Title | 1910 Utonian '10 junior year book V.2 |
Note | The University of Utah has made former and current yearbooks from various campus entities available in print and via its digital library archive. These documents contain facts and milestones about the history of the University of Utah. In some cases, these publications contain insensitive and offensive language and imagery that does not represent the views or values of the University of Utah. Insensitive and offensive portrayals of race and gender were wrong at the time these publications were originally printed, and they are wrong today. The yearbooks are presented as they were originally created and have not been edited or censored-to do otherwise would be the same as claiming these prejudices and biases never existed. - July 2019 |
Subject | College yearbooks; University of Utah--Periodicals |
Publisher | Junior Class of the University of Utah |
Contributors | Alley, James E. |
Date | 1909 |
Type | Text |
Format | application/pdf |
Digitization Specifications | Original scanned on Kirtas 2400 and saved as 300 ppi 8 bit grayscale jpeg. Files saved as 300 ppi uncompressed TIFF. Display images created in PhotoshopCS2 as JPEG2000s |
Resource Identifier | Utonian_1910 |
Source | LD5538 .U8 1908/09 |
Source Physical Dimensions | 25 cm x 21 cm |
Language | eng |
Relation | J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States |
Coverage | 1908-1909 |
Rights Management | Digital image copyright 2006, University of Utah. All rights reserved. |
Contributing Institution | J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States |
ARK | ark:/87278/s64b323h |
Setname | uum_utonian |
ID | 754337 |
Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s64b323h |
Title | Page 198 |
OCR Text | 1. The Junior Prom HIS year the Juniors decided to have something really classy in the way of a prom instead of the usual mixture of "wishy-washy" booths of uncertain architecture and design. The general plan was a street in a frontier town. All the organizations fell in with the general plan and the result was immense. The Juniors had four booths. One was a grove of pines which had done service for Christmas trees. Another of rough boards was boldly labeled the "Last Chance Saloon" in open defiance of Miss Van Cott. It had a real bar, a real mirror, a true dope sheet on the races and real cuspidors. The only unnatural thing was the unreal stuff that was passed over the bar. They had a roulette wheel in the "Klondike,' where gambling was carried on wide open. In their "Cheap Drinks Parlor" punch was served from a block of ice. The Gamma Phi's built a lodging house (assisted by Sigs and Pi's) that beat any frontier house a mile for coziness. The Theta U's were right there with a cheap dancing hall. The Alpha Pi's built a tenderfoot's cabin. The Sigma Chi's had a miner's cabin and the A F's had a whiz of a hunter's shack. This was the first year that the Normals have been represented and their first attempt was certainly great. The log school house that the Girls and boys built was realistic, in harmony with the Juniors' ideas and suggestive of their own future vocation. The Medics constructed a booth that beat anything else easily. It was a house of r-e-a-1 logs, cut and framed just right, and full of interesting and amusing displays. Everybody left the Medics' booth with a face full of smile and a stomach full of "what it takes to make a man happy." The electrical display was splendid, the snow effect well carried out, the band was the Fort Douglas Military Band and that's praise enough for it. Socially and financially the Prom was a Success. < 198 ) |
Format | application/pdf |
Resource Identifier | 198-UTON-1910_Page 198.tif |
Source | Original Book: Utonian 1910 |
Setname | uum_utonian |
ID | 754301 |
Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s64b323h/754301 |