Beloit College - Codex Yearbook (Beloit, WI)

 - Class of 1924

Page 1 of 328

 

Beloit College - Codex Yearbook (Beloit, WI) online collection, 1924 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 328 of the 1924 volume:

Ox. Libris Twenty Four “hs G Nineteen fm NAS fh WN Fe ee NN tl ele, Myron W oRTHINGTON Editor Cuarre H. PIERCE Business Manager ST — SI = Ran WV ZN SLI IIe Ne reo Ore weer Ns SSS ASS SI = ge 4 ; he Codex Nineteen Twenty Four co A BIENNIAL Boox Published by the ASSOCIATED STUDENTS at BELOIT COLLEGE Q @ 2 y KS : ice ) G ) Q le : Nr ) ADMINISTRATION CLASSES FEATURES ATHLETICS BEAUTY ACTIVITIES ORGANIZATIONS made a step forward in the progression toward a Greater Beloit bi yu fas portrayed the stu- nt life, rest content. then the editors GEORGE L. COLLIE sede), JEN ADD Professor of Anthropology To the finest friend a college could have; to one who for thirty years of great attainments has always held the college first in mind, ever striving towards the vision of a. Greater Beloit; to one who, because of his kindly human understanding, has be- come an inspiring institution in the hearts of all who love Beloit, we respect- fully dedicate the 1924 Codex. alll Athi — “Now came still evening on, and twilight gray Had in her sober livery all things clad.” ” 5 mar thy fame, St college rest, faire Fat “Naught can ever { Sead aay a , engaas creme manne bitrates ee ahh aS ul court, lo ts 10 us o c=) , is to me a s , the best companion: and philosophers.” erty ne See Ss Ss 4 ay SiS = 9 “SS 8S wn ae O38 Siac ee ey o f8 See ws S aS —TS sO Ge ass Sj SS ss = S — CS vhere hourly se apts: SeSRietiehac “And then he thinks he knows The Hills where his life rose, And the Se a where it goes.” “Where man to live coeval with the sun, The patriarch pupil would be learning still.” ” vith a smile. ¢ t , ? ward “Whose yesterdays look back “To follow knowledge like a sinking star, Beyond the utmost bound of human thought.’ ADMINISTRATION PMU MIM -— «s«x{9 CODES 24 ——— WMT ABER Dh ieee RHONAS FUZZ. GE RAL DS 18 PIM 5 TEU EEE YE © aa a eR a NN SESS TUL |UULEUG UI GCAAUARGPAUTUR UATE NGaNgasUansameandes SVEALECEEUDLTRAAQETADDECOUA VERE UDY CAYCE GHGS V4 2S AROS Sc aa NE Np NAETINT (11100 EU UNTETLNGIN VU SNCUGINUBTDET LAT! a el TMM MMT eee x 24 MMMM MMM MMT % iO SASUUUUAUUOUURAUEAVELEOUNCCUUURUEULUUONUAR UTAH CURL ORRUOOTUDCRUNGHRGEODURDODINEN.S; PRESIDENT IRvinc W, MaurER (eis Hime Gatelion Lib Re 5) Hels Oslel, It will not, in all probability, be a greater Beloit in the things which make a true college. Beloit has always cultivated a spirit of truth- seeking; yet, in this ad- venture, Beloit has hada great hopefulness, a keen appreciation of spiritual values. ‘Prue knowledge and pure faith are both manifestations of genuine culture. But the Beloit of the future, loyal to this fundamental fact, will be greater in the expansion of its equipment, of resources, of student body, of teaching staff. It will be a college in which student life will have vigorous broadening, intel- lectual contacts. In an enlarged dormitory system, capable of housing the entire freshman class, with a freshman commons, Beloit will invite a body of men and women whose fellowship will center in frank j interpretations of modern ‘life problems. It will be a college of vigorous athletic pursuits, where the deve eneen of the body will be honored not in the person of athletic teams alone but by the entire student body, as a personal achievement. A woman’s gymnasium and a Woman’s Union will be features of this program. It will be a college of enlarged equipment, with a large library, with a new classroom unit, with a new Art Hall, and with a great auditorium. It will be a ‘college where teachers will have opportunity in every way to throw their best powers into classroom work, with enough leisure to do the research work requisite for the better teaching and with every stimulation possible to make teach- ing the finest game in the world. It will be a college where an honest approach to truth by teacher and student will be everywhere respected. And it will be a school in which religion is cherished as the heart of life and devotion to a task will be the outstanding mark of Beloit men. ee est COUTTS COUT OTT 7, O i eUIADUGUOUORRUGUARAREADEDAOLTOAOUUNUOATARYEAUODLOOID ALN DOULOUUUOUAUCALOLARURNDRLULGUUDUERURRORORNNOD Eee QO i K PU LO Vice-PresipDENT Louis E, Hotpen On Te (Gea, BeAS Dates alee alana A greater Beloit in the truest sense can only mean an increased number of such men on the faculty,—men whose scholarship and personality attract and whose enthusiasm for thorough scholarship is contagious and will arouse in their students the desire to do their best and to emulate their teachers. The world recognizes the fact that such men are invaluable as teachers of youth. If Beloit is going to continue its own splendid record it must have a much larger endowment than it has at present in order to guarantee to the future the Beloit type of teachers that we as boys had. The very times in which we live make us to realize anew the vicarious sacrifice that such men made for us. They gave themselves and all that they possessed that we might see life as they saw it, and be willing to serve our day and generation as they served theirs. A greater Beloit will also mean a building period,—an enlargement of the phy- sical plant. It seems to me that it would be advisable at this time to employ a first class architect to make a study of our present conditions and to harmonize the new building period with the Beloit of today, in color scheme and building material. The second great need of the college is a dormitory for men. If we are to pre- serve the democracy of Beloit college we should have an up-to-date fireproof dormitory for men. We want Beloit to be a place where a poor boy can come and by mere virtue of character and ability be everything that any other can be or do. The third great need of Beloit is that of a recitation hall for the humanities. Nearly all of the work of the academic department of a college, except the sciences, is now carried on in the venerable Middle college, erected in 1847, and in North college, erected in 1854, we realize that the need of a new recitation hall is very urgent. A 20 CUHSUGDEMEDGUTAUG RG GUVBO8 ORS E000 10 ca NT ANNU UN am oY LOL HU SUUEDUQOUAMNOUUMUCQEGLILA | HUCUULAUTOUIUGURNDLITELATICAURUELITIS 19 CODEN e4 SATE LEME TEILEL COUT TTTUTTTOTUTTTOTTT TT Va i’ SUDELEVAUOOUUAAMAVARIGDAEROUEUUNSEDODAUAUYOAURDLOOHDUGD TMT mo CMOneRxX 24 OTN ATNTHATNTTANTKE COUT UE TT] Dean Georce L, CouiE Nig Yee ODS eAs eh OoR SSD hal Os sh | Every true friend of Beloit wishes it to be an outstanding school with distinctive features, with a fine personality that calls attention to it and to its work. Some say that this distinction is best achieved by bringing together a notable body of men in the faculty, distinguished in their lines of effort. Their reputation would call together a high grade body of students, who would fill the accommoda- tions of the college to overflowing. This method would doubtless accomplish results but it would call for expendi- tures far beyond the means of the college at present, though it might well remain an ideal to be striven for in the future. Some would have the numbers in the college remain small. They would have a carefully selected, though not necessarily high priced faculty of fairly good size, brought together in the college. This faculty would have thorough oversight of the students and give them the utmost attention, a hand picked method of educa- tion. This is a good plan but few alumni want to see the college remain small. They desire to see it expand, not to the dimensions of a university perhaps, but to those of a larger college. ; The writer, while believing in the plans proposed, while b elieving in the neces- sity of careful, scholarly work as one essential in the greatness of Beloit, yet believes that the college ought to achieve distinction by the service it renders to the world. Beloit ought to be a laboratory where some of the great problems which perplex the world might be studied and the results of these studies broadcasted to the world. If it can enter this kind of service it will become a distinguished college, one that would satisfy my ideal. Te LE. IY Sie COUT oe ene ee Se a ee ee 7 @ au — KO POUT LUT SULADUGPMUDRNUAUGADARIADEGRULEGRUCEOLRUARTOAUOOLEOIDIEN = ETT TT ke OUT OTTO OTT cS = 2a SAPUUCUUCULOVEUUEAUEAOUNLCCUUUENUNDDATOCU ENTE FUMUGODLEDREWEATQRGOUSRORODERIALINTS: Dean KaTueErIneE R, Apams Hg BG ers ee es eee ally One of my hopes for Beloit is that she make a new appeal to her women grad- uates by having them consciously related to her future, as well as to her past. Alumni have always been mainly interested in their college as they remember it. I make my appeal particularly to our women. The matter has been definitely settled that women are in Beloit college to stay. Consequently, there are very definite aims that must be realized for the women at Beloit. In our Greater Beloit, there are at least five definite ideals. We need a women’s dormitory unit, large and modern, near Emerson Hall, on the ‘Women’s Campus”. We need a Women’s Building, or Union, where we may have centralized the necessary facilities necessary for the intellectual, religious and social interests of the women. We want a full college curriculum and such methods of teaching as shall meet the needs of women. We want scholarships for women at Beloit, and the endowment to be such that it will not be necessary to increase the student expenses. We want a wholesome, social life for Beloit women. The tides of young life flowing into the college can be directed into the proper channels. It is mainly a matter of expression rather than repression with which we have to deal. It is not primarily a matter of rules and regulations, though these have their places ‘ts a great desire of ours to help our women to understand themselves, with insight and with power. Along with group loyalties we desire a democratic social life. We want our good times to be vital, not hectic. We want individual morality. We want a social life within the college tempered by an intelligent sense of the world’s larger life outside. bo ho PNT MMLC 19. COCO alee 4 seers sei th EEOCPRAUIUADROUED ARLES SEERMUTEGUMNEIRUSGAM Gi! S110, Sia Nt 25 Sea IE RN rae mS ene © [UNL TL UME LAAIENATUNCNULETSIMATIOTELVLgIN OMMMATUADLOTUDVEDEOUEIOUIAUIAAUDIDILTLI FS = OULU TS a UU OTT OUTS N cy s Bs | 4 rr) a Q ez O Ee O a oy HRCUOLEVTOUTCUGUAULUSERLANIRROLUERNIES K 23 SULA AA GTULLEL EDTA Lh AL aa a a ee aC meer 11 CUT ETETILGDATUTADLIGUAMIOUHATALAIU) 2) SHDGUDAUUNUUDDORUGANTDALORRURUDTORODENIORNLINIOI@ COUTTS Th rs SORTTANRERURBENE UGURND EER YGHERAELOUOODUVLCR DLT RRA R05 Pe POD SSSI OSES SONU A SRIS ESPNS SHES ENN CI NDAURRULINOUDERRAMMAADIER IS LCM ERNE I USCIS = = ) N © 2 Z = 2 = fr OUT ES | J. Jousaithe® as 19 CODEX 24 tal pay oe = ey Jd | s re) Q b 2 O = ‘ SH)ADIUUANUOTAULUGAUOATUAUCTANTUAUTETISENTINIUI) e ee az © LUUTANUVATARATONAUIVEDIOAUAUDIVARONADONIVO0IG ie TMM MMMM MOPED EX! 24 OOM TTT COUT TTT %, i 1 QClomstrons: (a) 25 SUPER Pedy D SUC ATAVUS VURDEUC BENALLA Y 2 Lae aa AL RT 110 GUTTVU LCA OU TRUER ALU DEGLEVHAUSHUAUGAOARIOREUROUEGROCUAODAORYEAUODLEOA DEEN SUTTON U = P } PUUUMAUESUANUALAEOEATOOUCQUEN CUS OOL AN NEE 1101101111111 1 0100111100100 OV0NAAUQUUUNVOVHCOUEUAUOUTS s = = = : = ry N © = : = = = in HUGUO RULODUGOUAURDEUUUIOUBATOUDINIIA OGLE eo 19 CODEX 24 ee] = pa 2 | a = Ke = 5 = = SVDADUAUANOGDODDUGANNDALORRIDONTONDDONUERERUNINI@) : CUTMIMIUMMIMM OUTTA ET fs NULULD RUC OANGBONG DANN OTODEORUNA CHU RODLERDARIS: OUTTA UT TS CXUTTITTTOT ez - te S56; Y2.s3 Robinson PARDEE 24 Qiasusocth “ Ollve SSUEUUUULUOTUNEGUANROLUIROLOOTCRULULATI EC SSLAGUDIROOANOOTROLIORUDUORQOORUREARINN:S) AGU TET GGL SUT ERATEVELUWEGRESH ORG NETL ae oi Ss rT 817 )L NUD NNSA EAES UNA AANCe, PTT MTT 19 CODE 4 COTTE TATE tS : | © ; iY. eA aMNe. 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ONT ey BYU TTT TTS COUTTS OULU TATA TS i UU TTT TR OUTTA TTS i y Olcver ek See PeCOWEX I UO TOTS 31 SMG EG DRLG TERED ELEC E DATEL LLL 2 aL ae RMT 5 UUW SV TNNDLUNDOUREMTOAUSERUATANENL) SUGUDEUOUOUDDOALGANNDONGREIAUEQUDAEVIOROLENIOIS: COUTTS ey POUT UO OUTTA CO TAU is CODE 24 SVEUQUUIOVEOUTUTGLOOAUENULOTLOUNLUEAI ES e@ OUTTA TAA Is [Mass Stekelee oa Nass elderdee 32 eee ee TE Te ET © 8 “Mass Vearson G STRACUDSOOOANOOAMDAVOROGDGRGRODORUDIUUT OULU TT CLASSES i 4 COUTTS Sa) OUATATAVEALITTAUAVALITULVTTCHUINTA TO cope EXON: BX 24 ao [til BF ia Basle) By dey Ne ROBERT 1 RVAIN Et DONA De B URI HAER’D ARTHUR RUTLEDGE 34 UCU UL ae a ee. ee ee ee K TTT TTT TTT DEG UBTDLELOUNUDQRERRODGGUM CEOS GULAQU GOTH OGH AEE G10 200 ies eS eam aaa ee ae eee ee ee eee ee i a ee eee, tou PIM «1 th ite le ig A lit i a ET A a ee ee i a nah Ye ‘he om 1 heey pO HT UTE TTS 19 fe G) D E x 24 COT TTT MMT SB NEE OsRss COUTTS COUTTS CRAWFORD FITZGERALD Unrr MaAcAULIFFE ISR TOT bse) (Od ae IO gargs) KENNETH CRAWFORD ; ; President Rwona FitzGERALD. ; . Vice President Mary Utr ; ; Secretary JouHn MacAuLiIFFE . ; peel veasturer The class of 1924 leaves Beloit reluctantly but without regret,—reluctantly because of the happy profitable years its graduation terminates,—without regret because of its proud under-graduate record. The class has endeavored to further the best interests of the college by its support of extra-curricular activities and by upholding, to the best of its ability, Beloit’s high standards and ideals. It points with pride to the achievements of its individual members as well as to its record as a class. The best wishes of the class go with Beloit in its hopes for Ehesuture. 35 Mini. POUT TU TO CUT TTT TT oy al SS)UEVOLUVEOUIATEARULUINULOULCRELULLIIES 19 Ge QO th) EX 24 UU EE Ciaytron ALBERT ADDIE Oak Park, Illinois DAH 1B? Clubs ilireasn 2) Sec. 3s) Footballam2.ch4-s lacks 12m Captenaama Class Pres. 2; Sophomore Council; Senior Committee; Treas. Associated Students; General Board. ‘THEODORE ALGEO : Billings, Montana XG Be Clib-stoorwallitr 23h. Irvy ANDERSON Beloit ALFRED ALLEN APPLEBY Beloit Orchestra 1; Glee Club. Puyutiis CLarrE ARNEMAN Chicago, Illinois JIBS; W. A. A. | Treas. 3; Tennis 2,3; Numerals ‘B’; W. S. G. A., Treas. 3, Pres. 4; Big Hill Day Com. 2,3; Big Sister Com. 3,4; Glee Club 2,3,4; Vesper Choir; Y. W. C. A.; U. R. 3; Round Table 3; Sophomore Council; General Board 3; Porter Latin Prize. I aa a ee ee ee es tae ae ee ee oo CA Cart STARKE BAERWALD Milwaukee 2X; ‘B’ Club; Varsity Track 1, Squad 2,3; Rifle Club’ 3. Marerer Exvaine Becx Harvey, Illinois Ka Ne, Pres. 3; W. A. A.; Numerals, ‘B’; High School Day Com.; Y. W. C. A.; Round Table 1,2; Women’s Editor 3; Shakespeare Society. 36 LUDSUROUCUUT WTAE RENEOREG 08 10001 U8 | mR IR ea Ee TOL UTS 3 AV TELAYUNCHVIOUINVEUUSAIULMGUIEdGy eT LGUUDAUORNOAVOANOUUDNLOONEQOOUUNUEATARTEQUADATOADING alt = = = aie RUVRTAV ECU TGTLR UN UTRLATTCR ELEN 1 9 ‘® O (fy EX 2 4 OUTTA OUUUT OS pn e———E—E EouyyuyyEEEEEoEoEoEEaoa——EEEEE - a= fe : “4 F me 3 Sy bs ‘ ™ : 7 : Se 4 a, - oe ye Sie : ‘A pee oS ; 5 ° HUI LLC Witiram Wa.iacre BicELow Rockton, Ilinois Radio Club; Bushnell Math. Prize. IsaBEL Bit Beloit AWA; Glee Club; Vesper Choir; A Cappella Choir. AtpHeus Avery BLAKESLEE Williams Bay TKE; Rifle Club; Beloit Players; Y. M. C. A.; Photo Staff 1922 Codex; Photo- graphic Editor 1924 Codex. Heien Boynton B owkeER Morris, Illinois Or; Ciirrorp K. BranpRupP Mankato, Minnesota IIKA; ‘B’ Club; Treas. 4; Track 2, 3, 4; Football Squad 2, Mgr. 4; Senior Com.; Big Hill Day Com.; Interfraternity Council. GeorGIA JOSEPHINE BRANNON Crown Point, Indiana KA; Shakespeare Society; Y. W. C. A.; Vesper Choir. MarcuerireE Frances Bretr Oak Park, Illinois AWA: W.A.A.; Y.W.C. A.; French Club; Round Table 3; Shakespeare Society. 37 a SOUR CEH OYOBLSIUU EOTYUUU SWALEGD LN ¢ 2 SSA A Reem 1 VY UY TATU AVGAYUDUA HACER ALM VAVEIL O a = = i PTT TE ay PTT MIM MMIC 19, EOI BE xerg4 vil Dororuy Witiarp BuFFINGTON Hinsdale, Illinois AWA; Ka Ne; Big Sister Com.; Chm. 3, 4; Pan-Hellenic Council, Chm. 4; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 2; W. S. G. A. 3; Shakespeare Society, V. Pres. 4; Round Table 1; Sophomore Council. Grace CHARLOTTE CAMPBELL Chicago, Illinois AD-5 Wa Aan AWE Cass JOSEPHINE CANFIELD Sparta AT; W. A. A.; Y. W. C. A.; Shakespeare Society; Beloit Players; V. Pres. Class 2; Sophomore Council. CLAYTON CHAMBERLIN Bangor TP; Rifle Club; Radio Club. Paut EuGENE CHAMBERLIN . Beloit r, Lreonarp CHURCH Walworth TP; Forensic Club; Rifle Club; Round Table 2, 3; Business Manager 4. VERA CLARIDGE ; Beloit W. A. A.; Y. W. C. A.; U. R. 4; Glee Club; Vesper Choir; A Capella Choir. 38 LOTR COSC ae SUPE ADUUSURUEGER BUN STAQSECAEQCUEUDRERAVEUGAE LUCE TL SSSR SPR a EL © SLU HNN AD IANA VOLU CE UEC UATE EE O} e : a LAUOLNTOUATEARORLSTULNETCAHAUAIES 19 Ge Gy 1) EX 24 OMT MET COUTTS eee ——————e—eeSSE—ee——eeeeeeee rt | P Ne 4 q 4 ae : : ‘ 2 aot es = COTITTITTTO a FELron GRANDISON CLARK Baton Rouge, Louisiana YeauM C. A:; Vesper Choir; Orchestra 1. Heten Evecra Coie Brodhead IIB®; Glee Club, Sec, 3, Pres. 4; Y. W. C. A.; Vesper Choir; A Cappella Choir; Milwaukee Downer, 1. KENNETH GALE CRAWFORD Racine =X; DAX; ‘B’ Club; Track 2; Big Hill Com. 3; Homecoming Com. 4; General Board 3; Interfraternity Council; Sophomore Council; College Publicity Dep’t. 2, 3,4; Pres. LAX; Class Pres. 4; Round Table 1, 2, Editor 3; Assoc. Editor 1922 Codex. Georce ArrHuR DAHLGREN La Crosse DAE; ‘B’ Club, V. Pres. 2, Pres. 3; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Track I, 3, 4; General Board 3; Pres. Rifle Club 4; Class Treas. 3; Interfraternity Council 4254. Mirram Corsin Davipson Los Angeles, California AO®; Big Sister Com.; Y. W. C. A.; A Capella Choir; Glee Club 3, 4; U. of Arizona 1; U. of Redlands 2. James Tuomas Dawson Beloit TP; AZ®; LAX; Senior Com.; Rifle Club; Sec., Treas. ZAX; Interfraternity Council; Wisconsin I, 2. Ricuarp Mircuerti Ditton Chicago, Illinois TKE; Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Vesper Choir 2, 3, 4; A Capella Choir; Circ. Mgr. Round Table 3. 39 SU TTT OTTO ULE iii — ame PEATE VCR CPU EAT USSELU ASE UOLV CUR BUA TEU Le al MUU ae) O D EX 24 EvizABetH Evans Beloit AT aN CAG Ruona FirzGERALD Beloit AY; W. A. A.; Social Com. 1; Shakespeare Society; Class V. Pres. 4; Ass’t. Women’s Editor 1924 Codex. Nevin GAGE Chicago, Illinois TKE; Glee Club; Beloit Players; Sophomore Council. Mase. L. Heroipson Davis, Illinois KA; W. A. A.; Numerals, ‘B’, Star; W. S. G. A. 4; Stowell House Pres. 4; Hockey Mer. Dororuy HENRY Tonganoxie, Kansas AWA Wieae Ac) YienWie GuNed Classpseeus) Uorvansacmis CLARENCE BurnuHAM HI. Mrs. Auice Blopcetr HoimMes KAO; AK@; 40 AUMLTEANMEREMOADAQNOGGAO0 GD E0000 1001. aS rae eee epee eee VOTO (UU ADIVNVEVUNGUDUNORONTSRURUECGNN, OUT TT Aurora, Illinois TKE; Glee Club; Vesper Choir 2, 4; A Capella Choir; Round Table 3; Y. M. Cas; B i nn a arin Aa RA SERN UWE Fh NEN ht SULRAUGUSLORROAAEANDRIADENAUAUCHUCSDODRUMRTEOUOOROOLEOAD iS TMM TITS PAIX, 24 AU TO EE Davin Biopcerr HoimMes Janesville BOM; Rifle Club; Round Table 3. Rosertr Hazen IRvINE New York, New York Dike TAX Bi Club, Press ootballiz,4. Baseball, 3, 45 Rite Club, Pres. 3; General Board 3, 4; Round Table 2, Editor 3; V. Pres. AX; Senior Editor 1924 Codex; U. of Chicago; Durham U., England. i ris ee ree eerin ee 7 OO Everetr CHARLES JANES Kewanee, Illinois TKE; Artus. BRENTON JANVRIN Beloit TIKA; Artus. GERALDINE ELonor KELLEY Beloit KA; Ka Ne; Y. W. C. A.; Pan-Hellenic Council; Cabinet 3, 4; Society Editor Round Table 4; Shakespeare Society. Va Guy W. Kester Quincy, Illinois ®KW; Football Mgr. 2; Round Table 2; Senior Com.; Interfraternity Council 4; Sophomore Council. Harry Minoru Kixucut Japan Art Staff 1924 Codex; Winner Home Oratorical Contest 1922. 41 a © SpE) yeh DyGUUDCU TAA GA DENTE LL: F SRR ae Se aa A ea ec 1A AT OED VATED AOAC CETUBUEAUUC ESTEE 3 STU PSTTUUTTTTOTME UUU Ei aE it COBEX 24 STS NUESTRA Dorotuy M. Koun Long Beach, California IIB®; Y. W. C. A.; Glee Club; A Capella Choir, 1, 2; Vesper Choir, 1, 2; Round Table 1, Society Editor 2, Woman’s Editor 4; General Board 4; Sec. Associated Students 4; French Play. Wiuiam H. Korsr Janesville ®KW; Ass’t. Football Mgr. 3; Round Table Staff 3. RuesBeNn R. Kuster Neponset, Illinois Rifle Club; Orchestra. James Larrin Beloit @®KW; ‘B’ Club; Basketball 1, 2, 4, Capt. 3; Baseball 1, 2, 3, Capt. 4. Wiu1am P. Liroyp Mankato, Minnesota DX:“B’ Chib, V. Pres. 3; Sec. 4; Basketball, 2, 3; 4; Rifle Club, V2 Pres23; Sophomore Council; Class Treas. 2. GerorceE Cuaries Loucks Mankato, Minnesota =X; ‘B’ Club; Track 3, 4; Football Squad 4; Rifle Club; Carleton College 1, 2. Cuar.otre Lyons Brodhead W. A. A.; Milwaukee Downer 1, 2. 42 QUDIRODLUUDTUPAVCRRUTODGROREAORDINEL-S) COOLUTTTU TOs POCTERAC ULC VOPR EANICLLUEEY ERE LGU Ke reais Se OR TA ee a Oe gee VULAURDEADAUAVOUGAD TG ODOR AUU ALO UOD0 NY GNM A000 6Y BRD Ses aia Se su ae es SETAE AO. LU VGVNNADNNUANTALTOLGLUDGA USER AUIC UN GRELE 2 = = PUT 19 Op G) D EX oy 4 UU TTT COUT TTT TT Joun TuEropore McAUuLiFFE Butte, Montana =N; TP; ‘B’ Club; Football 2, 3, Capt.4; Basketball 2, 3, 4; Track 2, 3, 4: Class Treas. 4. GerorcE Oscar McCaustanp Rockford, Illinois 2X; ‘B’ Club; Football Squad 2, 3, 4; Beloit Players; Rifle Club; General Board 3; Sophomore Council. Donatp Waiter McComs Lima Center TKE. Anprew Kinc McCorp Blue Island, Illinois 2X; Student Social Com. 3, Chm. 4; Big Hill Day Com. 2, 3; Glee Club; Sopho- more Council; International Relations Club; Circulation Manager 1924 Codex; Glass) Presa 1 OTP TR ROeaA VTS CHGL CULT MINDER pare ts Oe eee et tN EUR URL UULE COCR CE ee SarAH CaTHERYN McGavock Beloit oy AWA; Vesper Choir 1, 2; A Capella Choir; Glee Club. = Gorvon McLay Janesville = 2X. = Dorotuy ExvizapetH Mason Elgin, Illinois = Y. W.C.A., Sec. 4; Rifle Club 4; Ass’t. House Director Chapin_Hall 4; Syracuse = Wiese, 2s = 43 = SUD GULCH GH MU OGRE DAL NEU SGRGN BH ROR OWNS R, Site Mie eT ULLAL DN ODADASUNRALUYRDEANTEGURDONAIN ay | « Metis ee ee Va e He TUTE LUPE CO PUTT UE SURGND AGB UAGACU UAV GAO DUORGG OD UBIO U0 1 samme ees ona Sa re a TUT N DUDA OD TOMA NUo LI 19 “(GOI EX 4 Rupotpw Herman MAYER ’ Milwaukee DX; Track Squad 1; Lighting Com. Pageant; Chm. Pan-Hellenic Com. 3; Home- coming Com. 4; Rifle Club. VireiniA Harrier Mitts Oak Park, Illinois Shakespeare Society; Y. W. C. A.; Vesper Choir 2, 3, 4; A Cappella Choir; Glee Club; St: Mary’s, 1. June Cotron MitcHey Brodhead Milwaukee Downer 1, 2. Detmar R. MoeRIcKE Janesville TP; Track Squad 2; Interfraternity Council; Rifle Club 3, 4. James Hitt Moore Glencoe, Illinois BOI; ‘B’ Club; Track 1, 3, 4; Glee Club; A Capella.Choir; Fellowship Club. Norvat Myers Mt. Carroll, [linois BOI; Chm. Big Hill Day Com. 4; Homecoming Com. 4; Social Com. 4; High School Day Com. 3; Sophomore Council; Class Pres. 3; General Board 4; Mgr. Debates, Oratory 4; Debate 3; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Vesper Choir 1. Eucene MatrHew NeEwsurG La Crosse PKWY. 44 SUEALEVDUODEUAUOVOAOUADOLADINCQOUUNUDAVORTEAUODLEDIDIEN © OO COUT TTT TT deo ) See METOUAUTGUIGTAANULMGAULONUOTNUNHAIIIC@ i9 CODEX 24 ALE Dororuy JACKSON OvIATT Columbus IIB@; Glee Club 3, Mgr. 4; A Capella Choir 3, 4; Shakespeare Society, Pres. 4; Wie aA a4. Marjorie Mary PALMER La Crosse TIB®; Glee Club, 3, 4; Vesper Choir; A Capella Choir; Beloit Players; Shake- speare Society. Mi.prep Ruru Pautson Oak Park, Illinois AT; W. A. A.; Baseball 3; Hockey 3; Numerals, ‘B’; Y. W. C. A.; Shakespeare Society. Epwi tt PrrrcHarp Maywood, Illinois TEA i @l ub adunack san ho gladszs Exvinor EvizaABpetu RaLtston Argyle, Illinois Wie ie 3 odes) We CEA Rite Glib, Francis GEorGE REARICK Danville, Illinois TKE; Artus; Forensic Club; Debate 2, 4; Mgr. Debates, Oratory 3; 4; Pres. Wisconsin Intercollegiate Oratorical Assoc.; General Board 3; Platform Editor 1924 Codex; Winner of State Oratorical Contest. Marcret RICHARDSON Oak Park, Illinois TiB®; W. A. A.; Y. W. C. A.; Denison U., 1. 45 PIM SCTE TELUGU PRTT ITN Ca a RS a RE Un RUN MDNR NRE IMR NPT 16 (LS ANLLERAASSVOLUNUSUANUGRECTAARGREMICHT LS Paneaparan ee cree geri gC TOReCR TEE TE For) P0) 000K) cc ee ALI ee 2 SH) PAATOLOQTONEATNARUNUITUNASICHSNERILECO in GOD Ew LE = He WaLrTeR RIDEOUT Freeport, [linois Oe Ime Chu 4. Wineas, AL FRANKLIN SCHACHT Racine TIKA. Gren ALLEN SCHRADER Burlington ies Wy Chhotog Baseloell 2. 3, A. EstTHerR IsABELL SEAVER Beloit W. A. A.; Fine Arts Prize 1, 3; Beloit Players; Forum; Debate 2; Shakespeare Society. De.puia LUELLA SMILEY Orfordville Vig AC CT OO pe at Seay he a ELF ie ies ee os, ee eee eee ee See ee S O a Y¥: W.-C. Acs Rifle Clubs) French) Play, 5 ea a Lae eae enna Syn FTG ei) O , [A Bh T. Atvin STRAHLE Elgin, Illinois DAE; Track Squad 4; Pan-Hellenic Com. 3; Social Com. 4; Glee Club 3, 4. ADELAIDE MABEL STEWART Plainfield, Illinois Be; W. A. A; Y. W. C. A. 46 CUT TTT CASUUUUUULUUEAUUATECOUROTOUUUAURNANROILORUT AUT HUDGQAODOAGGO SALAH NTGLGG ADM DLO LERD 2 SSOaaRans Deion NE RL A NAT HNN LINNLOUONNOM DRAIN CUD NOTTS PTT 19 ‘ 2) 1, EX fA 4 MMMM ELiIzABETH STEWART Plainfield, Illinois IIB®; W. A. A.; Y. W. C. A.; Sophomore Council. Howarp McCuttoucu THompson Beloit Dx, PAX B Clubs Track 1, 23, Capt. 4; Football Squad 2; Round! Table 1, 2, 3, Editor 4; College Publicity Dep’t. 3, Mgr. 4; Vesper Choir 1, 2; Glee Club 2, 3, Leader 4; Homecoming Com. 4. Rocer Russet Turrrup Appleton BOI; ALP; Artus; Forensic Club; Round Table 1, 3, Editor 2; Athletic Editor 1922 Codex; President of Associated Students 4; Debates 1, 2, 4, Leader 3; Rice Prize 3; Big Hill Day Com. 4; Pan-Hellenic Com. 3; General Board 2, 4; Pres. Sophomore Council; Chm. Senior Com. Exvizasetu Ruts UtTicrer Beloit Ka Ne; Alumni Editor Round Table 2. Mary Exizasetu Urr Glen Ellyn, Illinois AT: Y. W, C. Az; V. Pres. Class 3; Pan-Hellenic Council. Gerorce WiiiiAM Van DuESEN ; Beloit TP; Pres. Orchestra; Forensic Club; International Relations Club. Vivian VAN OrnUuM Iron River, Michigan AEP Wie CPGAG 47 SMMiiiiiiilio. —Gmlnmimumir PEULIVEER SHS A SEL Og IR UAC RMD TUS HEI YB SR sae A aE DN OIC CeO UENO RUDE EE DEIN Rce Smee 1) (VEU NAUUULUUGLUQHEANOEELRUAGUURCANMGNI GANS HEE STeLELOGEU EEUU ES EUE UR ECUQODO EQ TEGRERT GWT 6000 0 03 8 0 iN Sas ai Sa gE RUNES |LOG TYG LU RMD GLLELURGCCAPLORUNTGUUIODAALREN ay DUCTOUUUTOUICTNANOITITULAITONNIUINNIS io ‘CODER we. sie ee Arruur FREDERICK WHEELER Appleton BO; Artus; ‘B’ Club; Football 3, 4; Basketball 3, 4; Baseball 3, 4; Track Squad 3, 4; Lawrence College 1. 2. Mary RurLepce WHEELER Chicago, Illinois AWA; W. A.’ A., Pres. 4; Numerals B’; W. 8..Gs A:; Y. W- C.Ag= Vice! Pres: Associated Students; Shakespeare Society; Social Com.; General Board 4; Soph- omore Council. Joun Francis WicKHEM Alexandria, South Dakota ZAE; Basketball 4; Creighton U. 1, 2, 3. Raymonp FREDERICK WEIGERT Rockford, [linois ®KW; ‘B’ Club, Treas. 3; Basketball 1. 2. 3. 4; Football Squad 1; Track Squad 1; Baseball Squad 3. 48 SUUREUNUOO TEED DER EU ERODE OTE GOT 0 ae AI AANA MME LEP UUTDNTREUEREEY ee EPEC TET TUTOR CUCO EA OUCH TEE Pa a GO es OTN LP TNE EPL TNE a ae RRNA (CVU MANN LADEN PER ONT UTA ATES GONLATAELOUAS SUSIE AIO TEBONCTRNALNVEVOUOT GGG UAGAAOUETUGCRGHU S100 @ SER i en aN NT © 11 TLS AU ASS MTaTgicnd GVMITANVOOWANAAL! it PTIITINI I UU 19 (a) D E 232 2 4 OUTTA ALU Jee Nob ORS COUT UT @ULVUVLLAANTAN TANT OLEH UTRANULA ATED ETERUEL Frost Jacoss GREEN MILLER (Ose CALA Ste TOAD IC I0 aati. ee FRost ; : é , , President MarTHA JACOBS ; : . Vice-President KATHRYN GREEN ' Secretary Ernest MILLER ; : Treasurer Tis with high resolve that the class of 1925 looks forward to filling the honor positions that will be left vacant by the Seniors in June. As Seniors, we hope to keep bright and untarnished the name of old Beloit which, during the past three years, we have come to love and honor. Our sincere hope is that we may be the best example possible to underclassmen in scholarship, religious activities and in clean manhood and womanhood that Beloit expects and demands of us. May this express our allegiance to the college where we have worked and played three years that we have found good. : 7, as 49 STU CHUM CASTANVANUTUURUODAUUTIOGILGUUUUUN ETON LLOLUIHET © QUUUUOOLNODEDUAVGRUDTORGOORERUADIONL.S: PEC ESET UCU UR) ee ee OUI O NATE cea nes = UU UT TTS ee Gy ©) D EX 24 Marcret Martie ALLER Janesville AT; Glee Club (1); A Cappella Choir (1); Bowling Club; Y. W. C, A. E1izABETH ARNEMAN Chicago, Illinois IIB; W, A. A, (1), (2), (3); Sophomore Council; Y, W. C, A. (1), (2), @); Shake- speare Society (3). Auice GotpTrHwaite ATwoop Roscoe, Illinois WA WG TCs GN (Goes Wesoar Claoir ©), Lucy Mary Bartrass Oak Park, Illinois PNVGNG GEN INO AWE ISG) UN “Iweris. (Gale Wn AN AN We [Pines (ays Ye, WS (CoN, (Ga), (2), (3); Forum Club (1), (2); Hockey Mer, (2), (3); Baseball Mer. (2). EruHet BARNES IIBé; W, S, G, A,; W, A. A,; Beloit Players; Shakespeare Society, CHARLES BARON Orchestras), (2) yaa) se honensiceC@lub: Dorotuy Lois Beck Glee Club; A Capella Choir; Basketball (2); Hockey (3), 50 DOREEOERERES TERA TORCH OD UT 0101 SS ae NOE | ERED ARMENIA UNN I OUNSTANGNMRARIES ag), Harvey, Illinois Belo it Players; Codex Staff (3); Shakespeare Society; W. A, A.; Y. W. C, A,; OPT UT UD OTS ScAATAPESVAURERUALEEE GEST DUANE DEGDATAUTE SEU UE HMO Se NTS NTT NPE SMa SMTA GUL TCC Vinay TAOOUOT EL MTOMANCHUUONALDD ie yf aed ALi 84 TM URDU LS a aa SS PSE PSETSPERESIRY © (0111104080201 00T HUA HULIE PNM MMT fou On XxX Ba IsaBEL Nourse BENNETT Battle Creek, Michigan AVA, Heven CaTHERIneE BENoIr Oak Park, Illinois AWA; Ka Ne; Round Table (1), (2), (3); Codex (3); W. S. G. A. (3); W. A. A. Y. W. CA. (a), (2), (3); Rifle Club (3); Hockey (1); Basketball (1). En1p Hamitton Brown Mandan, North Dakota Minnesota State Teachers’ College (1), (2). Donautp Drx BurcHARD Wilmette, Ilinois BOII; TAX; Round Table (1), (2); Assoc, Editor (3); Codex Class Editor (3); Big Hill Day Com, (1). Davin Henry BUTLER CHARLOTTE CARRIER Huan Cuat Wuhu, 51 oO LNG WANDA a a ee a TTT OUT CALLUS Elgin, Illinois BOI; Track (1), (2), (3); Football (3); ‘B’ Club; Goer Bus, Staff (3); Big Hill Day Com. (w)s Fellowship Club (1); Pres, (2). Edgerton Anhui, China STOTT TT Speman ere oe a a Sa op ee ee ae OM em ene = o CASTUUUAUULNHARORGUIERTATOOUNUOUULONOLONET EEO PU ‘ 1i9 CODEX 24 Haroitp Wuitrorp CHAMLEY Mineral Point TP; Glee Club (1); A Capella Choir (1); Track @), Ass’t. Trainer (2). Joun ConNELL Beloit ®KW; Football (2), (3); Basketball (1), (2), (3); “B’ Club; Class Pres: (1); Sophomore Council, Roy DaniscHEFSKY Milwaukee 2X; Football Squad (1), (2), (3); Basketball Squad (1), (3); Baseball Squad (1); Round ‘Table (2); Sophomore Council; Pan-Hellenic Com, (3). Pat Wesiey Dawson Beloit TP; Football (1), (2), (3); Basketball Squad (1); Baseball (1),(2),(3);° B’ Club, ALFRED GEORGE DIETERICH BOII; Codex Ass’t, Art Editor (3); Glee Club (3); A Capella Ch Hootball Meri(2)-sRatles Glubn(2) Vesierecan(a)neYoulVibs Gee Aull reaces(a))s Dororuy Exizasetu Downs IIB®, Joun Frost TKE; Beloit Players; Class Pres, (3); Glee Club (1), (2), (3); A Capella Choir (1), (2), (3); Vesper Choir (3); Organization Editor Codex (3); Com, (3). 52 HDMURODGOUESOOI1UBGO0 0000 G0 0012 1 100 Rasa tee ei DUS REST a RNC AREAS Dr NTT MUON v 0NLUVNANUAAN SVU IUAN CUDA GMUUSOOLe es Harvard, Illinois OUTTA . i =z == = os = = al = = — =o = — om = = = = = = = I ret — = = = — = = = = fea a et = = — = = CJ = = i — CO ®@ = J = = I — = = = rt = = wo = =e = = aad = = = ie! = = = = BS = i EE es HUAUOLANTULICTRIAUNGNEUABLEENAUILTS moe CEN - 74 OOM MMMM QCOUUTTTTTTT S COUT Herpert osepH G: Iwitz La Crosse Glee Club @); A Capella Choir (@);-Codex Bus, Staff (3). Russet Gisson Toulon, Indiana Eunice ALvepA GopDARD Beloit Vespen. Chom (2)er(syea vo Ws C eAy (1); Cabinet (2), (3): Katuryn GREEN Beloit AT; Class Sec. (3); Beloit Players (3); Glee Club (1), (2); V. Pres. (3); A Capella ae (3); Vesper Choir (1), (2), (3); Sophomore Council; Y, W. C, A, (1), (2), (3). NorMAN JEROME Hanks La Crosse BOI; Round Table (3). Rosertr TAytor INMAN Beloit IKA; Rifle Club, Marrua Jacoss Delavan ADS Class. V.. Pres,’ (3). 53 a TPURLERSUNLAUEDLAGUGUUTEOLEOQ 1044 [11], za eee 3.111011 7 10 NU NVUAVODITOLOANSN ELRTLGTIY DEALUDHUOREUAVUADAOUOODRAULLGHOTIOUONTARTEAVENLELIDILIC PTT TATTLE 5 ay PMT MUM ITS . 19 CODEX 24 SAUTE OUTS COUT oT Georce Waters KEITHLEY - Beloit TIKA; Forensic Club (2), ; Dora KELLEY Lake Geneva HB®; Y: W. C.-A, (1), (2), G); Girls’ Forum Club. (2), (3). Joun Lupwic Kroner La Crosse TP; Rifle Club (3), Heven Aurepia Kunz Beloit Vesper’ Choire (i), 1 (2) na) Ya Wee el (a) Harry De.sert Lapp Janesville McKendree College (1), (2), , i’ Cuar.es TownsenpD Leavitt Cedar Rapids, Iowa BOL; Beloit Players (3); Glee Club (3); A Capella Choir (3), Epmunp Frank Linpop Oak Park, Illinois ZAE; Class Treas, (2); Rifle Club Sec, (3); Pan-Hellenic Chm. (3). 54 AUECERELUTATAELIERAUCOLADOS LASALLE a NATE eT (IL WNNINMIUIE li e UU ET CLK SUT ae SH ELETOANEALEUTELANLLITURUTEHNANLLNTT oe COE X. 34 MMMM nM MMMM Lucitte Eten Lourm Beloit W, A, A,; Hockey (1), (3). 4 Lois Marre McCornacx St, Charles, Illinois AD Ye Wa. Alt) (2). (332 W AlAs A Capella, Choire(1), (2), @); Rifle Club (3). Raymonp Peter McGaw ; Rockford, Illinois ZAE; Football (1), (3); Basketball (1), (2), Capt. (3); Baseball (2), (3); ‘B Club, Pau. Epison Martin Beloit Aruiste Kucenta MILLER Sheboygan AWA; Glee Club (1), (3), Treas. (2); A Capella Choir (1), Sec, (2); Pres. (3); W. S. G. A. (3); W. A. A.; Varsity Swimming; Baseball (2). Ernest Ranpaty MILLER Sheboygan IIKA; Round Table (3); Codex Ass’t, Bus. Mgr. (3); Glee Club (2), (3); Pan- Hellenie Gomes (3)= Class ‘Treas. (3). Orton Brince Morrer Milwaukee BOI; LAX; Round Table (1), (2), (3); Beloit Players; Home Oratorical (3); Debate (3); Orvis Roundtree Contest (1); Sophomore Council; Forensic Club (2), (3). 55 iii... . .._ cHtimmlnniminmiiinlitc ee RUE COTE VVC TN SSS a a el a a ESI RS EU GE NT MN TRADE sme RT 4611 CUAAG NLU VAAUDAAT EUR SUALENT! (GUGURGU TOURS ee lER sg UVEUE LUTE TLE TRS UE ESTA BicS 0 002 LB i Sn nena eaeena are © LWA N AVI LI IiNiF dN dLaan nc iS PT TMM MN 19 CODES 24 OAT UU QO EE @©ULLTLILTUANNVULUOLAOLORUTANLODCUNEOEREATAN Cari Tracey NELSon Butte, Montana Dx SF ootballe i.) a2) Gis ae Cle, LawrENceE Francis O’ BRiEN Rockford, Illinois DAE, EizABETH PATTON Beloit Vesper Choir (3); Y. W. C. A. (2). Josep Ropert PETERSON Dover, Illinois CLAIRE Haroup PIERCE Medford TIKA; Baseball (1); Track (2); Business Manager of Codex (3); Beloit Players; Pres, Sophomore Council; Ass’t. Cheerleader (2); General Board (2). ’, a Wiitmor Frank PIERCE Medford TIKA; Football Squad (1), (2); Baseball Squad (1); Track Squad (3); Glee Club (1), (2), (3); Ass’t. Football Mgr. (3). Haro.p EuGENE PIETSCH Beloit ‘i 56 PMTTTTTTTTITPIITT TTT en ee = OTT TTT TT STU 2 bs) | LTVLATTALATEAAUATLTTTTUTTRLATT@ 19 ‘eS C) 1p) EX 24 MMMM MM TTT COUTTS CHALUTLTLTLTTTT Lawrence PrEEers Ray Rockford, Illinois ExizasetH May Ricumonp Elgin, Illinois Elgin Junior College (2); Forum Club (3); Rifle Club (3); Y. W, C. A. (3). Leonarp Orvin RISETTER Rockford, Illinois TKE; Rifle Club (3); Big Hill Com, (3). Irene Roperts Bangor Bd; Y, W. C. A, (1), (2), (3); Orchestra (1); Shakespeare (3). CuristiAN BARNE RossEBo Edgerton BOI; Football (1), (3); Basketball (1), (2), (3); Baseball (1), ()an(@) eb a Clubs Sophomore Council, ’, K = Norris RowBoTHaM Walworth = = IIKA; Football (1), (2), (3); ‘B’ Club, = = Harry Lawrence Rowe Citronella, Alabama = = TKE, = E E = z SVtviiapHUANEERI Q00101016911121 111, AAA a ae ee eee cccaeaamanemmemen 1000101) 00TH YRTONUTOENAUOECLNINIALL 3 [A QugmnunmReE CN ea ee a a BR SAIUUUUUUULCUUOUEAUELLO TOTO RUTLUORTNONENEIENE OT S)URUUUVTULATGLUOLUSNULUTIORNIUEUNES 19 2 O D E xX 24 ArtHurR Hamitton RUTLEDGE Rockford, Illinois BOI; Round Table (2), (3); Codex Bus, Staff (3). Evizasetu Louise SAYLES Janesville AEs Clase) Sec. (12 ¥, Ws © AST) 2) a ine (oLuba AumMa CHARLOTTE SCHROEDER Beloit NE NOX i Neal Ce CrypE Haven Scuryver, JR. Chicago, Illinois ZX; ZAX; Round Table (1), (2), Editor (3); Class Pres, (2); Beloit Players, Pres. (3); Glee Club (1); Big Hill Day Com, (3); Cheerleader (1), (2), (3). Ruta ScHWARTz AT, CLayTON SHIMEALL Jouy THEODORE Stoops Nappanee, Indiana TKE; Glee Club (2), (3); A Capella Choir (2), (3); Orchestra (1); Round Table (1), 58 UOMUTEDUTUESGSAUCQ 0010000 0 12100 11 1 RRR eee een NRCC NNN GMS . (UU ULCSUEOD NALD NCUUNSELUEESINTELEAN, SUA SUG EAEETU SLSR ETA C0 YUE 00 a aa ee ge ae SST Ss aL © 1 YVOUIHAL LGU USUAINGULTEIN ADMD IAAI TATATAN, TMM fe OE. ae SLEUAUHLALTUIAAN EASLIAEUIAUDINUOLLEONGS COUT TTT TT TT Cxiara Louise SUGDEN Oak Park, Illinois AWA; Vesper Choir (1); Y, W. C, A.; Cabinet (1), (2). Sipney ALLEN THAYER Beloit TP; Pan-Hellenic Com, (3). Cuaries Winsitow THOMPSON Beloit BOI; Track Squad (1), (3); Round Table (3); Homecoming Com, (3); Pan-Hel- lenic Com, (3). Wixuts THORN Hudson ®KW; TAX; Round Table (1), (2), Editor (3); Codex Staff (3); Beloit Players; Forensic Club (1); Pan-Hellenic Com, (3). Stuart C, Toares La Grange, Illinois TP; Orchestra (1). J. Lonrer TunstTeap Janesville @KW; Round Table (2), Advertising Mgr, (3); Homecoming Com, (3); 1924 Codex Adv, Mgr, Wixita Hoitmes Von Oven Beloit AT; Beloit Players; Y. W. C. A. (1), (2), (3). 59 UGA W EME LM DGS UY AGED EDLC GD EDD DAN SL aS aaa a a cy UU UTUTNGDATD LNA EASNUANOANGOGODUD RAIN irs BEEUPSEUTEE US TSALUIE CARURIRAM TEL UD EIES CELE ap Deets a a eT eT ed CT TTT TTT TC | PRETOLANTOLIGIRANULISTOLUDIUINAUILIE@ 19 CODEX 24 OLUUATIVULUNUEATUELILUUIUUEATHAT ELIE Edi ce O A ErHe. JoseEPHINE WatTTs Oak Park, Illinois KA, Rarpy Sruart WILFORD Beloit ; : KW; Glee Club (2), Mer. (3); A Capella Choir (2), (3); Homecoming Com, (3), Myron Wo, H. WortHincton Rockford, Illinois LAE; TAX, V, Pres, TAX (3); Track Mgr. (2), (3); Round Table (2); Sophomore Council; General Board (3); Editor 1924 Codex; Chm, Homecoming Com, (3); App’t. Chm, Pan-Hellenic Com, (3), Ora RacHet WRIGHT Clinton Y. W. C, A,.; Rifle Club (3); Hockey (1), (3). e Epwarp Joun YounG La Grange, Illinois = 0 TKE; A Capella Choir (1), : = E 60 z AMS cm EN TMM MOTT Pe COWEX 24 A TENE Sees HOMO RES COLT TT Brown JoNEs HuRLBUT FENWICK mur omeesin sco OFFI Con Rs Ceci, Brown. ; ; ; 1, President LILLIAN JONES. ; ; , . Fice-President HELEN HuriBut ; : Secretary GEORGE FENWICK ; . Treasurer For us, the class of ’26, the whistle blows on June fourteenth. From then on we will no longer be underclassmen, but in line to receive the deference and privilege of upperclassmen. Thus far the record we have made is an enviable one. Mem- bers of our class are prominent in every activity on the campus. Through union and class spirit we have tried to uphold the spirit of Beloit college and thereby maintain the true standard of our class. We only hope that the coming two years will be as creditable to us as the last two, and the fulfillment of this hope is more than probable. 61 RE PUTIMLTPTTLVASEI TATU ERLE UTM) tee ae CTT ST BUTT TTT TT ke COUTTS ENTUMIMM NUM MN LOIS 19 ‘oO G) 1B: E x 24 SMM MMT QUIT UT Tc “Dele rw pane ersor 62 CUUUEEDOTATEREUTEWUUTULCH 0 11001 111 ( Sc a a aa eR TSP Milne ie: SOVUPECER ESS BUGIS UA EPRUHALO RT TMB TREO GY QT SHO ARES SS A Ce en ae MNES | UHL LVMH OUND IC SEDRG GNC UNANITUUHURLTIE NES SANTUUUUUUUCEAUATOTOUULCUU TRU AUU NNO NCNR NINERS POTTS 19 ‘ee G) D E b.4 24 OUTTA AT MTT y) 2 Bade nce. - | Stan Kunck y = = we a i = — oe = om — 2 ms Semel = — =a — = J a= = oa a = = = e = 2 ze O el sao a A Kh Wallie Haskiaks | 63 GC = = ali Bes UCUD HUD LUGUEMEA EDU RELES GD TPE MLA E aa a a RSM 3-1 LALUDUNHAUDYUMMEDPUREOAUUONAMIDEAIN Fs OUT TT = = o Ne} S : : = = : : : : OUT TT PO UU OO TTT OUT UT EU Poe 19 CODEX 24 PU CT eS a BUTT TT TTS 229: VSCELELE ENV EUAGAAUEOLATTASUOAOEUNT 0} | SE SSS RENT SET TOUT UUM) Ee UE COUTTS O 65 PoCODEX 24 — 3 E ) 6 2. = Y = z : STM © A TANADTANUTAA ALATA TUALTTUAASEATGTVA re IUATOLOOTUEGTOARONGEOLUDICTHNELESIT@ 1o CODES 24 OMIM Ey Jounson — Grace BaBKA «7 i“ 66 EXCLEDUATUSCGTALUSANTOCR OR RLYED CL ) a ER SI NAA NNN AU UNUAD UDR RGAAPENE eee SU SAQUUUUUELEUEEUEREAUEAHTTCRUUUETATA ETON. | | j | TMM MTT mS eSODRX: 7a OMT FRESHMEN COUTTS TT COUTTS CHILDS BRIGHAM FLoro GERRIGAN Teen teeta en Oath LC Be LESTER CHILDS President Jean BricgHam . , . Free President KATHERINE FLOTO ; . Seeretary KELLY GERRIGAN Treasurer The Freshmen class has well advanced its appreciation for Beloit since the entrance last fall. The class feels that ever eager spirit to carry on the good will of the college and to do its best to support the noble reputation of the institution in scholastic attainments, activities and interests. It is with a feeling of keenest devotion to Old Beloit that the class of ’27 will advance through the remaining years of collegiate life and with a desire to be of real worth to the college. © 5 O7 CTT A 24 , a s aiad J Childs 19 CODEX 24 Vieginia Aallock Jolin Vandolah . PUTT ik ST ie GOUT OTT as UU TT PT SA) ERUUALAVTMLLGUGUNUDUFLUANNEORUUUERETE@S 19 ts G) D E x 3, 4 SALOU TTT COUT OTT TT %, fh Joe’ Georce 2 A WHS iy ee 69 SLATTED ADCS TU EDEL U1 © eS a eC RR TEEN © (EEG LN MS HOM STIEAANDOUODROAVEALARURDAURUDECLOUULVONTARYERUODLODIOILY COUT OTT Ts = BUT TT Ke VOULELOQUUNUROUOLARUUORNGLOUOUEUUEROROUOTAB Eee O % A = SAEUCUULUVOLTOTGROOLUSNULOTLOUELUTNIIES 19 CODEX 24 70 LUTTE CTCETCOT CS Ca ee ee ee OU en a OUT UCT TT e) , i SUNALEDBUQRUUAAEARARIGOLURUNLAQGUULODAUGAYOAURDLOOIOULN FEATURES © ITM (LEO Dike = : OM MMMM MMMM Ea 1 F EK Digi Deepa | JAMES BLACKBURN . ART GLEN ARMSTRONG : JOSEPH PADDOCK HLS STS oT . TUL TTS 19 eh C) D E x 24 SOT TTT MTT OOUUUUT UTS COUT TUT TTT TT TTT DOF SOO BEOeUIBER FASE COLE DSS S, = = = = = s = S = 3 = = = = fs OUTIL TC STM eS TMM MT ——— 19. CODEX 44 CMM MMMM Blaisdell Got £4, Ma rah boys — yah rah — a ee = _ na — = - cn — — al —_ — = — —_ = a Sal — — —_ naa ne oa a a — a = - all -_ _ — — om ad — ser — © — — ad = oe a laael — c— — oot =a _— — a oa — — — — a te a aoe —= = — — — - — — ee rs = ea — ne — tom = — — — = — noe oe — — | MOUDIOROANDONONLRNNNADGRORODDODIANT:2; PAU ETT MM MMM MUON | HNETOAVEGLETOUANDLNUOELETUNLLIT® 19 CODEX 24 AMM COTSTV TITS TTT TTT TTT TTS Th = = = = = — — = = S = = ot = : = ETPSEUEHE ULE ORYRPEUE SUL SS tAUL A EUHU ed COL UCI o e aS eee Ce PT LL LL a eee eee eemmmer TAI TVCTTRNNANCITEAUPRIIEOMDIIN ii 2 = = 25 tice oo) oan ofa OUTTA Te POUT iB OUTTA TT Sees fitz aAurice i io COBEN 4 C) “Task . Vex Texhemer HUCVOLOVCGUUATGARONNLURONLCRALTONNE NG ae + te voduil show ‘ 76 PANIIT. a ee 2) BUNT TTT came COUTTS OUTTA POUT oo, OUTTA oS 19 CODEX 24 Phils Nevceernr PULL UE ECTS LY art a a i é os : 4 a etardieq io And So Were es te SRIMEAIA BU ARTY GUNTUR SNCUEGD CN UNUGRUUOE 7 x Saas Sine ny pe NC ne UAT TTCUAATANORNCANOAURBMNDDDDRIL COUT UT T c ay BU TTT TITS OUTTA OEE S2)ORENUIAVERLEATRURULUONULONLETHLUILNIE@ 19 CODEX 24 COUT TT OG J Beals Brannon. ae Hea ausey | ae alge { Ya ly CUT TUTTE EURAUEOAREASOTANCHOLYOUGG OR LAS22 U1) |: aaa ae ies ae ERE Er oO Sige POU UO 19 ‘a a) i) E xX 24 QUITE ee oe = eet ed aa = = ae a lee Saal = = ss at oma f or = Sail = = = ‘ = = - ™ me -— . =a —_ sa = i — i. . = 2 aa oY ao é = = [s) eee Nearick. COMTI TTT Howie Gee 4 ‘7 a “weatt, way silvery moon. 79 Z E : CULT ALS GALE L LLL a a a a 31D EAT CONTEC at POU OT 19 '® 2, 18; E De 2 4 OUTTA UTA TO v UU TT on SHUGRVLOUNUUDOOUUGANUOALORDERONOUNDDOVORRIUTIOL@’ a MaCausland = RCE S OUTTA PO TTT 80 SUATUVUHALUANERDATORANTOUEDOUULOEU 01 2 LEROY WMUEMINNNMUENNSSNN LU LN(EU(1(CUIUEIEIEIMiNNIAirdiy COUTTS OUT = POUT : Al Srahle ag aes rs oe s ne werwl so Fah the Mest SUA A KO las - 81 EDU TAU DUUEY UD URESEA GNU GU GR ERT Sana ara nC UDR 9A] ULEATUGAEAMLOODUTONSAUEOMABDARENL OUTTA TAT “ ia CODEX 24 ‘Loe Fo sse ; f tm COUTTS | SODADDUUOUUUDRURUGALNDAUERRIRONIRNORDDO ORIOL PREUOLAVERLIAOUAUYLSNERINTCRNLTERIIVS 19 COMES 24 OTT ETM ToT FOLLULERAUGURUNGNAPEL EOD UUUUUTRUCAUERDREROUED EEE aaa O i eo : Bil ae ; SL SUCHIN T HDS OLAMUYDARYEDGAUS CTLICUEEG UES QUES AI R10 Sa I A Reems TET 111011 (TUB LUNN TOLIUNLANTSOQUNUOSIUGNIONN PSU UTE TTT TT TT COUTTS PUTO WBULGRNUNOTOOLUSNLTRUORUILERIINIS: z = OUT TTT TTT A CURUNGHOTOLUDDLANODEEONOACCOCUNED DOIN (A) VY Lat Ce O = tet a Pee OLE Xx 24 @ 9 7, STLACUUUADOLUEOEOTAVCRNOVIRORODELADIUN os COUTTS hr S 4 : = = : : 0 POUT LK PU Et tS e 19 CODEX 24 co oe S2EROUULUNTLTUTE OULU LOTT TT CUUUTTTTT TTT Ossie ano Tonay ’ aba tf ' ttttt ‘ friron av FYOCKFORD 84 THE fick. BUTT TTS SUTTON Tc SSLAUUHEQOOAUDOAUDATORONUADOGORUDONDINITS PO UU Tk g OUTTA DE A TS e Y, PoC ODEX 24 PULL CET 85 USED EEA LEL ET LED 5 a aaa a aa PNT UDG ASU UVLVTAVATADUT ATAU EEEUDDNYIN) Ey BUTT TTT TTS COUT (4 VOULELURALOUUORRDGQUUUURNUCLUGRDEGUOOOROUULUD Kee EAITALUEEUECTRILSTULUTGHEANIAIE@ io GOMER MMMM MATT © OF % i Va eo 86 COUTHO RDB OOEQUAYOR DEON G0 OWA R00 DUG 1 aR ita ent eSB AS LN ST yA UIANLUUAN DINAN ODARORDRIRD GUNS SUatstiS CTT SASTUUUUUUCUNCAUERNOUTCUOLCUUUUUTUNNERTORAT AEE 2 WSTUABEGERUDWETUILY EERETQDETU2UGUNTAA OTE UCT © [SS TPE SNPS STEP ESSN ONE UUUDUVUNNNLUUIVUCIU SUS LILUUEMEMANSE UTTER EET LS OUTTA TO 3 = = = a 3 AT MADISON 0 FLAT 87 Pe toODE Xx 24 e g S z | | 4 : THT fe TMM MMMM TICS 10 CODEN 2 Aol COUT TTL TTT cS SCAnoAl e eo 88 SVMAGUELGOAALDOGO TH GR UNUULOR OR GH12 01101, 5 SaaS a a Se SNL ANSON UNA SUMMTENRNNONSMLAT U1) (GH ]UURUGA(RUOOTIBUIMICES Lo 2757599) FRCL ATLL HOO SHALE OUCH VANDER EA 010 i lea alec aaa ga err See 11111 AM AAA TATHALULIUUTINITECTHIUANNT. PU BPESAUARUEAIRESEECUULOUOR EA, CUSULULL ES EU GEE EA see ETL PRED CU Cee fo OUTTA US = —— - 4 PLU UL OTS PreaeOEX 24 IPEVIE WERS As You Line [7 a P| SPELT ATE ELUTE ULC aaa a eae ee ee IRMA Te HNL Ua Ons EUS TRLN VEER PS cg CCR TSE CULOEL PUN), ste ae ee Fa a ae es es em OUT UVR EER Pee ONT UT U TS Yonie YONSON (A) j S Ss s S 19 CODEX 24 90 a BO Ft REA STS eA EE Se) SS S i) = ss : = E = : = , Z a iiiiiiiiiiic = = ee ae TMI OUT HUTT TAU DS i9 CODEX 24 ©) s PUTO 2) J PAA SO EAEMCEDERILAMUESRUEIUSTON2 UNDO CRB LUE G00 |) i EE TEE PES SS TT Ya ee TET THe ProoJers H OME C ONING Is 91 ar a TATUREL LUTTE NUT (Oey ee CM PULL LP SOUEDEVOUEAPSADDUETUAUED EMTEEATAHUDDETEEE CU 61 eee ane ee ny Slane MreNNOT TEND SS eT OUTTA CATO DT OTS KR POUT OUT UT OS Ohve Th VERN Ye 19 CODEX 24 = — = = = = an io = oa = = ow at =] = Ss — — — CC — = = = = a 92 SSUCARURRULUHDEMDAUOGGU00008 00110111411. AA eee NNN ANTM | 11UUNUNGNNUNTCIUANAANINTNN is. SODGNDUORNUURDLUEANEDAVOAOIDONAOHODENDSRIHNEEIS) eS RSE: © LUNUTANONTALATADANAYDDLOMOTTGAUSRORUDTDUIADER rs TAATALONUGLEMTAUANLUSRULTEGSLNELTTCS io OER X 24 OOM UE TTS a = = st coool — Tet acs = al = coal cad ad = = = = aS == = = = = = a coal it = = B = =a J — 0 é ; z Af 4 re + Presioenr Maurer ARRIves : kislle More Snow - cs) . 92 = = = = — — i anal = = co = ae = = = — = — — = aati — = = — = a eos — = — a S = = int nd — — PST UL oe PERT TCEGT EEL LT LE (11, 2 aA UT UU DTVNAUDLUDEQUOCAYEAVCEBURDO RDI S Lo OUTTA TT fo CODE K 74 s PULLOUT UO ET a) SPESUEDAMERE ORB USLUUAAEL AD HEB REGGE G0 UO 00 SOR ES a a NOON HN DENN NES TTS ERM UTA O ULNA GUAT RAULNUS OTITIS ri, castes SUUAUEACUOTESUOUGUGRUDNAULAEQSTRHSAUTUUACE UCC Sl i ein US na NR 511MM NTT iB 94 LAMAR Mt CGAP a ame LUMI MLN lidbad) vi: 9; , SSLAGUERODIOOUERDAVOROQUSDCQORAQIORIUNT PITTI 19 ‘3 Se D E g 24 OUTTA TTT QO in KO COUT TTT TT Do you remember way back when North College looked like this,— i and Middle had grass long enough in front of it for the cows to graze on,— 95 SAIUUCUACOLCUMAUEATELTCOUOUUN CUE UTMELO UT EEE = SET een ne ee ee ee ee ee EN MTT io “GODEX. 24 OMIM MMT COUT TTT O J and when the class of ’06 was initiated into the traditions of old Beloit in this manner,— ‘, i’ Va OO and Ed Meyer, ’or, who spoke at and Billy Allen, ’o2, called the Homecoming in ’24, played foot- signals on that champion team,— ball in these togs,— 96 . TTTUTITETE UCC CLL: anny OUT TT HLAVACUEUOHONGANGITOOTONCUUOUULONOLUUQUIOEN = = HAATOLONTOLEGURUNUANSNUENNTOGAIUENNIE@ Pe GepeExX 24 wie UU TTS COUT TTT and the Sophs handled the Frosh this way during one of the fights of ’06,— 7, u Ta and Ed Merrill, ’02, played football and the first of the Bunges, playing as well as broke track records,— fullback, bucked the line,— 97 PULAU EU QU TEGQ SANT RAUOR CG SELEY O 8 (EY Se a LNA LLG LD UDA NDONDNOUGUONDAUEADARIDRGUN ES SUIRAAUDAUAARURUGURLOLEDEERUUACAUAEDARTOAYEAUODLCONBILN OTTO and Tommy Mills, ’05, the redoubtable, was and H. C. McRae used to break qualifying as a coach playing short stop,— track records in this same suit,— and the old grads would study in this reading room of the old library,— HRITALUTAUEATRILUASTULETCERAUITEC@ i9 CODEX 24 OMT OU TTS OF and the Logan museum was the sight and a large crowd gathered to watch the first of the town way back in the ’70’s— shovelful of earth dug for Smith gymnasium,— z i @ DB and Art Hall was the chapel back in ’59? 99 TESTES a aaah a aaa NY 4] LAY AW ADLCNVUU EQUI ONOANCUHUDIDUEI Dire SUAAAGDAUGDEOGUUANARIADAUOULUCHOUINUOAUANYERUGDLGOIDIAN UTE UU CIC 19 G O 1D: EX 24 UU COUTTS OUT) eo Tuomas CHROWDER CHAMBERLAIN, LL.D., ’66 is the Emeritus Professor of the University of Chicago geological authority and editor of the Journal of Geology bd ’, iK 7 2 SASULCUUUULUURAUEANULYOOULCNUUAUEUTODURTORUE IEE CUT TT STUECTELAOULAESEMERERDORHOGE OD TTEAD {00 { Se A aeRO PRONE SOAS CRN «3.1 UUUSUEDUOLURLUANODNIMUNAUGS Sac i SH PNATOUANEALIUUULNALGNEUAUTATHNUULIE Pea ODEX 24 :HTATANULONAAHEMEHLANHATHINAENTR J Wiiuram H, McMaster, ’99 is the present Governor of South Dakota and a candidate for United States senator, Bia y, 101 PMPURRTUT UT TUTNT TTT IT TUTTI) ENT Me) eo = S iG ay ETT M MT 19 e ‘@) D E X 24 SAULT HOUUUUOUOUOULONUDOUHOUURCURUERDOUUEONNGRONED UGE COTTA TTD ce Jay N. Daruine, ’99 is nationally known for his political cartoons which are syndicated throughout the country, =a 102 SURE AUABOSHUDEGUAVGRGUSIUGH GR 0051011, SaaS eR NDE ATAGNEL LN ANUS co. (ULUIDULUINCDRULAMIULATINST ay CUTTS PUT EUITALTAUESLEALULUNOTEBLCETAUUNTE@ ima COE X oA OMIM MMT Joun L, GrirrirnH, 702 is the supreme arbitor of Big Ten Athletics, and editor of the Athletic Journal, i) Tee See SS Sa a a ae ae ae AS [AN UDTALUUCUNMUADUUNTBURARGSOROASUQNRONSEED UES Cet wake ee ee ON ee a ete ee OO K 103 2 ThE T OATES ERCESAT GEL 3 5a aa NSA YAU UATAEDUDLSORNDEORSTANGATNOGADEDELIN SAIUUUUUUUCUUEAUOANOLEQEATCUUUOEUTONEACU REA EE | THM NM I 1 9 oe C) 1) E x 2 4 UU QUT EES J Roy Cuapman ANDREWS,’ 06 internationally known explorer, was the leader of the Third Asiatic Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History, 2 = = ; ce = = = = = : = = | = = a cc] = S : E = = = | = = | = = = =a —— = = 2 = = f = = | = = | = 104 = . : : = STA UUUUAWDLULERO SLUR UVENRD OD G00 a NY RMT . 11 VHD UDAUAVIATONDOUOAUQOUAUDINLI ire AI alble KES TMM MTS Bis ko We Ga) BYE e.6 oy.) OTT EDITED BY IDMOINE 1K 18S Ib; 1B, AR Men’s Athletics Si Mi URES CREST DO Lar Et Tel ACTIN 1B 1B: INO) ik We Women’s Athletics ‘ % ee ee ee Se es a ae aa er ee uae ee SOL an ree ‘ POU ET UU TTT TK 106 a TOOUAALUGAMTACGAATOTEG AREAS 2 aR 3.111111 HUG UNANOAUONGAUUAGADIALUM Nis a a —_ PUTMAN MITOTIC mae AEX 2 4 OTT TTT TT Tuomas E. Mitts Director of Intercollegiate Athletics = s = = ES = S S = = = = = = 107 SMM ___ AMIN a TTT TTT TT CF %, aS SUUTUTTT EN TMM MTS 19 CODEX 24 UALOLELLALSAHEAATHL ELLA : COUT TTT TTT SASTUUUAUUUUUEAUURYOUEOHULCUUUUOOUTODOLLE UT ETE S Epmunp J, Oscoop Assistant Athletic Director HE -G Oa Dan aN Se eral Since the debut of Thomas E. Mills as director of Beloit athletics and the installation of E. J. Osgood as track coach in the fall of 1920, Beloit has enjoyed a Golden Age in athletics. For several years prior to the arrival of “Tfommy’, Gold athletics had suffered a severe slump. Mediocre and even disastrous seasons had been suffered in all sports, with the possible exception of the period of the S. A. T. C. regime. Beloit was athletically ‘down at the heel.’ With Coach Mills in charge of football, basketball and baseball, and Coach Osgood assisting him with the football and basketball squads, and taking charge of the track squad, Beloit rapidly began to show signs of an athletic recovery. Each year since the start of this athletic renaissance has found Beloit teams winning more consistantly and the general caliber of Beloit’s athletics improved. Thirteen out of nineteen possible championships have been won by the Gold in the last four years. This year, the fourth since the return of Coach Mills to his alma mater, Beloit won both state and midwest conference championships in football and finished basketball season without defeat, winning the state title and tying with Carleton college for the midwest championship. Prospects are good for successful track and baseball seasons. The Golden Age in Beloit athletics has indeed arrived. 108 CUATRO ODGGQSBPACGG AU G0€0 G0 00 8G ne TON Ta DANES RDRUUONUEDDIATORR GALLUS) SLE Wee TURE AN ER UPS VGBEE DAUM EA OUT EH ANG BYRAUTTE 23H) IIa RE RN a A RRP DS UEMATSU VUTEC UA TC DION AMT SRUNLUUR CLO AIYE Peer eee ee ENELUETALATELLLSTLETAESLUHLE@ Poot CE X 24 CTMATATANTMATATT COUTTS TTT Boarpb 1n ContTROL OF ATHLETICS Ae ee iee tele OFA hap P. W. BoutweEtu, Chairman 1, Mirus H. H. ConweE.u GCATLAND H. D. DENsMoRE Much has been done for Beloit athletics this year by the board in control of athletics. Improved conditions in the gymnasium have aided the candidates for the various teams, as has the provision of first class equipment for all men reporting for any sport. Beloit’s athletics are improving steadily due to the cooperative efforts of the board with the institution and its alumni. %, 109 oO CETEPOUSER EG SGA DCEEM OW GANG LA C1 SR a nN ATL AUU A VNUUDLADWODEUALOACCHEADIARUIN Fe SUT TT S} a 19 CODEX 24 t PITTI OL UEATDUOLUDUNOUELUHEANULVUDUUONEILORE CUO O y O President Vice President Secretary Treasurer RoBertT [RVINE Joun McAULIFFE Wi.ti1amM Lioyp CLIFFORD BRANDRUP ee OIL IC TP Ky o) FOOTBALL GrorcE DAHLGREN Pat Dawson RoBert [RVINE STanLEY Kuick Joun McAuLIFFE Raymonp McGaw GrorcE McCausLanpb Cart NELSon ERNEST OLSON BJARNE RossEBO Norris RowBoTHAM WESLEY SHAFFER Ben VONDRASHEK PauL Watson ARTHUR WHEELER Ciayton ApDIE THEODORE ALGEO Epwin ANDERSON CHARLES BUTLER Dave BuTLeR Joun CoNNELL So CLAY Currier BASKETBALL James LaFFIN ByaRNE RossEBo Ben VONDRASHEK PauL WatTson ARTHUR WHEELER RayMonp WIEGERT Joon CONNELL Joun McAvuLiFFE Raymonp McGaw BASEBALL James LAFFIN BJARNE RossEBO GLENN SCHRADER Ben VONDRASHEK Paut Watson ARTHUR WHEELER Ceci, BRown Pat Dawson RoBERT [RVINE Ra CAS [A h PUTT EU et Ciayton ADDIE Cart BaERWALD Dave BuTLER KENNETH CRAWFORD CLIFFORD BRANDRUP GEORGE DaHLGREN Joun McAULIFFE 110 James Moore EpwILu PRITCHARD Howarp THoMPsoNn QUUAGQ UDO OOEDDATQ RGU EORO8 OD G00 8 B01 ina Sa SR Ss LT OLD NGTUNU LUDO TOD GATES ANDI CU TTT TT TMM MMT ree CE X. 24 ecHTATLUAATTANATANTTUTNLNNNS COUT TTT Tae Isr KO bel Ue ae: Since its re-organization in the fall of 1921, the ““B”’ Club has been very active in Beloit athletic affairs. The renewal of activities in 1921 followed a long period of inactivity, and in the first year of its renewal the club, with forty-three members, resumed its old activities and added new ones. The membership this year is thirty-three. The club has done much towards aiding Beloit athletics in other ways than simply individual performance on the field. Beloit’s athletic conquests of the past four years have given membership in the club an added honor, and the distinction of membership is a coveted one. The ‘‘B” Club, in addition to entertaining visiting teams, campaigning for prospective athletes, and developing student spirit before contests, has added much to the social life of the campus by sponsoring all-college mixers in the gym- nasium after athletic contests. Members of the ‘““B” Club were entertained at a banquet at the Hilton Hotel by Beloit merchants and professional men at the close of the 1923 football season, a custom established in 1922. ee AR Ke es ee eS at eee Pe ee TOES Ta ee oe. Bee CERT Ue EU eee Fe Ren a _ a te ssi mm pr i 3 = a te Sa om E ; 2 ” ; = : +e Xe ‘ nt : . : it ee a ‘ io , ig 2 im g 3 - é 4 : Fi Sy ge %, ey . St ; SS : : . oe ; 3 2 5 x 7 eS ; on { { ¢ ? AS is po X k ‘oa , ee i 5 F: % s ae } ay 4 : : ae % a Bite om pe ae . ; SEC sem a ie ’ hy a} he ae “ ad 4 4 eae , 7 3 i % - a i : yo 2 4 4 : ‘ 7 fh POUT 111 MnPTTATENITTUTILITTLI UI M ee SUINALGDBUGDAUAUGARADUODDORULECESUUAUDATORTEANEDLEOUDILN ET MMMM MTS io OOD ne 24 @CAAANAATTANTATTHATNTTT ee Wr ON THE TOES FOR THE KICK-OFF OF THE Knox GAME ; TH Ee@rHe ie BRL AD BeRSS 3 OUT TTT TS ; ony Cheerleader Clyde Schryver and. his “assistants, Frank Keefer and Alden Fork, did some great work in leading yells at the football games last fall, and carried on the same old pep through the basketball season. Clad in white trousers and; swedters, the three lung encouragers kept Beloit spirit and pep at top notch dur g contests, getting in some great work on “The O-o-l-d_ L-o-o0-c-o-m-o-t-i-ve!! Peppy. Beloit! Oe Olson’,cand ‘thes: Deatmana Dumb Yell] , md 7 OO KEEFER SCHRYVER Fork 112 SUAAUATHUODAUALCANSRUADAOQULECAMOADGRNUANYEANODRERIDULD PUA BUT TTT Te CATT TTT 3 1] 6 PVA SSUES ENN i a ae eee SONU EEE EULER RETO es OUTTA 19 “CODE 74 s HUCUOLGNTOLIUTOURUTUSTOUOTLCEOAUERILE Carprain Carrott RADEBAUGH 1922 114 PLT ae TIT 2} = Fee Le a Ug e eee oe ee ee ee ee = = = e ‘J PO UTE OE i : OUTTA A E OUTTA TS 19 CODEX 24 Captain Joun McAutLiFre 1923 115 wii. — Siu UU TTL LO ETI LPOTSDULNIELILALUUIURUULIDVOCAASECOTEULOU DS ee ee eee a SLIOUAVULAVEOUIGOLRULLENURNOLCRNLUCATI NS O ag S CaRROLL RADEBAUGH Tuomas E. Mitts Guy W. KESSLER Crayton ADDIE ‘THEODORE ALGEO Epwin ANDERSON WILLIAM BuNGE CHARLES BUTLER Joun CONNELL Cray CuTTER GeEorRGE DAHLGREN Pat Dawson JAMEs FaRRELL RoBert IRVINE STANLEY Kuick NorvaL LANGWORTHY Joun McAutirre F. JosEpH O’ DONNELL CaRROLL RADEBAUGH SAMMY RANDOLPH Norris RowBoTHaM WESLEY SCHAFFER Haroup Tracey Ben VoNDRASHEK ARTHUR WHEELER Tuomas WALSH cet @1@) B) 5), Gz OPEIGERS PERSONNEL 116 OPT TT 19 2)2° VOAC Resse i O° O Tap SAS Os eaaD) Captain Coach Manager Halfback Fullback Tackle Center End en eiG Halfback Tackle Quarterback Guard End Guard Halfback Quarterback Tackle Halfback Halfback Guard Tackle Guard End . End Tackle HRERBOLOUEHOEAUGRGARONGG OD UH08 000 | ema ie 55S eS NN aaieRe enn MALTY MUSEO NADU TNCHI NINN tue a aa MN I Ee A NTNU LOAN UG DNR - IO SUINAUUUB UDMA ULUNDARUADDAAULEREUOLOOONUGNTEAUAOREAIOILD —— Es QCOUTUUT UTS =) a SLIGUATUOOAUTONUOATUGNATANOA ADELA 1401 © 11 ULUADUVAUADUNTOONUONOAUUOEOMIDVGIII ES LTT UE Joun McAutLiFFE Tuomas E. Mrtis CLIFFORD BRANDRUP Crayton ApDIE THEODORE ALGEO Epwin ANDERSON JosePH Brean CuHarLeEs BUTLER Davip BuTLER Joun CoNNELL Cray CuTTER Roy DaniscHEFSKY Pat Dawson Wa.LLacE HastTINGs STANLEY KvIcKk GEoRGE Loucks Joun McAuLIFFE GreorceE McCaustanp Raymonp McGaw Cart NELSON ERNEST OLSON Norris RowBoTHAM BJARNE RossEBOo WESLEY SHAFFER Ben VONDRASHEK PauL WaTson ARTHUR WHEELER 19 CODEX 24 WBOPZe eve Na a aY ete OO eee BALL; OPFICERS PERSONNEL ei I SQUAD Captain Coach Manager Halfback Fullback Tackle Tackle End Guard , End Halfback End Ourrterbace par Eire Guard Guard Halfback End Tackle Fullback Tackle Guard End 2 Guard Halfback Guard Center e) ? a TTT fe tr PITTITIMITI i 9 G ce 1B) E x 2 4 OPT UT tS REV LE Wa Osh elt9 2 2 sere a The 1922 football season, while not a distinct success, was an improvement over the several seasons before. Out of the seven games played the Gold won three, lost three, tied one and scoring a total of 124 points to their opponents’ 53 points. However, Beloit tied with Lawrence for the state championship. Coach Mills started the season with a fairly strong squad, but several of the players while not new at football, were new to Beloit methods, and almost through- | out the season the team was handicapped by weak tackling, indifferent inter- ference, injuries and ineligibilities. In the first game of the season, a practice game with DeKalb Normal at Hancock field, September 30, the Gold displayed a flashy and versatile attack, winning the game with the score of 34 to o. Playing a team which outweighed and outclassed them on the following week- end, the Beloit players bowed to Northwestern University at Evanston by a score of 17 too. The Gold line held well under the battering attacks of the heavy Purple squad, but the light Beloit backs could not penetrate the Purple defense. Northwestern of Watertown fell before a slashing attack at Hancock field on October 14, Coach Mills using twenty-three men who romped through the visitors for 64 points and preventing scoring on the part of the Lutherans. Lawrence was met at Beloit on Homecoming Day, the game resulting in a scoreless tie after four quarters of close and exciting play during which both teams passed up several chances to score and exhibited much fumbling. After leading by 6 to o until the last quarter, Beloit lost to Knox at Galesburg on October 28 by a score of 15 to 6. A blocked punt recovered by Knox led to the first Knox score, and an intercepted pass and a field goal completed the scoring. A second half come-back on the part of Lake Forest defeated Beloit at Han- cock field on November 11 by a 12 to 3 count. Beloit led by 3 to o at the half, but the Gold Coast eleven staged a strong attack in the last half and scored twice. The season was closed in a big game played with Ripon at Rockford, Illinois, on November 18. The Red eleven took an early lead at the close of the first quarter with 9g points, but a fighting Beloit attack during the remaining quarters finally gave Beloit the long end of a 17 to g score. 118 OUTS UTC CU Me aa ae SUTTER e Minin: 3 =. On UE UE KC 4 = za = = es ron 4 = = = a oa od al — = = — a = at wae == — et CO oss — cd = —) os a = = = = == = = os os = — PITTMMMM TK ETM MMT ims (ODEX 24 © HUA ATAATTAATTAAVHATTTHTTTTAS . 3 = At the close of the season letters were awarded to Addie, Anderson, Bunge, Butler, Cutter, Connell, Dahlgren, Dawson, Farrell, Irvine, Kuich, Langworthy, McAuliffe, Nelson, O’Donnell, Rowbotham, Radebaugh, Schaeffer, Tracy, Von- drashek, Walsh, Wheeler. SeURVinVig ghee Ostia | El eboe 18.92.25 Ss A SiO N September 30 Belo a 34 Derk a beeen. O Beloit October o Belov ae fo) Northwestern U. .. 17 Evanston October 14 Beloia ae 64 Nertbwestern Co 4. 0 Beloit Wctoberas (21 Below oer fo) Vawren ces sean... fe) Beloit October 28 DACita aa 6 Galore io eee 15 Galesburg November 4 Open November II Beloit eee 3 Pakeqbionests 700 ).80: 12 Beloit November 18 Belo. 17 FR TO apelus aeee eerste he, 9 Rockford LoOtalee WDClOL te. cu. - 124 Opponents: act 2 cots 53 s 119 = U0 NAN CSG RRR ENR 3.1 1A TUUVEDUAVNEHOUTUSUPACGDUEDIADEI Fe iS SALCAUEARE ESE CEU ELTA LLU EDGY ELAR EAU 5 a aa a NNER RTOSTUSSST. ©. 1 U DTD OUANQNOGNGCUAAUOVUAURORARGGRUGRIRHEG a TMM MMS (ie CO EX 24 a REET Vlei WO aio 32 5 eA osO aN The 1923 football season was the best the Gold has had in more than a decade. Six games were won, one tied and one lost. Beloit was undefeated in both Mid- west and State Conferences, winning the championship in each conference. Coach Mills started the season with a promising squad, and yet not a squad which gave great promise of developing into championship material. ‘Tireless effort on the part of Coach Mills and assistant coach Osgood, however, rapidly whipped the team into shape and in the first game, a practice game with DeKalb Normal, the Gold ran up a score of 33 to 7. After holding Northwestern Uni- versity to a 21 to 6 score the following Saturday, the Gold machine struck its stride and proceeded to sweep through the state and Midwest conferences. The greatest victory of the season from the Beloit standpoint was the 24 to 9 victory over Lawrence,—the first since 1910. The one blot on the season’s record was the scoreless tie with Lake Forest. The Gold Coast eleven, playing before a Homecoming crowd, exhibited the best football of their season, while Beloit was not up to form. Twenty men were awarded varsity letters at the close of the season. Those winning letters are: Captain McAuliffe, Nelson, McGaw, Rossebo, C. Butler, Addie, Olson, Vrondrashek, Wheeler, Rowbotham, Kuich, Watson, Anderson, Dawson, Schaeffer, Algeo, McCausland, D. Butler, and Connell. Fourteen of those awarded letters are expected back next fall and the 1924 season should be more successful than the 1923 season. Five men will be lost by graduation: Addie, Wheeler, Algeo, McAuliffe and McCausland, being seniors on the squad, while Connell has left Beloit. The line-up which started the majority of games during the season was com- posed of: C. Butler and Rossebo, ends; Olson and McGaw, tackles; Kuich and Rowbotham, guards; Wheeler, center; McAuliffe, quarterback; Vorndashek and Addie, halfbacks; Nelson, fullback. TUUATROSOGSGMDA LCR OATR OGTR ANU G DU Rp NL NST) ALLY AGDNNUNCADOMAGOU AMOR OLMIAMNiles AUT Piper ee Pa ee ee ee ee a Ae ee ere ee A eee SU MMMM MTD 19 C G) {fy E e. 24 COMMON COUT McGaw | a — a = rc = = = = i = cs rex a ce — = met — — 7 = — pare = as = -— ¥ = 7 = = — — = rl I = = — = oa — — — — = a i ia a eal a. mp of . Fi ‘ i } ! ea 1 ; Sy ae 3 is d 3 f i ea hs AN a 8 ‘ ¥ : a be wie : ; fea: Be i i ii as. ; 4 Se: la Se Aer oe — re A % = i p a : ‘ N t é 3 xe cones - 2 sa . ee ES oe hetiigns Oa ? NET SRS y = . “4 eg 3 ‘ a K_) ‘ ; ; ‘ ‘i 7 x b cag 2 NELSON Five Beloit players, Olson, Kuich, Wheeler, McAuliffe and Nelson were named for positions on the Midwest conference teams by sport writers and coaches. Beloit opened the season at home against the DeKalb eleven on September 29, winning the game easily by a score of 33 to 7. Tommy used twenty men in the game getting a good line on his material. Several freshmen were used. The line worked well, although outweighed slightly.. Passes and long runs accounted for Beloit’s scoring. DeKalb scored when Warner recovered a Beloit fumble and ran eighty yards for a touchdown. Playing Northwestern, at Evanston, the Gold suffered the only defeat of the season and suffered the loss of ‘‘ Pill”? Nelson for several weeks as the result of a dislocated shoulder. Beloit made numerous gains through the Purple, but could not pierce the tightened defense when near the Northwestern goal line. McElwain, of Northwestern, proved disastrous to the Gold going for gain after gain. Beloit succeeded in stopping other Purple backs, but seemingly could GT ee tie mee Sow ss Beloit crashes through the Knox line for 10 yards, SUNAAGUAUGDRUAAGADARUANADROUEGAUOURUANUORYEANGDLOODIEN PUTT TT OPTION eis ITM MS id CODEX 24 TUANLUNENAATTUNTANTNEATNITNLATIN i ip ia ee es 6 A a ee a es Se es GIT ela NUTTRe INERT EOn SURO TET Rh PLE ET Tile VONDRASHEK RossEBo McAuLIFFE not prevent gains from Captain McElwain. Two field goals by Pat Dawson accounted for Beloit’s six points. Both were made from the forty yard line. Nelson gained consistently until injured. Nearly three hundred Beloit students accompanied the team to Evanston and with alumni made a cheering section of seven hundred. Carroll was outclassed by a score of 24 to o at Hancock field, Beloit going for long gains and breaking up every attack launched by the Waukesha eleven. A blocked Carroll punt, recovered by Beloit on the Carroll twenty yard line and plunges to the goal line counted Beloit’s first score. A field goal and the goal after touchdown gave Beloit the lead at the end of the first period. Touchdowns by Addie, who recovered a pass over the goal line and by Ander- son, who recovered another blocked punt behind the Carroll line, with Dawson’s goals gave the Gold a final count of 24 to o. Beloit 40; Ripon 6, Here is the one time when Ripon tried a peculiar one on the Beloit line, Evidently it didn’t work so well, 122 SVRERUOUEOOTAEVEO ATO ATNG00C0 00 00900 1001 aaa a ee Hep SRA 951 VAN UIVEMAYATUIEAD IAL STEROL NCTM MUA UGARESUTEEQMRUAG OTE EQ G BVT BG OU TCU @ 4 ER aS Pa a me NTT STEIN 1 HLV VASA TN VSD TOTES ICHONTUNULCAUSUUCUNY MONG PULL 19 a. O D EX 2 4 OLUUATDLRLERUAOTEUEEHAULANSNGONOI ELLOS CAV TTTOTTTTT T strength at Appleton, on October 20, winning by a score of 24 to 9. The victory was the first in twelve years. “Kid” Addie was the star of the game, scoring two touchdowns after dashes of 68 and 85 yards. Vondrashek made the first touchdown in the opening quarter. Dawson scored after each of the touchdowns and in addition booted a beautiful drop kick from the forty yard line. Lawrence scored a safety in the first period and a touchdown in the final quarter when a bewildering pass attack was launched, which ended in Kotal going over the Beloit line. The flashy Lawrence quarter made several long dashes during the game. Beloit was outweighed by the Appleton team, and advanced dope had given Lawrence the edge. Playing at the Lake Forest Homecoming on the next week end, the Gold suffered a reverse of form and was held by a scoreless tie by the Red and Black. =) Kurcu CUTTER WHEELER Smothering Lawrence under a vicious attack, the Gold exhibited their greatest 7, i De Kalb couldn’t make much headway through the reliable Beloit line, Schaeffer apparently has complete charge on top of the pile, 123 SSPRODNSeMIPEE DNC ATAP RUHL I TUTE UL ULSIA I Meee ne near ee Se SUIABUUUOUGDRUGUGURAD AOA DROUDEGAUOUDODATQATOAUODLOOID AG PUTT Uk IUEUOMANTALIGVOURONUSENIENTORINUUNINICS 19 “OIE 24 ee eens aes PU OT COUT TOT iG) y OLson RowBoTHAM C. BurLer A wet field prevented the Gold backs from getting started, while the slippery condition of the ball made the Gold pass attack ineffectual. Costly fumbles at crucial moments and the fight always exhibited by Lake Forest against Beloit, completed the upset for Beloit. Throughout the game Beloit was on the offensive and was in Lake Forest’s territory most of the time. In the last quarter, Lake Forest threatened the Beloit goal, two passes being intercepted by Beloit, which would have spelled disaster for the Gold. Nearly two hundred Beloit students attended the game, returning downcast and hoarse from rooting. ‘The game was valuable in that it pointed out several defects in Beloit play to Coach Mills and enabled him to iron out the wrinkles before the Homecoming game with Knox. Homecoming was the best Beloit has had in years. Knox was defeated by the narrow margin of 6 to § before a record crowd of returned alumni. The day %; i rm OO Addie intercepts a Carroll pass on the 18 yard line during one of the early games of the season, 124 SHORE ACM RO SM ER EU TAC GGUS DGG AB LT D8 0 1 SaaS nN en Meng EN AN UITEPIREDD NCEA DELO AGAUGR ONG ANAIND. 3 SUT TT UU PUCUULUOTOUECTOURULUGEOLEDICEOLITLIES 19 KS: i} D E ok 24 OTT TTT COUUU TUT pS CALITO TT Dawson D, BuTLER SCHAEFFER was started by a parade and ended with a celebration on the campus. After the great bonfire and speeches, an all-college mixer was held in Smith gymnasium. The game was painfully close, keeping the spectators on their feet half of the time. Despite the closeness of the score, Beloit outplayed Knox throughout the game, carrying the ball for fifteen first downs while the Siwash were making two first downs. McAuliffe dashed 38 yards for Beloit’s only score four minutes after the game started. Beloit received and carried the ball to the Knox 38 yard line from where McAuliffe shot off tackle for the score. Pat Dawson, inserted for a try at the goal, missed the posts. A beautiful drop kick from the 47 yard line, by Senn, opened the Knox scoring and a safety scored in the third period completed their five points. In the second IK is ‘Mooney’ Vondrashek carrying the ball against Cornell was a man worth watching, Here we see him starting out for a good gain, 125 Mio. SE ETT TTT TTT ET PUTT TTT TT ik SS PUTALYEEREUTANODASTUAELETUUATS 19 COPE 24 SHTML TITRE cA on November 17, the game being played at Hancock field. Again the Gold emerged the victor by one point. The final score was 7 to 6. The game was one of the best seen on the Beloit field during the entire season. The victory gave a firm grasp on the Midwest title. Cornell displayed a crushing attack in the first period which steadily pressed the Gold defense back. Bracing on their own 15 yard line, Beloit held for downs. McAuliffe’s punt went wild and Kerwin, Cornell fullback, signalled for a fair catch on the Beloit 20 yard line. On the next play, Kerwin skirted the Beloit left end and crossed the Beloit goal line. The try for goal failed. Beloit came back strong in the second quarter, carrying the ball deep in Cornell : vi — a = p ay j bea ts be PS a © S . Nias Va 2 Cornell tries to punt out of the danger zone, but the fast Belott ends wouldn’t allow a good gain, The ball twirls out of bounds, 126 ALGEO Watson CONNELL period, McAuliffe passed to Cutter, who plunged over the Knox goal line, but Beloit was called off-sides, and the touchdown was not counted. After the close shave in the Knox game, Beloit faced the strong Cornell team = ma na = = = — = = oe wet I ca — = oa — — = oa I = = aed = = = i a = =a =o = ase = fest 4 Ss PU UE SVUDEDUSTOARUONEOTATCR A GURGG GREAT ED 101 |= ART TL TIONS NNL 1 MUERONNONTNUOROTT 34 JUN] U0 DANN SDRORLAUIRUIAIGUC ASLAN) TMM hee COE x 24 OTM MM MMT =e = = oo p= aw a =a } = | on =e = cc) — = = = = = 4 =o = = a) = ) oz = = = = = } 7 = Tl saat = = os wes = aa = =m | | | | 1 | } = == aoa = os — sa = = — a = = — — = — — = = = i =a = ie =a eat = = os hee Bs i ame 7 = 1 = — — en = 7 a % oi 2 rgd S ANDERSON HastTINGs McCausLanpD territory, where they lost it on downs. Cornell attempted to put out of danger but the kick was blocked by McGaw and Wheeler, McGaw recovering the ball on the 1o yard line. McAuliffe passed to Addie across the line and Dawson’s kick added the winning point. Play during the second half consisted of a punting duel between Kerwin and McAuliffe, both teams threatening at times. Nelson displayed some classy line plunging in the second half. Beloit closed the season with a one sided victory over Ripon on Hancock field, piling up a score of 40 to 6. Ripon was weakened through ineligibilities, while Beloit was in excellent form. The Gold pass attack worked well, Addie going over for two touchdowns on passes from McAuliffe. McAuliffe also scored two touchdowns and Nelson and Vondrashek each scored once. A fumble recovered Ripon attempts a gain around Beloit’s left end, but Butler pulls one of his driving tackles near the sidelines,—he never misses his man, 127 COUT TTT TTT = MMS MMM nn 19 Cy D E xX 2 4 SAUTE behind Beloit’s goal line, by Ripon, accounted for the only score made by the Red eleven. Beloit merchants entertained the Gold football men and other letter men at a banquet in the Hilton hotel in December after the season. Sixty merchants and professional men of the city were present and an equal number of Beloit athletes and faculty members. SHAS SOeN TS. UV MBAS Kay: September 29 Belotteee em. 33 DeéKal ba aia eee U, October 6 Belotaaeer: 6 Norehwesternae) ee 21 Octobe tae Belovtetep ae = 24 Carrol lesen eres O October 20 Beloitaaer 24 October sae 7, Beloiteeeee fe) iva Kes Ores i aeaeeenee O November 3 Beloit ey. 6 KnOxgee eae. ee 5 November Io Open November 17 Beloriiees ars 7 Cornel a ee eee 6 November 24 Beloit tee ae 40 Ripon 22 a nena 6 lotakw belotte nana 140 Opponents. eee 54 128 HE LACT 1TNMNNItiini. 5 © - : : a 4 =) : ey Q : : a) : OTST ESTER SOD EU ETT AET EE OTODES ROU BU C0 A a a a A SN ae AN TNT UNAS o L101 110 000101 TAL UVLUANADULVGUAITAUWN LOIN) UU ETM MMM MS i CEDEX 24 OMT COUTTS COUT Caprain-ELecr Cart NELSON 1924 129 ELSES ALLL LLL a aaa a NNT « , CA VU OUT OVANARUODDURLOAUCEGARINNOTLI SUIDAGUBUODRDAVEMAOUADONOGULGLOUSUUDATORTEAUODLEAIDILNS: OTT EMO SA ARTULONTUEGTEALUTINELENICHNNLLIT@ 19 CODES a4 SMM —= — = we ond ot ai at I = ss eS = = = = et = — = = =a — —, = — cal oo a = mS z= Cy I ra = sat os = — os = — O RES Bev eASN Se OcOe Bb Av iaicee orc) 20 eae Under the tutelage of George Dahlgren, former Beloit football and track star, Beloit’s 1923 Freshman squad developed into a scrappy, strong eleven which gave the varsity severe workouts on scrimmage nights. ‘The squad was the first Fresh- man squad since the World War period when Freshmen were made eligible for varsity competition. Though it was originally planned to match the Frosh against other Freshman and prep school elevens t hese plans were never carried out, and the Freshman squad was used merely as a developing agent for future varsity candidates, and as a scrub eleven to scrimmage against the varsity. The Freshman squad, once the season was under way, consisted of about twenty men who remained out throughout the season. Practically all of these men were players with considerable high school and prep school experience, and among the graduates of the squad Coach Mills has some promising candidates for the 1924 varsity squad, especially in the line. Outstanding among the Freshman squad members were many experienced linemen, though backfield material was rather scarce. Calvert, former Rockford high school star, is a powerful tackle, and captained the Freshman team. Other promising men on the squad were O’Brien and Vandolah, backs; Monyhan, former Kemper Military academy star, and a valuable lineman, and Childs, Hinsdale high school star, who promises to give other candidates a real fight for the center position on the varsity next fall. ‘s a % eo 130 = — = om I = ear 1 a a = =a = = oat =a io — — ees = 1 = = et =— =a — -= = = = — —y == = = = = = — = — ved — = = wa = oat aad rea iat — SAUUCUUUUIUOMAREANOITOUTCRUUUERENDATEN EDIE STUAGUUSODDAQUSHR DAN ORGUOGLGH ODUBYO 1 imisaimataeanSeie y NRT PEI UU AUNNNN NIAID MONAT OAUALLCRANRN EOS UDIVARODODENAY Md EQUSURENGA GUNS AAG ANTEIDSTESRSRBUD WO O84 TUNITY. Co Tie Pa SR SS SPS IN es 6 REET eae SO ae: | OPT TU A 1923 19 CODEX 24 ra OO 2) SVVGVENUDNUNERODUG ALU DAUUREUDONUONUNENIORN ONIONS: lis CAIUS 132 G ( all COUTTS iG SAP OUULANNOUEANDUANOEROEDIOONIRURUEWORUILORLINIC@ ; e GO NVIATODVGTAVELRUAVELUAARTODIROLERULURUAU ON EOU TIAN ORTLE OUT UT CATT 133 Captain Raymonp McGaw 1924 19 CODEX 24 = = om = aaa = = = = = er = = S = = = fees = = fr SAPMAVALGTOULUTGENUDUSNULATICEDA ARTE 5 Mio CTC TTT OTT ‘ = 2 ——E — SH) AHUTOLOVTALICTBUUOIIIANLETTOTIINILITFS (0 CODE or CMM MMM MMMM OUT TOT TT 192.38 VA Rost Dy Belg eke Bye eg eben Oem aD OFFICERS James LaFFIN. : ; Capiain Tuomas E. Mitts : : } : ' ; Coach Maurice FITzGERALD : Manager PERSONNEL Epwin ANDERSON , ; ; Guard VINCENT BLAKE : ; : . : Forward CHARLES BUTLER . : Guard Joun CONNELL ; : Forward GEORGE DAHLGREN ; Guard Wattuace HastTiIncs : ’ E , Guard FRANK KEEFER ie Forward J. BREwsTER KIMBALL ; Forward JAMES LAFFIN : ; Forward Wituiam Luoyp : ; : : : Forward Joun McAUuLIFFE ; : : Center Raymonp McGaw . : ; : : Guard 'e ByaRnE RossEBo : ; : ; Guard | JAMES SURPLESS Forward Ben VoONDRASHEK . : : : Forward . Paut Watson : : é ‘ . Guard RaymMonp WEIGERT ' : : : Forward ARTHUR WHEELER : ; ; Center WALTER WINKENWERDER ; : : Guard 134 SLUGEUMUADOATSSAOTACGMTDEULGH ON GO002 1601 ORR eee er TRENT RTE | MUNN LRN A MNSMOCNNMA ss LULMINTATINSIUANEINIA Secu SUS RELMTT RAR TSCA USES CE CENA EDC TLC a RE re Ere SN EPCS SGETNTSANATIODPRAAT © 19000000 0210005 Vita i0D GE Ua ETAOTINOTOMLNTOD f SSSUUUUUUULURACOATOLEOUNUCUUUUUONAN ATURE EAGT ree ee a ee ee SM PUTT TEE = = z 8. = = - = = = al - PUTT Raymonp McGaw Tuomas E. MItis Sam RanpDOLPH Epwin ANDERSON CHARLES BUTLER Roy DaNIscHEFSKY Wa .uaceE HastTINGs James LaFFINn WiuuiaM Lioyp Joun McAUuLIFFE Raymonp McGaw Rospert O’Brien ERNEST OLSEN BJARNE RossEBO JAMES SURPLESS Joun VaNDOLAH Ben VONDRASHEK Paut Watson RayMonp WEIGERT ARTHUR WHEELER Frank WICKHEM mC ODEX .24 Re tea HAST ole AYR by Ag Kure BeAl la [i OFFICERS PERSONNEL a ie) So OUTTA TS ssa p QU AD Captain Coach Manager Guard Guard Forward Guard Forward Forward Center Guard Forward Guard Guard Forward Guard Forward Guard Forward Center Forward HOTEL TUDE TERRY PUDET REET ELT TAUINENTTUTTUNEELTET LE UK S oc ce Sem Sewn ne em per eo apg vin nope ee ane ee eee Cec DEE EC Eg A) HLETULAVTALCUTRULNTLSLETOTLORIITIUR EO 19 O D EX 24 STM MMMM MTT i J AZ y rr. 4 rad + fe ee + 3 ae Pe eS ie eo eR 2S ae” REV LEW 2O F192 Sa eagorO IN Beloit closed the 1920 basketball season with both State and Midwest cham- pionships in its possession. ‘Thirteen of the fifteen scheduled games were won by the ‘‘Blue Devils”, and no games were lost in either conference. ‘The season was nearly a replica of the 1922 season in which twelve straight games were won and both titles captured. DePauw, played before the holidays, proved too much for the Gold squad, which had been at work but a short time, and the game was lost by a score of 22 to 18. In the regular season games which followed Beloit met defeat but once, that at the hands of Lake Forest. The Gold Coast five, heavy and possessing uncanny shooting ability, swept the Blue Devils off their feet early in the game and the final score was 30 to 22, with Beloit on the short end. Games played with Cornell, Coe, Carroll, Lawrence, Knox, Ripon, and St. Viator’s were all clean victories for the Gold, however, and the season was ended with a smashing victory over Lake Forest in a return game, the score being 28 to 10. The closest of these games was a 24 to 20 victory over Cornell. In an earlier game the Mt. Vernon team was defeated by a score of 28 to 16. The largest score of the season was piled up in the second Coe game, the Blue Devils running wild for a 48 to 8 victory. When the season opened Coach Mills had the same lineup which completed the successful 1922 season, Laffin and Connell at forwards, McAuliffe at center, and McGaw and Winkenwerder at guard. In addition to these men, Watson, a valuable guard, and Vondrashek, a forward of great ability, were added to the list of players eligible. Wheeler, former Lawrence star, and Lloyd and Rossebo, reliable substitutes of past seasons, were also available, making the squad one of the strongest in Beloit history. At the close of the season practically every member of the first team was nominated for mythical all-state and all-Midwest teams. 136 QV RLEOUHAEREWDL GRE NTOGA GD 00100 £00 a TUN RST NA ST NNN A MUTA = PUVA NAA A RTUUUYET ETA VRASOUREL SUR LAA URAL): iNet e eee a ee ee UL EL ee 7 1 ate Oa % pe : a . - s e = °. tat | “din ; ‘ = : bane % ae ‘ : ir eye Boeke ° + , . : es - 4 % { . a A f 7] ¢ t . 4 Pe Mi s : ‘ i f : P ; | ‘ : ‘ ga i : J : } ; t Me . i a. a o : | gee we : : : r a Mi ai 7 a i - , is ‘ % i ¥ : y ’ Pt 3 “a ; ' i ; . . 5 . Ss . s ia : e ee ° oa ; 3 : ed . ae if { : e a . Be 5 2 : z, Me ee : A Ss P 3 i. , i { . ae nine ht, is ; igh bala Ee aa , ; P a Fae bal . . Don Ser mn an K ; TOT TTT OETA UT AUNTS BSE EA IG VN TY A A ANT Lc SS cm RP ae ON OREN OE RE ee BUN REMOTE eee TS 1111011 ce ae sls cos sdo SAS CAUCUS LU a a etn SO NPT w 141111111 SU AINTUGUONAUUAQEVVLUGGLINUQEGUULE al Captain “Jimmy” Laffin, playing his third season in the Beloit uniform, was high scorer in State and Midwest, making 42 field goals and 49 foul goals for a total of 133 points. In addition his fast and reliable floor work made him a most important factor in every game. “Johnny” Connell, running mate to Laffin, was rather erratic at times, but possessed an uncanny knack of breaking loose from opposing guards for seem- ingly impossible shots, and made up in fight and aggressiveness for his lack of finish. _ John McAuliffe, playing his second year as center with the victorious Blue Devils, was not up to his 1922 form due to illness and injuries, but notwithstanding these handicaps outplayed every opposing center, aided immeasurably in the short pass game of the Gold, and did his share of the scoring. “Baldy” McGaw made even better his reputation as the best standing guard in the Midwest. His ability to take the ball off the backboard and tear down the floor in smashing dribble was one of the outstanding factors of Beloit’s game. Winkenwerder, playing his fourth year on the Gold team, played his usual consistent, steady and fast game at running guard, being an important cog in the Beloit floor game and adding greatly to Beloit’s scoring. Winkenwerder’s graduation was a severe loss to Beloit athletics. Watson and Vondrashek, new members of the squad, made good account of themselves on every opportunity, as did Wiegert, Wheeler, Rossebo, and Lloyd, other members of the varsity squad. ; DEA .OeNM ES UMVieNVTAGR, Y. Delotta ocoee mare 18 Wee uweeee he 22, Beloit cate 28 Gore laee ease oe 16 Beloita gene ene 34 COC aee eR aT eee 8 16 DelOie ee ae are 29 (Catered eh at ee 15 Beloits a aee. 22 aawrencen ener e o: 13 Beloit ae evra 32 Grapes St Mea. ew 15 Béloitum. «ans ae 31 [Goyer 25 ee ee 7, Delotty ae eae ZZ Laket Forest: 25.1.3 33 Belotars aed cette 7, LEC INCE Seen nea ii Delotta. ace: 24 Core liek 0: DE stole eet ee 48 (Core Races fa ee 8 | BY al Gyn Sa Oe a ae 20 aT Ol ed eae oe te i°98 Belo pens se 1g DigiViatOn ..ant oe 9 Beloit teen se 28 | Mig ci8) Sue Beene peoneaee 13 {eYatoviee ts . Gee poms oy a keel Orestim. sau toes 13 gta) ai beloiters es 6308 ODpGnenicn. see 231 Games Won: 13 host mee 137 MUM TC Om ETM MTS Po COLOR 34 SMM MMM MMT Bnd SATA A PEPU MA MMEL ERAT OIE CE BINH 27 S100 001 I RRS ee i i a eg Si Nc ON A a RR OR ce LAY T TTA ATCO UC LTOALSHISHMITIEAAINAD SUEY: CUTTS UU OU LAFFIN McGaw Robe V LEW = Ove sO ee oe eA ON The 1924 basketball season was without doubt one of the most successful that followers of the Gold have ever known. Handicapped at the outset of the season by the loss of two of last year’s regulars, the Blue Devils plunged into a hard schedule and emerged without defeat at the end of the fourteen-game season. The state championship was won for the third consecutive year and the Mid- west title shared with Carleton college of Northfield, Minn. A post-season game on a neutral floor was agitated considerably following the finish in a tie with Carleton, but a faculty vote disapproved of the contest, and the two schools remain joint holders of the title. Winning of all the fourteen games on the Beloit schedules gives the Gold a record of thirty-nine games won out of forty-one games played in the last three years. During that period Beloit has not lost a single game in either the Wis- consin Intercollegiate conference or the Midwest conference. Walter Winkenwerder, guard of four seasons, was the only member of the 1922 squad lost by graduation, but scarce two hours before the opening game with Hamline, Johnny Connell, captain of the squad, was declared ineligible because of low scholarship, and the team was left minus his aggressive floor work and leadership. “Peck” Wiegert was inserted in the hole and played a good game against the Hamline five, but an injury prevented his playing from the Hamline game until the last week of the season and it was necessary for Coach Mills to revamp his team. “Mooney” Vondrashek, who played the opening game at guard, scoring six field goals, was shifted to forward for the Knox game, and ‘“‘Swede” Watson was placed at running guard. This combination worked successfully against 138 AVMANGEAGUAEOTAYARGGUSHE0 000801 181 a ENR aN ORIEN TNGRE NTNU (HUSA TANITVINLALGILODIGliMe sully SA)PRCUNLGVEGLIUNGUUUDESRULUSTOROURERUTE CO 19 'e G) iD E x 2 4 QA A Eg ee TRU eMC CE UI) UPL LUNG) Se ee Ea i ooh cL VUEBIUSET Lg 202 107 TIL “oe a ne Raa a SQM eR mE De EO ae CUS MMMM LUYCULUTGIAVCUNDIGRELNAGAUGRGG UNA OUCRANCGUUEE Zi z = = he = McAuLIFFE VONDRASHEK Knox and the combination of Laffin and Vondrashek, forwards; McAuliffe, center, and McGaw and Watson, guards, finished the season. The lineup was in many ways the strongest that has ever represented Beloit. Following the disqualification of Connell, “‘Baldy’”? McGaw, star back-guard of the 1922 and 1923 teams, was elected captain of the squad, proving unusually suceessiul as ay leader. Beloit opened the season against Hamline on the home floor. The visitors got away to an early lead, but once the Blue Devils struck their stride they quickly over-hauled Hamline and though the final score of 30 to 28 was rather uncom- fortably close there was little doubt at any time as to the ultimate outcome. Following this first Midwest victory over Hamline, Beloit invaded Galesburg, defeating Knox by 24 to 16 in an afternoon game. Beloit was never in danger and the new combination of Laffin, Vondrashek, McAuliffe, McGaw and Watson worked smoothly throughout the game. Dubuque came to Beloit for the next game, bringing along a reputation built around a victory over Lawrence. ‘The Iowans proved ineffective against the whirlwind passing and close guarding of the Beloit team, and were defeated 34 to II. The following week ‘‘Tommy’s” Blue Devils invaded Iowa, defeating Coe by a score of 44 to 17, and taking the measure of Cornell on the next night by a score of 35 to 26. By this time the new combination had begun to reach the height of its efficiency and neither of the Iowa fives presented great opposition. In a return game with Coe on the Beloit floor the Blue Devils played the slowest game of the year, the final score being 35 to 17. Coach Mills used seven- teen men against the Kohawks the regulars playing but sixteen minutes altogether. The game was the first for which Freshmen were eligible and several were given an opportunity to display their ability. Lawrence invaded Beloit determined upon revenge for the humiliating foot- ball defeat administered in the fall, and gave the Blue Devils a close run, the ae wo © EN TMM MATS ‘eel Gh Gl BIE. Gres OMIM MITT COLT SULEAUUUALODNOAAUAONOLORADROUUUGUEDNUDAUONYEAULILEDIBLLNS 7 Qeentee mr ss a ee ee eee CID eT SASTUUUAVOLUUEAUAYOUEOUIUCUUUUUONTON ATOR UT ETE Watson Lioyp final score being 25 to 21. The Appleton team displayed a stubborn defensive game and scored on numerous long shots. “‘Jimmy” Laffin starred for Beloit, totaling eighteen points. Ripon fell at Ripon in the next game by a 32 to 19 score. Laffin again led the scoring, with Vondrashek close behind him. In the return game with Ripon the Redmen displayed a vicious and determined attack which kept the scoring much closer, though Beloit won by a final score of 35 to 26. Breitzman of Ripon worried the Beloit guards, while Vondrashek of Beloit caged eight field goals and four fouls for twenty of Beloit’s points. Carroll college gave Beloit followers the worst scare of the season in Smith gymnasium. The Waukesha quintet got the jump on Beloit and led at the half by 9 to 6. In a frantic come-back in the second half Beloit tied the score, but Carroll again spurted and with less than a minute of play remaining led by 19 LOmrs. Shooting from the mae of Carroll players, Vondrashek dropped the ball through the basket just as the final gun barked, giving Beloit a one point margin. Beloit rooters were nearly hysterical during the last seconds of play, and when Vondrashek’s shot cut the nets they swarmed onto the floor, nearly tearing the gym down in their excitement. Beloit returned to normal form in a return game with Dubuque at Dubuque, winning by 49 to 35. The score was the largest piled up by the Blue Devils in any game during the season, while Dubuque’s scoring was likewise the heaviest against Beloit during the season. The return game with Carroll at Waukesha was rough from the first whistle to the last gun, Beloit winning by 14 to 11. On the following afternoon a return game was played with Lawrence at Appleton, Beloit winning by a score of 21 to 18. Beloit closed the season against Cornell on the home floor, winning 41 to 32. The Cornellians made the game fast in the first half, but in the last half the Blue Devils broke loose and gained a comfortable lead. The game was rather rough 140 STRAUEOURBHGDOSOUATRRUAGSY OA GRUHG0 100 = mam a a SE ARAN LAGNA co |G NIT RORMOSLENIGL TEE TOL ‘19 a: O D E 86 24 OTT TTT TT - = 1 SaRUM MAT RSL ELU UU UUTRULLLUCOEE UL CQL LORD 2 ee RIEL SS)EUETUACUTULEATELUULUTLULNEENNAUTUIE@ 19 C. O D E 4 ©: TTATAULUDUAELLEHAWULAVEATNAD BILAN COUT TOT TT OTT RossEBo WHEELER and many personals were called on both teams. Laffin and Watson of Beloit were both sent to the bench. “Jimmy” Laffin and McAuliffe, both playing their last game of basketball for Beloit, played probably their best game of the season. ‘‘ Jimmy” led in the scoring with five field goals and four foul throws, while ‘“‘Mac” scored five times from the field and played a flashing floor game. Vondrashek again proved his ability as the best shot in the conference, caging the ball six times, and sinking one free throw. Four of the victorious Blue Devil squad will be lost to Beloit by graduation, t he loss of Laffin and McAuliffe being a severe one to Coach Mills, as is the loss of Wheeler and Lloyd, reliable substitutes. The loss of these men leaves but four of the eight men awarded letters available for next year’s play. With these men, however—Captain-elect Watson, McGaw, Vondrashek, and Rossebo—and with the remainder of the squad in addition to a number of promis- ing Freshmen, Coach Mills has the nucleus of another championship quintet. In addition to Lloyd, Wheeler, Laffin, and McAuliffe, the squad loses “‘ Peck”’ Wiegert, three-year letter man in the sport, and Frank Wickhem, who proved of real value in several games. = Captain-elect Watson showed improved speed over his form of 1923, and this as = ee act = ee Se ms Cos ico Baas ae as J oN a eel os Gaol seis a os = — oS om aS eS ae — ead J = — ad va ma aed = cd 7 cas = OF ©, m Captain McGaw again distinguished himself during the 1924 season, playing the same great defensive game and exhibiting all the old fight and smashing dribbling ability of former seasons. ‘‘Baldy” will be a big factor in whatever success may befall the Blue Devils next year. combined with his size and his thorough knowledge of the game made him an 141 SUINDAGUNAODAUAUGVLANINDONROLEOLOOUDLDATORYEAUADLOOIDILV ol LEAS aaa NN UAT ALN TOUDAUATOUDURVEAUEUEAMIALOIU Es tf 22S EEUHENE VEU LUGS ASANULTUAT LAO UTENY UU 1 7S a A EP RE PN SEDER A PVS UOTSNINT oN AUUOLNUCUUNNNRALUNAGUNNEANOACUSNNTOLEED HACTOLUNYOMLGTRARULNANULOSICHILUARILEC@ io Or Gor WIEGERT WICKHEM indispensible factor in the Beloit guarding. ‘‘Swede” also took the ball off the backboard in nice shape, worked into the passing game well and scored often. Vondrashek led both state and Midwest conferences in scoring with 63 field goals and fifteen free throws totalling 141 points. ‘“‘Mooney” has unusual shoot- ing ability, and played the floor nicely as well. McAuliffe at center was the same slim Montana flash that outdistanced all opposing centers in 1922 and 1923. His speed, elusiveness, clean handling of the ball and shooting ability made him one of the most dangerous men in the Mid- west. During the season he scored forty times from the field and eleven times from the foul line, for 91 points. Able substitutes in Lloyd, Wheeler, Rossebo, Wickhem and Wiegert, who was injured early in the season, and others enabled the first five to keep in trim. When- ever the Blue Devils piled up any considerable lead they were relieved by the lesser lights. 142 OURSQOORRAGSQGANGRUSO0NG0 QB 00650 128 1: REI itemise gine ien mp NED jo SUUNUTStp Ui SupSUNUNENNT T SQECQNE UNSSC S CESMEOS TMCS ) 1) 01 000000000000) 000N0i0G000NNIEI Mac UTE COUT TTT (7 ih SUTALGUALNGLUAAUUELRUOD AGRON EGU ORDER ATAATEAUODLODLDAAG LATUUAVTANEGVAULNALSNOUITIEBNANIAII@ is CODEX 24 3 wee zn : SEASON SUMMARY Delores et ee tte: 30 Elamnlatierm set, ca 28 Belo, ov cera 24 KnOxeeeee ne ir ce. 16 DelGitaetss ext. o8 34 Dubuawesser 2c8 48. II Beloitiggrea ctr vat 35 Gopre riers: fc. 26 Belortun sate 44 Oot a re lim Beloitetnn nae: 35 (Oar ere eis etn cs 17 Deloie es, eee 26 Mavrenctemtc.4 17 21 Del OM az rn Co 32 Ripe wears sever 22a 19 Delores a an! as Ripon act 26 Beloit mean ys 20 Carroll sia ae 28: 19 Beloit teaene- geet pete Ke DDubUqUCcE eee 35 lol (ee ee 14 Carroll yarer tet ee II Beloiteee ey jas 21 TawWwrenc ees oe ae 18 BelOi tL Pee oa 4I Cornel a ees esac 32 Deloitte. 441 Opponents m5 a4: 293 Won, 14. Lost, None. TUUUATUCUDEANUALEAOORSUOUUCNRELAGTITUNUITIERI® 143 MMMM ' UINGLEVHUUORUALUURURIODANAOHULGUORUANUARTRAUODLOIUILIC = SA) PMUUOLTUUIUOAUAUIUGNAUOSTOGNANIAERT@ 19 es UC) D E xe 24 7 COMM MMMM % KX) SZNTUUUUNUEUOUUMORTOLUUATCUUUUOENTODOATORTT ELT FRESHMEN) BAS KE IB Ages OU ne The Freshmen basketball squad this year produced some promising timber for future varsity teams. Starting practice early, the squad worked faithfully through the season. Several members of the squad were given varsity uniforms when they became eligible at mid-quarter, and finished the season on the first squad, giving good accounts of themselves when substituted in a game. No regular games were played by the Frosh, except encounters with the local high school, which were easily won by the Frosh. Nearly all the squad was given opportunity to work in these games. Once the squad began to develop the Beloit style of play, great improvement was noticeable in the squad, and individuals began to loom up as varsity possi- bilities for the future. PERSONNEL Harry BorcHARpT : Aan ‘ } : Center Caru BROLIN : : ; : : : Guard RosBert De Pau ; : : : : : Forward THomas FirzGERALD é ; : . : Guard ALDEN Fork : . ‘ : : Forward KELLY GARRIGAN : : ‘ : Forward RosBert O’ BrRiEN . : ; : Center Howarp RoseE . f . : . Forward THEODORE SCHROTH . : : : ; ; Guard Hapiey SMITH. ar eG iara TRAVERS SMITH . : : : ; . Guard JoHN VANDOLAH . : ; S Guard DonaLp WItson .. : ; ; : . Guard 144 SUMADURUAOORNEOROAAUGAUNTOUGR GD TLEAS 100 Sa NN APY EL NNO RNC c)UQOUOUAVOAVONGDUOSUIQDEAUUGCLDERUUIM ES COTM TTT v, i CUT TTT 145 aay SAN ULUNYODUGAGUBUGULGW 1500120628 OBNSDRUEL0 10 ea SSS a SSDS TDRSS IST ©1710 58 1740 JAVA MMGUANUIUGUGBLUN SUATIMGAB INTL OUT CUT 19 CODEX 24 Caprain EpmunpD SCHACHT 1922 146 Be Se ae oy eh Re Re Ee ee Ce, ae EE i) UY a) ELM UT a PRNMNGLUESUATIB EHDA GUNEOOSEUSDEDUGUGONG 01 RuR Sais Sesame a eee Sa TIT 1 1011 LN GUN NATTA AUT Nee POUT DOU TOU OUTTA ES OUTTA it ry + fon | Q B : ics jaa) : isa] ‘ea a = 4 8 : . O : O ; a a O ON rot : 2 2 STVANGEUIANUTOGITNUTTVAUCATYEAVTOENTOUUT TTT een eee nT 1 7172 1)708 1070 NIEATTNTTTITIESE ELA HU UU OS © J 7 h COUT UE 2 ETUC AMUTUDDTTAEUOGENTUOE0 DOLD DLL SNR NNNRENNCNPURC OMS co |LG(00N0iN000U000NNHIIGTL Vs, - PMU 19-2520 Ve Aga ealeayg EDMUND SCHACHT Tuomas E. Mitts ‘LED BLatr Pat Dawson JAMES FETHERSTON STANLEY Fosse RoBeErtT [IRVINE JAMEs LAFFIN James MonaHan CLAIRE PIERCE WiumotT PIERCE ByaRNE RossEBO EpMUND SCHACHT GLENN SCHRADER OFFICERS PERSONNEL WALTER WINKENWERDER 148 24 Best brAg isis Capiain Coach Pitcher First Base Pitcher, Outfield Second Base Third Base Short Stop Left Field Pitcher .. Catcher Center Field : Catcher : Right Field Pitcher, Left Field SQUAD UTE EE UNTRUE REASON EMAIL ASHLEE GUUT TANT 9S ROO 8 OH HO cS ee OE PEO SUSE SRL pS SN SOWETO © ATU AINNRARDELTOORRUIEOIIRMN UIA ANGR AOCaN YEE SHUATUANTULUTEUAUAITHHTLSTANLLT 19 CODEX 24 MMMM = . Oe? See VeAwhacw Maeve beAgo Feb AT S30 UA D OFFICERS STANLEY FossE . é ; . Captain Tuomas E. Mitts é : Coach PERSONNEL ep BLaArr : : f : : : . Pitcher Ceci, Brown : First Base Pat Dawson Third Base STANLEY FossE Second Base Wauace HastTINGs . ; . Outfield Frank HEPBURN Ne : . Catcher DEARBORN HuTCHISON ’ Catcher RoBertT IRVINE. Richt Field JamMEs LAFFIN : ; é Short Stop Raymonp McGaw ; ; ; ; Third Base ByJARNE RossEBo ; Outfield 2 GLENN SCHRADER ' Outfield =| © ‘PauL WaTson ae ; Center Field = a Bren VoONDRASHEK ; Lettr Field = 2 ARTHUR WHEELER. : ; ; hee Gatcher = = RayMonp WIEGERT . : ae Pitcher = = WALTER WINKENWERDER , . ; Pitcher = = 149 = ai i MMS [A CE ae a ee ae OTe TDR Cee _ POUT ELE = Cet as — — ba) = ms -_ = Ss = = SB a 5S = i= = oat = —= = toa = a bas} ©, a or o 2) =— = = = eat) fost ee — = al = = = sat caad — at ap koe = = mes = Bast = eed) comet ao aes a = SVRUUUULUVTALEGTERUUAITOLUDTCELUETS i9 CODEX. 24 [ ROEV LEEW OF 310992 DAB Ayo BAS ies ALON Winning five out of nine games and scoring 50 points to their opponents’ 56, the 1922 baseball team just about broke even on the season. Injury to Ted Blatt, pitcher, early in the season, seriously handicapped the pitching staff of the squad and this weakness was felt at several times. The team was fairly good in the field and on occasion batted well. The season opened against the University of Wisconsin at Madison, the Gold players losing by a score of 8 to 3. Beloit led in the fourth inning, but Elliott’s long circuit drive in the sixth inning put Wisconsin on even terms, and they then rapidly took the lead. Both teams showed the lack of outdoor training, and a rough diamond slowed up the infields. Agai nst Northwestern University on the following Saturday, the Gold had better luck, winning over the Purple by a score of 8 to 3. Steady pitching by Winkenwerder and timely hitting by the Beloit batters outdistanced the Evanston nine. In the first home game Beloit took an easy victory from Northwestern college of Watertown, winning 7 to 2. The Coe game at Cedar Rapids brought out heavy scoring and the Gold was again victorious, winning by a score of II to g. Notre Dame administered the worst defeat of the year in a game played at the Fairbanks-Morse field, Beloit. Pitching and loose fielding bothered Beloit and the Irish won by a score of I5 to 7. Cornell defeated Beloit at Mount Vernon, the Gold batters being unable to gather enough hits off the air-tight pitching of Paulson to bring in a single run. Beloit gathered two lone hits off Paulson’s delivery, and the lanky Cornellian struck out nineteen of the Gold batters who faced him. SHEMAUGHADANEINDSR TENOR AGRA AMER EG5G EAR EAGD 8AM 2 AHI Ram al ST ar UE PN ONS NNN TN UTL TIN IAWNGAUUILOOLINUFEBDSGANDOAURONNET UCU EE ET TMM MTS ie CLE Xx - 24 © FUTUNA UTATHATTITTITIN Lake Forest was defeated by a score of 7 to 5 at Lake Forest and in a return game with Notre Dame, played at South Bend, Beloit played better ball than in the first contest, losing by a score of 5 to 2. The Gold closed the season with a 5 to 4 victory over Lake Forest on the home field. Captain Eddie Schacht, playing his last game in the Beloit uniform, scored two runs for Beloit. DEUS iVIEAT Hee OTs te At OIN Beloit ee ys. 3 VWVASCONSIIewanetes + 2 te: 8 At Madison Belo tee ptt a 8 INorthwesterm,. Us 4... 3 At Evanston isyaleyhes ea oe anes i INosthwestern Cat. :-.0, 2 At Beloit Beloit wee are oe Tae Gere ee eee ee ean 9 At Cedar Rapids Beloiters ween. 7 INotres Dames seee ane iis At Beloit Beloiigeva cere ot: O Cornel lane, Sate, oak: 5 At Mt. Vernon Deloige ee 7 ake giorests eee Ss 5 At Lake Forest Delotgarar se: 2 Notre:Wam cy eset. | 5 At South Bend DEOL ee ae ee is baker P Oresten: eae oe. 4 At Beloit Be lOre tanto A 50 Opponentcs. es 56 Won, 5. Lost, 4 - © = 2 E =| Fy 5 151 = Miiiiiiniie MMMM Unmmd ea ee ee ee ee eee nt i KO PUL UU eal me = ms = ee — fs = = = — al = oc ig i — eal 7 = xs a = = = =e = = = = a =) KY = or bo 2) = fa — = = = = = = = = a = -_ J = 7 =n aol = ot i —) aad = — = = = tan = aS me ier ca — = PULL ee @) BED. Ga Fosse WINKENWERDER Varsity Captain in 1923 Was pitcher in 1923. Played second base and was one of the Control was Wink’s chief asset and he could hold fastest basemen in the Conference, the best Conference teams to a few scattering hits, Ris Ve HeW Oct lp 002 cE oe EN The 1923 baseball season, although not as successful as the football, basketball and track seasons, ended up in a fifty-fifty break for the Gold team. Coach Mill’s aggregation succeeded in winning five games, losing the same number, and capturing third place in the Mid-west conference. During the season the Gold squad had games with such teams as Notre Dame, St. Viator and the Michigan Aggies, three of the best college baseball teams in the middle west. Games were played with the strong Cornell and Coe teams of the Mid-west conference. At the beginning of the season the prospects for a winning team looked very dull, but with the promising showing made by the Freshmen candidates, the chances for a successful season loomed up a bit stronger. Coach Mills had Captain Fosse, Laffin, Irvine, Dawson, Winkenwerder, Blatt, Rossebo and Schrader from the 1922 squad to work with. Of the new men, Vondrashek, Watson, Wheeler, and Brown showed at the beginning of the season that they were going to make strong bids for the team. Vondrashek proved to be an exceptionally good man at the initial sack ‘and was a reliable hitter. Coach Mills was in need of a good catcher when the season started due to the loss of Edmund Schacht, who, for three years was one of ‘“Tom- my’s” mainstays. Wheeler had been a pitcher before he entered Beloit, but due to the abundance of pitching material, the coach shifted Wheeler to the catching position where he proved to be a hard worker. Watson was used in the outfield and on the hurling staff, while Brown alternated with Vondrashek at first base and also with Watson in the outer garden. With these new men Coach Mills lined up a formidable team at the beginning of the season. Wheeler and Hutchison were behind the bat; Watson, Winken- werder and Blatt alternated at the pitcher’s position; Vondrashek, Dawson, OUT TTS EU EEL ETE DAP ULATED THESE YD, a ee a EE ERR ONT NST UUTT LUCA MAUGIOTL(SIPRUCUUTUVRDEUGAUNGUREL al a se COUT all ’ _Bratr SCHRADER Was a mainstay of the pitching staff and won Played in the outfield, where he got everything his share of the games on the mound, that came his way, He controlled his position in remarkable fashion, Fosse and Laffin made up the infield; and Irvine, Schrader, Brown, Rossebo and Watson made up the outfield. At the beginning of the season, games with Northwestern and Wisconsin Universities were scheduled, but both of these “‘ Big Ten” schools cancelled their games. Coach Mills then arranged for three practice games with the Rockford team of the Three I League. These games early in the season helped to put the Beloit squad in good condition and the younger athletes learned a number of the finer points of the game from these “‘old timers”. The Gold team lost all of their games with the Rockford team, but they made a creditable showing for a college team. The first game of the season was played at Hancock field against Lake Forest, an old time rival of the Gold. Beloit handed the Foresters a lop-sided score of 18 to 7. The entire game was loosely played from start to finish and due to the poor condition of the diamond many infield errors were made. The Beloit team knocked three Lake Forest hurlers off the mound, while Winkenwerder and Blatt held the Red and Black nine to seven hits,—most of these being made due to the slow condition of the field. Watson played-a spectacular game in the outfield, robbing one of the enemy’s of a sure two-base hit by leaping into the air and catch- ing the ball with his bare hand. In the second game of the season, the first Mid-west conference game, the Beloit nine was turned back by Coe college of Cedar Rapids, lowa, by a score of g to 2. The Beloit batters were unable to familiarize themselves with the pitching of Rush, while the Coe sluggers, headed by Weirnimont and Collins, colored center-fielder, hit three Beloit pitched curves to all corners of the field. Weirnimont and Collins were the stars for the visiting team, the former securing three hits and the latter two hits out of four times at the bat. Weirnimont, the Coe captain, also caught a steady game for the Kohawks. Watson again starred for Beloit in the outfield, while “‘ Doc” Irvine led the Beloit hitters with the willow, collecting two hits out of four times at bat. During the next week the Beloit team traveled to Watertown to play the ATi. ENT MMMM TTT PecODEX 24 A COMMIT %% aS UIEAUEUAUORNUAAUADLRIANDEROUUELOTEOEDRUGRCANADLTOADEAY PUCTALUOTULGGOGANMUILVLTTOTHARLAHIT@ 19 CODEX 24 OMIM AAT OUUT TU TO TT COUT LAFFIN WHEELER HurTcHIson Varsity Captain-elect for 1924. Was catcher in 1923, He played Played catcher on the ’23 squad, Played short-stop and was one consistent ball at all times and “Doc” was a fast man with of the best hitters in the Con- was a reliable man with the bat, the ball during any game, ference, Northwestern college team in a practice tilt. Beloit ran wild. The game was purely a slugfest for the Gold hitters. Winkenwerder held the Northwestern team to one hit and fanned twenty of the enemy batsmen. Brown, Watson, and Irvine hit the long circuit clouts off the Northwestern hurlers. The score was most too lop-sided to make record of,—20 to o. The next week-end the team took a four day trip to South Bend and to Lansing, where they played Notre Dame and the Michigan Aggies. Both of these schools had superior teams and the Gold lost both games. In the first game, with Notre Dame, Beloit lost 6 to o. In Michigan, with the Aggies, the Gold dropped the game with the score of g to 2. At Notre Dame the team played listless ball, which, combined with the inability to solve the delivery of Favley, star hurler for the ‘Catholic nine, enabled the Catholics to score six runs off the delivery of Blatt and Winkenwerder. This game was the only game of the season that the Gold failed to cross the pentagon. Captain Favley seemed to be right and the Beloit team was unable to connect with his slants, in fact, his slow ball was too slow and his fast ball too fast. In the game with the Aggies, Captain Fosse was unable to play because of a wrenched knee wh ich he received in the Notre Dame combat. The game was played very raggedly due to the slippery field. Errors were numerous on both sides. Winkenwerder pitched rather erratically for the Gold, while Weinert, for the Lansing team, held the Beloit team to four hits, two being made by Von- drashek and one each by Brown and Watson. On the following Saturday, Beloit scored its first Mid-west victory when the Gold turned back the strong Cornell college team of Mount Vernon, Iowa, by a score of 7 to 6. This game was the most interesting of the home games during the season. With the score 5 to 4 in favor of the lowans and Beloit at the bat in the ninth inning, Jimmy Laffin, first man up, drew a walk, Schrader struck out and then “‘Doc” Irvine poled a long triple to deep center, scoring Laffin with the tieing run. A moment later Irving himself scored the winning run on a passed ball to 7, u“ Va eo 154 SUROUU MUR GDSUOVEMHAT OM GSAT ER GHA EB ca AST RNR TL NNT MLN ULSAN YSUTTUSHIETAITANMMT as SUAAUGUSUODNUAVNNNAREADRAROHEOAMUSDUORUARYEAUODEOOUBOGD SO UUUUUUUEUUUOROANELEOUITCOUNAUARTANDAOR NT ETET ENT MMT LO) BD) em.4 24 AU TT CALITO TTT VONDRASHEK IRVINE Dawson Played in the left field and was Played in the right field, ‘‘Doc”’ Held onto the third sack, “Pat” always good 1n connecting with was another exceptional hitter played consistent ball and seldom the ball, “ Mooney’’ was one reliable on a three base hit in missed a ‘chance’, of the hardest hitters in the any game, Conference, the catcher. Blatt hurled a good game for the Gold, holding the enemy to six hits, while his team mates gathered eight hits off Hemmel, the enemy slabster. The next week-end the Beloit team traveled to Iowa to play the Coe and Cornell teams and succeeded in earning a even break. The Gold won from Cornell for the second time of the season by a score of 7 to 3 and lost the other game by a larger score of 11 tog. Blatt had little difficulty in defeating the Cornell aggrega- tion, but Winkenwerder was hit freely by the Coe sluggers. The following week Beloit played Lake Forest and St. Viators. This game was very much of a duplicate of the one played against the Red and Black at the first of the season. The Gold players had the Foresters outclassed during the entire game. Good pitching, steady hitting and consistent fielding carried the Beloiters through to the top of the score, 10 to 4. Blatt pitched one of his best games in this contest. The last game of the season was against the strong St. Viators nine, who, until this game, had had little trouble in turning back their opponents in easy fashion. The game resulted in a pitching duel between Winkenwerder and Don- nelly. St. Viators scored first during the second inning. Later, in the fourth inning, a three base hit by Irvine evened up the count. It was not until the sixth that the Mills aggregation sent two more runners across the diamond. The game looked good for Beloit. In the eighth inning St. Viators knotted the score by sending two men on a trip around the bags and in the ninth they scored the winning run on a passed ball. Beloit played good ball, however, and outhit the enemy seven to six, but odds were against the Millsmen. Winkenwerder won in the pitching duel, striking out eight men, while Donnelly succeeded in striking out but three via the strike-out route. The score was 3 to 4. To have out-played St. Viators, a team that had won eighteen out of twenty- four games, holding victories over such teams as Purdue, Wabash and Butler turned out, made the home contest one of which we may all be proud. The game was a fitting ending for the season. ‘, i 155 TURN CY Cp Cl Me ee ___ Sanne Seed aS Lek Buby UiL DS Ee Sa Sa a a a A SN Te NRE os |) GUIUNUULAUGNOUIDOMUESSVGSUURGUGSROLURIGESS SUADUNTO UD EUGNALARUADAGROLLORUCEDUGATARYEAUADLOOIDULO = PT TMM MMM 19 Sea. 24 oc HHA OEUUHELAUUNAATHEATTULELL =i 4 7 os CUE a Brown RossEBO Watson Covered the initial sack for Was a har d hitting outfielder. Played in the center field, He the Varsity, He was a heavy Barney stopped everything that was especially well adapted hitter as well as a good man on came his way, for pulling down the high ones, the sack. Four regular letter-men were lost to the team through graduation. They are: Captain Fosse, Winkenwerder, Blatt and Hutchison. Thirteen letters were awarded at the close of the 1923 baseball season by Coach Mills and the Athletic Board. Those who received letters are: Captain Fosse, Winkenwerder, Blatt, Watson, Wheeler, Vondrashek, Dawson, Laffin, Schrader, Brown, Rossebo, Irvine and Hutchison. At the time the book goes to press, the prospects for the 1924 season look very encouraging. Coach Mills has about fourteen men from last year’s squad and an abundance of added strength in “Pid” Purdy, from Nebraska, Carl Johnson and Frank Wickhem. ‘The season should prove very successful. QHUKBBROBOG(@01 QU G0N@N BB 8020 00 0” aceite atc eters ee ney OME ns ry Ng MNT COS mE Sec LULA NDTNA SAMA RIO DIAN = = om = = om — = = = = = oa = — = 1A = = to = = = = ra at = = = ood ex a = = = i= = = a = = = = = N = i — = — =o = = = = = =s = = = a = ae = BS =i = = cs = = = = — = = = = — = i = = aa I = = =a = aa — = ss = = = = PTT MM MMM 19 CODEX 24 STEN UREA CARES) LEN ESTEE QUT COUTTS HAs OeN@ oe Uel VieVie ASR Y Delo tteeen ee eer 18 Pak Cen Ole tpt can 7, At Beloit DelOUeegn wre a 2 COS rea tire Beans 9 At Beloit Delores... fe) INotresDamecw en ee. 6 At South Bend Beloite. gee: 2 Michigan Aggies...... 9 At Lansing Delolteewe a2 a7 PoXeskall ty Bede cae ea 6 At Beloit Belosteeran ac. 7 Borne leawet. sree th | ten! @ At Mount Vernon iyo KORE DRS aera 9 COCT Rant Seay at A eck, II At Cedar Rapids el Olt reer fe) Wakes ones tecwat oeit x 4 At Lake Forest Deloitte ee woe 3 DESAVIAtOrre ce ceed: At Kankakee DelOliaee aa tte 20 NorthwesterniCy a... fe) At Watertown © Q = 5 157 = — = sal is aaa ae aa ae a a a eee eee 10 0N 0010011 NNU NHI ATBEIACOGAUDINUAIL) 3 SUD AUI UDG NUDE SU US AMER ER OSL SAU GD SS a a a a a MINE © TTT LI TIN LUTATSAUUININONGRLDUREOUI RUMI ODRG ON TABNagTLS = = al = = 2 = = a =a = = = = 7 = = o ite) re © = = = = = = = = = = 5 = = = = = = ir UU UA TT TS eo Captain JAMES LAFFIN 1924 it CODEX 24 . e HUQUOLCEOUTUTRNRORLINOLORLCRAANCANTE = SUOAUDUUDNUGDOONUNADTDAVEREURUUAONODNNORUWIEEI@ COUTTS A SOUUUUEAURA ESA SOO UO BUG AGAUG AGU OU eee a ST a I oO Oc NOE ONT LIONLANTHA DTA TLGIATRUARUNUAUE ROLLEI GOON IaNR EVE: OUT EAU URUMTHONUER CODON ODETANDANGOGUDDAROIES 19 CRO Ese 24 Caprain WILBUR PICKEN 1922 160 jee eee ee Pe Se ee a eS TOS, © ; K TOUT UT UT STLAGUDLAODAUAOORDAIOGOONERORDDOAUADIUDL LiCl Cmte ae oe ee ea re UT a EG TUVUURAGRALDEUDL ENED ERLAUHA BEES ENE 00 UN USS a a RP Se RES eS Dr NNR Ne mPOA UT TLTIAUCUNTEANGLEECUELRUUEUMRN CUCU UIE TAN GAdE SE ts OUT tS COUUUTTUTITT OT = N 63 Q ae 2 — ' q or) Z ie) a § y Sao q ¢ aS = O e Z O . a O ON rt @ SU TUILIDE EUR OLA ORUC OURO OL A SOC E es eee POULT EL BLT Lk PUL TT l 9 'e C) DD E x fa 4 SAUTE QUT OTT TS 1912 22 VOAS Ra ile oe le Les Calo eC) see OFFICERS WILBur PIcKEN : Captain E. J. Oscoop ; ; : Coach Harotp CHAMLEY , ; . Manager PERSONNEL CiayTON ADDIE . aaa Broad Jump Cart BAERWALD ; : Hurdles CLIFFORD BRANDRUP . y Scien . Two Mile Dave BuTLER . Hurdles, High Jump WILuiaAM CALKINS. , . Half Mile CLYDE CHAPEL ; za Two Mile Joun CoNNELL ; ; , ; Mile KENNETH CRAWFORD. 4 ’ : One Mile GeEorGE DAHLGREN ; Discus, Shot Put BLAISDELL GaTEsS _ Hard! es, Jumps, Pole Vault Norvat LanGwortHy . ; Pe Sprints Joun McAulLiFFE . : mebole. Vault CHARLES MorriLu : ' ; Discus © CLIFFORD NYGREN ; ; : Javelin = WILBuR PIckEN ; ; : : Half Mile = Epwitt PritcHaRD . ; . Mile = Raymonp Rietz . , , P. Sprints - ROCKWELL SMITH ; Me . Mile = Howarp THompson : . . Hurdles = ALBERT WARNER . : ; ; . Quarter Mile = = 162 TODA ELVES DLGRETEE ANBRVEDE AI EETA SEBEL 1, ESS le TEN eNO ae een I ee er tee TTT TTT SLAC HUQONTETACATLICATONIUOANATITATIAIT Fe Fae eT LULA LUO TL COUT GY ase NTN alas tek Od RG CiaytTon ADDIE Deel aOSscoop Myron WortTHINGTON Crayton AppDIE CLIFFORD BRANDRUP CHARLES BUTLER Dave BuTLER Harouip CHAMLEY GEORGE DAHLGREN Cart DuPKE BLAISDELL GATES DonaLp JOHNSON Woon Tsoi LEE Joun McAuLIFFE James Moore Mervi._L—E Morton CLIFFORD NYGREN EpwiLut PRITCHARD Raymonpb RIETz . Howarp 'THomMpPsoN Joun THOMPSON Ben VONDRASHEK ALBERT WARNER ARTHUR WHEELER HERBERT WILHOIT PUTT UT 9 CODEX 24 eA) Cale Qala Amp OFFICERS Captain Coach Manager PERSONNEL Sprints, Broad Jump Mile, Two Mile Mile Hurdles, High Jump Ours Mile Discus, Shot Put é Olas Mile Hurd! es, ahs Pole Vault Shot Put High Jump Pole Vault Half Mile Mile Javelin Mile Sprints a purdies Pole Vault Javelin Quarter Mile Javelin Mile 163 Mie. SM STIAALETATUAAUALUULLOTONAAUILTLUIHAUIATALTIANITLTDINTLNCO OUTTA OUT ES COUT TTT TT PU UUUUULU UT EL c= — = = = ot aa = =a J = — et — = om — = — = ss = = = — — = J i = = — = — = = = — = ‘or | K 19 CODEX 24 REV EESW. Oca 9 Cee AAR Sees os eon my Beloit’s 1922 track season was successful from the first encounter at the Wis- consin Intercollegiate relays to the closing victory in the state meet at Ripon. Coach E. J. Osgood started the season with a nucleus of veterans and deyeloped one of the strongest squads that has ever represented the Gold on track and field. The season was opened with a victory in the half mile relay at the Wisconsin indoor meet, the Beloit team of Picken, Addie, Rietz, and Gates, nosing out Mil- waukee Normal by two yards. The victory gave Beloit its second leg upon the Wisconsin Intercollegiate relay trophy. In the Illinois relay meet the Beloit team only managed a third, the fast Knox quartet easily winning the event and Cornell placing second. Cornell college was defeated in the first dual meet at Mt. Vernon by a score of 74 to 57.. The Gold squad took nine of fifteen first places. Addie of Beloit was individual high point man with thirteen points, while Gates of Beloit took second honors with eleven points. The only home meet of the season was with Y. M. C. A. college of Chicago and was won by Beloit, 84 to 47. Early in the meet the scoring was close, but as more events were finished Beloit gradually swept into an overwhelming lead. Knox, with a well-balanced and powerful team, took first in the Midwest conference meet held at Carleton college, Northfield, Minn. and the best Beloit could place was third. Carleton won second place. The meet was one of the fastest ever held in Minnesota, eleven new conference records being set in fifteen events. Dahlgren took Beloit’s only first place, setting a new conference mark of 120 feet, 5 inches, in the discus. Knox made 54 points in the meet, Carleton totalled 32.1-5 points, Beloit made 23 3-5 points, Hamline placed fourth, Coe placed fifth, and Cornell sixth. Beloit closed the season with a smashing victory in the State meet, winning a total of 93 points. Ripon, the nearest contender, scored 33 3-4 points. Beloit OTT Rs as a a a eh eS ot ake ee ee eed RECOM MUR EE UU TTT TT a TTT UE 19 ‘a O 2) EX 24 O:UUAUIAULANIAATAAUHTUVALAN ENCANA TUTE athletes won twelve first places in fifteen events, and scored all three places in three events. Dahlgren of the Gold set a new state discus mark of 129 feet, 8 inches, and McAuliffe raised the state pole vault mark to 11 feet, 9 inches. Blaisdell Gates, versatile Beloit star, led the team with 49 points scored during the season. Other high scorers were Dahlgren, 27; Rietz, 24; Addie, 23; Thompson, 20; Picken, 17, and Langworthy, 14. COMM NM MT eee nnn | =u ’ ; COUTTS Sere. OWIN Ul MMA RY. Wisconsin Relays: Beloit, first; Milwaukee Normal, second. Illinois Relays: Knox, first; Cornell, second; Beloit, third; DePau, fourth. Come ualmiviectssbeloit 74 .Cornell, 57. VeuVincmneCollese ual Meéet: Beloit,.84; Y. M. C. A.College, 47. Midwest Conference Meet: Knox, 54; Carleton, 32 1-5; Beloit, 23 3-5; Hamline, LO) Goent oe Cornell, 1571-5: : . State Meet: Beloit, 93; Ripon, 33 3-4; Lawrence, 2514; Carroll, 12 3-4. MMMM TT 165 TiiiiiiiiSe =] OTT TTT eu TMM MMS (or KOO a4 OTM MMT AUT O UI] COTM Out of their holes 1n a perfect start, 1,92) 3 9 Re AG see er Am oO) aN The 1923 track season was the most successful in Beloit track history since 1902, the year Ed Merrill established records which still stand. During the season the squad won two dual meets, one quadrangular meet, the state meet, the Wis- consin college relays, and tied with Carleton for the Midwest championship in the conference meet held at Galesburg. One dual meet, that with the University of Wisconsin, was lost. The victory in the relays brought the Wisconsin relay trophy home permanently as it was Beloit’s third straight victory in the event. In addition to winning both the state and Midwest championships four new Beloit college records were hung up during the season. Howard Thompson, running in the state meet, broke a record of sixteen years’ standing by. doing the high hurdles in 15 4-5 seconds. In the same meet John McAuliffe set a new pole vault mark by clearing 12 feet, 1 inch.- In the-quadrangular meet at Lake Forest, Clittord Nygren broke his own javelin record with a throw of 171 feet, and Clayton Addie established a new broad jump mark of 22 feet, 7 inches. Coach Osgood started the season with eighteen veterans and thirty-eight new men. Cold weather handicapped the squad by preventing out door work until just before the dual meet with the University of Wisconsin, on April 21. The first event of the season was the indoor relay meet at Madison on February 17. The veteran Beloit half-mile relay team, composed of Captain Addie, Gates, Thompson, and Rietz, easily won the event, giving Beloit permanent possession of the Wisconsin relay trophy. In the opening meet of the outdoor season Beloit fell before the University of Wisconsin squad by the score of 92 to 43. The Badgers scored clean sweeps in the quarter-mile, the half-mile, the two-mile, and high jump events, and proved strong in other track and field events. Beloit scored firsts in the 220-yard low hurdles, the broad jump, the discus, and the javelin. Nygren, Beloit javelin star, broke the Wisconsin javelin record with a heave of 160 feet, 4 inches. Beloit weight men took all three places in the discus, Dahlgren winning the event, Loucks taking second, and Morrill third. Gates of Beloit scored first in the 220-yard low hurdles, and Captain Addie scored first in the broad jump, with Gates second. ’, i y ih 166 DUOSAGESUOOABGAUGSORVOEGGO0 UHT E0101 aman Sei meee SE SAG ain ND TMRNET UMMM STE SATU U DTI NSLT ey LUT TTT ECAUUAUUUULUURAUEASENUUQTUOUVUUEUUVOBNLGNULITUH =] Se eS ee tae ee ii UTE TT CU AL 19 ‘3 © D E x SVUSEDELADPAUDNOUATORUDTOREAODERORBINTS: i) mes GATES DAHLGREN Rie tz Captain Addie of Beloit was individual high point man of the meet, scoring a total of eleven points—first in the broad j jump, and seconds in the 220 and 100- yard dashes. Dahlgren of Beloit scored nine points, winning the discus, second in the hammer throw, and third in the shot put. Two relay teams and several men in the special events were entered in the Drake relay meet at Des Moines, Iowa, on April 27-28, but both the relay teams and the special entries failed to qualify for the finals. Thirteen hundred athletes were entered in the Drake meet; one world’s record was shattered, and ten new Drake marks were set. In the dual meet with Cornell college at Beloit on May 5, Beloit won easily by a score of 74% to 56% points. Beloit took eight first places out of fourteen events in the meet. Clean sweeps were scored by Gold athletes in the broad jump and javelin, and Cornell runners won all places in the half-mile. Gates of Beloit, with two firsts and three seconds was high point man of the meet, while Captain Addie was second with eleven points and Rietz of Beloit Thompson in the high hurdles at the State Meet, CUT ATT Ts OUT UTA TT TS CALUTUUULTTTTT TT , [ UU TO OP HNEVALVTALITEUANFVNGAATLCTAETLN@ fo MSO) [Pies 84 MMMM MMT} 71 NYGREN ADDIE ‘THOMPSON was third with ten points. Smith was high man for Cornell with eight points. The victory was almost a repetition of the sweeping 1922 victory over Cornell. On May 12 the Gold track team met Coe college in dual competition at Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Coach Osgood’s men were pushed hard by the Kohawks, but finally won, 66 to 64. The meet was the closest and most exciting of the season. With a victory needed in the half-mile event to assure Beloit a victory, Jim Moore stepped out and ran the prettiest race of his career at Beloit, nosing out a victory almost at the tape. After the first five events of the meet had been run off, Cornell led by a score of 25 to 3, and later on had a clear margin of more than 30 points, but clean sweeps by Beloit in the javelin and hurdle events, and high scoring in the broad jump evened the score up. Moore’s victory in the half-mile gave Beloit the needed margin for victory. [7 pees ae ee ee eee eae eke Or a _ Beloit at the Drake Relays, 1923, 168 COUT as HUET TRE OPT SECEEGTAPEADTT DEVAS TOPO BNRNTE [HUET 81 LL @ Sa SE a a ee a a a aE aE SP RENNES ONTOS 11401 N00 RANG IAATAA REI ETERNONGL OCH DERIVE! a BUTT ke UL EET 19 O D EX 24 e TEAUDRRLUDECSTEUOLEAUOLAUENEOAN LAER COUT TTT TTT MacAvuuiFFE Moore BRANDRUP Nygren won the javelin event with a magnificent heave of 164 feet, while Dahlgren of Beloit took first in the discus by hurling the disc 126 feet. Entering a quadrangular meet at Lake Forest on May 19, Beloit walked away with nearly time and a half the number of points scored by the other three schools entered. Beloit totalled 79 points, Northwestern college of Naperville scored 23, Armour scored’16 and Lake Forest 14. Beloit track men took nine firsts out of fifteen events. Captain Addie jumped 22 teet, 7 inches, jor a new Beloit record.in the broad jump. This mark also bettered the Midwest mark, though it was not established as a Midwest record as the meet was not between conference schools. Nygren also set a new Beloit mark, breaking his own record of 167 feet with a throw of 171 feet in the javelin. Lee took first in the high jump with a leap of 5 feet, 7 inches, his best attempt to that date. Other first places were Thomp- son’s first in the high hurdles, Rietz’ first in the century, McAuliffe’s first in the 7 as Gates carrying the colors over the hurdles at Drake. 169 MMT ee CSET ESO NIN CST Eh SR 7 i iD ONG DN DTM HDL LLURUUAUUBUMARTATUURRHLUUYERUGUACHQUERLERIL: ST TT uy 6 | % OS a ee Ge Se A TTT TS AATELERDUGMEALMUUUANTETH ER ONUURGORRAREANA GEES BR PUA EE WARNER D, Butter Morr ILL pole vault, Dahlgren’s first in the discus, Addie’s winning of the 220-yard dash, and Moore’s victory in the half-mile. Favored to place high in the Midwest conference at Galesburg on May 26, Beloit scored 30 points, tieing with Carleton for the conference championship. Competition was close among Beloit, Carleton, Coe, Cornell, Ripon and Knox. Right on the heels of Carleton and Beloit came Coe and Cornell, each with 25 points, Ripon with 22 points, and Knox with 20 points. Hamline scored Io points, and Lawrence and Milliken came out on the short end with but one point each. Beloit won four first places, one second, three thirds, and one fourth place. Firsts were scored by Nygren in the javelin, McAuliffe in the pole vault, Thompson in the high hurdles, and Gates in the low hurdles. Captain Addie placed third in the century, but lost to Christopherson in the broad jump. Gates finished third in the latter event. Dahlgren of Beloit was off color in the discus and man- aged to place but third. . The meet was fast, even faster than’ the meet at Carleton in 1922. One new record was set, Powell of Coe stepping the 220-yard dash in 22 2-5 seconds. Beloit wound up the season with the third consecutive victory in the state meet, which was held at Beloit. The Gold squad scored 80 points. Ripon, near- ést contender, scored 47 points, Lawrence scored 16. and: Carrollii12: Two state records were broken in the meet, Thompson of Beloit stepping over the high hurdles in 15 4-5 seconds, and McAuliffe of Beloit topping the bar at 12 feet one inch in the pole vault. Captain Addie scored fourteen points for individual honors, taking first in the 100-yard dash, which he ran in Io flat, first in the 220, and a tie with Chris- topherson of Ripon for first in the broad jump, both of them leaping 21 feet, 8% inches. Ellison of Ripon was second in individual performance, scoring thirteen points. Lee of Beloit; won the high jump, the diminutive athlete clearing: suteetas inches. Other victories were Nygren’s winning of the javelin, Moore’s victory in the half-mile, and Thompson’s victory in the low hurdles. The meet was the last performance of Gates, Rietz, Nygren and Morrill for Beloit, all being seniors. Dahlgren also closed his athletic career at Beloit, but was not permitted to compete in the meet, because of a state ruling. Taken as a whole the 1923 season was a complete success. A strong, well- balanced team was produced which was capable of scoring in all departments. 170 QURENOODEOUTOIANAGOUEOTGGRTLGRD LA | Rane aaa ie Renee aE ae NE aa T NMAC GCMGNME (ULNA lst) TMM TTS she seems Coot WED) Bo, ode ei SUCUNES EDR ESAT LO 2 ac a a ae sae ca ae aan aac ca eS NSt SM DELe Hi (Tair ris olen EN MMMM Pet ODEX. 24 CMM a COUT TTT PRITCHARD LEE C, BuTLER A nucleus remains for the 1924 squad which should enable Coach Osgood to turn out another winning team. The squad was unusually fortunate in having performers capable of scoring in more than one event. Captain Addie was good for points in the century, the 220 and the broad jump in all company he met. Gates was a point winner in five events, the low and high hurdles, the high and broad jumps, and the pole vault. Thompson was a scorer in both hurdle events and in the javelin, while Dahlgren made points in all of the weight events. McAuliffe in addition to his stellar performance in the pole vault was also good for points occasionally in the 220-yard low hurdles. The one weakness noticeable in the squad during the season was in the dis- tances. In all other departments the Gold was sure of points and on many occa- sions clean sweeps. It will be hard to replace such men as Gates, Rietz, Nygren, Dahlgren and Morrill. Dave VigNvievehe ees) Hees HAS ON February 17—First in Wisconsin Intercollegiate relays, giving Beloit per- manent possession of relay trophy. April 21—Wisconsin dual meet at Madison: Wisconsin, 92; Beloit, 43. May s5—Cornell dual meet at Beloit: Beloit,-741%4; Cornell, 56%. May 12—Coe dual meet at Cedar Rapids: Beloit, 66; Coe, 64. May 19—Lake Forest quadrangular at Lake Forest: Beloit, 79; Northwestern collegei23 Armour, 105) Lake: Forest, 14. May 26—Midwest conference meet at Galesburg: Beloit, 30; Carleton, 30; Coe, 25; Cornell, 25; Ripon, 22; Knox, 20; Hamline, 10; Lawrence, 1; Milliken, if: June 2—State meet at Beloit: Beloit, 80; Ripon, 57; Lawrence, 16; Carroll, OR 171 Mii. —_— GiMMllmlMmllunimin a Tue ceca VTC LAL US SS SS ea Ca A SEE OS ENUM ROMA OURAN © 111 1] UAUUMUURLAVSIATANVUMUTMTEQUGSUEUL AY = 4 net SP ieee % cathe resin: ey 0 a s pi. v SULMAAUUOUODRUALGRMADTODDGRORETEREUNIANUONYEAUUILEOIDILNS PUL i 1 9 O D EX D 4 OUT OT TA DONUUHOUULOULOLRDARUONUANOUREUGNEGUAROREROLUDELE COTATI TO iS) J © ERT ee ee ea eee eae a ae ee a en ee = 2 = LS EASALAUAUOUOUOREAUOUEGWANCUUUNUERUANOLORUAIEED CHAMLEY Loucks Te Ah Addie and Rietz taking the first and second honors in the 200 yard dash, Time: :22 2-5 seconds, 172 QU ARH OLARAOOUACQGENOSGA BB AND AD U0 Seaman Raa UN PN ak ELT LLM UDNNNDNUUGIBRGRITGDUNNEE INURL YS SULEALOTBUDDLUAUCARARIADOURORLGROUGNUDRUGU CATED UERRB REN )LATOLUVERRICUGANODUGTOLENIOHOLUELIIES 19 ce O D E me nd 4 SAUTE ETT = = = = 2 - = = = = = = z = E = a = = : = = = =] ae 2 = Dy = ) K ) 2 ry 4 ay SS ae ae J | Ready for the gun, ‘ . , i ey = | es Ae = 0 | — = = = = = = = E = a = = = = J b] r Fr, a ey bie een Me % D’ = = = Thompson's perfect form, Kid” in the air leaping 22 feet 8 inches, = = = a Ba = | = = 2 = = = var ae = 173 4 = | PMS. _ oI MM FOUUELRRAUDUUANULAREDUOAUAEUOONNUURRARERGAOD Ee (Se y Fe EASUUUUUUUEUOUOTEAIULEUWINCUUUUUOUTONEALORUEAEEL PULTE UA How he finishes, QOUSRODRU OER PAYG RUGOE GO GRC RTA 0200” Semen ae ne a nanny ION nn ripe Ou eee NUD TNT OUND GUARD INDUDUEMMODROSHIALIGGIDINE II. 19 CODEX 24 SO UUATUAULUATSOTLATATUUUA TATU COUT UT Morrill throwing the discus, Moore in the half-mile, 174 SULEAUCUAUDDRUALUADADINDEDANTEOAOUUAIDRYADYEANEDRURI BEEN TUN TMM 19 ‘Ge C) D EX oe 4 @UUATIVELEMAAHULUHIIUTHLUUDATHNIEILENS ve Dolly's All-State form, The javelin leaving Nygren, Oo SS a aaa aa ee ed eS i) LEENA ANUAG LAN VUAUU RUAN UG MONA ROR GO de 5 es he a 1B a Fae git i 2 2. | mS es % . tl | a : - Ne O PUTT TTT Mac clearing twelve feet, 175 MIMI Om al P) AARNE EUYTG HG G0 188144 alee eS a a SSN 111111111 TANYA AU ULGTLQUL COTS RUHL ASQ Is UU UA Ue tS AUCOLGHDUON OGURA ODEERRDAUGGEARDADOIL O 5 19 ODEX 24 Caprain Howarp THoMpPsoNn 1924 176 ) Benen. Be SOARS Gc SR i ae ee @ © HUCOLAVEOUTATELNUDUTOOLONTOOOLOLRILE ETLAUURIGODAUNDOODAVORONNTOOOODONDADIONT SUDGRINUOLOUHRNLUAUDUAVERUIOGUERUDIONUNARLUEAIS) Co LNAVANNENVATANNOAUIADIOAUIIDLGORUSUODAGDINIA Fra | SH) PAITDILITOLIUTELADIIILULNTICHHTUILIIV@ mm CODEX 24 MMMM MM MAT QOUTUUL TLE COUT TTT TT WOMEN'S ATHLETICS _ I I PUTT TTT TTT i TUTTO a = = = | = = = = = SSATEWRUE TUM TMAE OTAGO UU EOWA NN ta a PSR SN NS AERTS 75110 FL UU LTUAU VNSUNUI TUVNATONLUUEIOUTLMTOINALED is HOATORRLAMUMODUUGDELUOLNUDASLDUEL Ege Ss (A) — N 3) 483 oO fe m zi gq ; [1) A rae re! Oy GB) (a cat « ny (Oo ey © a a 6 a fe) Pea oO oO A O A r= C) ©, = BUTT TT TET COUT TTT LTT SSLAQURSOODLENOCODAVOROUNOCADROLTERIONE (4 PT TMM MMMM IOC 19 CODEX 24 COMM MMM Mary WHEELER Assistant Instructor COU TUTTO ETT ELiIzaBETH OAKLEY Assistant Instructor = i ” — —) ao — ae = a nee = —— hat c= = — es aa = — ad a = oa hha me Cal =a aS re — ten Cao 20 ot (eg) rt a = = te = = = a = — os = 7 i — = = = = fo] co) ay eer a set pare) as om re ali DMM I E PUTT : 5 OUTTA PAU EU UT é (A J 19 CODEX 24 aS a ErHet TucKER 4 W. A. A. President 1922-23 180 ) Re ee ens card wt Deine eee © © C Mary WHEELER W. A. A. President 1923-24 TUL UTC SSULGUELGODLNUONRDAVORUANOQGQORUUAD INU SVVGUNAVALGUONOLUGANEDALEREOPUARUNDAOLARRINUEONS: OUTTA Pe LODEX 4 PULTE OUT UTA UE = CAUUTTUTTTTOTT Wee VieuioN ea oeAn hele Oe A SS O;G DAZ TON EXECULIVE, BOARD Mase. LEE Mary WHEELER Lucy Bartass Viorrn CHorr Dorotuy REYNOLDS ARLISLE MILLER Lois Moore a ee Oe LR EP Anna KozELKa GracE BABKA Extta Bacon MarGareEtT BEck POTTOUTTTTU iio ©. MMMM md Physical Director President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer MANAGERS Swimming Tennis, Basketball Baseball Dancing Hiking Soctal 181 =e “u UT TTT ENITALUVEANEATAAIUATVLUTEERATIU@ 19 CODE 24 cH TUAANNHTTANIATITNEATITTNNITINE pees oe (Cab ay dhe TOUTEDICGURNDUDOOTECOLUATEOOUNIRANTORRUOLONIAL rs COUT EU e OJ Marcaret Beck Puyitiis ARNEMAN Mary WHEELER 4 , [7 Mase Haro.tpson Lucy Baruass PHSTENUAUUEUURAGEAUUIAGHLOUUQUUNENUNDILORUEAEAY EUMAMOUSOOO NOU AUGHUOUONCQONGG) 001 C 01 aaa aaa aaa aaa RL NPN NY SEPA NNN MISSING ERMAN RUUUUEORGTESLNSALATERSULAT@ mec OWERX 24 MMMM BASKETBALL OU UT LUMUURTEGUA RN DUOONGOLORUEORUOLEALEA ANE ONEELE I AT OO Lots Moore Manager Sophomore Senior Freshmen VIOLET CHOTT MarGareET BEck CHARLETA TAYLOR GRACE BaBKaA CHARLOTTE Lyons ELIZABETH OLMSTEAD Ex.ta BarTon GRACE CAMPBELL Dorotuy ANDERSON MarGARET ATKINSON Mi.LpRED PAULSON Apa BaKkER Anna KozELKa Mase. Haroupson Doris REYNOLDS Lots Moore ; Guapys Fossum ‘s a ® FRESHMEN SENIOR SoPHOMORE 183 Pio. — amu PUTT TOT H+ | a a ae a a HNN TOT UUEUUN SHADE ARS URANO NUUaRTMMMUN ERC eee i O SZSUUUACOLUUCACEAYOUEOUNTC UUM EELON ONE O TOE HUCVOLCVERULGTEAROLUENULOMTCRELO ANTES HO Gr Keray 19 CODEX 24 OPT TTT PO 2S 23 Evia Barton KaTHERINE PITT Miriam WAGNER SOPHOMORE CHAMPIONSHIP Marcaret RasmussEN GwENDOLYN MILts Rutu ELDRIDGE KATHERINE Pitt EvizABETH McMILian MarIon ZILLEY Lucy Bar.ass Manager VARSITY 184 Mr.tprREp PAULSON Loraine MussER AnNA BRANDSMARK TEAM GERTRUDE SCHNEIDER EsTHER GEORGI Lucy Baruass Grace LuTHHARDT Ruts HuELsTER Heiten McNair CURUUODAU ALERT GTERSUTELOUATUCGH 1 (11 a NTSC 3 (CNV UCDUUAOUUVAUOADERNOLIGU EDD!) UUAG CUO UUL SESS 00 AG WROD OGGA0H DANA KYSNG BI N08 BA Bc Yee en ag 7 UNE SOE PUNO Pr SONNE TCE eT OCMMMNUT NSCLC , ULNA TINA ICCHLTNUEOSVERRO TIM TIO DEROL EN MMMM TTS Poe IE 24 OTM MMM MMT TO Gee Ye 15 9.2°3°-252 4 COUT ULE TTS © LUNUNTLCUAANUOLUDACOLILUEUNIINALERNINCUENNA Ts SOPHOMORE CHAMPIONSHIP [TEAM VARSITY Lucy Bartass VioLem CHOTT GRACE BABKA Etta Barton Dorotuy REYNOLDS Ta AS ; KO JUNIOR-SENIOR I RESHMEN SSTLCUUUULUUEAUOASELYOUUCCECUMAETN NORTON EET VE UT ERE ELA EG RDEE ELE aa ER ORR SAU AL QAT UDA SANALTEQUOAUGGQARRARUIAL | TMT 19 Cy @) D E x ps 4 SUH = = = = = a = Fa is = be = iL = = = == om ps = = ics es cS) os eal = = et = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = Inter-class volley ball teams begin their fall practice early for the annual tournament ties ee ah : 2 i “e J] oe 2) ’, A of the college on the high school week-end 186 IVAVADOINODCOTATORNVTORCQURTOTANIUNL a a ee ET eT AUC NGA CVG CLUE TTAUONTOGUUSOAUEU | EY © Le SS a a SOP ASAE Sa VE EMMIS © FAULLNNUUGATUNADSRENLVSNU GHC OUEAGCRNUTGUEN ULE = = Sa = = = = ae = ae pas = = . . ee - = The women’s baseball teams in an exhibition game for the guests = —4 = i) — = = = = — = = a) = — = Is i TUTTO 19 O D E 4 2 4 CUT TTETE COUT ET a at COUTTS Archery has been made a competitive sport under the direction of the W. A. A. ‘, a Observatory Hill skiing parties have been very popular during the winter flurries 187 PPM RTRTIUTTNTENTVTNTET OAT UT NLT IRe) is = = = om = = Sa sea — = =e eat a a a = = = = = = a at = a) = = ol a 1 = — ro aa = | = = = = = mal = 1 ro onl = = = zat 2a = PITTI UE ‘J = AAUTURUGG OED LEGE SOU ENE 3800 00 B10 8 a all ER PN RAO DMSO HULU MHI T TETSU U VANS TO TTAB MW MERA ul UCOLGEAUGLOOUUONODUDRDATAOGUDIDLUILIES e di = @, (F COE ee 4 S) EDLAQUNIEDDLURETRDAVORNNUTRORORULTEBINELS PU —————[—=—=—=—=—=—=—[—===={=x{—T_ ] ={_]]]_]_][_{=_ _q]c ={]l)]lU———_——eEU=e=_00 = ==—_ —— — = a 4 MTT SHPADDAUOUOUOVODUGDUDDAUUOUUR ONTO OUDENIANULAIEIS: ATT TT BEAUTY | SELECTIONS MADE Ieee ms ANTOINETTE DONNELLY ! | | PHO TO Giese PHB | } HOMO MINI UA Camp INOPS (iD IRONCKe POR oD . PS i OOO te LOT LEI. IFRRRII om aC OLE NIE 5x5 OOOO! te nti eT sige CRIS ocescmate O con S Ss a iS H T, ‘t? Fis . — . CAMPUS ACTIVITIES Tae 19 O D EX 24 Sa 4 = = = = co r= — ma Pas |j a. pt oe = Gat = — a — = je DRIP IPAS IDI 18) Ne WILLIS THORN FRANCIS REARICK DOROTHY BECK MARGARET BECK WA CK ROS) |. rot — a = a ae I a = = = = = = Prod = = coat om = = aaa 2S od = i = = =a ES — feral a — a — = oes = J = = — J a eS; = = = —j = = = == = = = = cd = J = = = — — i = — — ess — — — = tae = = Z = na = = = =a = is = es % eran ean Mine seee cee eT SEF eG ee ae 4 f 200 r HUD GHDAEH OBO QEAT OGD V0000 60 0000 100 1 ai eae aR Na RNS Sr ET co DI NMIUMINIININMUEIMOdnd) SH all ef = h is 2 OATALTATEATEALUNANERRTTCTTAANTTS met C)DERX 24 OM MMMM ublications Maye a ag . e é 1 NUS G d = h ras = oc UT EMG GUNA SUG WATERS CEC VAIL | Sb Ric sc oN NaC sR MM UMM FALUP ULM LURRINLNURAUUURNLELOMLLAUEADUNLNMCBRS a = ae = 4 PRR = = = = = = = = ma = aa feel = | ad = = to ) = = al al = = = = — = = = a = = = = ored ae = BUPURNIEUUNH nn RUMEN) 2 se ee ee ee ee et ee ieee Md eee ae, a a ee a eS Oe PUM SUURUUOLAVEOLIGTEURUFAINULONTCUELULNIIES 19 CODEX 24 19 2 Agee Oss eX 2 ASHE Pror. R. B. Way EDIT ORTA ER ISEAR Myron Wo. H. Worrtuincton, Managing Editor EDITORIAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE Pror. W. E. ALDERMAN DULPERAS TALE James BLACKBURN Assistant to Managing Editor RosBert IRVINE . Sentor Editor Donatp BurcHaArRp, ArTHur RUTLEDGE Class Editors Donatp KESLER : ; Sports Editor Jack FRost Organizations Editor Wituis THorRN .. : : ; . Publications Editor ALPHEUS BLAKESLEE . Photographic Editor Dorotuy Beck, MARGARET BEcK . Music and Drama Editors HELEN BENOIT , : : Women’s Editor Ruona FiTzGERALD Assistant Women’s Editor GLENN ARMSTRONG : ; : ; : Art Editor BUSINESS STAFF CiairE H. Pierce, Business Manager BUSINESS ASSISTANTS Ernest MILLER Kinc McCorp LoHRER TUNSTEAD Witmot PIERCE Ray ACKERMAN 202 SHLAPUHLOODRUOUTRDLIORUA TENDON ODTERINR: cn PUTT Ts Pror. R. K. RicHarpson SAUTE SURMEUAUAROUAUKULAMYQUEDDOUUCEATECEARY OA ECAM0 C311, SO a I SR en ODT SRE DMEM 1h (00 (HUAN Tithe onal PUEVOAYTOLGGOUNOUUNOMENIOWULRL@ 19 CODEX 24 STMT Migr o 24° COD EX Official Biennial Publication of the College OUT TT COUT TTT TTT Criaire H, Prerce Myron Wm. H, WortutIncTon Business Manager Managing Editor THE CODEX INVESTMENT As nothing gains perfection, it has not been the aim of the makers of this Codex to enfold between these covers perfect bits of artistry. Rather, it has been their acknowledgment of a great privilege; to see the spirit of Beloit college live proudly; to see that spirit begin to broaden and deepen with the now vigorous opinions of expansion in organized control; to see the intimacy of Old Beloit. The makers of the 1924 Codex have tried to catch the significance of that grow- ing spirit and to express the suggestions and intimations within these pages in a nature of promulgation. The hope and efforts of the 1924 Codex, sincerely expressed, if established, will not be altogether unworthy of the real value of the inspiration. Tue Epiror. 203 Mii ——_ GMulmimmimmmin ST TTT TT TK PTT UE SASUUCUUULEVEAUOLUNITOUNLCUUUUUENAOROLEAN UT IER in America. CRAWFORD IRVINE HECKLER RIETZ (ise RO. Ul Nase eee bel: EDITORS 1922-23 KENNETH CRAWFORD. ; é . Furst quarter RosBert [RVINE , ' ; Second quarter Epwin HECKLER Third quarter BUSINESS MANAGER Raymonp C. RIETz The Round Table is the official publication of the Associated Students of Beloit It is issued twice a week by a staff elected by the student body. The Round Table holds the distinction of being the second oldest college publication It was established in 1854. The Yale Literary Magazine, monthly is the oldest college publication and was established in 1836. 204 AQOUUODOOGUGOGSUROUEERC OD GO 05000 1 mm ie a SA RY NOSRSTDNNNANLGT 4 SOR URMONNNINGN 5.(ULUIBLGCLIUGNRNNIINUANIM iy SA PUEUOAUEAUEGUOGAOHAATULETTCEELIUUTES io LEOIO Eee es CCA TTT SV EATIECOMUTRAGATARLAADANOTERLESRAUIONADURESGU 20381 6, OSS aa ge rm TST TINIAN ©) 111 (0 RTUIINT ITM LGH RUN UGAN AB ORTIAIS PULLS 19 ‘3 © D E xX 24 Oc FTAEOURLENLLUTIAUAAGHLATEATHVN ILEUS COUT TTT TTT COUT TT ‘THOMPSON SCHRYVER ‘THORN CHURCH AP Am OID We KOME ON, ID) TEIN 185 1h, 1. EDITORS 1923-24 Howarp THompson a! (iSteGuar ier CLYDE SCHRYVER Second quarter Wiis THORN : Third quarter BUSINESS MANAGER LEONARD CHURCH Originally the Round Table was a monthly publication. Then for many years it was issued weekly; and in 1916 it became a semi-weekly newspaper. It is the only college newspaper in the state that appears oftener than once a week, with the exception of the Daily Cardinal, a publication of the University of Wisconsin. In 1920 and 1921 The Round Table won first prize for general excellency among the news- papers of the Wisconsin Intercollegiate Press Association. 7% O i 205 oo ETAT EEDSE SOUS OR DOELCA ODO LG0 LA YS aR CAN CU LU TIVOAVANTNNODNUDNOACCHOADIALSIM FS SUIRGLUUAUODEUAUEALAREOR OURO CQRUUDUORTORYEAUORLEAIOALY SUTTUTU CU EO SL PUAUULOVENUIOCAIRULLIOULOOLOOLUAUNIT@ 19 is: © iD) E ox 24 7 OTT MT oT DEL Re Dean Ore ee Agi Us ieNaG es EDITED AND MANAGED Bigs BELOIT CHAPTER OF SIGMA DELTA CHI The Beloit Alumnus is the official organ of the Alumni League of Beloit college. The magazine was founded in 1909 and volume one, number one, was issued in January, 1910. George L. Collie, 81, was the appointed editor and E. H. Light, ’06, was made business manager. Mr. P. H. Ralph, until recently, has since been editor. In April, 1924, the Beloit chapter of Sigma Delta Chi took over the Alumnus for publication and management. a aaa SF MINN NAANNU LOWELL HRN ANALT AL GTANA ORO E TOI CAI ES LA NN ENE RN Ae NT A ee SNE Sane ESET ALG TR Pe a 1 206 SOUGUEREEOODERDLGDATERO DRACO OM COTE [00 Savon OU UUCNERRNRL ESSE SGRONNCNEDCD UNUM ON cE UDIUYIADNDAUAUNAARGHAONECRAINN ALANS. CUT TTT SASTEUVAVOLUUEAUEATECECHATORUUUENUORENCAEUE EET STDLGDEABNSUR RR NTU ON RRR SRC SRE DRE TSS, SRE SENSU MMP RNG SS DNL EME Mm ca NOLS TTEUTNUTMOEUEESYREVAUUAUMUUS SOUT U ERTS ee «) al ree a x eee i er an : PU e 19 CODEX 24 A S) © = = = EVV UDDEURUSRUS WET AT LUAU AEEN2Q UTR TURES TARE E21 | ge ar RNAS ATMO (Tey ene SA)ORAUULUVEOLUTEAUOLUSNULOULERONUA ROE OOOO TS i 1 PU ULL a PTT MMIC io “CODES v4 © UUAADRUAENAATEAHHTANALATHANAANTUIEY TE GOSH ES Proressor A. F. Smitu, A.B., Ph.B. Public Speaking Department 1922-23 ProFessor H. C. WELLER, A.B. Public Speaking Department 1023-24 208 GUBLO DRAW OREDOANGSUODENCA GB O10 0100 § maa tei esse ESN mr mD IA WL McNamee UDNAIUBDUINODNOANOUDNLODAQ IGS NLIST. A a A LS TN NTS LT A TET Sa FILLE mE CAT %, as ULLAL VAUD ROUAUUAMADTANAUOOREGAOTEDOORTONYOAUODNOOLDE MMMM TTS eeu 24 CHUAN HTAAATNHTLETTNNNS es tele aoe Be Aa ee ee | COUT TT Beloit representative at the State Oratorical Contest, Carroll College, Pebruary 15,1923. Beloit Uhird place. Harry M. Krxucutr Beloit representative at the State Oratorical Contest, Lawrence College, February 21, 1924: Beloit= First, place: 7 is eee A mF ee TU LE CE ed Francis G. REARICK 209 SVAOUNUAMDADEOTOTATGANOTENOQONLLA 111 ALU UU UAUAUUONOUUUATAAUOOEHNINLLN Es SULEOUUDAUDDAUMAGARABUOORORUDEAAUOUAUDATGRTEAUEDLOOUDANN OTT MS SA ETALTAUEAVESLUTONERETLCTUNLAITS 19 KEGIO PR Xe 94 eNMUAATTUNTTTTNTHATTTTATINE 19 Desee et BEA Ty LINGG COUTTS iO Myers ‘TuUTTRUP JORDAN AFFIRMATIVE TEAM Resolved: That the United States should adopt a system of responsible cabinet government similar in principle to that in force in Great Britian. | Beloit at Grinnell February 23 No decision 4 Knox at Beloit March 9g Won by Knox CoA DL 1e BO. RaNG To Agre soe | | = TUuTTRUP REARICK z = Affirmative at Washburn March 24 Won by Washburn = =| Negative at Pomona March 27 Won by Beloit = I = Negative at Occidental March 28 Won by Beloit = i = Affirmative at Pasadena March 29 Won by Beloit = | = Pomona at Beloit (return) April 10 Won by Beloit = i E = = 210 = Mii iio © © .. . . Glin EN TMM TTS Do CODEX 24 HUTTE ior oP, BAT TNeG CUO TTT TT eS CUI TT TT PERKINS REARICK TAYLOR NEGATIVE TEAM Resolved: That the United States should adopt a system of responsible cabinet government similar in principle to that in force in Great Britian. Grinnell at Beloit February 23 No decision Beloit at Carleton March 9 Won by Carleton GOs a NG eae bea 7, a ‘TUTTRUP REARICK JORDAN AFFIRMATIVE TEAM Resolved: That the United States should adopt a system of responsible cabinet government similar in principle to that in force in Great Britain. Beloit at Cornell April 2 Won by Cornell 211 mere PUEDEN TN TUUUUT CCTV LUCUUMED eT PUT UT 1 HAITOLOVTONEGTAANUNIONULOSTOQALUERILECS (9. EOD EN 24 ALOT TE ALT 1.9 2 3a DebeBeA sD TsNeG POUUALRUHUUUANRLARUDHEOUOUNUORNNUURROROROUUD ie: OCU . O PHILLIPS SPALLA McMiI.Lian AFFIRMATIVE TEAM Resolved: That child labor should be prohibited by an amendment to the Federal Constitution. Beloit at Knox February 16 No decision 7 As WALLACE NIEDECKER WEBSTER i NEGATIVES TEAM Resolved: That child labor should be prohibited by an amendment to the Federal Constitution. Rockford at Beloit February 16 Won by Rockford 212 CUT TTT TT AQUUUUNUEUUMOREAYEUTUROLORUUUUARTGDDALORUEAEE HUSH OND OO G9 AVO QUGO0 0 01 000 0 £00 ae SNe: 5 SUT Sa HANNO DNNAU DANO HONLED RN AIDEG ONL 4 — ST = z PUTT TT ke TMM MT ee CODE x 2 + MeO 264 FB A TONG oy NIEDECKER ALTPETER SPALLA AFFIRMATIVE- TEAM Resolved: That all penal institutions in the United States should be ad- ministered according to the central plan introduced by Thomas Mott Osborne at the United States Naval Prison at Portsmouth. Knox at Beloit February 29 No decision SEAVER Myers ENDERS NEGATIVE TEAM Resolved: That al l penal institutions in the United States should be ad- ministered according to the general plan introduced by Thomas Mott Osborne at the United States Naval Prison at Portsmouth. Beloit at Rockford March 5 Won by Rockford 213 USTED ER ENDL G GGL ELLE LLL LALLA a a a eNO ATAU UCUVGEURVVAMOUAUANIACGLEUMTONNIN Es UU = = = = cS — = = — oa ma = —_ = eael pay = = laced = = Steel etal ee = = = a oe cal = = = = uo = ao CO O — , s : = = = 2 = = is a AULT O UOT TT POUT LU KC HRQUOAVTUEATRLAUDHRULOUTC ANTONIS io CODER 24 19°24 9D FOB AV a . SUeASD Resolved: That the United States should enter the World Court under the conditions outlined by President Harding. Affirmative vs. Carleton Negative vs. Grinnell LUVERNE SEAGREN Norvat Myers CHARLES LEAVITT Orton MotTrTrerR Rosert Morris RocER Tutrrup March 14, 1924. No decision contests. Triangular debate with Cornell and Butler colleges on the above question April 4. Debate with Cornell University, at Beloit, on the Bok Peace Plan. Oxford type of debating. April 7. no ran i , D 2 = OPT UU TT Tf SELETCUPEEEGUUOUGTEVAGUUEDED TQ UES CAMEAATEAD EDL S01 1 SO a SS aS ENP USSSA RRO NO CIT LUGE UNL ARM ANN TITS ICAU aS AT Tan TMM MMT Pec CIDE X 24 OMT TNT iS . OCUUT TTA TTT TTT TTT ————__________ WETTITNTMMTI, ORELGLEQEWESURBER SOO UGH EDO USDEGNEGBVMAURSHG 3 B24) {inn eee pe Sa a DCIS LULU MICRO NARUUNODIOIDDUGRODONT ALIA AALMANN CATT Ts ITT UE Te SHUAAURLEDDLUODTODAARSAEERODORERORD INNIS: POUT AOUCO SAVARESE UUM 01 OS PSE SS ST SES TSE TRL © UUUCDUSANUUAMYUGQI09(NVUNUUIECH OE PY Lk Se sss a ee UUA TUN RTAN EA UEUUTO OU LUCH CULO LEU AU TTE GOI HT = = = = = = = t—4 — = Lal [| = = | t—| = = e = 4 = = Ss A F = = = = a = = fe OUT UTA ET DA Ne} a N Max G. Miran Department of Music i9 CODEX 24 la ay STPEUEDUDNUODAOALGOVNDUUREEDOUUOUONISTORERILIOI QUT TT —_—_ OUT CU TK PUT : = ET MMMM MTT Pt iwi. e4 OM MMMM eee Ue Lal Lea Irvine W. Jones Director of Glee Clubs and Vesper Choir. Instructor of music. Irma Hoac Mrranpa Director of A Capella Choir. Instructor of voice. 217 wUDUR AT UU TIGL cdh I ELVSNUT CLUE GUT SRS a ea lS a ree ee ON oy 431110401 VUTETGNLGTUTUATUIOATINANNAUIL CEE EEL OECTA AGL UTUOLIAUAMOADUADAOAUEU GADIDUOTII ES TMM MTS id “C5 Cais a OPUNTIA HACC UR iy a OUTTA COUT TTT TTT DELLA SEHRT Instructor of piano. ALBERT GREEN Instructor of violin. ’; A 7 2 PUTT UOT SASTUCVAVOLUUEACEANOCAWATCUUUURUEDRONCAREA EY COUT OT =| QUDLRDOLNOGTRDAVCRANUOLORORUDDORINNTS: er CODEX 24 UU LO OUT TUTTE Ne MOM VeS IB olb os (Ca hOy Pa OFFICERS Irma Hoac MIRANDA Director ARLISLE MILLER 5 President VERA CLARIDGE . Secretary-Treasurer Jack Frost, LEE Witulams . . Business Managers Harriet Brown Librarian PERSONNEL Sopranos Dorotuy BecK IsaBEL BILu Harriet BRown LoRAINE BUNGE VERA CLARIDGE HELEN COLE Miriam Davipson Norma DowseE JANET FISHER ELizaBETH Hicks AutcE Hurp FLORENCE JAHP ELizABETH KENDIG Jove Matzex Leona MULVIHILL Witma Myers Dorotuy OVIATT RoinE RosMANn FLORENCE SUGDEN Buiossom Tonn Harriet WESTPHAL JosEPHINE WIGDALE Altos ALIcE BAILEY Jean SCHUMAN Jean BriGHaM Guiapys Conry ARDELLE BAKER KATHERINE FRITTS KATHRYN GREEN Norma FarRNSWORTH SuE HEYNEN Frances Kup Dorotuy HAPpEMAN ARLISLE MILLER Vircinta MILs Lois McCornack GaRNET HOLMES LoRRAINE REYNOLDS _ Tenors ERNEsT ATKINS ELTON SINGLETARY BurnuamM Hit CHARLES LEAVITT James Moore EpGaR MUELLNER RicHARD CARTLIDGE Raueu WILFORD Basses LEsTER BEcK CuHaRLES DEVLIN Ricuarp DILLON Jack FRost HERBERT GIEWITZ ‘THEODORE STooPs LEE WILLIAMS 219 OTT UE Me ___ XT e) i SUAALUDDUADRUAUGURAUUODOGQULECEMUDLURRTARYOOUODLEOUBIL UUM UTC OUT TTA UTS 19° (EO QIDEXS 774 OULU OTT Teg | | Cun Ea CTD menor Va Bh SUTURE IRvING JONES Cart HEYERDAHL Witmot PIERCE Dona.p GILLEY MeErviLLE Morton CamMpEN MuRKLAND Joun BuckINGHAM Cart HEYERDAHL RIcHARD CARTLIDGE CaLvIn CLARK RicHarpb DILLON Don Cannon LEONARD CANTY OPEICERS PERSONNEL First Tenors Watson RastEy WILLIAM SCHOFER ALVIN STRAHLE Second Tenors Epcar MUELLNER ELTON SINGLETARY First Basses Jack Frost NEvIN GaGE Wiutmot PIERCE Second Basses Haro.tp Mass Ernest MILLER 220 VURARDADEONEDOAT CRUG EORGA OU URGED 1101 RR a EE ATT SNS MUM MSEEE LLC NNN NGILGWINER ODUM e Director Leader Manager Accompanist Howarpb THOMPSON Haroitp WAGNER Foster TayLor Rateu WILFORD Wiemicenus CIRO AP Se ee a ae ee a pe oe CERCA Ee 7 OO ‘THEODORE STOOPS Apvoupeu ToEPFER Howarp PANHALLEGON Lee WILLIAMS al UU UU TO iJ a = ts ami eet eat — =e = = sme = — = | a = — = newt cad ae == — — Sz es Se a —_ emt ct = — ca J = = rs — — = 7, Q al % Cal: Eat? GL UB IrvinG JONES Howarpb THOMPSON Ratpepu WILFORD Lee WILLIAMS EDWARD Hosss Don CarRROoLu WILLIAM ALDRIDGE RoBErRT KILEY CHARLES LEAVITT RiIcHARD CAMERON RicHarp CARTIDGE CHARLES DEVLIN MortTIMER ALDRIDGE Donatp BARNES LEesTER BEckK m CODEX 24 OFFICERS PERSONNEL First Tenors MaurRIcE COAKLEY Harouip CHAMLEY STEPHEN MILLER Second Tenors THEODORE McCorp James Moore EpcarR MvuELLNER First Basses RicHarp DILLoNn Ja ck Frost Witmot PIERCE Second Basses HERBERT GEIWITZ Marcus JOHNSON Ernest MILLER 221 UOTE 1924 Director Leader Manager Secretary Rass QuINBY Howarp THOMPSON ELTON SINGLETARY Ratpepu WILFORD THEODORE STOOPS ApoupeH TOEPFER THEODORE THOMA Lee WILLIAMS Minnie. ee COUTTS 5 PU LT | SA) PUVALAYTOLIUNOUAUINSEULANTORNUCLIICSS 19 CODEX 24 SAUL PO FORUELURAUEUUANUDARERHARUUNUURNEOUARODORELAD KEE O GG Hele Gales Damier OFRFIGERS IrvinG JONES Director HELEN COLE ; ; , : 3 President MarjoriE PALMER : ; : . Manager Norma FARNSWORTH .. : . Accompanist PERSONNEL First Sopranos Puy.tiis ARNEMAN Norma DowseE MaryjoriE PALMER Dorotuy BEcK KATHERINE FRITTs ETHEL PoLLARD Harriet Brown GERTRUDE LEFFINGWELL FLORENCE SUGDEN LORAINE BUNGE Vitta LIvERMORE Harriet WESTPHAL HELEN CoLe Jove MatzEex JOSEPHINE WIGDALE Miriam Davipson Dorotuy Oviatt a FE aL a SP ES De TS, LNT AU LNA TSGE HONIG LURDU AI RTMUN ON 7; i Altos Jean BricHaM GERTRUDE EXNDERS Dorotuy REYNOLDs G.Lapys Conry Dorotuy HarEMAN ELIZABETH SARIS Amy CRISLER ARLISLE MILLER ELEANOR WALDO Dorotuy Noyes Va . Second Sopranos MarGARET ATKINSON AutceE Hurp FLORENCE Nortu AuIceE BaILey Frances Kup LoRRAINE REYNOLDS Norma Everson Virernia MILs JEAN SCHUMAN KATHRYN GREEN Witma Myers = TUOUERDASSURUYAYCROOTERG O00001 0111 Raa ee eae A eR RAPT. HVA LGNUIL DNV AMON LS 1 — i= = esl a sal oot — I st ord st tom la } : | | PO UUIUTTOT UU LO Va os 19 CODEX 24 OUT PA j Webiorletahee Geb Ole 9°24 IrvinG JONES Max Miranpba GERTRUDE ALLEN HarriEet Brown GEORGIA BRANNON KATHERINE FLoTO KATHERINE FRITTS EuNICcE GopDARD JEAN BRIGHAM Guapys Conry Norma FARNSWORTH KATHRYN GREEN FELTON CLARK CLARENCE HI.Lu LesTER BEcK WiLiiaAmM Brown OPTICERS PERSONNEL Sopranos EvizaBetu Hicks Rutu KoeEwLER HELEN Kunz Jove Matzex Leona MULVIHILL Marjorie PALMER Altos Dorotuy HAPEMAN MourieE.L HutcHInson Anna KOZzELKA AR LISLE MILLER Tenors Haroup Loomis Basses RicHARD CAMERON RicHarp DILLon Director Organist ELIzABETH PATTON Ro1inE RosMAN MarRGARET SMILEY FLORENCE SUGDEN Harriet WESTPHAL Vircinia MILus Dorotuy REYNOLDS LORRAINE REYNOLDS Epcar MvuELLNER ELTon SINGLETARY Jack Frost Hucu NEELy ©7019 TELS AE a a RRR LULU HUGNLNALANTOLDERTEACER IMIDE ES , J SUTCATESLULIN AAG GB ADTWUMER GDA DLESNERORU ANY UGE RE GDH BU GN Sais SS ev a a ae ee eee oe te 7 tO PIU ULL PTI S:é‘« C‘Y' CODEX 24 CUDLAODLU ATR DATEROLNONERORUDUE DIENT SS) WRIGHT CLANCY Mitus BoE LAO Tt 3G, OUR Geb Ge tae AS alee | THE LIGHTED DOOR presented by the Students, Alumni and Faculty in Celebration of the Seventy-fifth Anniversary of the Founding of the College. The theme of the pageant is the unfolding of the human mind through the process of the centuries, the obedience of man to an unfailing instinct that urges him on toward some far off goal. The Lighted Door represents the portal through which man passes, as age succeeds age, into wider realms of wisdom, truth and beauty. Not all men catch the vision of the larger life. Process is made possible because a few, the thinkers and dreamers, are quick to hear the call and press eagerly toward the light. The few are symbolized in the pageant by a single figure who appears in each successive episode: he is the learner, the light maker, the searcher for truth. Heis Youth. He isthe Scholar. In each episode also appears the teacher who is the guide to the Lighted Door. The seven episodes depict seven significant steps in this pursuit of perfection. Others might have been chosen: these are typical. In the early dawn of civiliza- tion, suggested in the first episode, we see an early assertion of the higher nature of the savage. In the glory and achievement of the twentieth century as suggested in the last episode portraying the life of Beloit college, we note the fruition of long endeavor and yet the same eager pressing on toward a goal that ever recedes. 224 CUTTS QUT COUULITTT TTT ‘7 IN CULT TTT TTT EMMA MMT et COLE X a OMT CUT TTTUTTTT ; ) se = = st = aot aS cad et = =a = — = peed = = cael == i Be SS — = = a — — 7 nee eal sa Doe = Sa aa ead ad = = — — = | SUIAELEURUGDRUAUGULANUADONRODUGAGUADEDRTOATEANODAGOUDERD STVAUUUAUDAUEDNOVAVURNATONELOGL0L 111! AT UGT OTD UONUOVANUOUOUANOAUOUCURIOLANNI ES ET TMM MMS 19 CODEX 24 eA le A OUUTT UT TCTs CONT We UUM UU TT a B EO Ve ele Yee OFFICERS CLYDE SCHRYVER J. Loruer TuNnstTEAD LORRAINE REYNOLDS James BLacKBURN Student Director Business Manager Secretary Treasurer ACTIVE H ONORARY MEMBERS Mrs. H. H. ConwE.u Mrs. James WOLF PERSONNEL MortTIMER ALDRIDGE ALPHEuS BLAKESLEE JAMES BLACKBURN Joun BucKINGHAM JosEPHINE CANFIELD KATHERINE GREENE GreorcE McCausLanp THEODORE McCorp LoRRAINE REYNOLDS CLIFFORD SWITZER Frances WILLIAMS WILLA Von OvEN HELEN BuRGETT Dorotuy HarEMAN LILLIAN JONES STEPHEN MILLER CLYDE SCHRYVER FLoyp WHEELER 226 PROF, GACeCLANGY Coacuel ik Mitts ETHEL BaRNES Dorotuy Beck LEsTER BEcK Doris FLAGG Joun Frost Nevin Gace FRANK KEEFER Wiutma Myers Orton MorTrrer CLAIRE PIERCE Puitiure RALPH Wiis THORN RosBert DE Pau EVELYN JOHNSON CuarLes LEAVITT Marjorie PALMER EsTHER SEAVER Dorotuy FLINN CADUEHOUUODER TASCA OUETLCO 011 170 11 Sania ni eee a Rel ie See Ra RET MTA o (ULI VINTIN IITs ec) = SUT TT PRCERLAVEO UT ALGU RUT OLOETC UD LTERTI TS 1 9 cc B, D E 6 2 4 OUTTA OF PP OADT AB) IBC CRN Gn e. By GerorceE S. KauFMAN AND Marc CONNELLY DrrEcTED BY Pror. A. F. Smi1trH CLD Se Se ees ee SS Ae TEHE CAST, Dulinea ; , ; Lorraine Reynolds Gordon Smith, her husband e Donald Cannon William Parker, her brother Clyde Schryver C. Rogers Forbes ; : ; Willis Thorn Mrs. Forbes ; : Katherine Kinzer | Angela Forbes. : . ‘Clare Trimble © Schuyler Van Dyck ste ee? Brewster Kimball = Tom Sterrett, Advertising Engineer Claire Pierce = Vincent Leach, Scenarist x Nevin Gage z Blair Patterson ‘ , Orton Motter = Henry ; James Blackburn = 5 = PUTT ULE LLL La a a a a eR 9. ANADTGERADLGRVTOUODAUREOAUCUEDNIMDLI ES COUTTS PUTT S2AUAUOLAVTRLEGTERRODANTULANLCRAAGOUNIE i9 GODEX 24 oO EEE Weel eG FL SSN Game Le) aha By Aucust THOMAS DrrecTepD By Mrs. J. F. Wor EI CA | JO owe : Jack Brookfield Lew Ellinger Tom Denning Harvey é ; Mrs. Alice Campbell Mrs. Helen Whipple Viola Campbell Clay Whipple Frank Hardmuth Justice Prentice Justice Henderson Servant Colonel Bayley Mr. Emmett Frank Keefer Clyde Schryver Jacks Prost James Blackburn Stephen Miller Ethel Barnes Lorraine Reynolds Josephine Canfield Orton Motter Nevin Gage Willis Thorn Alpheus Blakeslee ; Lester Beck Morton Aldrich John Buckingham 228 QU AOODRO OSCR UNDER DSOGEGO ABORT B10 Sama a Se aay aT FEMI ITNT NAN OUU TOLLED TOE CUN LS OUT TUTTE tS COUT TTT IEALOUAUEDLUAANVOARUADOURULEGAUOLAUDAUOAUEAUODLOOIDALNS: a ALITOUCOUULIUEAARURLITULONLCEHANUANTTCS mom CODEX 24 CMM MMMM Bb ACCU SS IPO A Tide) SOMO IO AE Ne Mrs. Mat Ross ConweELt, Director Sa a ee a mares ©, HINT IGUUUP IAS LNUU EA ANOIEROUN OS REEMIES 1923 OFFICERS 1924 LaAURINE MuSSER . : President i . Dorotuy OviatTr VeERDA BEAN .. : Vice-President . Dorotuy BuFFINGTON Marion Rawis_ Business Manager ; . Erxep Barnes Dorotuy Beck . Assistant Business Manager . LORRAINE REYNOLDS PERSONNEL ETHEL BaRNES MarGARET DAVERY GEorRGIA BRANNON Doris Frace Vircinia MILs GENDOLYN LINDEN Dorotuy BuFFINGTON LILLIAN JONES Ruona FITZGERALD LoRRAINE REYNOLDS Dorotuy Oviatr ADELEE MaTHEws Maryjori£E PALMER Dorotuy Noyes MitpreEp PAuLson ARDELLE BAKER EsTHER SEAVER : GERTRUDE ENDERS Mary WHEELER KATHERINE FLoOTO Dorotuy BEcK RutH KoEHLER IRENE ROBERTS Witma Myers ELIzABETH ARNEMAN Ramona GaRDE VIOLET PADLEFORD 229 0 UNSEAT GS EATON CE QD aaa aaa aT oy HLTA UDRTREN MMOD TC OREAUCO EN DURTAIA ES Es dew tac S00 ENUGEAS SURE TLUUNT ADT io Za a aaa a a Rg ue Ng PREM © FULT COANASUG NAS CUIUMANNAHUDMARUCADENRTASM AT SUINGLGUAUDDAUDAUARADIAOLERUREGAUOUADDATAUTEAUODLOOUD AG a al COUTTS Va OO SASTOUUAVELUUCACUANOULOUNLCUUUUORNNOREURUD ATED HRCUONCVGUTATRUADDUINOATLORHLUER CAST Don Pedro, Prince of Arragon Don John, his brother : Claudio, a young Lord of Florence Benedict, a young Lord of Padua Leonato, Governor of Messina Antonio, his brother Balthazar, Servant to Don Pedro Borachio, ‘follower of Don John Conrade, follower of Don John Dogberry, a Constable Verges, his assistant Seacoal, a watchman Oatcake, a watchman Friar Francis A Sexton A Messenger A Boy : Beatrice, Niece to Leonato Hero, Daughter to Leonato Margaret, Gentlewoman attending Hero Ursula, Gentlewoman attending Hero 230 19 CODEX 24 SMU Goo AS) OFF AD cOc Ue Lee NEOs ie eNEC: Margaret Davery Elizabeth Fox Helen Woodbury Laurine Musser Esther Seaver Dorothy Oviatt Abby Strong Grace Palmer Katherine Pitt Dorothy Beck Blanche Whitehead Doris Flagg Ruth Bailey Virginia Mills Eloise Beatty Georgia Brannon Beulah Adams Marion Rawls heedors Densmore Ethel Barnes Verda Bean HURLRODLROUTRPAVCRULEORGO ORE ADEDIUDI ane een TTT OUT UTE COMI ‘; I CUT TO oT etic ie QU TTT UU UO iC SUREUUELEDAAUOOTOUAVCROOERERORALTABILNT:S GENBQND ASAITIORS | ff fh J F | f COUUUU TTT TT SA)PUCTULGTULTATALAUDESEULONTEEATU 19 ‘3 G) i E ee 24 AUT : Py ee ee eS ETT HEAULANTULEGUAUNULNGRULOSICUNAUUAIE@ 19 GODEBX: 24 COMM MTT OUTTA TT TTS © MANIGNIAMADUOUTOACOTENUTANUTIGUNIOOLRUNLEDAN TH Biv G Beebe RA lee SOle egy ale) PERSONNEL Rocer Tutrrup . _ President, Associated Students Mary WHEELER ; Vice-President Dorotuy KouNn , ; ; Secretary Crayton ADDIE ; ; Treasurer W.E. ALDERMAN .. ; . Faculty Adotsor RoBertT IRVINE ‘B’ Club Representative CLYDE SCHRYVER ; Editor, Round Table Myron WorTHINGTON ; . Editor, Codex 5 OQ Norvat Myers. . Manager, Debates and Oratory = = Paut Watson . . Sophomore Council Representative = = ea 2 = = e = = = 5 S — 3 = = 232 = = = _ E PTUTUURIUHTU TRIM UUUTVCT CLEC) ee eee 2) HUTALAVEGLETAUN OMSK TLTTOEELIUITEC@ im CODEX 24 OMIM CF Yea at Wish) oa UA ce OFFICERS MarGARET DavERY . : . President LorRRAINE REYNOLDS. . Vice-President Dorotuy Mason : ; Secretary ANNA KAZELKA : é Treasurer VERA CLARIDGE. ; . Undergraduate Representative COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Dorotuy BEcKk ; Meetings LorRAINE REYNOLDS. . Membership FLORENCE SUGDEN ; é Music MarGarReET ATKINSON. ; ; weeepocial Doris EuUAGG sen ; ; : sPablicity fe GERALDINE KELLY . Social Service = OQ} ANNA KaZzELKA 2 ; Finance = = Eunice GoppaRD : : Rooms = = Dorotuy Noyes . . Employment Bureau = = ELEANOR LAURIE. Employment Bureau = : = = = 2 = = z = = = 233 S a = Summ TRTINELNTUTST TARTU UTI U NGS COUT TTT PUL 7 HRCUOLAATOLGTEAROLUSNULANTORELUELIIE: IVLGEION, a as Hae OFFICERS GEORGE DAHLGREN ALFRED DEITERICH Mase. Haroupson ALFRED HuLstT PERSONNEL Wituiam Lioyp LEONARD RISSETER GeEorcE McCausLanp RoBErRT IRVINE Roy DANISCHEFSKY WALTER RIDEOUT Rosert INMANn RupoteH Mayer Paut MartTIn Jutian Howe Eart Hopkins Joun Moore CHARLES FOLTZ Roy ACKERMAN ROGER SEAVERNS Howarp Rose STANLEY Hicxock Harry Commons LeRoy Txuimmic LAWRENCE Ray Cart JOHNSON 234 19 CODEX 24 GLtUEB President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Witi1am Hooker ALFRED HuLsT Epmunp LINbDoP HapDLey SMITH James MoynaHAN CLIFFORD SWITZER Joun McCartuy Harotp Forp ALDEN ForK GEORGE DAHLGREN Ernest ATKINS Davin HoumMeEs AusTIN KEEGAN ALFRED DEITERICH Howarp BLOMBERG Cart BAERWALD WiLuiaM BAERWALD DonaLp JOHNSON Paut TURNER STEWARD SEASS EucENE LINDENMEN OTT UE Ts Z| 7, a oo = os = =s sea ma oS = =a = a ee = e coed Se = — = — J — ms — a = J = ss = =a aed J = = = a = cad — = — = C4 = = mt — = pees 7 | VURUUBEAU ERE TASUHUSRELCH GU ELUE GLA] a a eae eee NMS UAVAGLIUUAUMSVMQNGIMEINI Esc. ——————————O Oe - . COUTTS TUT TAT ET a ST UIUUT UT UO 19 CODEX 24 Wo ORME Ne Samet Tel Osta UB GEORGE DAHLGREN ALFRED DEITERICH Mase. Hsaroupson ALFRED HuLsT DorotTHEA Von Oven VirciInia HaLLEcK ARDELLE BAKER Marion SAUNDERS Ava BAKER Dorotuy JEFFERS CaRLoTTa TAayYLorR Dorotuy Mason EvizaBetH RICHMOND RacHAEL WRIGHT MI.LpRED PAULSON ORFIGCIERS PERSONNEL 235 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer CHARLOTTE Lyons Rutu SCHWARTZ ELEANOR RaLtsTon LUELLA SMILEY ELiIzaBETH Evans MasBe.t Haro.pson ELIzABETH LaIsT Lois McCornack DELAND FISHER Dorotuy FLINN Emma CRAFT DIS SM QUO COUT 7, f TTT TT OCUUU UU TTT OT oS SAPHUCUUUULEUEDOATELYOUULCMUUWONTNNDATONE EET UU TTT 19 ‘6 ty D E x 24 PA NH Er Eel eNel Car Gr Os Viaiisi@e [abe PERSONNEL Myron WortHincTon ; Sigma Alpha Epsilon Jack Frost Tau Kappa Epsilon Winstow THompson ; Beta Theta Pi ERNEST MILLER. . Pt Kappa Alpha SIDNEY THAYER : Tau Rho Roy DaniscHEFSKY ' ; Sigma Chi Wituis THORN Phi Kappa Psi 236 HUDSADDITNGEMTAVORGUEOUOGONLA TEN (G11, Raa eae eee aM NUTINI SAUTE TE OOUU TTT TTT TTT e —_= = =e = = = sd = = p= = — ans = 7 = = ma = — — = = = —J = = mt = = 7 = ss = — = = = = rw — = = st foal a = roan — ay oe aa + | is EN TMM MUTT fot ODE X 34 OUT O HDELATARHANTLATNDABUNUATUCULERLEAKUALCUULED COMM TT VE OeV ICH NG meee mel Ne Tia OsVelo RINE ME ND eS OlGse Aen ON PERSONNEL Puytirs ARNEMAN ; ; ' ’ . President ETHEL BaRNES_. ; . Vice-President HELEN BENoIT ; ; : Secretary Lucy Bartass . ., , = . Treasurer Dorotuy Oviatt ; ; Senior Representative ARLISLE MILLER . Junior Representative 2 2 © MarGarRET DAVERY . Sophomore Representative = = = = EVELYN JOHNSON. . Stowell Representative = = : = Es = | = S = = 3 = = 237 S = = =| | Mo GMM a OUT TTT PUTT EMT UT LK PULL UT Teer eA OrhaeligeGals OFFICERS LILLIAN SPALLA Dora KELLEY Lorine NIEDECKER PERSONNEL Ione ALTPETER Lucy Baruass HELEN BuRGETT Amy CRISLER GERTRUDE ENDERS KATHERINE FRITTS MILDRED JAMISON FLORENCE JAHP Dora KELLEY GERALDINE KELLEY ELIzABETH KENDIG 238 19 “OOWRa 24 CEB President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer ELEANOR LAWRIE Lois Moore Witma Myers Lorine NIEDECKER EvizABETH RICHMOND KATHERINE Ropp Marion SAUNDERS JEAN SCHUMAN LILLIAN SPALLA Buiossom Tonn ELEANOR WaLpo SAU COUTTS TT) CULT TT TT = UUUUED DUET TRE URUUEONCG OD EL ULC ai ea a SNPS EY MUM A CSIECSTINUHATAVELETAtieths | COUTTS PUTT TTT | = 2 2 = ts Q E = = POULT me (CODEX 24 SoM ee Nala Cpl rc) Vieille Bills PERSONNEL Rocer Tuttrup, Chairman . . Beta Theta P1 Guy KEsLER . : ; . Phi Kappa Pst KENNETH CRAWFORD ; : : : Sigma Chi CiLayton ADDIE ; Sigma Alpha Epsilon CLIFFORD BRANDRUP ; ; Pi Kappa Alpha Nevin GaGE .. : Tau Kappa Epsilon ) Ww © CUMIN LLC TUTTO QCOUT UT UOT HRUUVLUVTUNIGTRURULGANULOSICONIUEAIIEC@ 10. FG) lex 4 COMM MMM MM MM GA MEP SiS be RebeN Aspe has RaymMonpb WIEGERT, Director I a a gee en ee a ee ee eee STEN ee Ln pe PERSONNEL AtaN HookER , . Pianist RayMonD WIEGERT . . : ’ mee Luin pet LawRENCcE O’Brien ; ; Saxaphone | Norvat Myers . . Saxaphone, Clarinet © | Joun BucKINGHAM : ; Banjo = Q S = LAWRENCE KEELEY . ’ Drums = = = = z = = = = = = : = = = = = 240 2 = = al z EUMUUO OREO TRLTUROSEONG OD LATE 21 a a eNO 9] 11 GRIVADILD GRAIG EIM QM) ORGANIZATIONS CHUUGUPTSEUAESRERE LOU GUGERARDRLE DADE AGG Se se aN Ae Se ee NT SE NUANIOUANMLAADLNDUAURO LI ANUSURRNRRAARE EGAN SA) ONATOLUVTOUICTAUUOIUITNLONTOTHIUILINIS po) [Dee 4 : SHAUNA JEM AE TEAS ABY (Aes Ve JACK FROST ean nna 242 q eee eee ee eS ee 2 = ifs —— = fs % a QSLUEECLEELCUDESMU NES OU 020 EG UG0E DOLBY LU 0 a SST SPENT mM. AY GEC HU UANUOATECEONUSVANSLUNMSERGERASURI He ani tices Uy 19 CODEX 24 once =|aofesnonal Lrasbarcubiee Sa ee TTT UIUC SONERANATUSESORTEROUETSLOMEEDUTORDGEAEOCA EDEN | ROS i ti tg RN a a Oe AT ng mene NYE TEASE MA eae” PULLOUT EO io: WOES 24 Di pleas Gavia A REO Founded, 1906, at Chicago, Illinois BELOUM CRAP ER Established 1go9 PRATER AUN GR ACUI AIAG Paut WInstow BouTWwELu ACIIVE CHAPTER Rocer Tutrrup Francis REARICK Qualification for membership in Delta Sigma Rho, honorary forensic fraternity, is active participation in intercollegiate debates or oratory. OUTTA TS = — on =a Cy J = = wa a — = a = = = cond J a —= as = I =a = — = = = = = = SS Ss = a = = coat = = = = O HUTOLUNEOMEATRLLULIGLELEVTCTNUANNR@ mC CDE X 24 OCT aie lee ak eA KTASReR aA Founded, 1776, at Williams and Mary College OUT — Ss eeeeaeaeaeeaeaeaew=we=®=®a SS | 4 COLT TTT Williamsburg, Virginia WISCONSIN BETA CHAPTER Established 1911 FRATRES IN RACGULTALE O.iverR Morey AINSWORTH Joun ForsyTH CRAWFORD Henry HersBert ARMSTRONG Joun Pitt DEan Lioyp VERNON BALLARD Henry WILi1aAmM DuBEE KENNETH Boyp BaRNES IRENE ELDRIDGE AumMon WHITNEY BurRR Epwarp BELA KILBOURN Iva Marion BuTLin Irvinc MAuRER Forest EMERSON CALLAND RoBert RIcHARDSON GeorGE Lucius CoLuLiE FLORENCE ROBINSON Frank CoLucci Royat Brunson Way 1923 GeorcE Mitts Brrp Harouip Henry James PauL HaskELuL CLARK Marrtrua Moore WILLIAM CLEVELAND Louts Van Ess Miriam MarGuERITE WAGNER 1924 GeEorcIA BRANNON Norvat Myers VERA CLARIDGE GLENN SCHRADER Ruona FITzGERALD RoceER TuttrruP Autice B. HotmeEs 245 SmmmummnTUTETTUUINTUDITATITI TT ATINNIT TGS SUEAUTUAUDDRUAATADARIADOUOULEOLEUIAUERUARYEAUADEDIDILNC PUTT UU SU NREUUUNTURIHGUARINATULUTGHLARUUIT@ is. ‘COWRX 74 CoAT TMNT OULU UTE TTS Asta aes Founded, 1912, University of Wisconsin OMICRON DELTA GAMMA Honorary Economics Fraternity BE LOUIS CHA Ri: Established 1922 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Lioyp VERNON BALLARD Joun Eart Conn ELMER SAYRE CLARK AC ULV Heras Bk Ricuarp DiLLon Francis REaRICK EVERETT JANES Rocer TuTtruP BRENTON JANVRIN ARTHUR WHEELER 246 UUELEGAUTURADUGTUR UD SOCE OR GLEAL CLL ( aaa ET NONE NNT OMEN OS LLLLTITTINEWUIG EASTUUUUNUEUUHAUEANELEOUNLCUUUUUTNOILORUE EEL ©. : SES ESTE ESCH CEE 6 a a a ac a a a a a ROIS oO 1i1ITY UGE TIASELTEOIUNTTRUSOIE GUE RTUNINED PTT UU 19 ' C) ® EX 34 4 OUTTA UE OUT ft COTUTTTTTTTTTT CTT KA NE Founded, 1920, at Beloit College Honorary Journalistic Sorority OPRICERS Dorotuy BuFFINGTON : President GERALDINE KELLY Vice-President Luc y BarLtass. : . Secretary-Treasurer MarGaret BEck ' Extension Secretary AGEIVE CHAE EER Ta I Lucy Bartass : DorotHuy BUFFINGTON MarGarReET BEckK GERALDINE KELLY HELEN BENOIT Dorotuy Koun Rutu UTIGER 247 = MMe EAS RUUUAGUEUUANOLUGUAUHOLCUUUCUOUUNRULUERUH ATE © ENT MMT 19 CODEX 24 SUT . CAO bal GoViC Ag De te a Age ial Founded, 1909, at De Pauw University BELOIT CARTER Established 1915 PRA TRE Ss UNG AGUL EAE Roscoe BraBazon EvLLARD GEo. CARPENTER CLANCY RCA AVI AOlat Meth lis DonaLp BuRCHARD CLYDE SCHRYVER KENNETH CRAWFORD Howarpb THomMpPsoNn RosBertT [IRVINE Wi.uis THORN Orton MotTrerR Myron WorTHINGTON UU TTS POU HUDIEO DO TRERTAIGRODENNCE OMAO1L) (00 ar ee Re Se TNE C V GUUNIVIOTERUANMDNTNsfil) i9 CODEX 24 as af || aca Se SSS — — _ E II fc _ —| PTT MIMS yoo O 6 E ix 24 OUTTA EO ORSACT RANT he lee tte ea) sleds Betas ieray 1 : age 2 : ; 1839 1860 Phi Kappa Psi hg SOA eS a ae 1657 (ger oer Sigma Chi ; ; : : 2 ; 1855 1882 Sigma Alpha Epsilon : , ; : - 1856 1915 Pi Kappa Alpha : : : : : 1868 I9I7 Tau Kappa Epsilon . : ; ; : 1899 I9I7 Tau Rho : E : ee: . 1923 LAUREATE TEE VOD SCG LES RTL DSS a NN a SES USN SR NNSA TIME © NV HLUGOGUGACUGHUCUUDGQLDEN AGUNEGUURONGHIANE GSE mn mnie ET a 250 1 STUER 2 ac a a ee a AOR oT TNAUBINDTENTEDSIM sin COUTTS PUTT : al IBN paateheAs ehNule ll Y¥ouGe@: UCN © Tel: PERSONNEL Lyte K. Munn, Alumni Representative Norvat Myers ; ; Beta Theta Pi Guy KEsLER . LRU K appa ls KENNETH CRAWFORD ; Sigma Chi GrorGE DAHLGREN ; Sigma Alpha Epsilon CLIFFORD BRANDRUP ee es Pi Kappa Alpha Francis REARICK ; Tau Kappa Epsilon DeLMAR MOERICKE ; . Tau Rho 251 MMMM MMM 19 QOleleas 24 COTTA TENT TTETTTTTTATETETTC TT COUTTS TT . UT T T = ALE EE ATLL CALLE LLL, LSA aA NRT 11ST TCLS =A) PAUTOLANTONIUTANRUSIONULONLCUIINENITE@ io (CODES 24 fe OPT A boyd dba) ARP eee A wii —__OUT TOT ERA TR EBosINGEAGCULIA LIZ GeorceE Lucius CoLulE Hiram DeEtos DENSMORE AGUIVESGIUALALER 1924 Davip HoLMEs Rocer TutTrruP Norvat Myers ARTHUR WHEELER James Moore 1925 Donatp BurRcHARD Orton MotTrer Davip BuTLER BJARNE RossEBO ALFRED DIETERICH ARTHUR RUTLEDGE CHARLES LEAVITT Davip SHoupY Winstow THompPson 1926 MorTIMeER ALDRIDGE FRANK KEEFER Donatp BaRNES Pau. NEsBITT CHARLES BUTLER SAMUEL RANDOLPH Norman Hanks Lee WILLIAMS 1927 Cart Brouin RoBert KILEY James GAGE LawreENCE ROGERS Va UTE CULT TT TS DURLROODNDERODATERNUEONORODERIADINIIC SCHUTT TET ERDR EY STOTT QED EHUB TA ETAT LIES a 2 a eR RT REE NOS ow, |) 101 UR AUC ULN TAD ( AUTUMN SURURTONONANY CO OE nk OUTTA OUTTA UT US CATT al EB ep) - fs fot} 7, SS an a4 © e. © _ al pee oes s+ S oo) LL) a oo . Hoe oO 8 Ar ag Q pte oot aan - Bl BS = 2 ce i) — O 4 ae S ware ) O iis) meen = ise O 2 = ON a 20 = a = Zz =) e) ice UUM UU LUUDIRDOLORDOUAGAUUDOROOONEROER INNES a = EVUUTUTUDAND GUNMEN OTAEOOEYSOOOEUOO010 1141 a a vnen NUNN NNN «1771 1700 10608240020 ANUTUTPAD ENE NTI PTET COUT LUT OTT cS POTN TT OC TOOTS 2 = = = = os = 8 = = al PTO OTT Me lakdk tC IPP IN ese aoe ? japkea SA. PRATRESINTPACULTATE GEORGE CARPENTER CLANCY 1924 Guy KEsLER WILu1AM Korst JAMEs LaFFLin RaymMonp WIEGERT 1925 Wiutis THORN LoHRER TUNSTEAD 1926 Haroup Bo.tre Ceci, BRown Joun BuckINGHAM RiIcHARD CARTLIDGE 1927 Lester Becx WILLIAM BENOIT Lee Bort LESTER CHILDS i) CODER: 24 UE EucGEeNE NEWBuURG Rapa PIERCE JOHN Saris RatpeH WILFORD Paut Watson Cray Currer Don KESLER Howarp GERHARDT ERNEST OLson WILLARD ETHIER GUINDON OLSON THEODORE THOMA Donatp WILSON VERTU SSR ER TUN ADLRIRLGELED CLEAN GANG AUER ECARD UG cS ha ee NS CEMENT © LUAU TIAL DRUOU ODOC IAAT RUTTNIANEREADEUNLED UOMO = — = = 4 = co Ba — oad =a ee — eal and cea = = = ss ail ond — = I = = — aa ad Ya O sil BUTT TT TTT he fe -CODEX 24 FouNDED, 1852, AT JEFFERSON COLLEGE WASHINGTON, PENNSYLVANIA Forty-eight Active Chapters WISCONSIN GAMMA CHAPTER Established 1881 TUTE ta OUTTA COTTA eS ne eT ek Se ee ee eee ee ee Ae 7, ©) i SUISGLUUAUARUUAAUAUDOUOOAUOUDEGAUOUADDRTAATERUADLOOADARN Ae PUTT i oe RURDUURUTRUROREROREROCED %e fh PUTT CE os FRATRE IN FACULTATE Paut Winstow BouTWELL 1924 THEODORE ALGEO KENNETH CRAWFORD Cart BAERWALD RoBERT IRVINE Witiiam Lioyp GEORGE Loucks Davip WILSoNn 1925 Roy DaNIscHEFSKY Cart NELSON JEROME PappocK 1926 Epwin ANDERSON Louts GorpDOoN Henry HutcHison 1927 WILLIAM BAERWALD Harry CoMMOoNs Rospert DEPAu Tom FirzGERALD KELLY GERRIGAN RosBert O’ BriEN AUDTODDLUORGODATGR OUTRO ORARIDDIUNT SS GEORGE McCausLaND Kinc McCorp Gorpvon McLay RupoteH MAYER Wa.LrTeR RIDEOUT Howarp THOMPSON BrrpDELL REED CLYDE SCHRYVER Joun O’BriEN EpwIin SCHOOF HERBERT WILHOIT STaNLEY HicKkock Howarp Rose ‘THEODORE SCHROTH ‘TRAVERS SMITH LeRoy TuimMic is PN TMMUI MN MUU 19 ® O D E x 24 OUT UL COUT TTT TT FouNDED, 1855, AT Maimi UNIVERSITY Oxrorp, OnIo Eighty-one Active Chapters ALPHAIZE LASCHAPTER Established 1882 see F 7 ASTAUUAUUALUEAUANEUUUGUIGUULUUUNLLUELELCL To SS SNL © 1010 UATVULULAQOANOVUQQDEVLQOQNUQQQQANULOGUD = CATT SHMOGEDLODDLNOTRUAUCRUDOLOD OD ERDEEIENESS a) ERATUUAITULLUTALNUNITINIATIUTTLTTAHTF@ isn COD 34 OMIM MMM MMMM S70 GUVirAR ATL BR HAT EPS ier O aN . FRATRE IN FACULTATE | | Tuomas Emmet MItts | 1924 | CiaytTon AppIE ALVIN STRAHLE | GEORGE DAaHLGREN Francis WICKHEM AtaN HooKER Atvin NorDELL e z Z = = ol 1925 Raymonp McGaw BENJAMIN VONDRASHEK LAWRENCE O’BriEN RoBertT WELLS | 1926 ] James BiackBuRN Perry MaGILu | Myton WorTHINGTON CLIFFORD SWITZER 1927 ERNEST ATKINS STANLEY NOBLE Haro.p Forp ALVIN SCHICKEL ALDEN ForK HapLey SMITH Joun McCartTuy Joun VANDOLAH James MoynaHan EVERETT PurDY RaymMonp WELcH UTE 1k FUDTOODENATROLCROUDERGA ANE LD LD ee eT cE o LliiiiNiiniemyr =a EN TTT TTS 19 — c) D EX 24 COMM TT i OUT FounpEpD 1856, aT UNIVERSITY oF ALABAMA TuscaLoosa, ALABAMA Ninety-four Active Chapters WISCONSIN PHI CHAPTER Established 1915 i 5 SFSU T SSL LES CPUS ENT TTA ETUOAY YHOU (05 806 @ aR aR MOORE co U1 UY SCAG WLS OULCSIULIUDUUNIQNIIANUANDIING OTTO COUT BUTT TT PUTT ET CURSRODRUODTODLIGRADUORGRORORTADEUDES: 19 CODES 24 P71 e es KGASP PeAger ela bel len CLIFFORD BRANDRUP RoBERT INMAN GEORGE KEITHLY Jessie LAWVER Harry CoLe GEORGE FENWICK WaLuaceE HasTINGs Rex BLANKENSHIP RaymMonp ACKERMAN WALLACE CALVERT Ricuarp DuvaL CHARLES FOLTz CHARLES GATES FRANK SCHACHT 1925 Norris RowBoOTHAM 1926 1927 BRENTON JANVRIN ERNEST MILLER CLAIRE PIERCE Wiumot PIERCE CHARLES JENCKS Eart JOHNSON EpGcar MvuELLNER Paut PEARSON WitLiaAM HooKER Eart Hopkins ALFRED HUuLST Joun Moore Ivan WaTSon SUARLUVSUDDAOADEALONTURUORULETHNUILUDATANTEAUDALODIDILNOM COUTTS OUT TUS COUTTS TTT BOT TN eee eee = = = 3 = = S OUTTA VIRGINIA , VIRGINIA 261 UNIVERSITY OF 19 CODEX 24 AT CHARLOTTESVILLE Sixty-one Active Chapters BETA 1OTA CHAPTER Established 1917 OUNDED 1868, B SS)URULOLLUT OULU UNO NLN URONIC HLTA = = om = = Sa = = = =a = = = ss = = = in FTITITUNNINUTURIUIUNUTSUIUNIMOUUIUN LUNG a CUT UE OUT POTEAU SVENCUULAVEORIATRUAULINULONLCOLUARN TS UTE ST TT i9 CODEX. 24 OUT UT UT TTS ASUS KARR ReAR ie sel ss. GOaiNi FRATRE UINSFACULTATE Liuoyp VERNON BALLARD 1924 A.LPHEuS BLAKESLEE RicHarp DILLon Nevin Gace Francis REARICK 1925 Howarp BLOMBERG Jack Frost LEONARD RISETTER 1926 GLENN ARMSTRONG MERRILL CHRISTOPHERSON ALBERT CUMMINGS Irvinc Howe JAMES SURPLESS 1927 STANLEY Day CHARLES DEVLIN Marcus JOHNSON LERoy LINNE ROGER SEVERNS 262 EVERETT JANES CLARENCE HILu Donatp McComs Howarp Rowe THEODORE STOOPS EpwaRpD YOUNG STANLEY KvuIcH Autyn MItts Purtirp RaLpeu ELTON SINGLETARY Haroup Loomis ‘ArRNoLD Macu STEPHEN MILLER ALBERT PETERSON COULU UIT — = = = at = = = = = a aN et = = = — = = a = aot mm 4 ral ei = 3 = = = e O =— a =) os = cdl fem: = ee = oil = = PJ et wet = — = = = mm mt = = = = en vase = Sir a = oe = 4 = Le = oe = — = = = i — ae = = i ca Ff BS ee f SCHCGRERD SUG RULES ULGE [UR CHAD ENTRD TODTLUAED 1 a RO PSOE USPTO YUU TUIUA LT VAU TTR ST Ges Gu OUTTA TTT 4 5 io) P [2} e Zz Se E Z ) ee “ me on, oe rn mee Go S ee jad) an ee s s cto QO ne ate ae ce H “3 = 3S UO a Ss a x 5 Sih te a ae, 8 O Bee, Ges 6 © SS Slee td es 4 ON nF re On co — Qa jea a) 7, S .) ica 263 MNPBPTISU TTT UATETUNTIUPT UT TT eee UU EE a SICEDIULUOLUCUMLCOLLUSCCUULUO ORO CLOSACL COKE i Oe TMM TKS is GO DEX 2 “ ASU LO COUT Sie UES 1924 CLAYTON CHAMBERLAIN LEONARD CHURCH James Dawson DetMaR MOERICKE 1925 Haro_Lp CHAMLEY WESLEY Dawson JOHN KRONER 1926 Lewis DEGRAFF 1927 GEORGE AMELONG HERBERT Hoopes RussELL PorTER i? CULM CET PC S| BUT TTT Joun McAULIFFE EpwWILL PRITCHARD GLEN SCHRADER GEORGE VAN DUESEN SIDNEY THAYER StTuART ToOaTES DonaLp WHITE LUVERNE SEAGREN STUART FULTON RoBpertT Morris OUT TUT ES = — = = = a — = = — = = met a = — = = = — at I — a = = = A = = = = 3 = = 1 = = = rs od = ws = a oe _ = =r ex = = = = = = = =a oe as = = = a = = = a) —) = = = = = es = = = = _ a a = a = = = et — J = = — es = = = = Po COUTTS TT OOU OA POUT OT OUT UTA TA TU fon y O Q ca Ov 1 = s ine) ™ 5 S zs ae aie P cea es LL) ca oO oA le i ee a = - te) fa) a ae a os) o Sym 'S, ¢ GE ( ) Ov re) © _ fx) oC jaa) u a fx ON a) = is} ae | 3 v = e) oy 4 6. PUTRD GEE SEU CURE QUESTA LLET SS aA aia aaa « . [LOUD DUTAU DANA PU EE SHOATAAUOLAUDAUULAN TDA ORRTRUDERNODANIOR DAA UH OTS: = OUI UT MMMMMMMm————- 19 CODEX 24 ee ee ee PER BAe ee Nae eel eA ee aie eee In the present condition of the College, fraternities in the general concensus of opinion, are deemed in- dispensable. Concretely, they do much towards the comfortable and proper housing of the men students; they have stimulated interest in campus activities; and they form the nucleus for the social life of the college. More abstractly, but apparent nevertheless, is the tie of brotherhood that makes the return of alumni to their Alma Mater of double significance. Man is a social being, his place is among his fellows, and where is a more apt place for this association than in a fraternity house? Arguments concerning fraternities are always present; there is good and evil in them, but this is not the place dor ‘suchwa, debate.) Suincient)1@uisito say that the college has made fraternities possible, and that they have grown up with the institution. They belong to Beloit. 266 QUDGODRARDDGOTOOGHORTOUOG GN GRUB E01 a ea mane a eee eee SIE eR NNNMMTNMMMNMOODMET OSDIR DVT GMNANATAI INNA USMC AR UMERUUAN AA Gg A A) een eee zt e108 ATER AUREL EAREERD YU LE TARE 2 LUE ACTED 990 28 1 © SS a a a RUNNER, 1) 10 SU EVULUOEICNENRU POON DINAUARY NOURNGI . — 2 ) ae 19 CODEX 24 : LULU TTT TTS 19 CODEX 24 TTT COUTTS ©:0O R’O OR TE Piss Ase ie) ally Pe bet eb hia : : ; : : 1867 1919 Kappa Delta . : : : ; : 1897 1920 Delta Gamma . : : . ‘ : 1874 1922 Delta Psi Delta : . : . : 1908 TU 2 a ar as a RETR ESS To il COUT EE UC ed al = 2 iz = fe HUETOUNEOLUTOGUOLUNOUARLCUUNLAIT@ 19 CODEX 24 COTUTTT TT TTT TTT COLTTTTUTT TTT TTT ase eis i lee NT CS O-UEN Gol PERSONNEL MaseEt E. Lee, Faculty Advisor ETHEL BARNES : : Pi Beta Pht ELIZABETH ARNEMAN ‘ ; fe eet beta Pht | GEoRGIA BRANNON : ; Kappa Delta ) MarGaRET DAvERY , ; ; Kappa Delta ELIZABETH EVANS , Delta Gamma Witia Von OvEN ; : Delta Gamma = = Dorotuy BuFFINGTON . : Delta Psi Delta = = HELEN BENOIT : : Delta Psi Delta S SIMMS SSS _ oo ‘a tf CUTE 1 ASUUUUUUUAUUR AEAUATEUOALCUUUUOULEONUNEAETE EY PULL CO COME xe 24 Pit ieee ah Ae AP etl SORORES IN FACULTATE FLORENCE ROBINSON Puyuitis ARNEMAN ETHEL BaRNEs HELEN CoLe Dorotuy Koun ELIZABETH ARNEMAN Dorotuy Downs SopH1A BARNARD Norma FarnswortTH Jove Matzex Jean ALDRICH BEaTRICE BAKER JANET FISHER GarRneET HoLMEs EvizaBETH KENDIG 1924 ELIZABETH STEWART 1925 1926 1927 JosEPHINE WIGDALE IRENE ELDRIDGE Dorotuy OviaTT Marjorie PALMER MarGARET RICHARDSON ADELAIDE STEWART Dora KELLY IRENE ROBERTS ELIZABETH OAKLEY Rutu PoLtuarp ELIzABETH SARIS Frances Kutp Witma Myers FLoRENCE NortTuH ETHEL PoLLARD JEAN SCHUMAN OT CU a OUTTA UE TE COUT TT PET T TTCT = UO GC + 9 a ‘@) D E x 2, 4 OUTTA QOUTUTUT UU te © LAVUSNIGACRUNUSUUOIUOLONUEUAUISOUUORNTONTITIACES FounpDED 1867, aT MonmouTH COLLEGE MonmoutH, ILLINOIS Sixty-eight Active Chapters WISCONSIN BETA CHAPTER , Ah @ 271 a mini... aa PUTMAN WOTTON 5 HRCUOUAVERUEGURAAODIINOLONTOSHLUAUI@ eta es O D E x 24 AUT AMTLTLL EGON IP Te a ID Sb AN HOULOUREOLOUCRROUORUGURUUAOUEHDNOUORORER OCOD ECE DAUUALICOAMNUDNGGONCOLORUTONTOLEUNERDDUGULIIE Jj 6 1924 GEorGIA BRANNON Masie HaroLpson Dorotuy CALDWELL GERALDINE_KELLY 1925 ETHEL WATTS 1926 Giapys ConrRY Loris Moore Marcret DAvERY Dorotuy Noyes Dorotuy FLINN Marion SAUNDERS ELEANOR LawrRIiE ELEANOR WESTER Frances WILLIAMS 1927 Apa BAKER AuticE Hurp ARDELLE BAKER MILDRED JAMISON Evita DEWEY RutH KoEHLER RaMONA GaRDE MarGaRET REINHARD JOSEPHINE GEORGE PrEarL RICHTMYER Buiossom Tonn 7 ©) is = 1 272 CTT UE COTTE = TTT ke a EN TTT TTS 19 CS o) D E xX 24 COMMIT TTT COUTTS © UUNUGTANCRADTANOTOCOLOLUOUASESNANIDRALRNLOIN OT FouNDED 1897, VIRGINIA STATE NORMAL FARMVILLE, VIRGINIA Forty-five Active Chapters WRSILONE CHAT LHS Established 1920 ’, ’ O 273 SUT =} 3 FSP PGTN CHE VEEL LF aL LL A a ae ce AM 1001) ANT DNNTUTORUEACTL GAN ATANN 3 (4 OTT TT OTT O ) i? HSUUUUUUUEUOUNUEANOIEOUILOUUNNUANUONDITORNT EEE TTT TS A - PULTE GRACE CAMPBELL io (OE 4 OUT UU UTA DELTA GAMMA JOSEPHINE CANFIELD ELIzABETH EVANS MarcGaret ALLER KATHRYN GREEN MartTHa JACOBS Ex.ceva ADAMS HELEN HurRLBuRT LILLIAN JONES ELIZABETH LAIST GERTRUDE ALLEN HELEN BuRNETTE IsaBEL CHERRY KATHERINE FLOTO KaTHERINE FRITTS Vircinia HALLECK Sue HEYNEN Vivian Van OrnNUM 1925 Wiuita Von OvEN 1926 Harriet WESTPHAL 1O27, Hewien Louise WILcox bo Ruona FITZGERALD Mi.LpREp PauLson Mary Utt Lots McCornack ELIzABETH SAYLES RutH SwWARTz Harriet LeETTs JesstE Morrison ANTOINETTE ROGERS Ruts THoMsoN Dorotuy KENNEDY Emma KRAFT Rutu McCausLanpb Rutu RosENBLATT MarGARET SMILEY VrirGINIA THOMPSON DoroTHEA Von OVEN COTTE s COUTTS , i CITT E MMM ee OUT OS COUT ite) t ARREN FEMALE INSTITUTE MiIssISsIPPI Tt b) seven Active Chapters at W OxFoRD ALPHAUMUTGHAPTER: Established 1922 - 19 CODEX 24 Thirty FouNDED 1874, TTT TTT TTT SSLAGUELEDOLEVENOOLIORNTORORODERIODIUDL© PIOUS UWER ME RDUUINGUN US MUCUUOPONTG UN LCE ee ee at PORLELRRALGUUANUMARU AUD UOUHUURURRURROROR OCOD Ete oe Ta 2 SHAALAUAUUAUOHAUEATOUEOULLOEUULOUUUUVOLICRUERERE UU UE TO io CODEX 2 4 JOTI TRIB RSs deisey Ml APA Ab AE WAN IsaBEL BILu MAaARGUERITE BRETT Dorotuy BUFFINGTON Lucy Barwass IsaBEL BENNETT MarGARET ATKINSON Grace BaBKA MarGarRET JACKSON WENDELYN LINDEN JeAN BRIGHAM Harriet Brown HELEN BuRGETT Vircinia DantIELs 1925 CLARA SUGDEN 1926 LuciLeE SCHNEIBERG 1927 Dorotuy HENRY Sara McGavock Mary WHEELER HELEN BeEnorr ARLISLE MILLER Mary JanE McComs Mary OsBorRNE LORRAINE REYNOLDS Rone RosMan FLORENCE JAHP CATHERINE Ropp FLORENCE SUGDEN EstHerR WESTERLAND HORAUORDEEREMTACUQBTOLCGODN0EEE1U GS an ene aT LN NGSUUDNIODLUEDNE Mai OUTTA ETS COUT TTT 7 us ETT ELE PO TTT Ak ; OUTTA TU EE Ot OUTTA = 2 19 CODEX 24 FouNDED 1908, aT BELorr CoLLEGE Betort, WiscoNsIN PTT MIMI 2 SVOADNAUOAVUDDO LUE DURDAURRDERAUEO AUDI OUER OTITIS COUT PH TUT TTS 19 Cy O D E D4 24 UAT OURLENUGAELUNAEU RATA VOATHN THLE SOMAe CO) MALE d ves Le Dee id JCD Ik AP Living as the girls do, entirely in the dormitories, sororities have not the opportunity for group classification that the fraternities enjoy. However, the four sororities at Beloit have done more than their share in fostering a wholesome atmosphere for the women students. ‘They have enabled individuals to form friendships in their own groups that would be impossible to cement as tightly in the whole women student body. Though more recent than the fraternities, the sororities also help to raise Beloit to its high level. What with their Sunday night sings, their parties; their benefits and enter- tainments, they make college life more appealing to the girls. It seems that a co-educational school is judged, superficially, perhaps, by the quality and extent of its group life. If this is true, Beloit need never fear for that part of our prestige that is upheld by the sororities. 278 BUC ee ee CTU re LUCCA LUT GEUTATOCO ELON CCUG OAEOEGT DELS SSS a A RNC ENUM 1111 UNUUAAGGRAG CNL EUCT UN GUCRACAQLEUT OA (eS OSLO USCESITST TELE TYLA E500, ES a ae a ee NEN TRTORINNCRNOENTAT || 0U00ULUND OU UOUOTISOV 0s VOUNITGLINGNEORUNL UU UU COUT UOT OUT EE A005 - PUTT TU i SSLAFUELRDOLOODARDAUORSANAUOADDEDIADINNTS GEOUP 5S === =S= ts ie J | Ras air Al NE eae | a CAM cn iS NS i) Sia mess = ‘ My Eo ee eee EHO WR Goa ran me reeneeors HET UATNT AMUN ORUAGUNRCOUTURTETUISDI NET UL CUUTRIT RIT LUC Yosemite are COTTUTITUTU TTT TT ALITALOTELITETANILILULNITEHNLUIIT@ 19 CODEX 24 cTUATIAUHATUATTUTEATUNTEATHTTNLIEINE DOMAULRERUDUEADOURUNUALOUUUOOULQUARARUOUUOD LA: COMTI TTT O J Heten Benoir House President DWE Idedatie (ON) label lb Emerson Hall, which is the home of the upperclass women, is located a block from the campus proper. ‘This dormitory, which can accommodate seventy-five women, was a gift to the college from D. K. Pearson. Mrs. Nelson is the house director in charge of the hall. 7, a = OO) DAAUGUSCODRUAVEDNADIANAROUTERLETEAUONTARYEOTEDRO OLDE 7) SZUTUUVUUUEUOHACOAYULOUTC UOT A OTANUATORTTAENY BUTT COUT TTT PO UUUL EU TTT 19 @ O D E X rs _) -. UU EL COUT TTT TOT TS TUCEUNTGRUMENDOUTOTCOLORTERATOLEAUUODTELUN eo) EvELYN JonNsoN Miss Maser Ler House President House Director esa Vel sl lmeGsO lb AP Gat Stowell Cottage is the residence of women from any class who prefer a small house to the large dormitory. There are rooms for about eighteen women in the house, which is located one block from the campus. %, A ® eUAALGUSUOONUAUEALARUADLUAULUCEOUSUIDRTANYEAUODLEDIDARO PIU EE COUT BUT TTT TT SLDUCVULANTRUEATOAAUAUSNOLONTOTDAERIIN@ 19 Gs ) ne) E 4 24 OTT TTT TTS te SO UMMNULAGHLLULALUAAELUUERLUANUTRUERURRARERENED EvizABetu Movuar Miss Mary GassowAy House President House Director CeHPAS EalsNeelieael eae Chapin Hall, a former men’s dormitory, was turned over to the women after co-education was established at Beloit. This hall, located on the campus proper, has rooms for the accommoda- tion of sixty-five women. This hall is the residence for the Fresh- men women. Se Da EN Re a aE Oe RR TEMS ALTIINIINNDANAATOLAU GLY SURAALBARAUUGONCUESTE , as i KO 282 COT ee Eo er SUAALULE LOD EUALGURU DUNO EORUEE RLU OEDIERUOTEAODL COMO REN Er MTT Mm CODERX 24 STMT COUT TTT The 1924 Codex Advertisers UU EO a HMTUTELIUGERITETERLTL@ 16 CODEN 4 OOM COUT TT OTS ADVERTISING STAFF U5 -L Oo Re Ree UN Sete ek 1D. _ Advertising Manager PAUL WATT SON ARTHUR WHE Ebr ER AGERE EUS Ey Es UI PE IDeGars LEE BOR T DOUN FILO FELIN SiON, TOD Ore iE OeViEn a) RIES eee alk ie ans RO fe Se ie a ey a! as 1 ie Sa an eS a ee ee ee SONNE LM EL KC J ra i fq 9 A at £ “ ’ « 9 i - tw _ _ 284 AMOUOUACQORUANUUNTOUONETOUUIHOCTWQONTANTEAQUOLENUOIUN POUT MEU = Bw S i a Hiiiiiiiiie SST SS) ULEVDLAVTOLEAUEULULMANOLOATESHATERII 19 CODEX 24 OTT TM MTT iS COMM ILE CREATE THE HABIT OF BUYING FROM OUR ADVERTISERS This last section of The 1924 Codex is prepared for the buy- ing element of the Associated Students of the College. 285 Pmiimininnnninintte._ me SoG UONUCTUSUUCHUE TRE STS UNCER ALTE a a a Sa eee NE IS re Ui NAAN AIAMANSN TOL AASTAM ALA ent SUITAUUUOUGHMOAAEULARIADARROLUIEOUSDIAAUADIO ATOMIC PUTT TTS I9 CODEX 24 Strationd Clothes MORE POPULAR THAN EVER WITH COLLEGE MEN THE SEASON’S SMARTEST STYLES IN FURNISHINGS Hart €. Timmons The Young Men’s Style Shop Second National Bank Building 1861 1924 The “At It For Years Second And Still On The Job” National FUEL LUMBER Ba nk BUILDING MATERIAL Phone 13 Member of ‘Keeler Service Satisfies”’ Federal Reserve System Keeler Lumber Fuel Co. BELo1tr, WISCONSIN 108 State Street OUU TTT TOTS SOE. a aa ae a ae a a a ae a a a Se eae nee NTRS UNTRSTTET| 11157111147 10400 HUTA LEI TOTUTEATATNN TUL LUTE 19 ie ‘@ 15) E 24 OUT TT TT YOU’LL NEVER FORGET COUT TOT TS Jim When you come back to visit— Come in just as you used to in those good old college days. Che Bridge Inn “On the Bridge”’ 287 rir areriuevannueteeyicr er vestrunrcit a TeEYpIVUPT) (CUM, se tee oro ie pipitianee A UL ULEC LD GIG TECH ECAC L pec hang SSSUUUUUTENOUEAVOAELEOUAUGUUUUUEULTRONLEA UAE © CUM T= SU Te a F PLUUUL ELE LLC QUTUUTO UT TT TMM FURLAD ORTON CODATERNANORORONGUOADIODI:S: PF. J. Bailey Sons Company Occupying our new three story building about August 1, 1924. Located at the corner of State and Grand forty-five years. One of Beloit’s oldest retail establishments now equipped with every modern merchandising facility. Complete lines of Dry Goods, Ready-to-Wear, House Furnishings, Rugs, Carpets and Draperies. 360-362 East Grand Avenue Beloit, Wisconsin A. E. SHort, Prop. ° 9 Mrs. SuHort, Ass’t. Hicke US “YOUR MESSAGE IN FLOWERS” CHOCOLATES Beautiful Cut Flowers AND for Every Occasion gence College City Dinner 11 to 2 p.m. Floral Shop Lunches All Hours Opposite Daily News Bldg. Phone 238 The Home of Hart Schaffner Marx Clothes Holahan’ s Satisfaction guaranteed or money back. 288 19 e © D E xX 24 COMM TM MTT SEE FOE UY ARP EDEG SRE MAC TEN ORE R TVG STA TORU SSS a NN NNN DOR TENET , {AUC NIU LUA P Fi Ci AU TAEECU GET ATCRULLT : UATGHD GON ODDLONODURRONIGURODIODNINES . PULL OU UU Pe (OWE X Ba Women ihem-- Men and Women of Beloit COUT TUTE O you remember that little thought? You saw it in the Round Table and in Beloit booklets the year you seniors and juniors were freshmen. It was not an “advertisement” in the usual mean- ing of the word—it was the sincere expression by one of the Beloit family of a genuine conception he had formed of the school. Now you have been four years—some of you; three years—more of you—a part of the growing life of what three generations have thought is an unusual and wonderful college. A middle-aged man said sincerely the other day: “SIT AT MY. FEET”’ Centuries ago Plato sat at the feet of Socrates. It was the beginning of The Intimate College The Beloit Idea is th : ; : ee Gollere “Would you mind directing me to the college ' Tignes : campus here in this town. I’m not a Beloit man—I’m from an eastern state university and from a western business organization. But I’ve heard of Beloit every- where. I’ve heard men and women in trains, in offices, in homes grow sentimental over Beloit—talk of their college as a real nourishing mother as I’ve never heard graduates of another school talk of their Alma Mater. ledglikealorcccruhat, Kinde ole colecess = a e e and meet some of their folks. It’s after we’re out of school that we ap- SALUTAMUS! BELOIT COLLEGE Beloit, Wisconsin preciate that sort of institution! There must be some reason!” Yes there must! You tell them. Men and Women of Beloit! You tell the boys and girls you meet, the fathers and mothers. It will be kind to the boys and the girls and the parents. It is from your mouths, your experiences in the life of Beloit’s intimacy, that we want Beloit’s name to go out to the rest of the world. Around the corner from the main entrance of Old North College, is the Little Campus Book Store. Scores of Beloit faces smile over the diminutive counters every day. Scores of hands take their books and Polar Cakes and _ lolly-pops—and are clasped in the warm sincerity of ‘‘Good- bye” when the last trip of Commence- ment Week is made. Come say hello to us—for soon will come a time when dim hands will stretch out in memory which we would give the whole world to grasp! — “Pa” CALLAND. [ © = : bB [ i (; [ l : = BELOIT, WISCONSIN = o Tell them to write for the ‘““‘Doorway to College’’! 2 | | = HI — = SLACTNLAOOTNOOTUTITONNITITOANNEAIININIES OMAUIONLUTUAVAATOITUAUIAVOOEADUAVLTN is SMART APPAREL FOR COLLEGE MEN z Ss Reitler Clothing Co. When you want the best in ICE CREAM OR BOTTLED MILK Insist on ours; it 1s pure, and it is prepared under the very best of sanitary conditions. S. W. W. Dairy Co. Opposite Northwestern Depot SUEUCUOLCVUOLEATEANUIVSNOLONTOOLULANIE@ 19 (Ge C) D E x 24 COTTA TT A Too ETT TTT TTS 19 ‘3 ) iB EX 24 OTM MMT OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER FOR THE 1924 CODEX Beloit Wisconsin Hirer Wea eUmnte Nie TOAET OUST LEI TEL) ART UUERT A) [EL Kf neti tiaaateaaiemaes NA SVOUUE EE TEC es aa 291 CONSUL DRED SRA CSTD LCE ODL ET ADEE GS SLL aa aaa aa IT «DLN DNA AADNTUOAUTA USAC ONMT AREA WeasG. Larson H+ | 19 ‘e OC) 1) E x ps 4 SAUTE TEE Co-eds will find our curling iron stock complete in every detail— any size—any finish—any price. We also feature travelling irons, COUT TTT chafing dishes, and many other practical appliances. Beloit Water, Gas Electric Co. Public Avenue and Pleasant Street VISIT OUR DINING ROOM ARE YOU TAKING ADVANTAGE OF THE MUSICAL SERVICE Banquets A Specialty Offered by Hotel Hilton Hook Bros. Piano Co. CHARLES WILD Proprietor “The Steinway Home”’ RosBerT DAILEY Manager Hook Bros. Building Beloit 292 STAAUOUMIODUALOVALOUADUAUTVEULODUDAYONTEAUODLODIDILCOM PUTT STULCURAEAOADEAGOUAARGUUALGDADOGD DD LA) aaa aaa PMN AULA NISELIRALNTUMN Sh CUT OT TT i 2 SPUUUUANUOUDCAUEANELEOUULCUCUUAULUNEALCRTT EEE EEE ESSE EEE SELLE SIUUUUUVTOLANEROLUANULONLOOALUEUT Oe 0000000 CoCo OOOO poco ooo ooo oOo ooo oS eoGGoG 6 | PeCOWEX 24 Henry C. Lytton Sons STATE at JACKSON—on the Northeast Corner— CHICAGO The Lytton College Shop Has Your Kind of Clothes @e interpretation of college tastes is based upon close personal contacts in the colleges. We then incorporate our findings with the prevailing style trends, that the last word of Fashion may meet collegiate approval. These clothes come to your campus through a store that holds a world-wide reputation for the greatest buying advantages and economy of operation in America. .No other Store better approximates your tastes, nor sells such clothes so low. 293 Pe ccc cc ccc eee ee COCO COCO OOOO OOOO CCC COCO OOOO OOOO OOOO SOOT OCCT SOOT OSC COO ORCC ORO DOO UO DO OTN S 2 TU UEU ER UCP NULL LU Meee le Se Ss On nie SUH UT COUTTS TTT 7 iS SUEALTDAUOAAUAVELARTADEURUTTUQUUURUONTQATEANEDLEODBELY SUURUUOLCNTOUEATRLROLUSNOUEECE SLUR RES 19 O D E xX 24 OUT TTS CLOTHES, SHOES, AND FURNISHINGS “IN THE COLLEGE MANNER” OUT TOT TTS The authentic styles and tasteful patterns preferred by college men. Low prices are assured by our Seven Store buying organi- zation. GrROCKFOR), sToRES 6 ‘Grries G. J. BorHLAND 118-120-122 So. Main St. Manager Rockford, Illinois FREEPORTILL.STERLING JILL. SIOUX CITY, IA, ROCKFORD ILL.SPRINGFIELDILLDES MOINES.IA, “Home of the More Fashionable Footwear For Women” | wscinanme | GTEWART © EAT AND DRINK DRY GOODS — = CARPETS SHOES Rockford, Illinois REAL HOME MADE CHOCOLATES Hickey’ s Chocolates and Bonbons ; 2nd Floor Palace Theatre Bldg. 125 W. State Street Rockford Rocxrorp, ILLinors Exclusive Young Men’s Tailors O OTT ELUM ONACURDERREAPUOUUUELEAEAVLLRYAOTAEGRELEOA0E1 (© aaa ta a a Ne ee IN NANT NTN AMTTMCL LUST ©) 'G 11k RETINA NNT Dl) MANDAL LEU EEL UU ee CA 2) PRCUULAVEOLEATELRULATHULOSTRENNUEAIIE® 19 ‘® ‘®) 4 E xX 24 ©cHUATDARUUAAAATLAUAIAGULON HANOI THRIER AS CF © Fashion ed JOSE There is no stretched-out tightness around the calf, nor any relaxed cloudiness at the ankle of the new ‘“‘ Vee Weave”’ Burson. Just as the hand knitters use a different number of stitches at the ankle, calf, and knee, so the Burson process shapes the stockings in the knitting. Added to this is the smooth com- fortable foot—knit-to-fit. Burson clad ankles intrigue the most critical eye, so dainty and smart are their lines. % iS LST eS SSS a ee ee ee ae Penna e et ee ee ee A OT iO K Sold at Leading Stores Burson Knitting Co. Rockford Illinois SUIAUEUH UDR RULAUANDDTORAORUUECRGCUDUDAVORVEAUODLEOUOILN OUT COUT BUTT SU OUL TT TTS L9 eS O D E xX 24 WOMEN’S APPAREL OF PRONOUNCED INDIVIDUALITY SUITS COATS FURS BLOUSES DRESSES SKIRTS MILLINERY L SHOES HOSIERY OUAU TT === 708 SW SSA a= Sse ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS One of the Most Beautiful Specialty Shops in Northern Illinois or Southern Wisconsin I2O-22 N.MAIN STREET ROCKERORDEITEEINOlS= CLOTHING _ RURNISHINGS where Doriety Brand Clothes are sola The Nelson Elotel Rockford, Illinois Cafe and Cafeteria Service 365 Rooms Sea Foods Planked Steaks Kitchen Electrically Equipped and Operated All Dishes Sterilized Joun A. OpprG, Manager 296 SVRUGUOUAUADEDSERTAVGRGNUORGA GHEY OECUUT, aOR enn enn RNIN NORTE (LGU EUINNIVUNIETAIUIOTIANG. ty EASUUUUAUUOUNEAWERUOLY OUST OUUNUU SUN LTORIT NEA e Sau er CU EMU TC UCLREOLC LOE USODQUUROD DUE CN) sn ee CUTTMNTTUE MARAT TMM TTS ion OWE X | 24 MMMM COUTU ULE TTS COUT TT Mutftett Studin L. F. Ropinson, Successor THE STUDIO OF DISTINCTIVE PORTRAITURE 114 W. State Street Main 1572 Rockford, Illinois PUTT UE THO UU TT = PPUSTAS ADEE ALTE ECTUEL SL GEL NEAL LLL La aaa aS AARNE TLE N DA VTAU OLEAN ODOT A NAANEAMOMUODOIN ES 19 e C) D E x 24 COTTA TOOT PULTE TT pe Witte C Son QUALITY MEAT MARKET 117 East Grand Avenue Phone 93 JOHN L. BULL TRY KEELEY’S CAFE Dealer in FOR TASTY FOOD STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES Good Service Expert Chefs Telephone 294 124 East Grand Ave. Beloit, Wisconsin THE POWDER PUFF CHRIST BOYSCHOU BEAUTY SHOP Marcelling Scalp Treatments Shoe Repairing Water Waving Facial Massage Hat Blocking Shampooing Manicuring Hair Dressing in its Latest Modes Call for Appointments at 3767 Al6 Wace Grand Avenue Witte-Newton Co. PLUMBING AND HEATING 418 Pleasant Street Phone 475 ty Wo) ios) PUTO SPREE VRP OP UNE VEU CUEL LEUY UCC CLT EEE) rete cantina aertrpmanmenicissptimmmienamai papaiiisiniinssligesisiatie rata iatiagi tag ee Hee ea Ss = = a 2 = = g = = = = 4 Wa at UU ULC AN INSTITUTION that is inseparably bound up with the industrial and com- and vicinity. mercial progress and growth of Beloit. 19 CODEX 24 A Beloit Bank’s Creed By H. A. Von Oven, President The Beloit State Bank The Beloit State Bank The Sort of Quality This trade mark is recognized by the users of wood- working machin- ery all over the world as a symbol of high quality machines. P.B. YATES MACHINE COMPANY Wisconsin eS oA. Beloit, SVLAUUUURODADDONODUIGROANIROQODORUERINANCS) Beloit, Wisconsin The P. B. Yates Machine Company is the largest establishment in the world manufactur- ing woodworking machinery. From a begin- ning of one machine (a sanding machine), built nearly forty years ago, the Company has grown to be the world’s largest; and the Yates line of machinery is the nearest complete of any. One hundred and twelve different type machines are built in the great factories at Beloit, . Wisconsin, and Hamilton, Canada. Branch Sales Offices of the Company are located in all principal cities of the world. And there are in successful operation today more woodworking tools which bear the Yates trademark than any other kind. 299 COUTTS The Beloit State Bank ‘‘BELIEVES IN BELOIT”’’ and the community it serves. It believes in Beloit’s educational institutions, her manufacturing indus- tries, and her commercial enterprizes. The aim of this institution has been to assist and support that which is best in the upbuilding of the com- munity. This Bank has built its suecess upon but one fundamental principle—to extend and broaden its usefulness to Commerce and Industry, and increase its helpfulness to the citizens of Beloit UU ST UUARDRL VAS GAU EGP DUREL CES EEE UERDSET EDEL QD BACT VS a ea a RNC OCR LA UUTT BG ANAVNITSGLUURERSRG TUM R MSMR Od ET TMM MKS 19 Gx AB NEe.« REESE SUT E = ie : 99 : Those ‘ Nifty’’--B Sweaters C were made by 9 e e e O’Shea Knitting Mills Makers ATHLETIC KNITTED WEAR FOR EVERY SPORT 2414-24 North Sacramento Avenue CHICAGO A. E. Gilberg @® Co. FOSTER “Campus Shoes” The Better CANNED FOOD PRODUCTS Deedmedeaemtne COFFEES TEAS College Woman, the GROCERS SPECIALTIES IBS nie eal dae ‘“Sub-Deb”’ 589 East Illinois Street CHICAGO Priced $10.50 to $12.50 = Catering Exclusively to = Fraternities, Sororities, F. E. Foster 6 Co. = SARE ENTE SS IEE 115 North Wabash Avenue = and The Foster Drake Hotel Shop = CHICAGO 2 C. W. GriuBeErG, Representative - Orrington Church Street, Evanston 5 800 An a = = = = = = = . = = al HTOETEsTRURNUANITRRUTUSUIUORTUITITNTTNIUURTIRICC PC Gor Ny. 24 PULLOUT OUTTA TTS “a CUT TTT OUUT TUS Cj Kohler “Viceroy” Built-in Bath Corner Pattern KOHLER Look for this name, unobtrusively fused into the enamel of every Kohler fix- ture. It is your guaranty of genu- ineness and of these distinctive Kohler qualities — (1) the beautiful snowy whiteness of the durable enamel (2) the uniformity of that whiteness in every fixture. APPY the child, when days are hot and sweltry, who can splash in the clear waters of Lake Bathtub, the summer resort of the home. A boat to sail, a celluloid fish to angle for.... pink legs thrashing upon the smooth white bottom, clean as a beachof dazzling sand— And happy the mother who can turn the youngsters loose with never a care for the splattering flood—whose Kohler built-in bath, snug with the wall, snug with the floor, leaves not even a crack for water or dirt. Kohler Ware brings to the bathroom—or to the longed- for extra bathroom for which a nook can always be found —that coveted air of mod- erncharm and fitness. Call on the good plumbing dealer who sells it. Ask him ques- tions. It will be surprising if your first discovery is not that the cost of fine Kohler fixtures is much less than you had imagined. Please write us for our book- let of Kohler Ware for bathrooms, kitchens, and laundries. t7 i — ®@ K LERor KOHLER Kohler Co., Founded 1873, Kohler, Wis. Shipping Point, Sheboygan, Wis. BeKPAe Nc Cellier SterieNu Pe Re oN CrlpPeAstes Calc S 301 STU To OUTTA LEE COTTA BUTTS TT Ke UOT 19 e O D E xX 2 4 SUT TCO WHY NOT ALWAYS WANNER LOOK YOUR BEST? MALLEABLE CASTINGS COMPANY CULT MTT SOT TT YOU CAN IN CLOTHES FROM Certified Malleable Castings Ashton’s saa Hammond, Indiana Rockford, Illinois South Beloit, Wisconsin EDWIN KOOL Merchant Tailor Nelson Hotel Building “Clothes Made by the Individual for the Individual.”’ Phone Main 5181 With all their outstanding refinements ROCKFORD’S CLARENDON PIANOS OLDEST AND LARGEST SS SSE SCTE SPORTING GOODS STORE Quality is part of them, not merely a surface finish. Haddorff Music Co. 408 East State Rockford, Illinois BURR AND BURR Nelson Hotel Building RockrorpD, ILLINOIS 302 a FTN T TART 2 a a ee NNT [114111111 NI TIAIIDITAIUFAINII 101). 5 SULT EUNUUULURNREUELLOMILONUUUUE WUT TK COUTTS @ K OUTTA - PULL International UT Pe Cok Xx “24 Pa BR Dependable, low-cost haulage means much more than a Cheap Purchase Price. It is determined rather by the actual amount of work your equipment will do each day over a long period of years, and the Cost of Doing that Work. In every section of the country, Internationals are giving the greatest measure of satisfaction to many thousands of business men and to farmers. This is the best possible proof of International sturdiness and economy. It shows that Inter- national service and quality are closely related to successful hauling. Internationals are not only built right, but are kept right by our Free Inspection Service. Company of America Rockford Illinois 303 Harvester OUT UTA TOT UTS = COUT TTT TT 4 %, COTUUITTTITIIST IT rs 19 CODEX 24 oT Kairbanks Morse = | = =] : 2 SHUAQUASADERAUDENTAUCOGAYUACHON GOUT (00 1, Ra RNG T ON OLIVININIINTINMIAIA cine PUTO UL OE 19 ‘Ss O |B; E 4 24 J i OUTTA MTT THE MARK OF INDUSTRIAL SUPREMACY COUT TTT Eight factories, covering hundreds of acres and employing thousands of expert workmen, all dedicated to an ideal— the closest approach to perfection in the manufacture of Fairbanks-Morse products. Thousands of dollars spent each year in inspections of raw material and finished product—in precision methods applied to quantity out- put. A world-wide distributing organization highly eff- cient in serving the needs of modern industrial require- ments. These factors contribute to make THE FAIRBANKS-MORSE QUALITY SEAL the outward and visible sign of the ideals for which this ereat organization stands. This pledge reflects an in- stitutional promise supported by the combined efforts of thousands of Fairbanks-Morse employees to give the industrial world products ONLY which merit this rank. Our products include “Y”’ oil engines—pumps— I electric motors and generators—railway ap- pliances—Fairbanks Scales—farm machinery such ! as “Z” engines, lighting plants, water systems and windmills. Fairbanks, Morse Co. MANUFACTURERS CHICAGO World-wide distribution through our own branches and representatives. 305 UTI TT TT ENMTETUTTTTTTTIITT TIT Te cay TUUNANUECUEAUGMUEQENGTOGUAUUULYOUUOLUUU EC oS © HOULELUEOUNULANEMADUREOUECRUOROOUGRDLOROUUD PO LTT KS OULU TTT TS Phone 56 i CU ET Tic = . = STLAUVUAUUOSUUOENOLIGGGAORCGOD0G108 (01 Se nS NSNETNNNNTT LU ATOLGVUUAULUNUAIVSNNIQG000010.11)1) 19 CODEX 24 Satisfied Customers Our Hobby Beloit Iron Works Builders of PAPER MAKING MACHINERY FOR ALL GRADES OF PAPER Established 1858 Beloit, Wisconsin USA MARCELLING ELEC Teor oa COLLEGIANS! Se tT conn SCALP TREATMENTS When you think of HAT CUTTING | HAIR LUMBER AND FUEL Soft Water Used For Shampooing MRS. THIMMIG Please remember we BEAUTY PARLOR ‘ 422 Pleasant Street aALCuraveny Olle SeLVICe. Phone 1415 Compliments of Beloit Lumber Co. JOE KNIGHT 306 Billiards Pocket Billiards SUNS UCTS ETREAS UNA MMR UER HUTTE ORV SURG L EAL EY SoS ee en ee eee oc NRE RR SEE TTNRMIEEMED 11111) (INR T IG EsH tuna tT LOULUUARULOULOUGUARUOURUUAGUERIEQURRAREROUUD EEE O Vz POU TTT UU TTT 19 CODEX 24 SI — a The goal of every ambitious man and firm is typified in the rapid growth of the Jahn Ollier Engraving Company—the uni- versal esteem inwhich their art and plates are held by the large national advertisers —and the enviable reputation for prompt E deliveries which they enjoy. = Delivering this same high quality and careful personal supervision to schools has built up for us the largest college and high school annual engraving busi- ness in America—4oo books yearly. = Thirtythousandsquare feet of floor space (4 floors) and over two hundred and fifty skilled employees are required to meet the = constant demand for “J O” commercial = photographs, art, color process plates and photo engraving (one complete floor is devoted to color process work). Intelligent supervision ofall work by many skillful office service men eliminates your S| troubles. Sales servicemen sent everywhere =| JAHN and OLLIER ENGRAVING CO = 554 West Alams Street CHICAGO unntat ul TM M TUTTI TTT TELEPHONE MAIN 3620 s AS TAN SD MMMM 307 FOUSEOEEEDAYUC GOEL TVECH COLA, 2 SSS a ee ae Sa aaa NAM (1001011011 USTINTATITALSUICOENNYALINNI 5 OUTTA TT TTT TTS Se 7 i SULAUODAAODEVEANDAARIGOAEQUUECAUOUAUDAVORTEAUOOLOANDALO : 19) BIDE ee PITTI ©: HAATVUELADLAAELUETILUULATHATOINUULUET ALS CULTS Badger The Place you all know Clothing Company ELLIOTT’S Fountain Service Lunches THE YOUNG MEN’S — DUPKE’S Picture Framing and Decorative Headquarters Style and Quality Always y Q y y 439 East Grand Beloit, Wisconsin ! LUICK’S ICE CREAM OF INTEREST TO you Highest Grade Drugs, Candies, | Cigars, Soda, Imported Perfumes and Fancy Toilet Requisites. Get it at Loose Leaf Goods Fountain Pens b) WIESNER’S PHARMACY cpecrer aaa Goodwin Block Eversharp Pencils The Store of Personal Service Corona Typewriters Dennison Goods Sanford Inks Engraving GORDONS HARDWARE EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE Bredesen Bros. Stationers Locker Locks A Specialty OUTTA ik 2 URSRO OSG UUAOOLNC GAY UNG OO RUD 01 000 Raa ae PNT NATTA EODTIAU IMME al SPUTUM MUNA TNC Ma TROT EY DREN ATU U LUE TNULUTENULT ETT Ke) ee TMM MM TS 19 CODEX 24 OOM MMMM CUTTS COUT TTT This Book is a product of the Year Book De- partment of the Rogers Printing Company Dixon, and Chicago, Illinois SUIEALTDAUDDRURAUARAM UAB DEAULECRUODADOATOUTEOUODLEAIEILNS: PUTT TAU ik Bee eas QUAI OUT TS POUT LC OULU ETS K A Shoe Store for Everybody “Murklands’’ Unusual shoes for every member of the family. Styles, shapes, patterns unequaled QUALITY and RELIABILITY supreme. The SATISFACTION of giving absolute SATISFACTION to our customers has made ‘“‘MURK- LANDS” the last word in good shoes. io GODEX 24 BEAUTIFY WITH PICTURES The pictures you need to beautify your home are here. YOUNG’S SUPPLY SHOP 421 No. State Street Beloit, Wisconsin GARDNER MACHINE COMPANY Manufacturers of Grinding and Polishing Machinery Disc Grinding Supplies and Accessories Beloit, Wisconsin U.S. A. LC. my) THE VANITY BEAUTY SHOP 416 State Street MARCELLING MANICURING SCALP MASSAGE HAIR DRESSING FACIALS HAIR BOBBING HAIR TINTING Ww a o a = = _— | = | = — = ee — = BD = = — fe ey = = = = - = = Ss = 4 = = = = = — WE CLEAN LADIES’ AND GENTLEMEN’S CLOTHES BELOIT DYE WORKS 343 East Grand Avenue Phone 575 OUTTA TTT TS VATA UTES SE BEDE UHL ALEVE TUE CT ATL i Rea AD Re NNR DS RRND UORAN co 5111154 10 ESRC ITSO UG TTLAN VISE SALE DUMAUONUA i | EN TMM fo OL eX 24 TMM TMNT City Ice and Fuel Co. RESCREENED HARD AND SOFT COAL COUT TT TT TTT) The Most Modern and Best Equipped Plant in Wisconsin EK. R. BRANIGAN Phone 161 Beloit, Wisconsin ‘‘Mother, What’s a Wash Tub?” Maybe in 1985 children will have to look up the meaning of “washtub” in the dictionary. But that is an awfully long time to wait. Especially when you can rid your- self of the washtub now. The Lasting Quality of Just call for any of our services. Allen A Family Finished Wash Hosiery Rough Dry makes it unusually Damp Wash be economical to wear. We offer you a complete assortment. Styles that wear. Ideal Laundry Co. E.L. CHESTER: CoO: Phone 540 414 Pleasant St. 311 MITTIN Sd SUISAAUDRUDDAUAUUUDADIOUAUAUDECLUUERDORUGNYEANADLGDIDEED CASUUUUANUAUUHANOAGULECTACUUUUUULODELUOUT ITAL: UT OTT 19 CODES a2 OUTTA TTT A UT TTT TS ABBATHWASDAY, KEEPS YOU FIT EVERY WAY ERICKSEN’S The Photo Shop COUT TTT DEVELOPING PRINTING ENLARGING FOR THE AMATEUR Rk. T. Morrill PLUMBING AND HEATING KITTO THE PRINTER PRINTING OF QUALITY ALWAYS Exceptional Service Phone 2346 420 Pleasant Beloit, Wisconsin Phone 538 524 East Grand TAILORED CLOTHES THAT FIT Hulburt Hulburt 416 Pleasant Street FOR QUALITY GROCERIES AND MEATS BADGER TOOL COMPANY GRINDING MACHINERY Supplies and Accessories THE ECONOMY GROCERY 951 Wisconsin Avenue BExLoir, WISCONSIN COUT TTT TS $$ LS —) = = = sas = a at a i = = = a = == = om — = = = Vrs mee ad SLLURML ODADAS GOALS GG LUGN GD OB UDI EGE Se a TAT ATAU LD TUANDEAULA TON DSONEAVGEHODUADAIN 19 CODEX 24 TONG DEE Xe O99) 224 AS DAVE Reis EeR'S A SHTON@ WR Ye G OODSL Omer ee ke oe ee Oy oe) 302 B Ba nyea nc Chm amen Ke 9 Crap ean dy dren cit ae ee 5 eee Salen ve oe 308 DA DGH Ra WOOL LC Omer esa meme the.) Ame Uh Gta gle ae. Bile BaTE Eva OONG © ber meee. ce ek ime kr 6 ak, ES eR er, Pee: 288 BELO COLLEG mae men cm eee 8 Wer ee tek ts acta cee 289 Bret Orta) vam WOR KGma ee ter te eee i ote) tales s tele 310 IS BUOLS LR ONG ORK Gites ces Mon ons hone nus De ee ee 306 BEEOEGRISUM Bite WO we. nar eters fer ie Saye So) eee lbs ho Dale 306 BE rorus DATE. LA AINK, 5 ciel ferent fa ln, eh ae ace bos yf ea eee 299 TD BrIGO (re Vis Cree PAC seen ee ie eee ei) BN, a 1G i ee Ge 292 DOUREVARDLLOGGER Vln. cei ee one sean eet a ea oe 294 DOVE CHOUM CHRIST mie. me Mammen were d 04 itte Ae ees Exit (hag te Gaee 298 BREDESH NG ROG ME trae oh i Ate Ret pe Dorr tInreh Nee ee oe, 308 ERED GES EN Neeaeee dibs r epie, FPA eh haa ame St OR cen sde cette M ee 287 ES Tr ee eae re, Rl ae CRE hare hie At Mey AU al Nhe og 298 BURR Oee Ds UR Egeerees, ieee ae teh EGS sire leon Oe YN eee 302 BGR ONG EH OST BR Vetoes tech tan ang i , tee ee) Bee eee COee 295 C CELE Suiin rege bse Lan oO see ree eek 27 ce 1.5c Lata oe ch ae A Sula Ui VelC Bice Hil hist One Taal ae pate eae eine so ry) Seon te eer: old Cone Gr Oriel CORATTC Occ cate ih oka ce hare Se ee 288 ) D IER es ACN FC) Demet meee rarer eit wie eh A 2A ie on Uses oe 308 E Ble Ga Wie © EO TEIN G: GO enemies ite tel A os Ae eet, 294 ECONOMY ROCER Vier Sat be aeMe ei mite aren, ay at at gene es ale RELL OT aN Oe Ld ee Wear ai ee en at ts Ue hl WAR Ree oe leak. 308 LERICKSONELHOTOLOH 0 Pamiea sc Lean es ee ot ae. Le F TOS pie Hise bee Oss OO at eee ares, ee sige te ae Ra 300 TUNER BANK O-VLORSE: (1 COM en enn) tas eo iy anniek a aoa wl 304-305 G CAR DNUEMVUAOGHIN TA Ote te, wee tea ee as Aa 310 CUTIE Fie epee ate OCR Ocak ie wy ee ed NS td heey 300 GCORDONSE AR DUC. Bs One ee «nem 5 oe Sale sw Serer 308 H FUAD DOR Gay UU SLOWEl US Timur ety. eater Seo oe. wes ay ait memes 302 EiTerchivace| DO BCORD) mae eeawny aus nee h. be a cos aed aes See, Hoe Os 288 PUL asec OO FORD amram iec ety ity fos ela Beak ON Mites 5 294 TLCE DONGLE OLE Leer ree Ge ee eh ek en Guach org ees yA eee 292 FLOUATIANEC EO TITENG! CO parrots yea OST Aha os bth Gen gs, Bhs 288 HOOKe DROP H ERS mee RRS eee en te a tA Cad ti om Ree 292 EP OEBITRTE OC gcLULE CP Umma ne wiNe -iht. ole LS in eee a lek obs EEE ODOR CITONE DAN Ko eee ete eo ln ws a UNE hme SL 310 313 QUT COUTTS SUT TT TK SS) PRITOLUVEALEGIUNUNASAUEOSIOQAIINNIT® 19 CODEX 24 TOBAIIATENDRY ok oe oe Ce ee ee INTERNATIONAL ULARVESTER GOs 5c ee ree ee ee ee JAH NEOs OLEIER H:NGRA WING: Op Gree ere ee en eee 307 Knee LUMBER bP UnL CO. se ee ee ee 286 KEPunY CARE. 2.925 tee. eae ee ne ee 298 KELLY, TOM...u 0 ae ee ee a ie 296 Kirro THE PRINTER O45 oe 2 ee ee eee ee, eee oi2 KowitGut, J 2 Hs eet een ee eee 306 KonuEr :Goves pe ree ee eta er eee ee 301 Koo; Ep Wingy ee ee ead ee 302 LARSON): Wi Goee A ee ee ie ee ee ee ee ee Ve 291 Dyrron; ETE Ye Gos 20h are Ne te edt oer ee ee 293 M MOFFETT STUDIOS) aac Oe See oe 297 MORRIDD RTs he 0 ess cet oe eet ee 312 MORELAND: (Poo lie page 3 ee ren ee ge 31Q NSE BSON HOTEiy 225 See ie 6 eee eee eee 296 REITLER CLOTHING Co. .. : tengo Las cs ang NOR ee 290 ROGERS: PRINTING'CO” eae ee ae eee eee 309 SECOND NATIONAL“ DANK pte tee 0S ors eee ee 286 SO WA RL) a) eee eee Ss a alt Son, SCRA ee eee an ar eee 294 Se Woke Wie ATR CO ee et tee ere es ae 290 4 TatMMiG, MRS. ies 305 ki leette aes ee: 2 ee 306 PEIMMONS, | MLART: Hit a5 0t Pek oe ee 0g fue tos by ce ee ae 286 MEME ee ge ee ee ee EA ee Ss : 2 oe = es eet a2 fe 3 bo 2 = Q Nn oh ss jo) by = n ys) ae) o) A te i) (Se) = ites) S (oe) S VANITY BRAUTY SHOP.) 9 eg oe ee ee 310 OD = WARNER MALL@ABLE GASTINGS COW a eeeiicagcse cers ieee 302 = = Wisner: PHARMACY sigs. toe eee ee 308 = = Wirrn-NEWIDON CO. ee tect ie rn 298 = = Wrere Soni icee oe eee ee 298 = = WortHam: , Go, 00 iia y2 5. sae eee 5 ee 296 = E ¥ E = Yarns; Po BP Cosa Se ees eee eee ee 299 = 5 YOUNG’s SUPPLY. SHOE 2. sec Sy eeer te ee 310 = SUM or SUELCUULAVTOUIATENRUAUENULETOETAULUE@ SASHUMNANUNUNEONUAUUEOOVLONLUEUEDTATUUELERIS Pre OOD EX 224 BOOK INDEX PaO ae te Ol Mae waees et eee Lh ow cahee iW Sneek eS | 2 PRCUAIINS GES LON mete, oe wake Gy ene Maree ee i ee PA CLV EP USL Same meeieita eterna, ners Pe ces kb oda, ely. TNULTNCSWAKEES ES eee ES Seat Moy te sey 5 nde Eee oer a a ge so Pe EN CHICTICACUV LEN Gs Meir nti ANE rene er eyes tC LY cles nh vce NS PACE LINCO RE eVVOMIC LVS) are a Oa Nae eR ARES Mh erat ye Pe ey PASC LETC OL OFur Cin epee eR ne ae ls a Malta oy cee) edulis ad RE GUD belkin ee Baan. 7 2 Tale ae gen me Cs A ge a Rae DESAIS(O) OY NDE: -chak 7 nn rs gE als Mul OR SRaN, by AACN aa ene eee ok hi PT LEER ay WTA Kay aera en. Mes at os a A Ree eee Becket boil areas Seg aes me ee oe Ne dg ; Basie! Dalla Women) pape ti set tke ala Sec seen hte. ek 5 Beloit Oley ent Ay CVS mr aet ee ne, cetera @ 0 50s AA ue MiNeme, Beta BSL Ae Lene eRe we eee oo Sen heWy verter neh tiie oll rans ceo SST DUSEA CULV ILIOSI Ie Shine ae ty ele et Miah Ace ea a Sn on es Campus Seren sete meme meee ho) ORsc pet es 5 hel: heh we tas eB (Sand DUsmVICWEOCCLION @ eUhe tre) tae Sie ree) eee bs ei eae CST ole Ca 2 eee eee aie meet ea ee ce et NS oe RE Sens (Sheerleanders meray at wets Mi ne toon AES Se te a ad oR Se, LE ESEPEC | 9 Sool Ta pcs a ael Oia yl Ra e as ee ge COO oe, Ty Sea OE ey AS ee Pa GCOontonteel 10 Cm wire ein Se yr fer el. Selenide Batol Gtatt © timed Copy righ tePag oman wees ween re A AR Ly Peers ty Al Dancing werent, poe to “le Gee ORE RN taht ee ee TCA Ole Cn Rema eae wae es eo er Se om a tale) euctal A ios PCATCOL AV OIG Geee een ake eN eine he 6 ARR Ue. he Ble ay cues Debates G11 Dee neateea aires Metin te. wt coke Pin, Me til on Yon py a UB YeoROR ACO) a NY: See tor nec a 35 Ws, SVN a Ree OO ga ling Ra Ae mee Deltas cig el tae mete wie O ets tien ee a Kn yka tec Ty Mee, Peri pthc (5 Deltapsigiis ah Osh amen wert, weer et St ea ae Sete els ae Don’t You Remember Those College Days ................. UC eee ee ear ee NS a Pe Ect, by eb ytorder t,2 UaaQsr abaya AON | ato fine, Shen -c. Leake gamut er te Mg cea anne es Re (HOA LULCS Sa NNeMee ara eR MM A Mate te Ames Oe SE EO, SE LOOT a! ae anne See he he tas 6 elt akin es ad ounr oe: LOGE WOOL Ce wet cee ag Ain, ks oy Eh eR Gd RNR E ba ore HALO LIU COC ae wets oie k Pawn ete eNO LO oe ere ieee du. reclatumee By io slhdahY UTA QM MNETIS Oy wre UM, «ol eae (or Ne ee On ENE LA SACU VIMCS© chu eee MRNA n a, ter aks Ste once ele fo, (enera le bGardiee . tee ee io otk Che ae cla lees 8 eT CEL Den VICT. ) ae) einer re em cua tr 28, oes NCD EE. eee ibe CW OINEN eee eee het eh cpre FR anit cet Auk Bw. or EV CCI ae etn eae ae einai PAO ere ei tee ce ed DAW oh ew od Homo manaseroLesslonal in ra termileg nnn oa canl ees Noses Boe .o s : JELOR LED mepbh eles 2 Monn ae Prac on ts gash Me Nea WRIT tack a a ae ae HITLCE MELE iw OUI ewe eee eee Me ee harsh Me ee Seuss ols: MGI ey ac Se a cre dla) Saran gs Chee ee fo ae Oe TCA Did ee eee ah eee et le Beet ee Ree he Sle ASEAN CO} clo Sol a ln I Ud Oe, A Et earner pera eA cia eee eiani Mey ne ey 8 Pe ot Wight ee hab a 6p Gaps DMT OUTOR DI SEBS coc Pic dy: ae ag ON Cnn at PO Om oP EE 315 STURN DURRE GUT wh AUDR LANL LY aaa a ARAN UU VAUATG AUD AU OCEAN OVERS s QUT UE COUT TTT ST SULERUUU LORE UAUUUELAINROUOUECLUUELIDRUARYEAVODLODINILNC 4 COUTTS ASTUUUAUOLUUEAUAVOIEOUIUGUUCUUOUTNNONUURHA NEAT S: TTT TT UU TS it 9 cy Gy D E x 2 4 OUTTA MuchvAdorA bout Nothing) ee ae eer 230 Musiczand) Drama... «2 ) ieee, ace nee ee ee 215 Oratory foes oe aa eek ees ere eee a 209 Organizations... a Sv. ociehec sey eee eee 241 Pageant oy. 60.85 eae eee ee eee ah: 2 eee 224 Pan-Hellenic Committee 2. se ee 236 Pan-Hellenic Couneilmin.s yee = ee 269 Phi’ Beta’ Kappa. ih a eee ee 245 PhiKappa -Psh oat chee ne em ee 254 Pi-Beta. Pht... sc.4 Sue beeeey oes es eR nae 270 Phi' Kappa Pst (c2..Fenee ae see ee ee 254 Pi Kappa: Alpha: oes 9 ie ee aes see eee coe 260 Platform |. Acyi%s Sawe 2 eee ue Stee ee ec ee ee 207 President +: % phe Soe 0 Ret dade tt ee ee 19 Publications 21, ): SgeRe Aces 4 ea ye ena eet aren ee 201 Rifle Club CMe ise eee ee 234 Rifle Glub}(Women’s). 7.525 c60 oe ee ee 235 Round ‘Pable ics 2 nas Sa ee ee eee 204 Sclenices os ih se vo. 4 Ae ee EN Seats 29 SO@MIOLS 6s ln a hue wl ww aho e nek e Sys) Senior Committees... 22.2 oe aa se 239 Shakespeare Society — ac fase one 229 sigma Alpha Epsilon 2.3 7.8 se eee ee 258 Sigma, Cia fy eteeeeen ea 1 cals Und aga ROM OR or ane oe ee 256 Sigma’ DeltavCGhi “2.2224 oa ee 248 SoOphomoress vias... gece) 5 ok ee ee 61 Sororities. ..2% aesaa ee oes We ae 267 Stowell Cottage 240. $2.02) See 281 Sub-Titlhe, Page... 29s i es 3 Tau Kappa. Lips longa) ae tS ae eee eee eee 262 Tau RO ig Bee a ae eae ee 264 Vesper Choif «.Jastucguet os eee ae ey qi 283 Vice-Presidént 2, (4.40) 3 Seah ae x. ee 20 Volley Balls = oy 2c ee a 186 WAL AL lle tk es Pies fs, ok ai 181 Witching Hotir 2.0 ve. areas bac esata eee 228 W8.-Gy AL. oo ee ae a ee 231, Women’s Forum %s.) 4.) seat an oe ee 238 We We CG. AL Ge ee a ea 2 ee ieee 316 | I ir ES Ny hi i jp [ “Ty | oe ° pene « ‘ ‘ . is i} | is H ihe Ways |


Suggestions in the Beloit College - Codex Yearbook (Beloit, WI) collection:

Beloit College - Codex Yearbook (Beloit, WI) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

Beloit College - Codex Yearbook (Beloit, WI) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Beloit College - Codex Yearbook (Beloit, WI) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Beloit College - Codex Yearbook (Beloit, WI) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Beloit College - Codex Yearbook (Beloit, WI) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Beloit College - Codex Yearbook (Beloit, WI) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935


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