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2 i 1 D CZZD C THEWYO 1919 VOLUME TEN I i I P UBLISHED BY THE JUNIOR CLASS OF THE STATE UNI- VERSITY OF WYOMING IN THE SPRING OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN I 5] |i=i| fc J c=i c □ • • • • • | + THE. WYQ, ] o tip bom of tlje Pitt- ([l I (m stto of piyonttttg l tit tlje scr tcc of ffintk jlant foe loyally indicate tips JHyo of 1919. . r. . THE wrCL 3ln ifawmam Clarence Jensen, a t n Born September 29, 1897. Died February 4, 1918. 3ltt iH monam Jefferson E. Warfield Gamma Theta Chi Born August 12, 1893. Died April 5, 1918. The Annual Staff Editor-in-Chief Edith Peters Associate Editor. Emily Anderson Business Manager Louis Krueger Athletics Art G. Burckert Illustrations Margaret Longshore, Helen Tyvold Jokes Agnes Avent, Carrie Hitchcock Colleges and Departments Katherine Cloos Classes ..Jennie Ay res Organizations Wright L. Hess College Life and Society Mary Osmond Photographs... ..Maude Avent, Lloyd Buchanan - £— THE. Wra, The Editor s Page O □ NCE more the task of editing The Wyo of the Univer- sity of Wyoming is completed. It has demanded the most earnest efforts of the staff and we hope that, through these efforts, we have produced a book which will recall to you a few of the memories of those college days . The class of 1919 herewith presents you the tenth volume of The Wyo. and we hope that it will meet with your approval. Thanks of the class are due those who have kindly helped us in the production of this Wyo, to whom we are truly grateful. The Editor. The Board of Trustees OFFICERS Mary B. David __ President Alexander B. Hamilton, M. D Vice President Charles D. Spalding... Treasurer Frank Sumner Burrage, B. A .....Secretary A. B. Hamilton EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE T. F. Burke W. S. Ingham MEMBERS Term Appointed Expires 1895 Timothy F. Burke, LL. B.. ... 1919 1913... ...Mary B. David 1919 1914... ....Mary N. Brooks 1919 1911. W. S. Ingham, B. A..... 1921 1913 ......C. D. Spalding...... 1921 1915 J. M. Carey, LL. B ...... ' . 1921 91 1 Alexander B. Hamilton, M. D 1923 1911 ......Lyman H. Brooks... 1923 1913 Charles S. Beach, B. S 1923 EDITH K. O. CLARK, State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Ex officio Acting President Aven Nelson, A. M., Ph. D Ex officio The Faculty Clyde Augustus Duniway, A. M. (Cornell), Ph. D. (Harvard), LL. D. (Den- ver and Colorado) President and Professor of History. AVEN NELSON, A. M. (Harvard), Ph. D. (Denver) Acting President, Professor of Botany, and Curator of Rocky Mountain Herbarium. Justus Freeland Soule, A. M. (Hobart) Professor of Greek and Latin. HENRY Merz, M. A. (Blackburn) Professor-Emeritus of German and French. Charles Bascom Ridgaway, A. M., Sc. D. (Dickinson) Professor of Mathematics. f Henry Granger Knight, M. A. (Washington), Ph. D. (Illinois). Dean of the College of Agriculture, Director of the Experiment Station, and Profes- sor of Agricultural Chemistry. June E. Downey, M. A., Ph. D. (Chicago) Professor of Philosophy and Psychology. GRACE RAYMOND HEBARD, M. A. (Iowa), Ph. D. (Illinois Wesleyan) Professor of Political Economy and Librarian. Elmer George Hoefer, M. E. (Wisconsin) Professor of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering. John Conrad Fitterer, C. E. (Colorado) Professor of Civil and Irrigation Engineering. Arthur Emmons Bellis, M. S. (Michigan) Professor of Physics. ALPHEUS Davis FAVILLE, M. S. (Wisconsin) Dean of the College of Agriculture, Director of the Experiment Station, Professor of Animal Husbandry, and Station Husbandman. :|:John A. Hill, B. S. (Wyoming) Wool Specialist, and Professor of Textile Industry. Thomas S. Parsons, M. S. (South Dakota) Professor of Agronomy, and Sation Agronomist. ' Resigned September 1, lf)17. •(■Resigned February 1, 1918. JAbsent on leave in military service. Captain 166tb Jnfantrv, United States National Armv. SAbsenl on leave, September 1. 1917-July 1, 1918. John Oscar Creager, M. A. (Yale) Dean of the College of Education, and Professor of Education. Albert C. Boyle, Jr., M. E. (Utah), A. M., Ph. D. (Columbia) Professor of Mining Engineering. fRoss B. MOUDY, M. S. (Wyoming) Professor of Chemistry, and State Chemist. EmELINE STORM WHITCOMB, B. S. (Columbia) Professor of Home Economics. BEVERLY C. Daly, Captain, U. S. Army, Retired Professor of Military Science and Tactics. Carl Eben Stromquist, Ph. D. (Yale) Professor of Mathematics. Sylvester K. Loy, Ph. D. (Johns Hopkins) Professor of Chemistry. Raymond Burnette Pease, A. M. (Harvard) Professor of English. Julian Edward Butterworth, M. A., Ph. D. (Iowa). Acting Dean of the College of Education, and Professor of Secondary Education. John William Scott, A. M. (Missouri), Ph. D. (Chicago) Professor of Zoology and Research Parasitologist. Harrison C. Dale, A. M. (Harvard) Professor of Political Science and Directcr of Correspondence Study, E. H. Lehnert, D. V. S. (McGill) Professor of Veterinary Science, and Station Veterinarian. Harvey L. Eby, A. B. (Yale) Professor of Rural Education. Earl Kilburn Kline, M. A. (Oxford) Professor of Modern Languages. Ruth Adsit Professor of Elementary Education, and Supervisor of the Training Grade School. E. DEANE HUNTON, M. B. A. (Harvard) Professor of Commercial Subjects. Laura A. White, A. M. (Nebraska), Ph. D. (Chicago) Professor of History. JSamuel Howell Knight, M. A. (Columbia) Professor of Geology and Curator of the Museum. Resigned July 1, 1917, to become Commissioner of Education of the State of Wyoming ' . tGives no instruction; fully employed as State Chemist. JAbsent on leave in military service, First Lieutenant, Intelligence Division, United State National Army. ALBERT LuKKEN, B. A. (Fremont, Neb., Normal) Director of the Department of Music and Professor in Vocal Music. KARL T. STEIK, A. M. (Harvard) Associate Professor of Chemistry and Engineering Chemist. ALONZO F. VASS, M. S. (Wisconsin), Ph. D. (Cornell) Associate Professor of Agronomy, and Associate Agronomist. Emma Howell Knight, B. A. (Wyoming) Assistant Professor of Home Economics, and Adviser of Women. Frank Sumner Burrage, B. A. (Trinity) Secretary of the Board of Trustees, Registrar and Secretary to the President. Ralph E. Berry, B. L. (California) Assistant Professor of Commerce. JOHN CoRBETT, A. B. (Harvard), M. Ped. (Ohio State) Director of Physical Training. James F. Groves, S. M., Ph. D. (Chicago) Assistant Professor of Biology. Wilbur A. Hitchcock, C. E. (Colorado) Assistant Professor of Engineering. Clara Frances McIntyre, A. M. (Columbia) Assistant Professor of English. Mabel Louise Anderson, M. A. (Iowa) Assistant Professor in the Teaching of English. Rose Lena RUEGNITZ, Mus. Grad. (Northwestern) Assistant Professor of Music and Instructor in Piano. JOHN LUKKEN, B. S. (Fremont, Neb., Normal) Acting Director of the Department of Music and Instructor in Voice. Robert J. Cowper Instructor in Shop Worl(. Mabelle A. Land DeKay, B. A. (Wyoming) Instructor in English. -j-Katherine E. Nenno, B. A. (Wyoming) Instructor in Geography and Arithmetic. :j:Roger C. Frisbie Instructor in Organ and Piano. Absence on leave, second semester, 1917-18. tResigned September 1, 1917. JAbsent on leave since January 1, 1918, in military service. (Officers ' Training Camp.) THE. ' WYQ, Edgar Thompson Smith, B. S. (Pennsylvania Stafe) Instructor in Mechanical and Electrical Engineering. Amy Gunnell Abbot, B. A. (Wyoming) Instructor in English. fLULU A. CONDRON. B. S. (Washington) Instructor in Home Economics. MABELLE Rae McVEIGH, A. B. (Nebraska) Instructor in Latin and German. Helen Mayer Instructor in Violin. Morna Alma Wood Assistant Adviser of Women. :|:Gino Vincent Medici de Solenni, M. A. (Ohio State) Instructor in Modern Languages. Mary E. Smith, Ph. B. (Ottawa) Assistant Librarian. K.ATHERINE A. WALLER, B. S. (Teachers College, Columbia) Instructor in Home Economics. Amanda E. Clement Instructor in Physical Training for Women. EARL C. O ' Roke, A. M. (Kansas) Instructor in Zoology and Assistant in Parasitology. Arthur C. Cross, A. M. (Michigan) Principal of the University High School, and Instructor in History. JOHN I. HARDY, M. S. A. (Tennessee), Ph. D. (Missouri) Assistant Wool Specialist. H. M. Martin, M. D. V. Instructor in Veterinary Science and Assistant in Animal Diseases. Charles T. Latimer, A. B. (Colorado College) Instructor in Modern Languages. Amy Gardner, B. A. (Colorado) Instructor in Drawing in the University Training School. Hettie G. McConnaughy, B. A. (Smith) Instructor in the Junior High School. Margaret Harden Bellis, B. A. (Wyoming) Instructor in the Junior High School. Resigned September 1, 1917. In military service. Captain Engineers, Reserve Corps, United States Army. tResigned January 1, 1918. Resigned September 1, 1917. In military service. Second Lieutenant, Infantry Reserve Corps, Intelligence Division, United States National Army. SResigned February 1, 1918. Beatrice Thompson Instructor in Home Economics. Cady Kenney Instructor in Organ and Piano. Lavina Stewart, A. B. (Carroll) Cataloguer in University Library. Marion V. Higgins Assistant in Agricultural Library. Frank Edgar Hepner, M. S. (South Dakota) Research Chemist. O. A. Beath, M. A. (Wisconsin) Research Chemist. ALBERT E. Bowman, B. S. (Utah Agricultural College) Director of Extension Worl( in Agriculture and Home Economics, and Extension Professor of Agriculture. IVAN L. HoBSON, B. S. (Utah Agricultural College) State Leader of Boys ' and C Y s ' Club Work. EPHRAIM F. BURTON, B. S. (Utah Agricultural College) State Demonstrator in Dairying. R. S. BESSE, B. S. (Missouri) Slate Leader of County Agricultural Agent Worl(. Henrietta Kolshorn, B. S. (Columbia) State Leader of County Home Demonstration Agent Work. Mary W. McFARLANE, M. S. (Oregon Agricultural College) State Demonstrator in Home Economics. J. D. McVEAN, B. S. (Pennsylvania State) Slate Specialist in Animal Husbandry. MARY HOOVER, B. S. (Kansas State Agricultural College) Assistant State Leader of Club Work. PAUL H. DUPERTUIS, B. S. (Washington State College) Assistant State Leader of Club Work. FRANK P. LANE, B. S. (Oklahoma A. and M. College) Assistant State Leader of County Agent Work- Katherine E. Dolbear, M. S. (Clark) Assistant State Leader of Club Work. Emily A. Linhoff Assistant State Leader of Club Work. Ray T. Jackson Specialist in Rodent Control Work, U. S. D. A. Resigned January 1, 1918. C. E. Bartholomew Specialist in Apiculture, U. S. D. A. N. E. Luce Specialist in Poultry Work, U. S. D. A. ALLYN H. TEDMON, B. S. (Colorado Agricultural College) County Agricultural Agent, Big Horn County. Samuel M. Fuller, B. S. (Wyoming) County Agricultural Agent, Sheridan County. W. R. Reeves, B. S. (Kansas State Agricultural College) County Agricultural Agent, Crook County. B. S. TEDMON, Jr., B. S. (Colorado Agricultural College) County Agriculural Agent, Platte County. J. A. HELMREICH, B. S. (Missouri) County Agricultural Agent, Goshen County. fJOHN E. Watt, D. V. M., M. S. (Oregon Agricultural College) County Agricultural Agent, Lincoln County. :j:R. E. REYNOLDS, M. S. (Oregon Agricultural College) County Agricultural Agent, Laramie County. §LEO L. LAYTHE, B. S. (Oregon Agricultural College) County Agricultural Agent, Park County. P. T. Meyers, B. S. (Nebraska) County Agricultural Agent, Campbell County. M. B. BoiSSEVAIN, B. S. (Washington State College) County Agricultural Agent, Fremont County. GEORGE F. HoLMSTEAD, B. S. (Utah Agricultural College) County Agricultural Agent, Weston County. ||VeRNE STEWARD, B. S. (Michigan Agricultural College) County Agricultural Agent, Albany County. John C. Hays, M. S. (Wisconsin) County Agricultural Agent, Natrona County. Earle G. Reed County Agricultural Agent, Lincoln County. J. CARL LANEY, B. S. (Washington State College) County Agricultural Agent, Niobrara County. ] C. L. JAMISON, B. S. (Oregon Agricultural College) County Agricultural Agent, Johnson County. ♦Resigned February 1, 1918. tResigned August 8, 1917. (Resigned March 1, 1918. §Resigned December 20, 1917. II Resigned March 13, 1918. HResigned March 1, 1918. A. F. Scott, B. S. (Iowa State College) Count]) Agricultural Agent, Converse County. H. J. THOMAS, B. S. (Colorado Agricultural College) County Agricultural Agent, Sheridan County. LEW P. REEVE, B. S. (Iowa State College) Assistant County Agent in Charge, Uinta County. PHILIP B. MlLES, B. S. (Colorado Agricultural College) Assistant County Agent, Fremont County. HOWARD W. ALDRICH, B. S. (Iowa State College) Assistant County Agent, Campbell County. A. E. WEBB, B. S. (Oklahoma A. and M. College) County Club Leader, Sheridan County. L. A. MARKS, B. S. (Connecticut Agricultural College) County Club Leader, Sheridan County. Harrison Waln, B. A. (Fremont) District Club Leader, Wheatland, Platte County. Laura I. Winter County Home Demonstration Agent, Lincoln County. Katharine E. Bennitt, B. S. in H. E. (Wyoming) County Home Demonstration Agent, Laramie County. Marguerite Allen, B. S. (Idaho) County Home Demonstration Agent, Platte County. NELLE E. HUFF, B. S. (Wyoming) County Home Demonstration Agent, Big Horn County. I he Alumni Association President .. Charles L. Rigdon, ' 02 First Vice President _. ...Esther I. Downey, ' 1 7 Second Vice President Mrs. Frank Holliday, 09 Secretary Leslie B. Cook, 10 Treasurer.. Roy E. Fitch, 00 A. S. U. W. Representative Benjamin C. Bellamy, ' 10 C2) c-? d_b -(2) :A: : Marie Milligan, AAA President of Senior class. Chairman of Pan-Hellenic. Editor of Wyoming Student. Secretary-Treasurer of class, 1916-17. Member of Quill Club. Student Staff (3 years). A. S. U. W., 1915-16. Wyo Staff. 1918. Ben Appleby, ATQ President of A. S. U. W. Major of Cadet Corps. Member of Delta Sigma Rho. Member of Quill Club. Debating Team, 1916-17. Editor of 1918 Wyo. Manager of Student, 1916-17. Cast of Merchant of Venice, A. S. U. W. Play. Hilda Kline, n b j Member of Phi Upsilon Omicron. Convention Delegate for Phi Upsilon Omicrcn, 1917. Honor Book in Home Economics. Arthur Jones, 2 A e Business Manager of Student, 1917-18. Business Manager of Wyo, 1918. Sergeant of Cadet Corps. Mary Aber, n B l Member of Phi Upsilon Omicron. Wyo Staff, 1918. President of Y. W.C.A., 1917-18. Oscar Larson, 2 A e Honor Book in Animal Husbandry, 1917. Student Assistant in Chemistry, 1917-18. C aptain of Cadet Corps. Annual Staff, 1918. Dorothy Downey, n B Secretary- 1 reasurer of Class 1914-15. Member of Debating Team, 1915. Member of Women ' s Debating Team, 1917. Honor Book in Political Economy, 1916. Honor Book in History, 1917. Chairman of Dramatic Committee, A. S. U. W., 1917-18. Annual Member of Y. W. C. A., 1916-1 7. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 1915-16, 1917-18. Assistant Editor of Wyo, 1918. Student Staff, 1917-18. Cast of Merchant of Venice , A. S. U. W. Play. X Ellen Greenbaum, n B Vice President Y. W. C. A., 1916-1 7. Girls ' Glee Club, 1915-16. Graduate of Normal School, 1917. Vice President of A. S. U. W., 1917-18. Wyo Staff, 1918. Christine Frandsen Member of Phi Upsilon Omicron. Secretary of Senior Class. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Honor Book in Chemistry, 1917. Wyo Staff, 1918. V -  - Herman Timm, A T O Cast of The College Widows , A. S. U. W. Play. THE WYQ, Ralph Holland, 2 a e First Lieutenant of Cadet Corps. Mrs. Edwin Payson, n B Member of Quill Club. Wyo Staff, 1917. Honor Book in Modern Languages. Secretary of A. S. U. W. Assistant Editor of Student, 1918. 1 - ' -■... the wra, Dorothea Wichmann Graduate of Normal School, 1916. Harry Titus, Gamma Theta Chi Honor Book in Mathematics, 1916. Honor Book in Physics, 1917. Passed Rhodes Scholarship Examination, 1917. THE WYQ, Beatrice Dana, n B 3 Member of Phi Upsilon Omicron. Wyo Staff, 1918. Cast of The Egyptian Princess . Cast of When Johnny Comes Marching Home . Raymond Lundgren First Lieutenant of Cadet Corps, 1918. Honor Book in Mining, 1917. THE WYQ Arthur Wichmann, Gamma Theia Chi Member of Delta Sigma Rho. Sergeant of Cadet Corps. Debating Team, 1918. Helen Tyvold II K Greeley, Colo. Wyo Staff, 1919. the wra Arthur Linden First Lieutenant of Cadet Corps. Jennie Ennis the wra c 7 d-b Ci diULi T7 J= c Meta Brown Not that I love fun less, but that I love study more. the wra Mary Cheese A daughter of the gods, Divinely tall and most divinely fair of all. Blanche Evans ' To watch for glances every hour From her divine and sacred eyes. Ethel Eyer ' Thou art worthy ; full of power; As gentle; liberal minded, great; Consistent; wearing all that weight Of learning lightly like a flower. Sidney George It is surely funny that when a student ' s thru college she aims at a mark and Mrs. it. the wra Margaret Gibson Enough, if something from our hands have power To live and act and serve the future hour. Ruth Hanesworth We truly think this Queen of Holland has no faults. THE WYQ, May Highley I would not grow too fast, For sweet flowers are slow, And weeds make haste. Mary Menghini ' Devoted, anxious, generous, void of guile, And with her whole heart ' s welcome in her smile. -(3) the wrg. Ana Mullison Her eyes are sapphire set in snow, Resembling heaven by every wink. Ada Newsom The temple of purest thoughts is silence. -(8) TH£ WYQ. Ruth Pickering ' Goodness shines in her very eyes As a gift from the heavenly skies. Grace Park A maiden fair and fond and true, For future use a name she Drew. Ursula Tanner ' With golden crowns and wreaths of heav- enly flowers; Hear and believe! thy own importance know. Esther Watson I live for those that love me. ' The Young member of the Class 1919. Effie Yeoman Graceful ease and sweetness void of pride. May Garner ' Kind and useful all she does, Blessing and blest where ' er she goes. THE. wroL T? T? T? Qd vW MIO THE WYQ, Agnes Avent ' I ' m going over there, over there. Katherine Cloos Short and sweet And hard to beat. Edith Peters Never idle a moment, But thrifty and thoughtful of others. Amy Matheson Cease forever. the wra Emily Anderson ' Beware the fury of a patient mind. George Atteberry Calm in the Storm of Life. Louis Krueger And beauty is the dream that leads me lome. Margaret Longshore Come, Jerry, tell me of your dreams. the wra Mary Osmond Shows a fondness for Dennison ' s Crepe Paper Flowers. Carrie Hitchcock Gee, I wish I wasn ' t bashful. THE WYQ Jennie Ayers The Young member of the Class 1919. Varner Erickson He ' s quiet, that ' s peculiar. I T Wright L. Hess I love the cows and chickens. Vernetta Stager ' Wouldn ' t I make a wonderful suffragette? THE WYQ Stella Kellogg Of all days in the week, I dearly love but one Day. Morna Wood In her tongue is the law of kindness. THE WYQ, Maude Avent I always speak Frank-ly. Lloyd Buchanan Now, what have I Dunn? Ruth Nash I ' ll soon finish the H. E. course, then, O, Jo-y. Arthur Burckert Have you no pity for me who have found a little beauty? Edith Fessenden A good heart is more than gold. Della Crosbie ' Grace was in all her steps, Heaven in her eye, In every gesture dignity and love. -(4) THE WYQ, Jnl OM E -(4) the _wra THE SOPHOMORE CLASS Colors: Orange and Blue. OFFICERS President Glendon Laird Vice President ..Charles Young Secretary Betty Beck Treasurer Gladys Hasbrouck Dewey Anderson Alden Avent Norah Banner Betty Beck Meta Brown Robert Burns Anne Coughlin Mary Cheese CLASS ROLL Mary Ethel Holliday Josephine Hults Lenore Judkins Glendon Laird Meredith Langheldt Ralph McWhinnie Marguerite Mau Mary Menghini Charles Coolidge Roger Cottle Leslie Crawford Albert Day Arthur Dennison Catherine Dunn Blanche Evans Ethel Eyer Norma Fisher Arthur Foster Helen Gaensslen Mae Garner Myra Geer Sidney George Gl adys Hasbrouck Harold Hicks Mae Highley Arthur Miles Ann Mullison Ada Newsom Theodore Olson Grace Park William Penland Walter Perry Ruth Pickering Nettie Potts Lillian Richardson Hazel Spencer Elizabeth Steele Ursula Tanner Esther Watson Isabelle Whelan Efne Yeoman Charles Young ,rfrt the. wra, the wm The Sophomore Class JROM the opening of the University in September the Sophomore Class has kept up the high standards for efficiency and pep which they established for themselves last year. The Frosh were properly initiated into the mysteries of college life; their W dance and class meetings were visited ; their girls were adorned with 20 ' s ; their boys wore Fresh- men caps; their colors were hung below ours on the flag pole. These served to keep the Frosh awake and arouse a class spirit within them. The Sophomores are well represented in the various college activities. The boys put up a good game in the class basketball series and the girls ' team were the champions of the University. We have a number in Quill Club, in Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. offices, and in the cast of the A. S. U. W. play. Our hard times dance in April is going to be the best ever. The University has no class that is livelier or more interested in all its activ- ities or more loyal than that of the Sophomores. FEESMMEM Robert Allen Irvin Hugh Austin C. Sanford Baker M. Helen Banner Herman R. Bath Agnes Bell Dorothy H. Berquist Terry K. Biglow Wm. H. Birchby Neal F. Boyd Maud Avery Bright Fritz D. Burckert Glen S. Burton Richard Holliday Butler Ellen Carmody E. Opal Clifford Mary B. Clifford Gladys A. Davison Wm. Edward Deming Winifred Dillingham F. Kelly Dukes Arthur G. Essert Paul Essert Elsa Bernice Ewel Charles G. Frazer Bessie Fulkerson Julius Galligar Gladys Gardner Ethel Lois Gibson Dorothy Goodrich George R. S. Grant Margaret M. Grant Samuel W. Gross Katie Hall Leda L. Harlow Alfred Harrison M. Frances Heaton Archie C. Heigert FRESHMAN CLASS Emily Bessie Hoffman Helen Holliday Fredonia A. Huff Robert C. W. Ingham Clarence Jensen Mildred Johnson Dora M. Joslin Lenore Judkins Mildred Keefe Frederick Wm. Layman David R. Lustgarten Esther McNally Martha Marquis M. Marguerite Mau Mary T. Mau Esther Meredith Barthol E. Miller Mary I. Miller S. Glenn Parker Wm. Albert Ryan Leonard Byron Shaw Harry Sheldon Russell J. Sholl Charles Wm. Shoop Milward Lee Simpson Albert M. Smith Lawrence Smith Homer Robert Soule Dorothy Thees Alma Thompson A. Claire Tucker Myra Vaughn Violette D. Ward Mrs. Florence Warriner Martha J. Watson Carroll A. Whitmer Hildegard Wichmann Cora Williams Hannah Wilson The Fresh resnman ci ass □ W Twenty-one! ! ! HAT does twenty-one stand for? Well, to be brief and to the point, it stands for the class which is to be U. W. ' s crowning glory. We are convinced of this, for it has already done much that is praiseworthy. Its spirit is far greater than one might expect from its size. This spirit led its members to defy the Sophomores, and to whitewash the famous W when it chose and not at the appointed time. It was the same spirit which promoted the valiant struggle between Freshies and Sophs on the Ag building the day after Whitewash day. Our colors are black and gold, and everyone knows how well they look floating above the Sophomore blue and gold . Our Hop , too, was a great success and showed well for our splendid organization. Un- der the leadership of our President, Carol Whitmer, Secretary Robert Ingham, and Treas- urer Milward Simpson, we have managed to have many good times and gain some honors. Our boys won the championship in basketball. Two of our girls are on the debating team and two have already made Quill Club. With such a start, everyone looks forward to great things from twenty-one . M. R. C. the. wra DEPA [Fi r l d-h M rvl )=4l 7£n r l d_b Dr. Jven Nelson the wrg. The College of Literal Arts JHE College of Liberal Arts is the oldest College of the University, and from it have sprung and to it have been added all the other Colleges and Departments that are mentioned in our University Catalogue. It is the center around which all the other Departments must continue to grow, if the University is to attain still higher fields of educational service. It is essential, therefore, that the College of Liberal Arts receive continued and increasing support, in order that its highest func- tion may be realized. This function is to develop and cultivate men and women; as indispensable part of the work of education as to train farmers, teachers, stenographers, housekeepers, and engineers. The term liberal means free, and studies are liberal or free in contrast with studies in which one is restrained by routine, or by the need of livelihood. Again, certain studies are free in the sense of making free or of increasing freedom. Ignorance is the greatest obstacle to freedom. It follows that a wide range of knowledge multiplies our freedom and in- creases the extent to which we may be said to do what we really wish rather than what circumstances dictate. Liberal education is a wide survey of the field of life, a broad out- look over all its manifest possibilities, so that we may chcose our work in the presence of all the possibilities. It is the kind of education that helps us to choose our work freely, rather than the kind that fits us for our chosen work. The period of liberal study may well be a period of desultory attention, of a sort of spiritual idling, when, according to the standards of efficiency, time is wasted; for the essential purpose of liberal studies is not to prepare us to succeed in the practice of a spe- cific profession, as for instance law, but to help us to decide wisely and freely whether to aspire to such success. Consulting the University Catalogue does not help you to gain credit in the courses, but it plays an important part in your deciding what courses to take, and it assuredly shows you what courses there are to take, and whither they may lead you. To profit most by liberal study, or to acquire that which is peculiarly valuable in it, we need freedom and openness of mind, quickness of response, toleration of the ancient and traditional, and an eager interest in the new and radical. A liberal education means, primarily, a retrospect of the past, an assimilation of the civilization of our age, and a wide acquaintance with the possibilities of life, in order that choice of vocation may be wise and free. Prof. J. F. Soule Dr. C. B. Ridgarvay JTH.E, WYQ, ?- — _ — — r ——a Dr. Grace Raymond Hebard Dr. June E. Dorvney Mr. F. S. Burrage the wra r If Dr. L. A. White Miss Amy C. Abbot Dr. J. F. Groves Prof. R. B. Pease Mr. C. T. Latimer Mr. C. O ' Roke the wra Prof. Karl T. Sleik Dr. S. K. Loy Miss Clara F. Mclntyre the wra ufr , Prof. E. K. Kline Prof. H. C. Dale Mabelle A. Land DeKav -(5) THE WYQ, V Miss Mary E. Smith Prof. A. E. Bellis Dr. J. W. Scott -(5) THE. WYQ, t_b ■m 1 R =4 Fa E THE WYQ, The College of Agriculture )HE College of Agriculture consists of three well defined divisions or de- partments: the Agricultural College, the Experiment Station, and the Division of Extension, each playing an important part in the agricul- tural development of Wyoming. The Agricultural College trains students in the fundamental sciences. It lays a broad foundation for the agricultural students, knowing that except on broad foundations specialization is utterly ridiculous . The agricultural courses are built for Wyoming students and Wyoming conditions. That they fit men for graduate work in other institutions is borne out by the records of many of our graduates. The Experiment Station is organized primarily for research work along lines that will be of value to the agricultural population of our state. Upon the Station devolves the duty of gathering the material from which the Agricultural College draws in developing men and women trained in agricultural lines. The Division of Extension carries to the state at large agricultural truths discovered in the class room, in the laboratory, and in the field. Through the ex- tension workers, valuable information of all kinds is carried directly to the men and women on the farms and ranches, thus bringing to those who have not had the opportunity of at- tending college, the essential things they need in developing the agricultural possibilities of the state. The work of these three departments or divisions is closely interwoven. They succeed individually only as they pull together. Together they constitute the College of Agriculture, founded and fostered with the idea of placing the Science of Agriculture on the high plane it so justly deserves. Dean A. D. Faville Prof. A. E. Bowman ■■■■-.. .. ' •-; ..- Dr. E. H. Lehneri Mr. O. A. Beath Mr. Ivan L. Hobson the wra, Dr. H. M. Martin Mr. A. F. Vass thjl wra Mr. R. S. Bessc Mr. John I. Hardy Miss Henrietta Kolshorn Mr. Paul H. Dupertuis ■rf... the wrcx Mr. Frank E. Hepner Mrs. Marv IV. McFarlane Prof. Ross B. Moud)) Mr. E. F. Burton THE WYQ- .lueC f3 (7srf ®{F EdMcaftSoini d ? THE WYQ Dr. J. E. Butterrvorih Miss Ruth Ads ' it Dr. C. E. Stromquist f v.. Miss Mabel Anderson the wra. ■--. Margaret Harden Bellis Mr. Harvey L. Eby Miss Mabelle Rae McVeigh Mr. A. C. Cross The College of Education , HE State of Wyoming needs from 400 to 500 new teachers and school administrators each year to take the place of those who leave the pro- fession or who go to other states in search of greater opportunities. As the only instituton in Wyoming of more than high school grade devoted to teacher training, the College of Education has an unusual responsibility. It is assuming this responsibility, so far as it can, through the preparation of: teachers for rural schools, for city elemen- tary schools, for academic and vocational subjects in high schools; directors of normal training in high schools; rural and elementary supervisors; and high school principals and city superintendents. Its spirit is service to the state; its procedure is the development of a thorough, accurate scholarship in subject matter, supplemented by an understanding of how to adapt this subject matter to children and adolescents in order that they may possess increased power of living fully and effectively in a modern community. JT dB - m ■•■wZ JJE ' v ! - Mr. J. R. Coxcn Miss Ruth Stout the wra DEPART T OF EMGMEERflMG the wra, Engineers AAr anted! (WO messages to young men: President Wilson: There will be need for a larger number of persons expert in the various fields of applied science than ever before. Such persons will be needed both during the war and after its close. I would particularly urge upon the young people who are leaving our high schools that as many of them as can do so avail them- selves this year of the opportunities offered by the colleges and technical schools, to the end that the country may not lack an adequate supply of trained men and women. Secretary of War Baker: Let the young men of America devote themselves to the various branches of engineering education, so that when the war is over the call will not be in vain to young men who have had the training and have learned the lessons neces- sary to enable them quickly and rapidly to play a part in that great reconstruction enter- prise. Their Significance: After the United States entered the world war it was soon apparent that the induc- tion of students in engineering colleges into military service, through enlistment and the operation of the draft law, would seriously deplete the supply of trained engineers so neces- sary, both in carrying on the war and for the continued maintenance of our industrial strength. When the war ends, the world, including our own country, will have to be recon- structed, and this is the work of the engineer. America and the world at large will need trained engineers in the immediate future as never before in history, and the supply is in- adequate for the present emergency. In recognition of this situation, the President and Secretary of War, with the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army and other government officials in authority, are urg- ing that students now in engineering colleges should, as a patriotic duty, remain to finish their courses, and that the universities should do all they can, not only to retain such students, but to induce others to take up technical training. So one of the significant developments in connection with engineering education is that provision has been made for allowing engineering students to continue their studies in col- lege. As a means to this end, the Selective Service Regulations have been modified by inserting the following: Under such regulations as the Chief of Engineers may prescribe, a proportion of the students, as named by the school faculty, pursuing an engineering course in one of the ap- proved technical engineering schools listed in the War Department may enlist in the En- listed Reserve Corps of the Engineer Department and thereafter, upon presentation by the registrant to his local board of a certificate of enlistment, such certificate shall be filed with the questionnaire and the registrant shall be placed in Class 5 on the ground that he is in the military service of the United States. Wyoming Engineers and the War: As our University is one of the approved technical engineering schools listed in the War Department, it comes under the provisions of this regulation, and students accepted under it are distinctly in the service of the government by continuing their college work. Several students are now in this type of service. There are over a dozen graduates and former students of engineering in the military service, some of them holding important commissions. One member of the faculty is on leave of absence in France as a Captain of Engineers. The engineering departments themselves are giving special courses in preparation for war service. A course in military field engineering is being given, which all cadet officers are required to take, and a ccurse for radio and buzzer operators is being given at the request of the United States Army, twenty-seven men having enrolled in the class. It has been stated that the University of Wyoming is one of the approved technical schools listed in the War Department. It is also in the list of approved schools for training acting ensigns for engineering duty in the Navy. Prof. J. C. Fitterer Prof. Elmer G. Hoefer TH.EL WYQ, Mr. Robt. ]. Coxepcr Mr. Wilbur A. Hitchcock -(6) •3C- THE WY(X Dr. A. C. Boyle, Jr. -(6) The Department of Commerce i ror 7[[ PEED ! Speed! Speed! Speed in preparation has been the watch- word of our nation for more than a year. And hand in hand with this preparation has gone actual accomplishment, actual testing of plans and strength, so that even as we dreamed of larger accomplishment, we have realized the utmost on present resources. We have not hung S r o r 7 p back, fearful, because we were not equipped, cap-a-pie, to enter the conflict; rather have we met the emergency and supplemented our initial activities by preparation for further participation. Just such a problem in policy faces many of our institutions. It faces our own Uni- versity. It faces this division of the University. The demand for trained men and wo- men recurs daily. Can we answer the emergency call? Can we prepare our students more rapidly to take the places that await them? We shall try. The Division of Commerce, beginning with the summer session of 1918, will offer short intensive courses of study. The aim will be to give students the technique and skill necessary to enable them to enter upon clerical duties in the shortest possible time. The ultimate success of these students must depend upon their resourcefulness and continued preparation while engaged in the actual pursuit of the chosen work. « • .--- Prof. E. Deane Hunton Mr. Ralph E. Berry THE. WYQ, H©m pi L=4 A k A -sft Prof. Emeline Whiicomb mm Mrs. E. H. Knight Miss Katherine A. Waller Miss Beatrice Thomson Ho me .economics ( — HAT role does Home Economics play in the education of every woman? It is not another phase or our twentieth century materialistic dream, a WU course which trains our young women merely to be efficient in the p; homely arts of cooking and sewing. The main purpose is not so much, as the words might suggest, to train her for economy in the home, or to enable her in college to prepare feeds that warm the heart. To be sure. Home Economics answers the growing cry for specialized ed- ucation; it has a broad field all its own. Yet more than training young women to pursue a vocation, this department within four short years molds the character, raises the stand- ards of living, establishes ideals, and gives each young woman the weapon to think as well as to do. As a whole it is strictly a scientific course. That is, it seeks through the study of such subjects as Chemistry, Bacteriology, Botany, Zoology, Foods, and allied sciences, to give each student a questioning mind, a desire to seek after truth for its own sake, and a broad vision of life as conceived by the Great Creator. Are not these fundamental re- quisites for worthy citizenship, for service of humanity at large, and for the glorious heritage of womanhood? Notwithstanding that the arranged subjects draw upon the reasoning powers, logical ana analytical thinking, they also develop the appreciation of beauty and art. Costume Design, House Planning, and Interior Decoration have their place in the Home Economics curriculum, to make each students education symmetrical and well balanced, if I may borrow those terms from Biology and Nutrition. If we hold the view that a college edu- cation only marks the beginning of knowledge, the dawn of a bigger life of service, with efficiency, truth, beauty of thought and deed, and charity, as the stepping-stones towards a higher goal than earning and preparing our daily bread, then Home Economics has its func tion in the education of every young woman. -«£_ THE WYQ THE ' WYQ, THE WYQ, a - rj cs r 3- 3 Oo g 3 0Q THE WYQ Oft c a CO u ■5 c j a a a. THE. WYQ, T? T? J Lh the ' wra Miss Helen Mover Miss Rose Lena Ruegnilz Mr. John Lukken Mr. Cad ) Kenney Mnlfairy D Captain Beverly C. Daly, Retired Sergecnt John L. Cagne, Retired the wra Military Department □ CZZIOLZZ) □ D A Q o £ o A D □ CZZIOEZD D NEW shade of cadet green has appeared on the campus this year, as to the proper designation of which experts differ. Some say it ' s forestry green, some say it ' s home defense green, and some say it ' s — oh! well! no matter what they say — it ' s green all right, the new uniform, but it ' s the only thing green about the Cadet Corps. We ' re a small organiza- tion, this year, but exceeding wise. Heads up — - Eyes front — Body erect on hips — we know the language and act accordingly — sometimes. Do you want to know about the ballistics of the new mystery gun , or how to semaphore back the news about the Reds mounting up in the orchard, or how, in the most approved methcd, to make good Huns out of live ones? Ask us! Also, we are good-natured and well-disciplined. We get our heels together when convinced that the occasion demands, say Sir when addressed, when we don ' t forget, and cheerfully conform to little requests emanating from the Faculty Board of Strategy, that we drill an extra hour here or there, or add an hour ' s theory each week, or dabble in various hitherto uncatalogued intricacies of military science. Why? For one thing, it ' s by way of doing our bit, and for another the purpose back of military training in college is more apparent than it was to some of us before the world caught fire. Specifically, we believe that military training at the University of Wyoming has justified itself by RESULTS. The conviction is borne upon us that the man who is good enough to sport shoulder straps or chevrons in our Cadet Corps, is good enough to do the same in Uncle Sam ' s Army — and Uncle Sam knows it! Glance back over the rooter of cadet officers for a few years past — nearly all are now in service, and most of them commissioned officers or in training for commissions in Officers ' Training Camps. Two former Wyoming cadets are mem- bers of the General Staff — the brain trust of the United States Army. Another is a distinguished naval constructor. Versatile infantrymen, dashing artillerists, bow-legged cavalrymen, high flying aviators, signal and ordnance experts, paper-work sharks, military police sleuths — all of these and more have been furnished the government in its time of need by the University — and we remember it was on our Heaven-kissing campus — the one we tread our martial steps on — that they got their first rudiments of things military. Nor do we forget that one of the first War Heroes and earliest recipients of the French Croix de Guerre was OUR Major, three years or so back. You ' ve heard before that the ideals of the Military Department are expressed in the motto of the United States Military Academy at West Point — DUTY — HONOR — COUNTRY . Our boys in service are LIVING those ideals. MILITARY ORGANIZATION -191 7-18 Captain Beverly C. Daly, U. S. Army, retired .Professor of Military Science and Tactics, and Commandant of Cadets First Sergeant John L. Gagne, U. S. Army, retired Assistant to Commandant FIELD AND STAFF Major Ben Appleby... ...Commanding Battalion First Lieutenant Arthur Linden Battalion Adjutant Company A Company B Ralph W. Holland ..Captain Oscar Larson First Lieutenant Raymond Lundgren Lloyd Buchanan ...Second Lieutenant Art G. Burckert John W. Sodergreen First Sergeant .... Archur Wichmann A. C. Boyle, Jr. Sergeant Charlie Young Arthur J. Jones ...Sergeant Harold Hicks Alden Avent ..Corporal Theodore B. Olson Charles Coolidge Corporal C. William Penland Ralph E. McWhinnie Corporal Roger J. Cottle L. Dewey Anderson Corporal Robert H. Burns Leslie Crawford ...Corporal Harry Titus (Acting Color Sergeant) ... Corporal Allen, Robert Pr Baillie, Harmon ...P Bath, Herman Pr Burk, Kenneth A ....Pr Butler, Richard H .....Pr Chedsey, Francis Pr Chedsey, John Pr Day, Albert M P DeKay, Emory L Pr Deming, Edward Pr Dennison, Arthur ... Pr Foster, Arthur Pr Grant, George Pr Hamilton, Richard. Pr Ingham, Percy Pr Krueger, Louis T Pr Laird, Glen Pr Lustga rten, David R Pr Miles, Arthur Pr Miller, E. Barthol ..Pr vate _ Biglow, Terry K. vate Boyd, Neal F. vate Burckert, Fritz D. vate... Burton, Glen R. vate — Dukes, F. Kelly vate Erickson, Varner E. vate Essert, Arthur vate Essert, Harold vate Evans, Aubrey vate Galligar, Julius vate Heigert, Archie vate , Hoitsma, Irwin C. vate. Hoitsma, Ralph vate Hunt, George vate _. Ingham, Robert vate Knight, Oliver vate ... Larson, Melvin vate Layman, Frederick W. vate Neff, Sam vate Parker, Glen S. -(7) THE WYQ, i.. ..Private Schlosser, Paul ..Private Sheldon, Harry Private Simmons, Carl R. Private Simpson, Milward ...Private.... Smith, Arthur Soule, R. Homer Private ... Timm, Herman Spalding, Charles Private Tucker, Claire Thompson, Robert A. Private.. Whitmer, Carroll A. Mundell, Arthur G Perry, Walter D. . Rhineharl, George Sholl, Russell J Smith, Lawrence ... -(7) the _wra MILITARY ORGANIZATION, 191 7-18— Continue d WITHDRAWN DURING YEAR TO ENTER MILITARY OR NAVAL SERVICE (14) Captain Marshall M. Feris Third Officers ' Training Camp First Lieutenant Arthur J. Nelson Enlisted in U. S. Navy First Lieutenant Donald A. McDougall Enlisted in U. S. Nati Second Lieutenant Henry R. Bray... Enlisted in U. S. Nati Second Lieutenant Burton W. Marston Third Officers ' Trai Sergeant Dean F. Covert Third Officers ' Trai Corporal Samuel Hitchcock ...Third Officers ' Trai Private William H. Cheney Third Officers ' Trai Private Roger C. Frisbie Third Officers ' Trai Private Albert Lukken Third Officers ' Trai Private Glenn E. S. MacBeth Third Officers ' Trai Private Walter Storrie Enlisted in Aviation Section, S. C. Private Adrian F. Weaver ...Third Officers ' Training Camp Private Jesse G. Wheeler Third Officers ' Training Camp onal Army onal Army ning Camp ning Camp ning Camp ning Camp ning Camp ning Camp ning Camp LEFT COLLEGE ( 1 8) Private Sandford Baker Private William H. Birchby Private John Cunningham Private Joseph E. Evans Private Charles G. Frazer Private Orville W. Frazer Private Raymond A. FraZer Private Samuel W. Grosse, Jr. Private Glen Hartman P P P P P P P P P vate Frank W. Mesboer vate George D. Moses vate George Osher vate George H. Pickell vate Ray Pranty vate William A. Ryan vate Leonard Shaw vate Charles W. Shoop vate Walter Stoltz DECEASED (1) Private Clarence A. Jensen RECAPITULATION Field and Staff Company A ... Company B ... 2 39 38 Enrollment April 1, 1918 79 Entered Military or Naval Service 14 Left College 18 Deceased 1 Total for year 112 THE WYQ THE. WYQ, A. S. U. W. President Ben Appleby Vice President .. Ellen Greenbaum Secretary Lois Butler General Manager... Lloyd Buchanan Chairman Athletic Committee Leslie Crawford Chairman Dramatic Committee Dorothy Downey Chairman Publication Committee ...Charlie Young Chairman Debating Committee Arthur Wichmann Chairman Music Committee Edith Peters Faculty Representative Prof. Hunton Alumni Representative Mr. Ben Bellamy Editor-in-Chief Student Marie Milligan Business Manager ...Arthur Jones o |C=JO]-Z | O Q o D T o o (ZZIOEZD o HE Executive Committee this year has had a little private war on hand which has taken all the strategy at its disposal, but by a concentrated fire of Rigid Economy, the Budget System, and Hard Work we have made good headway against the enemy, Financial Troubles. We started out with a bad heritage of old debts, and it has been to the credit of the committee, especially to Mr. Buchanan and Mr. Hunton, that the greatest part of the past debt is erased and this year ' s finances, in spite of the war, managed on a profit basis. The purpose of this committee is to be of service to the student body of the Univer- sity of Wyoming, and it is our hope that in this we have succeeded. That which we took the most joy in doing was the purchasing and presenting to the University a service flag, four of whose stars stand for members of this year ' s committee, Mr. Partridge and Mr. Asay, both now over there ; Mr. Covert and Mr. Feris, who are working for commissions at Camp Funston, Kansas. The Vyoming Student STAFF Editor-in-Chief Marie Milligan Associate Editor Lois Butler Business Manager Arthur Jones News Editors.... Charles Coolidge, Esther Watson, Betty Beck, Theodore Olson, Stella Kellog Society Editor Ana Mullison Organizations ...Dorothy Downey Athletic Editor Dewey Anderson Ag. Notes Albert Day the wra Gamma Chapter of the American College Quill Club OFFICERS Chancellor Lois Butler Vice Chancellor. Miss Clara F. Mclntyre Scribe Esther Watson Keeper of Manuscripts Charles Coolidge Midan Theodore Olson CHAPTER ROLL Mrs. Bellis Dr. Hebard Pi of. Pease Miss Anderson Ben Appleby Mary Clifford Anne Coughlin Maude Avent Margaret Mullison Vernetta Stager Arthur Foster Marie Milligan Virginia Miller Jennie L. Ennis Martha Marquis Ana Mullison HE Quill Club has again completed a year of achievement in the field to which its efforts are dedicated. The papers read at the bi-monthly meetings have been of unusually high quality, and the discussions pro- voked by them of great interest. During the year eight new members have become proud wearers of the quill. The special issue of The Student published by the Club gave public testimony of the work which is being done. One of the most important events of the year was the unfurling of the Quill service flag which now hangs in Dr. Hebard ' s office. With half of its total male membership in service, Gamma Chapter feels that it has not played the slacker in the nation ' s time of trial. o cznoi=D]o rj, Q o 1 o D l O |CZ30EZZ O THE WYQ The Agricultural Club m T jlfcXHE Agricultural Club of the Univer3ity of Wyoming, established in March, 191 1, is an organization for all students of collegiate rank who are interested in agriculture. Its aims are three-fold — educa- tional, social, and inspirational — and the bi-monthly meetings share this triple nature. The first aim is accomplished by addresses on agri- v) culture and related subjects, which not only give valuable information, but stimulate discussion and individual study. The second and third aims are accomplished by enabling members of the Agricultural College, both students and faculty, to meet on common ground, and to become better acquainted with one an- other ' s life and work. The Club stands for progress, net only in agriculture, but in every field of college and outside activity. This year, on account of the World War, the Agricultural Club has a smaller active membership than at any other period. Many of the active members have enlisted in the military service of the United States. SOME AGRICULTURAL STL Pr ACTUAL rOOP PRQDVCT ffl CAN TW MtSER THE. WYQ. OFFICERS First Semester Second Semester President Leslie S. Crawford .Wright L. Hess Vice President ...Samuel Hitchcock.... R. Homer Burns Secretary-Treasurer Wright L. Hess ..Albert M. Day PROGRAM COMMITTEE Wright L. Hess Theodore Olson Albert M. Day ACTIVE MEMBERS Neal T. Boyd R. Homer Burns Leslie M. Crawford Albert M. Day Glen Hartman Wright L. Hess Theodore Olson O. A. Beath R. S. Besse A. E. Bowman A. C. Boyle, Jr. F. S. Burrage E. F. Burton A. D. Faville J. F. Groves J. I. Hardy HONORARY MEMBERS I. L. Hobson E. H. Lehnert K. Loy H. M. Martin Aven Nelson E. C. O ' Roke J. L. Robinson J. W. Scott A. F. Vass Prof. J. A. Hill Prof. J. L. Robinson Prof. S. H. Knight J. E. Anderson I CLUB MEMBERS IN MILITARY SERVICE Charles A. Jones A. Asay Dorman Bennitt Potter Bowman Silas N. Brooks William B. Cobb Arden W. Godwin Samuel Hitchcock William P. McKinstry Burton Marston G. H. Pickle Wilmer Porter Vernon Simmons A. L. Sodergreen Samuel L. Spicer Frank W. Spafford James C. Willox James Wilson THE. WYQ, UQ c THE WYQ Y. W. C. A. Cabinet President Mary Aber Vice President _. __ ..Christene Frandsen Secretary Ruth Hainsworth Treasurer ...Kalherine Cloos Religious Meetings Dorothy Downey Social Service : Ursula Tanner Social ...Margaret Longshore Association News Meta Brown Mission and Bible Study Nettie Potts Membership , Christine Frandsen Finance Katherine Cloos THE WYQ, -(8) Phi Upsilon Omicron o czzioizdI o n D o LI o D F D o i i o HI UPSILON OMICRON, an honorary Home Economics Fraternity, was founded in the College of Minnesota, at St. Paul, February 1 0, 1 909. Because of the excellent standing of the Home Economics Department in the University of Wyoming, Alpha Chapter became interested in us and invited this department to membership. Delta Chapter of Phi Upsilon Omicron was installed in the University of Wyoming, November 29, 1915. The purpose of this organization is to establish and strengthen the bonds of friend- ship, to promote the moral and intellectual development of its members, and to advance and upbuild the science of Home Economics. ACTIVE MEMBERS Mary Aber Stella Kellogg Emily Anderson Hilda Kline Jennie Ayers Margaret Longshore Beatrice Dana Ruth Nash Christine Frandsen Edith Peters Vernetta Stager HONORARY MEMBERS Miss E. S. Whitcomb Mrs. E. H. Knight Miss K. A. Waller ALUMNAE MEMBERS Mrs. Charles Conley (Frances Fowler) Mrs. William Cobb (Ethel Pfeiffer) Katherme Bennitt Nelle Huff Mabel Knight Mrs. E. M,ller (Gladys Perry) Mrs. Peckenpaugh Mary Spafford Mildred Travelle -(8) The Engineering Society OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER President _. Donald McDougal Vice President Henry Bray Secretary-Treasurer Archie Heigert SECOND SEMESTER President :.... ' . Arthur Burckert Vice President Arthur Wichmann Secretary-Treasurer Robert Allen The Engineering Society of the University of Wyoming was founded in February, 1915, for the purpose of bringing the Engineers of the University into closer relationship and to stimulate interest in engineering subjects. THE WYQ, The M en s lOmmons J s ® a t tqi | TARTED in the year 1908 under the direction of the University, the Commons has been a rendezvous for the various students each year — a place not merely where one could secure three square meals every day, but where one could meet with his fellow-students and engage in conversation, or perhaps gather around the piano and sing such songs as The Cannibal King, I Went to the Animal Fair, Solomon Levi, and the other innumerable selections that gladden a lonesome heart. For such is the purpose of the Commons, to provide sustenance not only to the youth famished with hunger, but also to the youth smitten with that peculiar disease called homesickness , which attacks every Freshman at one time or another; to dispel the Blues which occur with irregular frequency, particularly upon Monday. That the Commons has been a success in this endeavor is evidenced by the rotundity of many of its members and the happy, cheery smiles with which a visitor is greeted upon his first entrance into the jolly group of Commoners. (For their aim has always been, and always will be, a greater University of Wyoming.) ROSTER OF THE MEN ' S COMMONS Louis T. Krueger Melvin Larson Art G. Burckert Fritz D. Burckert Terry K. Bigelow Roger J. Cottle John Cunningham William Edward Deming Albert M. Day Varner E. Erickson Aubrey M. Evans George R. S. Grant Wright L. Hess J. Harold Hicks Ralph Holland Earl L. Kisor Oscar Larson David R. Lustgarten Lawrence Meeboer Barthol E. Miller Arthur Miles G. Dewey Moses George Osher C. William Penland, Jr. Paul Schlosser Russell J. Sholl Walter Stoltz Charlie C. Young ■- Wto -m. 1 ■. • - a SP i B V SJWk. Ms tfftri m [ % ■■■•■0 5?. - «5s i University Orchestra First Violins — Anne Coughlin, Miss Thyra I he.-kildsen, Arthur Burckert, Archie Heigert, Barthol Miller, Arthur Foster, Walter Stoltz. Second Violins — John Lukken, Catherine Cloos, Florence L ' Hommedieu, Harry Ninde, Frank Cordiner. Viola — Rose L. Ruegnitz. Cello — Dr. Bonner. Cornels — Harry Thompson, Mr. Lustgarten. Flute — Mr. Steik. Clarinets — Mr. Bellis, Oliver Knight. Drums — Amanda Clement. Bass — Miriam Doyle, Mr. Hollenback. Trombone — Harold Hicks. Horn — Richard Butler. THE WYCX The Year in Dramatics o (ZZIOEI3 o Q o I Q o D o C=IOI= o N University dramatic circles the past year has been one of signal suc- cess — success from every standpoint, artistically as well as financially. Too much credit cannot be given Mrs. DeKay for the untiring effort which made possible the three dramatic triumphs which made the year notable. Again has it been proved that there is no dearth of dramatic talent in the University, especially since in each of the three plays given new stars have taken iheir places in the dramatic firma- ment. For the discovery and development of this unsuspected talent much credit is again due Mrs. DeKay. The first dramatic presentation of the year was the light opera, When Johnny Comes Marching Home, by Edwards and Stange, given by the Musical Department at Root ' s Opera House the evening of December 1 4. This was repeated the next evening at the Y. M. C A. hut at Fort Russell, and at both places it played to a capacity house. The opera was under the direction of Mr. Albert Lukken, with Mrs. DeKay as dramatic coach and Mr. Frisbie as director. The story was of a highly humorous nature, with a strongly patriotic tone, the music of a popular and catchy sort, and the best of acting and singing, rounded out a combination which assured its success from the minute the curtain rose on the first act. Equally successful, although of an entirely different nature, was the Y. W. C. A. play given in the auditorium on Saturday, February 16, 1918. For this presentation was chosen Charles Rann Kennedy ' s deeply thoughtful and poetic drama, The Servant in the House . It was acknowledged that the Y. W. C. A. had set itself a difficult task in attempting to give a play of this sort; it was equally evident at the conclusion of the performance that the difficult task had been admirably done. The effective simplicity of the single stage setting made it possible to give the play in the auditorium. Of so nearly even value were the parts that it would be impossible to pick out any one of the actors for commendation. It is enough to say that they managed to put the message of the play across the footlights in a manner that professionals could not excel. Of a still different type was George Fitch ' s screamingly funny farce of college life, The College Widow . This was given at Root ' s Opera Hou:e on the evening of April 19th. Greatly in contrast to the serious tone of The Servant in the House , this was of the lightest touch, and was as provocative of laughter as the other was of thought. It served to re-emphasize the amazing versatility that characterized the year as a whole Widely varying as the three plays were in scope and treatment, ihey had one characteristic in common — the uniform excellence of the presentation, which in turn was responsible for their uniform success. jT vvr klV v the wrg- University Band [HF, University Band is a voluntary organization and was organized for the purpose of being useful to student activities. Not a bad motto is it? Many a time it has given up its prepa ation for a concert to get ready to play for some athletic game or rally. Although affairs looked rather discouraging at the declaration of war, yet through the efforts of the band committee, the membership is still up to the twenty-five mark. This consists of two faculty members of the band. These are appointed by the President of the University. The third mem- ber of the committee is elected by the students of the band from the members who are upper classmen. The director is appointd by the President of the University in conference with the band committee. Any man on the campus might be selected for this position, although the last two have been members of the Department of Music. However, being on the faculty of the Department of Music gives no one a claim to the directorship of the band. The band will always try to get the best available man as director. That is one reason why it is a good band. A number of concerts have been given this year, and all of them have reflected credit on the band and also on the University. The band is one of the best assets of the Uni- versity; it is the organization with the GO. Twenty-five loyal fellows can make any- thing go. THE WYQ, Band Committee — Faculty — Professors Bellis and Steik Student — Art G. Burckert ORGANIZATION Director — Cady Kenney instructors — Harry Thompson, August Koer- ting, and Barthol Miller INSTRUMENTATION Cornets — Harry Thompson Fritz Burckert David Lustgarten Terry Biglow C. William Penland Emory DeKay Clarinets — August Koerting Oliver Knight J. A. Johnson Roger Cottle Arthur Foster Piccolo — Prof. Karl T. Steik Saxophone — Prof. A. E. Bellis Baritone — Barthol Miller Altos — Richard Butler Archie Heigert Arthur Wichmann Trombones — J. Harold Hicks Dr. E. H. Lehnert Bb Bass— Prof. E Deane Hunton Basses — Robert Ingham Art G. Burckert Drums — Louis Krueger George Grant Kelly Dukes Arthur Essert Prof. E. G. Hoefer Drum Major — Russell Sholl Delta Sigma Founded April I 3, 1 906 University of Wyoming Chap- ter established May 4, 1917 Charter Members — Morgan V. Spicer E. H. Davis Clarence Bastian Horace N. Wilcox Ben Appleby J. E. Redburn A. P. Wichmann Don G. Shingler J. E. Anderson Active Members — Ben Appleby Arthur Wichmann Charles Coolidge Ralph McWhinnie George C. Atteberry the wra Delta Sigma Rno □ □ o N May 4, 1917, the Wyoming intercollegiate debaters, organized as Delta Epsilon Kappa, a local honorary debating fraternity, saw their hopes realized and their earnest efforts crowned with success; for on that day they were granted a charter by the national honorary debating fraternity, Delta Sigma Rho. Delta Sigma Rho ranks as one of the foremost societies of its kind in the United States at the present time. It has over fifty chapters, including some of the largest colleges in the country, as Yale, Harvard, Columbia, Penn- sylvania State, Michigan and Illinois. The membership is composed of men who have been prominent in intercollegiate debating and although the membership at present is quite small at the University of Wyoming, they will always strive to maintain the high ideals for which the fraternity stands. Skahundawa Camp of Camp Fire Girls OFFICERS Guardian Amy G. Abbot Secretary Mary Menghini Treasurer ...Helen Gaensslen ROLL OF MEMBERS Amy G. Abbot Nettie Potts May Garner Edith Fessenden Betty Beck Berenice Ewel Agnes Bell Mary Menghini May Highley Helen Gaensslen o =30IZ= | O Q o D T Q o o CZZIOEZD o HE members of Skahundawa Camp during the past year have found much enjoyment as well as profit in trying to carry out the health pro- gram arranged by the National Camp. Much walking has been done, and upon one occasion, November 25, all the members, with Mrs. Knight as a guest, enjoyed a long walk followed by an outdoor break- fast. Other walks such as to the Holliday ranch and Floral Canyon brought equal pleasure. As an organization the Camp has not done the usual amount of work, but individually and with other organizations the girls and their guardian have done much knitting and other Red Cro ss work. One October forenoon was spent by a number of the members in picking potatoes at the Experiment Farm. In so far as possible the Camp has tried to carry out the war program by conserving food and by buying War Savings Stamps. The year just past has indeed been a happy and profitable one for all the Camp Fire Girls. THE. WYQ, -(9) Y. M. C. A. OFFICERS, 1917-18 President Ralph McWhinnie Vice President Charles B. Coolidge Secretary Charles C. Young Treasurer C. William Penland -(9) THE. WYQ, doemetoede; Mrs. Emma Howell Knight Mrs. Morna Alma Wood Our Dormitories T ® F] HE war has not taken any of our girls as it has taken so many of our boys. The going of our boys means many opportunities are open to girls which have never been before f hem previously, but our girls are realizing the need of a greater education in order to fill the still greater positions which will be open to them, and they have not given up their college educations. All those who came to our University this fall came with the intentions of finishing their education and doing a big share of war work at the same time, and these intentions they have kept. Practically every girl knits, and there is not an hour in the day when some one can not be found doing this work. They knit whenever they have a free minute, at dining table, at lectures, at recitals, at committee meetings, even at little parties and birthday spreads. These girls are never found wasting their t ; me, and they are knitting for our soldiers, and not for themselves. Scarfs, sweaters, helmets, wristlets, socks, many in number, sizes, shapes and colors have been sent from our dormitories for our boys in the trenches or for those who will roon be there In almost every window of our halls Red Cross membership cards are to be seen. So those people who are not acquainted with our University may realize that each one of us is doing her best to help the great cause of our nation. This does not mean that cur war-work is so serious we never have any good times. It only makes us happier becau;e we feel that we are doing something, even though it may seem small in comparison, for those others who are more fortunate than we, and who can carry the flag and march to the front. THE. WYQ, THE WYQ, Expl xplanations [O, you near-sighted and visionary fish, those are not dove-cotes there on the hill — those are the girls ' dormitories. You ' re not in the country N fi) now, so forget about birds and pigeons long enough for me to tell you J3 the history of those two buildings. That big red brick structure over there was erected by Colum- bus in 1492, and served as a hostelry for his sailors after their severe voyage. What! You didn ' t know Columbus came this far west? Oh, yes, he shipped out here in a prairie-schooner with the rest of his gang way back in the dark ages of the continent. Now, to explain hew U. of W. fell heir to that old relic. An idea prevalent back in ' 49 was to found a State University somewhere in the western wilds. Accordingly, eyes were cast about for a gocd locality. Laramie, the great city of the plains, was selected, probably because of its locaton, but more probably because of that big red building, for well did the people of the universe realize what an ideal home that old shack would make for the girls. Columbus was paid his price and turned it over without a murmur; anyhow, he wanted to get back to Chicago. Now, don ' t get excited. I told you I would tell you about both of them, didn ' t I? Give me time — it takes time to narrate all the things tha happen in those two domiciles. We ' ll go over and take a look at Hoyt Hall, which rears its young dome so proudly in the ozone. Go quietly, for we mustn ' t disturb Sody. He has an inter est in that red house. Now don ' t feel abashed at the newness of this dwelling, for all is not gold that glitters. Yes, there ' s a mat to wipe your feet on before entering. It ' s really no different from the other dorm, only you must keep your eyes front. That fellow standing by the radiator in the hall was Farmer. Yes, he had a friend with him. Just between us two, let me say that Farmer aspires to be Dean of Women, and if persistency counts he ' ll realize his desire, for he ' s there most of the time. He has a friend by the name of Denny who tries to be as regular as the old boy, but sometimes is led astray by down-town dances, and the like. Let us mount these stairs and cross the hall. The floors are highly waxed — be careful not to slip. Nobody ever does, however, except the girls, and they only when a manly arm is near. Now, to see a room-full of wonders. Yes, they call it shining the dolls here at the Uni. Buck Appleby, Long, Hoiland, and numerous others always find a place in that room. Bobby, a mere child, got in there one night and forgot to turn on the lights until requested to do so by Mrs. Knight. We know heaps about this dorm, for they had open house day here once this year, right after the first house cleaning. Of course, simpleton, the other dorm holds open house , but clean-up week doesn ' t come again until about May 1st. 1 hats right, glad you mentioned it, for I undoubtedly would have overlooked it. No, those little circular splotches are not buffalo wallows; those represent the first at- tempts of the girls at landscape gardening. Give ' em tim° ; they ' ll improve if they stay four years. Before you go I may as well explain the use of those staircases on the exterior of the dorms. Don ' t confuse them with fire escapes. Those iron things are movie lad- ders, especially adapted for all first-class schools and colleges. The State Legislature has ordered these as a particularly convenient place where the young ladies can sit and dry and sun their hair. There may be other uses for these structures, but so far as knowledge goes they haven ' t been discovered yet. THE WYO, Cn nK C-h J? in «r? bd Hi r4 R d_b ii_b A ' is Amanda E. Clement Mr. John Corbdt the wra Football Season of 1917 YOMING began and ended the season by defeating their opponents. Seven games were played and three were won by the University. WThe first game was with the Colorado Aggies, who were the Rocky Mountain champions for the last two years and, as usual, had a very strong team. The second game that we won was played at the U. W. with the Greeley Normals. Wyoming made one touchdown and a goal kick. The last game was at Greeley, where we defeated the Teachers again. Wyoming ' s team was not very heavy, but they had the pep and the bulldog tenacity. The men who played on the Wyoming team were the following: Buchanan, the Captain, heavyweght and fighter. Ferris, Simpson, Soule, Lareon, and Layman, who were quick, active, and hard to hold. Others who had the fight and the grit were: Ciawford, Tucker, Burns, Covert, Nelson, Shaw, Laird, Jensen, Lundgren, Marston, and Parker. FOOTBALL SCORE October 6, 1 91 7— U. W. 6, Colorado Aggies 0. October 13, 191 7— U. W. 3, Colorado School of Mines 5 1 . October 20, 191 7— U. W. 0, Utah University 14. October 24, 191 7— U. W. 0, Utah Aggies 57. November 3, 191 7 — U. W. 0, Denver University 18. November 10, 191 7— U. W. 7, Greeley Normal 0. November 29, 191 7— U. W. 8, Greeley Normal 0. the wra Basketball Season of 1918 — w YOMING won three basketball games out of five. The first two were taken from us before we got into condition to play. But it sent the electric spark through the beys and they defeated every team that they encountered after that. The star team of Colorado College, the Cheyenne Alumni, and Creeley Normals were overwhelmed by the Wyoming Cowboys. Those who played and fought for Wyoming were: Lundgren, Simpson, Layman, Buchanan, Larson, Avent, and Burns. ) ( ) BASKETBALL SCORE January I 7, 1918— U. W. 1 7, Colorado Aggies 26. January 18, 1918— U. W. 14, Colorado University 36. January 19, 191 8— U. W. 25, Colorado College 2 1 . January 26, 1918— U. W. 5 1 , Cheyenne H. S- Alumni 6, February 9, 1918— U. W. 27, Greeley Normal 23. the wrg. the wro. Girls Basketball Forwards Guards ROM the beginning of school last fall, a great deal of interest in bas- ketball was shown by the University girls. It was decided to have a series of games between the Prep, Freshmen, and Sophomore teams, since inter-collegiate games are net allowed. The Sophomore team came out victorious in all these games and so were awarded W ' s, The line-up of their team is as follows: Centers — Catherine Dunn, Meredith Langheldt. — Sidney George, Betty Beck, Hazel Spencer. Blanche Evans, Captain; Norah Banner. the wra a S U a 3 c c the wra. State High School Basketball Tournament University Gymnasium, March 21, 22, 23, 1918 SCHEDULE OF GAMES No. 1 TEAMS 1 Score Defeats TIME 1 ( ' hevenne 36 | + 4; ) Thursday, P. M., 2 :44 1st half Rock Springs 3 :35 2d half 4- 2 Evanston IS 3 :08 1st half Laramie 36 4:0()2d half First .Series 3 Powell 1 36 Casper 1 44 4- 4:361st half 5:30 2d half 4 Big Horn 38 26 4- 5 :05 1st half Worland 5:54 2d half 5 University High Wheatland 33 18 + 8:081st half 0:55 2d half 6 Rawlins 44 14 + 8:32 1st half Torrington 0:18 2d half 7 Big Horn 38 25 + :45 1st half Rock Springs 10:35 2d half 8 Cheyenne 37 41 + + + 10 :08 1st half Powell 10:57 2d half 9 Rawlins 26 36 + + ■Friday, P. M., 2 :12 1st half Second Series Worland 3:00 2d half 10 Laramie 52 11 + + 2:37 1st half Torrington 3:25 2d half 11 ( ' asper 32 + + 3 :50 1st half Wheatland 38 4:44 2d half 12 University High Evanston 21 7 4- 4- 4:16 1st half 5:10 2d half 13 Laramie 41 15 + + 0:21 1st half Casper 10 :09 2.1 half 14 University High Big Horn 24 11 + :45 1st half 10:32 2d half Third Series 15 Rock Springs 30 23 + + + 11 :00 1st half Wheatland 11 :46 2d half 16 Rawlins 26 42 + + + 11:24 1st half Powell . A. M.. 12 :08 2d half 17 Big Horn 26 25 + + Saturday, A. M.. :55 1st half Laramie 10 :47 2d half Fourth Series 18 Rock Springs University High 8 21 + + 10 :24 1st half 11:15 2(1 half 19 | Worland | Powell 19 38 + + + 11:44 1st half P. M.. 12 :15 2d half 20 | Bis Horn 15 23 6 12 + + + + + 3:07 1st half | Powell 3:45 2d half :■: Fifth Series 21 | University High Laramie 3 :27 1st half 4:04 2d half 22t Laramie 15 14 + + + 7:20 1st half | Powell . 7:54 2d half :;: Finals 23 University High | Laramie 15 13 + + + 10 :05 1st half 10:37 2d half Worland— Bye. -(10) tUniversity High — Bye. $15-minute halves. DEBATING o cznorzz | o 9 D 8 u O (ZZIOEZD O URING the year 1917-1918 Wyoming again carried on three men ' s debates. On account of the small number of debaters, one team had to participate in two intercollegiate debates. The question for all three debates was, Resolved, That the federal government should own and operate all the coal mines of the United States offering coal for sale. Affirmative Team — G. C. Atteberry and A. P. Wichmann. Negative Team — Charles Coolidge and Ralph McWhinnie. The first debate was held at Logan, Utah, against Utah Agricultural College, on March 8th. The other two were held on March 22nd, against Denver University, at Laramie, and against Colorado Agricultural College, at Fort Collins. Opponents Side Utah Agricultural College. Negative Won by U. A. C. Colorado Agricultural College Affirmative Won by C. A. C. Denver University Negative Won by Denver -(10) George C. Alteberry Charles Coolidge ...... ■;- ■■-■■■:■■■■■■Ralph McWhinnie Arthur Wichmann the wra Wo men s Debates O ) )| u W n t ) t n YOMING UNIVERSITY took part the second year in the Triangular Debating League for Women with Greeley Normal and Colorado Agricultural College. The affirmative met the Colorado Agricultural College at Laramie. This debate was won by C. A. C. by a two-to- one decision. The negative debated at Greeley, where the decision also was two to one in favor of the State Teachers ' College. The Tri- angular Debates were held on February 1 5th. WOMEN DEBATERS Against Greeley — Stella Kellogg and Winifred Dillingham. Against Colorado Agricultural College — Nettie Potts and Martha Marquis. Question: Resolved, That the Allies ' terms of peace at the close of the present war should provide for disarmament of the individual nations under some form of an In- ternational Peace League. the wra the. wro. «11 I; n mwm§mmmm W- p r fr «m tf% ' ' i 9 THE. WYQ the. wra Alpha Xau Omega R. Alden Avent Leslie S. Crawford Neal T. Boyd Founded at the Virginia Military Institute, September 11,1 865. Wyoming Gamma Psi established March 24, 1913. Colors: Azure and Gold. Flower: White Tea Rose. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Captain Beverly C. Daly Wilbur A. Hitchcock FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1918 Ben H. Appleby Herm an Timm 1919 Lloyd A. Buchanan 1920 Glendon D. Laird Robert H. Burns Charles B. Coolidge 1921 Milward L. Simpson Carroll A. Whitmer S. Glenn Parker Robert C. Ingham Clarence A. Jensen Archie C. Heigert Richard H. Butler F. Kelly Dukes Frederick W. Layman PLEDGE Arthur Essert hRATRES IN THE MILITARY SERVICE U. S. Grant D. T. Bennitt E. L. Sederlin C. L. Irwin F. S. Sutphin D. C. Foote J. F. Wilson J. F. Davis J. L. Laughlin C. A. Jones P. Bowman W. B. Cobb C. S. Greenbaum L. N. Rogers E. E. Payson L. V. Simmons C. H. Bastian J. T. Peterson D. G. Shingler T. S. McCraken B. W. Marston L. S. Powell S. Hitchcock C. E. Stott S. N. Brooks J.F.C oons R. B. David E. N. Hitchcock B. C. Daly W. B. Sammon J. T. Jensen R. M. Immel the wra THE V YQ, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Founded at the University of Alabama, 1856. Wyoming Alpha Chapter established January 29th, 1917. Colors: Purple and Gold. Flower: Violet. FRATRE IN FACULTATE Edward Deane Hunton FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE Varner E. Ericksen Arthur J. Jones Oscar Larson John W. Sodergreen L. Dewey Anderson Roger J. Cottle C. William Penland, Jr. Fritz Burckert Homer Soule Harry Sheldon Ralph W. Holland Art G. Burckert Arthur C. Dennison Charles C. Young J. Harold Hicks Herman Bath George Grant Claire Tucker PLEDGES Bert Miller Terry Biglow S. H. Knight Fulton D. Bellamy Everett L. Knight Harry J. Craig Morgan V. Spicer Albert R. Mau Clyde P. Matteson Robert M. Anderson Arden W. Godwin J. George Wheeler Walter Storrie Dean F. Covert Herbert E. Drew C. D. Moir John A. Smith Walter P. Smith FRATRES IN SERVICE Andrew W. Willis Varner E. Ericksen Arthur J. Jones Lyle A. Asay Marshall M. Feris E. Blake Partridge Gus P. Modlish Allen V. Laughlin John T. Pierce John A. Stafford John E. Anderson Henry R. Bray Donald A. McDougall Arthur J. Nelson A. G. Burckert Sam Spicer the ' wra the wrg. Pi Beta Pki Founded 1867 at Monmouth College. Wyoming Alpha Chapter established 1910. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Dr. Grace R. Hebard, Iowa Zeta FRATRES IN URBE Margaret Mullison Mrs. Faville Mrs. Cady Eugenia Neer Miriam Doyle Mrs. Hitchcock Mary Hollenback Mrs. Gottschalk Mrs. Bellamy Alice Harwood, Minnesota Alpha Dorothy Downey Beatrice Dana Ellen Greenbaum Agnes Avent Margaret Longshore FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1918 Lois Butler Hilda Kline Mary Aber 1919 Maude Avent Carrie Hitchcock Ursula Tanner Sidney George Betty Beck Norah Banner Blanche Evans Mary Ethel Holliday 192 1920 Virginia Miller Meredith Langheldt Gladys Hasbrouck Ana Mullison Isabelle Whelan Catharine Dunn Helen Banner Mary Clifford Winifred Dillingham THE WYQ Delta Delta Delta Founded 1888, Eoston University. Colors: Silver, Gold, and Blue. Theta Eta Chapter installed in 1913. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Amy Gardner (Simpson Delta) FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1918 Marie Milligan 1919 Edith Peters Mary Osmond Katherine Cloos Ruth Nash Leoti Patrick 1920 Esther Watson Ann Coughlin Grace Park 1921 Cladys Gardner Mildred Johnson Margaret Grant Katherine Hall Helen Holliday FRATRES IN URBE Margaret Coughlin Edith Stirling Helen Johnson Evelyn Johnson THE. WYQ. THE WYQ K appa Delt; Pounded at Virginia State Normal, October 23, 1897. Rho Chapter established 1914 FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE Emily Anderson Norma Fisher May Garner Ada Newsom Margaret Gibson Amy Matheson Stella Kellogg Delia Crosbie Mary Ch Jennie Ayers Ethel Eyer Ruth Pickering Elizabeth Steele Helen Gaensslen Esther McNally Dorothy Goodrich Mary Miller Opal Crawford eese Bernice Ewel FRATRES IN URBE Mabel Lauk Alice Ames -(11) Gamma Tneta Chi Founded October 23, 1916 Colors: Cherry, Red, and Black. Flower: Red Carnation. HONORARY MEMBER AND SPONSOR S. K. Loy PATRONS A. E. Bellis J. F. Groves FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE In Graduate Standing — Rameri C. Lauk Arthur G. Wichmann 1918 920 Harry W. Titus Ralph E. McWhinnie Walter D. Perry 1921 J. E. Warfield Laurence M. Smith Albert M. Smith Julius C. Galligar Robert H. Allen Glen S. Burton George R. Rhinehart PLEDGES Leonard B. Shaw C. Sanford Baker IN THE NATIONAL MILITARY SERVICE R. C. Talbot. ' 19 C. H. Edwards, ' 20 M. R. Ogden, ' 19 C. E. Walker, ' 20 Glen S. Macbeth, ' 19 -(H) the. wro. Inter-Fraternity Council Chairman C. B. Ridgaway Secretary Dorothy D. Downey Top Row — Art G. Burckert, Arthur Jones, Lloyd A. Buchanan, Captain Beverly C. Daly, Ben Appleby. Middle Row — Margaret Coughlin, Mabel E. Lauk, Dorothy Downey, Prof. Ridg- away, F. S. Burrage, Miriam Doyle, Jennie Ayers. Bottom Row — Marie Milligan, Stella Kellogg. Absent — Katherine Cloos, E. Deane Hunton, Agnes Avent. the. wra Woman s Pan-Hellenic of the University ox Wyoming Chairman Marie Milligan Secretary Stella Kellogg Top Row — Mrs. Lauk, Edith Peters, and Agnes Avent. Second Row — Margaret Mullison, Dorothy Downey, and Margaret Coughlin. First Row — Stella Kellogg, Marie Milligan, and Amy Matheson. The purpose of this organization is to create harmonious feeling and action between the three sororities on this campus. The delegates are as follows: Delta Delta Delta — Marie Milligan, Edith Peters, and Margaret Coughlin. Pi Beta Phi — Dorothy Downey, Agnes Avent, and Margaret Mullison. Kappa Delta — Stella Kellogg, Amy Matheson, and Mrs. Lauk. the wro, t? «; (TTr THE WYQ SOCIETY COMMENCEMENT WEEK In spite of the fact that several of the Senior boys had commenced serving Uncle Sam, and were miles away from the scene of their college commencement, those present partic- ipated in the usual amount of festivity. First, the Inter-Fraternity Luncheon was given. All the Frats on the campus endeavored to make this a successful and enjoyable party; therefore, nothing was lacking im the motive, and if we can judge from the looks and actions of those present, nothing was lacking in the luncheon itself. After the luncheon everyone enjoyed a matinee dance. President and Mrs. Duniway gave a reception to the Seniors. When we say Prexy and Mrs. Duniway give a reception we say it is the best that can be given. They have won and sustained this reputation in their several years spent at the University and this reception only added to their laurels. The usual commencement exercises took place, and those who graduated felt that their commencement had been the best in the history of Wyoming. THE JUNIOR PROM The Ninth Annual Junior Prom, given December 20, was such that everyone ad- mitted this year ' s Juniors were the luckiest of classes. For in place of searching for Oriental costumes to adorn the Gym, it was the privilege of this class to decorate with the flags of the Allies. At the end of the Gym hung Old Glory , proud of his silken stars and stripes, and the flags of the Allies on either side. Immense flags hung from the balcony, and the cozy corners were cut off by flags. The grand march was led by the Juniors, the guests following. At the close of the march the programs were handed out. These were white, with only one decoration, The Flag , in the center. A very appropriate war supper was served by the Junior girls, after whch dancing was resumed until the wee sma ' hours . The tired couples, upon leaving, voted this the most successful of all the Junior Proms. RECEPTION TO NEW STUDENTS A reception and informal dance was given for the benefit of the new students on the first Friday of the school year. Each one had a tag on, bearing his name and the class to which he belonged. Needless to say, everybody got acquainted with everybody else, and the dance amply served its purpose, that of renewng old friendships and forming new ones. FRESHMAN DANCE On the evening of October 1 7th the Freshmen entertained the Uni students at tneir ' annual hop . Although the Freshies may be green in some things, they surely know how to entertain. Pep is the specialty of this jolly class, which was fully demon- strated on this gala night. Rah! Rah! Rah! Freshies . ALPHA TAU OMEGA FORMAL. On the evening of January second the A. T. O. Fraternity gave a farewell dance in honor of the boys going to the Third Officers ' Training Camp. This was also their formal dance, and the Gym was artistically decorated in the fraternity colors. A large fraternity symbol hung at one end of the hall. The coziest of cozy corners invited the guests to rest. Everyone enjoyed themselves immensely, and we are sure the boys when over there will remember their farewell dance. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON BALL One of the most enjoyable dances of the season was given by the S. A. E. Fraternity. The floor was its very best, the music entrancing, and everyone caught the spirit of festiv- ity. Punch was served in a daintily decorated booth. The end came far too soon — even though it was some beyond midnight — and the happy couples declared the evening delightfully spent and the S. A. E. ' s royal hosts. DELTA DELTA DELTA DANCE The Tri Delts proved themselves excellent hostesses on this occasion. Forty couples were present, and the Gym took special pains to look its prettiest that evening. Flags of the nations formed the decorations. At one end of the Gym three large Deltas studded with electric lights — which peeped out from a background of pines — afforded the only iight tor the dreamy moonlight waltzes. Punch was served during the evening by a dainty little high school girl. Everyone telt his besc, looited his best, and reported having had the best of times. THE WYQ MERRIMENTS Dorothy Dcwney in History, explaining a contract: If I should make a contract with Sam, here, and then should decide that I didn ' t want to keep it, could I break it? Prep: No, he ' d sue you for breach of contract. ' Mary A. : We were down to see Judge Tidball this afternoon and after we had been there a while several visitors came in. Beatrice D. : Well, I ' m glad we got there while he was empty. Simp, at Hoyt Hall, open house day, looking at a picture of Winged Victory Gosh, there ' s another fellow that ' s been playin ' football! Babe closing cabinet meeting of Y. W. C. A.: ' Let us repeat the Lord ' s Prayer. I think we have time for it. Miss Abbot, in English I: Mr. Essert, what do you have the most trouble with? Essert: Cases. Quill Club having its picture taken Cooldge: To bad we can ' t get a picture of Mary C. ' s giggle. Result of food lecture class — Katherine, when Esther asked if Greece is one of our allies: No, grease is a fat. At the Men ' s Commons and speaking of college subjects: Miles: That subject (psychology) will make a person nuts quicker than anything else I know of. Sholl: How many years of it did they give you? Erickson, sitting at the table between Sholl and Miles: Ah, I am a rose between two thorns. Penland: Nix, rather a jackass between two bales of hay. R. Sholl: I have had all the agriculture I want. Hartman: The trouble with you, Russell, is that you never had it; you were ex- posed to it, but did not take it. - T . the. wra Dr. Martin in Bacteriology class: Buchanan, what is a saprophyte? Buchanan, thinking of other things: It s a kind of stone that rings are made of. Albert Day at the musical given by Lucille Stevenson: I want to hear that song, One Fine Day, as it must mean me. Sody: Say, Cutie, isn ' t it funny that the roughnecks get the best girls? J. H. : Now you are trying to flatter me. Simp, (new case) : And believe me, she ' s some girl. Denny: Clever? Simp.: Oh, very! She ' s got brains enough for two. Denny: Just the girl for you, then. Betty: Spike: Betty: for you. Spike, stop using that dreadful language. Why, Shakespeare uses it. If that is who you room with, you better move. He is no fit companion w THE WYQ Another ftomeo an4 Jik it t V ien Esist meets Vest Day Z)rea.mS Eric a i Rtxssei TflT Greets fo or Sa. m. Parker to Isabelle in dim cozy corner at dance: Here, Isabelle, let ' s take this chair. Ruth picks up magazine and reads title, The Farmer ' s Wife. Esther: What? Miss Mayer (in orchestra practice) : Ann, have you got two bows? Ann (indignant): No! Chuck brings me. Ruth, addressing a letter to someone , writes: Mrs. Joe L. Robinson. Have we missed something? D. Calling M.: Central: Number, please? D.: Is Mary Osmond there? Young: Gee, I ' ve got an idea. Smith: Be good to it, kid; it ' s in a strange place. She: What would you do if a girl offered you both cheeks to kiss? He: I would hesitate a long time between the two. Layman at the Connor Hotel: Waiter: Table d ' hote, sir? Layman: What ' s a tabledote? Waiter: Course dinner, sir. Layman: Not for me; I git all the course grub elsewhere; when I get downtown I want something a bit fancy. Prof. Berry in Shorthand class: I wish you would pay a little attention. Gladys: I am paying as little as I can. Fredonia: What are you doing, Myrtle? Learning something? Myrtle: No, I am just listening to you. G. : Sometimes you appear manly, and sometimes effeminate. Why is that? H. : Well, you see, half of my ancestors were men and the other half women. 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B-?r?r = 5 ' era CU 3 O ft ■a n Cu o ? n O 3 O n 3 ft IT) o a. c n S ' 3 3 n, n n 3 3 CU o r 3 S- ' o n ft cu CO o ' 3 CU CU 3 ft -O rr X . 3 3 3 Cu rniH ft Cu •a ft c CU 3 o ! r-r fu Cu pa 2 s « 6 O 3= c 3 2. era q_ Cu ft -g ft B 3 era t-3 -: O ft 3 re 3 co 3 O X5 ft CO CO ft 5 CO Sh O ft 3 ft o 3 ft O C H- 2 B SPP? -; ft ft co C — ; 3 S-J5 E ft a- . ft CO CU m 3 pa o ft CD o CO c ft -. a ft o C -! ft 0- 3 Cu Su ft sr cu CU ft D_ Cu 3 D- era rt S B 3 n « 3 O Cu BA ■rt cj- si ft ft S 3 ro o o Co £ ft X- Eg ' 3 o B S-r ft ' 3 „ O cr n to s ft zr: -T: ft ft X3 r re r co S ft c ft ft o ! ft c d; 3 sO rT O ft CO ft O 3 n ■I ri O Cu o 3 ft ft 3 T3 ft o o ' - - ro ft o ; ro o u - tj 3T ro Cu ft j 5 ' O 5=- • 3 3rr 3 g cu _ CO = 3 B CO 3 3 8- ft J- Pa ft 2 ft a- Co C OQ Dft c o 3 pa m o -— H CO H n po O Co m z o po o CO 0 H r ai Parker (soliloquizing) : It ' s such a pleasure to be alone, especially when your best ;irl is along. C. B. C. He told me last night that I was the prettiest girl he had ever seen. Oh, that ' s nothing; he said the same to me a year ago. I know that, but as one grows older, one ' s taste improves, you know. PROVERBS Popular slang snatches no grades in English. The tardy bell waits for no man. Play and the Senior plays with you; study and you study alone. Wise men say little; it ' s easy to be wise. A wandering brain gathers no knowledge. Never pledge a student ' s ability by the amount of books he carries, some girl ' s.) (They may be Freshman: Look at ' em in all that mud! How will they ever get clean? ' Hicks: What do you suppose the scrub team is for? -(12) If serenading won ' t bring a girl out nowadays, try an auto horn. She: Isn ' t it strange that the length of a man ' s arm is equal to the circumference of a girl ' s waist? He: Is that so? Let ' s get a string and see. A Freshman happened to come from a town that had passed the boom stage. On his arrival at the University, he met a former resident of the town. Well, how is Rawlins? asked the former resident. Freshman: Oh! It ' s an awful place now. Cullen, he dropped dead on the postomce steps Saturday evening and they didn ' t find his body until Wednesday. DO YOU KNOW— That if you take long steps your shoes will last longer? That you are not the whole cheese? 1 hat the wisest are not highly educated? That you have a bone in your head? That two and two make five? That Mildred is fond of a Bath? That the world was not conquered in a day? That all Cheese is not green? That late to bed and early to rise, makes a man sleepy with heavy eyes? Ask AI. That idleness will kill time quicker than occupation? That A. Bell is very quiet? That All Fools ' Day is coming? That electricity is created by friction- — there ' s where the rub comes in? Uni one-step: You go stealing along like you didn ' t have no bones in your legs, and had a Wyoming cactus stuck on your bare heel. Prof. Ridgaway: Can ' t you sit down on your chair; you will fall and break your head some day? Timm: Ah, nothing would come from it. Denny: I was at Ringling Bros. ' show last night. Farmer: So was I. Denny: I was looking for you. What was the number of your cage? -(12) ■• . Jic Zi ims itit afxi ) i the wra Sir, your daughter has promised to marry me. Well, don ' t come to me for sympathy. You might know that something would happen with you hanging around five nights a week. Krueger: Say, Burrage, what is the best way to strike a crank for an ad in the Annual? Burrage: Strike him first with a club. J. H. : I wish Providence had made me a man. U. T. : Maybe he has, but you haven ' t found him yet. I vants some powder — vat you call? Vace powder. Mennen ' s? No, no; veeman ' s! It is for mine vife. run. Waterman (shaking his fountain pen) : You have no idea how easy these pens Customer (applying a blotter to his pants leg) : I have an inkling. Musical Query: Another thing we do not understand about a grand opera or- chestra is why all the fiddles finish at the same time when they are playing different tunes. DIALOGUE ON CHRISTMAS EVE Cady: Gladys, will a long stocking hold all you want for Christmas? Gladys: No, but a pair of socks will. THE SAMARITAN Owner: Here, what are you doing? Don ' t you know you are not allowed to take fish out of this water? Penland (three hours without a bite) : I ' m not taking them out, I ' m feeding them. NOT HIS BUNCH A Sunday School teacher was quizzing her class of boys en the strength of their de- sire for righteousness. All those who wish to go to Heaven, she said, please stand. All got to their feet but one small boy. Why, Johnny, exclaimed the shocked teacher, do you mean to say that you don ' t want to go to Heaven? No, ma ' am, replied Johnny promptly, not if that bunch is going. the. wra ®Jk$$ M FREAKS , ' Z « :  if ■Prof. Soule: Give the principal parts of the Latin verb ' occido ' . M. C. : O kid, o kiddo, dearie, o kiss-um She: I can ' t find my bathing suit anywhere. He: See if you have it on. Aren ' t some of these hats women wear absurd? Yes, and yet when some people put them on they do look so appropriate. A PAIR OF THEM Father: He looks like a fool. But, Papa, he has asked me to marry him. He has? Well, don ' t ever tell me that I can ' t size up people. Prof. Dale: If I ' m not mistaken, Miss Nash, I heard you talking during my lecture. Miss Nash: You are mistaken, Prof. Dale; I never talk in my sleep. He: I wonder how it is that I can never manage to be alone with you? She: It must be an act of Providence. AT CAMP PRESIDIO Knight: Come on, Craig, let ' s join the cavalry. Craig: No. Great change in me. Knight: Why? Craig: When the general says retreat, I don ' t want a horse tied on to me. SEVEN AGES OF MAN First Age — Sees the earth. Second Age — Wants it. Third Age — Hustles to get it. Fourth Age — Decides to be satisfied with one-half of it. Fifth Age — Becomes still more moderate. Sixth Age — Now content to po:sess a six-by-two strip of it. Seventh Age — Gets the strip. She: Is Gertie Smithers a friend of yours? Friend: Yes. What has she been saying about me? THE WYQ, ' A kerfS tke For J f 3 S3 Please ? 0 £ of many Un Known Who led the Army in that recent expedition? I did, replied General Tamale. I thought the attack was led by General Concarne. It was I that prevented great loss of life. He led them going forward, but I led them coming back. Ingham: What is the hardest work you ever did? Butler: Getting my job at the Uni office, and the next hardest is the work keeping it from being taken away from me. Mr. Newlywed: Did you sew the button on my coat, Darling? Mrs. Newlywed: No, love; I couldn ' t find the button, so I just sewed up the buttonhole. Esther: Oh, Farmer! to think of you coming to ask father ' s consent in such shabby clothes. Farmer: That ' s all right. I had one suit ruined. Mr. Burrage: Shall we talk or dance? Miss Whitcomb: I ' m very tired; let us dance. B. B.: Oh, sir! Catch that man! He wanted to kiss me. A. M. : That ' s all right. There will be another one along in a minute. For any informaton about lollypopping — see Vass. F. H. to Fritz: You are all right in your place, but I ' ve never seen you in your place yet. When you cannot make ends meet, fill up the gap by standing in it yourself. Coroner ' s Verdict: Inquest over man found dead in room hanged to bed post by suspenders — Deceased came to his death by coming home full and mistaking him- self for his pants. Doctor: I don ' t like your heart action; you have had some trouble with angina pectoris. Laird: You may be right, doctor, but that was not her name. the wrg, JAILLESS CRIMES Killing time. Hanging pictures. Stealing bases. Shooting the chutes. Choking off the speaker. Running over a new song. Smothering a laugh. Setting fire to a heart. Knifing a performance. Murdering the Englsh language. — Judge. Denny: When I was a boy the doctor said if I didn ' t stop smoking cigarettes I would become feeble-minded. Mary: Well, why didn ' t you stop. Who was that tough looking chap I saw you with today, Hicks? Be careful, Parker! That was my twin brother. By Jove, old chap, forgive me! I ought to have known. Larson: A fellow told me I looked like you. Grant: Where is he? I ' d like to punch his head. Larson: I killed him. Coolidge (applying for a position) : Have you an opening for me, sir? Old Gent: Yes, there is one behind you. Shut it as you go out. An Englishman, guest at one of our western hotels, went to the office and asked for a glass of ice water, which was given him. In a short time he repeated his errand, and quickly after made a third and fourth call with the same request. Do you drink so much water? asked the clerk. No, replied the guest, the lace curtain in my room is on fire and I ' m trying to put it out. Special peculiarity of Babe — Smells her watch to tell time. Jane: So you have chosen a Farmer? Esther: What have you to say? Isn ' t yours C. D. ? -■IL • ft i I %$$ $ fX For information for rules of etiquette when your girl from home arrives unexpect- edly, and you have a steady date at the Uni, see Arthur Curtis Dennison. Buck: Miss Catherine — or Catherine, I mean — I ' ve known you long enough to drop the ' Miss ' , haven ' t I? Catherine (fixing her lovely eyes upon him with a meaning gaze) : Yes, I think you have. What prefix do you wish to substitute? The Wise One: Diogenes didn ' t even try to find an honest woman. — Colum- bia Jester, Heigert (sighng) : Ah! If you only gave me the least hope, I— Effie: I have been giving you the least I ever gave to any man. C. D. M. : I ' m smoking a terrible lot of cigars lately. Jane: You ' re right, if that ' s one of them. Fitz: My plate is damp. Mrs. Fitz: Hush! That ' s your soup. They serve small portions in war times. Simpson, on basketball trip, to Conductor: Is this Noah ' s Ark full yet? Conductor: Yes, all but the monkey; jump in. Al Smith (making out his schedule) : I want to take commercial law. What time does it come? Prof. Hunton: Eight o ' clock. Al: Nothing doing, that ' s too early for me. THE. WYQ, ire? 7-1 1 1  T JUNIOR CALENDAR Sept. 25. Registration Day. 28. General jam Freshmen reception. Oct. 2. First love scramble of the season — Sophs and Freshies. 2. Senior class elects officers. 2. A. T. O. ' s give smoker. 4. Juniors elect officers. 4. Kappa Delta reception. 5. Pi Phi reception. 5. S. A. E. ' s give smoker. 6. Football game. The Cowboys round up Colorado Aggies to a score of 6-0. 6. Football dance. 9. President and Mrs. Nelson entertain the faculty at a reception. 9. Delta Delta Delta entertains for Esther Johnson. 1 0. Football game, Wyoming vs. Boulder, 7-0. 10. A. S. U. W. dance. 12. Freshies fail to whitewash the W and war ensues. 1 3. Cowboys lose to Mines, with score 1 8-3. Football dance. 1 5. Members of A. S. U. W. elected. 15. Y. W. C. A. pack Christmas boxes for soldier boys. 1 5. Dr. Woodbury speaks in Assembly. 16. Y. W. C. A. weiner roast F-U-N 16. S. A. E. ' s give informal dance. 1 7. Freshmen give annual hop . 18. Kappa Deltas visited by National President. 24. Cowboys play Utah at Salt Lake. Score: Utah 14, Wyoming 0. 25. Cowboys lose to Utah Aggies. 27. Tri Deltas ' reception. 31. Hallowe ' en. Nuf said. 3 1 . Freshmen caps in evidence. Nov. 3. A. S. U. W. football dance following Cowboys ' victory over Teachers , 7-0. 17. Freshmen Day. Stunts?!! 1 7. Tri Deltas entertain at a luncheon. 1 9. Representative Mondell speaks at Assembly. 25. Pi Phis give cooky shine and pledge Blanche Evans, Meredith Langheldt, and Gladys Hasbrouck. the. wra N ov, D ec. an. 26. 26. 28. 28. 29. 1. 6 7. 7. 9. 13. 15. 16. 20. 2. 12. 14. 16. 17. 18. 19. 19. 21. 23. 24. 25. 26. 26. 28. 28. Feb. 1 . 4. 4. 9. 11. Kappa Delta pledges Ruth Pickering, Elizabeth Steele, and May Garner. President and Mrs. Nelson entertain Freshmen. Tri Deltas celebrate Founders ' Day with a luncheon given at Hoyt Hall. S. A. E. ' s give informal dance. Thanksgiving Day. Cowboys meet Greeley at Cheyenne. Score, 1 8-0. A. T. O. ' s give Thanksgiving dinner and dance. Home Economies ' Get Together luncheon. University Band gives concert and dance. Pi Phis pledge Cadie Dunn, Margaret Longshore, Ann Mullison, and Meri- deth Langheldt. Stevenson gives concert. Basketball series ends. Seniors beat Sophs for first place. When Johnny Comes Marching Home , given by A. S. U. W. Music De- partment. When Johnny Comes Marching Home , given for soldiers at Y. M. C. A. hut in Cheyenne. Ninth Annual Junior Prom. A. T. O. ' s give farewell dance for boys of their chapter going to Third Of- ficers ' Training Camp. Tri Deltas entertain at Stunt Party. Service Flag presented to the University by A. S. U. W. Kappa Deltas entertain at dinner. Basketball season opens. Wyoming plays Aggies at Fort Collins. Team plays University of Colorado at Boulder. Team plays Colorado College at Colorado Springs. U. H. E. A. dance. Senator Diers speaks in Assembly. University entertains at dinner for Field Faculty. University Faculty Carnival. First semester ends. Open house at Hoyt Hall. Pi Phis give dinner at home of Dorothy Downey. Registration. S. A. E. formal. Common Bid Day. Death of Clarence Jensen brings sorrow to all University students. Tri Delts pledge. Basketball in Gym, Cowboys vs. Colorado Teachers. Score, 27-23. Third number of University Artists ' Course. Heniot Levy, pianist. the wra Feb. M ar. 12. 15. 15. 16. 16. 19. 20. 21. 22. 22. 25. 2. 7. 9. 16. 16. 18. 20. 22. 23. 29. 29. 31. April 4. 12-14. 12. 19. 19. Lincoln ' s birthday, a holiday. Girls ' Triangular Debate. S. A. E. give smoker. Pi Phis hold an initiation and pledging party. Servant in the House , given for benefit of Y. W. C. A. Phi Upsilon Omncon mitiaticn. Y. W. C, A. installation. Band concert. Washington ' s birthday, a holiday. Tri Deltas ' initiation and banquet. Gym party. Kappa Deltas ' initiation. Quill Club ' s initiation. Pi Phi initiation. Tri Deltas initiate. S. A. E. gives informal dance. University Music Faculty gives Artists ' Course. Food course commences under the directon of Miss Whitcomb. Men ' s Triangular Debate. State High School Basketball Tournament ends. Preps win first place; Laramie High, second; and Powell, thud. University of Wyoming entertains Math. Convention. Easter vacation. Easter. The death of J. E. Warfield comes as a sad blow to his numerous University friends. Y. W. C. A. Conference. Tri Deltas give formal. A. S. U. W. gives play, The College Widow . End of The Wyo calendar year. THE WYQ, £ En R Lh d_b (Li [FT FnIi dj -(13) the wra IF YOU WANT WHAT YOU WANT WHEN YOU WANT IT LOOK THROUGH THE FOLLOWING ADVERTISEMENTS AND YOU WILL KNOW THE PLACE TO BUY r- w E salute Wyoming ' s gallant sons who are so nobly upholding the honor of our State and their Alma Mater in the bloodstained fields of France. Our hearts are at the disposal of her fair daughters who are so ably seconding their efforts in lines as necessary for the successful accomp- lishment of our Country ' s Aims. i The Intermountain Railway, Light and Power Co. -(13) A SHOE STORE FOR- STUDENTS In fact a Shoe Store for anyone, for there is no class or type of Shoe that is in regular demand that the Boot Shop does not carry. You will like the Boot Shop and you will like our Shoes. Your next pair of Shoes should come from the Bcot Shop. You will be a steady cus- tomer after that. BOOT R D SHOP Shoes and Hosiery The Model Market Co. W. H. Graham, Pres. Inc. $25,000 MEATS, FISH, FRUITS AND VEGETABLES -f Phone 1 1 4 Laramie, Wyo. r Pacific Model Market R. K. Graham, Prop. Inc. $25,000 The Best Cuts of Beef, Pork, Mutton, Lamb and Veal HOME DRESSED POULTRY Always have on hand Fresh Vegetables and Fresh Fruits Phone No. 7 t— The San-Tox Store FOR DRUGS H At Your Service All-Ways a CENTRAL DRUG COMPANY ' ■? f The Furniture Exchange L Laramie ' s Stork Furniture Store ® Rugs, Linoleums, Stoves Ranges and Furniture Typewriters, Phonographs We want you to visit our store whether you buy or not. You are always welcome B. F. EARLY, Prop. COWDENS BARBER SHOP ■ ESS ' Br? f iP it | y iifrf ' w B l m%r ■B. ' PiPw ' JC.3. ' pp 1 f J 1 First-Class Work Guaranteed Student Trade Solicited I I 1 Thornburg Street i i Do not allow eye strain to make you feel sick, tired and out of sorts. For every twinge or blur of the eyes there ' s a reason ; and my rigid examination of the eyes will reveal it. Once I know the cause it ' s an easy matter to correct the trouble with right lenses fitted for Glasses or Spectacles. Why not be helped today? CARTER, Refractionist 121 Thornburg u— • Where the better goods are W OODFORD CLOTHING CO. D • HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER MARX CLOTHES AND WALK-OVER SHOES This year when Economy means so much, shop where you can buy it for less. Join the National Army of J. C. PENNEY CO. SATISFIED CUSTOMERS ' Incorporated 197 BUSY STORES 2 1 4 South Second Street Laramie, Wyo. THE LARAMIE LAUNDRY ABRAHAM BROS., Props. Clothes Cleaned and Pressed, $1.00 Dry Cleaning a Specialty Steam Pressing Kid Gloves Cleaned i JOHN WATT (Successor to E. J. Lehman) Clothing and Furnishing Goods Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, Etc. Money to Loan ® 2 1 6 Second St. Laramie, Wyo. Sfyieplus Clothes $21 and $25 FRANK J. TERRY TRADE MARK REGISTERED ' Each grade the same price the nation over ' WE SELL Omaha Corn-Fed Beef, Swift Premium Hams and Bacon We carry only the best that the market affords in Vegetables Fruits Grand Avenue Market 2 1 5 Grand Ave. Phone 56 MAY BROS. THE PAINTERS DEALERS IN WALL PAPER AND Painters ' Supplies ® 301 Third Street ' COMFORT One of the watchwords of the home. Good Plumbing is conducive to comfort. We sup- ply it in Fixtures and Workmanship. a B. F. ASHLEY Inman Plumbing Shop SI 406 South Second St. Phone 85W t— ■ii r—-- Buy a Motorcycle! Buy a Bicycle! Everybody ' s Doin ' It! We always have a stock of slight- ly used Motorcycles and Bicycles at prices that are big bargains. Supplies and Accessories Albany County Agents Harley-Davidson Motorcycles LARAMIE CYCLE NOVELTY WORKS 4 I 6 Second Street .— «. .., The Wyoming Creamery Company Is one of the leading home industries of this community. It merits and should have the support of all our citizens. Tell your grocer he must send you Overland C reamery Butter and insist on getting it. The Creamery makes a specialty of Fancy Ice Creams A. W. STERZBACH, Mgr. Corner Third and Garfield. Phone I 1 HAVE YOUR SHOES SHINED AND U— i POLISHED AT LITTLE JAMES We clean all kinds of shoes Corner Third and Grand BUY YOUR TEA GARDEN Preserves Je llies AT THE Star Grocery Company i . r For the Porch See our Porch Furniture Depart- ment now attractively displayed with Wicker Chairs, Rockers, Set- tees, Tables, Tea Carts, Porch Swings and Hammocks. ► i Laramie Furniture Company •— — 7Ae Laramie Snoe Hospital C. A. BALLEWEG Shoe Repairing While You Wait 202 Third Street First Shop South of Postoffice When You Look for SNAPPY COATS, SUITS, HATS, GLOVES, CORSETS, UNDERMUSLINS OR NOVELTIES AT RIGHT PRICES Call and See Our Lines BLAIR TRAVELLE HARRY J. TAYLOR NOTARY PUBLIC REAL ESTATE SURETY BONDS FIRE INSURANCE AND LIFE INSURANCE Converse Building THE DELUXE BARBER SHOP W. J. We use the best materials with expert workmanship ASCHENBRENNER, Prop. 103 Thornburg Watches Jewelry Periodicals Stationery i CHAS. L. CLARK Watchmaker and Jeweler 206 So. Second Street Laramie, Wyo. U. of W. U. of W. Jewelry Pins and Pillows Up-to-Date Shoe Shop W. A. Anderson, Prop. Repairing While You Wait Promptness Assured Best Material and Workmanship Factory Shoe-Stitcher Used All Work Guaranteed 207 Third St. .. L. LOOK FOR THIS SIGN AUTO GOODS CO., Laramie. E. E. FITCH Real Estate, Insurance, Loans, Notary Public Certified Abstracts, Surety Bonds HARTFORD AGENT Corner Grand Avenue and Third Street Laramie, Wyo.  «i f  -—- — THE WHITE PiOTLTSE Corner Second Street and Grand Avenue EVERYTHING READY TO WEAR FOR MEN, WOMEN and CHILDREN Not Cheap — Just Good Merchandise — Not Expensive t .-.«. § THE UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING COLLEGES AND DIVISIONS 1. The College of Liberal Arts — 1 . The Division of Letters and Sciences. 2. The Division of Commerce. 3 The Division of Music. II. The College of Agriculture — 1 . Resident Division. (a) Agriculture. (b) Home Economics. 2. Extension Division. 3. The Experiment Station. III. The College of Engineering — 1 . The Division of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering. 2. The Division of Civil and Irrigation Engineering. 3. The Division of Mining Engineering. IV. The College of Education — 1 . The State Normal School. 2. Secondary Education, (a) The University High School. Military Science and Tactics. The Summer School. Non-Resident Instruction — 1 . Division of Correspondence Study. 2. Traveling Libraries. 3. Lecture Courses. t THIS IS AN ADVERTISEMENT Well here we are, folks, in The Annual — There ' s plenty of work besides manual; We ' ve been sweating for hours preparing this ad., Torn up dozens of copies because they were bad. What we wanted to say at the very start Was we ' re sorry to see the old Grads depart ; But we know they will boost the Wyoming Schools And speak a good word for the great THREE RULES r 1 QUALITY GOODS IS WHAT COUNTS It takes no more labor to produce the Quality Goods than it does a cheap grade. Nor does it take any more to pay the freight. If you want the best on the market get the SOLITAIRE GOODS SOLD BY The Gem City Grocery Co. Our Motto: Not how cheap, but how good Corner Second Street and Grand Avenue LARAMIE, WyO. THE WYQ o UR advice to young people is, Start in saving when you are young ; it will surely come in handy when you are older . OUR SAVINGS DEPARTMENT IS FOR THIS PURPOSE OPEN AN ACCOUNT TODAY FIRST STATE BANK OF LARAMIE i The Laramie Water Company ' s Completed System of Reservoirs and Canals Covers Fifty Thousand Acres of Irrigable Land in the Vicinity of Laramie, Wyoming PRICE LOW Write or Call for Particulars TERMS EASY THE LARAMIE WATER COMPANY First National Bank Building LARAMIE, — :— — :— — :— WYOMING -4 f« SURPLUS MONEY Any person who has a little surplus money should at once deposit it with the FIRST NATIONAL BANK, where the money will be safe- guarded in every way and at the same time earn a fair rate of interest. We cordially invite deposits in any amount and it is our aim to render careful, painstaking service. FIRST NATIONAL BANK LARAMIE, WYOMING UNITED STATES DEPOSITARY Capital, $100,000.00 Surplus, $100,000.00 Resources over Two and One-quarter Millions The Laramie Republican Company PRINTERS BINDERS PUBLISHERS OF ■THE LARAMIE REPUBLICAN DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKLY THE 1919 IVYO was printed and bound completely in our plant. ' 1 . H. Simpson H. Hegewald H. R. Ingham THE LARAMIE GROCERY CO. GROCERIES— STAPLE AND FANCY HARDWARE, IMPLEMENTS AND QUEENSWARE THE HOME OF RICHELIEU CANNED GOODS AND WHITE HOUSE COFFEE YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED ' WHERE QUALITY TELLS AND PRICE SELLS Phones 345-346, connecting to all Departments i w E HAVE THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE BOOK AND STATIONERY Store in Laramie and we want your business, large or small. Our prices are right, consistent with high-grade goods, and our store is a money back if not satisfied. CORDINER ' S BOOK AND STATIONERY STORE 21 I Second Street LARAMIE, WYO. the wra m- m. I FOR Your Soldier Boy IN CAMP OR AT THE FRONT FOR Your Sailor Lad PATROLING THE HIGH SEAS From you to him to make his heart light, and to help keep tight the home ties YOUR PHOTOGRAPH H. SVENSON PHOTOGRAPHER LARAMIE, WYOMING the wra. J i ' Hiii.i i niiiiiiiiiii . __ _ _ _ ___ __, _ _ __, . , IS BROCK-HAFFNER K PRESS i ARAPAHOE S 14.™ S T DENVER ,COLO: ENGRAVERS PRINTERS BINDERS nlowt a, AfovuuQJLkx n AwjwI omjL Coition ONmXaj U-A IoV h H JLS —MjMVt AlQUAJ OWYU tiA m i m Warn ft™ 1 msm
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