Wichita State University - Parnassus Yearbook (Wichita, KS)

 - Class of 1931

Page 1 of 186

 

Wichita State University - Parnassus Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1931 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 186 of the 1931 volume:

EX'LI BRIS ew, 5 11 4 ' - . 5' f 1, Designed and Engraved by THE MID-CONTINENT ENGRAVING CO wlcmm, KANSAS Y 1 Tha lf-93I lNNlfTUf I f f INSPIIRATION in O I I I I I I I The INSPIRATION that flashes on man's life and malces it sparlcle, that gives impetus to his endeavor, comes from the One Divine Origin through many sources. He finds it in the glories of Nature, in the power of Learning, in the radiance of Personalities, in the thrill of his own Achievements, and in the glowing warmth of Friendship. To aclcnowledge these sources of inspira- tion as they exist on our campus today and to extend their influence throughout our lives is the purpose of this laoolc. 1 , , .. K 1 , L' fa- A A 'Aw' , ','- 1 if .i t s t 1 SOUTCCS ' ' ' Nature and our outward surroundings I Lives of the great men in our midst I Learning and ti1e cuitures of ti1e past I Personal Achievement I Companionsiwip and good ci1eer ill Nature and Cur Outwarcl Surroundings 1- EQ E . N, . '.,KV, X f , 3 X I E w W 4 'Ti Q H f .Y-ff? wt K 1, ,, V L 4.1: t ,S.. wap W ANL ,. 44 , i QW l watch the great clear twilight Veiling the ice- bowed treesf Their branches tinlcle faintly With crystal meloclies. ' . , Q 5 fi., X1 t 2 Q 9 , s 2 1 - -W i , K, M. fsfwwgig ' K V -5 nf Q vga in I . H. SQ A. , Q . X 9 iff i X Q Q Yis ,X is A , mwa ,N I , .A . ' N 4, 1' 'J A ll N' A blue anci white 1 ,M .,: 7 WMF 7, ' ' ciazziing iight Qf2QgeP3,5N g V g on everything -'qt 7- .. -4, f , 7 ' V--1-. .Ansel ll Che S625- , W, S 1 ' - V2 js Vw, wi -'M gt , i,?g'1W:W H , L. W ,mL.ia1fmmi5E5 -. ,di SBK 1 i Oh better than the minting OF a gold-crowned Icing ls the safe-kept memory OF a lovely thing. , Rh, . ?, L'Lm :I Ak ' wif, ff ' 5 my il 1 5 g 55,11 E Q2 5 n QL' 'sb . A W' I ' W V J . , - V ,W 'W 5 K f-.L MA hw Q vw- J .Q W Y Q . R 5 f I M 2 I g . M . 1 i , I 4 , h f ' ' ' --... num H ' A . y J ' Il':2 A ' .Q , W A ' . li ' Mm . ' Q- fd In 4 A L, N i 4 5 ,,'4.Q' -4- , L. 6 n iq '-an 41 iq - 1 ' Wei 'Dv ' f- E i E 2 1 , y Q 2 4 1 mg-4,4 was 5 ' 1 u gm: Hfsgfgs, H - up-on -'tant 1 i'0 'W0 ' . -.. M M -..N,,, 5 hi' Q. S 'hs' ,.... 1 'I i1w4.- -TS vwtfigw .s ,L K wg-M ' , -... A 515 3 .,,, ,. 'hiigiiiafiiq ,filf W K 'Yu-i . ,. ' are QI 1 Q7 K. V' 'I '11 5 in .ms : ,M LA? ff if , .wa 4- ,H - im 5195-f i 4: - 152 A, I -15.5 ,Q ff , ,. 4, i1-1, 4' :K f 7 Q- f f 1 'ff' I x 'E W' klfzu d wil, , Hn' f ,Mil f-'r ' Va- ...X 4 . X. E K S f - Q I A K A 1 pg, 'Ima ...V 4-I A K K 523. K X g ,j1:f ,.g'k , V l::ppan.vuunxnp,, , 5 . 2,2 , S y 1,.,,,n ,fl Q , R Q 1 f 4- , f -l.ur:,,,,, +31 55 l Q L , , ,, M ,M LLLA, A , ,L M m RN' fy f if V. if ' H1 - :Q L all ,. H 'L-1 15 -' Qivif 1 . N 'E J fc ' me . V, was t , H .- lv 2 Kr if 7 '1.? N ' 5, - , L, H N ,Ll Lg 'rig fair' new 1 H '1 if ' 7 5? ' is ' .. IN' ig . 4 ' w i ' - n , ,. 'W at wif fg- ,..J n : wa' f 'PK . ' M - A . . Lf 4 -. 4' iif .' ' 'ff' ' at 4? ' r 4' Y- -C. ,ff . 3 1355 Y Vim! 757 r-- V ... , - fk 1,4 , . 7,52 ,J H3 r'- K A 4 4 ,Q -, N h.,,f.,.f: . Q . '-' , P ,:.fpw1i,f,, ' 'Y ff-9 Q9fl'E'I'N 'IEP-:.,g M s ' ig , , ,. .Q 4 yi. -1 , 3, -L Q Q nh YQ,'.'z:g QQ I' 2- . 1 , Vis H , Q 7 1 . f x 3 Y fur- ,,, di ' 1 ' -1 57211 1.'1f12 15,4 f W 1 , 7 --H V 1 '. ' fl 1 :J M 7 I x V. . -rm gi 3 A B J 4 'dui X 4 . .. ,-x....M-'wort-Y-mv l 1 4' 'W ' Here the sun shall spealc unto thee Words of a sublimer sense. Places I love come back to me like music. Over a dream the past will l1over, Out ol: a dream the past will call. V Lives of the Great Men in Cur Midst X H Yf w - vw V' gg b ' L q M y V , ,g2Txl-v5,,iph?wxklm..-, MM , A . - I M-, . ,. f X 'U NN ff' L Xu 'J X. ' N ,f w f a- 1 X fi:-X Y - - 1 A F-1 if rv S I xx, 2 . l:12i1inz1iiL11sr The rmfifznce of the person- alities fzrozfnzz' zzs is an ezfer-pres- ent and fzr-reaching source of inspirzilion. It is our pfecisure fzere to express our appreciation of the influence of one of ifiese person- ciliiies. His fqeen pfzifosopfzy of life, his enlfznsifzsnz, and his artistic genius have daily enriclzezl our lives, as his music has enricfzed flze lives of people ezferyziflzerc zifitfzizz its sound. And so, with gl'Ilfl'fZlll'C' and sincere respect, we dea'icclre lfzis 1931 7Jil7'7Z!l5'5Zl5 to ci man of gen- izzs and inspiring personczfizy, 1DE.'XN THURLOW LIEURANCIQ Board of Regenls HE Board Ol' Regents Of the University of Wichita replaced the Board of Trustees of Fairmount College as the governing body Of the school in 1926. The Board consists Ot the mayor of the city, four members elected by the Commissioners of the city, and four elected by the City Board of Education. CLYDE N. SIXIYSER Clzzzfrrmzfz CHARLES E. PARR, Vice-Chairman MRS. RENE M. GOULDNER, Secretary ALLEN W. HINKEL, Treasurer DR. H. W. HORN HERMAN A. HILL, Mayor of the City of Wz'c!zz'ta GEORGE HAMILTON GTTO SOUDERS DR. E. E. STAUFFER HAROLD W. FOGHT, Ph.D. President of the University The Pl'C'.ffIfI'1ll in lzix ojirc ,, Faculty l 931 HE College of Business Atlministrution and Industr became ri wart of the Universit of Y l Y Wichita in 1926 with Frank A. Neil as clean. It embraces the School of Engineering. In the past five years it has experienced ll remarkable growth. FRANK A. Nuff, MA. ljftlll of Collfgc of l?r1s1'r11'ss .I1lH1il1f'.fl1'ut1o11 tum' Imlzisfry Roi' W. ELLIOTT, B. in CE. Burszzr and Professor of Eng1'r1ecr1'ng S. VV. WIKICJIIT, MA. Professor of Business flzlministrczilon Ifxixuas Nouns lnslructor In Pharmacy Emma A. MARTEN, Ph.D. .fl5!0l'lLilC Professor of Bacteriology and Chemistry Amiitru Iosumi Hoxiua, Se.D. fin Honore Causej Professor of Mutlzcmatfcs A. T. BISHOP, M.A. Assislanz Professor of Mathematics F1.oitENc:E S. IEAKKVM, MA. Inslruclor in A 1tIf!7C'l7ILIll'l',C H. VERNoN Cimsxs, MA. Instructor in ll'IlIll1C'l7ZlIZI'L'5 VV. A. XIER WEIBE, Ph.l3. Professor of Geology PIAZEL FL1zABET1i Bimxczu, Ph.D. Professor of Zoology una' lima' of Department lN'lA.itY TIICJAIIPSIHN. A.l'5. Tczzcldng Fellow in Zoology H. D. Avruas, Ph.D. Professor of Physics i ii ii HE Fairmount College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is a continuation of Fairmount Col- lege. Dr. Hekhuis has been dean since 1929. This college provides pre-professional courses in law, medicine, dentistry, theology and sim- ilar fields leading toward specialization in oth- er colleges of the University. l..x:xiBERTi7s Hniiiicls, Ph.D. lhnm of Iflf' Ctlfltdgl' of I.ifff'ml flrtf tllllf lJl'UflI'.i'.f0I' of Rf'l1'AQio1r.f lffflzfulllimz Faculty 1931 R.x1,Pii B. cjRI'!Xf, Ph.D. Professor of lfnglfsh and Head of Depclrtmcnt I7Lok,x Co1.BY cjLOl'fllI, l.it.D. fin Honore Causej Professor of Ifngfrsfz Lftcrzlf ture lW.xin' 11.XYlXI.-XKER, M.A. .lyxfxtant Pl'0fl'J'.s'0l4 of Eiflgllvjll Ilxix C. Hfixolix. .'X.M. .lsxofftzte Profeffor of English Munn THAYER ciRIFlflTll, M.,-X. I nxtrztctor In lfnglixlz Imiies W,xLsH, A.l3. Tc11c'!11'11g Fellow in English - -Y --, joiix Rvnyoim, Ph.D. Profcxxor of History Iosumi I. fiRIFFITH, MA. ilfil-XZLIIII Profexxor of History Tuuonoim SCHREIBER, Ph.D. Professor of Germain S.xML'1i1. A. VVoifsY, Ph.IJ. l'rofc':5or of Spfznfsh NV. li. Mixizsau., Ph.D. Professor of Pyyrhoffzgy tllllli Director of l'cr5onnc'Z Hurwitz Vinum McKiNxEY HEEBE, AB. Ifzxtrzutoz' in .IHCI-C711 lmngzmges WY W v v i M l, J! ,M N1 vslm J g'l,'f,f . 'Sissy' xlllrylpiy X Faculty l 931 HE Graduate School was organized in 1928. Since that date about twenty-five Masterls de- grees have been granted. Research investiga- tions, having to do with practical problems affecting the municipality, are carried on by graduate students. EARL K. HILLBR.AND, Ph.D. Dean of Grilzlnate Sclzool and Director of University College LLOYD MCKINLES', Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry ana' Head of Department WURTH A. FLETCHER, Ph.D. Registrar anal Professor of Chemistry SANIUEL ELLIS SVVARTZ, Ph.D. Emeritus Professor of Chemistry ciLENN A. BAKKUL1, Ph.D. Director Bureau of Municipal Social Research ana' Professor of Sociology CYRIL W. ciRACE, B.S. in Ed. Assistant Professor of Sociology ana' History CiEORCE DUNCAN WILNER, MA. Professor of Dramatic Expression CLINTON C. MCDONALD, Ph.D. Professor of Botany anal Bacteriology and Head of Department Huoo WALL, Ph.D. Professor of Political Science GEORGE W. PRICE, LL.B. Professor of llflilitary Science and Tactics CECIL L. RUTLEDGE, AB. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics . ., ... E :sa ,L HE College of Education maintains a teach- ers, placement bureau, and arranges for its prospective teachers to do their practice Work in the Wichita City School System. Dean Sipple is on leave of absence doing educational work in India. LEsL1E H. SIPPLE, A.M. Drum of Ifzz' Cfzlfrgf' of ILPIIIIUIIIIOII and llfrz-cfm' of Szmznzrr School '6- iv BERXHARD P. HEUBNER, Pl'i.D. Professor of lfdumtlion LXIXIY NICINTIRE M1XHIN, A.B. Asxzklunt Professor of Educfltion and English FRANK R. H1c:KE1csoN, A.M. Assistant Professor of Psychology and Education ixLEXANDER N. Pizriioifr, M.S. in Aeronau- tical Engineeringg Director of Aero- mzuliml 1fng1'11c'e1'1'ng Cuaiuazs Maiuox lVi1LLER, M.E. ffssixlmzt Professor of Eng1'neer1'ng Faculty I 931 X I is M, ,f 5' HE College of Fine Arts offers degrees in music and fine arts. It is a development of the departments of music and art in Fairmount College. Thurlow Lieurance has been dean since its creation in 1926. THURLoW LIEURANCE, D.MuS. fin Honore Cause, Demi of the College of Fine Arts 111111 Professor of flfllfsicill Theory FDNA WKJKDLEX' LIEIIRANCE CI.Ax'ToN HENIKI STAPLES Professor of Voice Director of the Deptzrtnzent of Art FRANCIS H. DIERS, AB. Q Professor of Public School Music and Secretary College of Fine Arts OTTO L. FISCHER Professor of Piano MABEL WHITNEY Instructor in Piano Theory and Piano Normal FRANCES FRITZLEN EBRIGHT Instructor in Piuno ELIZABETH SPRACUE, M.F.A. Associate Professor of Fine Arts BEULAH S. BOWERS, B.S. Assistant Professor of Fine Arts CHESTER CLYDE HARBIsoN, M.A. Professor of Public Speaking and Debate LEROY LEWIS, A.B. Teaching Fellow in Speech L ISS WILKIE succeeded Miss Clough as Facully Dean of Women in 1921. She has charge of all the girls of the University and supervises social I ll activities. In addition to her Work at the Uni- ..., versity, Miss Wilkie is sectional director of the ' ' Southwest Section of the American Association of University Women. GR1XCE WILKIE, A.M. IDFLIII of Women and Profrssor of Homr Iffozrofzrrc - EDITH FULTZ, B.S. M. .ALICE lSELY Assistant Professor of Home Rcfcrcrzcc' Librarian Economic' , , J lx.-i'i'i-mvx A. CADSSITT, AB. IACQUETTA MTXE Dowxmo, M.A. Library Cartalogucr Pro cssor 0 French , . . , . f f .ALICE H. Bi'c:KxEu, B.S. in Library Sci- Nl.-XRY A. HALL, M.A. ence: rlssislrznz Cumlogzlcr Irrzruczor in French , J XVALTER L. FoLLEy, Ph.D. CHARLOTTE l. LEE, AB. Professor of journalism and Director Teaching Fellow in Frcnch of Public Relations CLINTON HENRX' CoLLEsTER, A.M. FRANCES PAULINE Gmsorsr, AB. Librarian fissistunt Cnmlogucr E- stef, ,fo ASSISTANTS TO THE ADMINISTRATION EDITH IACOB ,,.......,..4...,,,..,............,. Secretary to the President MARY ELLEN BABB ,... .A,,.A,....... S ecretary to Dean of Liberal Arts MARCELLA LYMAN .... .,.. S ecretary to Dean of Business Administration LOIS STEBBINS ..4.., .............,.I S ecretary to Dean of Education MARY CARLOCK ,.... ...,.. S ecretary to Dean of Graduate School IULE SPILLAR ,,.., .4.4..4.............. S ecretary to Bursar SAM WILLIS ...,..., 4,.I...I.....,,III.. A ssistant Bursar LAURA MCMULLEN I,.. ,..,. R ecorder and Assistant Registrar CHARLES ISELY ,..,.. ........... S ecretary to Alumni Association MARY LAWSON s.....I .................,.....I,.... P BX Operator ELIZABETH CHANEY ,.... s..s S ecretary to Head of Sociology Department STUDENT ASSISTANTS TO ADMINISTRATION HELEN FRAILEY .............,. Secretary to Head of Psychology Department NAOMI EDGERTON ..,., ....,,,.....,,...... A ssistant in Bursar's Office MARY PITTS .,....., Secretary to Registrar DOROTHY MARTIN ..... . ..I. . ......... Secretary to Dean of Fine Arts VERA IUNE SCOTT ,,I.....,,.,.c..,,.......,.. Secretary to Dean of Women HAZEL THOMPSON ..,,I.. Secretary to Director of journalism and Publications HIXZEL KERR .I,....,. ,s.,.I.I.. ......,,. ..,I.., M 1 ' meograplz Operator CLIFFORD VAN SICKEL . , . ...,...,. . . . . MATTIE L. COPE .I4. ROSE WAKEFIELD . . . IOHN GADDIS ....,., ELIVIER WELSH ..I.... MANNING L. EUTHON . . . LIBRARY ASSISTANTS BETTY COMPTON LURA LINCOLN DOROTHY DEMPSEY RUTH MCILNAY HELEN F AIRCHILD ROLF MOLLER PAULINE MURPHY MARY NEFF LOEN KAPPELL EDNA KLAASSEN LUCRETIA SHELLEY LO1s MCINTIRE, MARGUERITE SCHRENK ..s,.,,. .... .Assistant to Bursar . . . . . . . . . ,Matron of Girls' Dormitory . . . .Manager of U nizfersity Boolqstore . . . . . . . . . . . . .Superintendent of Buildings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,Superintendent of Grounds . . . .Sergeant and Custodian of Army Property YIU PING SHIH GEORGE SQUIBB LORENE STONE WILLIAM TOWNSEND DOLAN WELSH Secretaries to Librarian 6,t t ... , I .... ..c. Learning and the Cultures of the Past ig fipvr'-w. 1, .A,:,A1.. , fl ggi Q QE! gg 42 ian? M53 1+ SENIQRS H 1,i, 5 i ,, N X Seniors I 93 I ,f IJIINA LD MCIQKBBEIQTS Zoology SI-Iiim' Class Prcsiclcut: Phi Upsilun Sigma. V.-Prem. 1, Pics. 3: Pan Ilcllcnic. Prus. 4: Class Yl'fL'1l8. 2: Router! Club I, 1: .XI-sciilgipiiix Siiciuty. Prcs. 1, 4. LZLIZABETH HUNT Home Emnomics SI-niur Class Vice-Prcsiilcnlz Alpha Tau Sigma. V.-Pics. 41 Pan llulluiuu 5. V.-Prcs. 4: Y.NV. CHX.: Voturs' LI-agus: NV..X..X. lI'ANIT.x KREBS IWMIQ' and Education Scnim' Class Secretary: IDI-lta Omega, Sl'I'gCLll'll-LIIHXFIIIS 5, Vf Pres. 4: Class Soc. 5: Y.W.C..X. I. 1, g, Cabinet 4: Girl! Ch-Q Club 1: YI-lla-l.0r Club 5, 4: King .'XrtlIur3 Court. .J ciEC1L MCKILIE Pzfbllc Svfzfmf llflusfc Scniur Clam 'l'i'I-IIIIII1-I': .Xl- plia Gamma fidllllllll. Sergeant' at-,Xrius 5. Y.-l'ru. 4: lianil I. 2. 5. 4: Glu- Club I. 1. 42,2 MI-nk Quiiitutu- 1. 4. 4: R.O. l.C: Drill 'luaiu 2. 4. BEIINAIJINE KIi,'XUSE Fnglfxh and ECI'lll'tIZI.077 Scniur Class RL'lDlK'5L'IllilIlYC K0 Student Council: lbulta Oiucga. Y.-Prm. 5. Prom. 4: Student Council Rcprrxviiliiliw 1. 3: Omuga Upmiluu I. 1. Pres. 5. 'l'lLlS 4 YVVCX I I , 4 . , , . Riirvtq-iw' Club 1, 4, 4: French Club I, 1: King IXI'tlIIIrR Court. SLIIAN WILscmN Zoology Senior Clam Rcgvrufuiitativc to Suulcul Council: liakcr UniI'I-I'- Y.W.C..X, I, 1, lg, 4: Rimln-i's' ' 'us fllll14 VN X X I , 4 sity I, 1: Mtn of W elim-r. I . 4: l7.ll1'llL'llL'lllC 4: l'rc-MI-Ilic Club 4. 4. CEII.xI.I:IxE Hmixioxn - w . VIIui:IxI.x Aximiiizsox EI1g!l'.x'!1 Pi Kipui llnlll 4 Y Piu 4- LIL 'L '. .' hngllfh lbcliatc: 1. 4, 4: Pxirnamus 4: Scniur Class Rcprcmulltgltivc tu Sunflflwgr lg Y.NV,C,,X. 1, 5, 43 Stuclunt lioarml of Publicatinus: Img-rmiflimgll Club 41 XV.,X,l-X, Snrmis: Pan-Hcllcnic, 5: V.- 35 Rmm-rs' Club, 'I'1-Lim, 41 Prus. ul' Clams I: Pep Comuiit- lliilvukc Ilall Prcs. 4. Luc I. Chairman 4: VV..X..X. I. A 4. Swcatci' 2. Pres. 5: Y.VV,C..X. LUIS IXYRILS I, Cab, 3. 4. Y.-Pre.. 4: Hem- V0fl'l' cmrary llruiu Mayor 4: RlIKYtl'I'5' UI.m.cl.S4U, Strinu limcmbh. Club Pius. 1. 5: Yell l,L'LlLlL'f 4: ,Q 3. 4: Uhi4.L,l.3m,' String Fil, llilfllilhsklh Amt. Ed. 5, lid. 4: ,v 5' 4: Un4H.I.5m.'Chm.u'k 2- 5. lfrcnch Club I, 2: Prem Clllb 4. ' FIQIKNIIIS HAIIIII IOSEPIIINE ALEXANDER C11c.m,'m.y French ' - lipsiluu Kappa Rho. Pro. 4. Trcax. 4. 4: Pan Hcllcnic 4: l'rcnuh Club I. 1. 3. Prus. 41 ,.,.. .--- -1-g . . .,.. .. fm 'V v ivcI'IuaII Llulv 4. M.IIcuI'EIII'I'I2 IMKEII lllll glfxb Q5 -sql iii' Seniors 1931 R,n'1x1c1ND Bmaxss D.x1.L.xs BENTZ MELVIN l3owL1N M1x11c:.x1113'1' CADWELL Chgnzjjt,-V Busfzzcxx .Idl71I-77IiSl'I'LllI.077 Bu.f1'11c'.1'x .ldnz1'1z1'.ftmI1'0z1 Piano ZEN IRIN Epxiloln Pro' 4: Pi .Xlplm Pi. TFCLIS. 4: Foul' W Zctzl 171-lt11 Qlgpsilun. Pru.l4: mniucucniu 4 ball 1: l5:1111l 1. btumlcnlt i,f1u111i. lrc.1x. 4: l:111 ' llcllcnic 4: Rfm11-ri Club 4. 4. GLENN CMHHCHAEL Lama Boswoimi H.XIifJLID Fc1c111T, 111. Bufiffwf .lff1111'f11'fIff111'0f1 fiEORGE BAUGHMAN Cf1L'Wlf!ZI' Gt'0l0 .Xl 1l1:1 cillllllllll fiklllilllll. Asst, .V gy l A1c,,,0ndulI'l.d! EngI'nL,c,,.I'ng Pi .Xlpl111 Pi Soc. 5. Prcx. 4: X NICIIA of XX?-listcrz' Sxuflq-111 TFQHS: 4- Pfff. -1- 5504.41 RUN' V H E 1 P1111-Ilcllcnic Prey. 5. 51-u. 4: Louncii 1. 1: L111i1-nity I'l1111-rx CF: fllllll 1- NC- S1 Dflll 'IC-H111 vlctif IR-iw lklllfllffll- Nlfmf li EHQll lCCI'N- Club 1. Pr1w.:: lfiwt- 1. 1. 5. 41 R.0.'I'.C. 1. 1. 5. Rifle TC-UN 45 R-U-T-C. I- 1- 9- X-M-lj-X3 35 hliglmflx Qljlul' bull 1:T1'.1ck 1.2. 4: Ritl1-'Ik-.1111 Curlct Capt. 4: Psp Cmiixiiirzu' Ulm- 4- 1'-l' x l l'5' 3' lrw' ii hllflfli 5. 4: fillllL'I'5i Club 5: R.O.'l'.C. 5: Cl111i1'111.111 Social CUIIIIIIIIUT Clllll' lynx' 5' Vfprm' 4' 1. 3. 5. 4. 4: Glu- Club 1. ll Frnnuli Club A lGL ':f'l1:fl'il' 31 R l 'i Lo171s13 C11k1sTM.xN 111711 .1 , 1,1 . l. 1. LMNCES BEXL LL1s.x1sh111 li0u1J1s11 Y D Ph5.11c11fl.duazl101z I, 1.511 Englffh XELL1l'RH'B-XKER sm-11:15. w,.x..x. 1. 1. 4. 4. 'ng H Snrrmsif. V.-Pro. 4: Y.XY.lf,,X, liligflfh V.-Pro. 5: XY Sw1'.1tsr: YAY. Q R.S,.X.C. 3: Cl11c:1gfi Lf 5: 1.5. 4: l'ilTI1CllClLll5 3. 5: Kuivq IJult.1 01111-AQQ11 Y.W.CI,.X. 1. CHX- I- 1. S- -12 Drill TCLIIH il Sorfms 1: Y.W.C.1X, 1: Ciu1'111:111 .Xrtliurk Killllfl 5: I11tu1'11:11irw1111l 5. 4: Drill 'll-.1111 5. 4: P1'.111 RUOICFSQ Clllll 5- 42 UCVUHII1 Club 1. Club 3, 5. 4. ljlub 4. Club 1. 2. mmm, Q Zi V w-iff. 5:' 1 ' , .- c' f-ff? T P Seniors I 93 I 1iL1a1su C1..x1ax History ll1'll:l fJllR'g1l1 P1111-Hellenic 5. 4: Y.W.C..X. 1. 1. 5. 4: New You-xx' l.c:1g11c 4. RALP11 C0014 13 u.vf'f1c'.v.v .'1dl71I.71f5ll'LIfI'072 ,xllillll 191111111111 111111111111 lx'lAIEI. CRJIJPRIDER H onzc Economfcx Sll.ll1l5l1 Club 1. 5. 4: 11111111 l.U1l11lH1lLN Llub 5. 4. F11,xNf:1s Cox Econ o 7711245 .Xl11l111 flllllllllil flilllllkllll S411111- isl1 Club 1. 3: Y.M.C.A. 2. cJ'I I'fl CKLBERT Fzwzflz Sc.1bb:1r1l 11111l lll.11lc. lst Scr gulllll Il:1111l Iliructor 1. 1. 5. 4 C11.x11L1is IJANIELS Ch6'l77lA5l1'jf 1'il'UIl D.-wls I'hy.r1'cs l'1 .Xlpl111 l'1 05111112 D1a.x11s1x11T11 Sociology and lf.rf1z'e55z'on .Xlplm ,lblll Slglllil V.-l'1'cs. 5 Y O1111'g11 Epsilon 1. 5. Y.-P1'1w. 4: llfillltitllllllig 121111-11 4: Ulu Club 1. 1. 5: Rfl4!lk'l'N' Club 3. 5: 'lbs ICIIIPCSI 4: 1.W.L,..X 1. 2. 5: Girls' Drill 'll-11111 5. MA111' li. Du LA M.1x'1'1i11 Home lffofzonzzlpf .Xl11l1:1 -I-llll S1g111:1 Y,-l'1'ua 5. Pres. 4: l':1n-Ilullg-111c 4: YW, CA. 1. 3. 5. K.:1b111c1 4: 51111- flower 1: NV.,X..X. 1. 2. lfxvul- tivu l511:1r1l 5. 41 New V11l1'1's' League 2. 5. l'r1-5. 4: Social Co1111111ttu' 5: l11lc1'11:1l1u11:1l Club 2. 5: H11111L- l'.cono1111ca Club 1. 5. SCCFCIAIFX'-'lll'LlLlhllVCI' 4: Root cr! Club. Sac. 4. -In---f IW Snmxxu DEs11.x1'1is Public School .ll14.r1'f and Frefzfh Y.W.C..X. 1. 1. 5. 4: 11111-rn:1A tio1111l Club 1. 2, 5, Sec. 4: l'lI'L'IlCl1 Club 1. 1. 5. 4: C21-r1111111 Llub 1. 2. 5. CLARENCE IJOXYNINC2 . I e1'ofmuz1'ml 1i'ng1'n1:'f'1'1'11g Enginccrx' Club 1. 1. 5. 4. CLAKDINE Dox1'x1xc: Home IfCk0l10l71l.!'j I7clt:1 Omega Y.-Pm-5. 5. Sui 5. Pro. 4: P1111-H1'llc111c 4: XXX. CHX. 1. 4: klfbllll' li1'41111m1111o Llub 5, 4, X.'Prcs. 5: blur Llub 1: Routers' Clllll 1. 5. 4. .4-in :QN- Seniors lie' 1931 Rmcraig Dowxlxrz Bzz.f1'1zc'4'x T ldl77I'7Z!'.fl1'tlfl40l1 P,xL'L1NE DREW Pllbflilf Sfhool M lljlit' AIARTHA EARL KEI'I'Il EILERTS English PHIL EVANS 15507107711-C5 .Xlplm Chiliiluzi Cnuniuai. by-Q 2. Pres. 4: l':1n-Hellenic. 4. VV.uu4 EN EVERETT HI-Mary W 'lug-0r10n11r.f1 4 Q blgiss Imam. 5: lurigiiiu-i'h Club 1. 1: Y,M.C..X. I. Svc. 1. FOSTER EDGERTUN 3. Cub. 4: Ihgiifli Sllub gg: liiuul ' l i. 2. 5. 4: XMLJ. Llub 1: Runt- .SOCl0f0gy urs' Club 1. 3: Rifle 'll-aim 1, 1. -f,.'fmf-:mf 1 ,, -- -Y M ,E W .. 1 ,,..,. fnf, V1 1 .. V V Lrmxxix FUREBIAN llama l?l'0lZ0l71I-CA' Ilrviuu I-luuiiuiuics Club i. 1, 1 v w 4. 4: XX..X..X, 3. 5. 4: Y.VN.l,..X. g: Girls' Drill Team 4. ILXIKCVLD FOSTER lfro 110 nz ics Phi lfpxilrmn Sigma Sc-c. 4. RUTH FRANK Com pavilion Alplm 'lliu Sigma: Beta Nu . 4: Glu' Club 1. 5: Y.W.C..X, fi ,... ::,,... ' T: IAIELDA fi.-KRD English Alpha lziu Sigma Sec. gg Spanish Club 1: Home Fconom icx Club ng. 4: League of VVnm cn Votcrn 4: Routers' Club 4. EDYTIIE QTARYVOOD E d ucalion , ,, Seniors I 931 lXlA'I'1LD.X G.x1'ME Piano Soroslf. Trcas. 5: licta Nu. Iam. 4: Glue Club 1. 1: Stung scmlxlc 3. 4. QELORENE Gosczu English .Xlplla lau Slgllhl. 'lrcax 4: X XX.l...X. 1. 5. 41 llrlll luau' 4. V Rox' CiXV.XLTNEY Sociology l...X. -. Rr mmilw Hmczxxnx' Geology lialu. Hlumass Basin cfs f1dfI1I.l11'5lI'Llll'0lI ,- ,- ,f ,. I1 .Xlplma ll: lracli lC.lll1 1 5. Capt. 4. Exolax Huuus Sociology Ilnlta Omcga. Trcax. 4: YM ILLEANORE Hossox Public School Muxic Xpha Tau Sigma: licta Nu 5. I lrcs. 4: Glcc Club 1. 1, 5, 4: .W.l,..X. 1. 2. 5, 4: Pop Clulu lXflARGl'ERITE Howum Public School Nluxic Xlpha Tau Sigma: Ulu- lllul 4: Y.W.C..X. 4: Spanish lllulz EL12.xxoR Irion Psychology and Philosophy CLARA ILYDKINS Sociology BIEIUIEDES lungs Splwislz .Xlplma Tau Sigma: Pop 5: Spanish Club 5. M.xuo,x1zET Kaux .Irt l'i Kappa Psi: Pi licta ilu SCl'gCllI1I'iIl'.XI'lHh. 1, .:. X I'rc5. 5. 4. .o:... .. ., ..::. Seniors I 931 ETHEL KELLER IMO Lixitsoxsi Doiuwiix' MCCABE f10W1f' EC'0fl0H21'CS EC0'10m1f5 EdllC'llfI'UI1 and P5yc110!og4 Home lieniminics Club t, 2 Deltzi Omega: Y.XV.C..X. 4. 3, Pres. 4: Y.W.C..X. 1, 2. 4: , csermsn Clulv 1. IXENNETH LEWIS , Chem!-my IXENNETII NICCLURE Chcmim' ELIZABETH KI-AG LURA LINCOLN . ,y , Ph .1 I . l .Xlplia Cfzimnizi fyiininia, Y.- . ying Hanlon Eng!!-Ch Pres. 5: R.O.T.C. 1: Student In- KIIUJ 1Xl'lllUVS CUUFI 5- 41 Sumsis: Student Council, See. SU-Umor 5, 4, Y-W'-C-N I9 W'-AX-X Ii 2, 55 4: Piirniissus 3. 4: Sunflower 2Q BOJNI -1- Matrix 5: Y.VV.C..X. I, 2. 3, 43 International Club 4. ETHEL BICCOY DoRoTin' KLNCE WILLI.AbI LIPP English Edufallon Efonomlf-V Alpha Tatu Sigma: Holyolie King Arthur's Court 43 VV. AlphaGamniaGiln1nmg Box- Council 1, Pres. 5: Y.W'.C..-X.: A.A. 4. ing 3. Spanish Clulu 1, 5. luzviz NICINTIRE Zoology Sorosis Lois Mclrvriica Sociology Surosis. Pres. 4: University Citizenship Prize 5: Pun-Hellenl ie 4: Stutlent Council. V.-Pres. 5: Pi Kappa Delta 2. Sec. 3. Pres. 4: Convocation Commit- tee 5. 4: Debate Team 1. 5. 4: Sec. of Class. 1: Routers' Cluh 1. 3. 4: Y.W,C.A. 1, 1. 3, 4: Tretis. of Class I: French Club xg Rifle Team 1: VVichitafin- Turkey 1, 2. Seniors I 93 I of . A Gmczia MUPHT Englfxlz King Arthiirk Court 4. VIIKCINIA MANN Zoology lleltn Omega: Y,VV.C..X. 1 2, 5. 4. Douorm' MrXRTIN Spunfxlz l'i Kappa Psi: Beta Nu: String Iimemhle I. 2. 5. 4: Spanish Club 2. 5. Pres. 4: VV..-XA. 1. Bonrtl 2. 5. 4: German Club 5: Rooter! Club 4. Noxu iXlli.XRS Holm' lfl'0ll0l7ZI'C'5 llomt' lnconomies l,luh 5. 4: King .Xrthurk Court 5, 4: Prev Club 5: Y.W.C..X. 4. l':lJW'.XIlll.'X NflISl2NER ,0lH'l1tIlI'.fI'l1 lleltgi Omegaiz Matrix 1. 5. 4. Pres. 5. Sec. 5. 4: Prev Club 1. 5. 4: l,LlI'll1l55llS 4: SunHower I. 1. 5. XVIXSTOX lXflUXROE Pxyfli ol o g y an d lfzlu mtlo 77 King .Xrthurk Court 5. 4. Mun' lirmxoit Moolua EDITH lVlo1utisoN Pulilrc' School flluxfr' V H'-tfofy String limemhlt- 1. 1. 5. 4: Yxlzgvyxflllglx Umm 5' ll Glee Cluh I, 1. 5: Y.W.C..X. ' 'M' ' -' 5' 4' 1, 2, 5, 4: Drill Vl4L'2lll1 2. 5. ISOBEL NEVINS English WARREN MCJIRCSAN B u.v1'11 css 41 d m l77l'5lI'L1ll'OlZ B r5'1 rx' Moiuus H iftory lipsilon Kuppgi Rho. V.-Pres 1. Sec. 5. Pres. 4: Pun-llelleni 2. 5. 4: Y.W.C..X. 1. 2. 5. 4. . .. Wx .... ,..4..... .,,, 4-4, ,,,,,,,,, .. .. WW ,.....W.. Mmm 'rw' : .:. .g .:f C Sorobis, V.-Pres. 4: Beta Nu 5, 4: Debate Team 2, RQQ String Ensemble I. 5. 4: French Club 12YVVC'X1154 RALPH NICHOLS B miners fIdm1'n1'.ft1'at1'on Alpha Gamma Gamma: King .Xrthurk Court 5. Trcns. 4: Y. MC..-X, 4. N' WW ? Seniors I 931 Tl'Iflli.fX N1'c:Kf1LLs B mi zz cm ,-Idm1'nix:rat1'on Delta fblllk'-Lfll 1. 2. 4. Treus. 5: Y.lV.C..X. 1. 2. Cub. 4. Pres. 4: Stuclem Council. Sec. 5. Y.- Prcs. 4: Rflfllffbl Club 2. Drill Master 5. I'res. 4: Spzmish Club 2: Student l711y Registrar 5: Girls' Glee Club 1, 2. Rlcfmlm NITSILI-IKE Mutlzemfztlcs and Plzyfics ,fi .,,., . .fd-,- Q., WALTER 0115111 E111 1 If llXl'77Ci! A dm1'111'xmztz'on XVALTE11 Owhxs Public' School 'llrryic' Alllllll 114111111111 frillllllhl. Sec. gg Varsity Clilllllllflll' 4: Scub- lHLIl'll llllil Blade g. 'l4l'L'LlS. 4: llguul 1. 2. 5, 42 Clue Club 1. 2. 5: R.O.T.C. 1. 2. 3, 4: Dull 'I'e:1111 2. 45. I.11s111s PE1u:1v1L If IIXIIIZCJX .4dm1'n1'.ftratfor1 li11NEs'1' IOHN P1E1ufo1N'1' B H51-71 cfs A dm1'n1',v1raz1Aon MARY H111111111 P1T'rs IUSEPHINE RILEY History Zoology lleltu Omega: Y.W.C.A. 5 Drill -l'C2llll 5. 4. VV11.1..1 IQAYIXIUXD .-Irt Delta Omega Scrgc:111tf:1t- HELEN ROCKWUUU .Xrms 2. Sec. 4: P1111-Hellenic 4: Fygnfh Pi lletu Chi 1. 1. Pres. 5, Sec. 5' , Glce Club 1: Y.VV.C..-X. 1. 1. 5 Cabinet 4. ' l'res. 4: Pam-l'Ielle11ic 5. lfreneh Club 1. 2. 5. Sec. Slllllllbll Club 4: Y.W,C..X. v 2. 4: Routers' Club 4. X IOLET RICHARDSON Home Fronomfcx n Delta Oruegn: llome Eco11o111, NIELVIN ROESSLER 1cs Club 2. 3. 4: l'rench Club I: . Y.W.C.,X. 1. 5, 4. Edufnllfw ' l'1 Kappa Psi, lres. 4. X Seniors I 931 l I X A sul-i in Iii? ,girly ,I HERMAN RouNDs Economics HELEN RUTH P olitiml S Cie nrc FRANK SALISBURY BEATIIICE SANFORD Violin Beta Nu: University Trio 1, 2, 5, 4: String Choir I Orchestras. :2s5a4 NINA SATTERTHVVAITE Chemistry . Phi Upsilon Sigma 5, Sec.- Hlgfoiy Trcas. 1, 2, Student Council, Alpha Tau Sigma, TVCHS- 33 pres. 43 P2m.He11CniC 45 Student Home Economics Club 2, Sec.- Board of Publications 2, 5, 4: Ringmaster of Hippoclrome 5: University Players 2, 3, 42 Foot- ball 5: Y.M.C.A. I, Trcas. 2, Freshman Rootcrs' Club, Pres. IQ Rooters' Club Pres. 23 Par- nassus 2: Scabbard and Blade 5, Capt. 4. Trcas. 5: Y.W.C.A. 2, 3, 4- GERALDINE SAUER Expression Omega Upsilfm 5, Sec. 4, King Ixffllklfib Court 4. , sV WADE SAYIIE Economics Routers' Club 2: Political Sci- cncc Club I, 2, 5. 4. HELEN SCHINIIDT English Y.W.C..-X. 4, King Arthur's Court 5. HAROLD PICKLER Economics Scabbarcl and Blade 4: Y.M. C.A. 1. VIRGINIA SELLS IONES French Sorosis Pres. 4: Suu. 4: Pan- llcllcnic 5, Pres. 4: V.-Pres. of Class 5: Y.VV.C.A. I, 2, 5, Cab. 4: VV.A.A. I. 2, 5, Hoaril 43 French Club I, 2, 5, Trezls. 4: Rootersl Club 5, 4, Drill Team 3 GEORGIA MAE SHAW Business Administration Dclta Omega: Rootcrs' Club 5, 4- IAYNE SCHRADER French Alpha Tau Sigma, Soc. 41 French Club I, 2, 5, V.-Pres. 4: Spanish Club 4: Drill Team 5, 4: Honorary Colonel of R.O. 'I.C,. 4, Y.XV.CA. I, 2, 5, 4, WAA. I: Rifle Team 1. ,,., -- iT1E:L,,g f 2 f.:-V NIILDRED RANDLE Sixixioxs Zoology Pi Kappa Psi. Sec. 3: Y.XV,C. A. 1, 2, Cab. 3. 4: WA..-X. 2: Routers' Club 4: MILLARD SIMMONS Busln css A dWll'l2l'.ffI'flI1i071 Men of Webster, Treas. 3, V.- Pres. 4: Y.M.C,A. I, 2, 3, 4. CDLETHA SLOAN Zoology Y.NV.C..-X. 1, 3, 4: German Club, 2. 3: Pre-Medic Club 4: Ilrill 'I'eain 3: Routers' Club 3, 4. IiitNEsT1NE SMITII Frenclz Epsilon Kappa Rho. V.-Pres. 2: Emporia Teachers' College i: French Club i, 2, 3. 4: Spanish Club I, 2, 3, 4: Glee Club 23 Hutchinson Iunior College 3: Political Science Club 3, Pres. 2: New Voters' I,ea,i,gue 2, 3, 4: International Club 4: Rooters' Club 2: Drill Team 4: Y.VV.C..'X. 2, 3, 4: Press Club 3. CHARLES SQUIER Art Alpha Gamma Gamma, Serf geant-at-Arms, 4: Art Club 2. 3, 4: Scabbard ancl Blade 4: R.O.T.C. 1, 2, 3. 4. 'ff' -- I.oi'1..x MAIE STVCKEY Spunfslz Spanish Club ELBERTA STURM KINTER Zoology Sorosisg Texas Christian Uni- versity i, 2: Routers' Club 3, 4: it.w.c:.,x. 3. 41 Rifle 4. ELIZABETH THINYER History Pi Kappa Psi: Pan-Hellenic 4: NVHX..-X. 1, 2, 3, Pres. 4: Y.VV CA. 1, 2, 3, 4: Spanish Club 2, Ifrencli Club 2: Rooters' Club 4. Seniors l 931 HELEN TIILJRNTON Sociology International Club, Sec. 3, Pres. 4: Pi Kappa Delta, Sec. 4: Press Club 3: Y.NV,C.A. 2, 3, 4. IXLLAN TOWNER Zoology Phi Upsilon Sigma: Pre-Medic Club, Pres. 3: Student Instruc- tor 3, 4. HARRIETT TREWEEKE Clzemfstry Y.W.C.A. 1, 2, Cab. 4: King Arthur's Court 4. V.-Pres. 2: W.A,A. 1, 2, 4: Pre-Medic Club 4: International Club 2, 3, 4. Seniors 1931 CHARLES XIACIIAL Business f1dm1'nfszraz1'on M.AUllICE VANIIORN Economies Men of Webster. MARION WARIREN journalism Alpha Tau Sigma: Sunflower 5, 45 Press Club 5, 4: Matrix 94- W W , , ,, ,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,, , ,W 2, , , C1.AR1ssA WEEKS Plzysfm! 1?t1lZ4L'Ilfl.07'l Tea m 3 XV.A.A.: Swimming Swimming Club: Scouting. FRANCES CJBRIST WELI.hfIAN Voice Epsilon Kappa Rho, Pres. 5: Pun-Hellenic 2, 5, Sec. 4: Beta Nu 2, 4Q Pres. 5, Y.W.C.A. 2, Cab. 5: Spanish Club 5, 41 Glee Club 1. 2, 5, 4. LXCNES WENCL English Epsilon Kappa Rho, V.-Pres. 4: P:1nfHellenic Trcus. 5: French Club 2, 5, 4: Spanish Club I: Y.NV.C.A. 2. KENNETH WIDNEY Psyflzology and Philosophy Men of Webster: Track Team I, 2, 5, 4: Glcc Club Sec.-Treas. 4: International Club 4: Band I. FRED WIEL,'XND Economics Alpha Gamma Gamma. DARRENE WII.ll1TE History and Botany MELVIN WILLIAMS Business A d Wll.7Z1',Sfi'L7'fl.071 EVERETT WISE Efonomics Phi Upsilon Sigma: Y.M.C -X. 1, 1. fix N X v UNIORS. gg funkws 1931 Row I Rexwood Robertson, Pl'C'5l'll'6'71l Amy Ruth Mahin, Vice-P1'e,v1'dcnt Helen Day, SeL y-Treczxurel Ruth Granner, Student Council Charles Adams Sludent Counffl Row 2 George Hondros, Board 0 f Pub!!-L'llll.071S Walter Abel Bertha Achelpohl Pansy Alexander Iames Bennett Row 3 Howard Bish Michael Bovankovich Katharine Bowdish Marguerite Brooker Alden Brooks Row 4 Anita Brown Raymond Brown Viola Brush Betty Buckingham Mack Bryant 3 f'f'li A Row I Lynnley Calhoon Guy Campbell Edith Cobden Bessie Mae Colver Russell Cooper .T Row 2 William Crum Nedra Dildine Fred Dolecek Norman Drake Louise Drake funiors 93 Row 3 Elven Driscoll Harvey Elnersole Naomi Edgerton Lois English Vivian Engstrom Drake Row 4 Helen Fay Leslie Forward Fostine Fox Ruthmary Francis Lois Garberson v w i l furdors 1931 Row 1 Evelyn Garlisch Margaret Garrett Mavis Gerliardt Iosephine Gosch Richard Gottschalk Row 2 Helen Griffin Edwin Gross Theodore Harte William Hennigh Vera Hiett Row 3 Helen Hill Geraldine Hite Ann Hostetler Bessie House Evelyn Howard do as f CN' Row I Ieanette Kitriek Gerald Klepinger Martin Klingberg Margaret Klopfenstein Helen Lavender Row VVilliam Leach Row 3 Harold Manning Edwin Matthews Mary Ford Lippmann Ruth Little Ruth Mcllnay Harold McNeil George Metz Etsuji Miyhahara Beulah Mohler funkns 1931 Row 4 Marjorie Murphy Catherine Nitschkc Arthur Nowlen Helena Olthoff Leland Opperman f 1 Qzy vi. e .,AVA, f f .,.. furdors 1931 X I Row I Raymond Priboth Drusilla Reichard Harriett Richardson Kathlien Robertson Sanderson Root Dorothea Roth Row 2 Tom Salter Kenneth Sauer Harry Hamilton Harold Schooley Mildred Serafin Dorothy Seward Row 3 Eugene Shaft Douglas Shay George Shoemaker Susie Shoemaker Wilbur Sehowalter Mary Sipple Row 4 Iulius Simonet Kenneth Skinner Gerald Smith Hubert Snook Gwen Steele --W------uunununununr-fr-s... l v v i Row I Mack Sutter Alden Swingle George Thompson Hazel Thompson William Townsend Clifford Van Sickel Qs Row 2 Row 3 Roy Vile Homer Wilson Ramon Webb Alice Woodburn Rosemary Io Wentworth John Wright Waldo Wetmore Paul Wright Charles Whitney Lillian Garrett, Special Margaret Wiley ff? 'vs funiors I 931 Row 4 Glen Golden, S'pcci41! I. G. Hoffer, Special Frances Layton, Special Frank Markwell, S pedal Mrs. G. W. Price, Special W... SQPHQMCJRES Sophomores 1931 1 .1 lylx. 3 Lf, M X i lm iw Q ROXV 1 Oliver Witterman, Pres. Raezella Klepper, V-Pres. Ruth Burney, Sec'y Doris Bainbridge, Treas. Betty Oliver, S. Council David Lester, S. Council now 2 Maxine Allen Morsuo D. Allison Rex R. Andrews William B. Archer Harold Argo Isabelle Babcock now :a Mary Baer Margaret Baldwin Kenneth Banie Leora Barnes Gerald Betty Muriel Bird Row, 4 . Cas Castanien Louise Blankenship Letitia Chowningj Merrill Bosworth Mary lane Clampm Gerald Brooks now 6 Allen Brown Roscoe Bryant Ioe Beemiller RONY .n Thomas Byrnes Briggs Caldwell Anne Caniparoli Vera Cooley Maxine Cooper Charles Corbett Maurine Cordray Orville Cox Verla Cox V v i now 1 lack Craig Francis Dallorn lack Dudley George Edwards lay Esco Eleanor Essex now 2 Helen Fairchild Helen Fellers Richard Forster Helen Frailey Vance Gillmore Russell Gordon How 3 Maxine Gottschalk Kathleen Grossman Margaret Hall Harvey Hamilton Willard Hamilton Maurine Harhaugh Row 4 Albert Harris Katherine Harris Florence Harrison Kenneth Hays Wayne Hemphill lean Herrick KOXV 5 Dorothy Herrman Cathryn Hondros Genevieve Hopkins 193 Maude Hough Howard House Richard Huff How va Fayallcna Hutchison Cecil lnman Francis Iohnson Stanley Iohnson Lon W. Iones Glenn Ioram 'f ' e Sophomores Sophomores 1931 : N li ,W X : will W ' Row 1 George Ioslin Paul Keesling Helen Kerr Carol Kilhy Richard Knight Virgil Knowles ROW' 2 Dolores Kurt Florence Lambky Ralph Lightner Virginia Lee Lippniann Billy McMurtrey Charles Matthews ROW 3 Howard Miller Andy Moomaw Helen Morris Lester Nix Myrtle Nix Mary Louise Parker Row 4 Ethyl Patterson Gerald Paul Walter Payne Paul Pickler Hal Poole Warren Kinney Row 5 Marvin Postier Roland Prihoth Virgil Prihoth Charlotte Priddy Francis Rieniets Carol Rogers Row rs Louis Rollmann Clara Rosenthal Thomas Runnells Myron Russ Steve Scott Vera Iunc Scott .,.- mL.. WGN- ROXY 1 Chandler Scrogin Ellsworth Scuclcler Muriel Seip Robert Shadoan Lucretia Shelley Macy Shippey Maxwell Sipple now 2 Raymond Speer Elaine Spray Sihyl Spray George Squihlu Harris Squire Clarence Steele Ross Slokely RO W 3 Lorene Stone Marion Sutter Harriett Swenney Opie K. Swope Mary Katherine Tack Mary Ellen Taggart Otis Terry now 4 Irina Telen Marvin Thayer Iohn Torrey -1,1 ,. , ' S ' tv ' Frederick Towne Durward Tucker Faye Tucker john Voshurgh now Dwane Wallace Katrina Wallinglo Betty Weaver Ruth VVeblu rd Sophonunes 1931 Virginia Lee Webb Richard XVehster Bert Wells ROXV vs Lawrence Wells Iohn Wenzel Lola May Williams Dorothy Wise Genevieve Wright .,,, , ,,,. ,,,, , , , . , i I Q5 ,, 4 sf . 4 .W, FRESI-:MEN U Freshmen I 93 I Row I Iohn Nr-ll. l'1'r.f1'1lw1I Marion Rape. llfff-Pl'F!1.dt'l1f Ollun Ambrose, Sez'1'eIr1ry Tom Croft, Tre'r1fm'c'r Mary Ncff. Board of I'r1blim- H0115 .Xlbcrta liainbriclgc, Stzfrifnl Corrzzfil Tom lfullcr, Stzfdenl Council Brunton Achclpohl Row 2 Ilonalcl Alcy Virginia .'XlCXill'lilL'l' Iamcs Arulcmnrm Frcclcrick Banks Mary BL-al Iicl liloms Stanlcy lioatright Virgilcm- liomlcckcr Row 3 Bettina llosworlh Mary liowcn Gretchen liowlin llrlward Bradley Dudley Hramblctt Ilarricttc Branch Cherry Brewer Frank Brooks Row 4 Kcnncmh Brown I-'rcrl llI'LlI1lIl'lt'II Iilrla Brush Carol Bryan George Burket llully Christy Paul Cline -llllbllllll Colo Row -S lilma l.cc Compton Ruth Cook Rtllllili Coolcy Cilvnn Crofoot lm-z Cron l.cu Cosgrove .Xvis Cullins. Margarrt Cummings Row 6 Clyclc Davis Isabel llc Pew Herbert lies Clcorgc-s Katherine llcxinc Marjorie Ilimingcr Wayne Dixon Eugene Donlcy Cathcrinr- Douglas V ., - ,,-,,-,.,-,,,,,, ,W , ,W ,, , ,W , , ,, Row I Lora Downing Elline lboyra Marccil Drake Parker Dale llumhaultl John Dunkin Ralph Iilmerlcy Ethel Elliot Charles lillis Row 2 Milclretl Iillis Georgia Blwell Cecil linlow Dick livans Lucille liverett Margaret Felclner john Fialier. Ir. Pauline lfolkers Row 5 Iames lforakcr Mary Ann Fox Mary Katherine Fox Florence lfronian liugeiic Fulton Ilelen Galloup Iitlwartl Geary Ioscph Gesslcr Row 4 Barbara Gibson Tlicotlobia Goach Bob Gow Douglas Gow Carlyle Grage Betty Io Graham liugcnc Graham Leia Green Row 5 llctty Hamilton Gerald Hamilton Iune Hamilton Iames L. Harder XVilliam Harlong Katherine Harness Iieula Harris Madeline Harmp Freshmen 1931 Row 6 Brooks Harryinan Beth Hart Edwin Hartman Robert Hartman Thelma Hartman Guy Harvey Alyce Hawkins Henry Helgcrmn f'f'f iiii L Freshmen I 931 Row I Lucia Ilclt Glenn H4-ss Mary Hill llclcn Ilillyarcl luck Hinklc llclcn Iloclgmn Grant Huwalcl Lcunarml Ilulmliaril Row 2 Ralph llurly 'K 55 Mac licrt llynicr l.ilyan Ianscn Hymn Iacqucs Marguuritc lurqucs llarulcl Icflrics Mnrgurct Icnnings Carl Iolimon Rnw 5 , Marjuric Ioncs Xvxllilivlxl 1111105 Lua-n ll. Kappcll as . Carolyn Kcizlcl lack Kelly Lucille Kelly Luclla Kerns Clayton Karr Row 4 lclros Kilvlve Gretchen King Frank N. Kruslic Grace Louise l.aH4non lirl Lanibcrt r , , 3- Rutli Lanipl Alta l.arimr1i'c Iurcnnc l.1lllKlCI'I!1lllx Row 5 Rrigcnv Ialvciulvi' Hcrlmcrt Linclslcv lirna l,nrL-nz Iulin ll. Lynch Vurnun McNcil Raclil-l M1lllllllY lin-lyii Martin Gwqn D. M1ll'lll1 Row 6 Louis H. Marlin Ciarnct Mason llugli Maxwcll llarric' Ml'1lllL'I' liclwarrl Mcaiis Mary Mcans filLlVlHl1 Mvsuli I l I .. I I' I I hn- Ruw I Iiilccn Mcclicr' Laurcncc Mcrshon lxahrl Mickey Margaret Mooney Gcnexicvc Murgan Marjorie Morriwn lflurcncc Mm Margarct Murpliy Row 2 Iisthcr Myers fd' llugcnc Myers Margarct Mycrs Virginia Nrmlylic Kcilh Oclunwcllcr lacquclinc Oliver Rim Owens WL-all-y Park Rnw 3 Cllarlcs Peck Kathryn Phclpf llarrv Phillipb Mary Ruth Phillips Vaunlau Picrcc Mary Purtcr VL-rv Price licrnicr Ramsey Row 4 CD4-1icv.1 Rubcrts l.Ylll1lI1 Ruhertmn Rugia Rolicrtbon Walter lb. Rogers Xvlllllld Ruycr llruuc Sattcrthwaitc Curtix Sauer .Mlrian Savagn' Row S Sylxia Schmidt Nl.lI'IQLlL'l'lIL' Schrcnli Virginia Scott Ilulr-11 Scwarrl lxalcr Shafcr l.unn Shafer Q' Freshmen 1931 Rfiln-rt Shanklin Harm-r Shrixcr Row 6 Marx' Simmons Iaim-5 Sliuknr Rcllwcrl Slllllll William Smith Slklllllfll Snyrlcr Harry Smlcrstrom Rnlvnrt Sillltl' , ,, ' ,H ,.,, W., v w '1'f r Q rrrrrrrr rr '. l 'CC FTCSBTNCH 1931 or G, ,riff Ram' I Virginia Spaulding MLlfgLlL'I'ifk' Stnifornl Iictty Stzmlcy Ricluml Su-ck lililglbrlll Slcrrctt Hulwrt Stcvcns liunicc Slwlfus Cliffurml Slum-r Row 3 Hn-len Taylor Frnncrs 'I'cmplutm1 XVaym' Tcmplctun Ben Thayer Dun Tlliclc Iolm Tiulwrll Montel Tjzulcn l.m'n'11 Tllukvr Ruxv 5 Hill Turncr l'lihVllIAl! Tuttle Imupll Vargas Rulmcrt Vmburgh Clnytolm NVLIIUJH Hill VV4ml 'l'lu'lmn xvillll Immlhy VVnrner 'W ffl? V ' ----------w-.n-m-lq.ggg - Rem' 4 lmcplmim- Warren Kilim- Clmrlus Xvllillllkljf, I Stcwnrt VVilmn Rklllltlllll VVilL'y Murgurct Wiikinwn Mnrgy XVilli1lIllSUl'l Iicnnulh VVilmn VVinifrL-xl VVilsnn Row 5 .Xlvin XVinzcIL-r Kcrmit xvlbfldlllilll Fvrn NVUFQIUII lflurcncc wvfiglll Hcrnicu XVymscnb:1ul1 Curl ZiI1ll11L'I'lllLll'l ,MI AKEN? ,K 4' - ff! W M! I 1 . - 'vfbz E J 353 vwlm 1443 .. yz . .. . 'NN LJ I If I I ACTIVITIES l'ir,:1 rum: lfrank Salisbury. president: Thura Nuckolls, vice-president, Lura Lincoln. secretary: Melvin liowlin. treasurer. SFFIJIIII row: Sloan VVilson. liernzlcline Krause first semcsterij, Lois Mclntiru. senior class 1'epi1-seiitiitives W Charles .Xclams. Ruth Granner tlirst senieslerj. Kathlien Rohertsoii. iuniiir class representgitires. Tfzirzf row: Dave l.ester. Hetty Oliver -Hirst senieslcrl, Rat-zellii Kleiner. so iliuinorc class I'L'WI'Cst'I1lLltlXL'sZ ll l l W Toni lfullur. .Xllicrtgl Hainlvriilge thrst seinesterj. Bettina Hosivortli, lrt-slini.in class ri-prcsuiitatixrs. Student Council The Student Council of the University of Wichita brings to a close a year of varied activity and great success. Its first action on assuming office was to change the Frosh cap tradition, and secondly it approved the plan for more varsities during the year. It secured changes in the constitution which pro- vided for greater participation of the students in the student government. It has financed the sending of a delegate to a meeting of the National Student Federation of America at Atlanta, Georgia. The Council also is an active member of the West Central province of this federation. Three delegates were also sent to Norman to a Model League of Nations. The Council assisted financially in the sending of the university rifle team to Booneville, Missouri, and the track team to Champagne, Illinois. C f giving- iiii ' Harold lfoght, chairman: lilizalx-tli Hunt. XY.1lu-r Owelis. aeniorsz Rllllllllllld' lfrancis. Rt-xwond Robertson, iuniors: lit-tty Stanley, lrtwlinieiiz Kenneth llanie, fophomore. Social Committee The Social Committee of the University of Wieliitzi is the motivating force hehind the all-school varsities. This year there has heen on the average of one varsity every three weeks. The committee has taken great care to pro- vide original decorations and the hest orchestras ohtainahle for the entertain- ment of the students. The chairman and memhers of this committee are appointed to office for one year hv the student council. The memhers not pictured above are Maxine Gottschalk, sophomore, and Will G. Price, freshman. llenrion f,iS'lHl'l?l5lllIl1 the xcene of much gait-ty: an autumn and a spring varsity -----------F eWi'e Pep Committee CiERALDINE HAMLIOND Chairman IOSEPHINE IXLEXANDER MELVIN BOVVLIN Seniors MARY FORD LIPPINIANN Iunior lVlARY Lotrisia PARKER VANCE CHLLIXIORE Sophomores MARKDY WlLLlAL1SON JOHN NEFF Freshmen November 8 was the big day this year for the Pep Committee of the University of Wichita, for that was Homecoming Day. The parade held in the morning was the longest in the history of the school and featured more elaborate Hoats than ever before. Six prizes were given for the best entries in the procession. Q rrrE f . -H.-wurwf' 11 ..l..lI. ll :' 1 4' J' 'Wie W fame W e During the rest of the year the Pep Committee had charge ol' decorating the field for the Thanksgiving Day football game, arrangement of the convocation programs, and the direction ol' the three pep organizations, the Shockin' Susies, Yella-Lots, and the Men's Pep Club. Howard Lauder is the junior member not pictured above. Cl l22I L26d2l'S A head cheer leader is elected by the student body at the time of the student council election. During the football season this year the regular corps ol cheer leaders, Iulius Sinionet, Paul Cline, and Dick Evans, was augmented by two repre- sentatives of the womenls pep organiza- tions, Helen Galloup and Geraldine Ham- mond. fiERIiY HA1v1MoND It5L1t7s S1MoNET Iflend Cheer Leader PAUL CZLINE , Q ,nm s , l 5 r K 1 UNH 1:41.15 ,. 5' . if gifs i,,g.8:fe ji, .. ' ' ' ' 'iff A 33 f!1!Q1l, I 1 ,' 2 'f-L' + f-1':i'0'-55 'Q.3.f'i 5'.'1f.'fif, i yi-1: Y. mi Mrk 5 , .,-'fr W if ' - at in .2 , 91 eh., . , 9, 1 1 'Ia 'iv-NH .L V ,. if .:- . i... f . 1 fl'.-f - ' 'E rs 3' ir' . '55,-- 'A' i ,A mm e ' Q A . , I lx is , -x, V 5. 1 AW 4 'f as -- et'-,'ar,.ffflw 5:-if if lg' x on ,, W, J, 'aft P ,ihtusg we-UW' Q 4 1 if '-vga' 15 sg ul g In fstvp t' 'cess' si ix. ' F pr, v 1 ' 5 t n .Y il - 4-af-' iss' P . aim. -i i if 71, ,531 wr-.0 1'-'ie' 'H 5 t cwfs, . V ' -if , ,MI 'Ibm' . U - NM- S 5 . ' iii '-'H Q. .1 --i ei ii-wus'-.i. ,,, o A 11 Q , ' 'Y ' , I p n I Q n A Q, Q i R ' ' I VV HQ, Us .,,, , I A ' MW 3 Q Maxxum A Swsqa J MJ ,..?u, J.,k S sa ' T . 1. lb . 5 , Q I I , S N ' X t' N ' l ...ki I is . . yi I S no vs 5'--s The traditional and famous Sunflower being formed for the edification of the Mounrlhuilders. YELL-A-LOTS+l irst 1'ow: Helen Ruth. Juanita Peterson. Dorthea Roth. Hazel Thompson, Oletha Sloan, Georgia Shaw, Mildred silll' mons, Betty Thayer, Thora Nuckolls. Second row: Mary Ford Lippniann, Harriett Haskell, Jennie Faye Schweitcr. Imelda Gard. Louise Uhristman, Mavis lift-rhardt, Mary Elizabeth De lla Mater, Jo Alexander, Margaret NViley, Bessie House, Bernatline Krause, Juanita Krebs. SHOCKIN' SUSIES-First row: Virginia Scott. Bernice Popkins, Isabel Mirkey, Ruth Cook. Helen Fairchild. Marjorie Morrison, Helen Hodgson. Virginia Lippnian. Dorothy hYill'Ilt'l', YVinifred XVils0n, Helen Lowry, Ramona XViley. Serond row: Jackie Oliver. Betty Oliver, Grace Louise l.aff0on. Thelma Hartman. Margaret Murphy. Macy Shippey. Gretchen Bowlin. Yirginia Alexander, Mary Elizabeth Hester. Maude Hough. Ruth Burney, Ethel Patterson. Genevieve Morgan, June Hamilton. Florence Harrison. Mary Katherine Fox, Bar- bara Gibson. A Snake Dance . or Tho lie-ginnings of Il Sunflower. The two pep vluhs are separate organizations but united in a common cause, that of stimulating and displaying pep at the various athletic contests. They have performed at several major football and haskethall games. and have made trips to both Emporia and South- western. The Yell-a-Lots are made up of upper-classmen representing each sorority and the non-sorority group, Thora Nuckolls is presi- dent of the cluh. which has 3iiHli'llliM'1'S. The Shockin' Susies is the younger c-luh and was organized last year when its members were freshmen. Virginia liippniann is president of this club, which nunihers about 430. - ee r e m i rrrr rr i s . f rf' iam i 'ei ii i fwfr: . fr-'sf lc ':.e wwf: , .1 .,.1 !,, .g.. .4 tieraldine Tlilllillltllltl, seniorg Alden Iirooks, Georgyi- Iiondros, juniorsg Betty Weaver. sophonioreg Marjorie Jones. Mary Xt-ff. freshnn-n. Student Board of Publications Student publications of the University ol' Wicliitzt are controlled by this board, composed of two members ol' each class. one elected by his own class and the other appointed by the faculty. Dr. W. C. Folley acts as advisor, and Mr. C. C. Harbison is the chairman. Statl appointments for the Sunflower and Parnassus, and problems of policy and finance are discussed and decided by this body. Betty Weaver and Mary Nell have been secretaries of the board this year. The members are elected or appointed when freshmen to hold ollice for four years. PFCSS This is an organization for all students in the department of journalism, meeting every two weeks with speakers ol proliessional prominence as guests. The club was organized in IQZQ and during the last month ol' school holds a Press Club Banquet at which the best story awards, offered by the School ol' Iournalism, are presented. The olliicers who have held their positions lor entire year are: Marguerite Taylor, president: Dick Forster, vice-president. Cas Castanien. secretary-treasurerg and luanita Peterson, sergeant-at-arms. First Row: Kent YVise. llichard YV:-luster. Marguerite Taylor. Mary Louise Parker. Mary Katherine Tack. Second Row: Virgil Prihntll, Iiola M. l'h:xrtiv-r. Esther Myers. Madeline Ilarrop. Margaret Jennings, Ruth Lainpl. Third Row: Helen Hillyard, Dorothea Kyle. Mary liatlierim- Fox. J. hee Clark. T'l1'El!lt'l5 Ifafforn, Ki-nnr-th Hays. Fourth Row: Kenneth Sauer. Milton Lzunpl, Rieha1'dLindc-n, Jane Keteh- ersid, Mary Maloney, Henry Blows, V4-rla Cox. Hay lirown. : v i i liz-oI'i.:v Slioeiuzikvr. editor first Sl'lllt'Sl0TI Rayntonrl lirown. business lllElYlilj.fk'l'I H1-lt-n Morris, Fas f'ilSlilIliPl1, Yerla Cox, Mary Kath- i-rino Tawk, Mary Louise P2l1'liPI'. Kenneth Ham-r. lfll'llill'd FUl'SIt'l', Kiehzlrtl XVvbstvI'. Glenn l'rnI'k4-tt. SUFIHOWCI' The Sunllower is the official weekly publication of the University ol' VVichita. It was first printed as a monthly magazine in Ianuary, 1896. In 1906 it became a weekly newspaper. ln 1928 it was taken by the department of jour- nalism. This year two staffs were appointed, one for each semester, in order to give more students of journalism experi- ence of working in editorial positions. The paper is under complete supervision of student editors and reporters. The Sunflower is printed on regular metropolitan-size paper and with regular metropolitan type of headlines. Regular newspaper routine is observed in the publishing of each issue. A well-equipped laboratory is located in the Brig for the use of the students. Typewriters, desks, a newspaper file, a morgue, and a reading room are included ill the equipment. STAFF Firrf Semester CTEORGE SHOEIXIAKER , . RAYAIOND BROXVN . CTEURGE SHOEIXIAKER , HELEN RTORRIS ...., lVIARGUERITE TAvLoR . . x7ERLA Cox ..,.....i. NTARY KATHERINE TACK KENNETH SAUER ,..... RICHARD WEBSTER .. KENT WISE ...... Editor, , .,,., . . . Business M and gel' I . News Editor, . . Desk Editor. . , Feature Editor, , Society Editor, . . Club Editor, . Sport Editor .,.,.,. . Supplement Editor. . . A d I!C'l'lf5l-fl g ....... Second Semester ILTANITA PETERSON . . . RxmIoND BROVVN ,. RJARGIQERITE TAYLOR . . .H.'XliRIETT HIASKELL . . . , . . , ,CAs CSASTANIEN MIXIKX' KIATIIERINE TAcIQ ..lVlARY LocIsE PARKER . . ,RICHARD FoRs'I'ER . WHELEN MoRRIs . . GLENN CROCKETT qv ' TW Hi-ralfline llamlnunrl, i-flilnrg YV:1ynv Heiiiyvllill, business inzinagerl Virginia Anderson, pii'turv 1-ilitorz l'1flu':u'ilzi Bliss-ner. 1-opy editor: Amy Ruth Mullin. fvzitiirn- editor: Ya-rln Cox, society editor: Harriett Swenni-y, org:anizz1tion vrlitorg Ki-niwtli S2lllPl', :ithletie eflitorg llura Lincoln. faivulty editor: lit-tty xV9ilX't'l'. classes editorq Harold Foght. H.0.T.f', vtlitorq Mary liatln-riiw Tau-k, assistant fi-attire 1-ditorg Ruth liuriwy. assistant sm-ii-ty 1-flitor: Kenm-Ili Hays, assistant athletic eilitorg Helen Si-wzxml. i-zirtoonistg William 'l'ownsencl, kodak ed- itorg Mary Neff, assistant fvzitiire editor. PSITIBSSUS Old Fairmount College began the publication of a year bool-1 in 1902 and called it Parnassus , after Mount Parnassus of Greek mythology, probably because of the situation of the school on a hill. Since that time the book has appeared every year except a few at the beginning of its history. It was published by members of the junior class usually, with the editor and business manager elected by popular vote. Under the present system those offices are filled by appointment by the Student Board of Publications and may be members of any class. The 1931 Parnassus is the first of the school and third in the state to adopt an increased page size. Members of the stall whose pictures do not appear above are Harriett Haskell, assistant organization editor, and Charles Howland, cartoonist. - , .......,,,. ,c ,, , ...,. .. - Matrix ,,-.. M Arty KATIIERINE TACK IUANITA P1iT15itsoN 'T 'Sf Miss MARY I'TAYlNIAKER IIAZEL 'ITHOINIPSON llftRRIE'I'T SWENNEY Maru' Lot' Ijaickm ITARRIETT HAsKE1.L Matrix, honorary journalistic sorority, was founded March 15, 1929. Its purpose is to foster interest in journalism on the campus and to promote a professional viewpoint among women in the school of journalism. The officers of the organ- ization are: Hazel Thompson, president: Harriett Haskell, vice-president, Iaunita Peterson, treasurer: Iidwarda Misener, secretary. The pledges include Harriett Swenney, Mary Katherine Tack, Mary Lou Parker, Marguerite Taylor, and Viv- ian Engstrom Drake. Miss Mary Hay- maker is the faculty sponsor. The pat- ronesses are Mrs. R. M. Gouldner and Miss l.ucile Hildinger. Gamma Chi The purpose of Gamma Chi, men's journalistic fraternity, is to promote the professional spirit of journalism among its members: to assist in the development of the school of journalism, and to advance the interests of the University of VVichita outside the campus. The regular meeting of the organization is held each VVednesday morning at 6:30. The officers are: Dick VVebster, president: Cas Castanien, vice-president, Raymond Brown, secretary, I. H. Messick, treasurerq Kenneth Sauer, historian. Dr. VV. C. Folley is the faculty advisor. Milton Lampi. Cas Faistanivii. Kent XVise. Henry Mott-s, Richard Linden, Kenneth Sauer, Richard Webster, F1'1UN'iS Di1ff01iH- J- L00 Clark, Dr. XV. C. Folley, Hay Brown. Kenneth Hays, Dirk l m'stv1'. TSE.. -if Zhi ..,,..,.. '1f e a'--fa f'e 'f .,. W w e' Debate Oratory THOLIAS CROFT ..... Debate CLAYTON WfXLTI7N . .Debate Lois MCTNTIRE ...., Debate liEORGE SQUIBB ..,, Debate ULIVER WITTEIKMAN .Debale MARY NEFF ........ Debate ROSEIWARY Io WEN'rwo1aT11 Orrztory HELEN THoRNToN Orutory IQAEZELLA KLEIJIJER Extenzpomneour Spezzlqfng Forensics Eleven major victories for the forensic year is the record of the speech department. This includes either a first, second, or third place in a state or inter-state meet. At Winfield in December, five states were represented, but in spite of this competition, Wichita won two major championships. In the Okla- homa meet in March, the Shocker contestants brought back four major winnings. Five victories were won at Pittsburg. The season's total is 57 debates won out of 76 entered. Tom Croft holds the outstanding individual record of the university. Of 30 debates which he en- tered, he won 27. He is champion of Oklahoma, winner of one inter-state and two state meets, as well as winner of second place in the Kansas meet. Miss Raezella Klepper holds the championship of Oklahoma and Kansas in extemporaneous speaking. She is the only woman to enter and win two events. This was the peak year for the speech department, and there is a favorable outlook for the coming season, because of the fact that of the ten winning contestants entered in events this year, only two will be graduated. Adolph Ohrvall, whose picture does not appear above, is the other member of the squad. - - . .- .. - V , .... ..... L ..... . . la-ft In right: Turn Vrnfl. Uiivm-1' xVillt'!'1l1IlIl. Kat-zvlla KI.-plwr. Luis Bit-Ixitiw. Vlzxylnn XYal1oi1. Le Roy lit-wis, i'i1'l4'II 'I'hoi'n!nn. Mary Self. tienruw- Squibb, .Xdnlph Ollrvall. Pi Kappa Delta Eight new members have been taken into Pi Kappa Delta, national forensic fraternity on the cam- pus, this year. Several members have won advance jewels and advance standing in the organization through forensic victories. The purpose of the club is to promote interest and proficiency in debate, oratory, and extemporaneous speaking. Lois Mclntire is president, Virginia Anderson, vice-president, Helen Thornton, secretary, Alden Brooks, treasurer. The fraternity here is known as the Kansas Epsilon chapter. Jeffersonion Club This group was organized and sponsored this year by Charles Swan, member of the downtown Ief- fersonion Club. It has attempted during its short existence to arouse interest in government and politi- cal policies. The officers are: George Squibb, president, E. V. Long, vice-president, Ernestine Smith, secretary, Gwen Steele, treasurer. l.vl'I to! 1'ig:ht:A Klzxrvin l,0sIivI'. I'h:x1'les Squire. Oliver Wittvrmzxn. Kathlin-n Iiuln-rlsnil, l'hai'le-s Swan. lit-o1'g:u Squibb, iiil'lL'll Thornton. Luis English. I'I1'nestii1r- Smith, Gwen Ste-i-114-. Glenn 4'x'ut'kelt. -' -- ' W 'Y .. .... .. .. H ., ---ff ,- .f- fvmmf, MT --'- 1ff:--1:1-1-f- W f-'ff-Sxffffff' 'uf--'T-fi T-'fe-f---'f--'-ff -YYY . Y ' ' K, ,. , gm .,., -..aa.' r ',jig f'-.-5s1F'L.- 'WW f f nding: Max Sipple, Roy Schuessler, llarold lfoght, lr., .Xnila lirown, Robert Pinaire. Charles Ist-ly. Seated: Xlary Katherine Tack, lletty XVard, .Xlden lirooks. University Players University Players organization was founded in 1923 by George D. VVilner when he came to Fairmount to take charge of the speech department. All persons who have made outstanding contributions to dramatics on the University campus are eligible for membership, which is elective. The players have attempted to increase interest in dramatics, to stage better productions, and improve dramatic offerings in general. In particular, they are famous for their annual Shakespeare productions, having successfully staged MRomeo and Iulietf' 'AAs You Like It , Hamlet , L'Midsummer Nights Dream , L'Merchant of Venice,l' and g'The Tempest , among others. This year they attracted national attention with their presentation of the famous temperance drama, i'Ten Nights in a Bar-Roomw. Oliiicers of the club are: Elizabeth iWard, president, Harold Foght, vice-president, Alden Brooks, secretary-treasurer. mm ii v w if-Us .1,., i Above are scenes from three of the productions given this year by the University Players. These plays were The Tempest , the annual Shakespearean play given in the auditorium ol 'Wichita High School Eastg 4'Ten Nights in a Bar-Room , which received national mentiong and The Thirteenth Chair , a popular mystery play. Besides those productions pictured above the department of dramatics presented Mliontls of Interest , a comedy translated from the Spanish, and Bernard Shaw's The DeVil,s Disciple. Each play was well staged, and carefully worked out, upholding the reputation ol' the department for line pro- ductions. .e.e , s, ,v ,t I ul, ypyyv yy t ssi v E rsteeta , s s I, L livft in right: l-'rarities Tenipln-Ion. Vera Ilit-II. ltlleztmn' lilssex. XVinii'i'ed Wilson. Yr-rla Vox. Iinlherim- Jolinxon. llelen Morris. lim-zt-lla Klt-pper. tit-ralilinv Hite, Kin-raltliint Salter, lit-rnnrline Ki'a1ise.Osyll1e Dt'ill'hlllllil. Cmega Upsilon Umefa Uisilon, Zeta cha Hter oi the national honorar sororit of dramatics and ihvsical education. was or fan- iv . is ized at Cummock. school of oratory, in 1904. Members. at the time ol' initiation. are required to be taking work in one of the two departments and must maintain an academic average of So per cent. Geraldine Hite is president: Osythe llearsmith. vice-president: Geraldine Sauer. secretary: Hernadine Krause, treasurer. Beta Nu lieta Nu. professional sorority. was organized in 1929. Members must have an academic average of HC and they must be taking a minor in the music or dramatic departments. The organization endeavors to create a better appre- ciation ol' the line arts. During the past year Rudolph Reuter, pianist from Chicago, was presented to the people of Wichita through the eflorts ol' this club. Mrs. lidna Lieurance is sponsor oi' the group. Drusilla Reichard has been elected to the presidency for next year. succeeding Matilda Guame. Slantline: Mary M:n'g:ai'et Means. Matilda: tinaine. Lois Englisli. Elizabeth Starrett. Iintli Fox, ill2ll'g.L'llL'l'llP Mansell. Seaterl: llrnsilla lie-it-liartl. Ilorotliy Martin. Bessie House, Fram-s-s Wellman, Dolores Kurt. fe: f'f W f,-i ..., ' - ' V f -1'. Zizul gf 'f1f i .' ffe'f f -'f-211'-ff-1,71-:ff -W w u--.-------w--- Alnmw- :iw pivlliiw-s of the px-psi-nl:ilions ol' 5I1nis:1A'. tht- syinplionic' pu--lu 4-oiniposwl Ivy Dr. Tliurlow l.lt'lll'IlIll'I'. rliiwwlm- ot' Ilii- Vollt-gv ol' l ilI:- Arts. The lop pivtliiw' slums ilu- 1-llurns and ol'i'livstl'u rlnringtlwpi-est-n':1linn :xl llzxsliz-ll luslillllt' in I.:xxxv'1-live, 'l'l1v- ullwl' pivtnrvs xx:-rv lalwn iluring- ilu- pi'i-si-utation ln-thi'-A nivlnlu-rs of Ilia- Silllll'fl2lj' A1'iv1-mimi Xlusit- Vluli and their Hun-sts. Orchestra and Chorus Besides the occasions pictured above this group also appeared before audiences at El Dorado, East and North High School, Mt. Carmel, Pratt, Arkansas City, and several other places presenting Minisa , a poem set to music, portraying the modern love story of an Indian brave and an Indian girl in a govern- ment school, the death of the girls, ensuing sorrow and experiences of the boy. The composition and its presentation were received enthusiastically everywhere. String Ensemble The string ensemble assisted the orchestra in the presentation of musical programs during the year. The ensemble also accompanied the Minisa group on various out-of-town trips. This organization is always popular with audiences. It is made up of students in the university music department. l l A' Nlamlillifi Nlatililn lilllllllll. lruvilln- liowoni.1i1iyNi1y1lt-r. liessin- Ilfvust-, llr. lii1'i1l'4-Ile:-. li:-:xt1'i1'v Srillfolwl. Xl'ilbl1r' 5f'lHlXXIlllt'l'. Allin-1'I:l li:1iiiln1'i1lLLi'. Halen 4'i'l':lllillll. l7o1'uIl1y Nlzlrlin. Iioy N4'l1l'll5Nlt'l'. l 1'al11+'is Dim-rs, lk-eil Nlelit-i-. Nvxltvrlf lilvzxmui' Muniw-. i'l1:xx'l1's Sslillxu-ll, Lois .Xilinx Maw Sipple. 5. 3- ...,. gg....II:i2g,,,QEa?.g'g?.j3QEQZi T H V 'f' vf '-g i if ,L 2-i..Qar W W The Band The University Band is conducted by Otto Culbertg the assistant conductor is Ernest Black. The band plays be- fore convocations, and appears at various athletic events oi' the school. The members of the band are: trumpets, Hal Poole, Ernest Black, VVayne VVatson, Byron Iacques, Frank Cobb, Albert Reichard, Phil Davis, Robert VVoods, Dwane Wttlltlce, Hob Clark, baritones, Ed Hloss, A. Savage, trombones, Claude Nichols, Jerry Hamilton, Patil Young, Dru- silla Reichard, l.ouis Houser, Max Sippleg basses, Robert Shanlilin, Patil Cline, Marcus Cullen, VVilbur Schowalter, Roy Liebg piccolo, Nierril Bosworth, Parker Dale Dumbaultl, Ianies Harder: clarinets, Lyman Priest, Henry Malone, VVarren Everett, H. L. Meader, Mary lda Nevins: saxophones, Kenneth Vv'ilson, VVilliam Turner, Maxine Gottschalli, Ralp Hurty, Ted Harte, drums, Vernon Zxvink, Herbert Lindsley, VVesley Parks, Charles Adainsg cymbals, Ioe Cessler. Men's uartei: The men's quartet of the Fine Arts College has made public appearances before various musical organizations in Wicliitzl this year. They have also accompanied the glee clubs and the string ensemble to El Dorado, Augusta, and Pratt for programs in the high schools and before civic organizations. Mr. liliers is director ol' the singers and Guy Snyder is the accompanist. Guy Snyder, avi-oxnpanist, Francis H. Diers, first tenor, Galen Graham, second tenorg Cecil McKee, baritone, XYilbiu' Sehowalter, bass. .ref 5,.,.1qY5, 53fffg.L7.1, E 1,257 2 Regs s, W .... em .sg -vww e erre ee Sm F9 'QT 4.- '27 1513141-151:51 YAY. QKXIGIXET. sla111li11g': .xlllj lluih Nlahiu. lim-ttyWeave1'. Marv I-flimiln-'l1 Ili- l.11 XlIlI!'l'. Hi-len 'l'l1111'11tu11, Anita lZ1'uw11. lie1'alili11i-Ha1111114111:l,Seaterl: lla1'1'i1-1 'l'1'4'111-1-lm-1 Rlililre-il Sllllllljlllx. D111-111111-:1 liuzh H111-i1111i11e' p1'esicl1111t?. Mary Nl:11'Il1:1 lil.-asmi. .I111111iI:1 K1-1-hs. Willa Riljllllillll. 'l'l1111'a Xlielmlls. past 111'--sirle11t. Y. W. C. A. The Y.NV.C.A. room on the lirst lloor ol' administration building is the realization of one of the greatest dreams ol the organization for this year. Another innovation for which these women are responsible is the Vesper 'l'ea Service which will he presented again nexet year. The 'l'hanksgix'ing harrel. an annual proieet, proved to he the largest in its his, tory tl1is year. 'l'hrough the eoinhinenl ellorts ol' the YNV. and the Y.M.C..X. the annual all-school Hippotlroine and skat- ing parties were sponsored lor the student hotly. .Xlso in cooperation with lfrieuds Uvui- F' '5,?jgEjfV xersity a student conference ol tl1e 1Xrk X al- We-gg. Q:-gags.. 3 ley district was sponsored at the lJIllX'L'l'SllY MQ big 'Egg ol xvlillllil. l A A '64 Q i Y. M. C. A. Y.M. CABINET Sla114lI11t5: l'll2lI'l1'S Adains, Alflm-11 liruimks Cpasl presi- ilentj, S:-ated: William lll'llIll. 'l'11111 IIo1'!4111, Ray- 11111114l l'1'ih11tl1. 45e411'g'e M1-tx. 1H't'Sl1ll'lll. The Y.M.C..'X. of the University ol VViehita received a great impetus this year with the acquisition of it well-liurnished as- sociation room. in the administration huild- iug. A new policy of having a small com- pact organization to sponsor all school proi- eets was adopted and proved quite successful, and particularly well adapted to the condi- tions liountl in a municipal university. Alden Brooks was president the first semester. New nlliicers are: George Metz, presidentg Charles Adams, vice-presidentg Tom Horton, seeref tary: NVillia1n Crum. treasurer. NVQ'-wmv :gg H ,-gm t't A t ' m'1f11F'ft U i l.-l:E'fY i : : 'i 'QfT:,, ....f Standing: tilt-nn Crockett, .Tohn XVOnzi-l. Milton Lanipl. XY:iilu Saxyw, XYillimn ll1'l1!ll. lie-oi'g'o l'ltlw:1rcls, Tod Harte. Svutm-rl: Gvo1'g:v Squibb, Hugo XV:lll, 1n'ofvsso1', Kathlien Robertson, John Pierpoint. Political Science Club Newly organized during 1931, the Political Science club has an extensively outlined program for its future activities. The plans include an interesting study of political theories and governmental pol- icies. Hugo Wall, head of the department of political science, is advisor to this group of government students. New Voters League In 1928 a College League of Women Voters was organized on the campus with the help of Mrs. Glenn Bakkum, Dean Grace Wilkie, and Mrs. H. W. Foght. The group changed its name to New Voters League this spring. The purpose of the organization, which is open to any Woman student in- terested, is to create an interest on the campus, especially among Women, in the leading political prob- lems of the day. Mary Elizabeth De La Mater is the president, Elizabeth Hunt, vice-presidentg and Betty Oliver, publicity chairman. Ruth Lninpl. Elf-:mor Judd, Helen Hillynrcl, Alien XVoodbni'n. Mary Elizabeth De l.:1 Mater. Kathliun Robertson, .losopliinv Alexzlmler, llorothn-xi Roth, Lois Mclntire, Floreuee Hairrison, Jayne Sc'h1'f1de1'. A' we .., 1W...,.,..a ,W ,m ,.., ms- Q .w.W.... VW rm WH Q First row. seated: Olvtlia Sloan, Bi-tty Compton. llessii- Nl. 1'-ilvn-i'. J. Ii. Turner. Nl:iiiriei- Rlonasinith. Allit-rt Wiiiinzin. Se-eonql row: Dr. llixzm-l Hriineli. Polly Ayres. Don Mi-lloha-vis. llarriel 'l't's-init-ke. Tlielnni Hzirtnian, Harold Hynflman. Opin- Swopi-. Kozella Blood, Dr. Goldsmith. John Pohlniain. Loyd Wai'i't-ii. I.yh- Pllilllilll. lfiek Gottselialk, John liasliain, John tiroxe, llnyniond Clalpp. Marsh l'luinlee. Aesculapius The Aesculapius Society was organized among the pre-medic memhers of the Zoology department for the purpose of facilitating the securing of material coneerning entrance to medical school, dispensing to its memhers a greater knowledge of their held. and forging hands of comradeship through social activities. The society proceeds to the hrst ohjective hy collecting university catalogues, to the second hy securing speakers from the physicians ol' the city and from among its memhers, and to the third hy parties. The society sponsor is Dr. Hazel li. Branch, professor of comparative anatomy and related suhiects at the university. Upie Swope is president, Rozella Blood vice-president, Loyd YVarren secretary-treasurer. King Arthufs Court King Arthur's Court, the educational chili ol the campus, was formed in iozo. lts purpose is to coordinate the stu- dents' interest in education and bring heliore them speakers of educational value. The organization ol' the group is carried out in the manner which the name suggests. Those who hold otlices in the court are Glenn Crockett. VVarren Kinney, Helena Olthoiili. and Dorothy Eherhart, N1'illl'df NYins1on Xlrunros-, Ili-li-ini Olthoff. tilt-nn l'i'o1-ki-tt. llorotliy Hht-'1'lnii'1. Sianalintrz G1'ru'r- Moore. lfirlytlie tlzirwootl. Fred l3utlei'. ,XlniaYVlii1i-. llorniee l'opkins. lioreue Stone-. Susie XYy1'koff. l'i'ofessoi' Iliekt-i'son, Dora Ke-etou. lftlith Xlorrison. liuelht Kearns. Nomzi Mears. Y--ra Fool:-y. Pauline Jones, Mrs. l'. A. ftlzihin. Mal'g:ti't-t Wilkinson. .QKWVW 'W ..e. T W? . t TF? mi' 1 J ,,... umm l 1 A Seated: Majel Cooprider. Christine Jensen. Ethel Koller. Violet Rieliarrlson, Xonia Mears, Ruth Mellnay, Margaret, Mooney. Iilros Kihlfe. Standing: Miss Grace NVilkie. Jennie Faye Seliweiter. Vera June Scott, Claudine Downing. Dorothy Herrinan, Eleanor Denton, Mary lilizabetli Du La lllater. ,liriie-stine Yolheiin, Maey Shippey. Misa litlith Fnltz. Home Economics Club llome liconomics Club has as its purpose the creation of more interest and stucly in various lieltls of home econom- ies. Any girl interested in home economics is eligible for active membership. Meetings were lirst held in oltl Fairmount Hall, then in the llome Economics cotta re and now in the Home Economics suite on the third floor of Administra- tion building. The outstanding feature ol this years program was the Home Coming Day open house and tea lor the Home liconomics alumni. Officers are: Ethel Keller, presidentg Macy Shippey, vice-presitlentg Mary Elizabeth De La Mater secretarf-treasurer: Noma Mears re iorter' Miss Grace VVilkie and Miss litlith Fultz tacultf sionsors. 7 v l v a l Pi Beta Chi The art club was louncletl to further interest in Fine antl Applied Arts among stutlents. All members are required to be taking or planning to take a minor in the art tlepartment. The olliiccrs for this year are: lrma Teten, presiclentg Lawrence Wells, vice-president, Maxine Allen, secretary: Dorothy Eberhart, treasurer, Lewis Stephens, reporter. VVilla Raymond was president the first semester. Miss Elizabeth Sprague helped organize the club six years ago. Its ad- visors are Clayton Henri Staples, Mrs. Beulah Bowers, and Miss Sprague. ,,.,4 at 'J x Standing: Bettina Bosworth. Allen Brown. Howard Bisli, Lewis Stephens. Lawrence Wells, Mrs, Beulah Bowers. advisor, Irma Teten, Margaret Blankenship. Roseoo Bryant, Maxine Allen, Clayton H. Staples, advisor. Pauline llrew, Genevieve Morgan, Harry Kings- hnry. Seated: Dorothy Ebt-rliart. Marian Sutter, Margaret Kahn, XVilla Raymond. H 17' ,,-AY M212 ' ff' V: 1 H z,-14 1--f-Qfeziif' 'Sage' 2 ?1 5-f rf :fig,,1'i1g ---' ww Y Robert Pinaire, Lucius Mull. Etlward Geary. Jimmy Hoon. lien Thayer. George llziuxrhinzln. Earl John on tl Gliders Club Organized last year the Gliders Club has made a good beginning in that they are now the owners of three gliders, Which they put to good use, and by which they are enabled to gain valuable and prac- tical experience. Mr. Petroff, head of the department of aeronautics, is the advisor, and George Baugh- man is president. s . 1 enn Jorain. C'l1ai'It-s Whittaker Engineers Club The Engineers club is composed of a group of students interested in engineering, but who are not necessarily in the department. Their principal aim is to bring before the group speakers of note and to keep alive on the campus interest in the Held of engineering. The club came into being five years ago. Tom Salter is president, Dwane Wallace vice-president, Ned Burkett secretary-treasurer. Stunrlinggz Glenn Joraln. Clzireneef fiUl1lflIll'Y', Gmlfrvy llnwso. Cecil FU1'll'T. Gvorgw- l5:mg'l11n:xn, lin-mlcl Paul, Clarence Stem-In-. lmoiiard Znng'lu-r. Russell Gordon. Iinlitwt l'inairv. Xvilylll' 'l't'Il11llUlfl!1. Seated: hvilllfdl' Ilnrty. llulf Moller, Tom Salter. Dwzxnv Wallace, A. X, I'vt:'uff. Marvin Tlinyt-'i'. Ulevt- Sniysvr. 4'la1'vi14-e Downing. 7 ' ' 'ff .. . 'l . ... I T 1 'reJ35'2?'f 1SV:? t1Q ,1Z , 4 ' vv... , . -- '1 'f .,.. 2' Tifi 'Ll if -' YZ? ' ' ' -: ,:,.,::: iz- :. - ,,,, .,- W Irz- Stzinilingz NY1iiif1'erl VVilson. Isabelle llxxhcoek. liiiiiicv Stolfus. Mary Sipple. .lavqiit-liiw Oliver. tieralfl Smith. Helen Hill. liit'liard Fors- ter, Miss t li:ii'lott0 lim-, llarold .lt-l'fi'it-s, Evelyn hlilfllll. this Castaiiit-ii, Helen Sewnrfl. XVaiyiit- Hemphill. Mzii'g:iie1'ite Rliinsell. Ernes- tine Smith. .losepliiiiv ,-Xluxaiiiler. Seated: Gladys tlilley. Margaxret Hall. Lois liiigrlish. Helen Rovkwooil, Suzaiiiie Ile-sllztyes, Virginia Joints, l'Ii'iii-stiiiv Seydt-ll. Helen Hodgson, llvtty l5l1l'lilllg.fll2lIll. Mary lillvii Taggart. Jayne St'l1i'adi-i', Le Cercle Francais Le Cercle Francais was organized in 1922 hy Miss Iacquetta Downing, head of the French depart- ment. The purpose of the cluh is to promote interest in the study of the French people and to facilitate the speaking of the language. Each year the club has been host to the students of the French depart- ments of the high schools at which time they have presented a play or group of plays. The orlicers for 1930-1931 are: Iosephine Alexander, president, Iayne Schrader, vice-president, Alden Brooks, secre- tary, Virginia Iones, treasurer. CFITIBI1 The German cluh is as old as the department itself. Meetings are held twice a month at which Ger- man is spoken exclusively and talks are given in German. ln addition to helping the student gain a hetter speaking knowledge of the language, social meetings are an interesting part of the cluh's activities. Seated: l'Ifln:1 Klaassvii, Freda Ringel. Myrtle Nix. Siizziiiiie Deshziyvs, Lois English. Stamiling: Theodore Sehreiber, professor, Lester Nix, Russell Cooper, Bob Griffith, llarold Hynrllnain, Cliarles Pwhiii, Don HeRohei'ts. Y.. -WH-W V --.. Y-Wa,-YY-V ,,,... ,W ,M .W,,,,,.,,,. , .t-..-YY M -Y----f Y-W -'-Y - ,--- - ----Y,Y -H - -Y - - -Y ---Y---M -Y -V -- -V YA i-e1 '1 el-il cc1 tete eet1'1 ' 1 f 'W M' IT Mraz W Q 'f'5'1m1 '1 'if gt .H we -. I , L5 W- , i - . W. A - ... v Nvalmli lilizziln-tli f'li:iC0n. Pauline Miirpliy. Mary Nipple. llolmw-s Kurt. Carol Rogers. liriiesiim- Smith, Standing: Sanniell XVofs5'. prof.-sr sur. Olliin Aiiiliruse. lieiievieve- liopkins, l ln1'4-iirw llarrisoii. Maxine Ray. llill Smith. Yaurlan lliviwe. liwiwitliy Blartiii. Blai'j11rit- Miirpliy. lfmiiees XXI-lliiiaii. Spanish Club This group is an organization ol stutlents with ten hours of Spanish that has maale an Cllort to estahlish lirientlly relations with other Spanish anal Nlcxican elulis anal to facilitate the speaking ol the language. The programs arc given over to speakers representing the other cluhs. plays, music. and diversions that will aclnl to the mastery ol' the laiiguagc. lnternational Club 'llie nur nose ol the lnternational elulm is to vromote international anal inter-racial -'ooml will anal untlerstantlin ' on Q - h 3- tlie campus. .Xnyonc who is interested is eligilule for membership. 'I his year men ol worlcl-witle renown have lween the sneakers at meetinws. Dr. liclwartl .X. Steiner and Sherwood Eclclx' are two ol' the most outstanclinfr. ln the liall a I 21 4 . . - 1 . , rl . banquet was lieltl lw the local cluh entertaining similar clubs from hlcllherson. XVashhurn, Phillips. anal l'riencls. llelen 'lliornton is president: Raymontl Prilioth. vice-presiclcnt: Suzanne lbeshayes. secretary: Lyman Priest, treas- urer: llr. llaltlgum. sponsor. 1 3' , 5 S ' T KE? , Si-:Ili-rl: lmen Iieippell. Etsuji Miyaliara. Yin Ping: Shih, Suzanne Desliayes. Flizalmeth liowrlish. Lum Lincoln. Helen Thorntrm. prifsi- slvnt. Louise l rri't. Georgia Hlwell. Stamlinig: Alflen lirrmks. Kennth XViflnn-y. A. X. l'eIi'riff. Dr, Harold NY, lfvwght. 4':itln-rim' Nitsi-like. Dr. lllvnn liakknm. Ruth Nlellnay. llXlIlZlll Priest. Elizabeth Tliayer. Hriiestiiiw Smith. Gwen Steele. H1-len l,:iw. l.aYn-lle Vim. Hrs. V. A. Alahin, l i'i1la Ringel. Yirpriiiia Amit-rson, j2:'-,gui Q- --' ---ff- :-1,1-igjji, 1.-Fv,i,Z irq'-fag -fmmi--T11ffnfi--11--f-Q--3, 2 ifvg-3--2-ff--f :.:3.,i,pgj, 5:5 Mr V-as - -. V- .4 . , T-v s- W if YVhat good care will do for El girlvflollege bred at last, llelen Ruth, Suzann Judd, senio1's7VVhy Anne. you forgot your ive-skatesfJust drop in :my Sunil e Deshayes, Virginia Anderson. Helen Thornton, and Eleanor :ly afternoon, herm-Vs the reception lint-fThe ear lives just a block and tl half south, you guess-lt's a gaine they play with the U:1ssers-by--Illiss Ulough is ably 1-si-orlecl-It's anotller ganie, you name it-Mrs. Cope. house mother, and it seems her girls are all behaving xx we don't know what we have but we'll bet it's xnisehief. Holyolce l'l The girls' dormitory was established where it now is in 1898 fore that time the girls were housed in the stone house at 1717 F was established in the 'iCottagel'. ln 1914 an addition was made to t Miss Flora Clough was lirst house mother of the Cottagel'. Mrs. 'The girls living at Holyoke Hall have organized with the Helen Ruth, vice-president, Anne Caniparoli, secretary-treasurer Maude Hough, Iune Hamilton, Nedra Dildine, Bertha Aehelpohl, Katherine Phelps, Katharine Harris, Elizabeth Sterrett, Mae Bert 'ell-When spring eoines 'round againfaiid in the lt-it C0l'11t'l' as Holyoke Cottage with twelve girls resident. Be- airinount. A dining room for both men and women he building itself, increasing its capacity to about 40. Mattie L. Cope now fills that position. following officers: Virginia Anderson, president, . Other residents now are Mrs. Cope, Miss Clough, Wiiiifretl Leete, Helen Hillyard, Eleanor ludd, Hymer, Betty lo Graham, Helen Grirlin, Vera lune Scott, Luella Kearns, Wanda Royer, Suzanne Deshayes, Kathleen Grossman, Helen Thornton, and Marguerite Brooker. ,i T THLETICS O NK '4-v Part of the Mexican beauty Red told us about-A citadel some hundreds of years old: the boys were quite impressed- Coach Johnson is nearly out of the picture with these two huskies- And here is the plaza where the girls go one way and the boys the other CFQ-Hitch-hiking in Mexico is pretty soft-The boys lined up in front of VVoolworths-They wouldn't fool us, would they?-The good will ambassadors themselves-Such popularity must be deserved. It was the rare privilege of the basketball team to make a trip into Mexico this year. With Coach Gene Iohnson and Mr. I. F. Angulo, instructor in Spanish. the boys visited four cities, Mon- terrey, Satillio. San Luis Potosi, and Mexico City. and played eight games. The purpose mainly was to improve and increase interest in athletics in Mexico and incidentally to demonstrate the good- will of the University of Wichita hy sportsmanship. Members of the team who made the trip were Moffat, Hennigh. Matson, Grove, Arnold, Seedle, Randle, Ragland, and Wright. manager. Athletic Committee Ira Watson, chairman, Paul Yankey, Charles Yankey, George Haun, Tom Iohnson, O. E. Sutter, Henry Wallenstein, Ir., George Siedhoif, Msgr. Farrell, Harry Ortmeyer, Frank Brosius, Sy Seymour. This committee of business and professional men are directors and advisors of athletic affairs for the university. They have the promotion of the school at heart and have done much to put her ahead in many lines of athletic endeavor. - c i fiifllif 1745 if A Review of the Year liver onward and upward in the field of athletics, the University of Wichita teams are making gigantic strides in their ellorts to bring honor and glory to the school. The name of Wichita has been heralded over the nation as the result of victories and conquests made by teams representing the Shocker institution the past year. ln the three largest track and held games in the United States, the University of Wichita teams not only got Hrst place in the events entered but broke existing meet records. At the Drake relays at Des Moines this spring, the Wichita team was the only one to score two victories. ln football the University of Wichita with the inauguration of the Notre Dame sys- tem was able to garner second place in the Central Conference. Next year the prospects for a winning team are exceptionally bright as only two men will be graduated. The trip to Mexico was the crowning achievement for the basketball team of the University of VVichita the past season. Alter losing to the Central Conference leaders by one point, the Shockers got second place in the final standings. Golf and tennis, while minor sports here, were ably represented by talented players who brought home their share of the victories. ALBERT I. G1aBElt'r lJif'4't'Iw' of ,1ff1!l'fIit'n' nuff I-Ima! I-'nuff l l l E s l V f 5 1 i i 5 i 5' in I HARRY T. Gosacsrt Iosufu I. Locke Tzuzffq Couch and Dlil'l'l'fUl' of .-l.r.f1',f1.1l1l Fooffmzll Cmftfz GENE Ionxsox Hein! Btzxlgcffnzfl Cmrcfl llmrl l'l1y.vitt1l 1:'zf1rc1111'o11 mill Cm Rov l'Pif1'1. fiAI,I,.XGHliR was captain of the footlmall team for the past two years a11d has lween a regular during all his four years in college. Pele missed playing for the first time in four years this past season when he sulliered an injury to his knee. As a ft1llhack,i he was fast 'intl hit tl ' ' ' ' r 1' ' ' ' ' ' 11' line haid for consistent gains every time he carried the hall. Pete was made captain antl fullback on the all-state team. LAYING under the hanner of the Notre Dame system for the first time, tl1e University of Wichita Wheatshockers came out of a lethargy this season, when she played ten hard games. Six of tl1ese were in the Central Conference, and four were non-conference battles. Albert I. Gehert, graduate of the Uni- versity of Notre Dame, and a student of Knute Rockne, late master of football, controlled the destiny of football at the University, with joe Locke assisting. Of the ten frames ula ed, the Shockers emer ed victorious ' - A A as l Y V g . in six. Wichita tackled the strong Oklahoma Aggies on the latter's stamping grounds and lost tl1e game hy I2 points. The Haskell Indians came to Wichita for a clash and rom ved all . . , . , I over the gridiron to decisively smother the Shockers. 'Ihe Cen- tral Conference season ended with Wichita in second vlace. I Wichita again took the city grid title when she adminis- tered the worst defeat ever handled to a team wearing the :olors of the Friends University Quakers. Throughout the season, Wichita scored a total of 126 points to l1er opponents' 116. The Gehert-coached team placed four men O11 all-conference a11d all-state teams. Pete Gal- lagher, captain for the past two seasons, was unanimously chosen for the fullback position and made captain of the first team. Tilford Tucker, right halfhack playing his third year, was chosen hy a large majority. lohn Rosenbaum, playi11g his last year at VVichita, was chosen for one of the guard positions. Bill Crawley, captain-elect for next year, placed center position ol1 the second all-conference team. The all-star selections of the Central and Kansas Confer- ence played a charity game December 6. The Central team won by a score of 21 to 7. VVichita was represented by Pete Gallagher, Iohn Rosenbaum, Tilford Tucker, Louis Koch, and VVilliam Crawley. yt FOOTH.-XLI, SQUAD. iogo-Iiottoni row: Dye, Shadoan. Clark, Tucker, Rosenhaum, Gallagher. Lockert. Pierce. Bet-nian, Koch, Crawley. Middle row: Gt-hoe. McLaughlin, Hulwlmard. Schaefer, Pechin. Shaft. Hollander. Hamilton. Sutter, VVilson. Top row: Head Coach Gehert. Mot-Tat. Iohnson. Price. Sticklc, Randle. Iones. manager. Poteete. Seedle. Cow, Hurst. llunter. Loftus, Guyot, Assistant Coach Locke. CAPTAIY'EI.IECT B111 CRAw1.1-.Y is rated as one of the best defensive men to wear a bl :ck and yellow uniform Hc has been 1 xeritable H h b 1 l f r two cars. Hill made center on thc ill conference second team this year He man-mountain at the pivot position. e as een a rcgu ar o y has one more season of competition for his Alma Mater. I-IEN Coach Gebert announced the first call for football practice, 60 aspiring candidates greeted him and his assistant Ioe Locke. Twelve of these were lettermen. In the Hrst game of the season, the Wheatshockers engaged the Okla- homa Agricultural and Mechanical College at Stillwater. They went down to a defeat, 12-0. Although the steamroller tactics of the Aggies proved too much for Gebert and his men, Wichita threatened the goal line many times, and Koch, diminutive quarterback, returned a punt 45 yards. Wichita journied to Pittsburg on October 3 to play a night game, and returned home with her first victory. Tip Tucker, red-topped halfback, ran 70 yards to put the ball in a scoring position. Captain Gallagher smashed the line two times to make the only counter of the game. Two hundred and fifty rooters accompanied the Shockers to Emporia on October IO when Wichita tangled with the Emporia Hornets at night. The Final score was 13-13. The game was marked by many penalties and fumbles. In the first home game of the season, the Shockers were hosts to the Haskell Indians of Lawrence. The Redskins were on a wild rampage and completely smothered the attempts of the Shockers to overpower them. When the Indians had done with their evening's work, the score was 36-6. More than 8,000 people saw the first night game played on the University of Wichita Held. A week later, the Central Conference leaders, the Washburn Ichabods, came to Wichita. The Pile Drivers outweighed the Shockers 20 pounds to the man, and used their smashing line tactics to overwhelm the Shockers. The final score was 31-12. sw 3. Shoekers smothering a Southwestern attack-Gcbert giving McLaughlin an illustrated lecture Circling thc end for .1 gain on the Quakers 1930 Football Season ICHITA sought the Tigers in their lair, and vanquished the Hays Teachers, 14-0, for the second win of the season. After the Wichita power house got into action, the Tigers made a full retreat. Beeman, Shocker end, picked up a Hays fumble and ran for the first touchdown of the game, while Captain Gallagher put the ball across for the second touch- down of the day. Playing without the services of Gallagher, the Shockers walloped their traditional foes, the Southwestern Moundhuilders in the Wichita Rosiaxisiurixr, Gmzral .... .... 'l 'wo Years Mo1l1fA1', Emi ....., ..... 'I 'hrec Years KOCH, QIlLlI'fl'l'f7LIL'k ,.., ..,,. .... T x vo Years CLARK, Gzxizrrf .....,.......,.... ,..... T wo Years CR.fuvI.Ev, Cfnfffr, fIL1f7fLlfl7'Efl'l'f ..,. Three Years ROBERTSON, limi' .,.. ....,, ...,. ..... T l 1 ree Years Makin a Hrst down in the Homecoming Day game against Southwestern on Stadium Field. Homecoming Day game, November 8. The Shockers made three touch- downs against one made by the Moundbuilders. Tip Tucker proved to be the big gun of the Wichita attack. In a veritable sea of mud, the Shockers swam to a close win over the College of Emporia by the score of 12-9. Wichita was unfortunate in her punting, Carl Hollander, playing in the place of Captain Gallagher, and Tip Tucker were the stars of this game. With the dope against them, the Shockers rose to great heights to while the Collegians were making good their long kicks. defeat the Phillips University grid team from Enid. In the best played game of the year, the Shockers ran rough-shod over the I-laymakers. The Flirv'1'i,R, Hizlffmck llll-RVI4, 'llzrfglf ,. SIIXDOAY, Tizffflz' . Prcillw, Umm! i. R,wiu.i-,, limml .. TIWTKI R. Hillffulrk ,ew J . . . .... Two Years Year ' Yu 'l r Q . . ,.... Uni- . . ..,, T Wu .. .... Two Years . . . . , . , . Tlireu Years . . . . . .'l'ln'ec Years l l i ,, X t , . l t t 4 l S i 1 s 5 5 - 1 ,X host ol Slioekers stopping LI Ilaxslsell brave in the first home unc played at n ,Q ,X 'v G.: n- if H if W 'K lv 1 V ,W final score was 12-6. A series of passes netted the first touchdown. Tip Tucker, on an off-tackle spinner, raced forty-Five yards for the second touchdown of the game. For eight straight years, the Shockers have showed their superiority over the Quakers on the gridiron. The score on Turkey Day this year was 33-o, the largest for all time. Five touchdowns were made by the high-flying Shockers. Wichita excelled in every play, the Quakers never threatening until the final quarter. With this Fitting climax the wearers of the black and yellow ended a very successful season, placing second in the conference and winning two of their four non-conference games. l.or:Kif,R'1', Hiflllmck .... .... O nc Year lin-., limi ...,....,.. .... L Jne Year VV.'XIiKl.R, Q1IHII'll'l'!Hlt'k .. . .... One Year lN1Cl4XUG1ll,lY, Hfflffmrk . , . ...... One Year f SU'l I4l-.R, UIILHYI ........, ..... 'I 'wo Years I,o1f'i'i's. Gmini' ...... ,.........,......... C Jne Year ZQQP l Going through thc Quaker line for a long gain in thc Turkey Day classic. 1930 SCORING RECORD FOR THE SHOCKERS :'gWichita 4..C........V.,,. o Oklahoma Aggies . . . ..., . . I2 Wichita .i.i . . . 6 Pittsburg Teachers . . . . . o Wichita. . . . . .13 Emporia Teachers . . , . .13 ax:Wichita .,,, . . 6 Haskell Indians . . . . . .38 Wichita .... . . .12 Washburn ..,.. . . 31 Wichita ..,. . . .14 Hays Teachers . . . . o Wichita .... . . .18 Southwestern i...., . . 7 Wichita .... , . .12 College of Emporia . . . . 9 3'4Wichita .ii. . . .12 Phillips ........... . . 6 :'gWichita .... ........... 3 3 Friends ............ o Ui indicates non-conference gamesj Total points-Wichita 1265 Opponents 116 4 4 Hott..-wDi.R, Ifzzlffwizfk . . . .... One Year H.-xx1lL'1'ow, flulffvucfg . , . .... Two Years HLNNIGH. Tackle ..... ,.,. T wo Years XVILSON, Tackle ........ ..,,. ' Two Years SHAFT, Hnfflmek ,................,...., Three Years S1tH.i1-11111, Q11t1rtr1'fn1c'k .,............... Three Years Al' 1-if Q QQQPK sg .'3:?'.,..i Xi M Koch holding off Il Moumlhuilder while covering ground in the Homecoming game CaP'r.xIN IAMEs 'AREDU MOFFAT Mollat finished his collegiate career in basketball this season after playing regular on the Shocker team for four years. Ile has been captain of the black and yellow cage squad during his sophomore. junior, and senior years. Red is the only man to graduate from either lfairinount or the University of XVichita to hold the captainey three years in succession. He plays at guard. 1930-31 Baslcetball Season OOKING over the accomplishments of the 1931 basketball squad representing the Wheatshocker colors, it is easily seen that the University of Wichita had an outstanding team. Among their laurels are a cup for winning first place in the annual Southwestern College invitation meet, the glory of being runners-up in the conference race to the champion Pitts- burg Gorrillas, who also won the title the year before, the acceptance of an invitation to play eight games in Mexico and the winning of all of them, and the landing of three stellar players on the all-star Central Conference selections. Bill Hennigh, flashy guard, finishing his third year, was chosen a guard on the famous quintet while Captain Red Moffat, guard, and Harold Grove, the Shocker's offensive ace, landed places on the second team after narrowly missing get- ting berths on the first quintet. During the entire season, the cage squad played 32 games and won 27 of them. Eleven conference wins were matched against three conference defeats to allow the Shockers to wind up the Central Conference race in second place. The Washburn Ichabods slipped the Shockers a surprise defeat in an upset game with a one-point margin. The other two defeats were handed down by the Pittsburg Teachers, thus proving their supremacy in the central conference race. The Pittsburg- Wichita clashes were the most outstanding and hardest fought games of the year. The Wheatshockers entered the Southwestern meet at Winfield to defeat numerous outstanding teams such as the Northwest Missouri Teachers from Maryville and the fast Central Oklahoma Teachers from Edmond, to be crowned as champions. js,-XSKlf,'l'lsiXI,I, SQUAI3-F1'14,:f row: Shacloan. Arnold, lleenian, Ranlle. Seedle. Sl't'Ul1Ii row: Coach Iohnson. Ragland. Matson. Captain Molliat. Grove. Ilennigh. Intramural Sports An intramural committee composed of Coach Harry T. Goerger, Kenneth Hays, and Virgil Priboth was chosen this spring for the purpose of managing all intramural sports. This groups organ- ized the various leagues and made up the schedules for play. The Sunflower sport staff handled the baseball and tennis tournies. All major sports but football were represented this year and all men in- terested except Varsity lettermen Were eligible. INTRA MURAL BASKETBA LL-FINAL STANDING AVON IAJST PCT. hagles ..,...., , . ,.., .,... . ..., 3 o 1.000 Alpha Gamma Gamma . . . . . .3 2 .600 VVebster . . . .,......,.. .... x g 2 .600 Zeta Delta Epsilon .... ..,. 2 3 .400 Phi Upsilon Sigma .... . . . i 4 .200 Pi Alpha Pi ....,........,..,.,,.............., 1 4 .200 Al-l.-STAR Slfl.l'iCTlON l:0I'll'ilI'IfJ'f Priest. lfagles: Hunter. lfagle: Burkett. XVehstt'r: Ki-pner, VVebste1'. Carrier: liseo. Zeta Delt: C. liaxis. Alpha Gam. fr!tiII'Iia'.' Brooks, Alpha Gam: Tucker. liagles: Rape. XVebster: Youngmeyer. Phi Sig. INTRAMURAL BASEBA LL-FINAL STANDING Wins' l,osT PCT. VVebster .... . ,, ,. M5 I .835 Phi Upsilon Sigma , , . . . , 4 2 .666 Eagles . . , . . . , . . 4 2 .666 Zeta Delta Epsilon . .. , 2 2 500 Pi Alpha Pi . . . . . . . . . . .1 3 250 Alpha Gamma Gamma . . . . . .1 3 .250 XVehster won the inter-fraternity track meet. In tennis thc competition was close and the matches interesting. Right: liagles, basketball winners: Bosworth, Geboe, Crawley, Priest. Below: Alpha Gam, tied for second, R. Prihoth, V. Prihoth, VVieland, Mason, VVehh, Harte. Below, right: VVebster, tied for second, Cline, Campbell, Burket, Rape, Wilson, Van Horn, Brooks, Kepner, Schrader. C5921 1 U l X H 0 'Z' ' N the iaunt to Mexico, the Shoekers played eight games in four Mexican cities and Won all of them. The Mexicans were well impressed with the smooth, systema- tic, and well-organized playing talents of the invading Shoekers. The Wiehitans won each game hy a large score although the games were fought hard and fast. Prohalnly the higgest laetor eontrihuting to the success ol' the ioygi Shocker eagers was the in- valuable coaching ol, Gene johnson, coaching at the Shocker school for his third eonseeutixe year. Previous to the opening ol' school. it appeared that a lug season was in store and a successful one, too, but the hright outlooks were shattered when VValt llenrion. star varsity center. announced that he was entering the University of Nebraska. Iohnson rhen inserted Red Forney. Newton hoy, in the pivot position. Red improved fast and looked like a permanent Fixture when Cupid shot his how and arrow in l orntw s path and Red withdrew his obligations to follow matrimony. Two frosh. Vernon Vaughn and Ray lieeman. were seen at the pivot post from the on out. .Xfter a weak start, handicapped severely in lacking a eonipetent center. Coach Iohnson moulded together a winning team. Prospects for the team in in-Q2 are pointing to a hot contest for the conference honors as the only man to he lost will he Captain Red Motliat who graduates. .Xll other members ot the varsity and frosh squads are expected hack next season. E s ki IIENNIGH. llnard, 3 yrs. GHOYIC. Forward. 3 yrs MATSON. l orwai'd. 3 yrs YAUUHN, i'i'nl01', 1 yr. lSEl'1lNI,XN. Cr-ntor, 1 yr. Je' 5,1 VVichita ....., Wichita ..,,.. VVichitz1. . . . . Wichita Wichita Wichita Wichita ...... Wichita ...,,. 39 39 22 50 29 34 37 19 Wichita ...... 28 Wichita ...,.. 17 Wichita ,..... ,IQ DOY D1-.1x1uc:K GEORGE R1 ss1.1.1. Gsontzil, S1.1.1is SHOCKER BASKETBALL SUMMARY Phillips .. McPherson ., H:-thel .. Tulsa ..... VVl1Sl1lJLl1'H .. Ilays ..,.......... Collage of Emporia 24 Bethany ..,,,,,,,.. Tulsa . . . . Pittsburg . . Phillips .. VVichita .,.... 1 8 VVichita .,..,. 25 VVicl1ita ...... 51 VVichita ,...., 40 VVichita ...... 25 XVichita ..,,., 5 1 VVichita ...,.. 4 1 VVichita ...... IQ VVichita ...... 16 Wichita ..,... 46 1931 FRESHINIAN l5As14ETBA1.1. RLJSTEIK B111 Vc11.KM.xY ROI-SI-.RT Lhsirziz liiticii lhi HENRY MO'I'liS Dow Sc:11im1n1-.11 Fiuvcis Ioiixsov .Hi ., F ' but 5 ff licthany .. Washburn .,... Southwestern . . . limpuria Tcachcrs Emporia College .... liniporia Teachers . . . Hays ...,...,....., Pittsburg ,.... Soutliwcstcrii . , . Fricmls ...... . R14.r:G113 Rom-.R'1'sox Pl6'I'E HLRSHEY 16 35 I7 18 18 50 26 ll 16 55 Za HANDLE. Guard, 3 yr SHAIDOAN, Guard, 2 yrs. SEEDLE, Forward, 1 yr. RAG LAND, G uard, 1 yr. ARNO I iD, Forward, 2 yrs QQ 'N QW .vp tai-'i tis lauu. Ilbxitvss is completing four years nl' st-rxice for his .Xlma Mater this spring. Ile runs the l-iw and high hurdles and made line records all during his collegiate career. X Track Squad - top row: Williams, Koch, Miller. Pech- ln, Seedle, Clark, Klausner. Dempsy, Gottschalk. Brooks, C l a i' k. manager. Middle row: Shalt, Terry, Cessna. lforf ward. Captain llar- ness. P V l e . Hos- w o r t li. Manning. G a l l a g h e r, and C o a c li Goerger. Bottom row: San- ders, Walker, Wid- ney, Knowles, l.aud- crmilk, Woodman. , if I TRACK 1931 Track Season Competing in three oli the largest meets in the United States, the track teams oli the University ol' Wichita, led by Coach Harry T. Goerger, brought lame and glory to the school when they cap- tured high honors in the Drake, Illinois, and the Kansas relays. The Shocker team was the only entry at the Drake meet to cap- ture lirsts in two events. In the first meet ol the season, Wichita attended the Kansas City Athletic Club indoor carnival in February. The mile relay team composed of Forward, Rennick, VValker, and XVidney sur- passed the Haskell team with a record of 3 min. 52.5 sec. Harold Manning, running his last year for the University, set a new mile record when he sped around the oval in 4 min. 25.2 sec. At the lllinois relays, the distance medley relay team con- sisting of Rennick, Forward, Widney, and Manning, set a new meet record ol' io min. 35.2 sec. The old record was slashed by about Five seconds. The sprint relay team captured hrst place and broke the old record at the Drake relays in April. The time for the distance was 3 min. 30.9 sec., cutting the old record clown three seconds. The team was made up ol' VVidney, Walker, Forward, and Manning. The 880 yard relay team of Vlloodman, Widney, Walker, and Forward won lirst place. The Kansas relays proved just as fruitful for the Shockcrs when Coach Goergers proteges slashed otl 13.8 seconds in the dis- fp Distance M e tl l e y Team. which broke records in all relays :ntered this season. Coach llarrx' T. tioerger. W i d ne V. Rennick. lforward. .ind Manning. . N sm 'if-5 in Ei, Twrtrzia fnA 4... TP li ft Q Y 'ft -l fl A TRACK tance medley relay to set up a new record. Their time this year was IO min. 24.1 sec. ln two years' time, the University team has clipped off 25 seconds from the old mark. The team was made up of Forward, Rennick, Widney, and Manning. In the first dual meet with Tulsa on Stadium Field, the Shockers took I2 Firsts out of I4 events to vanquish the Hurricanes with a score of 95 2-3 to 35 1-3 for Tulsa. A week later, the Shockers journeyed to Pittsburg to meet the Gorillas, one of the strong track teams in the Central conference. Wichita was able to take six firsts, but the final re- sult showed that Pittsburg tacked up 752 points to 552 for the Municipals. The triangular meet with Friends and Southwestern College show- ed the power of the Shockers when they took I2 lirsts out of IS events. Forward was high man in this meet as he took firsts in the century and 220-yllfd dashes, and was a member of the relay team which took first place. Losing some very valuable men by graduation, Coach Goerger is expecting the new material to come in to take the place of the tracksters who have completed four years of track competition. Captain Harness, Roy Gallagher, Harold Manning, and Kenneth Widney are members of the team who graduate. Hrluzcf-Captaiii Harness leading in the low sticks-Knowles in a mighty leap- Williams clearing the bar-Forward scoring a first against Tulsa with Walker and VVoodn1an close-Three Shockers and a Quaker taking to the air-Leading scorers for the Shoekers, Manning and Forward-Forward, nosing out Morton, Quaker, in the eenturv. 4 .,f ,, 5 Q i 3 2 HE CHARLES Cam-.Y Goff Sqmzrf: LABIPI., Roin.nTsov, Caituv, C.xP'i'a1N M.xTsos, Cvxifmiw Mivrsov IEENVI-.Tli Hays Hays, VVooDs, Koen REX RoBER'rsos1 against colleges that placed good teams on the fairways. At present the chance of going through the season with a clean sweep. April April I5-Wichita U. won 6-5 El Dorado Iunior College at Wichita April 16--VViehita U. won Southwestern 1756-LQ at Winfield April Gow SCHEDULE GOLF TEAM, captained hy George Matson, started off the April season with victories in Oklahoma and Kansas Shockers are undefeated and stand an excellent 12--VVichita U. won Bethany fi up at Lindshorg April 24-VViehita U. won Washburn o-Ig at Topeka ii-VViehita U. won Phillips 5-i at Enid May 18-VViehita U. won Phillips 4-o at VViehita May April Igo-NViehita U. won lil Dorado Iunior College at El Dorado 4-Wichita U. won Kansas Aggies at Manhattan May 9-Wichita U. vs. Wlashhurn at Topeka I4-I61C0I'lfCI'CI'lCt' Meet at Pittshurg HE TENNIS TEAM, led hy the Veteran lohn Pierpoint, when it had completed one half of its schedule, turned in two wins, one tie, and three losses. The team has met some stiff competition with several more victories. Although tennis is a minor sport at Wichita it is dent April April April April body. TENNIS SCHEDULE I April 11-VViehita U. lost Phillips at Enid 2-1. Mill' IS1xVlClllI2l U. won El Dorado lunior College 4-I at Vllichita Mill' I I I I I I Maw' IX1AV1Cl1lI21 U. lost Phillips 5-I at VV1ehita MM, .zo-VViehita U. won Southwestern 4,2 at Vlliniield May April this season hut should come through fast becoming popular with the stu- tied Bethany Ig-g at Lindshorg 22TxVlCl7iI2l U. 24-VViehita U. lost VVLlSl1l3LlI'l'l at Topeka I-Lxvlklllllll U. won I-Il Dorado Iunior College at El Dorado Ci-VViehita U. vs.'Southwestern at Wichita. 9-VViehita U. xs. AVilSl1l7Lll'I1 at VViehita iafio-Conference Meet at Pittslaurg I8-Vvlklllllil U. vs. Kansas Aggies at VViehita Bloor-. DAY VV.xLKLR, OREBAEGH, BET'1'x', VAN SICKEL, BARN:-.s, l3IERPOIN'I', Captain, E. I. PiER1fo1N'r Loi- res, Koen, Craxim LEoN lSARNEs Mrss GLADYs TAGGART Miss EVELYN HINTON Miss MARY IEXVELL llirccfor of I7!1y,f1'L'i1l EffllL'lIfliUlI Amt. Dircdw' of Plzyxmzl Ezlnciltjozz IIIJZFIICYUI' in Pfzydcrf! Edziuzliwz Physical Education for Women The department of physical education for Women has grown rapidly in the last few years. It now offers a major or minor and special training for those who Wish to become teachers. Four hours of ac- tual gym Work and one hour of hygiene are required of every Woman enrolled in the university. A varied field is offered her for choice. This year golf was added to the curriculum, which includes clog- ging, natural dancing, gymnastics, folk dancing, and major and minor sports in season. Miss Hintonls clogging class finishing with a flourish W.A.,X. Iiyi-c:t i'ixi, Iloutn. .fc't1fz'1l.' ,Xnalwel Mclienzie, Naomi Raines. lietty 'l'liayei', presitlent. Miss liyelvn llinton. atlxisor. lit-len llill. .S'm111f1'11Kg: liliyalietli lilag. lit-tty Weaxer. Mary lfortl Lippmann, ,Xnita Brown, Iborotliy Martin. Rutli Mcllnay, .Xnne llaniparoli. liliza- lu-tli Cliacon, Mary lilizalictli llester. Women! Atliletic Association The NVomen's iXtl1letic Association was organizetl six years ago lay Pauline Mallonee witli tlie purpose ol foster- ing tlie icleals ol' gootl sportsmansliip, ol' creating a love of sports, anal ol promoting pliysical eiiieiency among tlie wom- en of tlie university. The seyentli annual Kansas XV..'X..'X. convention was lielcl at tlie Uniyersity ol' VVicliita in Novem- lwer. Representatives ol' practically all Kansas colleges were entertainetl liere at tlieir state meet at tliat time. Tlte local association awartls VV sweaters to girls wlto comply witli the requirements. It is necessary to earn i,ooo points to lie eligilvle lor tlie awartl. Not more tltan loo points can lie won a year in eacli maior sport. lt is al- most impossilvle to earn a sweater lvelore two years of memlmersliip antl participation. lielow are picturetl tlie girls now in school who are entitletl to wear the XV..X..fX. sweater. iilixalvetli Cliacon. I.oi't'na Foreman, Naomi Raines. Virginia Sells Iones. lilixalwetli Iilag. .Xnalvel Mtlieiixie. Pauline Nlurpliy. Louise Cliristman. liettx' 'l'l1at'er, Gerry llammontl. 'QW 428545 4-.qu-an nun:-nu-1 naman-me iran-an qu-an-u naman--n vnu-s--.an is-1 Q E---1 l The golf class taking a little extra exercise, Miss Hinton, instructor, at the left. Baseball varsity, 1930: Caniparoli, Hammond, Raines, Seralin, McKenzie, Chacon, Klag, Hester, Miss Hinton. ,4 M W 1 The hockey varsity team, chosen from all hockey players: Martin, manager, Caniparoli, Folkers, Hester, Bainbridge, Wyssenluaeh, Christman, Raines, Murphy, VVittmann, Miss Hinton. Basketball varsity: Seralin, Hammond, Bainbridge, Folkcrs, Miss Hinton, Caniparoli, Hester, Wyssenbach, jones. Volleyball varsity: Serafin, Iones, Bainbridge, Caniparoli, Wyssenbach, Wittiiiaii, Raines. Rirle team, winners at the .Kemper Rifle Meet, front row: Sergeant Euthon, coach, Folkers, Means, Hillyard, Francis, Essex, Iones. Back row: Bainbridge McKenzie, Raines, Klopfenstein, Miss Hinton, assistant coach. A study in natural dance, Miss Iewell's class. Archery varsity: Helen McClure, Elaine Spray, Bertha Achelpohl, manager. The natural dancing class ornaments the gym with various artistic poses. Women archers who have taken part in telegraphic and city meets: Miss Taggart, coach, Caniparoli, Meyers, Bainbridge, Hall, Folkers, Raines, Elwell, Mcllnay, Means, Martin, Miss Iewell. A representative group ol' advanced swimmers: Weaver, Warner, Nevins, Pritchard, Oliver, Harrop, Iones, Kihbc, Murphy. ' wi I 'E aaaii II 32 DISCIPLINARY ' ' ' 1 R. O. T. C. The Reserve Officers Training Corps at the Univer- sity of Wichita is a non-compulsory unit in which the cadets are given a four-year course in military science and tactics. Training is under the complete supervision of regular army ofTicers. Upon the completion of the course of training graduates are commissioned as second lieuten- ants in the Officers Reserve Corps of the U.S. Army. The University of Wichita R.O.T.C. unit was one of the very few groups in the whole country to receive the rating of Hexcellentw by the federal inspector this year. Mxjou fiEORGE W. PRICE Professor of M1'!1'lmAy Sc1'em'e and Tactics CIAPTAIN CECIL L. RIITLEDGE f1s.v1'.m111t Professor, M1'l1'tc11'y Science and Tactics N '- W rf 1 ly Wx ff! ' iw-i W tw , . ,X .. My . SERGEANT lVlANNING L. EUTHON CZLVZOJI-4771 0? R.O.T.C. Fqu1'pmc'11t .YY -,-,--W., y -f '1-eff' f ff-Vf- f--:ff .lfgw II- i If T'-fzlz. - 'mf ..1- iv 'f': -Y '--f-'Z c'ff 'c ffl' ,angie-,,,,,,,j IAYN12 SCHRADER Honorary Colonel Honorary Colonel Each year according to an established custom at the university the commission cadet oilicers elect a senior girl as the honorary commandant of the R.O.T.C. This year Miss L. Iayne Schrader was selected for this much-prized honor. Her principal duty is to officiate at all formal ceremonies and parades of the unit. Captain Harold Foght, Ir., acts as her aide. .Formal presentation of the Honorary Colonel to the R.O.T.C. unit at the annual military ball, Henrion Gymnasium, November 21, 1930. a tt,i,f Cadet Majors The leading cadet officers for this school year were George Shoemaker and Frank Salisbury, who received cadet commissions as majors. They were chosen on a competitive basis with military scholar- ship and ability as a drill master as qualifications for the honor. Their Work is to direct all military cere- monies and administrative duties of the unit. Staff Officers The staff officers are all senior commissioned officers of the R.O.T.C. It is their duty to take charge of the military instruction of the junior mem- bers of the unit. R.O.T.C. STAFF OFFICERS, Front Rank: Culbert, Hays, Everett, Fulton, Carmichael Hamilton. Rear Rank: Larsen, Owens, McKee, Shoemaker, Salisbury, Lipp, Bosworth Abel, Pickler, Foght. i v ' Y yl izy g 5 E SCABBARD AND BLADE, Front Rrznlq: Foght, Fulton, Vile, Purves, Culbert. Razr RLiH1f.' Shoe- maker, Squier, Pickler. Owens, Larson, Salisbury. Scabbard and Blade Scabbard and Blade is a national, honorary, military fraternity. The Wichita chapter is one of 78 in the leading American universities. Its purpose is to bring into closer association the members of the R.O.T.C., to preserve and develop the essential qualities of good and efficient officers. The members are selected from senior commissioned oilicers. The fraternity sponsors the annual Military Ball, as well as social events Within the organization. QQAQQ C ompany Capmizz ,..,.,, HAROLD W. FOGHT, IR. Licutcfzmzt. , . , i . , KERN PURVES Licutezzmzl i,..,,,. , HAROLD PICKLER Lieutefzazzl, . . . . HARRY HAMILTON Front Row: Klepper, Nlurphy, Wcbod, Kinney, Parker, McNeil, Fuller, Hamilton, Foght, Pickler, Vosburgh, Srickle, Iewett, Horton, Lindley, Buck, Peck, Welsh. Second Row: Leach, Beard, Schafer, Maxwell, Achelpohl, i Burkett, Voth, Cooley, Nell, Lindsley, Grimes, Miles, Gillmore, Swope, Sauer, Small, Pierce, Sauer, Sawallesh. 1- COMPANY ll, l r'ont Row: l'lUl'l6l'. Goble, Gordon, llyrnes. Est-Ii, Malcepl-sive, llorselt. Jr.. Nlilhkil. Mutliews, Lipp, Abel. ML'K0e, l ulIon. Stolwly. Jolinslon. lingers. llesl. Pziyne. JeffoI'ivs, Tlli'liPl', Hams. Vim OI'dstI'ainil. Soeoml Row: Shank. Shipley. Dunn. Brown, Blatliews. Holter, Wilson. vVllIlllll l', XVlllII21l'il'l'. Gow, Smith. Hanson, VVI'ig,flIt. Illoimsniitli, Pfnff. l'l0l'SlJl0lll. Kramier, Newman. aBxr C ucv: C Ompany ompany Captain . . . . . WILLIAM LIPP Captain ,... , . . GLENN CARMICHAEL Lieutenant . . , , WALTER ABEL Lieutenant . , .... CHARLES SQUIER Lieutenant . . . , , CECIL MCKEE Lieutenant . . . . WALTER OWENS Lieutenant .,..,.... ALBERT FULTON Lieutenant . , . ..... ROY VILE The function of R.O.T.C. is the development of leaders in case of a military emergency. Its pri- mary purpose is to create a corps of trained olificers Who, in an event of war, will he called upon to train and lead the national army. The course of instruction in R.O.T.C. emphasizes individual lead- ership and cooperation. That essential element of leadership, the ability to make decisions, is stressed. The object of the instruction is the inculcation of discipline, precision, individual initiative and respon- sibility. COMPANY F, FI-out Row: Drake, Hownlrl, Kruske, XVinze-lar, Wittnmn. Howai-d. Gill, Carmichael, Owens, Sliriver, Nix. Helger- Sim. Stoner-, Dixon, Lumpl, Bryant. Sl-'i'Olld Row: Gross, Zongkor, Johnson, xvilftl, Boutwright, Dudley, Allison, Carlyle, Hemphill. Rodda, Benjamin, C'osg'I'ox'e, House, Horton, Steele, Hartmzin, Israel. . ,. , o f- ,,,,,,, , .. e,-L ' f il- --r - ' . -1 ,,,.,, I f-- V i e w ,, ,.,.. ' IS V ' MEN s RIFLE TEAM: Zongker, Dumbauld, Larsen, E. P. Matthew, Bosworth, Whittaker, Schafer, Salisbury Israel Forter Abel C, Matthew, Fulton. Men's Rifle Team The men,s rifle team is composed of all R.O.T.C. men who desire the training in rifle marksmanship. Shooting is done on the finely equipped in- door range in the Science Hall, under the direction of Captain Rutledge and Sergeant Euthon. The riHe team has been represented in the Kemper Military School Invitation Match, Corps Area Match as well as several inter-school matches. Ti- I Battalion Extended for Physical Drill s rrs, , rr, , s sssr asf, ,fs rrrrrrr s so I BAND, First Row front to rem' : Uiillt-ii, liloss. Davis, llumbziuld, Zwinlt, Set-ontl Row front to l'0ill'lI Hzuuilton, Turner, NVomls, C 7 1 Mt-arlvl: lilaek. Third Row Cfront In i'eau'J: Nichols, Saivaigje, Poole, Gessler, Slll'ilIlP!'. Fmirtll Row tfront to reairb: Shzmklin. Dos Goortzt-s, xvilllillf, llz1l'del', Park. Offivers: Uzlpt, Otto Cullrt-rt, Lt. Leslie Bosworth, Lt. Fritz Lawson, Lt. NV2lI'1'C1l Everett. Drum Major: Clizirlt-S R. O. T. C. Band The R.O.T.C. band under the direction of Captain Otto L. Culbert has developed into a very strong musical organization. It appears and aids in all military Ceremonies, drills, parades, and at football and basketball games. Charles Adams is the drum major. Atlauus. wal. T564 . , xx :TN 413' Honorflry Qoloncl Iayne Schfadff wi her lX4AC1-IINE GCN SQUAD: Owens, Foglit, McKee, Hamilton, Carmichael. aide, Laptain Harold Foght, Ir., review the battalion. are e - ieee f eeee ' ei i a s . ,,. . ii e at no so 'ii i , 'I i .. i --if ., ' cw f. -A . , if 4 f , - , Nc. , fiIRLiS TJRILL TE.X1XI, Front Row: Klepper, Hodgson, Iones, Graham, XVoodhurn. Iirewer, Mann, Capt. Brown, Neff, Schrader, Mickey, Kihhe. Gottschalk, lirooker, Schmidt, Kunce. Second Row: Bainbridge, VViley, Riley, Uosch, Jennings, Kyle, Feldner, Garrett, Martin, Harris, XVyssenbach, Nevins, Herrman, Murphy, Hill. Girls' Drill Team Although the girls' drill teain is only two years old it has accomplished much and has made many puhlic appear- ances. The girls have marched in school and civic parades, have given exhihitions at football games, and have twice been the only girls' unit to drill at the annual R.U.T.C. Circus in Kansas City. The group of 35 is divided into two platoons. Besides the captain, Anita Brown, who was appointed hy the R.U. T.C. department here, there are first and second lieutenants, first and second sergeants, two guidons, and eight cor- porals, chosen in competitive drill. Twice a week the girls do regular drill work in uniform, or practice for special performances. Girls' Drum Corps This unit is related to the girls' drill team and the two organizations often appear together. although they are or- ganized and function entirely separately. These girls, under the instruction and leadership of Charles .'Xdams, RU. T.C. drum maior, also take part in parades and exhibitions. This year they presented a drill at the Kansas City R.O.T.C. Circus. Ciiitifs DIQFBI Combs: l.avendar. Griffin. Dildine, Hillyard, Kurt, Harrison, Iudd, Gilley. Sipple. YH., ,,,,, ,, ,W ,W -,L-fn .f::e::...::,:.g. -- ..,., erm.: .... .1-nafzi-:e:g.ne.:.f,men ---- :xr am. gm, -W ,,,,.,g-----::- -,-- fam:-f:...N11:m,.1m.:,fH.:-...: ...,., .-- if. 1, ez, 1 -: fr H W :. fn.: V.: rr.: W... -... ... 'W ff 7,if T' W mfwf fi' COIOI' Gllafd SHIPLEY, ALLEN, SAUER, ISRAEL Es- 3 companionship ancl Good Cheer , Z, xx Q ,o,'x. K 4 ' fx f 7 Q . kv XL E 1 3 MX ga .Q E .. ,fo ffwgxx xf N no CAM US P- 1 WRUSH WEEK -,x ,VHLH-Any 5ALL ,L K S , rl.-' 'N - X -,YL Fqflif- m 9' ,AE W -'I .. ' ' 'at w -ya V 15 ,QQ Q' X X - f N -Quirky l 1 F abr ' ., XTX , s HOMEQOMINCT 'Ti-,N Nlours uv A earz Room TRIO - mu BEITY co- ED N X fc. Zsres y w E o 1' U 'V' ing 'gp ::'PCsc5gS, f 'A G CvPA Vrv M0135 451- WOMQUS Znd. - THE WHOLE TOWNS I lg. T-ALKING f 'I , WC BST'Er2s oo Q .Ng DQAIVIATIQ I- ig Q: I 1 ' X 1 -i THE FLUTE CAA-1. IN X 5 DEBATE TOURNEY MurJasA'- 1 .9 'livpawn qc-.1 qumn , 0 Mnyg' W A 0 WMATRRE You - VVIVAT' NFKT' ' l AN wmruvc, Fora ff' QQSFN 6 ' , G its Sq ,J .' ' - ' ox S ' 3 9 1 'wx J fl W Q J' , ' X f x . - W M x i ' cc, mx Corfu-fueucememr X uf: i QU, Q12 X I 3-4 - 1-wo Man-nas 'os cezepxorzv f ' Qx i ' D .M A K 4-uPPoDr2oME ' X ' 1 ' I MAY QUEEN Osytlwe Dearsmith CHANCELLOR Phil Evans KODAK WOMAN Nina Satterthwaite KODAK MAN Alden Brooks W wig ,QM K 51-ggZfgygV,4g,5.1:iFISQQ,-Q :ff hf 1 .. ., .. . . z1:-ww.mm-.ww Vw .- .i Q ll m1W..wfmm r, -- L . .1- .-.ggi an .pfJ4f?wEQ:Qi4'i4mfe wfQfi5as.f1,M:--, an , 1 Women's Honor Group V11:c:1N1A !XNDElLSON Pi Kappa lk-ltu 3, V.-llws. 4: llc- butc 1. 5. 4: l,1ll'IlLl5NLl5 4: Sunllmvcr 1: Y.W.C..X. 1. 3. 4: l11tc1'11:1ti1m.1l Club 4: XV..'X.1X. 1: liuurcnw Club trcus. 4: llcrlvulw ll.1ll pres. lklun' E1.1z.x1a1aT11 DE Lx M.x'r1a1c ,Xlpl1.1 'l'.111 Sigma XlCL l1l'L'N. 4. prcx. 4: ll.ll1 ll:-lly-nic 4: Y.W.C..X. 1. 1. 4. ClllTll'Il'l 4: SLlllll1DXYL'I' 1: NV..X..X. 1. 3. l'XL'CllllKU lm.11'1l 4. 4: Yrw Yutcrx l.K'.lglll' 1. g. Nu. 41 Ruuluw Club 4. clER.XLDIXIE llxxrxmxla 801115181 ll.ll'I1.lNNlls 4. L'lllI41l' 4: Psp Cfu1111111llu' 1. 1l1.1i1'111:111 4: Rfnmulx Club pru. 1-g. Cllk'L'l' lr.1ml- A-1' 4: llc111o1':11'x llrum Xl.lllbl' 5: WUXHX. 1. sXYL'.llL'I' 1. pmu, gi YNY. LUX. LlllVllH'l 1. 1. 3. Xlxl'-l7IL'S, 4. ll.ll1 llcllulxu' 4: l'1'v1ul1 Club 1. 1: Slll1llHXX'i'l' 1: Ilrux lflub 4: films XlLlC'l7l'L'N. 1: 5lll1lL'lll llthllll ut Pub- l1uL1l1unx 4. Luis fNlclx'1'11cu Surmiy prw, 4: LlIllYL'I'NlIl' C1114 zsmlup Prim' 4: ll.lIl llulll-1111' 4: Suulcnt lltbllllfll 4. vice-p1'cs. 3: l'i K1ll3l7ll lDcll:1 1, src. 3. pre-s. 4: Cllll' Xilflllltbll Clllllllllllkl' 4. 4: llvbntc 1, g. 4: Cllm trams 1. src. 1: Roul- crs Club 2. 4: Y.W.C,1X. 1. 1. 5. 4: l'I'L'IHCll Club 1: Rlllc lc11111 1: XV1cl1iI:1 in Turkey 1. 1. PIQIIORA NL'c:Kr11.1.s Della Unwggx trcus. 4: Y.VV.C..'X. 1. 3. uxbinct 5. pros. 4: Suulunl Council acc. 5. Yicc-p1'c4. 42 Ruulus Club 1. 4. pres. 4: Spanish Club 1: Sluclrnt lbgly Rcgixtrnl' 4: liirlx Ulm-c Llub 1, 1. lVllLDRED RANDLE SKIXTMONS l'1 kappa l's1 src. 5: Y.W.L..X. 1. J. c:1b1m-t 4. 4: VV..'X..'X. 1: Ruotf L-rs Club 4. Men's Honor Group l.EsL112 Hoswourri . . Pr .Xlplia Pi, sec. 5. pres. 4: Pan llellenic pres. 4, sec. 3: Engineers Club 1, pres. 2: Football I: Track 1, 2. .ll Rille Team 5, 4: Gliclers Club 3: Sturlent Day pres. 4. fi1.ENN CuocKE1 r l'l1i Upsilon Sigma, sec., vice- pres. 5. pres. 4: intra-mural basket- ball 1. 2, Q. 4: University Band 2, 4: Social Committee 2: Press Club 5: Suntlower 5. 4: Parnassus 3: Erl- ucation Club 5, pres. 4: Chairman senior announcements committee 4: Political Science 4: Ielfersonian Club. O'r'ro CULBERT Scabbarrl aml lilanle rst Sergeant: R.O.T.C. lmnil leacler: school bancl rlirertor 1, 1, 4. 4. Rox' CTALLACHER lfootball I. 2, captain 3, 4: Track r, 2, 5. 4: lntra-mural basketball 4. 4: W Club 5. DoN.xLD NICROBERTS Phi Upsilon Sigma vice-pres. 2, pres. gn Pan Hellenic pres. 4: Class treas. 2: Hooters Club I, 2: Aescul- apius pres. 2, 4: Soccer Team IQ Class pres. 4. Hellenic Celebrities Ye olde footc-balle in a Kappa Rho setting - Sweet rcverie - Webster, Exhibit A--Dc La Mater is optimism personihccl- There's nothing like Il frat brother or 11 Sweet Brier - Downing might be the villain- css: who knows?-When one is at Bosworth, what else mat- ters-Lois, ll, lu typical-And we thought chivalry went out with the battle of Crccy. ,,-10' w W The WORLD f'QC?Mfi'3 Til TH! UNllfH2SllY ,OF WSGHSTQ L .4-I' ,Meal , .Sw rf, ,,,,wf' ...M WQWW -. .--Z,-5,-.y Q N 'H-M ---- -W ,W---f-wwz .f WM Woe ls Jinx See Wichita and die -- VVhat's a homecoming parade without: the lusty Simonet and a bevy of Yella-lots-Capt. Brown and her lady militarists-the R.O.T.C. hand plus the great Adams-the Army, most recent- ly featured in the campus pic- ture, Private Pete from Com- pany A -the pugnacious D.O.'s -Hammond up-a much-maul- cd Iinx-and a QUEEN? Whence Such Atro- cities? Products of pledge sandwich- es-Are she 11 wallflower or no?-Alpha Gam plays choo- choo train-Pi Alph tango spe- cial-Her interest lies elsewhere, a camera hasnt rr chance- Phenomena of nature, thcsc Wood sprites -We have both blonds and brunettes, trada- Thc only one in captivity Cwhiskcrs and alll-Tack edi- tion of Ben-Hur. Dealers in Pictures No malice in his micn, prob- xilnly puslics thc foil for excr- cisc-A violin, inciilcntally, Iso- l9cl's-Wc'll l1l2lliC Icnnic tlic licroinc fwilli Muclfs conscntj -A snazzy pair-How could llic fcncc-Rogcrs, in the role of porull lnox or flower pot- .Xgninst thc wall but smiling- .Xlspiiugli :xml Spray give the umm-ru Ll lwrcgik Cnot litcrullyj- 'Tix :in :nrt to lx- well unilcr- strmcl. W. U. Reference Library Harby lends atmosphere- There are Ways and Ways of preserving one's pets - Nice slant on house and hat-The fastidious Mr. Petroff must have his coat buttonecl-By his looks one would never' guess his pro- pensities-Might she know how greatly We revere her?-A stu- dent? Oh, no! lust Dean of Women-A cue for collegiate philosophers, Dr. Hekhuis still smiles-We salute you, Dr. Foght-Bishop, McKinley, and could it be test papers?-The Collester horseless carriage. is 5 1-alumnus ainnnnnw ,uruguay qununuynn nunaqq ? Nik nua- ynluuv pun -an liz 1: I - We Gem-f: 4 1 :iff ! ,V vi ,Q ,..,, . , .':, Y K f l -are -.fra All gf J. if R as - in 3, if if ' fm Q 'Q 3 5 4 14 + S is tiit S , A I i,Ai ,S 1 FW 1 ,N W fumegfsi, its 12,9 f 1: 7 'if 14131, fy fe iss, .iw i ll, is- fififgliffas ire' f . , W .,t.,r. N - Q ii,fe:fN,,we1f.:1,f -WYT1i?.siiQi'h?Tef'-A ., , . ,-,awhile '?:Eisi?i12 UETiaaQir' ', .M 7,14 nf L I 3 I ,A .ag QMS- s 1 , -q,::.,,M A ' 4 Let Joy Be Unconfinecl Struggle buggy's coming-It hardly becomes a frosh to in- dulge in such mirth-Should find an antonym for Kurt-It would take a hard spring to put Ernie under-We'll take Dick's Word for it but we thought he was younger-Am other boy who made good in the big city-Willis foolingg she's never seen the inside of a jail-Betty Co-ccl, a huge suc- cess as qucen of the Alpha Gam prize homecoming float-George the Great, Forensic King, alias Squibb-Books plus . . . l Hither, Tl1itl1er and Yon Ho has an avucation, that Manning-Hopf you solil liim a doughnut, Ollun-Might lm a statue crcctccl to inspire toil- ing W.U. inmates-Slioulal one call it domcmticity?-'Tis agrcccll Icrry has a niuc smile faml a collegiate hatj-M and M com- binc looks bail for alplialx-tical mliifts - A Simmons family group registering good humor -Fayallenak smilds worlll a million-Coulcl be Doug anil Mary with no apologies to the originals. - Among the Best ol Us lack Frost coulcl have clone better - Colonel Iaync shows some native talent in the way she wears her uniform--Gentle men and ladies of the press- Thora, Y.W.C.A. executive and what-not-This year keeping up with the Ionesn' is some job-Salisbury, pensive Phi Sig- ian genius-Ta-tu green caps- Gerry's intentions are goo1l-- Even the president of the Y.M, hae his playful moments-Now we know just how much of a bowl we huven't-At ease. CA I PU51 GRAEKS l Noof X. K up 'WAS mam A THE F-'RESHIES ADE Frzesv-lv-' AND saws AQE SOP!-32 0 O 'Q 'S, 0 S AND NE ER THE TXVAIN SHMI. S U , aj E, Fx 0xg: l.!. X0 N X - ' X MTE rm uousp 'iv .. pm. .A TN: rrmoxv XVHO MOOCHES ALL uns Doom- f' MA1e's roam gg 50W HOW Nzmus AND DQOL. Bl-MNT ff WLELGJSEST CLOTHES.-A-' CNOTCD couvouruou svsmztu n NEW D O T gp KNEE Peorcssoas svcccues , ' UNXFOQMS. msouzc MANY STUDENTS ' .A -ro asv 're-arm NEXT nouns u:ssoN. Momzms we ooN'T CAQE TO uvz ovno, - I A VISIT To Tu: DEANZS 9 OFFICE IN REGAPDTO A LOXVGQADE CDMPLU- M gm QS THAT ym, BLDQM IN THE ox C, Qu' SDQI Nc-1.TnA -LA , fx ' QI. .5- 0 9 9? 'W GQAD AN 3 G1uck'BoxvLAND 'sn I , E 2 1? i i ,E v4 mf 'i SQCIAL iff, fi Virginia Iones Margaret Wiley Anita Brown Eloise Clark Helen Day Mary Elizabeth De La Mater Claudine Downing Imelda Gard Elizabeth Hunt Virginia Lippmann Amy Ruth MahiII Betty Morris Marjorie Murphy Willa Raymond Helen Rockwood Dorothea Roth Nina Satterthwaite Iennie Faye Schweiter Dorothy Seward Betty Thayer Frances Wellman Genevieve VVright Women's Pan-Hellenic Council The W'omen's Pan-Hellenic Council was organized in the fall of 1924, with the purpose of foster- ing greater cooperation between the sororities. The membership of the Council is self-perpetuating, con- sisting of one junior and one senior representative from each sorority and the sorority presidents. Offices within the organization pass in rotation beginning with the oldest sorority and changing each semes- ter. The president for the first semester of the school year was from Sorosis, while an Alpha Tau Sig- ma member was president for the past semester. OFFICERS Firxr Scmesler VIRGINIA IONES . . , ELIzABETII HUNT FRANc:Es WELLMAN ELoIsE CLARK .... P1'c's1'dc'nl ,.., Vl'C6-Pl'65lid671l ..,. , . Sc'61'etcz1'y ,.,.. Trc'usuz'er .... Second Semester MAIKKSARET WILEY ., . ,. HELEN DAY MAliItJliIE MURPHY DCJRCDTIIY SEWARD Don McRoberts Sloan Wilson Raymond Barnes Leslie Bosworth Melvin Bowlin Alden Brooks Walter Duerksen Iay Esco Phil Evans Albert Fulton Richard Gottschalk Cecil McKee Walter Owens Frank Salisbury Clifford Van Sickcl s. Men's Pan-Hellenic Council The Men's Pan-Hellenic Council was organized in 1928 by Dr. H. W. Foght with four fraterni- ties, the fifth coming in the following year. The purpose of the organization is to bring about unity among all the fraternities on the campus, to create better social work, to limit and control rush pe- riods, and to raise the standards of scholarship in fraternities. The membership is composed of two representatives of each fraternity. The Council offices are rotated among the fraternities, changing each semester, as does one of the two fraternity representatives. This year Phi Upsilon Sigma and Web- ster have filled the position of president. OFFICERS First Semester Second Semester DON MCIQCJBERTS P1'es1'a'ent .....,.. ..., S LOAN WILSON HAROLD FOGHT, IR. . V1'ce-Presizlent .,.., ..... C ECIL McKEE WALTER DCERKSEN Seeretrzry ...., .... L ESLIE BOSWORTH CLIFFORD XJAN SICKEL Treczsurer .... . . . ALBERT FULTON SWWV R Men of Webster Sloan VVilson Richard Gottachalla lirncst Black Alden Brooks Kenneth Brown Raymonml Brown Neal Hurket Guy Campbell Paul Cline Charles Corbett Thomas Croft Jack Craig Cecil Irlnlow Harolcl Foght. Ir. Tom Fuller VVillarcl Hamilton Hugh Kilpatrick Dave Lester llerluert Lintlslev Ilaroltl Manning lohn Neff VVilliam Newton Marvin Postier Ray Poteete lack Randle Marion Rape Rexwootl Rohertmn Dale Santlera Chancller Scrogin Millarcl Simmons Max Sipple Kenneth Skinner Vtlilliam Smith Hob Solter Harris Squire Raymontl Speer XVayne Templeton William Townseml Maurice Vanliorii Dwane VVallaee Kenneth VViclney Stewart VVil5on W, Men of Webster Webster, the oldest fraternity at the university, was founded in 1895, and since that time has taken a major part in all phases of campus activities. This year has been a particularly outstanding one for the fraternity. Among the members are the winner of the national two-mile and member of the All-Amer- ican track teamg member of the Winning debate team of the universityg five members of University Playersg five members on the Men's Glee Clubg chairman of the social committeeg representatives in Student Council and Scabbard and Blade. This year the fraternity presented the play the '5Whole Town's Talking? Mrs. May Gillen is house-mother for the fifteen men who live at 1621 North Hill- side. Mr. Cyril Grace is fraternity advisor. OFFICERS F1'r,rt Senzeslw' Second Semester 4 3. SLo,xN WILSON i,.. .,... P 1'c'x1'dent ......,. .... I Dick GoTTscHALK MILLARD SIIWINIONS . . , , . VI-CL'-PI'C'5id6'71f ..... . . Matiiaica XIANHORN '50 W1i.i.,iian HAM1LToN . . , ,..,. Sc'c'1'cta1'y ...,.. ...... I -Imuus SQUIRE Ravixrrixo BRUWN ,.... .......,,.., T 1'6c1.vu1'e1' .............,..... KENNEFI1 SKINNER ,,,, , I . - . 'll' i' Q- ' W ' A 'ii' 'V ' i 'Tn -, . , .,,:, , ,... T T iA i T Y '1'1 'W' Pi Alpha Pi Leslie Bosworth Iamcs Moflul Walter .-Xhel Kenneth lianie lainie liearil Ioe BCL'l1llllCI' Dallas Bentz Hugh Davis Leslie lforwaril Douglas Gow Robert Clow l larry llaniillon Harvey Hamilton liarl Harneas VVayne Ileinphill XVilliam Hennigh George Ilonilros Leonaril Iluhharcl Cecil Inman Carl Johnson Virgil Knowlex Louis Koch Frank Kruske Jerry Lauslermilk George Metz Hal Poole Reggie Robertson Bruce Sattvrtliwaite Ilarolil Schooley Roy Schuensler Robert Shacloan Eugene Shaft Mack Sutter Alden Swingle lohn Torrey Cliflcorcl Van Siukel Clayton YValton Homer VVilson Paul VVright Robert Wynn Carl Zimmerman 'Q F 1 , V o '-gr Pi Alpha Pi Outstanding honors in athletics have gone to Pi Alpha Pi fraternity this year. The basketball cap- tain for the last three years, fourteen letter men in football and four letter men in basketball are num- bered in the group. The president for Student Day, and the business manager of Parnassus are also members of the fraternity. The house is located at 1521 North Holyoke with Mrs. Iosephine L. Barnabas as house mother. Mr. C. C. Harbison is advisor and sponsor for the group. OFFICERS A 0 First Semester Second Semester gf .P LESLIE BOSYVORTII ,.,. .... P redzient ........ .... I AMES MUFFAT Q' IAMEs TVl0FFAT ...., .... V iff-P1'eridc'nt ...., . . . WALTER ABEL J A - HAL POOLE ...,. .... S ecrctary ,..... . , . HUGH Davis ,9. l l , ,'v DALL.'xs BENTZ . . . ..,. T1'wrxu1'e1' ,.., . . . D.'XLL.AS BENTZ t 9 . N' v --' L: ,..,, ---- .1,-'-.'-::...a.:-r-:V:::.1:,.. :z-aaa:-....:. ' ., ' if ' ---f f fires: 'e rf - ' -ff .,..e. 5 M 'Ee e iv Q lpha Gamma Gamma Phil Evans Glenn Carmichael Charles Adams Morsuo Allison Leland Oppernian Edwin Bloss Frank Brooks Briggs Caldwell Elmer Carney Ralph Cook A Lee Cosgrove Francis Cox Clyde Davis Norman Drake lack Dudley VValter lluerksen Gerald Hamilton Albert Harris Ted Harte Henry Helgerson Richard Ilufl Lon Iones Paul Iones liclwarcl Lambert VVillian1 Leach Richard Linden VVilliam Lipp Garnett Mason Kenneth McClure Cecil McKee Clewell Murphy Ralph Nichols Lester Nix Ross Owens VValter Owens Walter Payne Raymond Priboth Roland Priboth Virgil Priboth Myron Russ Curtis Sauer Kenneth Sauer Steve Scott . Leon Schafer Hubert Snook Charles Squier Clifford Stoner Elton Taylor Ramon We-hh Iohn NVenzel Charles Whitney Fred Wieland Alvin Winzelcr Oliver Witte-rman Alpha Gamma Gamma Alpha Gamma Gamma fraternity moved to their new house, I6IQ Fairmount, at the beginning of the school year with Mrs. N. C. Haltiwonger, as housemother. The fraternity won Hrst prize in the Home Coming Day parade and has played an important part in school activities. They now have per- manent possession of the President's Scholarship Cup which they have won the last three years in suc- cession. They are represented by members on the debate team, Sunflower and Parnassus staffs, musical organizations, and by the May Day Chancellor. First Semester PHIL EVANS .... CECIL MCKEE ..... GLENN CARNIICIIAEI. ., RAI'MoND PRIBIITII OFFICERS ....P1'l'5I'dE72Z. . , . . lflifd'-III'L'5I.d6'l1l .... . . , .Secreltlry . . . . . . . .Treuxurer, ga.. .5 X, mlm!! 3 , it fl Y .I fr ' Second Sem ester CiLENN CARMICIIAEI .,.... QEECIL MCKEE c:lIARI.ES .ADAMS VVILLIAM LEACII 'rv 1: . 4 --- 0 v ,dd We 425 8 sd AQI 0 O Io. Ib' w Gr f..i.f aaa a ,,,s. I aa a at Phi Upsilon Sigma Dun MuRubcrts Rcx .Xmlrcws Muck Bryant Rc nun' IINYLIFII Stuart Huck Cen Custunicn Ln-c Clark Glcnn Crockn-tt Ifruncis lknffnrn Wayne Dixon Dick livzlns Mcrwyn lfngur Ilglrulnl Foster Vance Gillmurc limukx IiLlI'l'yll1llIl K:-nncth Ilnys Rulu-rl Ilczlslv Warn-n Kinncv Gcrulrl Klcpingcr Iuhn Lynch KL-ith Omlcnwsllcr lxlalml Rn-nnick Gwrgu Rominc lifllllk Salisbury Uuurgc Sllocmuker Cfglrncr Shriver Iulius Simunct I Ucrglhl Tuslcr liclwurd Tuttle lixcrctt VVisc f'6 gM Phi Upsilon Sigma Phi Upsilon Sigma fraternity, the fourth fraternity to be founded at the University of Wichita, has proved itself to be one of the most outstanding and active in the campus affairs. The fraternity was organized in 1927 with thirteen charter members. It has headed the Menls Pan-Hellenic Council, this year's president being a member of the fraternity, as was also the senior class president, Student Council president, and the president of Phi Epsilon Phi, national chapter pep organization. It is also represented in Scabbard and Blade, national military fraternity, Y.M.C.A. board, Sunflower staff and the social and pep committees of the school. The fraternity maintains its house at 1741 N. Hillside, with Dr. Glenn A. Bakkum and Captain Cecil Rutledge as advisors. OFFICERS , Fl.l'5f Semester Second Semester 4 GLENN CROCKETT . . .,,. P1'e,f1'flc11t ..,.... , . . PA17L YOUNGINIEYER gong' PAUL Yv0UNGlXIEYER A . . ,... l'7fC'E'-Pl't'5I.L276'77f ,... ...... N IAQK BRYANT D HA11oLD FosTER . . . .... Sec1'en11'y ...... , , . GERALD KLEPINGEIK VANCE CiILL1N1ORE .,....,....,...... Trezzsurcr .,.....,,,.,..,...... GEKDIRGE ROIXIINE c Zeta Delta Epsilon Rnvnmml Barnes Mclxin Buwlin Gcurgc llilllgllllklll :Xllcn Brown Rlmcll Cuupcr Orville Cow Iuhn Iluncun XVLIITCII l .x'a'1x-It lay limp Igunss lfnmkcr Cccil lfmtcr :Xll7L'I'l lfulmn Iulm Keller Clgnyumu Kvrr lltlllgllh Shay Russ Stolicly Ruy Vile Hurt NVclls , ,W l Zeta Delta Epsilon The latest fraternity to be formed at the university was Zeta Delta Epsilon in 1928. With sixteen charter members as a beginning, the fraternity now includes twenty members and Hfteen pledges. This yearls Student Council treasurer is a member. They maintain a house at 1811 N. Hillside, with Mrs. W. E. Peacock acting as house mother. Advisors of the fraternity are Dr. Lloyd McKinley and Mr. C. M. Miller. UFFICIQRS First S6'l7ZC5l'Cl' RAYINIOND BARNES Roy VILE ...,.. loim KELLEIK . FRITZ Liuzsox l'f'c'x1'c!c'r1t ...., . V fd?-Pl'L'.S1'!fC'lZl .... Sf'c'l'ctf11'y ...... Tl'C'llJ'lll'L'I' . . . Sccozzd SL'H'lL'5fL'I' MELVIN BOVVLIN IM' Esco . CEKIIL Foltriaia ,. BERT WELLS P YA 5 . 6 . or l i - ,.., ,, , , C, ,, ,, ., W Sorosis Lois Mclntirc Virginia Innes Ollun .Miilwmsc Margaret Baldwin Iflisaivclh Iimvilisii Katliarinc Hrmwslisli Anita Urmvii Ruth Iiurncv Iasuifu Clirixtman Bcttx' Clirixu' Luis ciQlIAi7UI'80ll Matilcla Gauino Geraldine Hamniuiul lflurniiuc Harriwn Gcralclinv Hin' Cathrvn Ilfmiulrm Gciicximi- Ilfmpkinx fNIilcli'vni Isciy Paulinr Irmncs Gm-Lcliuii King Ilrmiuws KLIVI Ruth Lanipl laura Ianculn Rugcnc I.axcml.1i' Radiol N11l1iiillX .Xmy Ruth Maliin W Iunc Mclnlirc i Imlwl Nei ins Iiutlx' Ulix ui' jackie Olixci' Mary Lou I,.lFiiQ'l' Ethyl Pattnwscm Mary Ruth Pliillipx Maxim- Ray Drusilla Ruicliarcl Kathlicn Rolvcriwii Dorothea Scott Virginia Scott Mary Sippiu Iilizabctli Stcrrctt Llbcrla Kintvi' Mary KLllilClAillC Tack Iiazcl Thumpmii Katrina VVallingfm'il Betty VVL-ai'ci' Lola May Willialm Margy XVilliammn Fcrn XViircIvn ' Sorosis Sorosis, founded in 1897 by Miss Flora Clough, is the oldest sorority at the university, and the first sorority having a residence house for its members off the campus. It is located at 1623 North Holyoke with Mrs. Walter S. Baxter presiding. One of the traditions of the sorority is the Little Theatre Plays, which had their thirty-fifth annual production this year on April 25. Sorosis is represented in school ac- tivities by the editor ofthe Parnassus, vice-president of Y.W.C.A., captain of the Girls Drill Team, chairman of the Pep Committee, Student Council officer, president of Matrix, honorary journalistic soci- ety, two members on the SunHoWer staff, and members in University Players, Women's debate team, and the Women's Glee Club. Miss Edith Fultz is sorority advisor and critic. oFF1eERs -ooo: 5 -, Firsi Semester Second Semester 7 Lois lVlCINTIRE ..,. ,,... P residerzt ....... ,..,. V IRGINIA SELLS L ISOBEL NEVINS . , ..,,. Vice-P1'c'5z'dent .,.,. , . . ELISABETH BOWDISH vobl ANITA BROWN ,... ..... S eeretczry ...... .. IQATHLIEN RoBE11TsoN NIATILDA GAUME .,... Tream1'er, ..... GERALDINE HITE . C C 'C k:A7:' t 'i'6f : 't W C PM C ' C W CP' W Alpha Tau Sigma Mary Elizabeth De La Mater Nina Satterthwaite Alberta Bainbridge Doris Bainbridge Mary Beal Cherry Brewer Osythe Dearsmith Isabel Dellew Lora Downing Vivian Engstrom Drake Mary Ann Fox Ruth Frank Imelda Gard Ruth Granner Glorene Gosch Betty Hamilton Maurine Harbaugh Katherine Harness Lucia Helt Bessie House Fayallena Hutchison Eleanore Hobson Maude Hough Marguerite Ilowzlrtl Elizabeth Hunt Margaret Iennings Marjorie Iones Mercedes Iukes lithcl Meeoy Eileen Meeker Esther Myers Mary Eleanor Moore Mary Neff Clara Rosenthal Iayne Sehratler Muriel Seip Dorothy Warner Marion Warren Iosephine Warren Ruth Webb Rosemary lo 'Wentworth Margaret Wiley , M-V M- 'N- ,:.l1 . '.:r , r,: i '1': 5 it Alpha Tau Sigma One of the delightful spots on the University campus is the porch of the Alpha Tau Sigma sorority house. The house, situated on campus, southwest of the Morrison Library, has become the home of many prominent officers. Ten girls, with the advice of Miss Flora Clough, dean of Women, founded the sorority in 1908, and since that time their number has swelled to forty-Five, with Miss Eva Hangen as their advisor. During the past year Alpha Tau has been honored with Homecoming Queen, Honorary Colonel, Kodak Queen, May Queen, president of the League of Women Voters, members on the wom- enls debate team and the Y.W.C.A. cabinet. OFFICERS - . , 1 ICI 40 Fzrst Scmcszcr Second Semester -1 - I MAIKX' Fi.IzABrz'1'i1 D13 LA lNlA'I'ER ..... PI'C'Xl'dC'lZf ,.,.,,.. .. , NINA SATTERTHVVAITE ELIZABETH HUNT ,.,............... V1'c'c'-P1'C51'dc11t ..... ....,..,.. I AYNE SCHRADER U , , 7 K IAYNE bciimonk ....,. ..,.. .S w'l'c'ta1'y ..,.,.., MARY ELEANOR Mooiua NIN.X S.xTTE1i'1'liwA1'r15 . . ..... Tl'f'fI5ll1'6I' .,.. ....,. C TLORENE CTOSCH ' L L cccc as cciccccc as ,. ,...,....... Delta Qmega Claudine Downing Bernaclinc Krause Maxim' .Xllcn Mary Baer Bettina Bmwortli Nell Bl'LllTLlliCl' lfloisc Clark Rulli Cook Halen Day Molly Fclmlncr Margaret fiill'l'ClI Bcity Io fiflllllllll lfnolzi llni Madeline llnrrop Alyuc Ilziwkins Helen lloilgmn Lilyun Inman Rnszrlln lxlcppu lunnita Krclws Imo Larson Mary Mni'gni'ct Mum lilnlwzmlzi Miscmr Myrtle Nix Thora Nuckolls Willa Raymuml Viola-t Riclmrrlmon Ilclcn 'l'ny-lor Florence Wright Iosephine Riley Irma Tctcn Dorothy KVM' Delta Omega Delta Omega, the third sorority to come on the campus, was founded in 1916, with rooms in Mor- rison Library. Later rooms were procured in Fiske Hall and this year the girls were housed at 1709 North Vassar. One of the customs of the sorority is to give an informal dance honoring the May Queen and her attendants. The Y.W.C.A. president and Student Council vice-president for the past year was a member of the group, as was also the president of the Art Club, members of the SunHower and Par- nassus staffs, and the women,s extemp. champion. Mrs. Cecil Rutledge is critic for the sorority. OFFICERS First Semester Second Semester , Y CLAUDINE DOWNING .... ,... P resident .,..,., .,.. l EERNADINE KRAIJSE ,6ph r IUANITA KREBS ,.,.... .... I 71.66-PI'EXlYdC'7lI ,... ,,,, W ILLA RAYMOND HELEN DAY ....... ,... S eerelury ..... ,,..,.... M ARY BAER x , RAEZELLA KLEPPER . . . ..., Treasurer. . . ..., RAEZELLA KLEPPER 0 ' if ' as s-we ,AFX A , ,e is ss , O , , s tss O ,, is is s ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, s y s O O aaaaa - .. a s f, V7 Pi Kappa Psi Hclcn Rockwood Icnnie Faye Schwcitcr Letitia Chmvning Mary Ianc Clampitt lilsa Lee Lornpton Vcrla Cox lncz Cron Catharine Dmiglam Marcicl Drake Lucille Excrntt Ilclcn Fairchilrl Helen Galloup Thelma Hartman Mary Iilizabnth Hutcr Margaret Ixihn Carolyn Keiclrl Carol Killw Mary Ford Lippmann Virginia Lippmann Dorothy Mirtin Ilclcn Morris Marjorie Morrimn Marjorie Murphy Margaret Myerx Virginia Nlorclyltc Hclcn Seward Mary Simmons Milrlrccl Simmons Elaine Spray Sibyl Spray Berry Stanley Marion Sutter Betty Thayer Betty XVarcl Thelma W ircl Bernice Vw xsstnlm ith i1 Pi Kappa Psi Nestled in among the trees on the south campus is the house of Pi Kappa Psi sorority. This group of girls has risen rapidly since their organization in IQ22, to become one of the outstanding sororities at the university. During the nine years since its foundation the sorority has had the honor of May Queen given to one of its members two years and that of Honorary Colonel four times. This year the president of the Women's Athletic Association and of University Players were members of the sorority. The girls also won first place at the Annual Hippodrome. Dr. Hazel Branch is advisor for the group. OFFICERS 0090 Ffrsz Semester Second Semester HELEN Roczxwooii ,,,,, , , , Pl'C'.ffd!.'72f .....,, , . . IENNIE FAYE SCHVVEITER Mfxuv Font: l.IPPIxIANN .... .,.. T 71'cc'-Prfsfdc'r1t .,,. ,...... M ILDRED SIMMONS F Mun' liLIz.xIsETII ITESTER .. ,.,, Secretmy ...., .. lVlARY ELIZABETH HESTER ALXILIIBIQIE MVIQPIIY , . . .... T1'cz15urer ,... , . . ..... HELEN NTORRIS 0000 3 I . I iv H, Epsilon Kappa Ilurullu-gi Ruth Unity Morris Imcphinu .Xicxiimlrr Virginia .Xlcxgimlcr Gretchen Bmvlin Nulra Dildinc Iiliinn- linyixi Lois lingiixh 'l'l1L-limi Ifuuts Marv Kntlicrim- lfrmx Mavis fit'!'illlI'tif i'i.ll'i1lll'.l Cliimmn Ili-lun Griffin Knthlccn Grrmiiiun Ni.l!'gLll't'I Hull Marx' llill Iluh-11 Ilillvnrcl fiI'LlCL' Louise I.g1ifamn lylbfiblili' Scwgiiul l.Liur'ct111 Sllvllcy Macy Sliippsy lirm-slilic Smith Gwen Strivin- lln1'rii-tt Swcnm-y i'1I'LlI'lCL'S Templeton l'il'llI1CC'S NVQ-llmnn Agnes VVrnul lien:-vivvv XVi'igl1t O Epsilon Kappa Rho Though the youngest sorority on the university campus, Kappa Rho, organized in 1928, has pro- vided competition in all lines of school activity. For two semesters this group has Won the scholastic tea set offered by Mrs. H. W. Foght for the sorority having the highest grades for the semester. Y.W. C.A. president for the coming year is a member of the sorority. Mrs. Glenn A. Bakkum is advisor for the group, which has its house at 1750 North Fairmount. OFFICERS First Semester DORKJTHETK RUTH .... ,... P resident ....... .... AGNES WENCL .,.. .... l fice-President .,.. .... LUCRETIA SHELLEY ..,. ,.., S c'fretm'y .... . IOSEPHINE ALEXANDER . . . .... Tl'EdXI4I'E1'. . . . Second Semester . BETTY Moruus DOROTHEA RUTH MARGARET HA1,L . MACY SHIPPEY X0 p,Qv j 5 .63 'Q69' if oott to o to o Psi Tau Delta A Q? 1 Ilorollix' Hgiriielt llora Ki-iioii Nliw, l,, ,X, Malim. , Xilvism' fXl.lX1l1i' Cooper' Julia Childs lmllisi' l ul'il lllQl'IlI.l l'i'i'rx Psi Tau Delta sorority was organized in 1926 with eiglil girls, and Mrs. Amy Mcliitiie Malim is sponsor and advisor. The sorority occupies a suite of rooms in Fiske Hall wliere tliey have entertimeel this year with several teas. Very interesting programs are arrzmgecl for tlieir meetings with Well liI10VVI'l SPCZIIKCTS 115 guests. I 1'f1ff St'l71l'.fft'l4 l,UlUl'I'lIY loxus Dom Kmzrow . lXlXXINli Coorfnk iXl.XXlNli CEUOPER OFFICERS P1'6ffdc'11f , . Vffc'-I'l'z',c1'ffr'11t SLTIALYKII'-X' ,.,.. , . , .,.., 'I-l1'C'tI.fIi1'L'l'. SCIYIIIII Sl'lII!'jfl'I lions Iiiaia'rox XYIRGINIAX SHAW ., l.lll'ISll l'o1zD lfuziavii ljliliki .M -W -av ...M Urn: , -- -, -, 217' ' v-A--z14?Mwafi V1 A ' ,.,jvMffw'st-:i : HOW TO BE POLITE THO' A COLLEGE STUDENT or Proper Procedure at Improper Times fP.Sf Without Apologies to Emilie Postj This little booklet has been prepared for you by the Non- Scratchum Tooth and Gum Powder Co., Inc., Ltd., of the other side of Mulvane. QTune in on the Gum Garblersn program every Monday morning at 5:37, Library Clock Time, for a five-hour pro- gram of juggling and adagio dancingj , . l 4 ',. X . Q, I .Ar,. ,ix .. It is with the unselfish purpose of instructing college students in the ways of etiquette as she is committed and of selling you tooth and gum powder that we slung together this volume. QDrop in at any of our 2695 stores located on the south side of the street and ask for a free demonstration, because you won't get it.D With only these zo words of advertising Qcount themj let us launch into the subject at hand, or under foot, if you will. PART 4 KTO he real aloud lo Ihr t1CCOU1fJ:IIIlI71t'l'lf of Inu I1 Gigolo played xoflly on Ihr htm' horn! HENROLLMENTH The question of enrollment has piquedw better brains than yours. It is a problem that should be dealt with in the student's earlier training but like other such problems is usually left undis- cussed in polite circles. The proper procedure is to arrive at the place of enrollment at precisely 4:55 p.m. on the last day. Go im- mediately to the president of the university or the dean of some college. These men will be likely to know what advice to give you as to the next step. After having paid your tuition in full, or when sober if necessary, make out a schedule, being sure not to take any morning or afternoon classes. Remember that you need your sleep and that committee meetings are always held in the afternoon. When your schedule is arranged have it okehed by the treasurer of the Engineers Club or the sergeant-at-arms of King Arthur's Court. If neither of them is busy then it will be necessary for you to take it over to the Brig for the signature of the Sunllower sporting editor. liVhen you have gone through this twice you will be given a 56x49 cardboard, any color you prefer. It is well to keep in mind the color of your ink in choosing this card. You will find on the card six questionnaires of 37 questions each, as well as 41 places to practice writing your name. These are to test your originality. Try to spell everything at least I7 different ways. Any less than that is usually considered below normal unless you have several ink blots to make up for it. When this bill board has been filled out hand it to the janitor and retire. You will be thought odd if you do not change all of your courses at least twice the next day. Why should the faculty stand idleFHl' CHAPT. 146 lTo he reall in an uprighl posilion on a 13th St. Busj THE CLASSROOMH Those who accidentally enter the classroom before the second bell rings should be equipped with Murads as well as Hershies. It is considered good form to observe the usual rule of being fashion- ably late. If the professor speaks to you, by all means return his greeting. Always take care not to choose a seat next to someone who will read your notes before passing them. That is, in case you are seated alphabetically. Of course, otherwise you are not free to choose the location of your seat but must sit where the chair is. See that plenty of windows are open. It is unhealthful to sleep in a poorly ventilated l'0Ol'11. If you have a watch, ask your neighbor what time it is at intervals of five minutes. If you do not, ask oftener. At fifteen minutes 'till the hour is up rouse yourself, ar- range your books neatly in a pile on your desk and keep your eye on the door. Be prepared to leap over the two people next to you with the least possible confusion. When the class is over go imme- diately to the Bucket and relax so that you will be in shape for another class the next day. NUMBER 61 lTo he read in French wiih rz Swedish aecenzj UTHE FRAT MEETINGU OR WHEN GREEKS MEET The president should begin pounding on the table for order. if he is a soda jerk, or for attention, if he is a first lieutenant. When twenty minutes have passed a lull is bound to occur and must be taken advantage of immediately. The next move is to call for old business, new business and somebody else's business. A nice discussion of Webster should arise here which will lead to the ques- tion of nationals. This will be a neat time to call the roll and when it comes place it in the intramural horseshoes loving cup for future reference. By then, it will be time to have a talk on Why I Would Have Pledged Alpha Gam If They Had Asked Me . After the talk let there be a vocal solo. and there will be a vocal solo. Don't forget to remind the members to get their dates early if there is a Phi Sig party. While on the subject of athletics remind the members that there is a tough baseball game with the Holyoke Athletic Club sometime. Remember the coming elections and be sure to send word to the Zeta Delts that you will support them if they will vote for your men and promise not to nominate anybody. EXERPT 2,697 ITU he fflllfv in rhe dark hy the lighl of Iwo, small, hnrnl-out flilrhlighlxj THE SORORITY MEETING OR UWHY CATS ARE GREGARIOUSM Pound on the top of the piano unless it has been paid for: if so the house mother's library table will do as well, When C0111- parative quiet has descended begin the meeting by asking the pledges to leave. When they have left call them back and ask them something like, How come you got a Q7 in Chemistry? Don't you know we don't want that tea service? Next join hands and sing, i'Please Don't Talk about Me. After refreshments, it is proper to . ,.,... .---' f ,J .s 3Fr,3fv.f', l f Afq qsfv 940, c-sf, 4-fr i l 0 l X , vsf- RX? f . ' -X ' 5 5 ' 4n7'V,xQ lvf rea' 125359 N 455312 'R l 227 ' . 1 - call for the critic's report if she is not present. There should follow a discussion of the formal Qsomeone else'sJ and a guessing contest as to who the juniors are who are married. A report of the last seven Pan-Hel meetings is next in order after which members clap hands and leave for the week. if I ffff if I 'f'f'fi I if I CAMPUS LIFE revolves around the student body and faculty of the school. This an- nual contains the record and history of the past year. The University is proud of its accomplishments and its splendid students. b 'H To the outgoing seniors- God- speed. To the coming seniors - suc- cess. To that great body of young people to enter its gateway- Welcome. f'NDMs9C0C.Z3 The Municipal University of Wichita 1'1f1 1 1 1 1o1oq 1111011110101 1 v1 1 141-ni f'i'fo ' so DIVISION M.X.T. ITU be read in class, or better during false and title' testj AT THE FOOTBALL GAMER The problem of what to wear to the football game has wor- ried many fair coedsg even the less fair sometimes wonder. Opin- ion is divided as to the fur coat. Some consider it as necessary as a ticket, while those who don't own one feel that fur is a little out of place at a football game, they argue that it displays something of the animalistic tendencies. A Lapin creation might catch the eye of the quarterback as he is calling signals and lead to his ask- ing for a date. Then the game will be a success. Always choose someone to sit by who is a connisseur ' of the game and knows all the fine points, such as how much the referee is penalized every time the goal keeper kicks the third baseman. Never yell above a whisper unless a foul is called. After the game give one hoot and make a swan dive into the middle of the held. Q' fl K about for the proper spot to smoke a cigarette. Should you see the girl across the floor go immediately and cut in. The accepted procedure is to step out as the couple rounds the corner, face the lady, look intently into her eyes and step between them Cyou know what I meanj: then dance smoothly on, that is, unless Harold Schooley is approaching. When all the punch is gone you may leave for the Air Capi- tal or Bill's. If you are encumbered with a lady of the upper crust, take her to the Harvey House and flirt with the waitress. She will enjoy your display of democracy. When the lady has been accompanied to her home, you are free to carry your paper route. 9 D 1 , . is f' ct sf xJ.,D'S ,72 , -wa, I we o f if-Zak li Y 1 gf , x A t 'T l ly sg! sy ks se' 7 ff tellh' .' lk' , SERIAL A 63 fTo he read upside down in the lwlhtulrj CONVOCATION Never hurry toward the auditorium. It isn't considered digni- Fied by those who love Fine things. After two pipes and a cigar, bite off a hunk and amble in. Wait until everyone else is seated so you can tell where your seat is: then trade three times. Three is merely an arbitrary number, usually considered lucky. fTell that to Dr. I-lekhuis.J Get your lessons during the announcements so that you may have the rest of the hour for recreation. Guessing which of the strange Knot oddj men is to be the speaker is one means of entertainment. When the speaker rises and spoils that game you might guess what he is talking about. Accumulate sev- eral guesses, average them, and send them up to the band leader for decision. The person who wins should get the purloined Sunflower. It is very bad policy to wave at the speaker. Nine times out of ten he is probably only gesturing. If the people in front laugh three times, you had better send a note up or better still arrange a little group to say Louder, please. Clapping whenever the people in front laugh is also in good taste. It shows your unselhsh appre- ciation. Go to sleep if you like although that is rather a waste of time when you could be making noise and taking part in the pro- gram. When convocation is over walk out extremely slowly. It shows the faculty that you regret leaving and they will erase all your chapel cuts. Don't forget to grumble about the program on the way out. It proves that you are interested. EPISODE 622 TTU be read on pp. 1,295 of Rand MeNulley'r Auto Mupj UTHE VARSITY DANCE OR SINK OR SWIM Never take a date to the varsity except as a last resort Csee our Arkansas guide book for description of Cold Springs and other resortsj. If the dance is Friday night, after your eleven o'clock Fri- day class is soon enough to ask her. It is considered smart to arrive at the door about 9:30 and await a momentary absence of the doorman before entering. Refer immediately to the orchestra as lousy , It indicates that you have been around. After dancing fifteen minutes, it is customary to look F oREwoRD INUI to be reudj HCOMMENCEMENT' OR THE END Commencement is a formal occasion and details must be care- fully observed. This treatise is addressed especially to seniors who are graduating, if any. The accepted dress is a garment of sub- dued colors, 5K inches below the Hoor. The mortar boarcl is to be worn during as much of the program as possible. Never appear on time. You will arouse suspicion by being too eager and your grades may be rechecked. Watch your feet as you walk up the isle. It gives you an air of detachment, and besides that you can see where you are going better. lf you are First in the row, clon't go clear to the end seat. It will deprive the last people of their prerogative of being conspicuous. YVrite notes on the program during the address so you will have something to remember from the occasion. When tal Q A -A. ...,. 3 'v!ih'V' Iw 5 at I-'I-af ti your time comes to go across the platform and receive your diploma, Walk up, tip your mortar board, look at the name on the diploma. Refuse to accept any that does not bear your name or one like yours if it were spelled backward. When the last rites are over, trip sweetly out. Stand in front of the library to receive any con- gratulations that might be meant for someone else. Remember this is your last chance. Tell each faculty member at least 2 H times that you are coming back to visit once a week next year. Look over the grounds and buildings with a misty eye and become a tradition. Shorthand for pre-script. High ellis: for pick, meaning to tear down. 'See our booklet by that title. Price jc except in Olqluhomu. 'HOne who nzufqes up what he doe.vn't know. io 10103: 1:1111 ini 2 101: 1 2 11111 2 1 111 1 1:1 1 111 3 Is There cz Higher Ecilue-ation Trusif, What a silly question, you say. Sounds silly, we agree. Yet it isn't a bit more ridiculous than some of the things that have been said about the electric light and power industry as a power trust . There are various higher educational organizations. The North Central Association, of which your school is a member, is one of them. Other organizations have practically all of the teach- ing profession enrolled in their ranks. Too, there is the American Association of University Women. Throughout the country, elec- tric light and power companies associate themselves, too. The National Electric Light Association is their organization. These associations of college and universities exist in order that standards may be maintained, ideas exchanged, and in gen- eral that education may become better and better. In the same way, the National Electric Light Association is devoted to the purpose of aiding its member companies in per- fecting the art of generating, distributing and selling electric light and power at the lowest possible cost. The North Central Association does not manage the interests of its member schools, nor control them financially. The National Electric Light Association does not manage or control the inter- ests of its member companies. Moreover, throughout the whole power and light industry, no interest or group of interests control more than I2 per cent of the energy generated in this country. Of course there's no higher education trustn. There's no CC 73 ' power trust , either. KANSAS GAS and ELECTRIC CGMPANY Al Your Service' ' :ning 1 1 1 100111101 :mixing iii 1 111 1:1 1 1 2 2:1 1 1 WHICHISITI True or Falsez To glide over our billowy boulevards, whether tired, tireless, or retired, is to place the heart where the mouth is not, the soul where it quick can escape, and the body where friction with the upholstery and surrounding equipment fincluding devices over- headj is at a maximum. Then, and then only, should that domin- ant stick-to-itiveness of the great American gum tree3 be manifest. Waiving the difficulties of sitting a vehicle, the greatest prob- lem in penetrating the interior of the campus from ye olde pave- mente is to keep one's four wheels approximately in the vicinity of the aged-under-tires highway which, like a true Bourbon, has borne the weight of many revolutions and got its own by con- tributing to the general looseness of the younger generation and its carry-alls. lol Paddling is a means to an end. ,f I 'ffl I 5' Sb-r is -- a , ,. , ., l A 1? 1 v k L Q- M . 'f J N A Q Q , c 3' - Q vi To the consternation of one of our promising young literary lights Carlyle wooed a maid for eight years but never pressed his suit. Since the discovery of the Iones' Pact the per capita Sllxprclf- bilily has increased 6,000 per cent. .loi- A certain alumni committee, as a last resort, interviewed Santa Claus to see what he could do about leaving a campanile this Christmas. As a usual thing he does not carry bricks. In order to offer a little competition the committee told him that some people do. After they had appealed to his humanitarian instincts by point- ing out the merits of Green Pastures and The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire , Santa finally agreed to bring one brick a year until he had completed the structure, provided the Student Council would make the last varsity before Christmas a benefit for the underfed Prancer, Dancer, Donder, and Blitzen, the sad state of which has resulted from the high tariff St. Nick has to pay in getting his goods across the border. lo, Pardon the personal reference but one reason why so many of Dr. Bakkum's well-meaning eight o'clocks fail to constitute a quorum is that the distance up and down from the bus line to Ad. is not in accordance with prevailing faculty statistics. Some poor pursuers of the oiled lamp get mired down and others lose their way in the untamed crevasses of terra Erma. If every freshman at dear old Whichisit were ten feet tallg if all these frosh were laid end to end in a line as long as they would reach, and if Frank Salisbury or some other man of weight were placed upon a bicycle and chased around that line, he would have to make the circuit 29,790 6-7 times before he covered the distance which groups representing Wichita U. have traveled this year. If each mile these groups have journeyed horizontally were up-ended and stuck down into the earth vertically like an oil well or a worm hole, international students at the University would have a convenient shortcut to fall back home ing they would have in ad- dition a return shaft right beside it to fall up again into the mater- nal arms of Wichita U. when China got too hot for them. And there would be enough additional miles to make a race track from 1-By courtesy of Moonweerl 2-Not to be confused with happy medium 3-Now extinct in the swamps of Western Kansas here to New York and back, around which Harold Manning could chase recalcitrant Webster pledges who refused to paint the house submissively. All in all, groups of Wichita U. students on official trips have traveled 19,350 miles this year. The track team accounts for the biggest slice, 8,920 miles falling to their share with trips to New York, K.C., Pittsburgh, Champagne, Lawrence, Des Moines, and Emporia. The basketball boys rank next with 5,520 miles to their credit, and their Mexican excursion of approximately 4.500 miles takes the honor of being the longest single journey this year. Third in line is the girls' rifie team, which has traveled 1,160 miles on trips to Kemper and Fort Riley. The team has engaged in telegraph for is it post-officeFJ matches with thirty other col- leges from two to two thousand miles away, and if these distances were counted in, the rifie team's average would be bigger than anybody's. Mr. Widney and fourteen other track heroes, however, protested with such concern over their team's losing first place, that these last figures must now remain unofficial for all time, or at least until the said stars graduate. Fourth place on the list goes to the Minisa troupe, which has tooted its way around Kansas for 1,090 miles. Its peregrinations have taken it to Ark City, Topeka, Augusta, and Lawrence. The debate squad is next with the comparatively small total of 1.060 miles, having traveled to Winfield, Alva, Emporia, and Pittsburgh. It makes up its deficiency in other ways, however. For instance, if all the words uttered in squad sessions were captured and laid end to end, they would make a rope long enough to lasso the moon, with a big bow knot tied around the world as anchor at this end. And there would be enough slack left over to make a suspension bridge across the parking space from the gym to the Ad building, as a sort of succor to drowning students in rainy weather. Coach Gebert and his football team are next with I,02.0 miles, having taken trips to all the Central Conference towns. Not counting court maneuvers the tennis teams have travelled over 1,000 miles this spring. frffie iid l 5 'X , Last on the list is the girls' drill team, with 500 miles which it journeyed to and from the Kansas City R.O.T.C. Circus. This is an unfair estimate of how much the drill team has really traveled, howeverg for it has marched approximately 1,440 miles this year, allowing one mile per girl per practice. at two drills a week, and counting 152 miles for the guidons, who have to run around to the front again every time the army turns around. This 1,440 does not at all include the Weary treks down Douglas with parades, or the i11any miles danced officially by dogged cadets at the military balls. In spite of its abnormal exertions the drill team has not a single flat foot on the roster, a record which it challenges the R.O.T.C. to better. This ends the list of important trips taken this year, The sociology department fit is truej made two journeys, but they were not overnight ones. The institutions they visited would have found it a pleasure to lodge the students, but were unprepared for such a large number. The departments field trips were made to the re- formatory at Hutchinson, and the feeble-minded asylum at Win- field. And now. after this great total of 19,350 miles, it is to be hoped that no misfortune will come to the Wandering Wichitans. One of the seniors on a football team figured up one day that he had traveled in his career 24,000 miles for alma mater, and the next week, to the horror and dismay of his coach, he flunked his final in geography. c t t ,i,f is WESLEY PHARMACY Where W ichita U. Eats Toasted Sandwiches a Specialty Stop and Get It 1 1 1 Congratulations, Class of 1931 We Wish you every success as you leave the university for the World of business. We have enjoyed knowing you as college students and We desire to continue to be of service to you in the future. VVe shall always think of you as our friends. MR. AND MRS. C. A. BENNETT AND BETTY ANN 1 1 1 Parking Service 501 North Hillside Phone 4-4256 The Service with the Hop 1 1 1 1 1 -1 1 1 1 1 1 1010::o1o1o:o1n1u1 1 1 1 111411111 111 A llii A A Tff'f li A A noteworthy problem discussed in the last VVhite House Conference called by Martin Klingberg. co-author of Women and the New Race by Margaret Sanger. was the apparent disuse of the spoonholder. The delegates from Cheney and Sedgwick. Nedra Ilildine and Harold Manning, submitted valuable and fairly au- thentic statistical information. the essence of which is given in Table I. TABLE I. Ure of ilu' Spoonlzolzler During ffze School Year, 1950-logl Month Species Septeinber 2 Frosh October 1 Chipmunk Novi-niber' W Mrs. Simmons Dee., Jan., Feb. 1- Phi Lambda Psi March, April 1 Sap' May 3 Zeta Uelt, etc. June 0 Alpha Tait Sigma. In September the number of occupants reached the highest point. May only excepted. Tom Fuller and Mary Ruth Phillips came to school to enroll themselves. They sat for two hours on the spoonholder waiting to give the Dean a break. Finally, a guiding Y.VV. angel told them that most students planned to enroll in the gym but that, if they preferred the open air. she would try to make special arrangements with the faculty. Of course they saw the difficulties such a concession might entail and quit the bench for a real waiting room. October's business is scarcely worth mentioning. altho it does raise the yearly average. For 45 minutes in November the irate Mrs. Simmons paced arountl and around on the distracted spoon- holtler while waiting for her better half. December, Ianuary. and February are thrown together because they constitute the warm season of the winter. While their zodiacal animals were romping over the zenith, once only. in the dead of night, did the bench have a visitor. A worthy5 W'ebster on his way from the library QU tarried a moment to get his bearings so that he could pick the widest and softest road to the frat hotise. March and April. by virtue of their frigidity, are in a class by themselves. During the latter part of one of these months, Red Shadoan crawled under the spoonholder to protect himself from a raging Kansas blizzard. He found it warm and comfortable- all he needed was a couple of blankets, a hot brick, and both windows closed. May seems to be the most popular month for the old bench 4-Abbreviation for Homo Sapiens, all of which means a galoot what should have been home in bed. 5-Substituted for worldly. ,-'tvs - . but careful analysis shows that it was all a horrible mistake. A bashful Zeta Delt pledge. forced by his loving and fraternal su- periors to get a date with anybody but a Sorosis, requested the pleasure of two dozen coeds. In the end a charming Pi Kap succumbed. VVithin a few minutes after the final victory, one of the winsome I7.0.'s called and said that she had changed her mind and would be delighted to take a date. She and a dozen of ber sisters, whom he had also called. had held a hurried meeting to see if they could. among them, at least partially supply the dee mand. She had been unanimously electetl as their best bet. Being versed in the ways of geometry, our hero planned the solution of his over-supply problem around the premise that opposite extrem- ities of a circle cannot see each other if there is something between them. I - .af . 'ag - -1 PJ ' v ' Tr'-1' ' s. . esac ff' si .fir 22?'5'::t' . . ,. - , - I - :sri-'ke . 7 'f . 275323-2-Z-:iff - J' 1. . ,. ' - , I . .-3.55.-:':'f ,fu I -ul J - ', At-- V f A . 0 ' -.,-sf' '-' L-wg , ... - ,.-' V132 22 itil A- -ff Q :kg ni-s 5' r --451 f-il! --f-fs.i+5'5g2, iv .JN I ETX Q T 'L 4 as e. H P L xl' l ,n l L: Q 9 :Phi x . 1: .4 .1 X 'FAQ 0 'Q Q! , I f 5-fi- ' ' il E yrifq 'rf 'K S fl S' 1'-T --.. Zhi iii, ' , r, A Lf- -cg x e w. '- '- Ne - , .. ,ul E7 I 0 M. Y af . 5 1. ' 19' 'sf' ' W 2. A: 'fr s . - f fs, it Promptly at nine he met the charming Pi Kap at the spoon- holder and by 9:15 had her comfortably seated there. Iixcusing himself. incognito. he went for the winsome ILO. At ozgo she had been installed on the opposite side of the bench. Ifrom then on everything was easy. In Iune. after the Parnassus had done its deadly bit. everyone knew the spoonholder was too ptlblic to be governed by the Iiill of Rights and that it was covered by the press-hence the dearth of occupants. .Xfter prolonged deliberation Mr. Klingberg and his colleagues. Ilelen Thornton and M. M. Gleason. have recommended or. rather. made the blithe suggestion that Pi Kap and .Xlpha Tau take con- certed measures to keep the heirloom busy. The suggestion is further enhanced by the applicable statement that cooperative ef- fort is the secret of all success. -Doioioioioioioiihiriiiiioioiozuzoir110101034iiogtpoioioioioio111010201 iioxolzxioxoloioz , :fl The value is greater S'I'ERLINGWOR'I'H Finer fabrics - - superior tailoring and advanced styling make Sterlingworths the outstanding clothes for men. , Reasonably Priced- With Two Trousers 839.50 , ix Soolf' Bwflxery Quality Corner Market at Douglas 'mf Q0lUi0-llilYl0lUQ0lfll1lQ4Zl9Q1Pl0lUQ4YQ0l91 lliililifllf 3 'iUi0i0i3Y10llliitglll0i010iUQ0a0Q011lC- -. T .-,t,i,f-- - ..,. - . ggiiiit - c.,. -1 The Portraits and Groups in this Year's PHYHHSSUS Were Made by ihe s O CLARENCE DE WALT A AA 212 North Lawrence Phone 4-653 1 ri U1 I1 li 3 li i i 1 itlilrim11011121liniuiuitvini iii 101010101 i 1 1: 1o1u1u1n1n1n1u14ri:111r1u1n1o1o1o14r1u1u1:o1u1u1n1 11 1 1111: 1: 11 1 11 1 1 10101 Desirable Employment Contracts Are V or-my M.et,, A. Secured Through Training at THE WICHITA BUSINESS COLLEGE Courses made so thorough that they are cheaper. Nearly a half-century's record for successful graduates. Trainees prepared for the better-class positions in the business World. Nearly thirty THE thousand former students testify to the worth of our training. We cater especially to Univer- sity people. Write for free prospectus. ,.,MimE,Ec,,,,t,.. 114-116 North Market Street 1 10101010101 XT! 1 101010101011lilll010g01l7iIlilYliliilililllili 11010101 ll 1 1 1 1 101 ! v Congratulations-H Class of 1931 CONGRATULATIONS i l M k f u p -gp U a erso from Q U. Military Boots, A Sam Brown Belts, ! S Puttees and Greater ! Q Boot Trees R0 RABAUGI-IS ! ! ! in the new location at I Douglas and Lawrence Aves. i THE TEITZEL-JONES BOOT CO., Inc. 640 North Maia Wichita, Kansas 11111 14 11,101 1:1 1 11 10101010101010101u1u1n1n:r1o101411o1o1n1:r1n1-1101010141111 Congratulations from Goldsmith 'S They come to Goldsmith's when they begin their schooling . . . They come here as they progress on their trip to higher educa- tion . . . They continue here as they advance in life . . . We congratulate you! 1-1-'-1s:,2g'f!5fm with? --- -1 116 -118 1-1 S0Topeka Ave 1. 1 1 101021 1 1 1 I 1 1r:o1o1u1oe1n1n1o1011:1 1 1111 1 1111 1 1 1,1 v1 111,101 Y 101 1 1 111 11111yinx11111r1u:u1n1u1n1n1u 101411 HOTEL BROADVIEW ideal place for your parents to stay when they visit Wichita 111010111 1 111 1 10111101u1u1u1n1n1u1u1 Lamoreux Pharmacy Where you're always u1o1o1n1u1'1u1u1 1 1 1 111: 1 1 1-1 1 14 Compliments of Welcome CENTRAL AT HILLSIDE 1 ' ' ClndianaD Dial Curb 4-49-42 Service Style Leaders for University Men Branch-Mlddlekauff ' 111 The Home of Hart Schaffner cQ Marx Clothes 1u1u1u:u11111110101o1n:u1u1u1u1u1n1n1o1u Investment Bankers 205-11 First Nam Bank Bldg. in1u1u1u1u111n1n1n1u14v1n1'r1 r1u1u11w1u1 in If You Plan to Save-Fix It So that You Must ROY W. POE Life Insurance and Annuities The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the UNITED STATES 319 Central Bldg. 3-7274 Congratulations to W.U. . -ae NINE ' WICHITA STORES X' KANSAS SSS 4 A QW x1o1u101u1n1n141r1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1o1ua1u1n1n.1n1411:1 1 1 1 1 1 1 111 111 1 14101 .pn101:11s11:r1:v1u1u1o1u1v1-1111' 11111111 4111311 1 11111 1 1 1 1:1 2 1:1111 1010 101 2 U H R. R. MOORE O. C. ROBERTSON ! i UNION NATIONAL n M00RE.R0BERTS0N BANK 5 PLUMBING si HEATING COMPANY ---Wichita-H U i 217 North Market Street E U Phone 2-5833 Wichita, Kansas ! -.-,- -,-.- :..-,:,: 2 : -,-,: :.,:.,-.,-.i:.,-.-,:.,,-,-,,: :,: I - ...,:.,:,,-.,:.,:.,-.,-. i Courtesy, Service H The and i U 'QW BA RCLAYW G d F d II 00 00 , FLOWER SHOP i at H . . Hillside and Douglas The Bucket 5 E 3 Books for H GE X I A M ' 0 o ..L2EE.iiLiQ.E.iES.'fE.?., , Gf2dU2f10I1 G1ffS U Step in and browse through our book depart- Sold BY ment where We have assembled for easy selec- --imm-D ' tion many choice volumes of History, Biogra- H hy, Memoirs, Poetr , and Fiction. A P Y Q 211 South Lawrence , 5 TANNER S 1 122 North Main Q 2 v fi 37 -pu1u:u1o3o1 1 1 1 1xioinioixviuioiuic 9 SUNSHINE Dairy Products Visit Our New Plant at 700 East Central 111111 1n1o1u1n1n14r1u1o1u1o1u1n1u1u101011101-1101010101 1 1 1 Kansas' Two Finest Billiard Parlors Meet the Fellows at the COMMODORE CLUB THE MILLER RECREATION Down Stairs, Brown Building Over Miller Theatre a 34 - - Best Equipped Tables - - 34 Billiards - Snooker - Dominoes LUNCH SERVICE S. E. BROOKS, Owner u1n1u1u1u1n1n11,101.11 1 1 1 1 10101 1 1u:u1u1u-.1u1n1.11n1u1u1 Cl 3 35 For University Style - - - There s No Place Like Holmes GOOD CLOTHES For young men since 1902 Our new store address is 117 North Market W can .farm ...ALLZH 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 111 10110101 10111 1 1 1 11:1 1:11 in T V ' 101111 1 1:1 1n1o1o1u1n1u1m1 1u1o1o1u1o1 pm11411:v1u1u1o1:w1n1o1u1 1 1 1 1 1:1111 CTHE BosToN STOREJ Wichita's Pioneer department store: 45 years in the same location-Main and Douglas. A record of which we are proud! ., . 1101411:p1111:x11riuiuirxiniuioini nrr101o1n1o1n1 n1u1n1u1u1u1u1u1o1u1o1o1o1n1n 1 - - -niversi- -o - -ic i ao: -U: FAIRMOUNT U Heagi,uj,Xs t P HAR M AC Y for Your Everything in H Sporting Goods Shocker Drug Store U IRA WATSON 'S 133 North Market 1 1 1 Q 310101 1 1U101n101uiIl14l1lx101u1 1 2 1011 U - , H We can satisfy your desires Q OUR ADVERTISERS 1 1 1 ! ARE ! FoR Us 131.11 3-8384 131311 and Hillside WE DELIVER i u1n1o1o1n1o10101:11u1o1n1u1o1nu1n1 10101010141 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 111 1:1111 1'l! soon have enough... It was easier than I thought it would he. This has been the experience of many young men contem- plating starting into business on their own. If you show the initial interest and ability to such a degree that you are able to save on your own account, you have gone a long way in laying the necessary foundation for bank credit. First National Bank in Wichita 1141 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11101014111:1010111u1u1u1n1u10111101011111110101o1u1o1n1o1n1o1 fvfit 101 1 1 1 111o1o1o1u1u1f1 1 1 1:14 10141141115 ! T T T TTTT l TTTi T E - T ! .ll Q.. The ! Geo. Innes Co. 0,u1.115f1,,0 O ' .X Q, H HIERFSQ 1 1 1 ' ,Qc on .QIMKQB U lfwhrlil - :' 'frilly S f 3 ' lflllfiriail ' 1 1 . , lv :Fur . gs- A E Y.l. Wlchlta S ' ' iii' Largest ,, mlllm lyljil 4 and Www wmye Finest ' i Store i Northeast Corner Douglas and Market 1 1 1 C ll E 7 7 7 College Girls know they may al- Capital One Million Dollars ways fmcl the the newest 1 1 1 Fashions First Make this your bank. We offer you all the at Innes facilities of a first-class bank. i HE ROAD TO SUCCESS awaits happiness and the satisfaction of achievement. Paved with LIFE INSURANCE it becomes easier, and the uncertainty disappears because: 1. This plan of preparing for the fu- M ture calls fOI' enforced S31VIIlg'S. H K LINDSLEY ------ president f ,' ,-,--, 1 . . 2. Such savings cannot be easily dis- i'nI1iN1iT:iv.iiiI2iaBsHAGirliii 5:33. ' I A sipated. 2 12 2 3' It as as ERSEBANMERS 4. The amounts may be either large ' Q Z ' . of Small, to accommodate the in- LIFE INSURANCE COM ANY dividual. , , , Wnchnta, Kansas 5. It does not require expert know- g , , ZA I! edge of investment. Tghffes Qtpfnqgcf Owner and Operator of Radio Station KFBI-1050 Kilocycles A FARMERS 8: BANKERS policy will help you on the ROAD TO SUCCESS m1n1 1:1 1 1 1:11111 1 1111o1u1o1o1nq11o1u1u1n1n1n1o1o1o1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 111 T, 9 WN li? il 11 , ,, W This Annual Printed by WXXX r Q Y ' E ,' 5735 'jfozif ' f Av-Mi M O .7ZlfAf.1l,: , , I ,Offg U VWMV! AHA 10-,yy 'V- f X Q 4 r fff?9Z7 , J .5055 R I ,f ,WA I '5 WQZQQ -4-' , 1 'xxx ffm '49f7'4'5i'y ' f ' J .' '.l. ' '4 W ,' f 1 QF !3?f'if'. I 'ff W Q' ff x a .1 wo ' f 3 7,44 'f siigfbxffi , 'Af .Q, .1 7, W! , Q .f., ', A we 'Aja I ,4 dl. ,, :nj ,. N ' f nibf' 0' A X fx f giffjjf . if A r Al X, Iv: . ' y .595 VI' , :ffm X X 4 f fy' W f ' 'A' ' v 1 x. y x.X7 -'ij' x- ', ' 1 'QE ' ' 271' ., ,,. I xii, 1 1 .-:yy 1 if 1 ' ,n, g f ,yr . w 'Lf X55 1 K. w ,pf 1 Q! my wilw SX, KX My fl . 'E xxxax 133 o X sw 3 fc, X Aa! E f '-v x --XQXM X Xxx SXMXX Z xg-A Csxmxgg ,X XSSSSX A X fa This WIHEIHIITVA IEMEILIE IPIQIESS WICHIT A. K ANSAS i,i,t . U. V.. .. an 'V - , ..,,, ,MA-N - ' Hifff'-Qv4:.',: ,- f K 55-' ,.?',5-,1 -:Jn 4 1. , h, his ' 39543 was P24 J' Tv -f- J4., M 1- ,5-... ,Y J 1 mf., ,. ... , f. QC- -I X X A ' . lfx- Jai 'VQzi'f 3gC:59:1i fF.'- - .fr Q .ge:.i'.f.15fg3 ,-'if gm- j I1 . 1-.3'jsz,2g-.9 ' 1 'Jiri-3'l.1lT,' -ji s x lffifkz--:L ,- ' -In ' . Ll - . 4 EEF. V' , -- W .,r,,,,.,,-is-,-W -- 21 - .: f VJ V Mp, .,w,vw.y,,g .Hx-.f F.- ' 5 1, '-ff' , ' , ',.' 1, PV 1 . fix:-'. '-7, -Delp- ' ' ' - , A iv-:Y . -,wg.',.' ,- .,1.,.. , . f -W 1:3 qv, my .4 'f'- ' e w Y ,V , .., . ,U ,mx 1.5. N uw' VC. A W- 7,,,..V V. f . fy, , ... . .MN 1 - V. ar fx al'- , Q..


Suggestions in the Wichita State University - Parnassus Yearbook (Wichita, KS) collection:

Wichita State University - Parnassus Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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Wichita State University - Parnassus Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

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Wichita State University - Parnassus Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Wichita State University - Parnassus Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Wichita State University - Parnassus Yearbook (Wichita, KS) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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