1921 Gem of the Mountains, Volume 18 - University of Idaho Yearbook

300

description

1921 Gem of the Mountains, Volume 18 - University of Idaho Yearbook

Transcript of 1921 Gem of the Mountains, Volume 18 - University of Idaho Yearbook

  • PUBLISHED ANNUALLY BY THE JUNIOR CLASS

    OF THE UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO

    Volume eighteen

    MO S COW, M A Y

    IDA H 0 l 9 2 0

  • .3n enntc.st nppr.e.dation ltf the benefits urei\Je~ fnlln llne \uln., hns ~~\Jot.e() his life to tb rnnst ttf

    ebnrnfio1t, \u.e lo\Jilrgl~ bebirnte this U.1lunu~ to l'lllt

    f;~:i.eu~,

    T!lrct

  • f.'vrtr

    Foreword

    GREETINGS I The 1921 Gem of the Moun-tains is before you-And may you recognize in the pages to follow its purposes : - To portray the ideals and standards of the

    University of Idaho by recalling to the student body the events of the past college year;

    - To bring before the friends of the University the greatest possible amount of information concerning campus activities ;

    - To reflect enough of the spirit of Idaho to inspire a deeper and increased loyalty to our Alma Mater.

    The Staff extends its Greetings I

  • (fje Staff

    ALFRED A. KIN.:\~:Y .. .. Ediror-in-Chief \VlLLIA:\I \V. SlJTHERL.A~D . Associate Editor \VILLIA:\ 1 H . LA:--.GROISE Business :U anag

  • ORPEI\f BOOKS . .

    U Imnwcerr~iiU:y Miillnli:rry A U:Iffillcelcn(C~

    Scox~nceli:y 0 lf~ IITlll~lli:llITll~

  • l!i!lhl

  • (ffe University of Idaho As the crown or capstone of the State':: educationnl sr~t(m stands the U ni,er-;it~.

    Even as the law of gravity makes it impossible for n. stream of water to ri~e above it:: source, so thl~ law of mental and splritunl forces mnk,s it impossible for rhe lc,c l of intelligence, of knowledge, of culture, nnd of puhlic 'ervice throughout the state w rise higher rhan the level at which these iclcals stnnd in the fountain head of the state's educational order.

    This mean~ a strong, virile. broad-minded, idcali~tic and yet practical faculty, but far more it means a student body fired with the -.ame ideals, who shall ~o our to ~erve the co:nmonwealth of Idaho in lines as diverse as human activity itself. But tli-\'erse as their activities must needs be, the sons 'ccn them.

    FRANCY A. THO.HSO~.

  • Trn

  • DR. ERNEST H. LI~DLEY Prrsidrnt of the Cni~crsily fJ/ ldnhfJ.

  • J. G. ELDRIDGE Dtrm of tlu l 1nitrrsit.r Fornlty.

    0. P. COCKERILL Drn11 of thr Ca/h(r of Lm1.

    ..

    PfR:'.lE.\L j. FREXCH Dum of II' 0/111'11.

    ~I. F. A~GEL.L .1 ('lint[ /)1'011 of tlu Co/11'1(1' of Lrt-

    ft rs nnd Sl'it11rr.

    Thirfc't'll

  • E.]. lDDINGS Drrm of tht Collt![r of d f!rimltun.

    F. G. ~\!ILLER Dtfln of the Srhool r1[ Forestry.

    C. N. LITTLE Dt'f/11 "f Co!lrl[l' of RnKineuinr

    F. A. TIIO:\ISO~ nl'(m of the School of Jl!ine.r.

  • Board of Regents J. A. KEEFER, Prnident, Twin Falls. RA.\ l SAY .\1. \VALKER, T' ire Pruidrnt. \Vallacr. J. A. LIPPINCOTT. Stcrt'fnr.l', Idaho City. :\ fR S. ] . G. H. GRAVKLEY, Boise. J: VAN EVANS, Grangeville l:T r I EL E. REDFIELD, Supt. f>u/,/ ir fn st urtion tx-offiri'l, Tini..,c.

    Officers of _jldministration and Instruction

    (fJe College of Letters and Science PROF ESSORS

    ERNEST HIRAM LINDLEY, Ph. D. (C!ttrk), Prrsithnt of !Ill' UnitrrsiiJ' ?.L\RTI N Fu I.LI>R ANCI;LL, Ph. D. ( Uui1rnitr of fFiuonsiu), Profrs.~or of Physics.

    Actin!{ Onw of thr Col!tg,. of L. & S. 1 1AROW L UCIUS AXTHLI., Ph. D. (Uni'l'l!r.itr of ChiNI.I(tl), J>roft.r,,,Jr fJf Grt't'k

    nurl Latin. fmft.sor 'if .~ lusir. \Vll.FREI> Cl i ,\RLhS BL F..\ L\1 \STER, B. S., B. P. E. (Gritwtll Colll'l[t'), Profi'Ssor

    of J>lt,.~icol Edumtirm. SQU IR E FRED BROW:'\E, :\I. A. ( Cniftrsil.l' of Chiwgo)l .i ssislanl Professr)l 'If

    Erflnomirs. BAKER BRO\\ ~EI.L, ~f. A. (Harfard Unitrsity) 1 .J.rsisllllll Profrssor of EnKiislt. Cu RT IS \ VoRTII CH E:O:OWITH 1 :\1. S. (fl nrtard Unitt:rsifJ'), t1 ssistnnl Proftssor of

    English. EowARO R ouERT CHRIS~i \:-.- 1 Colonel U. S. Army, Professor of Jlfilitory Scitnu

    and Tactics.

    J7i(lt:l'll

  • Sr.rlJl FtELOJ "(; H t:TCHIJ\'SOJ\'. A. B. ( Prinn ton Cnitl'nity), .1 thhtic Coarlt. J I \LLt E HYt>F., B. A. ( Cnhasity of 1 1/inois), . !s.wrinlt Profr~sor of I-1 nme

    Economics.

    FRANCIS ]ENKINS, Bursar nnd St'Crrlary of thr Fawlty. K \T IIERtN'E ]t-.NSEN. l\I. S. ( L'ni'itrsity of 1/linoi.r), Profr.r.,,,,. of lifJmc Economics. JoliN ANTON KoSTt\t.EK, Ph. D. ( Uni'i'i'rsify of 1/lin,li.r), f>r,Jfi'SSfJr of Orgnnic

    Cltrmistry.

    HOWt\RI> TIIO:\IPSOX LE\I'TS, A. .\J. ( Univ't'rsity of lf'inon.rin ), l'rofl's.nJr of Eco-nomirs nnd Political Scit'nce.

    CEORGL ~ f oREY .\I tt.LER. Ph. D. ( l 'ni'i't'I'Sity of flcidrlbi'I'J!), Pro/tnor 'Jf English. R!Cil.\RU A'ITHO'IY .\IvTTKOWSKI, Ph. D. ( Unirtr.,ity of lf'iuonsin), .t.rsistanl

    Profl's.

  • CORA lRii''ll LLIR\, R. S. (D..) (lames ,lftlliktll U11itrrsitr), ,/ssi.,tnnt Pro-fa~or of !I omt Economic.(.

    R .\LPH IT. S\fiTII, ;\1. A. (t'niicrsill' of Ca/ifornin), .lssocinle PrtJftuor of Entomo/ogy.

    ;c11 ES'rER SNow, Ph. D. ( Unirtnity of Triscomin ), Professor of ,1fr~thl'mntirs. r Ill 1.11' H FiN ORICK Sou LI!N' .H. A. (Hope Collt'!fl')' l'roft.~.wr of l~rlumlifJII nntl

    rlcting lfearl of the Drpnrlnmtl of Education. J\ l ARY Br;LI.h s\~EE'r, B. L. s. (r'ni1t-rsity of Jl/inoi.t), Ubraritlll nnrllus/r/lrlor

    in J.ibmry Science. NoEL. Ft:>:LEY Tl-10:\IPSOX, \f. S. ( L'nirasity of trmltinr;lon), .1.(.\i.llant Professor

    of Botany. \Vu.1.1 \\t ]O!.Iil'll TRt.\lllLE. Ph. D. ( Cnicwsitr of 1ri.wJ11.1in). Prnfnsor of

    rlmuican IlistorJ'.

    l'\RI, LWPOLO \To:-. :'\OF, Ph. D. (l:nittrsily Qf GQt/tinf(tll). Profnwr r,f Chull-istrr and Jlnul Qf Dt}tJrlmtnl of Clttmistrr.

    JRI"'= A \V\TSO,, B.S. (SarJ[tnl School fr,r Phniral F.rlurntirw), .luirlnnt Pm-fruor of Pltrsirnl Educntion.

    _:ERR\ Eo" \RD \ VoosFo \LEK, Ph. D. ( Cnht r.ity of Jl 'tsrotllill), Profa.wr of Zoolog)' nnd E ntomologj'.

    JNSTRl CTORS AND ASSISTA1 TS I:"~ T'\STRL.CTTO~

    \ '\Tti.LI \\1 H E;>.IH BRIIlr.t>, B. :\., L. Th. ( l'ninrsil.l' of D111lwm), 1 nslructor 111 Entr/islt .

    \V ru .T,\:\1 Cn I!> LETT, .JR .. l~h. D. (Stanford Uni~tnity), 1 nslmclor i11 l~uJ:Iislt. (;R.\CE I:LI7. \llETH fhr.r., A. B. (Colorado Co!lr,f[t), !IIJfrllclor in Commrrce

    Dt/lftrl mwt. T t i.Ll\IAN DA,IhL GhRI.OuGH. B.S. (Unhersity of ldrtltr,), Rtuflrclt .lsiistrtllf m

    Chemistry . . .:\:.1 y )lmnt.f'r()' Ge>'>S, B. S. ( H. E. c.) (J r,zm State Cr,/lu:r). lu.~lrurtrn Ill

    II ome Economics. J l: Ll,\ D.\Y I XCERSOLL, :\1. A. { Cnitcrsitr of rri.wuuin)' lmtruclor Ill R omancr

    Lnngtwgts.

    Resigned February 5, 1920. *Re-.igned :\Iarch, 1920.

    Srvclliccll

  • Eight ern

    CHARLOTTrr Lrw1s, R. (H. Ec. ) ( l'nittr.flf\ of Idaho), ln.rtrnrtor 111 Home Economics.

    ALICE Ll\'I~CSTON (Guy'.> 11 ospitnl. London), I nstrurtor in II runt X ursinf{ . .i\ l AE l\ 1ATTJHU, H. A. ( Cnh rrsity of rrmltinf(trlll), lmtrurtor in R r)/11(/n(l' Lrm-

    ((11(/!(('S .

    THO~II'SON D Ul':"L,\1' l\ l ATTHEWS, B. S. (E. E.) (Uni1tr.fil.l' of It/alto), Trark Com It mul Business 1H a11(11fer of A tltletics.

    GINO V J'I/CENT l\IEmc1 DE SoLENNI, :\l. A. (Ohio Sttlt l' Uni?rr.rity), Inst ructor iTI R Omfll/(f Lflll ((110![1!$.

    EoM U'-'D E. :'llooRE, B. S. (Chern) (ff"oruslt r Polytlcllllir lnstitntr}, StorrJ.eeper'.; Assistant.

    l : uCEI'\ r N "'CI.:.LE (Infantry U . S . 1.), .1 ssistant 111 .11 ilitnry .1 rl. lhR'T t\11 LSl'> (Grtuluatr of Army .llnsir School, TrruuiiiJtm. \ ortcay). lnstructrn

    of Corntf PlttJinf! anti Ltada of Cadi"/ ,l[ifitnrr Bmu/. GR\Cr :\ I \RGARF.T p,L,IER. Ph. B. ( ( .nitrr.

  • College of Engineering PROFESSOR

    J. U u

  • S chool of Forestry PROFESSORS

    C H :\RLS EDWARD B l.llRE, ~I. F. (School of l orotry, }'aft: Unitrrsity), ,1 ssio~ttllll Profnsor of Forestry. FRA~CIS GAR1\'ER :\ I II, LER, ~[. F. ( ) nit l 'nitcrsity Fore-stry Srho ri/), l'rofcs.wr 'J/

    Forestry t111tl Dmn of the Sr/tf)ol of Fon.ftl'J'

    INSTR CTORS A. D ASSISTA , TS L lNSTRCCTlON

    llE:s

  • 0. ELBERT McCoNN !H.! H. S. (Agr.) ( Uni1ersil)' of J1!is . .-ouri) , dssistt/111 PnJfl'uor of A nimrtl 1 lusbamlrJ.

    RAY E. ~EIDIC, H. S. (Gorni'LL), Profe,l',l'or of .f![rirultural Chemislry, run/ Clwnist . Idaho Experiment Station.

    JuLIUS EDWARD NoRJ)IW, :\I. S. (A~r.) (Uni7Jt'rsitJ of Illin ois). d.~sncir1tr Animnl H usbamlmnn, 1 tlalto Exprrimtnt Stcttiou.

    PETER POWELL PETERSON, Ph. D. (Univrr.~itJ' of Chicago), Proft'ssor of Soils. Sw"' EY PARK Si\IYTH, n. S. ( A},rr.) (l;urrluL Uni7Prsily), dssistflnl ProfpssrJr nf

    Poultry lJusbnnrlr.r.

    RoBERT SHJRLEY SNYDER, B. S. ( Coe Gol!tJ(t' ), .-l.uislnnl Chemist, !dt~ho Expt>ri-m tnt Station.

    \ViLLARD G. STEWARD, C. E. (Columbian University), Associate Professor of A gricu!turnl Engineerint[.

    C LARENCE CoRNELIUS YINCENT. l\I. S. (Agr.) (Cornell University), Profe.I'.Wr of 11 orticulturl', nnd 11 orticulturist, l'rln!to F..xprrimtnt Station.

    l' t\RL BuRGHARDT Wli..SON, l\l. A. (Obl'rlin Colll'gt), P1incipnl of !Itt' Srhool of PracticaL Agricultun, and l'rofe.~.wr of A.rtricultural Education.

    jOHN C. WooLEY, B. S. (A. .) (iowa Stale ,1gricu!tuml College). Profrssor /1 griwliural Engint'ering and Irrigation.

    \. H. YouNG, Ph. D. ( Universily of lf'iuomin ), Professor of Bot071J' and Plan/ Patho!OJ[J', lllul Plan/ Plt.r.~ioloJCi.a of tht' ExpuimPnf Station.

    CHARI.ES H AMLf:\1 \VERJC\IAX, B. S. (Agr.) (Pun/u p Uni7't'rsity). ds.~istnnl Bnc!Priologist.

    I STRUCTORS AND ASSISTANTS IN INSTRUCTION AMilROSE vVlLFORD J OTINSON (University of ldnho). lnstmctor in A nimnl Hus-

    banrlry. R ,\LPl-1 J EWTON' L ARGENT ( U ni'lasit.r fJf 1 dttho), lmtruclor in Dairy Husbandry. H. V. lVlATTH EW, B. S. (1\.nnms Stlllt A ,t[riru!t uml Colltgr), Auistrmt in Fora-

    tiona! Agricu/Jme. RAY FRANKLIN ?IIORCAN, B. S. (PI'IIIISJ'hnnia Stnlt' Col/tf!t'), Instructor in Dt1iry

    Husbandry. LuLlJ E~nLY VANCI!, B. S. (Uni~>l'rsity of California), tlssistrmt in Agricultural

    Chemistry, Itfaho Experiment Station.

    Twntlj'-CJII.:

  • IN MEMORIAM -

    BERTHOLDT SMITH

    I '

  • \

    ORS Twt'lllv-lflr,,

  • Twt'ltfy-fou:

    \twood Badger :\ t>lliClOll

    ~ron!" Plastlno

    ~1

  • I~I{Eili.RICI'. C. ERn. LL. B . .. '/ t'ti"

    ( ;uma~o:a. Spokane, \V a~h. l'h \lplw llclt;~; I ' IC' \. 1:. F ('h.~>: I It

    :

  • Twmly-si.t

    \ I.R \ El\ 1\1-.EI> l L l: :\l E:\TS. LL. n. "l

  • lll~R~ \RI> \ \lc i )I.VITT. LL. B. ".\Itt("

    Hurkc II . S. Pn.-.. ~cnior ( '1n .... : \ I'. ".\ ,.i"ooOdated

    U"rh,"; l'rt' l ie :>mot Uuh ( .ll: Uu. ,\I gr .\t'!(naut: Exec. llu:ml : l!tnch :11111 llao: "I:" 1tu11r' (41; Phi \lphn J lelw: gt" tta,,

    JJri:t , IWtf'llS llol.thc.til."

    711 \ fn I:V \:\!:ELl:\ E l'l.E7111 :'\C. B. A.

    "/ """ llurh II. S. l.

  • T,,,,., ly-ri!lh I

    C.\ RL C \ R LSO '\, B \. ( E~onomic) "Cou11t''

    L,,d-.tnn St:tll' '\nrmal School Trt:" Semien Uo'"' \'. P. E llttl: ",\"

    II unur:o. tktn Tlwtu Pi. JI, f,~,u." sh. 'tl WJWtl """'J:huut.'"

    \TRL

  • Cll \RLI-:!:> C GR.\Y, B.S. (i\gr.) cfws." Gene~cc U. S. Bn'k~thall ( I ) (21 (3) (11; Catlt- (.\1 \11

    1\Mtlmt. Fmsh JtnhtiMII: ll.t,h;tll !JI (J) (~J: Pres. Cia'" t1l: \th 1.-ttc ll11nnl (JJ (~l; --r Cluh: ~trwk Jml~~:lng 'J't:HU I ' I t, "17, ' l ~:::w. !otn \ lphn, Sig-mn Nu.

    "/'usscl t11 Cu .. ur d'.lkllt'-11)' Jmr~ di:t IIIIICt'."

    L.\ DESS \ H -\LL. lL A ( Comm. & Ec )

    ''Dcss" ",\" hnru>rA II) (11 (J) Hl: Ste. Ec. lluh I~ I, l~xcc. llu;onl Women' L~a~::m ( ~ l. l'nl .. Juint 0Yd1C'!f"" in Spain; 't8: V. Pn, J,J:lhu I nrkpttuh.~ntlll.

    "/1 Ius flr.fl unmc fl'oodr(fk, fJc$.ftc-

    \\' I I.Lt.\:\1 \. DE>JECKE. n. S. ( \gr l "Bill"

    Richfi(l"'l"t'tY rorr/~u uitlt J~tlr)',.

    ,\ . 1'1'1"1 :\1 \X \T\\ OOJ>, LL. ll. "Pilly"

    l'hi ,\lpha Oclt:'l; Trea. Junior t1a,: .:.1 l.t . Caol"l llu.; ~lil. 1\anrl: Bench an I ll.r. l:11(lli'h Uuh; Ec. Club; \tlv. \l~r "(;~"' ur th< Mt.". \'. P. Senior Un"; Knppa

    ~~~mn. ".11v Cod ttlwt '' --!"

    T-:.t,u/y-llillc

  • Thirty

    IIE'\R'I 1~. h.I:"\C. t: S. (C. E.) .. "'"'k''

    '\ ampa I I S " II" """"" 1 'l l.l\: The l:lw~tn. '' },f tilt ''lli'illt','t', .H"fMitf Jo Udllt' i'.ffl'/)t

    l'ttul flflll)'"""

    \ I{'(' II L' R lW\ I'I IU:\ IT'SON. H. S. (c. 1 ~.) "1'clllllll\'" Boi'l' I f. S

    "II' lltn .. rs (.Jl: Futhall (1) fJl (.!) 1~1: \II \'rth11~1 {.!): .\th. l l,.:trcl IJl ( 1): Jrt:.... 1 4l, f~xcc. Jlp:.rrl; Pre~. .\ ...... m:. Eugr~. HI: ('~old C:tl'l. C~l. t'nolct \lnjor (.1\ (~\: .. I" Cluh: \ I' ( In" I .1 t: CaJI. ( Ia'' Track lc,un 1'1 131: Tr I. SojUOinc, IJ .. \ . ( Cnmllll'rn )

    'lKt~t" Sandpoint I I. S.

    ".\" fl ,nor (II (.!) (Jl (~I; Shcathtol ll nmnu..- ( l11h; () '[ ( , : t'yplwriting .\tht'

  • FJ 1.1 \. \ PL \STI XO. B. S. ( \!{r ' "l'lcrsl\"

    Idaho '1\dmiciu l n~tittt ~ Fo>~thall (II 1.?1 (.1 1; Carlct Lt. !.?1. .!ol l.t .

    t "i \,: .\lhl~uc ,\ohi....,ry llGER. B. \ . C En~o:li~h) "Curlic"

    1:\ ampn H. S. "1\" hnnon, 111 en (Jl ! 41: Cln" S,

  • 1 hilly-two

    R \Ll'll S,\I ITII , H. \. (tli,tnry) "l1u\'fllll'l"

    :\ I m.c:t)w I I. S. I l't lr! I 41: ~ ... c:lih Cluh; Ec:. 7 Ju #UI t' o; tile /lfl~tr slw/1 bl" t uiu-d t"7'C"If ''"'" thll" Our ,,,~I {tturtl r,t>ul"rcJI",>u.'"

    r;l'~J \\' .\IH>LPII C\ RLSO\'. n. \. (lJJ,tory)

    "C11s" Troy II. S.

    "B" ll,unr~ I~); ",\ " lluun" (l) (ll. ''Cottw elatt'll to rotih, (1t1.f,' thrrt ur(' lot, ('{ ,;,.,. r,r'r'' Jr,r"

    :\1 \R(; \RJo"l IWRNS. 11. \. (:'l l m. i ~~ '',l1tll'!l" ,\ Jo~cow TT. S.

    "II" rlm1ur.: l'rc. \ . \\" l . \. : llcle~ai, I' S. \' C: .\l u.,. ir Club: l)dta (;amnHl:

    "/>. (;, Strllit.."

    110\\ \IW \\' ST\PLrS, Jl. S (Fnnst ry ) "Tuf{y"

    :\fo,cm\ H S. 'd ~1111113 1'1 : J'r..,.. l{ lfl~ Cluh I II; Tr~a-.

    l n,huun (1a .. ';: Pre' ''"lC Fuu.,ter ... (I): ' \1 t '. ,\ , !".ahin~t (11: \ (> \ S I' I

    (~1: latt. l'al~t On (41 (J). \lpha KatJ J:o:,, ... ,lun.

    ll't/1 f'uiil' f/:CI Go~y uor''

  • .\1.\RY \lc"-E::\)\ \. II \. c .... ur ,r \len.: 11. S.

    ,;,.,. Snroh. t'lat~t;; Sec.-TJ'l'"" 1 )Hnwt t'luh: Sl'i..t) JO:Illor or .-\rt:onaut t:!l, .Juul"r l'ru111. Comm.. :'ienlur Hun l'UHI IIL: l'rl>~ \IW ]. YOST, II . S. (.Mcch, E.)

    H ~rif.:c'1 ~Jw;t~O\\ H. S.

    '' \ n Hlt1 ' 1 )f" 11Hnors. ''(,,-t IU .iltf!, } OJtJ"

    Cll \RLI.S \\ ILDIXG GERU)Lll;ll. t~ \, (Ec.)

    "Curlcv" :\locow H. S.

    " \" """"'' 1.11 (+l: Glcr (luh ( 41: \ln-ir t luh ( ll: E. .. HnPntit ... Chth (.?J (.ll (~J: 1'111 , fur

  • ji;t/,IJ'ilt/19'

    WMd Bill

    T/rirly-7ortr

  • ~UNIO~

    Tltirty-fivc

  • 1/urf.\'Si.t

    .John~un Mot

    Gowen Swanstrom

    lllll'i'll ('lnrkt

    1 'lltw lr\'ln~

    Junior Class Officers Fint St 11/l'.fftr

    Rtuhtn .f ohn"on ..... . .I u~tin Gowen .......... . Lar \ \rn Borell ... .. Frrd Cline

    Pre,idlnr. ... \ice Pre,ide'1 t

    Secrerar~ . Trra,urrr

    ,t.,'rcrwd Srmrstt r ..Le-;lie ~ loe

    L'. H. Swan~trmn (~lad), Clarkt

    ~ril lning

  • \\'TT.LT \~T W. SUTII FRI~ \:\I> I B. S. Pn
  • C.\RL lllLL S\\ \XSTIW~l. LL. B.

    "Si'' C.unbrilgc II. S.

    Hulme Stunt (1) (2): "Ch:o" in Soph. Clas Saml; Argonaut Staff 1 I) (2) (3); Organiza-tion Ed. Gem of the

    ~lounwin-.: Ch. Junior l'ro>m ; Patron" Commit tcc, \"icc-Pre:-. ]w1ior Clas'; !1cnch and Dar .h-.nc.; Elwdas; As~oci atcd llarbs.

    "I I 'hut a f>roplzcc.v that 111111/t'. 1/il/"

    ; h irt y-cigllt

    L.\RYERX IXEi' BORELL. n. \.

    (Political Economy) ~T~'rru'J

    Xorth Central H. S., Spokane, \\'a,;h.

    h\'' Honors (l) (2)

  • LI~SL I J.. ~EI.SO~ :\IOF It . \. (Economic,)

    uBo" \\'arclncr Kellogg II S

    Ba,klothall (I) (2); track (1) (2) ; Dase hall Cl); GJ.:e Cluh (3): \thlctic Hoard (.2) l ::\GLE. II .\. "lJin!J''

    Coeur d'.\lcne H. S En~. Club; Ec. Clnh:

    Cast. "Four Flushers'': Delta Gamma. '

    ".l good politifi. Junior Class ( 3) ; Stum Fest (2).

    "II tn.

  • /oorly

    JOHX FRJ"DRlCK CU'\ , B. S. ( \gr.)

    '' Di11ybnf' Springdah:. Loon Lake, Colvill~. l.cwi-.. & Clark

    Jligh Schools

    Tr;tck Squall (.2) (3): :\g. Club (2) (3) ; Trc. .\ g. Cluh (3); T rcas. Junior Class '.20; Junior Prflm. Conuu. "20; 1st Lieut. Battalinn of Cadcb ( 3) : Studcut llook Stf>re Committe~ t 3) : Sigm:t Alpha Epsilon.

    ''fi't d011'f kiiOW II t/tiiiiJ about him."

    ~lERCH>ES JOXES. ll. \. ( l.m:li'h I

    ''Cidt" Gni,~ity nt nn~on . ".\'' Jl nnor' (2) 13 J ;

    Eng. Club c2l (3J; Ch. Program Cntnm. En!{. Club (3): .\rgotHl\11 t.2) ( 3) ; Assnc. l~d. \ rgo n:1 ul (3): Thl llig Four (3): Society Etl '2 1 (;nntain. (3); :\lu-..ic Clnh cJ>; Sil{ma :\'u.

    'fft Sti\'S /r .... f {11r 01'//1 (flu {tlruin) ."

  • WILLI.UJ II I. \>J(~LWISE.

    LL. n "Bill"

    Emmett ll. S. "B''Ilouor-. (2): Pn. ....

    Soph. Cla~s; Clerk ami . \""'"' )lhtice Hench and Bar I 2 J ( .} ) ; \

  • Forty-two

    I f. \R(JI.D OLI \ ER DECKER. ll. \

    ( T~unomics) Hod"'

    :\1 oscow H. S. Phi Delta Theta. '"Schiller says, 'ol/wr !'it-

    it.

  • Jl'SI 1'\ 11\"Kn'\ CO\\ 1.'\ JR .. II S.

    (.\lining) "Dutld\"

    Caldwell H. S !~out hall Suh. (I) ; Y.tr

    sity (2) (3) : V Pr6. Cia" (2) (3); V. Pre~ '"''"' ~I incr!> ( 3) ; "II" llonnr-. (.1); ~erg. R 0. L C. (1}; \\c~t Point Cadet '11-t, '19; ~lu5ic Club; "I" Club; ncta Thrta Pi.

    "Which sitft art yart !Ill ill!f II!, Ill~,; 1'/1 t.rk. f/z , oilrl'l".

    LFL.\ :\L\E P.\TCIT, .B. A.

    (English) "Pate/res''

    lloise High School: .\lhi0n State Xurmal

    Eng. Club; 1. \\' C . \ . ; Kart>a \lpha Theta.

    "L,/11 IIIli\' Put.-lr -nJrouf"

    l ~ I 1 .. (;[{\F. LL. II. "Fred"

    Cmur lL\Icne ll. S. louthall (1) (3); 1rack

    ( 1); \'. l'n~. Cla

  • ..

    L\\YRE::\CL r:. IIL:FF. LL.B. ''llu[f""

    Cottonwood I J S. Debate (2) (3); I~n~.

    Club 12) (3): D~bat~ Clui. (2\; Dtnch ancl B;11 \ssnc. (3). "a .. R\ FELTO:\. LL. B.

    "Ho11k" ~fnscow H. S .

    "D" TTonor!; (I); "\" lJonor~ (2): Phi \lplm Ddta; Elwet;,s.

    "no111lcr ,:f he'll Nt"r /ool. o-.o the btrr .. ,

  • J())J~ P \L'L F\ \\S. . II. S.

    C \gncuhnr, l "CIIi.-1/'

    . \rmrit:.m Falls and . \Jo,,ow lligh Schnnb na,eh:tll (I): Ha~k~th;tll

    !21 ( J). \thlttil- Broartl d 1: "I" Unh. Sigma :\u.

    ".lmri,,,l I ,rf/s i.{ ''"' [>,'., sf:, I111S So>lllnlllltf 11/tli/.~ Clrt' so o'(,r,raLl'tltd .JO

    Forty-fivt

  • Fvrty-si:~

    .\LFREI> :\ I ~LSC1'\. 11. S. C Physics) "Vt'ls' ..

    Kendrick II. S. C S :'\:I\ y ; . \ ~sociatcll

    B:uhs: rhc Elwetas. .J mall of suf>r. \ . ] . PRI EST, LL. ll. "A.!."

    Boise l r. S .-\' IJonor:-t (2) C~):

    \'ar.-it) Ot.'batc (l) (2) ( 5); Sporting Editor .\ r ~onaut ( I ) ( 2) ; E

  • JIO\"DF \\'. Ct1C\ELISO:\. B \

    l Econumic~) co,.,,,.,,

    :\fno;;cm\ i I. S. .\lan;~ger of .\thktil''

    'JR '19: Gh~l' Cluh '17-'1~: \thlct i ~ \dvi>orv llu:tnl

    111 tlw Prl,idlnt: Sig,m.t '\u.

    " I lllolll of ut'limt.''

    FEROL RICII \RIJSO'\. ll. \

    ( Ech. Cht' lll. Cl:ts': :O.hmhcr \'. R. Clement-. Prl'''ing Clnh: Founder ,.f 1 hc Rl.'\ in!l Mo\l.'ment in 1h1: lll.'ad Lan~o:uage CJas,.

    l'~ : l'hi Delta Thct

  • Por/y-dylrt

    KE~ \ l:'rJ I \1 HL"XTEI

  • RORFRT P.. Jli \:\:--rESE:\. II
  • C. EUI ER !Hl II ERT~. n. s.

    ( .\nimal llu,bancln ) '')'hurty''

    Roisc ll S. Eng. Cluh; ,\!(. Club :

    "\'' Honur~ (I) (J), l ow . \ltJha; Phi Della Thllit ;

    ft tukts Short\ /11 /cllllc' tfl, ~'iltl 11 an."

    :.

    FRED\ ~I \1{11~ SOL'LE:\. ll. \.

    (Engli'h) "Poodil'"

    Holland II. S .. :\Jich

    Orchestra; I rca~. So1>h Class ; Ec. Clu h ; Ll. of I. SLring Trio; illu~ic Club . Eng. Cluh; l'xn l!oanl \\'oman's Lc.lf.!llc; (J;unma Phi Bct:t

    "~h. lt~k

  • FLO\ f) \1 COSSI IT, 13. S.

    (Forestry) Council II. S.

    Gen. Comm. "Timber Rcast lloc Down" (2) : Program Comm. SOJ>h. Frolic; Sec-T rca~. \~~Ol' Fon:,lers (I) ; V - f>r

  • } i/1)'/ti'O

    I. \RL E. liUXT, LL U. r;,,. uri"

    St. l\larit:s II. S. I 't Lieut. C:tdet Bat.;

    \. E. r. Club; I "l Lieut. \ F I two year": Sigma Xu.

    "II 'l~ctt'.~ it s.-llinq ''' ;, /J, C., /i.

  • E:\!ERY T. K:\UDSO~. LL. IJ.

    ''Knutc" Coeur d'Alene 11. S.

    Tlencb and Bar ; Phi Al pha Delta; Chairman Vig. Comrn.; K:tppa Sigma.

    "Stud_,iug this ~nr, l::. 111en? No! Nor fuss-ill!!-"

    .\LICE BESSEl~, H . \.. < 1\1 usic) "fl,s,{'

    1\1 tlSC()W IL s. "A" Hfmors (1) {2); Snng-f(~t Comm. (2); \\'oman's League Exec. IJoard (3); ~ l usic Club: Kappa .\lphn Thrtn.

    "1 Jc's ouly a brollut' to Ill('. ''

    R \LPH R 'nroxn TIRESllEARS. LL. II.

    "llrm t'' Caldwell II. S.

    Foothnll ( l) (2) ; Cap-tain (3) ; lhseball (l) ; Dt?hali! (I) (~); Duj;incss :\!gr. Argonaut (2); Ex. Hoard ('2); Ensign U. S.

    ~. R. F. '18; Pili Delt:t Theta.

    ".1ft!f'Y is 11 _qrn11d old 1111 /Ill'

  • fi{/_1'-{IJII/

    LEO IT. I:L'I.~c..IIER. B. \.

    (Commerce) ''Srnw!t

  • R.\LPH R. ROWELL, B.S.

    l ,\gricullure) URO'ttl'

    Lewiston IT. S. "\" lTonors (l) (2);

    Second Prb:c Hort. Con-test '19: Second Prize Dairy Contest '20.: Trcas. :\g. Ouh (2) : Eng. Club; Alpha K;~ppa Epsilon.

    .. So lang ht yots lo brd in sa/ions."

    K.\ J H FRIXE JUXGE. ll s

    (!lome Ec.) "Katie"

    i\loscow 11. S ".\" I Jonors. Jrlt_v so serious, 1\"atu.

    Pit wit)' so serious["'

    CL.\R Et\CE ROHERT II TBB.\RD, LL. II.

    'Bob" Wallace H. S.

    Clerk of Hench anti Bar (,1): Ach. ~gr. Gem of the 1\founlai ns 1920; Jun-ior Prom. Cornm.; Kappa Sigma.

    "I I'll /Jc n briyltt 1vorid sallt

  • rtORTO:-\ ~IcC.. \LLI E. n. s. Plmm~

    ".lft~c'' Kamiah II. S.

    Track tl) (2); Capt. ( 3) ; Pre~. A ~suciaterl Miner:. (2) ; Scc.-1 rcas. "1" CluiJ; \thlel ic llon!'ll.

    ''Jor/..son )IIndo~,., !!."

    :\L-\RI F I Ll/ \llETII .\XI> I:J{SO~. H. \.

    Oiuo;ic) ".-lud,;"

    :\lt>SCOW H. 5 \" Honors ( I ) (2)

    ( 3); En~lish Cluh; I ~Xl'C. iloard \\'mmn\ Ll'aFluC; Uusic CluiJ; Y W C. \ .; Economics Club: ;\lcmhcr 'hip CommiLlcl' Fnt.!hsh l'lub.

    "I del f'roi'.f.l to be 110 /,ss tl1

  • C.\RL A. BURKE, LL. n. 8/iutl>"

    Star ll S. . \rgonaut Staff (1):

    "B" Honor~ (I) (2): Hench and Bar: Engli~h Club: Dcb;1te Whitman ll), w. s. c. (3); lst Lieut. Bat. Cadets; Track Squatl; Phi \lpha Delta: . \ lpha Kap[>a Epsilon.

    ",1tr. /!-;mr.>. I nm't s., Ilwl."

    GL \1>\ S ~kR \E, IJ . \. "G/,rd"

    Kamiah II. S. Economics Clt1h; Kappa

    Kappa Gamma. .. 'ifll''.f s/roug fur IJ'. S.

    C."

    PIIILLif' S.\~Drs. 1! s (C. E.) "Phil"

    T'oc:llcllo I I. S . 1-..:IJlpa Sigma. "II ou/d be a better slu-

    dmt rf lie didu'l lime so IIICIIIJ' rlalrs."

    Fifty-St"':JI'II

  • Fi/1.1' ,ight

    IR.\\ I, J IlL \CKI:\CER. n. S.

    ( Chem. E. l "Tutsdcl\ Hoi~e H: S.

    Kappa Sigma. "Thtu it's olwaw Tu,s-

    do)' at thr Kaf>/'~1 Sig11r.1 fTfiJISr."

    \D.\ S. J'C)\-E\. n. \ (Home El.)

    .. . I d.-" II;~iky II. S.

    \'. \\'. C. .\.; Ec>nomil'' Cluh: \Vomcn.. Lc:Jf

  • \\,\I. E. l'l.L'll \ '\ EC. H. S.

    ( ,\~riculture) "Bill"

    :-l:unpa fl. S. Stnck J tulf:(in~t 1 cam

    ( 3 l : \I{. Cluh; Elweta~. "Do \'till Sllt't'!:c it or

    qlll'ff/, ii .

    OLT\'E \IUHlFL ~I F.R.RlTT. II S

    (lfome Ec.) "J/ err/'

    Sandpoint- H. S. "H" Honors: Ilollll' Eo:.

    Club: Y. \\'. C. .-\. Dclc-~:ue to Seabeck: Y. W. C. \. Sec.; Cast of "Paola an

  • Si.rt\'

    TITUS G. LECL.\IR, llS. (E. E.) "Tite''

    Lewiston II. S. "\" Honors (1); Clcc

    Club (I) (2) (3) ; Quar lt'ltc (2) (3); V.-Pn,,

    \~,oc. Enncers (31; Pinafore Cast (3); :Mu~ic Cluh; Sigma Xu.

    "Gets n hllt!r C\ S LOl"lSE CL.\RKI:, II. S.

    (Home Ec.:.) "Glad"

    Xurtll Clntral I r S. ~re~hman C:ll' Sopb.

    l'"rollc. Junior f'rum. c/0111/ /0 /111 "/" !/

  • I:H '\ ES I II )LBER 1', II S.

    ( \l{ricnlture) "/Jul

  • j.\:'I!ES 11. FO'\:. It S ( \griculturc)

    '') illl" 1'\t-z Perce TT. S

    \':Lrsit \' Ba5cball (l) I ,11; X:itional .\nnv 'lR '19: \thletic Bo:mi; ''('' t'lull: Uc Smct Cluh: \lpha Kar,,a F.psilnn

    "~/' 11/. ,ft>r .\'

  • LYLE COLIWI{:\. I.L. 11. "Suorc'' Stcrlin~ J I. S.

    her', 1.:1\\ Cluh: l'hi . \lplia Delta; SrJ.,'lll ~l'df/OIJ /0 .. IIIC )'Cf.'u

    P.\l'l. I I. l;f'RR.\RD, 11. s. (Forc~try)

    ''J,n}"' \ iiiiC:OliYCr IJ. $., \Vash .

    '\ allonal Army; Xi Sig-ma Pi; Beta Theta Pi.

    '//'s II biy COII/IIr\' ill bol/r tlir..-lions, J ary!"

    Sixty-tit rn

  • Sixty-fotlr

    ED\\'1:-\ D. PErr.RSOX, U.S.

    { En~inclring-) [>,(t"

    Wardner KdiOAK IT. S.

    Glee Club (I) (2); Hand (1) (2) ; Cadet Cat>!.: Balla lion \djut:tnt : V.-Pn:s. Assoc. En!{incrs; Sigma \lpha Epsilon.

    "Onr af tltos, loll d11rl., hrllltl,wm, )'t>llfh.{:

    ElL'\ESTIXE IHW\\ '\, n. \.

    ( Rl)lll:tllCC L:tllj.."\I:IJtC') uRro-:c,,;t"

    :.\f oscow II. S. "/\." Honors (I) (2);

    Y. W. C. \.; 1-(appa ,'\ 1-pha Theta.

    ''ff'llv is slit to/tilly Frcuch.! .Jsk Ed."

    IT.\RRY \~ll '\l>SE'\, B . \.

    (Co nunc rCl') ''Dutch"

    rocalcllo JT. s. Tdaho Technical Tnsti-

    tute '19; Econornir r luh : ~igma . \lpha r~p~ill)ll.

    "Tilt qrolt't'.\'111"11 1.1 u drcmy place."

  • K \\ ~10\ l> Sl' \ '\C,J.U! B.S.

    ( \J;~ricultur~) ''Spo11y''

    Lungmont ll. S .. Colo.

    Colnratln Cnll~~c: ( I) ( 2) : K:uha, State \gr. Cnlll~~ I .1) : llcta Thda Pi.

    "l.o~w"'s fik, 'll"odsn' {111/itll/ ;{,..,., th, .lei. build-irry slcts."

    Pf'_\RL S:\l. DER l I \DLEY. ll S.

    ( 1 {om~: r-.cnnumic") "P,,rrh"

    Orofino H. S. Hc\mc Economics Club:

    Ed-Ed. Comm.; Kapp.t \ lpha Theta.

    ')/r,'s murri.-d, too.''

    ] . I' IIlLI [' DR I SSE:\. B.S.

    ( Fnrc~tr~) "Phil"

    Ilarri,on I I S. Licut R 0. T C (2)

    (3); Xi ~t~:ma Pi. "1 /r, ;,or.

  • n'!.\1.1'11 ..., 1 \lfl'l:-'1>\. I J: .. ,_

    Si.rty-si.r

    I(. I~ I "l

  • IW\ \1. \ t>:t F~ I SI\RR

    "1 :,inJ.ol," l\1 in l~au, I I S

    "I I" llonur': l,~m ui thl \lountaiJh Staff '.?1: bt l.~tut In r \ I~ F.: !'-n \~:r. Cluh: lot a .\I ph .. I hl FhHt:l,,

    "II.,.,. you goirry lo ~'cpt.

    " \" llunnr' ( 3). "1/,'~ iu 11 doi.H /1 him-

    st'l(," .

    Si.rly-sc~cu

  • Fl~ Ell PE.\RSO'\, ll .\. ( Emdi,h)

    ' ' /red" ~-~0-C0\1' II s

    ".\" llonnr, (I) l Sml"t Cluh: Junior T'r om. Cummittcc: Carnma Pin ll.aa.

    To tltt>.>' ;,/ro do uot n.d/,, !~ltn:-.' ll.r ~, -;,oulti s.t.\'. \'rmrs ;,, tit, !l~"'tl< r lriSS"

    I~LSSF l D. 110\\ ERS. H. S.

    (:\lining) "(,'o/dit'" J..l'llngJ~: H S.

    l'rl'' :\Iucker,' \c;..,oc c 1 I . K;lflJJa Sigma

    "Old mcm niyuily"

  • LORE:\\\ KITCH. n S. ( \gru:ulturc)

    ".')kooldr" ~~j~,oula II S.. ~I ontana.

    " \" llunllrs ( I) ( 2) : I'' Lilut Cadet n:,uation (J). \"ctcran, \'ocadonal Cluh 1.1 l : Third in C:rain

    Jnd~tlllj.\. Si!{ma :\u .. /J ,, ,,,,.,..J ...

    .\:\TOJ~ETTE SCHOTT KITCH, B. A.

    "Yt'llit" Cultl63C 1 L S. "\"Honor~ (!) (2):

    l>c Smet Cluh: T rehlc Clef Club: Frtshman Glee Cumrn.; Sororin Pan-llellcnic: Kappa \lpha Theta.

    l"cs. /r, i.f !"

    Cit \RLI.S C llVR(ilLER. fl S.

    (l\f E.) "Cliff"

    Hnplrt II. S. l'ni

  • LUCIE I>\\ IS, fl. \. ''l.uci, flc/,u"

    !Ioise II. S Sec. Trc;a-urcr lllSml'l

    C luh; .\I u-ic Cluh; Pan-llcllcnic: Conun. \\'oman',.. Lt'al{uc.

    "\h, lil.:cs 1111fs-but lht .

  • I I \RKY II II \ R' l \\' F!.L. ll \ .. LL It Old //urn lluhl II S

    "II" llnnnr,., lknl'l1 & Bar "'I" Cluh: .\llllml11 on S11uknt !look SIOrt: Trad Sl(uacl 1'))9: Cmnm \thln. "//, ,.,,,s ;,itll rill

  • I' \l'L lii~CITLIFF, n. s.

    "llinkir'' \ C\\ PI) lltlllll h I r. s.

    Jow:t Statt ,\~ricultural Cnllcgc, ,\me~. T:t.

    S. \ T. C.; .\~. Cluh: Cadet lland.

    . /uti h. ~.hi.rt/,d as /r, ,,.,.,, iur lurk of lhouqht."

    \LICE ~I .\~ ILL\ S\\'.\XSO~. fl .\

    Sui" Pocatdlo II S

    ldaho Tec:h11ir

  • SOPHOMO~S

    S tnJCIII y-t/~r,r .

  • \..:,'111,1'-(tJIIr

    1YOO\'t"r llnsruotht'r ~\\ +. rn \' ... ox \\' llldmwn

    Sophomore Class Officers Fir_,.,. Stmntt r

    ;\ 1 ich:t

  • Md:ol\\ n 1\IC.'Kny :-;thmld 'l'I&Hnn Bnrllttl

    .Ju .. h:-;uu Pl'iPl Jl(_lt:Ull

    ~II nll l'nr~uns .,.nrlt;

    Kuhn~ J lnrlman

    .Jn\'ulo,.t'n lla1::

  • St'r' 'lily six

    Yar1 l l oN:en Oyll'!\1' t'hud Mccrea

    \"\"'e~te>Vtlr

    Rashy !lul l Penslty M cflovern Anu .. rson

    l'lrkin .\n

  • 'Putman O'Bril'n

    ~ternbe 1g \\'olfen 11eu ~Cl!J>!> Ua~

  • :e.err .. \h.l;:tthtorll

    litH~~ l'luunlwrlaln \\"avo.:r

    I ill ~ or

    l.dt.~lruan lhu.tltt~; l'hl"lps

    "~h I 'u\q;lfl 1-:llb c :.,\,en l:rhdtAIII

    tt, nw,.:on HE>J.{e 'l'homp>

  • Llln~rol~
  • J!iyhty

    Hrumlt SIH.rfle l d Smith .\ndel"!on 'Yea.\'t\r

    'rav.y ll oll(lncl Thomn>< Rro\\rn

    Hobert~:~on

    'l't'

  • Morrlx Robln>
  • Riglr ty-1 lrri'r.

  • F.i[llrty-[ollr

    Kin!: llr'

  • \\ 1111('~ ,\tkln~< \\". U. Mllltr Owing, \\'II son

    l'ar'ht>rl" Mnrt ln Url!

  • Eiglrty-six

    \\"1lkins lkown l~tlwarcl~:J t:nclersn l'OrPAl Uutltlard

    Oltnwn C';;tpenlt:t' 'l'htockmorton ttoclner

    l lipl1Ht ::\'Lit tal< Ill \\' o Ull ProvoNt 1\:ulnew~:

  • :\I of Dd'amp llol!lerman Klng-t:hriAman Slnclnlr

    Uubhlns l'lt>mlng Wolf Hro"n .\drlanson Barnes

    I' lkiC\' l'onw~ll L}'UI\

    lin~< ru rt her -,mllh Swift

    :\It' :->n ry Selby l'ummlnl>" Healy Stmms l'lellls

    Eigfrty-sevell

  • McPhCr!'un RecdPr DsuiHw! Lowe :;toul Blackll'lge

    Eiyh ly-righ t

    Durhum Cwu,. Jalis lletcr!l(lll ~hance :UcQulllg

    l!llliCOCk To l1 nan llnyblll I l~rJngton Woods X ell

    Tru) ltruwn \YJnl

  • ('ros~ l'l"lce Pflepsen Standish Nelson Mullnrky

    Shurtz Schmid l'n.rk~<

  • .\" iucly

    IJrP~Ih ar:-o Brisco~ l'rltchanl l'luntgan Heed l'JerR.on

    L

  • 0 ... \ln ... \~$ffiUSRt:
  • .Yini'f.\'fwo

    Ston('man Hinh.

    \;ltl8gtlW Roberts

    Schrot.>ler Steadman

    :-.oll' lnn r.uct.>

    p,.1ry ':ustafNon

    Cast>y Cage-

    Jill) man \\ulli'I'S

    llulluck L.,..u,. Leitch K Gilman

    Henry :llonow

  • ,\'iurly-1/rrf'

  • I /l'lel!f/IJt'l I ion

    Wu/1 Anvt

    ,\ ;,,ly- four

  • AGI\CULT

  • tlf.'TER ~~ \Utl' Klt.ll \\1 'Prggy'

    Trn) ll1 ~h :->rhuul Thi1c1 P1it.c:> in l hHthr~ ju'li.d"t:.

    11 \; Se,rtl~n :'\. I' .\ . l .iurn ,. L?\: Pr~ ... itlt ,it S P .\ . OrJ.(il'; i7~\ inn ( 3; Yoiridi;1n 11 iQh ~t-hnol \'iceprc~i(lent :-;, l', .\ . Literary

    ''ucie1y /,t) ; S. I' \ S11 o~k Ju.t,C. int.t r(':lnt (,iJ,

    "The .\hurt . 1~. 1orurt9 H/.''

    Jl .\IH{\' \\'11 .1.1.\\1 i\ icC'.\l' I,EY

    "J/ar'' Buhl t li~th Sd1Ml.

    .1 mbition ruu.f l 11Tl1lfl'tl si!lliuK books"

    IIE:\K\ I. 1L\1l\\1\l'IIE1t ' ' litlon t ~. 1'. ,\. l.itc:ory (1) ; S. P .. \ . l::"kc111:~11 U); :'\, P .. \ . llo;;kethall (.1): S. P. ,\ Shick lurl!fininos College;

    \ 'icc.\>res. Cla.ss (I~: CIM~ fln~ ketba 1 (I): lapt. S . .P. A. Has keth:Jl (.2: Vicepns. S . .P . \ , Lit. Society (2); Pres. S. P . . \. Lit. Society (J); Clo-. P res. ( J): ,.;, P . \. Ba.kethnll (J); P res. \th .. hsn (3); n .. ,, llistorion ( J l: S. P . A Stock ] udging T~am (J): T. X. K.

  • f'cntoo K11Hhlsnik

    \\'jgg-lns Picard Halgher

    T"asel

    lla rri~ ('hick

    Lower OAt rom Slnclaia

    \\'a.Je navis JlRJl

    Kmlll Johnson Hobert!!

    Ninl'iy-swe11

  • S. P. A. Literary Society First Scmcsta Stctwd StmNirr

    l\taric Kelham ~l'n-icknt l\lontic C:1rl~on l\Iuntic Carh,on Vic.: l'n.-.icknt ................. On illc- Dl1ugla~ Fuller Fenlon . . ....... _____ Sctnta n I' na ... nro.r ... --.lldtn Lo" en Jack O'Brieu ........ Editor of th, II owl. ....... - -- Edward Hri11cy Onillc Douglas . Chairmau of Pro~ram CntmuitHe .. _ ... _;\taric Kclham Critic -- . - ----------- - .......... _ Princip:tl C. n. \Vilson

    The Literary Soci.:t} of the Schuul 11i I'r:u;til:.cl \~ricuhure b an or!,(anir.:~tiun of Short Cour~e ... wdcnh m:~intailwcl for the purpn-c of ,_i\ ing it-. members clppnrtunity fnr self tmprovcments in the art oi ckh:ttc and puhlic 'i't':aking, ior the I>romutinn n hctter ;1cquaintancc,hiJ) ami for the dc,clnpmcnt of ~chool spirit. :\lcmhcr;.hip i~ open to all o.tude.nh of the 'choul. :\lccting:; are hdll ever} t wcl wc\k ... throughout thc 'chuol year . \t lach meeting a progr:un j, rcndcrul cun,isting nf debate.;, cxtc.mpur:uJccm' ~peaking, reci-t.ttions, addresses, mu~ic, rcadmg of llw ''JJm1 1," a cnllcctiun of nuucnt comments on the life of the school, and a critiqm

  • '

    ." \

    ) /1 .. "\ .:..- ..

    . I-~/: .Y- ' )

    Ni1rrly-1ti11.:

  • Ouc Hundred

    c:B="Eiti\1. 1~. R. I' II R I SMA:-\

    j{ilitarg Department T he Univcrsin ha' been mo~t forrunate in havin!! ;c. Profes~r of ~lilitarr Science ~nd Tactics an ideal military man, a ma~ \\'ith many years of practical C\pericPcc

  • 011.: llrwdrr(/ Orlt'

  • ...

    ::: ..

    ~ ., __

    c c 0 ., ...

    .,~ w ..

    Ill :i.l/) iil .., Ul ~. ui l: .... ...

    !!: Q~

    . t:t. c.~

    c ~ -~~

    ... 0~ ..,..-::

    ...

    ~ ....

    ....

    ~ ~ \:j

    ~ 8 ~ ::: ..

    "~ - ~ ~ ~

    ~[:.-. N ~ ~ ..:l o ~ ~

    ~o :r. . -~ .., ~z .... ' " r ..-.._)

    ~ ~ ;:;: ;:J 0"" ;:r.:~

    o,,. II ,,u/r,tl '/',,.,,

  • ...

    ...

    CQ ...

    ...

    i:-:: :-1Z -:r. .... -

    . -_...,

    011t If rur th.d /lrrc'

  • Ont lJ lllldrrd F our

    "' "' C,.) ...

    ...

    ~ t::: ~

    ~ 8

    l I I I (

  • One llundrcd Fi7.'t

  • Our University at War A University nr war is scrmir1~l) a contrndicrion, but like nHill)' contraries the

    Univer.;il) of ldaho lx:came a.., effC\:tive nnd cffi ~: ient in its ne~ative as in its positi\"1 form. \ Vhen our country cast her lot with the Allies in the sprinK of 1917 our C ni-\'trsit) did not turn militant o,er niKht, in fact. ~he did nu starrlin~.: or unusual thing. The change was )!radual. Pnhaps th1 transition \\'as more npparcnt when viewed in derail than in the per~pectin. Our total enrollment at that time wa.; 676. -+25 of whom were nw:1. Gradual!) the men began to disappear from our Campus until when school doscd in June we restmblcd a )Ollll)! ladie,' ~elect ~eminnr) rather than the co-educational institution of this commonwealth. t\ possible e\'planatinn of our gradual transition may lie in the fal't that rhe l ni,er,it) oi Idaho i:- a land )!rant college. which means that mi litary drill i:- nquired of all umkr classnwn. Thi:; drill is compu lsor) with all men in their first t\\O year;. of college lite and optional \\ ith upp

  • The University closed June 5th and did not reopen agaLn until October I, 1917. The late opening was due to the facr th:tr Idaho is essentially :m agricultural state, and the young men were needed on the farm" to to harvest the crops that were to aid in feeding our AJlies. It was not until school had actually opened that we saw the change. There were no upper cla:'men, and a University without upper classmen is

    usuall~ re)!arded ;L~ a ship without a rudder. The older Uni,ersit~ men wtr~ gone. a~ were the ~ounj!er facult~. lt was up to the new generation to take hold in the e:ner-

    genc~ and do their best in managing student affairs. The effect of the war was being iclt i:1 many directions. We began to notice the diffaencc in all our activities, arh-letics for or~L't' \\"ere almost forsaken. social functions were simple and inexpensive nncl thrift .;tamps were taking the place of chewing gum. There wcre n

  • C. throughout the country before it 'had actually had a fair trial. W hether or not it was ranked as a success in other institutions, the S. A. T. C. at the Universi~ of Idaho was ranked as first in the Nonhwest Di\ ision and as far ahove the average in its mi1it:Lry, medical and academic department. The men were demobilized before Christmas vacation and so ended thl short lived S. A. T. C.

    o much for the University during the actual period of the war. Thi~ $Cattered and rather barren perspectus covers a multitude of heroic action and sacri fice, but th

  • ATHLETICS Our Htmdrr:d Ni11t>

  • Wearers of the Varsity " ! " Football, 1919

    Captain Brashears Gcrlough Plastino Thompson Perrino Irving 'Whitcomb G. Evans F. Brown Rnrber Glinderman Gowen ragel

    Basketball, 1920 Captain Lindley

    Campbell Ca rder H unter Perrine Cozier Fox

    P. Evans

    Track, 1919 Captain Richmond ~l cCallie Irving Howard Perrine Campbell :\foe

    011c 1/undr,d T,"

  • 1'.\l'T.-\TX llHESIII-:.\HS

  • ...

    l=l .-; ::l Cl "' ;... ,.... _,

    -;; ~ ..; > "' ....

    "' ...

    ~ 8

    011r Tlffltdrrd Thirteen

  • (ffe 1919 Football Season \Vith the: ,;chcdulc rurned wrong wa) to, and the hiJ,! game,., all at the bcginnin~:

    of the ~cn..,on, Idaho had onl) a partiall) ~uccr~,ful fnothall sc:tsun. Defeated in the fir,.,t thnc game,.,, the ream came hark stronJ.! anJ won the two nmaining conrc;;rs with cumparatiH t:L~e. Unfortunate!) for l daho'~ pro~p

  • 011c fl'ulldrcd Fi{ltum

  • "J:l':'\T" BR.\SIIE.\RS Captain and Quarterback

    ''Bunt" can pa,, a footh:tll mt')re :rc.:uratcly than mo't people, c:tn ,IJn

  • ").\ZZ" ll \RDER Guard

    jan" i-. alway!> on the job. He ne1er says much hut when he due' 1hing-. thl') "re done.

    Tmi:IIY" TIIO:\IPSOX llalfback

    Injuries hampered "Tommy"' thi:, 'l'a,nn !Jut he tore things up just the ,amc. JJ,. hils the line hard.

    "l;IWYE' E\ .\XS End

    "Grove" combines weight with plenty of speed and, on top of this he's a fighter. Tie~ alw~ys ~lo~1 n fa,t on punts and deltghts Ill 'PIIltn~ interferences.

  • "BUTCH'' X,\GLE Guard

    "Hutch" macle good on the S . \.. T. C. team la~t year and went u~ one hctter this sea~on. He's heavy nntl husky and fights every minute.

    'GUS" IRYI'\G Hal back

    JOE \\'Ill ICO~IB flalfback

    Joe jumi)\:d mto fame when he got into the \\. S. C. fracas and de-livered the goods. Tle ha~ a qukk eye for picking hol~s.

    . "Gus" is hoth hea\y and fast and lme plunges are his specialtr. Jh sc?red the majority of Idaho'~ poinb th1s season

    Out H111rdrrrl Eighlt!t'!l

  • "P.\'1 .. ' I'ERlU'\E Tackle

    They never make anything on ''Pal!. .. idl of the line hl.'cau~e he al-II ay-; "lop' tlwm hc.>forc tlwy gd to it. On llllllt" he make' a,. many tackl

  • C'.\I'r.\1:-: LL'fOLWl'

    On. lltmdrL"tl Twrn(\'

  • 7!fe Basketball Season The U nivrrsit) of Idaho basketball ream plapd cil,!htecn ~nnw.; in rlw 1920 season

    and won elcv(n, fini~hing fourth in the l orrhwest Conference. Tht Vandals scored +76 aJ!:ainsr -1-12 for all oppo1wnts. Hunter was hi~!;h point man oi the season, scoring 98 points on field goals, and throwing 82 out of 133 fouls. Perrine comes St'Cond with 86 on field baskets nnd four on fouls. Three men, Cozier, Fox nnd Perrine, made thci r varsity letters in basketball for thc first time. A srrong team is as."ured for next year, with every man returning except Captain "Pre"" Lindley, who will he 1oM by

    gr:~duation. Y!oe, all-Northwest forward, kept out for the scason by injuries, will hc back.

    l daho opened rhe season by winning two games from the Potlatch Athletic Club in the Potlatch gymnasium. The team then met \Vashington State, \Villamette and

    ~Iontana at ~[o-.cow, losing only to \Vashington Sratc. The next week the Vanci

  • No:-ton ............ II Idaho ........... ............. ... ................ 18 \Vashington - .... . .. .......... . 23 Idaho ........................... - 29 ~I ultnomah A. C. . .. . ............. 30 Idaho . ... ............ ...... . 25 .\fontana S. of :\1. ...... - . 29

    Totals, Idaho ...... . ....... - 476 Total$, Opponents 412 T he Con fcrence Championship ''as 11 on by thr fa.;;t \Vhirman College team,

    11'hich anne, eel nine out nf dr1 en conference g:ame.~. \ Virhout qut.~tion eveq team in the Northwc"t was stronger rhis year than usual and ever) game wa:; hard-fought throughout. Idaho, two years conference champion, missltl rhird plncc hr one point.

    1oRTliWEST CnNnREXCE ST \'\mN'CS

    \Von \Vhitman ............. ......... ......... .......... 9 Oregon - ... .... ----- ......... ......... 5 w. s. c ................................................ 6 I daho .................. ................................... 8 0. A. C. . ..................................... - -t :\1 on tan a . .... ... . . ............. ... .... . .......... 1 \Villamette .... ............ ... ------ I

    l'TI F: TEAl\ [

    Lost 2 2 3 -t 8 5

    10

    P.C. .818 .71-t .667 .666 .333 .166 .091

    Erne~t I ,ind I c) ( Cnptnin) ..................................................... Guard Elra Hunter (Captain-elect) .. .... ... .. .......... ... Forward Paul Evan" .. --- ... .................................... .. Forward Richard Fox .. . ......... ........ .................. .. . .... ....... .. . Forward H oward Campbell ............................. ........ ..... ....... .... ..... Fon.vard Leon Perrine .................... ................. ... . ... . ............ ..... ..Center \Villiam Carder .. .................................. ......... ....... ............ Guard Robrrt Cozier . .......... .... ....................... . ... ---- .. .Guard

    One llundred T'i.vrnly-two

  • R. F. JIUTCJII\SO:-\ Coach

    "llutch'' co:tciHd his first year here this season and developed a hard-fightinj:\'. wl'll -halanced team that worthily upheld Idaho's besl tradi-tions.

    "PRF.X" Ll\. I>LlY. Guard Captain

    One of th(' hl~t standing guard~ in Idaho's basketb:tll hi~tor\' :-.rade the opposinl!' forw:trd

  • "DH0:\1" C \.\IPBELL Forward

    "RICll" FOX Forward Fa~t and con~i~tcnt on both ofien,c

    :tml ddlnsl' "ith a "ure eye for the honp. Lo:d l:t,t year's championship iin. Onl Yl'ar yt:t to play.

    First year on the \"arisity but went like a whilwind e\cry time he got into the g:mte. Two yet lo go.

    ()u, fftllldnd T~..nty itllr

    "ClllCK" EVAXS Forward

    \Yas on the famon~ 191R team and came back to "chnnl and his uld plact' :tt:!'ain this rear. Exceptionnllr fa,t on hi,. ieel.

  • .. '.\T'' PERRI:\E Ccnt~:r Fa~t ancl a fitnc fightn. Snor,
  • FrleclnHm llalllng llornln,; ::;, l'hllllrpi

    Srnllh P~:nw~>ll W. Phillippi Tll'O\\n t!'uach) Patch tllt:rhan~ly

    Wrestling \Vresting as a !>port """' ih first ~l':l"'n at Idaho thi~ ~car. and from the >IHm ing made

    nu the interest aroused. t here can b~: nn doubt hnt lhat it has come In stay. T IH: team took ran in only twu matches. ln-.ing hoth, hut this wa~ nut di~cturaginK con .. idering the infancy .. r the 'port.

    The first contest w;.. .. held at Pullman :uul ldahu lo~t h\ the om->idcd ~core oi IZ to I. Too rigid restricting was n:,pon.;ibl~;: [(Jr Idaho's poor shnwinl-\' "Hahl:" Bmwn lol>t on a so lalled "rolling fall" tu a much inferior man.

    The ~cconcl match came off in tIll' Idaho gym and only a flukl pn:l'cmcd a \"ictory for the -.ihcr and goltl. Thi" caml when Smith. in tlw 15~-ponml class, threw hi' m;u1, but he utuse they were off till' mat it did not cnunt as a fall. l 6. Al> it tnded tlw score wa" 6 to 5 in fa\'or of \\'as ltin)o!lnn State. Brown thrl'" his formtr nppon.-nt 1:itl1 little effort

    1 35-t>Olllld-Oberhnn~lc:y 145-pound-Pcnwcll

    011' l11111drcd T~tuly-si.~

    THE T EA)( l:i~ pound-Patch nnd Smith 175-poumi-Bro\\ n (Cant.)

  • llnlmu FRI'IIliS1 ( l;tl'lifl < )~t r ruHltr l'ox ll'apt.J

    ~Pul ~'lcc~ur ~~

    Freshman Athletics Tlli~ Yl'ar\ Jln:,f1111illt ll'am' WlTe of :1 11 exceedingly high unlcr, and if a j.(oOd bcginninK

    j, :111) criHrinn.man) uf th~ fi r~t )C:Ir mc:n 11ill hi:' strong recruit., for 1':1rsity po,ition$ next ycar. rlwir 'fll'Cial missirm i-. to funu.h t:rimmagc fur nr,ity tc:uns, and Jlwy fulfi lled 1hlir dnli

  • STATJ: ('H,\MPJOXS

    Interscholastic Basketball Tournament Eight teams. \'irtors in as man) inter-~ectinnal tournament:;, took pan in tlll'

    annual interschola~tic tournnmem held in the lininrsity gym11asium on :\larch 18th and 19th. The schools reprNented wcrr: :\Io>cow, Twin Fall~. Boist, Aberdeen, Cul-desac, Driggs, \V:lllace and Coeur d'Alene.

    The .U foscow High School team. three lime'\

  • I

    C:Al''l'ATN RlC1:lMOND

    One Hundred T"tumty-rti11c

  • The Track Season The J0 :4 Hanson (\V)

    T ime, 16 : ~ Thompson ( I )

    Thnc, .:!2 ~ 1 cCa II ie ( I )

    Time, 2:03 1-5 Perrine (T)

    Time. 25: I .Jackson ( I )

    'l'lme, 10:26: 1 Rom ig ( 1)

    Hl'lghl, 10 feet King ( W ) Pl>-lt~n,e, 1 J ecet S '. lnchl'

    Bu rke (I) II ('I,L:hl :; f!'d 6 inciH,; Pearson ( I )

    lll,.lllJ1t' t', 119 feet 2 lnche>< :\ l oe (I)

    llistance, 21 f('t'l l) :t, lnche,.. .f:~velin .. . rrving(I l

    Bakt:r ( W ) Ptrrinc ( [ ) J enne (W) I rving (I) Perrine ( I ) ~lcCroskey (W) Perrine ( I )

    Relar ---.Conceded to \V.S.C. lll,.tance, 165 feet ~ Inches

    Final Score: \Vashington State 79, Idaho 'i2. Then came the all-important Conference meet at Pullman. The failure of a

    \Va.;hingron State rela~ man to carry the haton acro~s tlw line gave Tdaho the Con-ference tide. The meet will KO do\\'11 in ~port histnr) a" one nf the closest and moo;t

    One flundud Tlurly

  • . ~

    One Hut~drtd 1 flirly-ouc

  • Olio' lllludtotl "/ hirly lltl't't'

  • ~ ................................. ._. ..................... ._. . .._.. .... ....._~.-.......................... _ .......... _....._ ......................... _~

    ~ ............................................... , ................................... ~- .. ... .................................................. -......... ~

    Idaho Track Records I 00-yard clash

    220-yanl da,h

    +1-0-) ani da ... h

    .. __ _ 9 :-J. sec. __ _

    .21:3 ~c .

    . 50:2 :.ec .

    880-yard run ....................... 2 min. 1 sec. __ _

    ~lile run ......................... .-!-min. 32 ... ec. ___ ..

    T'' o mile,; ....................... J 0 ruin. H ,.ec. . ..

    120 ) ani hurdb 220-yanl hurdles

    ll igh jump

    16:1 sec.

    .. 25 :0 sec. .5 ft. 10 in.

    Broad jump ................... 22 ft. 6 in. Pole vau lt .............................. 12ft.

    l)iscus ............ 127 ft. 8 ill ......... .. .

    \ .f:llm's :\fontgumcry ( Snm :\Iorrison

    1909 191-J.

    .Sam :\Iorri:.on ............ 19 16

    l!:nni, ~Ia,scy

    .. .Ilcc Edmundson

    fl ee Edmund--on

    Oli,cr Campbell

    j mne~ Lockhart .James :\I ontgomerr

    .\Vallac

  • The 1919 Baseball Season

    Little interest wns taken in baseball last ~eno;on, due principal!) ro the scarcity of )!OOd material and to the um1sua l interest taken in track, w1hicth came ill tlhe ~ame time. Only rwo games were played and no letters were a11nrded, due, of cour~c, to the fact thnt none of the team had played the required amount of timt.>. Captnin Rettig W

  • Tennis fn tennis Idaho was represented b) Bill Dcnecke, "Stub" Almqui:>t and " Ken"

    Hunter. Denccke and H unter compo~d the douhks ream and Almqui~r rook care of the singles. The Conference tourne) at P ullman was the onl} contc:.t held during the season. The team went to the meet with the understanding that each school was to be represented br a sinJ!Ie,:; man and a doubt~ team. but when the matches started each mao had to play a round in the ~ingles. The team was eliminated in rhe singles b) \Vhitman, when Almquist lost, 6-2 and 6-3, H untcr \\'a.' defeated. 6-1 and 6-3, and Denecke lost, 2-6, (l--4 and 7- 5. \1\Thitman took the singk:. championship b) winning two out of three matches with 'VashinJ,..'Ton State.

    T n the doubles the ne'\t day, the Pullman team disposed of H unter and Deneckc m straight sets, 6-3, 6-1 and 9- 7. Br defeating W hitman in the next round, 6-+, 6-+, 6--4, Vv. S. C. anne-xed the doub les honors.

    T ennis has never heen much of a sport at TdRho, ami this was the first year the school wa~ represented in imercolle~ate competition, ~ results are not discour-aging. T he ] claho team put up a game fight. hut 11':\S simp!) outmatt'hl(l.

    Women 's _//thletics Organized women's athletics were started at the University for the first time this

    spring and pr:u:rically all of the co-eds are taking an ;tctivc part in them. F ebruary 2'5 one hundred nnd fifry ~iris met in the grmnasium nnd the greatest spirit and en-thusiasm were sh0\\"'11. An inter-group basketball rurnament was arranged for and it wa$ decided that an out-door girls' meet should be held later in the spring. Tenni~, hiking, out-door hockey and baseball will also be entered into. If the proposed swim-ming pool is secured competitive swimming will be ~cheduled.

    T he girls plan to organize a strong local a..,sociation and an arempt mar be made at some future date to affiliate with the National Women's Athletic Association. Irene A. Watson, assistant professor of Physica l Education, who has been doing won-ders with the girls' gym classes, is directing the mO\'ement.

    The co-eds so far ha,e shown fine spirit and upport and there is no doubt but that the plan will he a complete success. The wide variety of sports offers an op-portunity for every gi_rl in co llege, and they have not been slow in taking advantage of ir.

    (), ,. llundrd Tlrirly-si.l'

  • Thumpson Camplot>ll ~tdulllo l'orrlno

    !rvlng

    The Athletic Board President Secretary

    Harn Hart\\dl R. :'\ eil Irvin~ lloward Carnplwl l U nrton l\ IcCn ll ic Leon Perrine

    ~~~~~ .... Ro~ Thomp~on .. ..Le.;lir \foe

    The athletic bon rei has ~encral '!I pen i-;ion o\'er all athletic~ and tht granting of varsity letter-.. It i~ compo~td of .enn umlcrgraduatN elected each spring to sene for orw year. Thou~rh not dire.:tlr .;;pecificd in the con-stitution it is custo:nan to elect onh men "ho have made thlir letters in

    ~orne major branch of ;thlttic..;. lt l~a~ ail\ :l)' betn the polic) of the A. S. lf. l. to have each majnr ~port representtrl.

  • Traditions The traditions of a university are those thin!!~ which tighten the bonds bet\\ een

    the Alumni and their Alma ~I ater anJ which cause rhe underg-raduate~ w feel that in carrying out these traditions they are linking themselves with those students who have been before nnd with tho~e students who are yet to come. Idaho i\'> peculiarly blc~sed in her trad itiuns.

    The Fr~hman wears his green cap, not as an emblem of de~radation, but wirh the full knowledge th:tr generations of freshmen before him have done the same. To him it is a!' much of a badge of honor anJ a mark of class Jistinction :LS the corduroys of the Junior or the sombrero and cane of rhe Senior. He knows that, when he swin~ the senior cnne, to him alone \\ill be j!ranted the pri,ile~e of sitting on the "I" bench. To him abo shall the joys of the " Senior Sneak" be known.

    Before nil rhese thinJ-"S arc his, h()wcver, the Freshman does m:tn) th in~. He helps ot'hrr Freshmen gather wood for the W. S. C. bonfire, and to him it is not :1 cask-it is nn honor. He glories in the under classmen mix which gi\'es him a chance ro "get e,en" with the Sophomore,;, and he attends the "Burr the Hatchet" dance \\'hich comes after the mix, to sho\\' that hard fcelin~ arc forgonen.

    As a mark of respect to his Alma ~fatcr, no Idaho st11dent smokes on her campto~. ;tnd her president is always c:aluted .

    From the time he is a freshman until he is a Senior, the Idaho :.tudent looks for \\'ard to the stunt fe~t and "ng contest. It is hi!' chance to sho'' the ' ' isiting hil!:h >"Chool athlete" :;omc of the frivolit)' and seriousncS: of college life. It is his chance ro show others what he thinks of them.

    In l\ I ay comes Campus Day, when students and fnculty work on the Campu~ and the :\lar Queen holds her court. T'hen comes ivy planting and commencement and a collcl!e year has gone. F:ach year. howe,er, makes our Alma :\later and her tradi-tions dearer to us. Her spirit is the unconquerable spirit of the vVest.

    Our 1/mrdnd Tlr il'ly-riglrl

  • O lt
  • Debate lntcrcollegiatt debating :It the Gnivcr-,it) h:L~ mer with its usual ~ucccss rhis vear. The International and the lntcrst:tte Dehatin~ Leaguc, ha,~ brou~ht Idaho in contact '' ith the L ni' cr-.itie ... of Oregon, British Columbia, .\ lnntana and l_ rah. Thc,e. togrthcr with tht duel with \ Vashinj!Wn State College, have afforded worthy opponen t'i.

    The response of the demands of rhi' hcaY) :.;chrdule ha.; been general. Out of the "i" team-. put in the tield so far hut t\\ o com-

    petitor~ have appeared in more than one contest. l'"rom thi:; it would seem that interest and cffectivrnc;;,; in dchate are nr>t at all locali;,ed. The quality of the present freshman cla.;s ... cerns especially proph~tir of

    futur~ strength for the U niver,it) in thi.., cltpartment of inrerrolle~iar:acrhity.

    The question' discussed ha\c all been timely. Compulsor) mili-tary training, open \'e rsus dosed shop, and compulsory arbitrntion which irl\'olves consideration of the 1\;.,tlum of re"tricting imlivitlual Iibert) hr the extension of ~ocial and f!O\Crnmcntal control. Tht' thorouf!:h srutl} of uch question~ required for an intercollegiate con-rest cannot fail to give a student a whult:somc grasp of the fu nda-mental prohlems of politics. It is hopt-d that the ext1nsion of this benerit mar r('.;ult from the acti\itie of the open forum.

    ()u, 1/uudr,tl Por/_1

  • Cl L\RLES D.\RLING, ~lannger ''Charley b hoth a mauager and :111 all-

    \:mce agem-ask the hoy~ who went to Vancouver."

    C\RL II SW \XSTRQ)l Orc~on Debate

    "Sii111 lolks J)plllll'lll'. :my way you take it.''

    LA\VRE}JCE lTUFF W. S. C. Dlhate Oregon Debate

    "He talks ju-.t as fa,t :t~ he thiuks. ami thinks as fast a-. he talks."

    H \Y ,\GEE W. S. C. Dt>bate

    ". \ good lawyer, thcrefon a good :tlcr."

    \VILLL\M S. BRISCOE W. S. C. Debate

    ''His first year [or ldahn, h11L we hope not his last."

    Our llwrrlrcd ForljC>II

  • Ollc IJuudrcd F
  • '

    Ollt' lf111tdrcd Jiorty-lltrc.-

  • dUNIOR PROM

    .\larch 6, I CJ20.

    P(ltrons tuul Pntronesses President and ~Irs L indley Dean and ::\Irs Cockerill Dean and ::\lr,;. Thomson

    One 1/uudrcd Fllrly-faur

    Dcnn French Profcs~r .\larshall Dr. and .\Irs. 'Vodsedalek

  • SENIO RUFF Pntrruu and Prrtroutssts

    Profc~~r and :\I rs Lt"wi~ P rofessor and i\Irs. Evan:.

    011r llrmdtcci Forty-fitc

  • April 2-J., 1920

    Patrons and Pntroncssts Dean Pcrmcal_French

    Ou, II t111drcd ForiJ-si.r

    Professor anti :\Irs. C. \V. Hickman Professor and :\lr.;;. H. T. Lewis

    ~Ir. Dickin'iOn and :\1 iss \\7cgman

  • FRES GLEfi

    )1ay 8, 1920 Patrons a111l Pnlrontssts

    ) I i:os French Dean and )Irs. 0. P. Cockerill

    Dean and 1Irs. F. A. Thompson ~\Ir. and 11rs. L. F. Parsons

    One Il1mdrcd Forty-seve11

  • ATHLETIC BALL N 1wember I. I 919

    l'atrons a11d Pat rom n1

    President a,cl \ r rs. Lindler Colonel and \ [ r.;. Chri:.man

    \1 r. ami \1 r-.. lllt-am~hter !Jean Permeal French

    .\ r r . .\[a thew-.

  • .:\larch 20, 1920

    Patrons and Pntroiii'.I'JN

    Pnsidrnr and ~Irs. E. H. Lindley GO\ernor and ~Irs. D. \V. Davis

    Colonel and :\Irs. E. R. Chrisman Colonel and ~Irs. R. B. Lister

    Dean Permeal ]. French Dean and :\I rs. F. A. Thomson

    011c 1/undrrd Forly-nin,

  • We Other College Dances

    "BURY THE HATCHET DA~CE" "TH E ECONOl\IlCS CLU 13 DANCE" "A. E. F. DANCI:"

    Ser[ember 27, 1919 .. October -t, 1919 ~ovember 11, 1919

    "DE S~IET CLL' B DA..'iCE" ' .. .. .. .. ove:-nber 22, 1919 "THE AG BA\VL" .. . ...... ... ............ .... ................ December 6, 1919 "RF: CIT AND BAR'' ...... .. ..... . ............ ..:\Iarch 13, 1920 "THE INJCXEERS PO\V-WO\V" . ...... .. :\larch 27, 1920 "THE BOO:\UN' 13U.NKH0t S1

  • Ou, llu11drcd Fifty-ouc

  • Music Department Ever since its incipu.ncr rhe CniH~r,it) Department of ~lusic ha~ pht)~ed an im-

    portant part in student acti,irie.-.. It has j...TTOwn steadily each succeeding year in both size anc.l scope. This year the regi:;tration \\'as so he:t\)' that the faculty of three were unable to h

  • Scott II. I'NlRiey

    Music Club The or~anization of the :.Husic C lub has met a long fe lt need on the campus.

    It has J.:"I'C:ttl) stimu lated the interest of the students in the department, and has led to tlw development of new musical talent. It is the aim of the dub to cnc()urage the stu dents in the ~tudy and appreciation of classic music. All students in the department and member~ of the Glee Clubs and orch1.-s tra arc members. ;\lectings are held every two weeks, at which short program~ are presented, both vocal and instrumental.

    OFFICERS President .. .. ... . .. . ..... .. ........... ........................... ..... R u"scll Scon Vice President ......................... .... ............ ... Henrietta Peasley Secretary-Treasurer ........................ ..... ......... . .... Fiorcnc

  • We Glee Club The University Glee Club, making its fir~l tour for three ~c:ISton~r Fred Veatch

    Om 1/rrrrdrcd Fi{ly-forrr

    fltrri/rlllt'S l{u-. ... cll Scull ( ;ip;.on Stalker \\'illiam Sutl~t-rland Lc-.Jie :\Joe

    Rassos Titu" Le Claire :\I ichad Compton llm1 a rd K 1\Uibon Rl!x Kimmell

  • ,_ .:: .. ~ :1.

    ,; 'f. -l

    : e :2

    -

    " "' :..

    J:. : -

    .:

    ~~ ""

    ~ 0

    ::..

    c 0 'F. ...

    ~ .. g I:

    'f. ::: ';( :> 0 ;: Ql

    ... ..

    .. ..

    0 c 0 ~ .., ;:; i

    E ~

    ~ ~

    ....

    ...

    f ..

    Our HmJdr.d Fift:y-fivr

  • ~ ---

    H. M. S. Pinafore Sir Anhur Sullivnn's comic opera. '' Pinafore," presented by hoth

    Glee Clubs, .Ha) 7, 1920 .

    Sir Jo~cph Porter, K. C. B. ...... __ Captain Corcoran of the "Pinafore" ........ . Ralph RacksLan, able seaman Dick Dcnde)C, able ~eaman Josephine, the captain's daughter Little L3u tt('r Cup ................................. .

    ...................... Rusl>ell T. Scmt .. ... ................ Ro:;coc Jones

    .. ................. ..Ted Erb ....... Gipson Stalker ~athalie Tecklenberg .............. Esther M otir

    Cousin Hebe .. ... . .. . . ......... .... ...... .... ... .. .. ........ Henrietta Peasley Bill Bohsta), hoar...wain ................................... ........ William Sutherland Bob Becket ...... Titus Le Claire

    011(' Huudrcd Fi{f)Si.l

  • Oltt' lfr111drrd f1i(I.)'-St't'L'II

  • As You Like It PRE E~Tl':D BY THE GR.\DUAT I 1G CLASS

    June 11, 1919.

    Duke Senior .. Duke Frccl!'rick A miens J aqucs Le Beau Chnrles Oliver .. Orlnnclo Adam T ouchstone Carin .. . .. . .. .................

    Sil viu~ .......... ................................... . Willinm.; .............................. . Rosalind C ilia 'Phebe Audrey . . ........................... _: ......... .

    J ohn L. Biggs .Richard B. Ott

    .Bernadine Adair " 'a I tcr ~antleliu-;

    H oil is :. I cCral' Howard T I adield

    Alvin Denman Prr~ton A. Richmond

    Erlwin etrleton ... .1 Lenry Christ

    Clarence Taylor .AnAcl inn Burns

    . ..... Rona ld Romig Cami lll' :'1 kDaniel

    I: Ffir SwnnS()n l\I a ric Frcehafer

    . Norma D o"' Hymen . ......... Kathryn \ lcCormick

    Lmd:;, Pnges, .Forester$-The remainder of the cia~~-

    011c f{uudrcd Fi{l)-ciglrt

  • ..

    . .

    ...

    r::

    Que Ilrmdrcd Fi{ty-11itrc

  • Ou, 11 rmcirwf Si.rl.v

  • The Amazons PRODUCED BY TH F: Y. :\I. C. A. AND THE Y. W. C. A.

    Wednesday, 1\larch 17th, 1920.

    Y m1att ............. . - ................... ArnhnJS(' .l oh nsun The Reverend Ro)!;er :\[inch in ...................................... 0. R. Weaver Lady Castlejordan . .. . .. .. ................... ..... .. . . ~I arian L. Byrns Lady Wilhelmina .............................. .. ........... :\lnry l\ lcKrnnn Lady Thom

  • English Club Plays Prcsentrd at the Auditorium, J anuary, 1920.

    "CLOSF; T il E BOOK"

    Jhnnsi . Peyton Root

    B.r S uum Gnspr/1. .. ............ ... .... ... ..... ..... .. . Cnrolyn Lng-an

    . .......... ........ .... ......... . .... .... Fred N. H olland !Vl rs. Root ..... ......................... ... .. H

  • LITE~!ZY

    Ouc Hwrdrrd Si.rlj1-lflrcr

  • Out Huudrcd Sixty-fo ur

    The Plodders Across the desert sands the ca:nds plod From break of day. their endless way they wend 'Till shades of nighl, when riders' he:tds do nod As d mw:;iness u p(ln each doth descend ; Their dreams of shady p:tlms and waters tend To draw them on, new robes of hope to don, As thus in life, we :otruggle to the end 1 n search of rest and happiness anon, From dawn of life we !>trive forever on and on.

    -L. F., '21.

    I The Little Brook

    The l ittle brook dances over the stones, \ Vith a thou~and tones and undertones, I r stirs the lost swcerne,;s in those !,!TOWn old, And whispers to youth of stories uncold.

    To rhe d isheartened beggar it tells many things Of palaces, riches, nnd nobles, anrl kin~, To the idling drcnmer lingering- there lr builds wontlrous cnstlcs all hung in the air.

    As he lie.~ on its hank at the end of the day, The cares of the worker nrc fast lulled away; The feet of the children it guides on in dream, From freshe::t to fish rhro fairy land green.

    T n some such a senice I'd travel my way E,er a-singin{! and making folks ga) , A rest ro the weary. dreams to the )Oung. A song- ro the songless and speech to the dumh.

    - B. G .. '23.

  • The Paloma Bank Robbery Mgsterg By /l /i(ls Boston Brouuir.

    "I was in Paloma, an old-rime mining town of \\7estern Idaho, in nineteen ten, when the First National Bank was robbed. Olcl :\ Jan Suspician hooked on to a stranger who had been loafing in Kelly\; Pool and Billiard Hall for rbe last rwo weeks.

    "The mere fact that he was a stranger was su~picious to the hard-headed miners of Paloma. And during his stay, he had divulged no information as to his identity. his histor), or that most vaunted of things, his home town. This was morr evidence that there wa:; something wrong, and the fact that he had left the town suddenly and without warning on the night of the robbery made hi!> guilt conclusive.

    "The sheriff bad just rwo facts to \YOrk on, the fifty odd thousand dollars of P aloma's hard-earned currency was gone. and so was the pool slicker from Kelly's.

    "Sheriff Blodgitt telegrapht'd to Boise for hlo(Hlhounds from the state pen and they were n1rned loose in the hank. They made an awful racket for a few minutes and then tore up rbe main street of Paloma and wound up in front of one of the finest homes in the city. Their arrival ,,-as simultaneous with the departure of die householder for his place of hu-.iness. Half an hour later a ver} trembling and ner-vous gentleman climbed down from a small fir tree, minus the \\'CSt end of his trousers and all of his dignit{ :\[r. Hax ley, president of the First National Bank, had spent an altogether unpleasant half hour.

    "The hounds " -ere started again. Thi:; time they veered off into the forest north of Paloma, and after leading the posse through eight miles of san is brush came upon a hole leading under some big boulders, in front of which were !'>Ome fox tracks and a pile of chicken feathers.

    "Five dayl' after the robbery the stranger, alia~ Lightfingers, alia:,. Penny Turner of Chicago, matle his way along the precipitous shore of Lake Onawah, twenty miles from Paloma. A hcav) ..;eamle:;s sack was swung over his shoulder. Tt was evident that the man knew his ground. He went stcadilr along until he came opposite the drift of the Dazzler, a mine which had been abandoned long before.

    "The Dazzler is, perhaps, one of the most curious mines in the world. Irs only entrance is on the sidr of n high granite cliff, four hundred feet above the lake and two hundred feet below the top of the cl iff. Just in front of the tunnel was a shelf or bench perhaps twenty feet wide. The tune! could be gained from the lake shore, but it was a dangerous and trying climb. The entrance wns innccessible from above. A steel cable. the remainder of the old tramway, stretched from the mouth of the tunnel across the lake to the freight road.

    "After making a careful surwr of the ~round, Turner began ro climb toward the tunnel. I t was a dangerous climb, bur he went steadilr up, and in less than an hour he had safely made the tllnnel.

    (),,. f/uudrtd Si.rl_\' fi~'.:

  • "About thi:. same time reports began to come into Paloma. The Robinson'._, a famil) of mountaineer:., had seen a well dressed man, carr}ing a sack, making his way toward tlw lake. This report was confirmed by i\ J urrar, a prospector, living ncar the lake. Two days l:ttcr a freighter reported having seen $t110ke at the mouth of the Dazzler.

    "Sheriff Daggett immediate!) reorganized his pos.;c and proceeded to the lake. The hounds picked up a trail along the shore and followed it to the point below the Dazzler, but were unabl e to climb the face of the cliff, and so contented them~clves \\'ith mad baying at the hillside.

    "Somebody saw a face peerin~ over the ed!!e ol the "helf and promptly fired. The face dithdrcw from sight and a second later a man was seen to run rapidly along the shelf and enter the mine.

    " Blodgitr immediately placed guanls up and down the lake shore anti sent sornt to watch above the tunnel. H e then \\'t'nt inro consultation "'ith his deputies, and it was decided not to attack rhe nmnel. ru; the odds were roo great again~t the po :'

  • ercd from the top of the cliff that night. while ochers \\ ould go up from below, and the cwo forces would storm the ntnnel at daylight. Family tall-; grew more urgent and so lots wr
  • (),,. ffllllllrrd Si.tJ.t-.-irfh/

    MorniTJIL 1 hear A sharp clang as of a bell. \Vhat was that? A fire? Must I run? Where?

    Oh, yes, l h:1ve it now, I ha,e just awakened. lt is morning And that wal> the ri~ing bell.

    It is cold, I know it is fort} bdo\\'-l\Iy feet are fro~en. \Vithour a moment's hesitation I jump up and put on my slippers. Dazed, I readt In) dressing room And blind!} pull 111) clothe$ on. :.\lr eye lids droop. 1 shiver! \ Vhr could I nut have 't:t} ed in bed?

    Ah , yes, I t is my will power! How I improve ! It iorced me to arise. \Vas that it? Let', see. Of course not. It was force of habit-I ha \ e an eight o 'dock.

    I. S., '22.

  • Picnics

    Whr is it that the first S) m'ptom of !>pring fever among college studcnt~ is a l-ways indicated by a sudden outbreak of picnics in their most mn l ign form? vVhat plausible explanation can he given for the fact that we arc all so ~usceptib lc to this mnlady? After considering the arguments for and against, we come to rhe conclusion .that ,it is mcrcl) one of the pcncrsitics of human n:tturc for which there is n

  • first la)er. After a dust} ride of ten miles we arrive and unload, only to have some cnthusia~tic fiend lead u.; t\1'0 miles up the ~trepest -.ide of the mountain, through hru,h, over fallen tncs and jagged rocks tn the final rl'~ting pl:tcc. l~.,hausted we fall to the }..'TmJnd and discover that it i'-rainin:,!. But "irh undnuntccl spirits we consume gallons of bitter black coffee, indigestible roa't wcinic .... salad, sandwiches, sour pickle-;, icc cream and cake. At last, havinf! 'atisfied ourscl ves that nothing in the form of food remains, we consider our fir~t dut) done and tllrn lO lighter con-sideration~. After supplying the chaperones with a ma/.!ilt.inc and shclrn, the couples take po:;srssion of the mountain side, only to return to rmnp ;H rvcntide, soaked. be-dra)!~lrd, tintl, dirty, but happr. \Ve pile into rhe ha) rack, the icc cream freezer resting lighdy on our toes, and noting with satisfaction tht imp:tircd condition of the mi'S in white. \Ve arrive home long p:t.~t the appointed huur, utterly exhausted. 'l ct 11c smilin::ly declare that it has been The One Da) in our lives, and it is a ludicrous fact that we mean what we sa}.

    'Vhat makes u:> do it? "\Yhr do 11e endure the agon~ of earl) rising and the dis-comforts of primiti,c tra1el for a rainstorm that could be bettu cnjo) cd at home? \ Yhat makes us willing co be torn. scratched. and brui'

  • Disillusionment One day I bought me a m:w spring suir. One of those late modd~ \Vith lots of dass. l t haJ a split skirt With a row of buttons. The kind You see on all the new crearion~. I met A little bor \Vho stared, And stared, And then offered to button it for me. The next time I get a new spring suit I'll get one That doesn't need buttoning.

    G. B., '22.

    Forest Moonlight Dtcp, stagnant pools of darkness, touched here and there by frail shafts of

    \'CIIow I ight. Rought, gaunt, jagged rocks; silver palisades of fairy's making. Crystal W

  • A ShootiTJJL on Whitney Bottom Lt was late fall. Every morning the sagebrush and willO\\ s were CO\'ered with

    a glistening coat of frost. The little eddies along the river and ~he bayous and S\\amp~ were covered with a thin coat of icc. There had been a plentiful fall of rain nncl the dust which had swept back Mel forth on the burning summer wind and had hung da) after day over the prairie schooner or tllC solitary horseback rider was firm ly settled for the winter.

    This night the moon shone brightly from over the Boise mountHin~. In two hours it would he settling behind their snow-capped peaks. Under its influence the Snake river could be seen shining through the break:, in the hills for several miles up and clown the valley. Back from the river ran the bayou.;, cutting the bottom into sev-eral distinct fields and in high water making pas~age from one bank to another im-possible. \Vandering about aimlessly in some rude willow and sal:{ebrush corrals were lean steer' and horse:., the gruesome sear of recent branding plainly visible even in the moonlight. The sagebrush and bunchgrass cast shadow~ that filled the mind with apprehension which rapidly ga,e way to fear in the heart of a stranger as a coyote on a distant hill set up a dismal cry, full-throated at fiN and rising higher and higher until it broke in a melancholy quaver. This would be an-.wcred from far and near until the air rang, and one would swear he could make our the forms of the beasts slinking b~, and would jump violentl) when a jackrabbit ru.,hed maclly from cove1 :tt too cl.osc an approach.

    Back from the river about two miles and at the mouth of a gulch, where the hills rise rapicJly from the bottom. stood a little one-room shack. A light was burning within and cast a bright beam out of the one curtainles:; winclow, f:dling on a well, fitted with bucket and windlass. and sc,rcral saddles and packs clumped on the ground. A few stunted poplar trees were m:~king a heroic effort at life, though their neglected appearance gnve evidence of the spasmodic attention they had receiv

  • minutes, then ~uddcnlr turned square on his companion and said: ''Pard, what':. on your mind? You've been a changed man rhe last few months. \Vhat the deuce has happened? You know how you surprised me when you starred in this cattlc-

    liftin~ business. You had better tell me the whole rhint:!;, for you will be a crazy man hrfore long if you keep on broodin' and rhinkin' to your;elf so."

    The otlwr slow!) wiped his nt7.0r, p11t it in its case and sat down. "Bill," he ~a i d, " I 'll tell you, it won't take long. When I left ~l innesota two yr:~rs ago T was engaged to be married. 1 came out here to make a stake, as 1 didn't lutvc much cash. \Veil," he pausrd and lit his pipe, "e\'eryrhing went a ll right ti ll last spring, my hopes was high and things seemed to be comin' my Wll)'. I got this shack built, the well clug nnd the trees planted, and had some of my irri~ation ditches dug. \Veil, as I snid before. every thing went fine till last spring, when one da~ l jrot a letter from her sa~ring she had married another man." He pnused :~gain and pulled hard on his pipe for several minutes, then he continued: "1 made a VOW then thnt if f C\'er ~aw her agnin I \\'OU!d kill her. 'Veil. time went on, r got into this cattle business to have something to do; there wa:.n't any call for me to work thi, ranch nny longer. Then :tlong :tbout a month ago I got another letter from her saying that the fellow she had married had left her. She wanted me to forgi\e her and said she was coming out to find 11ll'." He !'prang to his feet and reached for hi' ~m. "H) God!" he cried, "if ~he COI1ll'S here 1 pity her, for ru kill her sure as hell." He ~tood for ~everal minute:.. hi~ f:1ce working and his hand fingering the trigger of hi:. gun.

    His companion rO).(' to his feet and in as calm a voict as he could muster said: "Oh, put up your gun, old fellow, the girl isn't within a thou~and miles from hnr." Just as he spoke there wa:, a. soft tap on the door, it was pu~hed open :md the lamp light fell on the weary, tired f

  • Fudge The ~tOT) of the college girl 'Yho, when she is first married knows how to mal:c

    nothing edible excep t fudge and salad dressing, is one of l'he srnndard subjects of humor. If, however, the makers of American humor did but realize the importance of fudge in college li fe they would never again touch upon the suhjN:t o f fu dge making with levi ty. O n the orher hand, i f the faculty hur realized the importance of fudge and fudge makin~ a course in it wou ld be su'bstitutcd for chemistr)' in the H ome E conomics Dcranment. A girl 's reputat ion is m

  • ID

    PUBLICATIONS

    Ont f f t111drrd Sctnr/J-{it.:

  • Kinn"y Langrolse

    The Gem of the Mountains The Gem of the .Hountains, published annually by the Junior C lass.

    i$ now regarded as a permanent Idaho institution and adds the fi nal touch of the college year. The book portrays, both in pictures and print, the thicf events of the college year, and records all leading activities. Tr sup-plies for the student a permanent memory of his colle~re days and is an in valuable keepsake in later life.

    The staff is elected by the class. and is direct!) re~pon~ible for the editing of and the sale of the book. The fir~t edition of the "Gem of the

    ~Iount:tins" ll'a$ published in 1903. and ~ince that time a ,olume ha~ been publi~hed each )Car.

  • liOl:ll
  • The Univers ity Argonaut The l ni\(r-;ir~ .r\r;!
  • McOcvllt swan~trunt ;\1. .lontH Mct'o.llle

    \\"htte

    Mcl'lttre suthE'rland

  • 88.Coach

    ;;.., Now Ernest"

    O ll t' H rmdr,d Eiglrt}

    ~

    Sl

    rrlvnlfy

    /JbiCI'I/1'7 hiS OW /7 -(!' C/oo/'~Pft"R

  • ''' ,,, iiiJ i'i"il ,;,, ntl

    ~ ''"

    OJVANIZATIONS

    Out II ttutfrnl IJ.iyhty-o 11 r

  • The Executive Board T he E:-..ecuti\ c Board was or~;anized ~imulta tcou"!) "irh the fou1dittg of r;tc

    A. S. U. L I t i .. compo:.ed of repre~earatin .. 1 rom the \'arious activitie~ the .. rudent bodr officer~ and a f:~culty member. Thi .. board ha~ charge of all the di~buN.'meu~ oi ~wdent-;' fund~. re.;ulting from the n:!!;i~traticn ll'rription to rill' ''Argonaut," the U nivcrsit) ..;rudcnt puhl ication, and

  • Lewis Hlomqul!
  • Stan'Upenbion oi tlw Federal lloanl for Vuc.:ational Education. These men arc in the UniHr~ity Ior the l.'xprc~s purpose of \'Ocational rchahilitatmn, hein~ disabled to such :~n exll'nt that they arc unable Ill pursue their former occupations.

    A permanent organi7ation was cstahli~lwd in Jnnuary of this year, and a club house wns secured and officers clechd for the rnsuing ~rmes t cr. ?11illcr, of the Sehoul n[ ForeMry. was elected faculty :Hh-isor.

    in February r>can F. G.

    The corollnwnt of the Cluh will be lnrger \1 ith tile beginning of the conling year, a~ :1 number of 111

  • lll'i>
  • Jtvr u~ c >i furl

    l' rc>idLnl - ....... .. \ 'iCl Prc~idcnt Sladary ...

    Trca~ttrcr

    Snc:ial l'inancial . l'uhhc:n' ~c.dal Srnicc \\ o>rll Ftllnllhip :\ILltin~-t' .....

    (),,. 1/uutfr,d /!iyll/y-.ri.r

    .f''liHHlO SrniLh

    ~lc lt,u ~ahin

    Y. W C . .4. OFFTCERS

    C.\1\IXI~T

    llyrnf< list roo t

    r.rargrl'l llyrnts Olin i\krritl

    l'h} J1j , I >rinnl l.da :-;ahi11

    .\I ar~o:r~:l (),t rnnt lldlll .Jnhlhnll :\I anon lh rnc~

    \'in.:inia \lacRac llcrmc:c Curndi,on

    . :\larjnnL' Smnh

  • Home Economics Club l'n:silldd:ml .\ !arion Ft':ttlwrstnll l' I hli:n Ram~
  • Economics Club OFFICERS FOl{ l JHST SE:\1 ESTER

    Vin- Prc:,dclcn l ....... .. .................. . St,rctar) ....... . 1 na:.u nr

    1::11 :\lorrio; Fr~cl :\Turph) )t;ul \lularkc:y Carl :--.ag-d E. (;. :\ankcnis L. \\ :\a.;h :-iklla '\"cbun h. '\ l'ldancl ll

  • \\ ood Taggart

    t IFFICf~R~ FOR SEC0XD SE.\1 FSTER l'rc'illcnt Vice- Prc,ii :\l:ulgc W ill in ms ,\laric lluuuncl II. L. Tor~on J oc Whitcomh Lillian \iVhitc L K. Whittier W. C. Williams W. Ga rdc \V ood !\irs. Edith Thoma~ \Vm. Stenger Agnes Sweeney ~!iss Grace Ball Ed Foran Professor Lewis Professor Brown

    ()u, II lllllflrrl f!ighty-11 illt'

  • :\lcKnna llyrnN

    The English Club

    l'n,jd,nl . \'ict l'rcsidcm S

  • The English Club Thi:-.) Cl!r of I 920 is th~ 1-tth year that a group tlf studmt!> intnc~tcd in literature

    and dramatics lws b('cn numb,rcd among the organizations in the Universitl' of Idaho. In 19 13 a norj.!anization of the CJriginal infurmal group \\a~'> effected under rhe

    cncouragemcnt of Dr . \lo01e, .'\liss Brashear and :\Ir. Lt:hman. The chid aim, however, t"

  • The Associated Miners Affiliated Jun ior Society of T he i\merican lrN itutc of ~'linin~ and l\ h :tall urv;ical

    Engineers. T he A~otiattd :\Liner, or ":\ f ucker:- Club" i,. one of the olde,;t oq.ranization;

    in the l: ni \'ersit}. The cluh meets t\\ ice a month for hu,inc-;-,, profc;;,ional ami -.ncial J)Ufi)Ches.

    Papers are pre-.entccl hy the students, faculty ami \ i .. irin:r en~neers.

    OFFI t in H.1 ron Cowan l..:cnnclh :.\J. TTunll'r Walter ! lo rton :McCallie Wm. L(cillt Tfoming J ohn Thomns :.\1cGovcrn Ellwood Rohln. \\' crry C .. \rthur Sargcm fo'red 11 Bradbury

    Rnht'rt B. Eldlr

    \ \\' FahrCJ.t\\alol l rl \\r Steeg

    Emerv L. Uri,cn

  • .,_

    :\lel'auley r.ow~r11 Brisco!' Cummings Provost

    Piper McGoYern \\"erry SamJ)son li;ersey

    l'OIItlT l lunter Berger Hnrgent llrown

    011c lllmdrcd Nill

  • Associated Foresters, 1919-20 OFF ICII
  • f>l'IH'('kO Clint

    Prc~ident Vice Prc~iclcnl .. Secretary .. Treasurer Harn'st Qucc11 ...... .

    llubson

    The _//g Club Of'FlCERS

    .John!n \l'eau

    \\'Ill. \. ncncckc Rcubo.:n John:,1111 ~rar R. \Vcavcr

    John F. Cline Claire llob~on

  • The Ag Club The Ag Club is one of the oldest oqrani'l,ati.ons in the Un ivcrsit). Jts member-

    ship includes all studcrm regular!) enrolled in the Co lkgt ot Agriculture. lts pur pose is to effect a unity of action among the students of rhe Coll ege of Agriculture and to preserve and enrich the traditions of the college, to promote ~oud fell O\\ ship among its members, and to control all matter" of special intere-;t to the Ag o;tudent-;.

    The a'$Ociation ha.~ had chartre of the "Ag Ba,d" :111cl the ".Ag J udJ.6ng Day." Through the A~sociation, prominent agriculturists arc brought to the college to speak before ito; meeting-;.. In this "ar the member" are kept in c1o~e touch with new cie-\'elopments in agriculture .

  • Bench and Bar Association The Bench ami Tiar ,h,nciatinn was organiz,.J in 1912. Its n~
  • President ..... Vice-President Stcrl'\ary Trta.;unr

    711 r. J. J. (;ill

    \V :tii:1Cl' tl:1r11eS \IIKrtiiW llenqit

    .\ I :1 rg;t nt lllackiuglr Fnd nradhun C

  • Xottlcton \\ hit

    Woman 's League OFFfC I~RS

    Prcsicknt ........................ . Vice Prc~iclcm ... .... ......... ... . . Secret:t r) -Tr~a>urcr

    -- Lillian W hile Sarah N cttlcton ... Gladys Clark

    EXhC . ."Tl\'E UO \RD Eula HaclKcr Lucie !Jal'is .\lice Uessec

    \l:trian Chubbuck Freda SouJen l..:t I >c~sa Hall

  • The Associated Barbs T he i\ssocialcttcr

    ,piril bPresident .. - . Vicc-Prcsiclent _ .. Secretary ................ _ ... . 1 rcasurcr ....... . ... .. .

    OFFICERS \mhro,;t Jnhn~ml

    Ira l-1rgcnt Floyd Whitt.>

    .. R. \\' Kulburg

    Two IIul!drcd One

  • The Elwetas

    Colors: Purple ami r.olcl.

    Tao 11 m1tlrrd Two

    Cw.ta1 Carl-~I ORES

    1.. L. Prut

    FRESIDIE~

    Ira F. L:tr~-;l.'nl W R. :"l lcCi un Clwrlt,:, Str~ddcr \\'m. 1:. P\.ch:tncc

    ) . ll Felton Flnyd \1. Cn,,itt .\lfrcd Xcbnn

    J :Jill

  • L'arlson SlrC'
  • Eula Badger Sarah :'\ cttll.'!ron

    J c:metle Cia rk Alia Povey

    Freda Core :'\orma Cowgill l\laudt> llaklr Genevieve I )ant Lila Firkins Thelma [[arc

    Julia Brown :\!arion Casey Winifred Chance Xaomi Chapman Hernice Glea~on Edna Goddart

    ~rary Ilcplon Marie Hummel l\Jarie ltunl Florence Graves Ruth Litton Janice Lowe

    T~.o J lull{ red Four

    Ridenbaugh Hall SENIORS

    Veri Oliver SyiYcna Pcchatll"C

    JC~IORS Leta SaLin Grace Taj:!gert \lice Sbdficl

  • .lohnKton 13adger Povey Peasley Cowgill

    l'ullhr :\'l'fi\ll) P ;-\etllcton :\Lartln :-;tcwart

  • l'ie!.' Stev-enR Chance Graves

    l~reolt>rick~tn

    J\14'\'o;t Siliclo.lr ll"l'ton t:

  • Idaho Independents

    Pr,>itknt .. Vice- Prcsidtnt Sccrct:cry .. Tn;csurer ...................... .

    OFFTCERS Ruth Scntt

    La l )c,~a I !all '\'nrn1:1 Cowgill Ctrtrudc Sabin

    Tn the fa ll of 1919 thl Idaho Jntltpcndcnts were urganiz,cl tn prc>ttHHl tlw mtcrc'l' of all non ~ormil) wonwn of the University. Th.: fir-t ~ocial acth ity of thi' or'(anization

    w:~s an cnttrtainmcnt fur ;ell nnn fraternity ,.tudc:nh giH"n in "the "\"'' hut ' I ht l

  • l'rcsldl.'nt ......... . \'icc- Prcsidcm

    " ! '' Club OFFICER"

    . Crnver 1:.\an, ... Erm-,t Limll

  • Kappa Sigma Founded December 10, llltl9, :1t the L'nivcr~ity of Virj.'\111ia

    ~umlwr of Chapter, H6 Gamma Theta of Kappa Sigma liht;tllcd tc;ns

    C ()/ors: Scarlet. \\'hit~: and Green

    (ul. E. R. Chrbman

    J \\ arrcn Barbl.'r

    ( lnl G. Cltri~man Phi li p C. Samm>. Frank }. Blackinger C. Robert Hibbard

    Latham D. ~'Toorc Lloyd C. Stenger Cecil Ryan john I1 McGowen \\'ant P \Vymau

    Pau l F. Reynold:; J :unc~ II. Neal .\lo:xaiHkr ~L Forc>t Ralph ]. Morrow Vernon B. \\'alters Robcn E. Leitch

    F~\TRES 1.'\ F:-\CL'LT.\TE Th11111a~ D. Matthew.,

    FR.\TRES 1:-.1 e:H\'EnST \TE '>nriors

    Eml.'r} T. Knudnn Juuiors

    Russell D. Bowers Ralph S Jacobson \\'illiam 1-L L"lngrui'c

    ScJftlwmor,s Claude \. 1\fcPher ... nn W. Cl} de William~ Phil S. Tolman l~dga r II. X eat Frank .\. Brown .\. !Inward Knud~on

    Prcshmeu ) . .\llan Brown Leo G. Provost l faro ttl E. Barto Raymond L. Robbins Theodore E. Holderman Eldred R. Dwight Eugene E. Ostrander

    1-.!lward r-1. H ulme

    \ Pmman .-\twood

    L~o J I. Buescher llownrd L. Campbell D:11 id T Proctor \\' !lorton :\lcCallio:

    Gcor::tl' l l. Phclp~ Henry L. Torscn fra ncis E. Bartlell Pern E. O'Brien \shle) II. Bi,cns

    vl' I'IIOII T. Palch Lynn F. Hersey Sidnl'y \V. Cro~s L

  • .\lwoml .fal'llbKIHI lluet
  • Phi Delta Theta Founded at :\{iama Uninr~it~ 1 kc:emhcr 26, 1848

    Idaho .\lpha of f'hi Della Th

  • l'lt!mt'ltl" H. Htl';oiH.>at~ Kerin Youngs Simons R. Hownrd

    l'oc :-.1. Howard Hart JaCki

  • Beta Theta Pi Founllctl August R. 1~39, ;tl :\fiami Unin~rsity

    :'\umlJcr of Chapters. 79 Gamma Gamma nf Bt:ta 'J hd;t Pi Jn,talkd S~:rtcmbcr 19. JCJI.f

    Cvi01s: ~hell Pink ancl Light Blue

    Francis Jenkins

    Charles H. Darling A.]. Priest Leslie X. Moe Charles \V. Gcrloul(h

    Ycrnon :\Iiller .-\be Goff

    .\lfrcd P. johnson Jr. Lvman Whittier LCland Scott

    Gleun Blacklcllgc William C. Carptnt~r Robert \V. Eldriclgc E. \\'. P~1rks

    r,,." Tltwdrrtl Fourlt'"

    FR..\TRES I'\ r \C..l. LT \ T E ]. G Fldridgc

    FRATRES 1~ l'XI\'IRSIT \TE Sc11iurs

    }mtiors Paul H. G\.'rrard Rallmond L. Spau!l'kr Xcil lnmg-Russell T. S~ott Thurlyn Shront1.

    .~oft/111/IWI't'S RoLcrt Wri!(ht George Curti~ IYan L. Pachnham Paul IT. Tlull

    Frrsh'"''" Curti.; E. ll~rringtuu Rohl'rt l\f. Cummins l larry Brown

    Tillman J) C~rlonAh

    Eastnor J oh;ntm~r,n llcrhcrl Ehcrh. Lim~> Sanhtr~t ] ustin B Gmnn

    Fn:d :\1 \' \.'atch Ernc,-t Dworak R usse II Pa r~ntt" Tohn Gill Joel L. Prbt Jr.

    Clifiord ).Inc Leslie Stout j(tseph A. Swift Will E. Troy

  • llarllng Gowen

    Eberl~ Veach Hull Cummins

    (ierlugh I t Scott Miller I Jwork Carpenter Blackledge

    .1 nn~N Hnnrl hl'rg \\"hillier

    l'u.~klllham ,.;lone Brown

    "'Ptttt~lf'r r . 11tH Goff L. Scott

    Eldrlcl~;c !';wlft

    ,J

  • Sigma Nu Foumlcd January 1, 1869. al Virgini;1 ~I ili ta r) Tnstil11h:

    Number of Chnptc1, 9.3 Delta Omicron of Sigma Nu, Ju,tallctl l\1:-t) ?2. 1915

    Colors: Black, \Vhitc and Gold

    FR..\TRES IX nn\TRSl r \TE

    Charles C. Gr:ty Lew E. Jlfnrri~

    WUliam TT. Carder noyde \V. Cornel ison Grover C. Evans Edwin V. Foran

    Kenneth .\ndcrson Gail Chamberlain Orval Garrison John ]. Hasfurther

    Cecil C. Rrockman Fred B. Chamberlain Harold A. D;trl A rthur B. Ficke

    T-wo /1 lllldr,d Sixfc< 11

    Sf'lliors \V. K. Xewlaml

    hminrs Carl F. Nagel Arllmr Garde \""'nod Lrcn Kitch Albert }. Gra Fred E. Graf

    Srhomnr..s !Iarl Theodore liege Oan:ucc L. 1 fechtnc:r Lloyd D. llibner Earl E. Hunt

    FrNhmnl .\mancl ]. Kern Howard McQuai~ William A. Gartin Charles E. Goranson

    Felix .\. l'lastino Rich:ucl :\1. \ cstonr

    Kenneth l\[. lJunlcr Titus G. LeClaire John Gipson Stalker ). Paul Evans

    Howard D. lilchtner John H. W:ttkins Clayton n. \\"e;.tmcr Jlerhert L. Clin

  • c:ra)t t:. J;\"nns Klwh C'ar
  • Sigma _11/pha