Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO)

 - Class of 1927

Page 1 of 296

 

Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection, 1927 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1927 Edition, Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collectionPage 7, 1927 Edition, Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1927 Edition, Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collectionPage 11, 1927 Edition, Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1927 Edition, Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collectionPage 15, 1927 Edition, Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1927 Edition, Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collectionPage 9, 1927 Edition, Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1927 Edition, Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collectionPage 13, 1927 Edition, Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1927 Edition, Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collectionPage 17, 1927 Edition, Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 296 of the 1927 volume:

• Ex Libi ' is . £% mOj j no II ES S1 EAI NUGGET COPy RIGHT by ohnN. AlbertWBevan Manager T I-i E 1 Q 2. 8 FIRES PEAK NUGGET Annual Publication ot The Junior Class COLORADO COLLEGE COLORADO SPRINGS. COLO. A % n.iTW- St t Pi JB H -t • ; « , — k - ! o DEDICATED t o those philanthropic pioneers who through half a century of uriiirtn8 service have developed the State °f Colorado to the place it now hold ' s in a land oj- unending progress. - t f FOREWORD As Ike slate reveres the memory °f its past records and legends, so ve hope thai ipu willcherisattiis record of ipur college i ear. CONTENTS -M Aammislralion Classes College History athletics Organizations Promineul Collegians The Cat In (Demoriam Frank Henry £oud ' Professor of CDathematics and Astronomy, Emeritus . Cutler— the first Building Coburn Library and Perkins Hall Palmer Hall from the Southeast , h ' r f -. • .X. Cossitt Hall Men ' s Commons Bemis Hall Women ' s Commons In the Jungle behind McGregor Hal Falls constructed by Geology Department The New Stadium iff ' - pt.- ' -m MM Ml Hi V! 5 John Evans ■liii JOHN EVANS, governor of Colorado, was before coming to the state, very influential in Chicago as a physician. In 1853, Dr. Evans advocated the founding of Northwestern University, and the selection of its location was made in Evanston, which was so named in his honor. In 1862 he accepted the position of governor of Colorado. He became a leader of men. In education, morals, rail- roads, finance, and pol tirs, in Colorado, he was an empire builder. He retired as governor in 1865 and the same year was elected U. S. senator from Colorado. But Governor Evans never helid office because both biHs were vetoed, and he was not permitted to take his seat in the Senate. Governor Evans was among the leaders of the Methodist Episcopal church and was one of the founders of the Uni- versity of Denver. ti £B.£v:S. urio nt .jiKi-)i ; d !j ii 8(3 o jniriU ni Mrflifi ittbnji $ t$v t $$te if. rnc+l willtqW to gnibmnot  tifo ii MSmbsi ■■„ -i0 f S£8I qi 9bfam 8BW «ioiJKDo(. 33i to noita J ' a  H brT.r: ..V ltolftviriU .looo.ii Bid ni b m n ©a anw ' i ' biriw , i o;|i njiv3 .obrtoilrO to -lomsvoH to xwi Ji£  q - ri 3 i ff$ spJ8  .d £. $! ni 1 P aljnom .noiJjsouba n! ..nam to lybewf s ©Jittrjyshjj sll MfQfRis as auw 9ti tobinotdD at ,e::i ,ii?toq bnf: r oonsnti „£bGoi u?9 r yixiifte art? brns 8 8:1 ' ni ' jcmisivog ae b9tJT9i 9H . jbliud tofitdtoO iiril .QbimoIoID moi ' i lotEnae .8 .. ' ) b$ioe t ajaw brta ,b90ls v 9iaw tijUld ibod 9 WJ30sd .3tfto fctad tavan n.Kv3 .ajjans?. arit ni 1b?3 aid ajlfii 01 botJinneq 1on siaw 9ri JgiboriJ9M ■atis to aisba©] grfu gnonua a jaw gnjavH ton-jievoi} -inJ 9(11 to 8i9bnuot 9riJ to 9 no aew bnta ricmirio liaqoosigS .I9Vn9CI to Ji819V •fflUBIBB ADMINISTRATION ADMINISTRATION J- 97? G PIKES PEAK NUGGET TEEN HUNDR TWENTY EIGHT -o Board of Trustees v-r y-v - CHAIRMAN Charles C. Mierow ._ President of Colorado College TRUSTEES EMERITI John Campbell Denver, Colorado Irving Howbert.. Colorado Springs, Colorado TRUSTEES Willis R. Armstrong ' 99 Colorado Springs, Colorado Glenn A. Bowers ' 13 ..New York, New York A. E. Carlton Colorado Springs, Colorado Benjamin Griffith ' 01 .. Denver, Colorado William I. Howbert Colorado Springs, Colorado William S. Jackson Colorado Springs, Colorado William Lennox Colorado Springs, Colorado George Foster Peabody Saratoga Springs, New York Thomas Harris Powers Colorado Springs, Colorado Oliver H. Shoup Colorado Springs, Colorado E. P. Shove Colorado Springs, Colorado Philip B. Stewart Colorado Springs, Colorado E. C. van Diest .Colorado Springs, Colorado ALUMNI REPRESENTATIVES ON THE BOARD Leo W. Bortree ' 06. Colorado Springs, Colorado Hugh McLean ' 01 . ...Denver, Colorado Harold D. Roberts ' 08 Denver, Colorado Lloyd Shaw ' 13 .Colorado Springs, Colorado J- 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTV EIGHT  To the Students of Colorado College: The Pikes Peak Nugget seeks to preserve, from year to year, a faith- ful representation of each passing phase of college life, and to record in permanent form the names and interests of those who for a time made this place their home. This year — as in all other years — Colorado College says to its friends, its visitors, its sons and daughters: May those we welcome come again, And those who stay be glad. Amen! Charles C. Mierow, President. 19 c 7t Q PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Josephine Morrow William Copeland William Postlethwaiie PRESIDENT EMERITUS William Frederick Slocum Officers of Administration Charles C. Mierow President William W. PostlEThwaite ' .— Treasurer William D. Copeland Secretary Guy H. Albright. Secretary of the Faculty Charlie B. Hershey ....Dean of Men Mabel B. LEE.... — Dean of Women Marjorie S. Crouch...:.. ....Assistant Dean of Women Josephine R. Morrow .. ...Registrar AlliE E. Brown.. Assistant Registrar Frank W. Nelson ...Cashier Mary ClEGG Owen Secretary to President Julia L. Gwyther Secretary to Treasurer Alice LawriE Secretary to Secretary ManlEY D. OrmES - .....Librarian Louise F. KampF Assistant Librarian Hazel L. Earl Manager of Dining Rooms Dr. A. A. Blackman ...Medical Advisor Jessie D. Stewart College Nurse Jack F. Lawson _ .Publicity Director Arthur Baylis ...Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds 20 u- 97zQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET _ --- N I -N HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Coburn Library Uhen the present building was opened in March, 1894, the college possessed a very small collection of books numbering 8,000, half of which were of no value to the college world. They made an insignificant showing in so mammoth a building. But the library collection, in spite of no endowment for books, has steadily increased. When the Evening Telegraph purchased the Morning Gazette in May of 1923, the library acquired the files of both papers back to the time of their beginnings. This was a library in itself and had to be housed in the loft of Palmer Hall for lack of room in Coburn. Frequently during the last few years, a load of those books used least of all has been moved out and stored, to make room for new purchases and valuable gifts. Today the library building seems pitifully small and the erection of the main building of which the present structure will be the south wing is a commanding necessity. During the past year the librarian after five years of labor has completed cataloguing all the newspaper files of the city from the founding of the town down to date. This work is being continued every day as the papers are issued. 13,500 cards have already been used and on the average ten items are listed on every card, thus mak- ing 135,000 entries altogether, covering all important happenings in the history of the town. The library has been greatly enriched recently by the gift of two notable private libraries, that of Mrs. S. E. Solly, and that of Rev. A. F. Ridges. Manley D. OrmEj- M. D. Ormes Louise Kampf Beatrice Sims ■ flQ PIT PEAK NUGGET - NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Prof. Sisam Department of Mathematics pxTENSivR and intensive research work has figured largely in the life of the Mathematics Department this year. Assisted by Cecil B. Read of the Senior class, a study has been made of scientific methods of sectioning Freshman. It is believed that this will lead to more accurate division of classes. The individual members of the Department have also been conducting various projects along Mathematical lines. Professor Sisam, Head of the Department, and president of Delta Epsilon, honorary scientific fraternity is in co-operation with members of the departments at Cornell, Illinois, and Princeton, publishing a report on the facts now known about Rational Transformations. Professor Lovitt, in co-operation with Professor Holtzclaw, of the University of Kansas, published in October a textbook entitled Mathematics in Business. Professor Albright has done his work along still another line. In March, he presented to the faculty a series of curves showing the distribution of grades in various ways within the college. The Department has suffered the loss of Professor Wapple, who resigned to take a position, last fall, as head of the Department at Southwestern University. His place has been filled by Miss Catherine Hood. The Rocky Mountain Section of the American Math- ematical Association met at Colorado College, on April 22 and 23. Professor Lovitt is President of the Section. Top Row — Hood, Lovitt Second Row — Albright, Sisam, Parker. 22 -r - 97z ? PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E E N HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT The Judson M. Bemis Department of Business Administration and Banking Phis Department has had a very active and successful year. All the classes have had an increase of students over last year — the classes in business of 20%, and similar increases in the economics and sociology classes. There were two new instructors in the Department: Miss Margaret B. Bennett and Mr. Glenn E. McLaughlin. Miss Bennett was temporarily appointed to fill the position of Professor Mautner, absent on leave. Mr. McLaugh- lin, an alumnus of the Colorado College, was appointed last spring. Both these new instructors made fine records for themselves in the course of the year ' s work. It is a custom of the Department of Business Admin- istration to take groups of its students to the neighboring cities of Denver and Pueblo to study first hand the activities of the large industrial and mercantile enter- prises there. This year ' s trip was under the direction of Mr. McLaughlin, who conducted the students thru the following Denver industrial houses: The Ford Plant, the Gates Rubber Company, the Denver Packing Com- pany, the Denver Rock Drill Company, and by special invitation, the plant of the Rocky Mountain News. Of the graduates in Business Administration several have established themselves as certified public account- ants and instructors in Accounting, while a number are making good in business. Still others are doing graduate work in Eastern Universities. Prof. Drucker . Drucker Bennett Abbott lie Laughlin c - lQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET H U N D R TWENTY EIGHT O V-r Doctcr McMurtry Department of Biblical Literature The work in this department i s wholly elective, for the most part open to all students, and arranged in semester courses throughout, so that the student with time and inclination may enter the work of any semester without the necessity of continuing the work for a full year in order to receive credit. In 1926-27 courses were offered in Biblical Intro- duction, Life of Christ, Biblical Literature, Greek Testa- ment, Principles of Jesus, Early Church History (to end of fourth century), and History of Religion. These courses are taught without sectarian bias, for their world content in religious and moral values. Department of History Y Tork in the History Department of the College has centered itself around an interest in research work and advanced study. Prof. Archer B. Hulbert has been absent from the college during the second semester, and has been in California completing his search for information needed for his map of the Santa Fe Trail. He hopes to finish that work during the summer. Professor Binklev has made some progress on his History of the Republic of Texas and will spend the summer in Texas in a further search for materials for the book. Mr. Meyer, absent on leave, has been replaced by Mr. Scholes. Professor HulbERT .£ 1 F. V. Scholes Edith Bramhall WlLUAM BlNKLY 24 o 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E E N U N D R E D X W E N T V G H x Department of Philosophy W E call it a liberal college, and one likes to think of it as liberal, i. e., free in two ways. First, it is a place where students freely engage to pursue studies, rather than a place where tasks are set for them, a place of assignments, recitations, quizzes, marks, absence reports, and where diplomas are eventually given for a specified number of semester hours patiently endured. The liberal college is free, in the second place, in being a place of intellectual tolerance where minds grow into capacious- ness. It is the aim of the Department of Philosophy to contribute its share to the realization of these ends. Prof. Wjlm Dean Hershey Department of Education ■The courses in education in Colorado College are de- signed to provide a general introduction to the means and methods of education as represented by the public schools and other educational agencies, necessarv in- struction in terms of hours for the graduate certificate to teach in the public schools of Colorado, and fifteen hours in education courses to enable our graduates to teach in the high schools approved by the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Three fields of study are offered: General and educational psychology, educational methods and princi- ples of teaching, and historical development, present organization and administration of educational insti- tutions. ) e J. A. Glaze C. B. Hershey E. C. Wilm 7hQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E N H U N D R W N T V EIGHT Prof. Douglas Prof. Boucher Prof. Gilmore Department of Chemistry This is the age of chemistry. Chemistry is no longer the mystic art which only the chosen few can understand. Colorado College, accommodating itself to the changing times, has accumulated facilities for the teaching of this subject which can be surpassed by very few of the colleges of the country. Department of Physics T HE physics department under the direction of Professor P. E. Boucher and Dr. W. F. Drea is well equipped to give advanced laboratory work in electricity and magnetism, optics and light, dynamos and motors, X-rays, photography, illumination, radio and vacuum tubes, and radioactivity. This year a complete X-ray laboratory was installed. Department of Biology POR training in the powers of observation, sound thinking, and knowledge of the fundamentals of right living, there is no better subject than Biology. The Department of Biology at Colorado College is well equipped with apparatus and offers a variety of courses dealing with plant and animal life. Top Row — Sparks, Barnes, Warner, Freudenberger, Krause, Penland. Second Row — Boucher, Douglas, Gilmore, Drea. u 7Aq pikes peak nugget N I N E T E E N H U N D R E D TWENTY EIGHT A, Prof. OkEy Frof. Parker T Prof. KEYTE Department of Engineering HE Engineering Department was established at Colorado College in 1903, under the direction of Dr. Florian Cajori as Dean. Complete courses in Civil and Electrical Engineering were given until 1919, when readjustments, due largely to the War, were made. Since that time, the electrical work has been handled by the Physics Department. Courses as now given, lead to the degree of Bachelor of Science with major in Civil, Chemical and Elec- trical Engineering. Department of Forestry The Colorado School of Forestry offers what many of the students feel is a very delightful course of study. During the junior and senior years more than half of the work is done with the students and faculty living, study- ing, and working in the woods. Department of Geology The Geology Department of Colorado College has in the past year taken great strides in expansion and general improvement. Much of this rapid growth and extension would have been impossible had it not been for the work of the Marland Oil Company in supplying equip- ment and assisting in many other ways. A special feature of the department this year was the offering of a course in Climatology under Robert DeC. Ward, Harvard Exchange Professor. Top Row — Wagar, Page, W. R. Keyte. Second Row — [. A. Keyte, Okey, Haymes. 7hQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET . NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT . Prof. Latimer Department of Romance Language || Tnder the capable leadership of Professor Charles T. Latimer, the work of the Department of the Romance Languages has come to rank high in the college. Each year an increasingly large number of students major in Romance Languages. The Department offers a wide variety of courses in French and Spanish, including con- versational courses as well as more advanced literarv courses. A two year course in Italian is also offered by the Department. Professor Latimer, whose academic work was taken at Colorado College and at the University of Chicago, has also studied and traveled abroad. All of the other mem- bers of the Department have had the experience of foreign travel and study also. Recently three of the members, Miss Gr aves, Miss Buck, and Mr. Snyder made an ex- tended trip thru Europe, spending some time at Paris where they studied at the Sorbonne. During the present year, Prof J. W. Crowed who has direct charge of the Spanish courses in the Department is on leave of absence and is studying at the University of Toulouse in Southern France. As part of his work abroad he is collecting material in Spain for use in some special research work that he is doing. He will return to Colorado College in the Fall. Mr. vSnyder, an instructor in beginning French and Spanish, who holds his A. B. from Boulder and is a member of Phi Betta Kappa, is planning to study next vear at Harvard for His Master ' s Degree. 97 e PIKES PEAK NUGGET N E T E E N HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT - O Department of Classical Language This year, the Classical Department has been fortunate in its ability to offer beside the usual courses in Greek and Latin Literature, Ancient History, and Classical Mythology, a course on the Greek Drama under Dr. C. C. Mierow. Dr. Mierow is well known as a Latin scholar, and his course has proven to be of great interest. Dr. Mierow is a Princeton University man, and was, before election to the Presidency of the College, Head of the Department of Classical Languages, but now teaches just the one course. Professor Herbert Mierow is the present Head of the Department. He is well versed in both Latin and Greek. He is assisted in his work in the Department by Miss Marjorie Davis. A chapter of the Honor Fraternity, Eta Sigma Phi, was founded on the campus here this year. Membership is limited to students who have had eighteen hours in Latin or Greek with an average of at least B. This organization although it is comparatively new in collegiate circles has proved to be very successful and has established several chapters in various colleges. The founding of the new fraternity is due in great part to the Classical Club — an organization which for several years has been open to anyone taking work in the Department, and which carries on many activities during the year. Meetings with programs by the members, social meetings, and each spring the production of a Greek play, given during commencement week. There is in the Department one endowed chair, the Gile Professorship. Prof. H. E. Mierow H. K. Mierow Marjorie Davis C. C. Mierow 29 97ze pikes peak nugget NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT b Department of English Prof. GOODENOUGH The problems in the teaching of English become more difficult as life becomes more complex. The Depart- ment discovers that presentations formulated in the past are no longer adequate, in that they fail to reflect the intricacies of modern life, and fail to give due place to the responses of the individual. As a consequence, the de- partment, in so far as is practicable, encourages greater freedom, both in study and interpretation. Since the best fulfillment of this purpose comes through work for the degree with honors, we invite the students, during their first and second years, to qualifv for honors, in respect to grades and individual attitude. A true appreciation of the best in literature demands a comprehension of the best in thought; therefore, a familiarity w ith the significant findings of science and of philosophy becomes necessary to proper understanding of the emotionalized expression of life which is art. Poetry is the breath and finer spirit of all knowledge. The Department of English has always the purpose to encourage the creative activities of the mind. A proper use of our language, and an acquaintance with the com- mon facts of literature are important; but even these fundamentals cannot be well used except in individual ways. The best, to the student and to the College, must come through the capture of what has not been so well expressed. The Department will try consistently to arouse in the student that finer appreciation of literature which will mean a life-long enjoyment to them. $t Top Row — Hale. Blaine. Daehler. Second Row — Rose, Goodenough, Hutsinpillar. 30 l - 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTV EIGHT - o Department of Music and Expression Phe School of Music, since its reorganization in 1905, has consistently followed its purpose to bring to the western student the educational ideals and praxis of the most progressive thinkers not only of our East, but of Europe as well. The so-called Methods, with their obsolete rules and misguided systems, were discarded and a scientific method substituted. This has acted to re- lieve us of the superficial and misled student, and has brought it about that the large part of the work of the School is concerned with musical education in the true sense. The present year is much the most promising in its history. More students are doing the regular academic courses, and in particular choosing a Music major than ever before. The natural result of this will be the adoption of a course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Music. Then the School will be fulfilling its true and intended purpose. With the Music major the student can now get a college education, with the A. B. degree, and at the same time become a competent musician and teacher of music. The field for the student so equipped is not crowd- ed, as the general field is, — there are many institutions, and many openings for the private teacher, which can be adequately conducted only by such a teacher. And the work is both very interesting and remunerative, while with it may well go the consciousness of performing a service of the greatest consequence to the community. Miss Edith Cogswell Landes is the director of the college School of Expression. an Hale Landes Tucker Bridges Reutunger Griswold Dietrich u- - N I N E T E E M EAK NUGGET ED TWENTY EIGHT If! ■—■ III 1 II Ill llllllllilllll Greenhouse Gallery — Concours History of Art Susan Leaming T N conforming to the demand of college life today, Colorado College has remodeled its courses in the history of art, stressing the important part that art has played in the development of the race. The study of ancient art is especially profitable as a key to man ' s remarkable adaptation to his environment, and the archaeological finds as studied through reproduc- tions and originals today are valuable aids to such inter- pretation. National art is important only as an individual expression of its peoples. Hence, colleges are devoting much time to the study of Russian, Scandinavian, and certain forms of primitive expression of art, where the outstanding char- acteristics plainly reveal truths of universal importance. The value of the courses in art appreciation and in architecture has been greatly increased by beautiful slides and helpful lectures given the college by the Carnegie Corporation of New York under the direction of the American Institute of Architects. In addition, the laboratory work, made possible by the unusually complete equipment of books, etchings, and photographs donated by the Corporation, has vitalized the work and doubled the appeal it offers. The college is most fortunate in being selected as a center from which the Foundation expects improved methods in college instruction in art history. 32 c -V 97i ? pikes N I N U N D R E D TWENTY G H T The Broadmoor Art Academy The- Broadmoor Art Academy was affiliated with Colo- rado College in April, 1926, and is now a part of the Fine Arts Department of the College. Although not conferring degrees, the Academy credits student work toward degrees in accordance with College regulations. Courses in Applied Art, Interior Decorating, Costume Designing, and Costume Illustration are included among the various types of work offered. In addition, the location and resources of the Academy present unusual attraction for the student of landscape painting or for those whose chief interest lies in figure and portrait work. The teaching staff includes Robert Reid, N. A., President Emeritus; Randall Davey, Life classes; Ernest Lawson, N. A., Landscape classes; Wanda Caton, Applied Art; Lloyd Moylan, Winter Life classes; S. W. Schaefer, M. D., B. A., Lecturer on Anatomy as Applied to Art; and W. Billie Lewis, Junior classes. Robert Reid The Academy cJ PIKES PEAK NUGGET . TWENTY EIGHT V- NINETEEN HUNDR . . -1 Dean Hershey Dean Lee Dean of Men Y ' ithout attempting to give a detailed list of duties, it might be said that any wide variation from normal conduct or performance among the men of the college is of interest to the Dean of Men. This does not mean that he seeks a high degree of standardization in everything that affects the men of the college. In many instances the variation is highly desirable and is encouraged. But a certain degree of regimentation is necessary wherever a consider- able group is working together. Perhaps the Dean of Men is a kind of time and quality keeper for the men in Colorado College. He is interested in seeing that work is done with reasonable promptness and that the quality does not fall too far below accepted standards. But there is always a pe- culiar delight in serving the original, ambitious student and the prospective scholar. Dean of Women The social life of the young women has always been one of the distinctive pictures of Colorado College. Out-of-town students live in the four dormitories: McGregor, Montgomery, Ticknor and Bemis Hall. The large common dining room in Bemis, with the after dinner coffee hour on Sunday makes possible a spirit of democracy and good fellowship. Life in the dormitories is regulated by Student Government and a member of the faculty is hostess in each hall. At various times during the year there are large all-girl parties. The outdoor recreations of the students, however, are emphasized more than the indoor parties. In the sponsor system the younger girls come to know the older students, and resident facultv members share not only the pleasures of student life, but they frequently help in the solution of student problems. Indeed, There is no place like Colorado College for a girl ! 34 u - 7 ho PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E E N H U N D R E D TWENTV EIGHT Student Government The Student Government Board which concerns itself with the life of the women of Colorado College is built upon a democratic ideal. Formerly- all the rules were made by the faculty. The Board, which was granted its charter in 1906, was necessarily greatly supervised by the faculty but has been so successful that at present it makes all regulations which seem neces- sary to the welfare of the group. In the spring the ten members of the Board are elected by the hall girls. This Board represents the four classes, the president of the four halls, and the Student Government president. THE BOARD Student Government President. Ellen Ruth Treasurer, Senior Representative Alice Burch Secretary, Sophomore Representative Margaret Foote Be mis House President.... Dorothy At water Montgomery House President (First Semester) Susie SanFord Montgomery House President (Second Semester) Gertrude Hamilton Ticknor House President Esther RockaField McGregor House President (First Semester) Margaret Baker McGregor House President (Second Semester) Susie SanFord „ , . (Ruth Atkins treshmen Representatives . _ r I Ruth Jackson Top Row — Atwater, Atkins, Burch, Jackson, Rockafield. Second Row — Sanfcrd, Foote, Hamilton, Ruth, Baker. S PEAK NUGGET . HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT - The Associated Students of Colorado College The system of finance was made much more efficient by a supervision over all student activity funds by the treasurer, with the adoption of The past year for the Administrative Council, the student governing body of the college, was one of real accomplishment and advance- ment along many lines. ■ requisition blanks, double check signing by the president and treasurer, and regular reports aiding in this. The council this year added judicial duties to its legislative work, following the abolishment of the old disciplinary councils. This body was also instrumental in having the college admitted to full membership in the National Student Federation of America. The plan of having the library available for work in the evenings was heartily supported by the organization, which also took charge of an unusually successful Homecoming and had a large part in the procuring of the college vesper services which were inaugurated this year. Another feature was the work of an activities committee in super- vising and restricting all campus organizations, in an attempt to stimulate valuable groups and to discourage those which would be detrimental to the general plan of student organizations. During the year one amendment to the A.S.C.C. constitution was passed, giving Jo Irish, Graduate Manager of Athletics, a vote on the athletic committee. 36 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET , NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT The Administrative Council Top Row — Graham, Morris, Swan, McHendrie, Wade. Second Row — Young, Baylis, Van Fleet, Forslund, King. OFFICERS of the COUNCIL Douglas McHendrie ... ..President Bernice Baylis Secretary Emmett Graham Treasurer COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Emmett Graham ..Finance Dr. L. W. Bortree. ithletic Helen Morris . Social Helen Morris Publications Bernice Baylis... .Music, Dramatic, and Forensic VhQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Class Officers 06% 4g aV- ml— g-)Jmmn Ik . Merle; Powell Bernice Baylis Norma Raley Jack King Senior Class Merle Powell ...President Bernice Baylis Vice-President Norma Raley Secretary Jack King... ...Treasurer - IT 44t ± Katherine Van Stone William Hall Josephine Van Fleet Robert Moses Junior Class Katherine Van Stone President William B. Hall Vice-President Josephine Van Fleet Secretary Robert Moses ..Treasurer 38 U 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIG H T Class Officers Glen Wade Lucile Hunter Ruth Gordon J 4 David Armstrong Sophomore Class Glen Wade President LuciLE Hunter . ...Vice-President Ruth Gordon ...Secretary David Armstrong Treasurer Franklin Emery Virginia Dewey Miriam Larson Kenneth Speir FYeshman Class Franklin Emery President Virginia Dewey Vice-President Miriam Larson Secretary Kenneth Speir ...Treasurer 39 Ray Haymes Powell Miller Enthusiasm Committee [ Tnder the efficient management of Tuffy Haymes, this year ' s Chairman of the Enthusiasm Committee, the ardor of the student body has been as demonstrative as the Glorious Fourth. The pep meetings held in chapel are conducted by the Chairman of the Committee and under the leadership of this year ' s Committee the first torch-light parade in three years was held. Traditions Committee Phe Traditions Commitee, created in 1923 by the Associated Students of Colorado College, is composed of: Merle Powell, Chairman, Dorothy MacDougall, and Guy H. Albright. This committee is in direct charge of the annual under class contests of the year. It must compile a complete record of such contests and of the observance of other traditions of the college. This committee also arranges for the establishment and use of Freshman insignia and shall provide such means for enforcing rules they deem necessary. Pan Pan Joe ray and David Armstrong, both members of the Sophomore class, were the chief workers in putting over a bigger and better Pan Pan. For the first time in years, stunts to burlesque the faculty were forbidden. A very wide range of stunts, extending from the silly to the highly dramatic, were presented by each one of the societies and fraternities. Music was furnished between each act by Tuffy Haymes and his orchestra. All- College Picnic Jack miller and his committee for the All-College Picnic turned the Picnic of former years into an All-College Dance at the Broadmoor Golf Club and into one of the most enjoyable events of the year. The usual races and games featured the Picnic at Seven Falls in the morning; and the music of Tuffy Haymes ' orchestra cheered on the dance in the afternoon. The Picnic is an annual event which is held on Washington ' s Birthday. I ' ' -.,„. y A Winfield Scott Stratton WS. STRATTON came to Colorado in 1872. His first • venture in mining was in 1873-74, but was a failure. Instead of being discouraged he became all the more de- termined to win success at mining, and for more than ten consecutive years he left Colorado Springs with a mining outfit. In May 1891, Mr. Stratton entered the Cripple Creek district for the first time. He soon located a claim on the southern slope of Battle Mountain and on July 3 he seemed to have a strong vision that gold was there. On the fourth of July, 1891, he staked out the location and choose the patriotic names of the Independence and the Washing- ton — which later yielded a bulk of his colossal fortune. Mr. Stratton was a builder of Colorado Springs as well as a stupendous factor in the development of the Cripple Creek district. Ray ! ' VYMKS POWELL MlU.fiP. Enthusiasm Committee T TndEK the efficient management of Tuffy Havmes, Ellis year ' s Chairman tin thusiasm Committee, the ardor of thu student iod has been i ,s demon the G trii us Fourth. in be! i in chapci) rue com the C mil • ' - ; u eadership of this on le in ctfioMfiit Mod2 bteiiiiiW man of .£V8I U oli tft A itoa 10TTAHT8 ' T ' HE 1 r Jaift 8iH . 8I ' rif ob iHB M ' yWiBo XOTTAHT8 .8 TJTJT i .siiiihsfr C3BWtfiilJdr f ?-«£lj!8i ' in k W mtiiisn tti 9-iwiJjKJV ♦ ab ' stof tt ixlJsIIiBnemiBadd sri ifcb biijoogit) giiiad lo bB9J«nI ndf ftMMti snom ioiI bjauB ' ,£nirrim Jb 889DOU8 niw oJ b9nimi9:) gflinim £ rijtw,8|jfiH |8 QbejoJoQ riot 4; Ba , agftwaeft fljRftts aiaeiO olqqhO 9c|},:b9ii9jn f 0Oft,3BT 8 niPlfi JP8I y MjuJ antftWurfhe , 9ril oo fniBia;,Bi b9}B3of nooa all .9nnj Jaifl ariJ mlbd ilMllfees the Jb9flnt 9 9irfr£ rl ul no bn$,ain}R,uol(L 9itt£Q n lp 9q ja rri9d;)tuo8 .nUiiJol-.s i n.O .8i9ri) £ jw n jbJiag..43fi:} fioiaiv gnoxtg b 9veri o 9tl.? 980orlrj briB noiifiool 9ri1 Juo b9 lfi}8 9d ,1P8I , Iul lo -gniri«BW aril bun ' ' ■ ' i ik bktiifdbn.V ' 9rf3 lo 89 nfin ailoixJfiq i 0E k , ,9flW|JToJ vJftBJW Hr i . $W t!Uft n efeM?N§l i9}£il rf? - ' n J J n., ,,8 b ,llfr r 8B T 8$piitq otoplol} k . nibjiwd B «BW,nQWBt)8 ,iMhe 49913 9Jqqit ,94ir lQ L f?9mqol9V9b 1 %rtJ ri p BraqobngquJ v exti iding from tin ill I i th Liiglilj ■ ' 1 m b v pri b . I ' .■ i rail tusii as fun ' aud i onni.1 ttt Ear tl - ' ol forme - ii All-College ban and into on t enjoyable events oi th i . | Seven Pa) I ! ■• I i m i in ' dan held ' n Wash :d the Picnic I roll Club ual niec I I the musi The Pi (pAiiiC CLASSES SENIORS c 97; S PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN U N D R E D TWENTY EIGHT - -o Top Row — Spicer, Enyart, McHendrie, Blackford, Powell, Slate. Second Row — Herstrom, Haymes, Hall, King, Roessner. ) ' Red Lantern Club MEMBERS Dr. Harry Woodward, Honorary Member Douglas McHendrie Harry Spicer Joy Enyart Fred Blackford Jack King Elton Slate Leo Roessner John Haymes William Hall Guy Herstrom Merle Powlle The Red Lantern Club is an honorary organization limited to 12 vSenior men. Members are chosen on the basis of their accomplishments during their underclass days and for their promise of service during their Senior year. Each spring the society observes Tap-day at which time the newly-elected members are chosen and tapped. The purpose of the Club is to strengthen and perpetuate all worthy College activities and to advance those things which might die through lack of leadership. s. L wWm m mt 42 7 lQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN H U N D R TWENTY I G H T U Lucile Adams Colorado Springs English Hypatia; Pi Beta Phi; Exclamation Club 2, 3, 4; Rid- ing Club 1. 2; Eager Heart ' 25; May Fete 1. Dorothy Atwater Denver Romance Languages Hypatia; Glee Club 2; Colonial Ball Committee 2; Exclamation Club; Girls ' Dramatic Club 1, 2; Ruth Loomis Scholarship 3; Pan Pan 2. Farmington, N. Mex. Ruth Baldwin English Minerva; Girls ' Dramatic Club 1, 2; Colonial Ball Committee 2; Minuet 2; Montgomery House Board 3; May Fete Committee 2. Bernice Baylis Colorado Springs English Contemporary; Vice-President of Class 1, 4; A. S- C. C. 3, 4, Secretary A. S. C. C. 4; Freshman Play 1; Junior Farce 3; Koshare 3, 4; Barbecue 1,2; May Fete 1, 2; Riding Club 1, Secretary Riding Club 2; Manager of Colonial Ball 2; Tiger 1, 2, 4; Nugget 3; Phi Beta Kappa. Martha C. Belschner Colorado Springs Mathematics Classical Club 1, 2; Riding Club 1, 2; Delta Epsilon; Phi Beta Kappa. Grace Berkley Colorado Springs Romance Languages Minerva; Riding Club 3; Crescent Club 3; Town Girls ' Board 2; Tiger Staff 2; Dramatic Club 1, 2. Frederick Blackford Rocky Ford Business and Banking Kappa Sigma; Frosh Football 1; Tiger 1, 2, 3, Man- ager 4; Nugget 2, 3; Red Lantern 4. Florian G. Boyd Denver Business and Banking Beta Theta Pi; Alpha Kappa Psi; Eta Sigma Phi; Assistant Manager All-College Picnic 2; Freshman Football; Football 2, 3,4; Koshare 3,4; Junior Farce; C Club; Question Club; A and B Club; Debate 4; Senior Play; Assistant Manager Nugget 3; War Memorial Scholarship; Pan Pan. Lyle Brokaw Physics Stronghurst, III. Eleanor L. Bullock Colorado Springs Biology Hypatia; Exclamation Club; Crescent Club 3; Class Secretary 1; Class President 3; Town Girls ' Board 3; Beauty Contest 3; Pan Pan 3; May Fete 1, 2, 3; Delta Epsilon. 43 c 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT ■ u Alice Burch Grand Junction Sociology Contemporary; Junior Councilor 3; W. A. A. Board 3; Secretary-Treasurer W. A. A. 4; Student Govern- ment 3, 4. Mary Elizabeth Burgess Colo. Springs Biology Contemporary; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; President 3; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3, Secretary 4; May Fete 1, 2, 3; Minuet 2; Pan Pan 4; Town Girls ' Board 1, 2, 3, 4; Girls ' Dramatic Club 1, 2; Euterpe 3. Wilma Mae Charles Colorado Springs Music Zetalethian; President of Euterpe 2, 3; May Fete 1, 3; Glee Club 1; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2. 3, 4; Town Girls ' Association 2. 3. VERLENE LtrciLLE Coleman Colo. Springs English Hypatia; Exclamation Club; Administrative Council 3; May Fete 1, 2, 3; Classical Club 1; Pan Pan 2, 3, 4; Girls ' Dramatic Club 1, 2, Play 2. Lois Tubbs Cooper Colorado Springs English Y. W. C. A.; Town Girls ' Association; Glee Club 2, 3; Riding Club 2, 3; Euterpe 3, 4. Helen Elizabeth Crane Colo. Springs Romance Languages Athenian 2, 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa. Stella Currie Colorado Springs History Hypatia; Tiger Staff 2; Y. W. C. A. 2. Myrtle Curtis Colorado Springs Sociology Hypatia; W. A. A. 2. Willa E- Danks Steamboat Springs Romance Languages Hypatia; Exclamation Club; Student Government 3; Crescent Club; Riding Club 1, 2; Colonial Ball Minuet 2; Montgomery House President 3. Margaret A. Davies Colorado Springs Graphic Art Zetalethian; Athenian 3, President 4; Classical Club Play 3; May Fete 1, 2, 3; Learning Art Scholarship 2, 3; Strong Art Scholarship 4; Phi Beta Kappa. 44 U - Aq pikes E E N HUNDRED TWEN Geraldine De Witt Colorado Springs English Contemporary; Eta Sigma Phi; Classical Club 1, 2, 4; Y. W. C. A.; Colonial Ball Committee 2; Town Girls 1, 2, 3, 4; Town Girls ' Board 2; Tiger Staff 1, 2, News Editor 3; Nugget Staff 3, 4. G. Edgar DrumellER Colorado Springs Economics Delta Alpha Phi; Band 1, 2, 3, 4. Carmen B. Durkee Colorado Springs Romance Languages Vassar College. David Edstrom Colorado Springs Business and Banking Alpha Kappa Psi; A and B Club 3; Band 4. Joy William Enyart Ordway Business and Banking Kappa Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi; Baseball 1, 2, 3; Question Club; Red Lantern Club; C Club. Blanche Erickson Colorado Springs Graduate Student Frank J. Figge Biology Delta Epsilon. Bruce Foster Physics Delta Epsilon. Silver Cliff Colorado Springs Lavinia Gilles Colorado Springs History Hvpatia; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Town Girls ' Association 1, 2, 3, 4; W. A. A. 2; May Fete Committee 3; Glee Club; Koshare 3, Secretary 4; Girls ' Dramatic Club 1, 2. Helen Mary Goldthwaite Denver English Hypatia; Eta Sigma Phi; Classical Club 1, 2, Presi- dent 3; Freshman Play; Nugget Staff 3; Tiger Staff 3; Glee Club 2; Girls ' Dramatic Club 1, 2. S PEAK NUGGET H U N D R E D TWENTY EIGHT Long Beach, Calif. Emmette V. Graham History Phi Delta Theta; Baseball 1, 2, 3; Football 1,3; Man- ager All College Picnic 3; Pan Pan Manager; Student Employment Bureau Manager 1, 2; Koshare 1, 2; Question Club; Junior Farce; Administrative Council Treasurer 4; C Club 1, 2, 3; Rotarian; Interfraternity Council. S. Bevier Gray Colorado Springs Business and Banking Pi Kappa Alpha; Tiger Assistant Manager 1; Fresh- man Football; Pearsons ' Dramatic Club 2, 3; Nugget Assistant Manager 2; Nugget Staff 3; Editor C. C. Handbook 3; Class Treasurer 3; Interfraternity Council 3; Pan Pan 3, 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. John M. Haymes Colorado Springs Geology Beta Theta Pi; Growlers 3, 4; Red Lantern 4. Erma Hestwood Ouray Biology Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Eps ' .lon; Contemporary. Dorothy C. Hodgkinson Colo. Springs Romance Languages Contemporary; Phi Beta Kappa; Dramatic Club 1, 2; Kosharc 3, 4; Minuet 2; Eager Heart 2; Town Girls ' Association 1. 2; Student Curriculum Committee 4. Colorado Springs Helen R. Houtz History Zetalethian; Athenian 3, Vice-President 4 Marian E. Hunt Denver English Minerva; May Fete Committee 2, 3; Y. W. C. A. President 4; Minuet 2; Secretary of Bemis 4. NiLEs Hyden Colorado Springs Special Student Virginia Irwin Colorado Springs English Minerva; Girls ' Dramatic Club 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. Board 4; Town Girls ' Association President 4; Minuet 2; May Fete 1, 2; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Tiger Staff 1, 2, 3. Jackson F. King Colorado Springs Economics Beta Theta Pi; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Kappa Psi; Red Lantern; Class President 2; Class Treasurer 4; Nugget, Assistant Manager 2, Manager 3; Koshare 2, 3, 4; Junior Farce; Kiwanis; Robert G. Argo Scholarship 3, 4; Administrative Council 4; Student Curriculum Committee 3, 4; i .: 46 7 lQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN H U N D R TWENTY EIGHT KaThryn Lace English Colorado Springs Grand Junction Mabel Latimer Biology Contemporary; Glee Club 1; Class Secretary 2; Exclamation Club. Ruth Marian Lefwenhagen Colo. Springs English Zetalethian; Tau Kappa Alpha; Intercollegiate Debat- ing 2, 3; W. A. A. Secretary-Treasurer 3; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3, 4; Town Girls ' Association 2, 3, 4; Athenian 2, 3, President 4. Maurice E. Lewis Colorado Springs Business Administration Sigma Chi: A and B Club; C Club; Alpha Kappa Psi; Question Club; Pan Pan; Pan Hellenic Council; Tennis 2, Captain 3. Douglas McHendriE Trinidad History Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Administrative Council 3, President 4; Rocky Mountain Association of Student Body Presidents, President 4; Red Lantern 4; Mary G. Slocum Scholarship 4; National Student Conference 4; Rotary 3, 4; Growlers 3; Dramatic Club Play 2; Chairman, Homecoming Publicity Committee 3; Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Press Association, Secretary 3; Rocky Mountain College Yearbook Association, Vice-President 3; Tiger Staff 1, 2, 3, Man- aging Editor 2; Nugget Staff 2; Editor 3. Dorothy MacDougall Denver Biology Minerva; Exclamation Club; Floor Marshal for Colonial Ball; Glee Club 2; Crescent Club. Virginia B. Manning Colorado Springs Art Hvpatia; Tiger Staff 2; Glee Club 2; Minuet 2; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 2, 3. Emmett Martin Physics Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Epsilon. Colorado Springs Sarah Ethel Mason Colorado Springs Biology Minerva; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 2, 3. Jack Miller Colorado Springs Biology Phi Delta Thcta; Freshman Football; Tiger Staff 3: Nugget Staff 3; Junior Farce Manager 3; Editor C. C. Handbook 4; Manager of All-College Picnic 4. CTW- 47 oT PEAK NUGGET N D R E D TWENTY EIGHT Mary Helen Morris Colorado Springs Sociology Minerva; Glee Club 1; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 2, 3; Tiger Staff 2, 3,4; Crescent Club; Exclamation Club; Ad- ministrative Council 4; Student Curriculum Com- mittee 3, 4; Inter-society Council; Disciplinary Coun- cil 3. Mary Morse Grand Junction Romance Languages Zetalethian; May Fete 1, 2, 3; McGregor House Board 2; Tieknor House Board 3; Riding Club 3; W. A. A. 2, President 4. Ada L. Mueller Colorado Springs Special Student IsabellE Patterson Pec os, New Mex. English Contemporary; Hiding Club 2, 3; Montgomery House Mary Graeme Pingrey Durango Romance Languages Merle Powell Las Animas Economics Phi Gamma Delta; Alpha Kappa Psi; Red Lantern; Question Club; C Club 2, 3, Treasurer 4; Class Presi- dent 4; A and B Club 2, 3, 4; Class Vice-President 3; Manager Sophomore Barbecue 2; Freshman Football; Baseball 2, 3, 4; Skull and Key Club 2; William C. Argo Scholarship; Manager Homecoming Luncheon 4; Manager Junior Prom 3; Chairman Traditions Committee 4. Colorado Springs Norma Raley English Hypatia; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Class Vice-President 1 ; Class Secretary 4; Minuet 2; May Fete 1, 2; Koshare Vice-President 4; Student Curriculum Committee 4; Exclamation Club 2, 3, 4; Girls ' Dramatic Club 1,2; Pan Pan 1, 2, 3. Alma Rattini Durango Romance Languages Zetalethian; Athenian 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Girls ' Dramatic Club 1, 2; Sponsor Group 3. Cecil B. Read Colorado Springs Mathematics Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Epsilon; Tau Kappa Alpha; Intercollegiate Debating 2, 3; C. C. Forum 2; Inde- pendent Club 1; Track 1; Nugget Staff 3, 4; Perkins Scholarship 2; War Memorial Scholarship 1; Chair- man, Student Curriculum Committee 3, 4. Neiva Carolyn Remington Delta English Contemporary; Minuet 2; Junior Councilor 3, 4; House Board 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; May Fete 3. i ; 48 c - - 7 7 Q PIKE NINETEEN HUN N T V EIGHT Rose Christine Ripley Colorado Springs Mathematics Phi Beta Kappa; Athenian; May Fete 2. Virginia Russell Denver Biology Zetalethian; Tau Kappa Alpha; Athenian 2, 3, 4; Intercollegiate Debating 2; Euterpe 4; Town Girls ' Association 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2. Ellen Ruth Raton, N. Mex. Sociology Hypatia; Exclamation Club; Sponsor 3, 4; Ticknor House President 3; W. A. A. 3; Student Government Board 3, President 4; Junior Councilor; Y. W. C. A. 2, 3, 4, Secretary 3. Clarence Burtrum Schiele Colo. Springs Biology Delta Epsilon. Harriet E. Scott Colorado Springs Romance Languages Glee Club 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 2, 3. M. Irene Selecman Colorado Springs Romance Languages Contemporary; May Fete 1; Colonial Ball Committee 2; Y. W. C. A. 1. 2; Mandolin Club 1, 2; Town Girls ' Board 4; Glee Club 3. Elizabeth Eloise Sharer Colo. Springs English Minerva; Theta Alpha Phi; Tiger Staff 1,2; May Fete 1; Nugget Staff 4; Glee Club 1; Freshman Play; Koshare 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 3; Christmas Play 3. Glasgow, Mont. Eugenia Shaver English May Fete 1, 2; Riding Club 1, 2, 3 Irene Shaver Glasgow, Mont. English Zetalethian; Riding Club 1, 2; May Fete 1, 2. 3. Mary Elizabeth Shepard Colo. Springs English Zetalethian; Athenian. 49 oT - 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTV EIGHT - . I Klton S. Slate Colorado Springs Economics Beta Theta Pi; Red Lantern; Football 2; Basketball 1, 2; Tiger 3, 4; Nugget 3, 4; University of Colorado 1; Western State 2. Frank A. Smith Colorado Springs Psychology Tau Kappa Alpha; Y. M. C. A.; University of Texas 1. Harry M. Spicer Pueblo Biology Phi Gamma Delta; Ball and Bat Club; C Club; Ques- tion Club; Red Lantern; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 3. Dolly Helen Taylor Green Mtn. Falls English Contemporary; Phi Beta Kappa; Dramatic Club Play 1; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3; Cabinet 4; May Fete 1; Tiger Staff 4; Sponsor Group 4. Elizabeth Linkins Thomas Canon City History- Minerva; Exclamation Club; Koshare 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, Circus 1 ; W. A. A. Board 2; Junior Farce; Minuet; May Fete 1; Eager Heart 1, 2; Montgomery House Board 3; Bemis House Board 4; Girls ' Dramatic Club 1, 2; Pan Pan 1, 4. Gladys E. Thomas English Zetalethian; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4. Canon City North Platte, Nebr. Harrison Tout English Freshman Football; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Tiger Staff 1, Desk Editor 2, Managing Editor 3, Editor in Chief 4; Nugget Staff 3, 4. Colo. Springs Marian Truby Art Minerva; Tiger Staff 3; Nugget Staff 3, 4; Koshare 4; Exclamation Club 4; W. A. A. 4; Town Girls ' Board 3; Y. W. C. A. 2. William S. Twilley, Jr. Colo. Springs Geology Phi Delta Theta; Pearson ' s Dramatic Club 2, 3; Koshare 4, President 5; Spanish Club 1; .Junior Farce Assistant Manager 3; Junior Prom Committee 3; Interfraternity Council 4, 5; Student Chapel Com- mittee 5; Senior Play 5; Homecoming Committee 5. James Darnley Waldie Colo. Springs Physics Delta Epsilon. s L ' O Mm 50 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT . Henry Waller Colorado Springs Chemical Engineering Glee Club 3, 4. Arlie Ione Ward Ordway English Zetalethian; May Fete 1, 2; McGregor House Board 2; Y. W. C. A. 3, 4; Inter-Society Council 4. Richard Warner Beacon Falls, Conn. Mathematics Phi Delta Theta; Football 1, 2, 3; Track 3. Margaret Waterton Colorado Springs English Hypatia; Glee Club 1; Town Girls ' Board 2, 4; May Fete 1, 3; Y. W. C. A. 3, Cabinet 4; Sponsor Group 3, 4. Helen White Fruita History and Political Science Western State College 1. Ruth Whitecraft Colorado Springs Biology Riding Club 2; Town Girls ' Association 2. Robert D. Adams Claremont, Calif. Civil Engineering Sigma Chi; Delta Epsilon. James Albert Colorado Springs Geology Sigma Chi; Freshman Football; Assistant Manager of Tiger 1, 2; Pan Hellenic 3, 4; Growlers 3. J. Linton Gardner Colorado Springs Biology Delta Epsilon. Edwin B. Harmon Colorado Springs Physics Delta Epsilon. Robert Leech Winterset, Iowa English Pi Kappa Alpha; Freshman Football 4; Drake University 1. Hubert R. Moody Economics Sigma Chi. Katharine Pauly History Pomona College 1, 2, 3. Anna Sutton English Pueblo Colorado Springs Colorado Springs 51 JUNIORS 97z ? PIKES PEAK NUGGET . NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTV EIGHT Preston B. Albright Colorado Springs History Phi Gamma Delta; Tiger Staff 1, 2, Managing Editor 3; Nugget. Staff 2, 3. Ralph E. Anderson Economics Kappa Sigma; Interfraternity Council 3. Fruit a George E. Baggs Colorado Springs Biology Phi Gamma Delta; Basketball Manager 2, Assistant Manager 1. Margaret G. Baker Denver Biology Hypatia; Crescent Club 2; Exclamation Club 2, 3; Glee Club 1; Class Vice-President 2; McGregor House President 3; W. A. A. Board 2. Margery Barkley Art Zetalethian; Athenian 2, 3; Glee Club 2, 3. Pueblo Clifford Beery Colorado Springs English Kappa Sigma. William B. Bender Hamilton, Ohio Business Administration Delta Alpha Phi; Freshman Football; Tennis 2; Glee Club 2; A and B Club 3. Albert W. Bevan Colorado Springs Economics Beta Theta Pi; C Club; Ball and Bat Club; Football 1, 2, 3; Nugget 2, Manager 3; C Club 2, 3; Pan Pan 1 ; Tiger Staff 2, 3; Glee Club 1. David Bowes Clearfield, Pa. Economics Phi Delta Theta; Football 2; Baseball 1, 2. Paul E. Brackett Colorado Springs Business Administration Sigma Chi; Alpha Kappa Psi; A and B Club; Ball and Bat Club. ' 54 r O - ItlQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Edna Brandenburg Maniiou Business Administration A and B Club 2, 3; May Fete 1. Jessamal Brophy Red Lodge, Mont. English Zetalethian; Classical Club 1, 2; Greek Play 1; V. W. C. A. 2; Athenian 2, Secretary-Treasurer 3. Wilfred M. Burton Denver History Beta Theta Pi; Asst. Mgr. Football I, 2; Asst. Mgr. Track 1; Manager Track 3; Tiger Staff 1, 2; Growlers 3, President 4; Glee Club; Question Club. George Andrew Cecil Denver Business Administration Kappa Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi; Question Club; C Club; Football 1, 2, 3. -vi ' .£■:, Clifford C. Chappell Forestry- Forestry Club 1, 2, 3. Mary M. Clark English Contemporary; Tiger Staff 3; Athenian 1, 2, 3; W A. A. Board 3; May Fete 1. John N. Cronk Economics Phi Delta Theta; Alpha Kappa Psi; Nugget Editor 3. Rhoda Crouch Colorado Springs Biology May Fete 2; Biology Peripatetics 2, 3. Westley F. Curtis Physics Phi Beta Kappa; Intra-mural Track 1, 2; Glee Club 2, 3; Intercollegiate Debating 3; Student Curriculum Committee 3. Raymond Davis Economics Phi Delta Theta; Manager Football 3; Nugget 1, 2 PEAK NUGGET NDRED TWENTY EIGHT O Lillian A. Degenfelder Cripple Creek History Contemporary, Glee Club 2; May Fete 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 1, 3; Montgomery House Board 3. Robert C. Dentan Victor Classical Languages Eta Sigma Phi, President; Classical Club 2, 3; Student Curriculum Committee 3. Kathryn Dudley Pueblo English Hypatia; Crescent Club; Exclamation Club; Class Secretary 2. Helen Elliot English Hypatia 3. Colorado Springs Helen M. Ferguson Colorado Springs English Walter H. Forslund Colorado Springs Economics Phi Gamma Delta; Question Club; Growlers 3; Administrative Council 3; Interfraternity Council 3; Track Manager 3. C. Louise Freudenberger Colorado Springs English Eunice Gardner Pueblo English Hvpatia; Crescent Club; Tiger Staff 1, 2; Nugget Staff 1, 2. Don Gibboney Long Beach, Calif. English Sigma Chi; University Southern California 1, 2. Paul W. Gorham New Haven, Conn. Biology Kappa Sigma; Xugget Assistant Manager 3. (_ Mi 56 c 97? e PIKE!: NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT James Gormley Grand Junction Business Administration Sigma Chi; Question Club; Track 2. Howard E. Grant Bearing, Kansas Business and Banking Band 3. Stanley F. Griffith Palisade Electrical Engineering Kappa Sigma; Band 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 2, 3; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3. Mildred Anna Groscurth Aspen Biology Etta Sigma Phi; Classical Club 1, 2, 3; May Fete 1; Riding Club 1; Athenian 1, 2, 3; Montgomery Sec- retary 3. William Hall Denver Biology Phi Delta Theta; Football 2, 3; Baseball 1, 2, Captain 3; Junior Farce Manager; Question Club; Red Lantern Pan Pan Manager; Class Vice-President 3; C Club. Gertrude Hamilton Victor English Contemporary; Glee Club 2, 3; Euterpe 2, 3; Mont- gomery House President 3; Student Government 3. Lester Hanes Colorado Springs Economics Basketball Manager 3. Loine Hanes Colorado Springs Romance Languages Contemporary; Tiger Staff 2, 3; Koshare 2, 3; May Fete 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 2. Harold M. Heckenlively Colo. Springs Electrical Engineering Pi Kappa Alpha; Band 2, 3, 4; Assistant Director of Band 4; A and B Club; Men ' s Glee Club; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. Helen F. Henderson Forestry Forestry Club; Riding Club Rush ' £• -tin. A ■ ft_ ' : - 57 c - 97ze PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN UNDRED TWENTY EIGHT O J __ - Blanche C. Horsley Canon City History Zetalethian; Athenian 2, Vice-President 3. Clara Huschke Colorado Springs English George Walter Karr Economics Ruth Kelley English University of California. Pueblo Berkeley, Calif. Margaret A. Kennedy Johnstown English Contemporary; Tiger Staff 1, News Editor 3; Glee Club; Junior Councilor; Y. W. C. A.; May Fete 1, 2. James M. Knowles Gunnison Economics Beta Theta Pi; Freshman Football; Glee Club 2, 3; Track 2. Dealome Knox Colorado Springs English Contemporary; Koshare 2, 3; Y. W. C. A. 2; Tiger Staff 2, 3. Mary Leonard Ft. Morgan Art Contemporary; Nugget Staff 2; W. A. A. Board 3; Junior Councilor 3; Y. W. ' C. A. 1, 2; Cabinet 3. Bernard B. Eongwell Danville, Ind. Chemistry Sigma u; De Pauw University 1; Band Manager 2, 3. Marjorie Mason Biology Zetalethian. Colorado Springs L x 1 rjnffli 97iG PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT ■ -o - L Elsie Medill Pueblo History Zetalethian; Athenian 2, Secretary-Treasurer 3. Earl J. Morgan Trinidad Business Administration Phi Gamma Delta; Alpha Kappa Psi; A and B Club; Question Club. Robert C. Moses Colorado Springs Biology Pi Kappa Alpha; Tennis 1, 2; Class Treasurer 3. Verxa Oliver Colorado Springs Mathematics Athenian 3. Anita Osborn Colorado Springs Mathematics Zetalethian; Town Girls ' Board 3. John A. Otten Rossville, Ind. Music Delta Alpha Phi; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Euterpe 2, 3; Interfraternity Council 3. Mildred L. Patton English Colorado Springs James Forrest Phelps Colorado Springs Beta Theta Pi; C Club; Football 1, 2; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Track 1, 2, 3;. Colorado Springs Barbara C. Potter Biology Hypatia; Town Girls ' Board 1; W. A. A. Board 2; Minuet; Riding Club 1, 2; Pan Pan. Mildred Ragle Biology Colorado Springs .£: c - S PEAK NUGGET TEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT - o Marie L. Reutlinger Colorado Springs Chemistry Harold R. Robinson Grand Junction Chemistry Delta Alpha Phi; Chemistry Assistant 2, 3. Esther E. Rockafield Cheyenne, Wyo. English Contemporary; Glee Club 1, 2,3; Student Government 2, 3; W. A. A. 3; Ticknor House President 3; May Fete 1, 2; Colonial Ball Committee 2; Classical Club 1; Pan Pan 2, 3. Leo G. Roessner Clearfield, Penn. Economics Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Red Lantern; Football 1, 2, 3; C Club, President 3; Kiwanis 3. Mary Miller Rose Pueblo English Pi Beta Phi; Koshare 2, 3; Glee Club 2, 3; Exclamation Club 2, 3; University of Colorado 1. Susie Sandford Manitou Economics Contemporary; Tau Kappa Alpha; Debating 1, 2; Athenian 1; W. A. A. Board 2; Student Govern- ment 3; Montgomery House President 3; A and B Club 3. Keith I. Sarcander Ft. Collins Biology Phi Gamma Delta; Sigma Delta Psi; Track 1, 2, Captain 3; Football 3; Junior Farce; Pan Pan 2, 3; Interfraternity Council 3. William Schortinghuis, Winnipeg, Can. Forestry Beta Theta Pi; Forestry Club, President 3; Track 2. Frederick D. Schultz Woodmen Biology Phi Delta Theta; Freshman Football; Band 2, 3, Manager 4. Virgil Seibt Broadmoor Constructive Engineering Beta Theta Pi; Golf 2, 3; Basketball 2, 3; Freshman Football. v- , (_ n 60 cJ 97? Q PIK N I N E T E E N — -o Claudine Sellers Colorado Springs English Minerva; Exclamation Club; Colonial Ball. Sherman S. Sheppard Eaton Political Science Tau Kappa Alpha; Debating 1, 2, 3. James F. Simon Colorado Springs Forestry Phi Gamma Delta; Forestry Club; Coe College 1. Ernest Simpson Denver Chemistry Phi Delta Theta; Baseball 1; Basketball 1, 2, 3, Captain 3; Tennis 2; Question Club 2, 3. Edward B. Speir Colorado Springs Biology Beta Theta Pi; Question Club; Class Treasurer 1; Class President 2. Ruth Stubblefield Pueblo English Olive Helen Swan Ramah Art Phi Beta Kappa; Minerva; Glee Club 1, 2; Town Girls ' Board 2; Y. W. C. A. 2, 3; May Fete Manager 2; Nugget Staff 3. Wesley E. Swenson Colorado Springs Business Administration Pi Kappa Alpha; Growlers 3; Interfraternity Council 3; A and B Club 2; Tiger Staff 1, 2; Nugget Staff 2, 3; Y. M. C. A. Treasurer 2, Vice-President 3; Glee Club 3. Marguerite Thompson Colorado Springs English Y. W. C. A. 1, 2; Town Girls 1, 2; May Fete 1. Josephine Van Fleet Monte Vista English Contemporary; Tau Kappa Alpha; Debating 1, 3; Riding Club 1, 2, President 3; Athenian 1, 2, 3; Tiger Staff 3; W. A. A. Board 2; Administrative Council 3. c 97ze PIRES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT O Katherine Van Stone Sa?ita Fe, N. Mex. English Hypatia; Exclamation Club; Tiger .Staff 1, 3; Nugget Staff 2; Glee Club 1; Junior Councilor 3; Sponsor 2, President 3; Disciplinary Council 2; Class President 3; Curriculum Committee 3; Strong Scholarship; Pan Pan 2, 3; Inter-Society Council 3. Lloyd M. Vaughan Palisade Business Administration Sigma Chi; Alpha Kappa Psi; Eta Sigma Epsilon; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1, 2, 3; A and B Club. Troy Ernest Wade Victor Business Administration Kappa Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi; Administrative Council 2, 3; Growlers 2, 3; Question Club 2, 3; Inter- fraternity Council 2, 3; A and B Club 2, 3. Ruth Donna Ward Clinton, Ohio English De Pauw University 1, 2; Debating 3; Tiger Staff 3. Madeleine C. Warner Fruita Romance Languages Contemporary; Euterpe 1, 2, President 3; May Fete 1, 2; Riding Club 2, 3; W. A. A. Board; Minuet; Pan Pan 2, 3. Marian Waterman Fort Dodge, Iowa Psychology Margaret C. Weinberger Colorado Springs Romance Languages Minerva Willard W. Wulff Colorado Springs Geology Sigma Chi. ,1 62 o 97lG PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT -o Wyan N. Cool Colorado Springs Geology Beta Theta Pi; C Club; Football 1, 2, 3. FernE De Flon Colorado Springs Romance Languages Marjory P. McBriEn Colorado Springs Biology Athenian. William Field Phelps Colorado Springs Economies Beta Theta Pi; Football 1, 2, 3, Captain-elect 4; Golf 1, 2, Captain 3; Basketball 2, 3; .lunior Prom Manager; Question Club; C Club 2, 3. Dudley J. nLKiNS, jr. Lotoraao springs Electrical Engineering J. Robert Rebillot Biology Canton, Ohio Phi Delta Theta; Football 2. 1 Leila F. Estill Colorado Springs English Mark B. Shaffer Colorado Springs English Jennie May Finney Colorado Springs Phi Gamma Delta. Mathematics Dolores Kiser Sparling Graphic Art Fortnightly Sketch Club. Colo. Springs Albert L. Forde Salida Civil Engineering Delta Alpha Phi; Glee Club 2, 3. Alberta Still Colorado Springs -f .- English Hligh H. Honnen Colorado Springs Forestry Beta Theta Pi; Forestry Club, President 1, Treasurer 2, Secretary 3. William O. Jones English Edward B. Jordan Physics Delta Alpha Phi. _ r. Colorado Springs Mabel Swanson English Colorado Springs Calvin Thierfelder Simla Economics Kappa Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi; Baseball 1, 2; Freshman Football. New. Castle Louisa A. Wallm Colorado Springs Education University of Colorado 1 NV  i- ■oSX V-W cJ J . SOPHOMORES cJ V 97 ? PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E E N HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT - Nelle Adamson, Colorado Springs David Armstrong, Colorado Springs Myrtle Armstrong, Las Animas Virginia Asmus, Los Angeles, Calif. James Austin, Denver Theresa Bailey, Colo. Sprgs. Ruth Bates, Pueblo Mary Beeson, Colorado Springs Lenore Benning, Pueblo Ingrid Berg, Pueblo Ruth Brown, Manitou Rosalie Buchmann, Denver Winifred Bull, Grand Junction Robert Campbell, Trinidad Eugene Cervi, Arvada Clifford Chinn, Arvada Philip Clay, Jr., San Francisco, Cal. Lois Coleman, Denver Everett Conover, Colorado Springs Christine Cotton, Colorado Springs William Crews, Denver Kenneth Cummings, Colo. Spgs- Ruth Donaldson, Ouray Elizabeth Downey-, Cortez Vivian Dworak, Longmont Fred Ebinger, Denver Richard Edwards, Colorado Springs John Emmerson, Canon City Rachel Espey, Trinidad Geneva Eynon, Durango Margaret Figge, Silver Cliff Laurence Fitzgerald, Denier ' « ' O M m h 66 c 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET S--1 N I N H U N D R E D TWENTY EIGHT - Margaret Foote, Ghnwood Springs Alice Frazer, Fort Morgan George Gibbs, Brush Ralph Giddings, Jr., Colo. Sprgs. Ruth Gilmore, Colo. Sprgs. Ruth Gordon, Colorado Springs Mary Greenwood, Colo. Sprgs. Gertrude Griffin, Colo. Sprgs. John Hamilton, Ft. Sumner, N. M. Beatrice Hanks, Salida Mary Hardy, Canon City Frances Harkness, Ness City, Kan Paul Harper, Potomac, III. Guy Herstrom, Denver Ruth Hicks, Colorado Springs Mary Higbee, Fowler William Hillhouse, Colo. Sprgs. Harold Hofer, Aledo, III. Lucile Hunter, Trinidad Maxine Hunter, Colorado Springs Howard Hutchinson, Eaton Clare Jencks, Colorado Springs Melzar Jones, Colorado Springs Martha Jonson, Longmoni James Killian, Colorado Springs Mary Kirby, Manitou Richard Leggett, Colorado Springs Louise Lyons, Colorado Springs Michael McEnany, Alamosa Mildred Moore, Grand Jet. Elizabeth Morgan, Denver Mar.iorie Morrell, Colo. Spgs 67 c-r U N D R ET D link HK John Murray, Colorado Springs Janice Olsen, Colorado Springs Harold Packham, Denver Verla Parker, Cheyenne, Wgo. Joe Ray, Denver Beryl Ritchey, Colo. Sprgs. Mary Ritter, Colorado Spring Wii. Robinson, Breckenridge Margaret Robison, Canon City Edward Rohrer, Colorado Springs Doris Simmons, Hilton, N. Y. George .Simpson, Denver Florence Smith, Montrose E. Stannard, Salt Lake City, U. Willis Strachan, Colo. Sprgs. Richard Street, Eianston, III. Horace Todd, La Junta Rebecca Tout, North Platte, Nebr. Ida Udick, Colorado Springs Roy - Vandenberg, Colorado Springs Glenn Wade, Denver J. E. Waldron, Jr., Colo. Sprgs. Raymond Wall, Colo. Sprgs. Curtis Wasson, Hollywood, Cal. Eugene Weinberger, Colo. Sprgs. Alberta Williams, Colorado Springs Jack Williamson, Cullman, Ala. Clara Wilm, Colorado Springs Harold Wilm, Colorado Springs Adelaide Wilson, Castle Rock G. Winstanley, Colo. Sprgs. Selby Young, Colorado Springs V I iiui ■ .I r ' Mi cT 7h Q PIKES PEAK N N I N H U N D R TWENTY E Paul Antle, Colorado Springs Ivan Asay, Alamosa Arlington Beehy, Colorado Springs Vivian Bittorf, Alle rton, Iowa Leonard Bohasseck, Chicago, III. Thelma Bonner, Dalhart, Texas Edwin Booth, Jr., Sheldon, Iowa Alyce Brigham, Colorado Springs Emily Britton, Colorado Springs Margaret Brodhead, Denver Charlotte Brown, Denver C. Jack Brundage, Colo. Sprgs. Adolphus Burleigh, Trinidad Mabel Burwick, Colorado Springs Edwin Cassels, Jr., Glencoe, III. Mary Clark, Colorado Springs Patricia Cogan, Colorado Springs Darwin Coit, Colorado Springs N. Bruce Cool, Colorado Springs Jack Curtis, Colorado Springs Richard Darnell, Cripple Creek Maurice Davies, Cleveland lights, O. George Dollison, Alma Gerald Downing, Montrose Robert Lackey, Colorado Springs Frank Lewis, Colorado Springs Robert Lewis, Colorado Springs W. McCall, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Richakd McCoy, Colorado Springs Dorothy McLaughlin, Albuquerque, N. M. James McTigue, Colorado Springs Ka.thr.yn McTigue, Colo. Sprgs. Mary Manning, Colorado Springs William Mason, Colorado Springs Eugene Mast, Colorado Springs Clarence Mawby, Denver Ted Medearis, Little Rock, Ark. Gerald Miller, Monmouth, III. Eugene Minter, Colorado Springs Alice Moore, Colorado Springs Ralph Moss, Jacksonville, Fla. Horace Mott, Colorado Springs Mal. Munson, New Haven, Conn. Dale Osborne, Denver Willis Poynter, Colorado Springs Harold Proctor, Ft. Collins Edna Pyle, Colorado Springs James Eads, Paris, III. Arthur Eastwood, Brooklyn, N. Y. Silas Engle, Colorado Springs James Fahey, Colorado Springs David Forest, Colorado Springs Winifred Gray, Freehold, A . . . Geraldine Grinnell, Detroit, Mich. Winfred Haigler, Colorado Springs Truman Hall, Denver Donald Harrison, Colorado Springs Willis Haverstock, Pueblo Josephine Hetherly, Aspen Ira Hodge, Colorado Springs Millard Hopper, Colorado Springs George Hurlbutt, Yates City, HI- Henry Jacobs, Colorado Springs George Jenks, Colorado Spring Evely-n Jones, Colorado Spring Ronald Jones, New Wilmington, Pa Frank Jory, Denver Darryl Ragsdale, Waverhj, Kansas Ellsworth Richards, La Junta James Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. William Rogers, Colorado Springs Dorothy Rose, Colorado Springs Jamie Ross, Colorado Springs Robert Row, Denver Orville Schisler, Colorado Springs Martha Scribner, Pueblo Keith Shelton, Winter Park, Fla. Frederick Smith, Colorado Springs Louise Stewart, Colorado Springs Frances Thatcher, Colo. Sprgs. Arthur Trautman, Cola. Sprgs. William Yorreiter, Loveland Robert Warren, Fruita Marion Weaver, Colorado SprinQ James Weaver, Colorado Springs Robert Williams, St. Louis, Mo. Leslie Wood, Ramah Maxine Wyett, Colorado Springs U FRESHMEN J - IhQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET _ - N I N E T E E N HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT L Kelly Alexander, Hollindale, Miss. Kazuo Asami, Tsunogun, Yamaguchi , Japan Ruth Atkins, New Haven, Con it. Selma Azar, Raton, A ' . M Opal Barrett, Annapolis, III. Hilda Bierschbach, Colo. Spgs. Margaret Bissonnette, C. S. Harry Blunt, Colorado Springs Katherine Boggs, Colorado Springs Mildred Broadbent, Colo. Sprgs. Blanche Broaddus, Colo. Sprgs. Adele Campbell, Las Animas B. Charles, Jr., Si. Louis, Mo. Earl Clark, Pueblo Robert (olegrove, Toledo, 0. Clara Cooper, Pueblo Elizabeth Crannell, Colo. Sprgs Carmen Cross, Collinsrille, III. Eva Chowder, Sedalia Genevieve Curry, Colorado Sprint Dorothy Davidson, Denver Virginia Dewey, Colo. Sprgs. Doris Dixon, Colorado Springs Jessie Drinkwater, Colo. Spgs. Eddye Duvall, Golden E. Edmondson, Des Moines, N. M. Dorothy Faus, Colorado Sprini s Marjorie Ferguson, Colo. Sprgs. William Ferguson, Colo. Sprgs Alvin Foote, Glenwood Springs Helen Forbush, Pueblo Winston Fox, Canon City ' I v7- s c c 7t Q PIKES PEAK NU NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT ( { 4 -f Betty Fuller, Fowler Dennis Garrett, Pueblo Frances Glau, Colorado Spring Helen Hageman, Las Animas Robert Hall, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Harmon, Colo. Sprgs. Harriet Hayden, Breckenridge Howard Henderson, Colo. Spgs. Lois Herbert, Colorado Springs Josephyne Hildrich, Colo. Sprgs. Louise Hiller, Alamosa Dorothy Hills, Colorado Springs Frank Hoag, Jr., Pueblo Sarah Howells, Colo. Sprgs. Louise Humble, Trinidad Ruth Jackson, Denver Gifford Jamison, Denver Harold Johnson, Clearfield, Pa. Viola Johnson, Castle Rock Thomas Jones, New Wilmington, Pa. Chas. Justis, Greenville, Term. Earl Kaufman, Marshfield, Mo. Angeline Keen, Colo. Sprgs. Elva Keplinger, Denver Max Kbyte, Colorado Springs M. Kirkpatrick, Walsenburg Donald Klein, Holly Miriam Larson, Colorado Springs Robert Liles, Colo. Sprgs. Lyman Linger, Hooper Evelyn Lustig, Colo. Sprgs. Lulu McCaffrey, Colo. Sprgs 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET E E N U N D R TWENTY EIGHT Mary McConnell, Colo. Sprgs. Stewart McInroy, Denver LORETTA MacShANE, Colo. SpTQS. Ronald Martin, Denver Muzelle Mather, Colo. Sprgs. Leighton Medii.l, Newark, Del. Byron Medlock, Palmer Lake Elizabeth Meston, Pueblo Joyce Miller, Colorado Springs Helen Mittendorf, Colo. Sprgs. Robert Moore, Kansas City, Mo. Edwin Morrison, Great Bend, Kans. Elizabeth Nelson, Pueblo Ruth Osborn, Colorado Springs S. Owen, Evansville, Miss. Edward Parker, Colo. Sprgs. Thorn Pendleton, Boston, Mass. 1 r John Perkins, Eaton Fred Petty, Edgewater Florence Pickett, Colo. Sprgs. Mary Potter, Glenwood Springs F. C. Rand, Jr., St. Louis, Mo. James Reid, Colorado Springs Ivan Ridge, Colorado Springs Ruth Robinson, Colorado Springs Lois Ross, Shenandoah, Iowa Robert Rothrock, Colorado Spring Frances Sargent, Santa Fe. N . M. Helen Schayer, Denver Freda Sights, Colorado Sprin B. V. Smith, Colorado Spring Chas. Smith, Brownsville, Texas - -iV: 7 iG PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Frederic Smith, Colorado Springs William Southard, Trinidad Eva Sparkman, Colorado Springs Kenneth Speir, Colorado Springs Evelyn Stubblefield, Pueblo Isabelle Totten, Rye Frank Truby, Jr., Colo. Sprgs. William Van Dyke, Pueblo Paul Vestal, Pueblo Edward Vollmer, Colorado Springs James Weir, Colorado Springs Cyrus Wilcox, Beacon Falls, Conn. V. Williams, Bisbee, Ariz. Richard Woodward, Pueblo Clayton Wynn, Florence Marion Young, Colo. Sprgs. -= , 7S Wilbur Adams, Denver Carl Allen, Wheatridge William Bell, Colorado Springs Sylvester Benbow, Colo. Sprgs. Cecil Bender, Colorado Springs Lela Bennett, Dalhart, Texas Edward Bray, Colorado Springs Lawrence Brown, Colo. Si rgs. Homer Bruce, Manitou Garnett Bruns, Denver Warren Buckley, Crook Arthur Burke, Ordway George Burnham, Colorado Springs Robert Caldwell, Denver Edward Carothers, Colo. Sprgs. Jerry Cogan, Colorado Springs John Cogan, Colorado Springs Charles Collins, E. Hartford, Conn. Arthur Conner, Denver Bernice Conroy, Colorado Springs Ralph Conroy, Colorado Springs Herbert Cramer, Walkersville, Mil. Arthur Dalling, Jr., Colo. Sprgs. Forest Danson, Colorado Springs Reginald Davis, Colorado Springs Roy Doran, Denver Clarence Downing, Grand Junction Franklin Emery, Colorado Springs C. Eveleth, Schenectady, N. Y. Francis Fleming, Colorado Springs Samuel Garvin, Colorado Springs Benjamin Griffith, Denver Oscar Hammer, Colorado Springs Mildred Hatfield, Colo. Sprgs. Lillian Huff, Colorado Springs Melvin Hymas, Colorado Springs Gene Irwin, Pine Bluffs, Wyo, Embree Jaillite, Colorado Springs Marks Jaillite, Colorado Springs Carrie Jensen, Colorado Springs Ruth Johnson, Genoa Coburn Jones, Los Angeles, Calif. Alfred LaFontaine, Glencoe, Minn. Harry Lamberson, Colorado Springs Eldon Larecy, Hugo, Okla. Emmalou McBroom, Colo. Sprgs. Clara Macy, Colorado Springs Gordon Manly, Chengtu, W. China George Merideth, Colo. Sprgs. Imogene Miller, Colorado Springs Mary Moore, Colorado Springs Ruth Morey, Colorado Springs Florence Nassour, Colorado Springs Mark Perkinson, Colorado Springs Ruth Rambo, Pueblo Frank Ray, Jr., Colorado Springs Francis Raymond, Miami, Flu. Donald Reed, Greeley Clair Roberts, Silver Cliff Clarence Ryan, Colorado Springs Thomas Scott, Colorado Springs Frank Seeley, Colorado Springs Tom Sevitz, La Junta Jack Sherk, Greeley Lee Shull, Denver Elizabeth Smith, Colorado Springs Marshall Smith, Jr., Gallatin, Mo. Eulalia Speir, Colorado Springs Milton Sprenger, Colorado Springs Carl Stafford, Cazenovia, N. Y. Cozine Strang, Colorado Springs Dolphus Stroud, Colorado Springs Randalin Trippel, Colorado Springs Marion Trumbull, Denver Virginia Lee Tylor, Denver Paul West, Colorado Springs Josephine Wickes, Colorado Springs Paul Willis, Colorado Springs Guy Windsor, Belljlower, Calif. Leo Wolgamood, Colorado Springs Harvey Zion, Colorado Springs ' yL General William J. Palmer GENERAL PALMER has been termed Colorado ' s foremost citizen. Prior to the Civil war he was engaged in engi- neering and railroad construction. During the war he served in the cavalry and was raised in command until he was a brigadier-general. After the war he resumed employment with railroad construction and operation. In 1865 he was chosen secretary and treasurer for the Kansas- Pacific. He built the railroad from Kit Carson to Denver. General Palmer conceived the plan of the D. R. G. R. R. with its many branches which were so valuable to Colorado mines. He was also the founder of Colorado Springs and one of the factors in devising rules, adopted by the Town Company. It was said of him that he never was actuated by a spirit of self-seeking, but rather by a genuine, broad minded public spirit. He perhaps did more to develop the resources of Colorado than any man of his time. f.t : ; v I ' 1 f III I U flL m HI i % J f I 1 Adams, Di William I ■ ■ ado Springs i liii Benboh ' CMo ■,•■ ' Cecil Bism r I ' qloraa i ! i.i Ue m n ' ■ • ' . i .. i .! ' • ' , rati v i ■ - '  .- ' CE l-S,:nn i ' ( Hi ' l ' i . I ' d Hi ' ' h i- -. i h i i ' ■ H ' l ' i ' I . ' : I , ||K i : , .:■::[ i ' . ' .■ ' ' l. i . ' . ■ :d iroi i ivurfo Spri ' . , ( ' ooan, I Moru ' l ' ■ . I ' SI t: ' . ii. 1. 1 -. -,. F ■ ' ' . H i !i H ' OoNfl 5| - ismlB 1 ! X meil lu i ii .iii msoN, ij ■ Ci urn .I ' im a, ! I ■■ ' ii LaFo STA1 ' i i ■■■ H.MIBY I , I :.i BE [SON, ' . ' o ' pi ' ■ ' . LiARECY. it ■■::■ ' ■ Mil ilu |)(i BBOl « I i ■ I . ' p i i ■, i, i vi m ■ ' .,; , , | ■-.,., i , .. i i ' , ' . | i ' ,, ' ,., II | I | , .l.. ' „ I EOR191I Mi in i , i i , i jlei. :■ • ;.• ' i iGBNE . ' In LEI),, ' ' ' ■■ II ' ngs ' ■ I ' ' ' ■ .i ' Y (| IM| Kt ' th Morey, i hi ' , •■ ' ' , ' ■ . LBK pEKll tUTia R ' .. i i Pn ilftafreO; xJ l!(.ALPH Co troy 1zomsio g ' obfiioIoO b9jrrn9J n99d aeri, .JISIMJA ! JAiiaWS -j fl .ni, bs B n 8BW 9d lew liviD ' sriJ di jioft ! .li SitiD i. ' oBE.s-ifciinniaa  tl tj5w ariJ gnrhuG ,noiJowiJ8noD bBoiiliBi bnis gnii99n ,b 8bw r 9 f ii ' JtTiBjr bflfimmoa ni basiBi 8bw b iB ilisyfio 9 f3 cti Jnaif0 o[qm9 b9mu89i 9ri ibw adl i9JltA .iBiori9|! i9t bedrid 8bw 9ii 5d8I ,nl .xnoitBigqa bos ' ' ' ttoff ' rS aijoo LiboiIibi rijiw | K 9H biNSB -8 ' B8rtE.3I 9ri? lol: 1915J8B9lJli bits V rfi}31398 1980riD tBi9n90 .i9vn9(I oj . xios-ibO ' tfjjl motI: ' bBOllJJri ' edl ' tt llikrd aij, , rttiw ..JET .H ,.,£ .fl 38 .O grf looelq-arfJ b9vi93ii03 igrrd ; 4 ! .89 iim obfiioloD ojr gldsulBv m 9 ' i9w d ' lhl ' w tfgilb ifitd vnBm sam 1 1 ! dLj, lo 9 jo boB ®gjnhq3 obBioIo3 ( Ho isfoitiMol Mm oalle «cw 9H I .7,WBqtoo3 nwoT ad} vd b9irqobR f 89fm gaieivsb iii 8ioJ3B : l Tto.iiiiqg £ xd bsJeutDB sbw 1979ft 9 1 iB lJ raid lo biB8 bbw 1 ,: 3i.l!doq b9bnim beoid „9£tiwa9g Bti ' W.-Miil iR7iJ![, i«flflM a8-iM9a ! ' i ' -2931150891 . dridi qol9V9b oJ 9iom 1J bib K siiBdi q 9H .Jhiiqa .9inii J 8i 4 ' %9 ,p.p ,X,W n, 4? obfiioIoD I It A I ' I ■. ' ' I ' l ' KKS. I , -I Wll,l.,l.s i i ' , rj , ,- !OI . Hi li ' ' • ■ . i. , 1. i i r „h,r olorti ' ' Hi COLLEGE HISTORY THE COLLEGE r 7hQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E E N H U N D R TWENTY EIGHT - ■ A The Old Wankss Block Looking West on Pikes Peak Avenue History of Colorado College By Manlev D. Ormes A T a MEETING of the State Congregational ■ ■ Conference in Denver, January 20, 1874, Rev. T. N. Haskell gave an address on the importance of Higher Christian Education in general, and of a Christian College for Colo- rado. At an earlier meeting the subject of a Christian College in Colorado had come up for consideration and a committee, of which Mr. Haskell was chairman, appointed to consider the matter. At the close of Mr. Haskell ' s address this question was before the conference, — Are we now ready to take steps to organize a Christian College? After prayer and discussion, the question was unan- imously carried. Three offers of sites were presented by Greeley, Denver and Colorado Springs. A committee on location at this conference recommended that the Colorado Springs offer be accepted, which was carried. A self perpetuating board of trade was ap- pointed which soon incorporated. Rev. T. N. Haskell was appointed financial agent, and the Rev. Johnathan Edwards, a brother-in- law of Mr. Haskell ' s as the first president, and it was announced that classes would start on the 6th of May, 1874. Three rooms were rented on the second floor of the Wanless block on the west side of the hall, to be used until the completion of the temporary build- ing on North Tejon Street across the street from Acacia or North Park. One term of -= It TrhT: e s 8jP Tfw. I r  Tt% 4 f l N Old Plans for the Campus 78 97ze PIKES PEAK NUGGET . U NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Campus Before Landscape Work Was Begun twelve weeks was held in these rented rooms. During the summer the temporary building was erected and was ready for the opening of the second term on September 8. Here the College classes were held until January, 1880. The Cumberland Presbyterian Church build- ing standing alongside was used as a general assembly room and for the daily chapel exer- cises. In this temporary building twenty- four by fifty feet were three classrooms, six- teen by twenty-two feet each, and a com- modious hat and cloak room. Thirty desks were provided, a large book case, and one of Smith ' s cabinet organs. President Edwards resigned early in 1875. The trustees appointed Rev. James G. Daugherty president to succeed him. About this time a financial panic which had over- taken the country was keenly felt here, and a visitation of hordes of grasshoppers had destroyed all crops and other vegetation in this region, completing the financial ruin of most of the inhabitants, and Pres. Daugherty, unable to raise funds to carry on the infant enterprise, after nearly a year of effort, re- signed early in 1876. Following him in the presidential office was Rev. Edward Payson Tenney, who remained in office for six years. As soon as the temporary building was done, an architect, Mr. George Summers, was em- ployed to draw the plans of the first permanent building to stand on college ground. Mr. Tenney made efforts to get funds for the erection of this building. He got a few friends in the east to provide for the salaries of the teachers for a term of years, among them Mr. Henry C. Cutler, after whom Cutler Hall (originally called Palmer Hall) was named, and he solicited funds in town and in the east for the new college hall. But times were hard and collections slow. On the 4th of July, 1877, ground was broken, excavations were made by the citizens without cost to the college, the foundations were put in, and then the work stopped for lack of funds. The citizens took a large hand in raising money with which to complete it. The Wornans Cutler Hall 79 Ticknor Hall Hagerman Hall College Centennial Association gave great assistance to President Tenney and the trustees in raising funds. For three years socials were held, railroad excursions arranged for, entertainments of various kinds given, feasts of lanterns held for two successive years, and every known device employed to get enough funds with which to erect the present Cutler Hall — without the two wings. In 1882 the two wings were added, General William J. Palmer meeting the entire expense. Early in June of this year, the first class comp:sed of two was graduated, and President Tenney was inaugurated. Mr. Tenney was a man of great vision, not only in educational and religious matters, but also in business matters. Among other methods to secure funds for the college, he bought all un- occupied land for a mile north of the college reservation and at first turned it into a farm on which students worked for their college expenses. On this track was S i ' erected a dairy building, laundry, and a girls ' club house. This latter was burned in the night of January 1, 1884. The other two buildings are still standing, the dairy on the northwest corner and the laundry on the southwest corner of Tejon and Buena Ventura streets, though now greatly modified. President Ten- ney with this land endowment scheme, the purchase of North Cheyenne Canon and a part of South Cheyenne Canon, and many other minor schemes got beyond his financial depth and he resigned in 1884. For four years there were several acting presidents — but no man with the title and prestige of president until the fall of 1888. These were dark days for the college. Many of the trustees and other friends of the college were very much discouraged and some were in favor of closing it up permanently. But there were a set of determined and resolute men working in the college. Professor W. D. Sheldon had come out with President Tenney in 1876, Professor Loud followed in 1877, and Professor George H. Stone in 1881, Professor George N. Marden in 1881, and Professor Strieby in 1888. These men were bound to keep the college going. Professor Marden spent the most of these four years from 1884-1888 in the east raising money to enable the others to remain with the college. He found a young minister in a church in Baltimore whom he interested in the college — and the trustees elected him as president, Rev. William F. Slocum. Upon his arrival here, the college took on an active life. The mortgages on college property were paid off, the faculty was enlarged, buildings sprang up, the raising of endowment began, and a development in- augurated which resulted in the present equipment, faculty, student body, and endowments. President Bemis Hall President ' s Home 80 97ze PIKES PEAK NUG NINETEEN HUNDRED T W E N T V Palmer Hall Slocum ' s first work after raising the mortgages on college property was the erection of a dormitory for men and Hagerman Hall was built during his first year. Mrs. Slocum organized the Woman ' s Educational Society, which is still as active in the life of the college. This society erected Montgomery Hall as a dormitory for young women. Other buildings were erected as follows: Coburn Library in 1894, the Henry R. Wol- cott Observatory in the same year, Ticknor Hall in 1897, Perkins Fine Arts Hall in 1900, McGregor Hall in 1903, Palmer Hall in 1903, Bemis Hall in 1908, Cossitt Memorial in 1914, and the Administration Building acquired in 1914. There is a long and fasci- nating story in connection with raising money for each building. The various endowment funds were com- pleted as follows: The first $100,000 finished in Decem- ber, 1890; in January 1893 D. K. Pearsons gave $50,000 on conditions that the college raise $150,000. For four years President Slocum and the friends of the college worked desperately to meet Dr. Pearson ' s conditions. At the end of 1896 Dr. Pearsons gave another $50,000 without conditions. In January, 1905, President Slocum started a campaign to raise a half million, which was accomplished in due time. Later a fund of $300,- 000 was raised and added to the endowment fund, the Rockefeller and Carnegie foundations usually assisting in raising these amounts. Another half million fund was completed in 1917 at the time of President Slocum ' s resignation, all this in addition to raising funds for buildings, current expenses, etc. President Slocum was a college builder. He not only interested men of large and smaller means in the college and organized all the friends of the college in the whirlwind campaigns which finished all his endowment funds, but he was an unusual judge of men and women whom he collected into his faculty. Cajori, Gile, Parsons, Hills, Ahlers, Howe, Schneider, Woodbridge, Noyes, Parish, Miss Brown, Miss Loomis, and others, in addition to Strieby, Loud and Marden who were in the faculty when he came, formed a group which did their share in building the college. Pres. Slocum built the material side and also helped the faculty to build up a student body and give the college a name among the best institutions of the land. These men and women, some of whom had an international reputation as scholars, were great in character and had the gift of inspiring enthusiasm among their students for learning and for the best things in life. Mrs. Slocum was Pres. Slocum ' s chief assistant and helper, and is worthy of the most grateful Cossitt Hall McGregor Hall Montgomery Hall SI NUGGET RED T W E N T Y I G H T - Tj remembrance for her contribution to the growth and success of the enterprise. She was wise in counsel, a woman of excellent taste and judgment and was a strong cultivating influence with the students. During the year 1916-1917 which Pres. Slocum spent in the east completing his last endowment fund, the internal affairs of the college were in charge of a faculty committee consisting of Profs. Cajori, Schneider, and Parish, and it was in this year that the enroll- ment of students reached 775, the largest number ever working in the college in a single year. This number was greater than our present faculty and our accommodations could properly care for. Dr. Clyde Augustus Duniway was chosen president in 1917. Pres. Duniway faced the difficult task of creating almost a new faculty. vSome of the previous faculty had gone into war work and others resigned and went elsewhere. During his administration the United States participated in the World War. This college with most of the colleges of the country offere d its services to the Government. The buildings and grounds were turned into a military camp. Palmer Hall In the midst of his service here the Rockefeller Board offered to give $300,000 to the college, as soon as the latter had raised $600,000. Pres. Duniway inaugurated the campaign and secured pledges of $125,000 but resigned in June, 1923 with the fund incomplete. Dr. Charles Christopher Mierow, professor of the Classical Languages and Literature was at once made acting president, which position he held for two years. So smoothly had the college affairs been managed that he commended himself to the Board of Trustees and other friends of the college and in June, 1925 he was elected to the office of president. His task has partly been to recover the ground which this and all other colleges lost during the war, and to bring it back to its position of power and commanding influe nce in the state it had during its Golden Age. Dr. Mierow was inaugurated to the high office of president in the Burns Theatre Decem- ber 5, 1925, in the presence of a distinguished assembly. Ex-President Slocum honored the occasion by making the trip from Boston and by delivering an address; and addresses were also made by Raymond Blaine Fosdick and by Pres. Mierow. Coburn Library and Perkins Hall 82 cJ - ItlQ PIKE NINETEEN H Administration Building In the autumn of 1925, under the leadership of Mr. E- C. van Diest, a recently elected member of the Board of Trustees, the endowment fund was completed, bringing a sense of relief and cheer to the college and a promise of greater and wider usefulness in the years to come. Mr. van Diest and the Boosters Club, an organization of townspeople gotten together for the purpose of helping the college, in 1926, led in a movement to build a stadium on Washburn Field. This was started in April and completed in time for football season of 1926. This has resulted in greater comfort for the attendants upon the athletic contests and in greater enthusiasm for athletics among the students of the college. It was dedicated on October 30 by dignified and appropriate ceremonies, the chief address being made by Pres. Mierow and a response by Douglas McHendrie, president of the student body. View of Campus Taken from Airplane 83 UGGET . T Y EIGHT - New Stadium nifj Bis$il i5 Presentation of the Stadium On August 28, before an audience of 3,000 people, the new stadium was formally presented to the College by the Boosters Club in exercises held on the new field. In the principal address of the day, Mr. E. C. van Diest pointed out the great need of the stadium, explained its construction, and in conclusion turned over the keys to President C. C. Mierow, who accepted them in behalf of the school. Expressing the sentiment and appreciation of the College, President Mierow mentioned the fact that the stadium represented the first new campus construction in twelve years, since Cossitt Hall was erected in 1914. Closing the exercises, a pageant, the Pied Piper of Hamelin, was presented, with leading local dramatic figures taking part, former Governor Oliver H. Shoup playing a prominent role, and 500 school children participating in the production. The Flag Raising c 97z Q PIKES PEAK NUGGET % N I N E T E E N HUNDRED TWENTY EIGH - i. V) ' WSm Washburn Field Dedication of the Stadium As an outstanding event of the 1926 Home- coming program, the new Colorado College stadium was officially dedicated before a crowd of 6,000 townspeople, alumni, and students, preliminary to the football game with Colorado University. President Mierow in his address announced that Mr. E. C. van Diest had declined the honor of having the stadium bear his name, with the result that Washburn Field should continue to be the title of the College athletic field. Douglas McHendrie, in pointing out the almost immeasurable effect on school athletics, expressed the feeling and appreciation of the student body for the stadium, and commented on it as an embodiment of the splendid spirit existant between the citizens of Colorado Springs and the College. The ceremonies were completed with a dedication by Margaret Baker, one of last year ' s beauty contest winners, and a formal flag raising service. E. C van Diest Main Shack, Camp Colorado Forestry Camp The successful forester ' s need for intimate familiarity with his forest is more than adequately met by the ownership by the school of Manitou forest, a well timbered area of over 6,200 acres, with excellent buildings and other camp facilities provided for field work. PUBLICATIONS c NINE NUGGET U N D R N T V EIGHT Xj Harrison Tout, Editc FrEd Blackford, Manager The Colorado College Tiger The official student publication of the college, the name of which was changed this year from The Tiger to The Colorado College Tiger, is the semi-weekly newspaper of the students, with the Editor and Manager being elected from the student body and the other members of the staff appointed by them. It is financed by a subscription included in the fee paid to the Associated Student organization and by the advertising con- tained in it, which at present covers a little more than the actual expenses. During the year no radical changes were made in the organization of the staff with the exception of creating the position of News Editor, which relieves the Editor of assigning stories to the other members of the staff and takes care of much of the news gathering routine. Features of this year ' s Tiger were the establishment of a column known as Potter ' s Clay, which was devoted to self-expression of students and contained quite a number of worth-while bits of verse and some fair prose. Another was the active part taken by the paper in the spring elections of student officers, as the Editor, who was the first non- fraternity man in years, had the advantage of a freedom from partisanship which made this possible. Editorial policies were strong, especially in the fight for better chapel conditions and more freedom in speech and press for the student body. 88 t - 97lG PIKES PEAK NUGGET _yv NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY I G H T Xj The Tiger Staff Preston Albright Managing Editor Beryl Ritchey Associate Editor Margaret Kennedy ...News Editor Alvin Foote Desk Editor Carmen Cross., R. I . M. P. A. News Editor DEPARTMENT EDITORS Elton Slate.. .. Sports Helen Morris.. Society HUMOR FEATURE William Robinson Berniee Baylis Robert Campbell Josephine Van Fleet NEWS WRITERS Harry Lamberson Sterling Owen Marks Jaillite Adelaide Wilson Kelly Alexander John Emmerson Dealome Knox Robert Caldwell Jamie Ross Mary Clark Ed Rohrer Loine Hanes Frank Hoag Arlie Beery Frank Lewis Katherine Van Stone Ruth Stubblefield Randalin Trippele Ingrid Berg Katherine MeTigue Virginia Asmus Doris Simmons Dollv Taylor POTTER s clay Elizabeth Bruner Preston Albright Ruth Ward Margaret Bissonnette John Emmerson Harold Weaver ASSISTANT MANAGERS Albert Bevan Clifford Beery X i 3 K f m$ m -Jh jL i P Pm V H ' . |Hl . If V it -, • m fir ik Ami f}k Mtf : - H Hte 1 A 4jL r l£l K, -P . Tz2£ M w Ii ' . ' ipi _. jfc: : , 4T M Top Row — Hoag, Lewis, Owen, Cecil, Emmerson, Haigler. Rohrer. 2nd Row — Weir, Campbell, Slate, Robinson, Conroy, Alexander, Foote. 3rd Row — Berg, Bissonnette, Van Fleet, Ross, Wilson, Clark, McTigue, Knox. 4th Row — Colegrove, Albright, Tout, Kennedy, Morris, Hanes, Ripley. AK NUGGET - o U N D R WEN EIGHT John N. Cronk Editor Albert W. Bevan, Manager ■ The Pikes Peak Nugget ' The Pikes Peak Nugget is the official student annual of Colorado College. It is published by the Junior Class and student fees guaran- tee a large circulation for the book. In the spring the Sophomore Class elects the Editor and Manager for the succeeding year. A yearbook today ceases to be a mere memory book — it ' s scope is much greater inasmuch as it is an agency in explaining to the new student what the college or university has to offer. Thus the thought in creating this book has been to try to present an edition as interesting to the prospective student as well as recording the events of those in college. Indeed, mistakes have been made, but we hope they can be overlooked in favor of what might bear merit. The theme of the book is centered around the semicentennial of the State of Colorado. A few of the outstanding men who were instru- mental in carrying out the problems of that era have been mentioned. The introductory scenes are emblematic of the present day progress of our state in commerce, sugar beet growing, iron smelting, and mining. If this volume arouses the desire of serving, as those philanthropic pioneers helped in developing a greater State of Colorado, its worth shall have been realized. Even if you have heard before that it is up to you to carry on , it might warrant remembering. 90 J 7 ho PIK N I N HUNDRED Nugget Staff Administration Geraldine DeWitt Christine Cotton Mildred Patton Douglas MeHendrie Classes Preston Albright Frank Hoag The College William Hillhouse Elizabeth Sharer Art Editors Marion Trubv Olive Swan Athletics Troy Wade Wesley Swenson Leo Wolgamood Ruth Atkins Organizations Eugene Cervi Mary Greenwood The Cat Harrison Tout Robert Ormes Photographers Cecil Read Walter Forslund Assistant Managers William Robinson Sterling Owen Harrv Blunt Joyce Miller Top Row — Swenson, Hoag, McHendrie, Tout, Forslund. Second Row — Robinson, Wolgamood, Owen, Wade, Cervi, Read. Third Row — Miller, DeWitt, Cotton, Patton, Albright Fourth Row — Swan, Truby, Cronk, Bevan, Gxeenwodd, Sharer. Jack Miller Student Handbook The Student Handbook, or Freshman Bible as it is better known, is compiled each summer with the purpose of including information for the especial benefit of new students in College. The booklet, con- taining explanations of school customs and traditions, the college calendar, lists of organizations and publications, and various directories, becomes a practical pocket reference book for every student. The Handbook this year, edited and managed by Jack Miller, presented an unusual wealth of material from both an interesting and informative standpoint. ACTIVITIES Top Row — ShEppard, Smith, SeelEy. 2nd Row — Van Fleet, Curtis, Copeland, Mast, McLaughlin. 3rd Row — Stewart, Ward, Figge, Jones. Debate MEMBERS Evelyn Jones Dorothy McLaughlin Louise Stewart Josephine Van Fleet Ruth Ward Coach W. D. Copeland Manager S. S. Sheppard Adele Campbell Margaret Figge Eugene Mast Wesley Curtis Frank Smith Frank Seelev The nineteen twentv-seven debate season has been exceptionally successful from the standpoint of interest taken in home debates, entertainment of the state conference, and the women ' s trip through Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado. Home debates were held in both the men ' s and women ' s divisions with Colorado University, Denver University, Colorado Aggies, Colo- rado Teacher ' s, Wyoming University, and Western State. Debates engaged in on the women ' s tour were with Wyoming University, LItah University, Western State, and Brigham Young LTniversity. For the first time in our history, we entertained the Colorado Debate Conference in its three-day convention here. About seventy- five debaters representing the colleges and universities of the state engaged in debates before open forums, churches, classes, college chapel, and luncheon clubs. Hikes, sightseeing, and a dinner dance furnished the entertainment for the visitors. 94 o 97i ? PIKES PEAK NINETEEN U N D R E D EIGHT Home-coming Home-coming is the one time of the year when the Colorado College campus is turned over to the alumni, and they once again enjoy the privi- lege of re-living their happv college days, and of recalling all the memories of their Alma Mater which have become so dear to them. Home-coming is usually an event of October, and this year, every student and member of of the facultv endeavored to make it the best and most successful of them all. It was opened officially on Friday morning with a big parade. Appropriate floats, bands and firecrackers made it a gala occasion. In the afternoon, a large tea was given in Bemis hall in honor of the alumnae, and it was really a deli ghtful get-together, with old friends meeting again. This was followed by the annual Sophomore Barbecue, which every C. C. student will say is a combination of the peppiest pep-meeting and best picnic of the whole year. At this time, the Tigers gather around the bon-fire. Stunts by different college organizations and talks by the coaches and alumni feature the program of the Barbecue, and then the proverbial ham, buns, cider and doughnuts are served. The Growler ' s, or the Men ' s Booster Organization, gave a dance at the Antler ' s hotel after the pep-meeting. Conversation again was of old friends, good times held at C. C. long ago, and, most important of all, of the game to be held on Saturday between Boulder and Colorado College. The password of the evening was Beat Boulder. The game on Saturday completed the perfect spirit of Home-coming, for the Tigers romped all over the Univer- sity men and defeated them decisively. During the half, President Mierow dedicated the new football stadium, which had been completed just a short time before. The week-end program ended Saturday night after the game, with an all-college hop, at which alumni and students mingled together in another of the wonderful good times which are so plentiful at Colorado College. The Sophomore Barbecue 95 7 zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Scene from Helen ' Classical Club The Classical Club of Colorado College was founded November 18, 1921, by the professors in the classical language department. It was founded for the purpose of furthering the interest of Greek and Latin students in the classics. Under the leadership of Dr. C. C. Mierow, the club arranges fortnightly programs, when there are interesting discussions in which the majors in this department take an active interest. The most important feature of this organization is its presentation each year of a Greek play. This production is always given in the spring in Cossitt stadium, the Greek amphitheater. During the past year, the club selected Helen, an ancient Greek play by Euripides. The costumes, made under the direction of Miss Marjorie Davis, were very effective, as were the dances, coached by Miss Eleanor Davis. Professor Harold Blaine assisted with the coaching, and the play proved to be one of the most finished productions ever given in Colorado College. The Classical Club was also influential in securing a chapter of Eta Sigma Phi, the National Greek Fraternity. This chapter was established this year and has proved to be one of the outstanding organizations on the campus even in this short time. The Classical Club, together with Eta Sigma Phi, provides very great aid to the student of classical languages, by furnishing such valuable programs and by acquainting students with others who are interested in the same field of work. 96 c 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E E N H U N D R TWENTY EIGHT - o Scene from Lena Rivers Koshare Dramatic Club Koshare, the dramatic club of Colorado College, was founded in 1925 from Pearsons, the Men ' s Dramatic Organization, and the Girls Drama- tic Club. Its membership is confined to men and women of the under- graduate student body, and is limited to thirty. Members are chosen by try-outs held at the first of each year, and those of exceptional talent and interest are urged to take part in the productions, as well as in costuming, management and stage-lighting. Professor Harold Blaine of the English department is the director and under his leadership many worth-while plays have been given since the organization of Koshare. During the current year, the feature production was Lena Rivers, by Marie Doran, a play which reached its greatest popularity in 1907. The play was given with the object of showing the changing standards of the theater. Although there was no attempt at burlesque, the situations proved to be laughable enough in their original vein. The production was outstanding because of the good characterizations, and since most of the roles were rather exacting, this was especially commendable. The settings too were effective, creating the atmosphere which the play demanded. In addition to this revival, Koshare has presented a number of one-act plays of unusual merit. Martha ' s Mourning, by Phoebe Hoffman, was given for the Woman ' s Educational Society, and a one-act play was also given for the Women ' s Literary Club luncheon, at the Broadmoor Little Theater. 97ze PIKES PEAK NUGGET . NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT - Magna Pan- Pan Magna Pan-Pan is the annual all-college amateur vaudeville show. It is always given the night before the Christmas vacation begins, and is a time of great hilarity and rejoicing, as well as a last get-together for all the students. Perkins Hall is always crowded to the doors for this occasion, and this year was no exception, although there seemed to be more college spirit and pep than ever. This Pan- Pan was managed by Joe Ray and everyone agreed it was the best production of its kind ever given at Colorado College. All the fraternities, societies, and clubs are asked to give or combine in giving, an original stunt of some sort. This year there were thirteen acts, all clever and unusual. Beside the enjoy- ment which students get from Pan-Pan, the annual show is valuable in that it brings out the talent which might otherwise not find expression. It is not given for any financial gain, but simply to present an evening of uproarious vaudeville. The acts range from light comedy to such lurid plays as Hearts Aflame a sordid drama of love and lust in the frozen North. There were a number of good musical acts, and a dancing feature with such numbers as Spanish Tango, Salome, and A Waltz Clog. The College Boys Orchestra, led by Lord Byron J. M. Haymes, furnished some of the best music ever heard. Truly, Pan-Pan can be called The Biggest and Best Show among all vaudeville shows. 98 J 7 10 PIKES PEAK NU NINE E N H U N D R TWENTY O All-College Picnic One of the oldest and dearest traditions of Colorado College is the annual all-college picnic. It is always held on Washington ' s Birthday at Seven Falls, and is regarded as one of the most enjoyable all-college affairs of the school year. It was managed very successfully this year by Jack Miller, and it was indeed an event which will long be remembered with pleasure. By eleven o ' clock Seven Falls is a busy place, and enthusiasm is at its highest pitch when the various contests are announced. These usually include pie eating, wheelbarrow races and races, but this year two entirely original features were introduced — a bowlegged race and a hog-calling contest. These proved to be the sensations of the day. By this time luncheon has arrived, and everyone has developed a monstrous appetite, and the eats demand all the attention. In the last few years the picnic has been followed by a dance at the Broadmoor Golf Club. No student would willingly miss this, for it is acknowledged as the liveliest all-college strut of them all. The winners of the various contests are honor guests at the dance and receive all the attention they so well deserve (see Hoddy Johnson). The Junior-Senior baseball game is played off some time during the day with bitter rivalry seen on both sides. The all-college picnic is certainly one of the never-to-be-forgotten affairs of college life — to the Freshman it means that his Freshman cap can be removed forever, and to everyone else it means a wonderful day of real Colorado College spirit and fun. The Minuet Colonial Ball Each year the Sophomore girls present one of the loveliest affairs of the social season — the Colonial Ball. It is given during the latter part of February in Bemis Commons and every girl in Colorado College is invited to come dressed as a maiden of the Colonial period. The town girls are guests at dinner at Bemis before the dance. The dinner is always by candlelight, and one of the prettiest of college functions. The grand march starts promptlv at eight, and from this moment on, the lovely ladies of George Washington ' s time dance until midnight. The minuet, danced by ten girls in the Sophomore class is the main feature of the Colonial Ball, and it is considered a very great honor to be one of this group. Bemis was decorated particularly effectively this year with beautiful ferns and candelabra. The programs were in keeping with the colonial idea which was carried out. Members of the faculty are guests during the minuet, but college men are absolutely taboo. Nevertheless, this rule does not forbid them from looking through Bemis parlor windows at the co-eds, who always seem to be having the grandest and most glorious time, even though the men are conspicuous by their absence. Being such a pretty event, it is hoped that the Colonial Ball will be one of those traditions which never loses its charm and delightfulness. PICTORIAL .1 cross-section of the life of the College as shown in the process of registration, the first all-college dance, be- fore and after chapel scenes, the faculty and seniors in cap and gown entering Perkins Hall for a formal chapel service. A few of the high spots in the life of a freshman — the blanket-tossing which takes place at the football games, a part of the long lines of the gauntlet, the. tra- ditional flag rush, and the tng-of-war over the chilly waters of the college lake. The lure of the fooiball season lies in a hundred places — in the clash of elevens on the Denver University Stadium, a parade in the snow at Fort Collins, during halves in Denver, and the final sendoff before the team leaves amid a burst of cheering on the famous Utah trip, aboard one of the fifteen- hundreds of the D. R. G. R. R. V. Showing that the game itself is not the only attraction, we hope a fast polo game between American Legion men mounted on mules, the A merican Legion band, and the three yell leaders who provide a show all their own with their feverish contortions, football men at ease, a Barnes-Woods window, and the famous old banner. The parade before home coming, looking north up Tejon street, Margaret Baker dedi- cates the new stadium, the freshmen collect everything for the bi fire, the new score board which marked up the victory, scenes of the parade, and Minerva ' s prize winning float. :| r tigers Winter views of the snow-covered stadium being cleared by the freshmen for a football game, the refrosted entrance to Cossitt Hall, the hub of athletics and men ' s activities, the rear of Palmer Hall, Cutler bell tower, a clump of pines in holiday decorations, and a scene across the main campus, with trees, grounds, and build- ings unbelievably converted over night. The psychology lab is a room in which many interest- ing experiments and research work is completed, a corner of Bemis caught while dec- orated for the holidays, the physics laboratory where lights may be seen at every hour of the day, the renowned collec- tion of Cossitt hashers, and the same at Bemis. A ' day no one forgets — The all-College picnic held on Washington ' s Birthday at Seven Falls and the Broad- moor Golf Club, some of the ambitious ones try their luck at walking, the human totem pole, posed by (reading down) McHendrie, Enyart, Hillhouse and Young, the pie-eating contest, a group and another group of those people who are conspicuous when the other is not present, and the juniors beat the seniors in a ball game. ,k . i-u.. w ' :J  4«wim ■rim mtr „ 1 Wild West, look ' em over, Bowes and Roessner see Denver after landing in the big city from Clearfield, scene from Clas- sical Club play, cast for Alpha Kappa Psi stunt, Cecil at ease, a few of the trophies won during the 1°26 golf season which brought in another championship, and Read and Emmcrson Co. : v r mm . 3 % ■• If ' • if I ifc ,.■«-, ■!- ' • David Halliday Moffat DAVID MOFFAT, banker, capitalist, and state builder, came to the Pikes Peak Region in the fall of 18 59. In 1880 he was elected president of the First National Bank of Denver. His efforts built the railroad to Cheyenne to con- nect with the Union Pacific. He constructed the South Park line and the Florence Cripple Creek Road. In 1885 he was elected president of the D. R. G. R. R. His greatest achievement was never completely realized. His dream was to place Denver on the transcontinental line, which should pierce the Rocky Mountains on an air line, establishing direct communication between Salt Lake and Denver. The completion, this year, of the Moffat Tunnel by the State of Colorado, has at last fulfilled his vision and given the state its greatest opportunity for future expansion. Hi! I i ieiloM YBbillfiH MvbCII ,- i ■ „-fjJ:i!;jijii:f $$ font ; aHttfiqeD f -t9jIrnBd TATtfOM OI ' A H ifl .f S ' ll ' lo fins ariJ ni noigaH JLbs ' I agjii ! 9«H ot 9m.G lo jJiraea .• J|bnoiJj3.W t«ii 9rJ.i 10 Irrabiggiq bajoa ' J© asw 9.1 ;; 0881 -noo o3 9iin9Y9itO o beoiiifn grfJ iliud gJioIltSH. aiH .taMiao riifil riJ0o8 srit bsJaw-iJaiip:: aH DiHto-fil noiaptajiJ riJrpfpisiTl iiitiw grf ?Ml nl JikoJU .ilaie-rS 9 q i-hb . 9prt9? ilS Mi brisk aitS ■ , ,aiiii.| ;JiasKni: noaaji ' , i§ : 9iiy tto iiyma ' Cl.aojsJq of ■(•law ' i wjrfjr aiM f 9(fiii! •itifi ' flfi no ' ' ajtiifedijfxWoWt sfoo-fr, ari.t, aoaaiq Mrjoria d i.rjw b-ns scsluj iflti:?. ' nawjrad rjofrfidf tff Hsrro:? ' ti Tirb tjnirtafJMiteilfo- f9Hia:in ■ i«ft fjft.. if11jj; ' : ' ;1:o ■j. B9 ;a|di r )ri:okfc9l | Eio!;i ' SfdT ■■. .isva Cl: brie aojeity sitJi fo iKft0 ' i- ' irfi : i jjfji %d ; f %ckJ[oO k ' liii48 stife «jrqf ' . n.rif.?imqx9 s ' liutw ' t to ! I: y.1 LrtLdTioqqo 3s93B9 ' t i g-g|i i 9J ' 1 i;;:l ' e; silt nn ' tiJUi f ATHLETICS Colorado College Boosters Club President E. C. van Diest Vice-President .... Charles L. Tutt Secretary George Kenner Treasurer D. G. Patterson COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Membership Milton J. Alexander Employment Charles E. Shorb DIRECTORS H. C. Harmon Louis Herwig George Krause, Jr. Russell Law F. P. Purdey Pierce Woods James P. Shearer Herbert Sinton R. E. Weldie The new stadium was built because athletics at Colorado College had the blues. — Mr. E- C. van Diest. And anyone seeing the Tigers play on the new field would know that they feel better now. To the Boosters Club and to Mr. van Diest, Colorado College wishes to express her sincere thanks and appreciation for the erection of the stadium on Washburn Field. r PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT O s . — J Telfer L. Mead Coach T. L. Mead Coach Telfer L. Mead came to Colorado College in 1921, from the Lincoln High School of Lincoln, Nebraska. Coach Mead is a graduate of the Uni- versity of Indiana, where he was a three letter man in football and in basketball. Following his graduation, he immediately took charge of athletics in the Lincoln High School. He was coach there for four years, and during that time he turned out three championship basketball teams and two championship football teams. While at Colorado College he guided the Tigers to three championships in basketball, while his football teams were always contenders for the title. The basket- ball season of 1924-25 was the most successful for Coach Mead. At that time the Tigers defeated Brigham Young for the entire Rocky Mountain Championship. Since leaving Colorado College, Mr. Mead has located in Cleveland, Ohio, where he is engaged in the automobile business. Coach Verne Collier Coach Collier has complete charge of Fresbman football in Colorado College. It is his job to start the molding of high school stars into varsity material. Coach Collier is a graduate of the Salina High School of Salina, Kansas, where he played four years of foot- ball. Following his graduation there, he attended the University of Kansas for two years, playing varsity football both vears. He has been Freshman football coach at Colorado College for two years, and the Baby Bengals have shown some real football during this time. The Frosh can always be depended upon to give the Varsity some stiff competition as long as Coach Collier is in charge. The Yearlings are required to learn several different types of football during a season, and Coach Collier is very adept at teaching the men new plays. Verne Collier 118 u- 97ze PIKE N I N E T E E N HUN Coach Van de Graaff Coach Bully Van de Graaff came to Colorado College last fall to fill the vacancy left by Coach Mead. At that time his position was that of football coach, but at the close of the season he was made director of athletics at C. C. Coach Van de Graaff attended ■Alabama University for four years as student and football player. Following his graduation there, he coached a small school in Texas for a short time and then entered West Point. Graduating in 1918, he went direct into the army as a lieutenant in the infantry. Until last year he was stationed at Alabama University with the R. O. T. C. unit. While there he was coach of the frosh football team for three years, during which time they did not lose a game. Coach Bully is considered by football critics in the east as one of the best football coaches in the United States at the present time. Colorado College is indeed fortunate in having such a man in charge of its athletics. William Van de Graaff Alvin Twitchell Coach Alvin G. Twitchell Coach Twitchell came to C. C. in 1925 from Brigham Young University. He was head coach of baseball in 1925 and head coach of basketball in 1926. Coach Twitchell was a student and football player at Utah Agricultural College, playing three years of football while there. In 1916 he was chosen for All Rocky Mountain fullback and in 1917 All Rocky Mountain Conference tackle. While in school, he was a three letter man in track and in basketball. Upon his graduation, he attended the Illinois Coaching vSchool and Rockne ' s Coaching School. Since that time he has coached nine years — four years in high school, four years at Brigham Young University, and one year at Colorado College. While at Brigham Young, Coach Twitchell turned out a championship basketball team two different years. This year being Coach Twitchell ' s tenth year in coaching, he celebrated by turning out the Eastern Division Champions of the Rocky Mountain Conference in basketball. 119 Jo Irish Graduate Manager of Athletics Jo E Irish ■ For the first time in the history of the college, we have a graduate manager of athletics, and Jo Irish was selected for the job. Not only is Irish able to handle the financial end of athletics, but he is also coach of the Tiger track team this year. Irish comes to C. C. with an enviable record as a track athlete. While at Park Hill (111.) High School, Irish was a member of the track team that twice won the Chicago university national track meet, winning the broad jump and placing in the sprints. In his freshman year at the University of Illinois, he was captain of the freshman varsity track team. In 1916, the year that Irish would have made the Olympic team, there were no Olympics because of the war in Europe. Jo was chosen on the official ail-American track team in 1917 as broad jumper. Among Coach Irish ' s best records are: broad jump, 24 feet; high jump, 6 feet; standing high jump, 5 feet 2 J 4 inches; 100 yard dash, 9 4 5seconds. While Irish has been with us only a short time, he has made great strides in putting the athletics of the insti- tution on a firm basis. Student Managers Track, 1926 Wilfred Burton Baseball, 1926 James Whited Football, 1926 Raymond Davis Basketball, 1927 Fester Hanes • W MkjiM Davis Burton Hanes Whited 1 FOOTBALL EAK NUGGET U N D R E D X W E N EIGHT u - K -- 1 I Football Review of 1926 Season Starting out the year with a new coach, who had different coaching methods, it was the general opinion that the Tigers would not place very high in the race. At the end of the season the football critics were calling the Tigers, the most feared team in the conference. ' Such a situation goes to show what a bunch of real men and a real coach can do. Coach Van de Graaff took charge of a group of mediocre material in September, and made them into the smoothest football machine ever seen in the Rocky Mountain Conference. The team started off slowly at first but it didn ' t take them very long to get the drift of Coach Van de Graaff ' s style of coaching. A new type of football was introduced into thisconference and our standing at the end of the season shows the result. Our alumni tells us that the team had more fight and spirit than they had ever seen before. Losing only Spicer and Tory by graduation and having Clark and Williamson to fill their places, it looks like a championship for 1927. Capt. Jory The sketches in this section were created from photographs by Oliver Swan. • , l - y   w TllWil Top Row — Twitchell, Simpson, Harrison, Osborne, .lory, Leggett, Schieler, Herstrom, Graham, Cecil, Boyd, Van de Graaff, Irish. Second Row — Moody, Hall, J. Phelps, Ebinger, Bevan, F. Phelps, Vandenb?rg, Spicer. Third Row — Slate, Bowes, Lackey, Cool, Sarcander, Beery, Roessner, Davis. 122 97? e PIKE TEEN U N D R WEN E I G Colorado College 3 Western State This was the Tigers first game of the season and their lack of polish could be plainly seen. The huddle system was used for the first time and seemed to work poorly and to slow up the game considerably. Fumbling and poor tackl- ing were also very evident as they are in all first season games. Coach Van de Graaff, however, was able to pick the weak spots in his team and to build accordingly. In this game the left side of the line seemed to be weak, a fault which was corrected later. How- ever, the Tigers did reveal defensive strength which improved as the season progressed. Beery showed well at end, tackling everything that came his way. J. Phelps was a good ground gainer in this game while Spicer seemed to have no trouble in picking holes in the line. Peggett, Roessner, Cecil, and Harrison did some good work in the line, making life miser- able for the Western State linemen. The passing of the Tigers was poor, many of them being grounded or intercepted. The old fight- ing spirit was very evident at all times in all members of the team and Field Phelps started the season right by winning the game. Al Bevan Field Phelps -. 123 7 ho PI RES PEAK NUGGET N I N TEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT : r Leo Roessner Forrest Phelps Colorado College Utah Aggies 7 Colorado College gave Utah Aggies a great scare in this game. The Farmers of Logan, boasting the greatest collection of stars in the history of the school, were completely out- played in the first three periods of the game. A touchdown in the last 7 minutes gave the game to Utah. The stubborn defense and the offensive drive of the Tigers was a big surprise to the Loganites. They expected to compete against a second rate eleven and were lucky in a large measure to record a touchdown advantage. Both teams, finding themselves unable to crash the line resorted to punting in the later stages of the game. According to one sports writer the Tigers exhibited a defense which was excelled only by the Rock of Gibral- tar. Vandenberg, Phelps, and Bevan were the big stars in the Bengal backfield while Cecil and Jory showed well in the line. Vande Graaff ' s charges entered the game the under dogs, yet they covered themselves with glory before the contest closed. In this game, against a team doped as one of the most power- ful in the running, the Tigers showed the first real threat of being dangerous conference con- tenders. a 124 U 7 iQ PIKES PEAK NE NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENT -T Colorado College 6 Colorado Aggies iq Colorado Aggies broke the old Tiger jinx by winning 19-6 on their own field. The Bengals outplayed them the first half but weakened in the third period. Aggies made all their scores in the third period. The Tigers started the ball rolling by scoring in the first five minutes of play. Leggett blocked an Aggie punt and Jory recovered for the Tigers. Line smashes by Vandenberg, and J. Phelps made first down and Vandy plowed across for the first score. Captain Jory, Cecil, and Leggett played great ball the first half, tearing thru the Aggie line time after time. The second half the Farmers got the jump and seemed impossible to stop. The solution seemed to be that the Bengal forward wall in the second half of the game waited to diagnose the play instead of charging thru, and as a result the Aggie backs got thru them for gains. Cecil was the outstanding line star of the game, getting thru the line so often that Coach Hughes took desperate methods to stop him. When he was stopped, the entire Tiger team was stopped. The Phelps brothers played a great game on the defensive, backing up the line where it seemed to be weak. Hurbert Moody Guy Herstrom 125 o S PEAK NUGGET A HUNDRED TW EN TV EIGHT 7 - . v Harry spicer ,.._.- Keith SarcandEr Colorado College 21 Colorado University o Starting the greatest game of the season with a play which almost resulted in a Tiger touchdown, until Lefty Herstrom intercepted a Boulder toss, the game showed a marked Tiger superiority. The Bengals had an edge in every department of the game. It was in the last few minutes of the second period that the Tigers found the road to victory. Bevan was sent in for Vandenberg. On the first play, Hall, F. Phelps, and J. Phelps started around right end, and of course the State line shifted over. When they did Bevan tore around left end for 32 yards and a touchdown. The backfield worked in unison in working this deceptive play which started Boulder ' s defeat. The second Tiger touchdown came thru line smashes by all members of the backfield, Vandy going over for the marker. The last score came thru a 35-yard pass thrown by Fat Phelps and received by Frosty Phelps. Jory, Osborne, and Leggett were the stars of the line. Osborne showing up well in getting down under punts. Vandenberg and J. Phelps were great ground- gainers while Field Phelps kicked all three points after touchdown. Spicer played a won- derful game being taken out exhausted in the third period. 126 i 97zg PIKES PEAK Nl NINETEEN HUNDRED T W E N Colorado College 2b Wyoming University o Wyoming pulled the fatal mistake of reveal- ing all their tricks in the first part of the game, so that the Tigers knew just what to look for. At first they were successful and made several substantial gains but the Tigers soon heeded and stopped everything they started. The famous Cowboy backfield was unable to do much against the Tiger defense. J. Phelps played his usual steady game, backing up the line and making several nice gains thru line plunges. Vandenberg started things off in the third quarter by running 40 yards for the first touchdown. He was able to make this run thru beautiful interference by Hall. Cecil played a great game, tackling fine and following the ball so closely that he recovered three fumbles the first half. Captain Jory did some wonderful work in this game. In the last quarter he blocked a Cowboy punt, recovered and ran 25 yards for a touchdown. As usual Field Phelps gave the Tigers their lead by drop- kicking from the 35-yard line. The Tigers seemed to have the one yard jinx in this game, getting on Wyoming ' s one yard line several times only to be stopped. The Tiger offense in this game was by far the best seen in this con- ference up to this time. ! William Hall Roy Vandenberg Andrew Cecil Wyan Cool Colorado College ib Denver University 7 Playing heads-up football, following the ball and being smarter all the way thru, the Tigers downed Denver University at the D. U. .Stadium before a homecoming crowd, 16-7. Each team scored a touchdown on a forward pass, but it was the reliable toe of Field Phelps that proved to be the scoring edge which gave the Tigers the game. Phelps dropkicked three beautiful field goals. This same Frosty Phelps was also on the receiving end of the Tiger passwhich accounted for the touchdown, and he added the extra point, which gave him credit for all the points scored by the Tigers. Denver snowed only one real offensive drive during the whole game and that was at the end of the third period. The Pioneers took the ball on their own 40-yard line, and marched up to the Tiger 10-yard line, on the next play a pass gave Denver their only touchdown of the game. The Tiger ends, Sarcander and Osborne, played some real defensive football, turning the D. U. groundgainers on every play. These two Tigers deserve a lot of credit as they stopped the Denver backfield aces who were counted upon to bring victory. Vandenberg played great football until he was injured in the fourth period and was carried from the field. Vandy could carry the ball as well as run the team. He could hit the line, run the ends and was a demon at handling punts. 128 rrhe N I N Colorado College 30 Colorado Mines o The Mines game was a fine example of the way to windup a very successful Tiger football season. The Tigers scored almost at will in this game, showing what Van de Graaff ' s coaching had done to mediocre material. Fat Phelps started the game off with a bang by grabbing the ball after a Miner had touched it on the first kickoff and running 50 yards thru the entire Mines team for a touchdown. In the second period Mines was forced to kick from behind their own goal line, the ball falling in Vandenberg ' s arms on the 10-yard line due to a strong wind, and Vandy carried it across the line for the second Tiger touchdown. Later in the period, after Mines had been forced to punt, Vandenberg took the ball on the first play from scrimmage and ran 20 yards for his second touchdown. Again, on the first play after the kickoff in the third period Spicer took the ball and circled the Tiger right end for 73-yards and a touchdown. After that the Miners braced and made 21 yards and two first downs, but the rally died out and shortly after Spic went over for the fifth Tiger touchdown. Coach Van de Graaff sent in a flock of subs in the final quarter to relieve the stars, but about the middle of the period J. Phelps intercepted a Miner pass and went across for the final touch- down. Spicer, Captain Jory, Boyd and Graham played their last game for C. C. Donald Harrison Richard Leggett 129 c 7hQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T UNDRED TWENTY EIGHT ■ o ' •■■ ' } ■ FINAL RATING OF THE EASTERN DIVISION Schools Played Won Lost Pet. Colo. College... .14 12 2 .857 Colo. Teachers 14 10 4 .714 Wyoming ... 12 8 4 .666 Colo. University 12 7 5 .583 Denver University .12 5 7 .417 Colo. Aggies.. .... 12 4 8 .333 Mines 12 2 10 .167 Western State .8 8 .000 Richard Warner -c Arlington Beery CONFERENCE STANDINGS TEAM W L T Pes. Pts. O.P. Univ. of Utah . 5 1.000 134 16 Montana State 4 1.000 52 9 Utah Aggies .... 4 1 2 .800 64 43 Colo. College .... 5 2 .744 111 33 Colo. Aggies.. 5 2 .744 107 41 Denver Univ.... 4 4 .500 106 72 Colo. Teachers 3 3 .500 95 56 Wyo. Univ 1 2 2 .333 90 55 Colo. Univ 2 5 1 .286 52 106 Brigham Young 1 4 1 .200 48 98 Colo. Mines 1 5 .166 23 158 Western State.. 7 .000 13 213 130 c - 97zq PIKES PEAK NTIG NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY E ALL-CONFERENCE TEAMS Associated Press POSITION FIRST TEAM End Glynn, Montana State Tackle . Xenford, Utah Aggies Guard ...Gibbons, Utah Aggies Center Leggett, Colorado College Guard Whiting, Utah University Tackle Dykman, Utah University End... Morris, Utah University Quarterback. Vandenberg, Colorado College Halfback Howells, Utah University Halfback Dow, Utah University Fullback. Caldwell, Colorado Aggies POSITION SECOND TEAM End.. .Miller, Wyoming U. Tackle _ j ory , C C. Guard Kayser, Colo. Aggies Center ...Wilson, Montana Guard. Scilley, D. U. Tackle Hobson, Colo Teachers End Taufer, Utah U. Quarter Rankin, Colo. Aggies Half.... Thomas, Utah Aggies Half Brown, Colo. Teachers Full ...... Mildrexter, D. U. Florian Boyd Dale Osborne 131 Top Row — Collier, Hymas, Weaver, Willis, Hoag, Larecy, Williamson, Clark, Linger. Second Row — Slate, Gormley, Downing, Stafford, Sevitz, Parker, Minter. Third Row — Liles, Henderson, Southard, Blunt, Brown, Cramer. Freshman Football The Varsity had some stiff competition in the freshman foot- ball team of this year. There were many high school stars who answered the call from Coach Collier. A good frosh team makes a good Varsity, and this season was a good example of that. Besides the scrimmage games, the Bengal Cubs engaged in two games with frosh from other schools in the conference. On November 5 the Cubs tangled with the Boulder Frosh and came out with the small end of the score, 20-14. Clark made a spectacular run of 90 yards in the second period for the first touch- down. In the second half of the game, a pass, Clark to Cramer for 40 yards, gave the Baby Bengals their second touchdown. On Armistice Day, under the auspices of the Colorado College Boosters Club, the Greeley Frosh team was brought to Colorado Springs. The Baby Tigers were themselves in this game and after some real football emerged from the fray with the big end of a 32-11 score. Dutch Clark made 26 points by himself in this game, while Cramer came across with the other touchdown. William- son, Weaver, Moss, and Bell looked like Varsity material in the line, while Hoag did some great work in line plunges. All of these men are returning next year and will be of great value in the race for the conference championship. V  sj- BASKETBALL 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET . NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT - Basketball BASKETBALL HIGH SCORERS Capt. Simpson FT TP 17 149 19 135 16 134 25 109 19 101 PLAYER POSITION FG E. Simpson, C. C. — f 66 Harkins, Wyo.— f... 58 James, D. U. — f 59 Clark, C. C— c-f.„. ..42 Johnson, C. C. — f 41 FINAL STANDING— BASKETBALL— EASTERN DIVISION SCHOOL W. Colorado College .... 12 State Teachers College... .10 Wyoming University 6 Colorado Llniversity 7 Denver University 5 Colorado Agricultural College 4 State School of Mines 2 Western State College.... ... L. PCT. 2 .857 4 .714 4 .600 5 .583 7 .417 8 .333 10 .167 6 .000 All-Conference Team, Eastern Division POSITION 1ST TEAM Forward.. E. Simpson, C.C. Forward.. . . ..James, Denver Center... .Clark. C.C. Guard... ...Glidden, Teachers Guard. Erickson, Wyo. 2nd team Harkins, Wyo. McKinley, C.U. Weakley, Denver Ryan, C.C. Waite, C.U. 3rd team Koerfer, Wyo. Willitt, Teachers Bagnall, C.U. Beresford, C.U. Pierce, Wyo. 134 c - 97zg PIKES PE NINETEEN HUNDRED T Y EIGHT Montana State College Series The Tigers, after winning the Eastern Division of the Rocky Mountain Conference, lost a three game series to Montana State College, champions of the Western Division for the championship of the Rocky Mountain Conference. Dutch Clark, playing better basketball than any man of either team led the Tigers to victory in the initial contest, 32-31. Thompson and Ward, scoring aces of the Montana team came to their own in the two remaining games and proved to be two much for the Tigers. Montana won the second game 29-17, and the third, 32-23. Ryan and Rhelps proved to be the main cogs in keeping Montana ' s scores as low as they were. ALL ROCKY MOUNTAIN CONFERENCE TEAMS POSITION 1st team 2nd team 3rd team Forward.... Thompson, M.S.C. James, D.U. Simpson, C.C. Forward.. ...Dow, Utah Harkins, Wyo. Nielson, U.A.C. Center Clark, C.C. Worthington, U.A.C. Ward, M.S.C. Guard ...Glidden, C.T.C. Ryan, C.C. Glynn, M.S.C. Guard.. Breeden, M.S.C. Waite, C.U. Saunders, U.A.C. Top Row — Wade, Beery, G. Simpson, Johnson, Clark, Thierfelder. Second Row — Gibbs, Ryan, Lamberson, E. Simpson, Phelps, Seibt. c7- : N E T E E N HUNDRED JGGET Y E I G H T O Clark Beery Thierfei.der Ryan , — Review of the Season Y hen Coach Twitchell issued a call for basketball, about forty men reported for practice. Among these were five lettermen, Captain Ernie Simpson, George Simpson, Arlie Beery, J. Phelps, and C. Ryan. The new men to make the squad were Dutch Clark, All- American high school center, Johnson, Thierfelder, Wade, Gibbs, Seibt, and Lamberson. At the first of the season, Coach Twitchell started Captain Simpson and Clark at the forward positions, George Simpson at center, and Ryan and Phelps at guards. Later he placed Hoddy Johnson at forward with Captain Simpson, moved Clark to the pivot position, with Ryan and Phelps as guards. The Tigers began their conference games with Western State College at Gunnison. In the two games of the doubleheader, the Tigers won 37-23 and 59-26. Colorado Teachers College proved to be too much for the Bengals in the new Teacher ' s gym at Greeley, and turned them back, 26-23. The next week- end ' s games were played at home. Wyoming was beaten 30-18 in the first game. Simpson and Johnson starred in collecting points, while Clark gave a pretty exhibition in teamwork. The Tigers next broke away and defeated the D. U. Pioneers, 34-25. The Tigers lost their second game of the season to Colorado University at Boulder, when they experienced an off night. The guarding of Waite and 136 oTV 97ze PIKES F NINETEEN HUNDRED Beresford consistently stopped the Tiger offense. The final score was State, 19; Tigers, 15. Saturday night the Tigers had not come out of their slump, but were able to defeat the slow-breaking Mines team, 25-22. Although but one game was played the next week-end, it proved to be a very successful one, for the Tigers regained the conference lead by defeating the Teachers. In the first game of their northern trip, the Tigers won an easy one over the Aggies, 49-23. In a comeback which swept the Wyoming Cowboys off their feet, the Tigers won, 32-27, the following night. A great rally in the closing minutes of the Denver game sewed it up, 33-27. The jinx of several years was broken when C. C beat the Miners at Golden, 34-18. Although victories over Teachers bv Aggies and Wyoming had given the Tigers the Eastern Division championship for the fifth time in six years, C. C. sought revenge over Boulder in the closing game of the season. The Tigers won 23-15. Captain Simpson, Clark, Johnson, Ryan, Phelps, Thierfelder, Beery, and G. Simpson finished the season with their letters. — v ■ L ■ c G. Simpson Johnson Phelps Prof. OkEy Dr. Leo W. BortrEE Prof. Gilmore Athletic Board The officers of the Athletic Committee are: President .Dr. Leo W. Bortree Secretary-Treasurer Prof. Frank M. Okey Faculty Representative to the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.... .... ..Prop. Ralph J. Gilmore The Athletic Committee of Colorado College is in full control of all finances relating to athletics in this school. The past football and basket- ball seasons have been a great success in respect to finance. The football season was able to pay for itself for the first time, and the basketball team was able to make a little surplus over and above expenses. The Athletic Committee is represented in the Rocky Mountain Conference by Professor R. J. Gilmore. At the last meeting of this association the following new rules were enacted; that football practice should be limited to two hours a dav, that no training tables should be allowed, that only three years of varsity football should be permitted any man, and that an athlete changing from one school in this conference to another would be required to attend two years before participating in football. SPRING SPORTS NUGGET - o U N D R E TWENTY EIGHT f YiM Herstrom Enyart Graham Bowes Baseball Season for 1Q26 . MacAluster Thierfelder When Coach Twitchell issued a call for baseball, eight veterans and several new stars reported for practice. Due to the construction of the new stadium on Washburn field, the home games were played at Broadway Park. The first games were played against Mines at Golden. The first of the double-header was won by Mines, 10-9. Captain Spicer starred at the plate and Herstrom brought the crowds to their feet by several sensational catches in the field. The second game was taken by the Tigers, 13-6. The second series of games was played with Colorado Teachers College. The Pedagogues won both games, the first, 8-6, and the second, 10-9. MacAllister pitched the first game for the Tigers and held the Teachers to a limited amount of hits. Herstrom, Bowes, and Spicer, who starred at the bat for the Tigers, could not bunch their hits enough to win the game. Graham started on the mound in the second game, but retired in favor of Quick in the latter part of the game. Hall, Simpson and Spicer starred for the Tigers. £ ' . ' ;— ' . 140 oTV- 97? q PI IV N I N Powell Simpson Gibbs Hall Baseball Season for 1926 Denver University lowered the Bengal per- centage a couple of notches in a double-header played at Broadway Park. Pete Howells, Denver pitcher, hurled the Pioneers to a 6-1 victory in the first game, and relieved Jacobs in the second game when the Bengal began pounding him all over the lot. Crowder, Gallo, Spicer, Herstrom, and Hall starred for the Tigers in these games. The Tigers then journeyed to Ft. Collins and broke even in two games with the Colorado Agri- cultural College. Quick starred on the mound in the first game when he held the Aggies to six hits. The Tigers won 8-1. The Farmers reversed their form in the second game and won 1 1-1. The Tigers finished their season against Colorado University at Broadway Park. The Bengals won the first game 9-6. The team showed its best form of the season in this game. The Saturday game was won 8-7 by the State team. The following men received their letters in the diamond sport: Capt. Spieer, Bowes, Herstrom, Graham, MacAllister, Quick, Crowder, G. Simpson, Gibbs, Gallo, Hall, Thierfelder, Powell, and Envart. 141 97zg PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Capt. Spicer Old Diamond on Washburn Field Baseball POSITIONS of PLAYERS Capt. Spicer left field Hall 3rd base G. Simpson right field Herstrom center field Gibbs .left field Gallo catcher Bowes 1st base Crowder .2nd base Enyart short stop Powell 3rd base Thierfelder catcher MacAllister pitcher Quick pitcher Graham pitcher 14: cTV 97tQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT O Sarcander Breaks the Pole Vault Record. — Photo by Snow Studio, Boulder. Track PARTICIPANTS IN EVENTS Capt. Kimmel; 440, half mile, relay. Sarcander; pole vault, high jump, hurdles Todd; dashes, relay. O ' Neal; dashes, relay. Gormley; dashes, high jump. Phelps; weights Vandenberg; hurdles Rogers; mile, two mile. Schisler; half mile. M. Ryan; 440, relay. Lackey; dashes, discus. %W L Capt. Kimmel 143 c V. ] : Rogers GORMLEY Phelps Track % C Ryan Prospects for a good track team at Colorado College did not look so bright when Coach Mead called the cinder men at the first of the season. Due to the small number of men at C. C, it is very difficult to have enough material in school to win much in a large meet. O ' Neal, tying the Conference record holder for the century at Denver in the triangular meet, and Sarcander, Conference record holder in the pole vault, were the only men to score at the Conference Meet. The University of Colorado Relay Carnival was the first meet that the Tigers engaged in. Colorado College placed seventh in the relays and fourth in the special events. Sarcander vaulted twelve feet for first place in the pole vault. Captain Kimmel, Gormley, Todd, O ' Neal, Ebin- ger, Cox, Ryan and Sarcander made the trip. In the next meet C. C. was able to collect 25 points in a triangular meet at Denver between Denver University, Colorado University, and Colorado College. State won with 8OJ 2 points and Denver came second with 57 points. Sarcander won first in the pole vault with a leap of 12 feet 4 inches and third in the high jump. O ' Neal equalled the Conference in the 100 yard dash when he ran it in 9 ' o seconds. He and Gormley placed second and third respectively in the 220. Bill Rogers came in second in the two mile after a close race. 144 u- - ItlQ PIKES PE. TEEN UNDRED TWENTV Schisler Lackey Track On May 15, the Tigers journeyed to Gunnison and won an easy victory over Western State College 7Q1-2 to 59 in a dual meet. C. C. made clean sweeps of the 100 and 220 yard dashes. Sarcander was high point man of the meet with 14 points. He placed first in the pole vault and high hurdles, second in the shot put. Vanden- berg won the low hurdles, placed second in the high hurdles and third in the pole vault. Ryan won the 440 while Captain Kimmel placed second in this event. Gormley won the 220, placed second in the century and third in the high jump. Forrest Phelps won the discus and placed second in the shot put. O ' Neal placed first in the 100 and second in the 220 yard dashes. Schisler and Eastwood placed second respectively in the half mile and broad jump events. C. C. won the mile relay to complete the day. The conference meet was held at Boulder, May 22. Utah Aggies won with 42 3 4 points, Utah University second with 39] 4. The Tigers scored 6V£ points and placed eight in the final standing. Sarcander broke the conference record in the pole vault when he cleared 12 feet 4} inches. New records were also established in the mile relay, low hurdles, high hurdles, half mile, and the broad jump. O ' Neal placed second in the 100 yard dash to complete the scoring for the Tigers. Sarcander O ' Neal Todd 145 ' 1 Keith Sarcander Only Member FACULTY President of the College F. M. Okev A. B. Hulbert G. H. Albright W. D. Copeland Sigma Delta Psi REQUIREMENTS Hand Spring vStand on Hands 1 1 sec. without moving. Swim 100 yds. without changing stroke. 100 Yard Dash 11:2 sec. 220 Yard Low Hurdles .... 32 sec. 2 Mile Run 12 min. 15 sec. High Jump ...5 ft. Broad Jump .17 ft. Pole Vault 8 ft. 6 in. 16 lb. Shot 30 ft. Throw Baseball .250 ft. Punt Football 40 yds. Sigma Delta Psi was founded at Indiana Universi ty in 1912. It is an honorary Athletic Fraternity and very difficult athletic tests must be met before one may become a member. Each spring tryouts are held for the prospective candidates. MINOR SPORTS Vho PIKES PEAK NUGGET TEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT - o Weimer Simpson Moses Tennis Ctarting the season with three letter men, Moses, Weimer and Lee, and a wealth of new material, the Bengal tennis team soon took form of a strong net team. The first game was with the University of Colorado team. The Tigers upset the dope and broke even with the State team in number of matches won and lost. In the doubles, Simpson and Scribner won their match, while Capt. Lewis and Lee lost. In the singles Bender and Capt. Lewis lost and E. Simpson and Lee took the C. U. men to a cleaning. The second match was played on the Ouackenbush courts in Monument Park, between the Tigers and Colorado Teachers College. The Tigers won 4-2. In the doubles, Moses and Weimer won their match, but E- Simpson and Scribner lost. In the singles, Lewis, Lee and Simpson downed their opponents, but Scribner lost his match to Leehan. The Tigers then journeyed to the conference meet in Boulder. The Bengals were eliminated in the first day ' s play, when Moses and Lewis lost to Gallacher and Blewins, Utah, 2-6, 2-6; Scribner and Simpson lost to Godell and Irvine, Utah, 5-7, 4-6. Milstien, Colorado LTniversity, won from E. Simpson, 6-8, 6-0, 6-2. Utah University won the conference championship in the next days of play, for the second consecutive year. Capt. Lewis, Bob Moses, M. Weimer, E- Simpson, B. Scribner, and Lee won their letters in this sport. 148 97z Q PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N TEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT - o Golf T HE 1926 Tiger Golf Team won the only Conference championship of the vear, when they decisively won the Conference Golf meet held at the famous Broadmoor Course, May 28-29. The team composed of No. 1, Capt. Seibt; No. 2, Bohasseck; No. 3, F. Phelps; No. 4, Broyles; and No. 5, Armstrong, amassed 21 points to 12 of Denver University who came second and IIJ2 points of Colorado Uni- versity who came third. Nearly all of the cups and prizes for individual play were won by Tiger players. Earlier in the season the Tee and Fairway Boys engages in two Triangular meets. The first was held May 8, over the Lakewood Country Club course in Denver, between C. C, C. U., and D. U. Capt. Seibt, Bohasseck, F. Phelps, Broyles, and Armstrong made the trip and collected 23 J points out of a possible 30, while Colorado University took second with 16 1 4- Denver University scored 5 points. The second Triangular meet was played over the Denver Country Club course, May 15, between the same schools. The Tigers won again, scoring 19 J 2 points. D. U. came second with 14, while C. U. came last with 11 J . Capt. Seibt, Bohasseck, F. Phelps, Broyles, and Killian made this trip. Armstrong Bohasseck Killian Seibt Broyles Phelps 149 97iQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT - Xj : Interfraternity Track T)Hi gamma DELTA won the 1926 interfraternity track championship in a closely contested two-day meet held in Monument Park. By taking both relay events, the Fijis were able to nose out the Phi Delts who came a close second. When the final scores were added up the Phi Gams had collected 45 points and the Phi Delts, 40. O ' Neal, Phi Delt, won the 100 and 220 yard dashes in very fast time. Sarcander, Phi Gam, who later broke the Rocky Mountain Conference pole vault record in the conference meet in Boulder, did not have to exert him- self to win this event. He also scored points in the discus, relays, and high jump. Bill Rogers, Phi Delt, won the mile and two-mile events. Capt. Kimmel, Phi Gam took the 440 yard dash and half-mile, but was pushed by Moses, Pi K. A. and Ryan, Phi Gam. This meet not only decided the campus championship, but from the results of the meet, the coaches selected a team to compete in the University of Colorado relay carnival at Boulder the following week-end. Final Standing points 1. Phi Gamma Delta 45 2. Phi Delta Theta ...40 3. Kappa Sigma. ....28 4. Beta Theta Pi 18 5. Independents 17 6. Pi Kappa Alpha 11 7. Sigma Chi 1 8. Delta Alpha Phi Interfraternity Baseball Intramural baseball, otherwise known as the Six A. M. Baseball league, was not as successful as in former years. Washburn Field, where the games were usually played was being torn up for the construction of the new stadium and the games had to be played in Monument Park. The teams were again divided into two leagues. The American league consisted of Pi Kappa Alpha, Beta Theta Pi, Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Chi. The National league con- sisted of Phi Gamma Delta, Kappa Sigma, Delta Alpha Phi and the Inde- pendents. A schedule was made out and several games played, but a cham- pionship was never decided. 150 97 e PIKES PEAK N I N E T E E N HUNDRED T W E Interfraternity Basketball y nterfraterniTy basketball at Colorado College means hard fought battles of rough basketball. The tournament was run off in round robbin fashion. Games were played each Tuesday and Thursday nights and an admission charge of ten cents was made, which greatly helped to finance baseball and golf. Final Standing team WON Phi Delta Theta .... 7 Beta Theta Pi ... 6 Sigma C hi 5 Phi Gamma Delta .... 5 Delta Alpha Phi 3 Kappa Sigma... 2 Independents 1 Pi Kappa Alpha ... ST PCT. 1 .875 2 .750 2 .714 2 .714 4 .429 5 .285 6 .142 7 .000 ALL INTRAMURAL TEAM POSITION 1ST TEAM 2ND TEAM 3RD TEAM Forward Jones, Phi Delt (c) Vaughn, Sig Chi (c) Wade, Phi Delt (c) Forward... Speir, Beta Van Dyke, Phi Gam Waldron, Beta Center... Shull, Phi Delt Morgan, Phi Gam Downing, Kappa Sig Guard Bell, Sigma Chi Hall, Phi Delt Spicer, Phi Gam Guard ...Leggett, Beta Doran, Phi Delt Williamson, Pi K.A. Honorable Mention: Forwards — Danson, Phi Gam; Jones, Kappa Sig; Centers — Rowe, Delta Alph; Moses, Pi K. A.; F. Phelps, Beta; Guards — East- wood, Phi Gam; Haverstock, Sig Chi; Karr, Independents. Top — G. Simpson, .1. Phelps, Moses, Moody, Bohasseck, Ryan, Thierfelder, Enyart. Herefrom, Kruger. 2nd — Waldron, Lewis, Cool, Beery, Graham, Vandenberg, Leggett, Cecil, Roessner, Warner, Gormley. 3rd — Van de Graaff, F. Phelps, Bevan, Sareander, E. Simpson, Harrison, Spicer, Hall, Lackey, Powell, Schisler. C Club President ... Leo Roessner Secretary... Don Harrison Corresponding Secretary Albert Bevan Treasurer Merle Powell Serge ant- at- Arms.. Coach Van de Graaff HONORARY MEMBERS FOR LIFE William Dotterer Dr. Mullin Chas. E. Shorb W. C. Jones D. G. Patterson O. H. Shoup Dr. MaeKinnie Dr. Shaffer P. W. Woods O. E. Mclntyre Dr. Woodward HONORARY MEMBERS Those in college until June 15, 1927 Fred Ebinger Harry Lamberson Troy Wade ACTIVE MEMBERS David Armstrong Don Harrison Leo Roessner Arlington Beery Guy Herstrom Clarence Ryan Albert Bevan Harold Johnson Orville Schisler Leonard Bohasseck James Killian Keith Sareander Florian Boyd Charles Kruger Virgil Seibt G. Andrew Cecil Robert Lackey J. Ernest Simpson Earl Clark Richard Leggett George Simpson Wyan Cool Maurice Lewis Harry Spicer Joy Enyart Hubert Moody Calvin Thierfelder George Gibbs Robert Moses Horace Todd James Gormley Field Phelps Roy Vandenberg E- V. Graham J. Forrest Phelps J. Eldridge Waldron William Hall Merle Powell Richard Warner Coach Van de Graaff WOMEN c - - PIKE PEAK N UGGET , H T - NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIG - Miss Davis Miss Warner Eleanor Davis Miss Eleanor S. Davis has held the position of Director of Physical Education for Women at Colorado College for the past twelve years. In preparation for the work, she was graduated from the Boston Normal School of Gvmnastics and, in addition, completed an extensive course of study in the department of Hygiene at Wellesley College. Her long training and natural ability for the position have proved valuable aids in promoting girls ' athletics at C. C. Marion Warner Miss Marion Warner has served as assistant to Miss Davis during the school year, 1926-1927. She was graduated from Connecticut College for Women, where she received her B.S. degree. Some time later she attended Wellesley College, where she was granted the degree of M. A. Her active interest in a long list of sports fit her well for the position of assistant director. 154 u - 97? Q PI RES PEAK NU N I N E T E HUNDRED T W E N T V Women ' s Athletics The point system is used to instill enthusiasm and further interest in sports. For earning 250 points a student gains her class numerals and for 500 points the W.A.A. pin is given. When 750 points have been accumulated the student is awarded a C.C. pillow top. A C.C. sweater is presented to the lucky possessor of 1000 points. These points are gained by observing training rules, taking places in meets, and extra gymnasium work. So far this year numerals are to be awarded to Barbara Potter, Winifred Bull, Dorothy MacDougall, Sarah Howells, and Madaleine Warner. Mary Morse is in line for a C.C. pillow top and Lois Cooper for a W.A.A. pin. The Broadmoor Pool Top Row — Donaldson, Rockafield, Russell. 2nd Row — Clark, Warner, Warner, Bull, Leonard. 3rd Row — Eynon, Morse, Davis, Burch. Women ' s Athletic Association OFFICERS President Mary Morse Vice-President Geneva Eynon Secretary-Treasurer Alice Burch HEADS OF SPORTS Hockey Mary Leonard Basketball Esther Rockafield Hiking .......Winifred Bull Tennis Marian Truby Riding Madeleine Warner Swimming Eileen Gallavan Bowling Ruth Donaldson Track Hazel Martin Baseball Virginia Russell The Women ' s Athletic Association directs all athletic activities in Colo- rado College by being organized along competitive lines. Each year the executive board and heads of sports are elected. The chief items on the athletic calendar are: Swimming Meet, Basket- ball Spread, Rodeo, May Festival, Gymnastic Meet, Organized Hikes, the All-Day Hike at the end of the season, Tennis Tournament, and the Inter- Class Games in all team sports. mh • • . .. Wm iPP i C Mahlon D. Thatcher MAHLON D. THATCHER came to Colorado in 1865 from Pennsylvania, and located in Pueblo with his brother where they owned a store. He was known as a merchant and a banker. His financial career began when he was first employed in the First National Bank of Pueblo. , From this time on he began to organize a banking system which was state wide. He was influencial in such enterprises as the Pueblo Union Depot R. R. Co., American Smelting Re- fining Co., Great Western Sugar Co., Standard Fire Brick Co., Cejment Securities Co., and Nevada-California Electric Corp. However, his interests in coal and metal mines, cattle and beet sugar seemed to be the most important. Mr. Thatcher was known throughout the state as a banker who controlled successfully many critical periods. He was noted for his fairness in business and helpful attitude toward competitors. 1 istftotadT .Q noififiM moil ' ddSl hi obieioIoO oJ emao H3H0TAHT .d tfOJHAj j i9ri}oid aid riJiw oldgul ni b9lBDoI ban f BinBvI 8nn9l - -Y± lnfirfoi9rn b 8B rtwonfi 8bw 9H .9ioJ8 b b9nwo 9ri 9i9dw ' ,l85ft,jjBW 9ri n9riw nB|$9d 199ibd Isianfinn 8iH .I93ln£d ! b bnB aid moil .01(190 1 o ifnea iBnoilBM J8ii ' i I 9ff? ni b9 ofqm9 , gfiw rioiftw tn9Jg 8 gniilned b 9sinBgTto oJ nBg9d 9ri no 9rtiiJ 9riJ ec 89sriqi9Jn9 doua ni lBion9oftni sbw 9H .9biw slBle -sft. 38 gniiJ9m8 nfioi79inA ,.oD .R . : JoqgQ noinU old ul 00 jlohS 9ti1 biebnfijg ,.oD iB girg metes W JbsiO t .o0 nina .q-joD DtrJ99i ' 3 BimolilBO-fibfivgH brtfi ,.oD 89i}iiu398 ingjQflsO brtB 9lJ}B3 ,«9nim Ib}91xi bnB Iboo ni 8te979Jni a„id ,i9y.9 oH i9rib?BriT ,iM JnBJioqmi teom 9rii d oJ b9m998 le ua. J99d b9lfoi3noo odw i9 tnfid b 3B 9}Bte 9dl luorfguoim nwonjl gBW aid io b9Jon «sbw 9H .aboriaq iBsiJna yasm yllti ' tezsooua .8io5iJ9qmoD biBWOJ 9buJidtJB Iwlqf9ri bnB asgniaurd ni 883miEt ni Colo- . 1 the Meet, P.! ' kel :ed ' l Ices, the h;. [nter- ORGANIZATIONS SOCIETIES Minerva Literary Society Founded October, 1891 Colors — Blue and White Flower — White Rose Officers FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Mary Helen Morris President .Mary Helen Morris Marian Hunt First I ice- President... . ..Marian Hunt Sarah Mason Second V ice-President Sarah Mason Dorothy MacDougall ...Secretary.... Ruth Baldwin Virginia Irwin Treasurer- Virginia Irwin Grace Berkley ...Inter-Society Representative... Grace Berkley Margaret Weinberger Factotae ... Elizabeth Morgan Claudine Sellers Factotae Louise Humble Catherine Hood Louise Kampf MEMBERS IN FACULTY Mabel B. Lee Mary Clegg Owen Dorothy Graves ACTIVE MEMBERS Ruth Baldwin, ' 27, Farmington, N. Mex. Grace Berkley, ' 27, Colorado Springs Vivian Dworak, ' 29, Longmont Mary Higbee, ' 29, Fowler Louise Humble, ' 29, Trinidad Marian Hunt, ' 27, Denver Virginia Irwin, ' 27, Colorado Springs Sarah Mason, ' 27, Colorado Springs Dorothy MacDougall, ' 27, Denver Elizabeth Morgan, ' 29, Denver Mary Helen Morris, ' 27, Colorado Springs Claudine Sellers, ' 28, Colorado Springs Elizabeth Sharer, ' 27, Colorado Springs Olive Swan, ' 28, Ramah Elizabeth Thomas, ' 27, Ca non City Marian Truby, ' 27, Colorado Springs Margaret Weinberger, ' 28, Colorado Springs PLEDGES Mary Greenwood, ' 29, Colorado Springs Martha Jonson, ' 29, Longmont Beatrice Hanks, ' 29, Salida Mildred Patton, ' 28, Colorado Springs Mary Fanny Hardy, ' 29, Canon City Doris Simmons, ' 29, Hilton, N. Y. Marian Waterman, ' 28, Fort Dodge, la. 158 oTV 97z ? PIKES NINETEEN HUN T Y E I G H Minerva Literary Society a4£A Li tfktffi Top Row — Thomas, Truby, Humble, Swan, Weinberger, Higbee. 2nd Row — Greenwood, Baldwin, Simmons, Hunt, Morgan, Patton. 3rd Row — Dworak, Morris, Hardy, Mason, Irwin, Jonson. 4th Row — Berkley, Hanks, Sellers, Sharer, Waterman, MacDougall. _ 159 G H T Contemporary Literary Society Founded November, 1899 Cole Red and White Flower — Cardinal Carnation Officers , FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Isabel Patterson ... President-- Dorothy Hodgkinson Mabel Latimer ...First Vice-President... ...Berniee Baylis Madeline Warner... .Second Vice-President Margaret Kennedy Irene Seleeman ...Secretary Mary E. Burgess Dorothy Hodgkinson ..Treasurer... ...Susie Sanford Esther Roekafield ....Inter-Society Representative... Esther Rockafield Dealome Knox.. Factotae Lillian Degenfelder Loine Hanes Factotae ...Margaret Foote MEMBER IN FACULTY Eleanor S. Davis ACTIVE MEMBERS Bernice Baylis, ' 27, Colorado Springs Alice Burch, ' 27, Grand Junction Mary E. Burgess, ' 27, Colorado Springs Mary Clark, ' 28, Canon City Lillian Degenfelder, ' 28, Cripple Creek Geraldine DeWiTT, ' 27, Colorado Springs Margaret Foote, ' 29, Glenwood Springs Loine Hanes, ' 28, Colorado Springs Erma Hestwood, ' 27, Ouray Dorothy Hodgkinson, ' 27, Colorado Springs Margaret Kennedy, ' 28, Johnston Dealome Knox, ' 28, Colorado Springs Mabel Latimer, ' 27, Grand Junction Mary Leonard, ' 27, Ft. Morgan Isabel Patterson, ' 27, Pecos, N. Mex. Neiva Remington, ' 27, Delta Esther Rockafield, ' 28, Cheyenne, Wyo. Susie Sanford, ' 28, Manitou Irene Selecman, ' 27, Colorado Springs Dolly Taylor, ' 27, Colorado Springs Josephine Van Fleet, ' 28, Monte Vista Madeline Warner, ' 28, Fruita Lenore Benning, ' 29, Pueblo Adele Campbell, ' 29, Las Animas Christine Cotton, ' 29, Auburn, Nebr. Geneva Eynon, ' 29, Durango PLEDGES Gertrude Griffin, ' 29, Colorado Springs Gertrude Hamilton, ' 28, Victor Verna Oliver, ' 28, Colorado Springs Adelaide Wilson, ' 29, Castle Rock oT 97z ? PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E H U N D R TWENTY I G H T Contemporary Literary Society Top Row — Patterson, Hodgkinson, Cotton, DeWitt, Warner, Hamilton. 2nd Row — Selecman, Leonard, Remington, Clark, Kennedy, Roekafield. 3rd Row — Baylis, Taylor, Foote, Burch, Oliver, Griffin. 4th Row — Benning, Wilson, Burgess, Campbell, Van Fleet, Hanes. 5th Row — Eynon, Sanford, Hestwood, Degenfelder, Latimer, Knox. • 161 cT - c 7hQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET . I HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT C- N I N E T E Hypatia Literary Society Founded March, 1903 Colors — Green and White Flower — Daisy Officers FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Willa Danks President .Norma Raley Verlene Coleman First Vice-President .. .Barbara Potter Eleanor Bullock.. Second Vice-President ..Margaret Baker Dorothy Atwater Secretary ...Verlene Coleman Lavinia Gilles Treasurer Lavinia Gilles Katheryn Van Stone Inter-Society Representative Katheryn Van Stone Eunice Gardner House Manager... ...Helen Goldthwait MEMBER IN FACULTY Marjorie Davis ACTIVE MEMBERS Lucille Adams, ' 27, Colorado Springs Dorothy Atwater. ' 27, Denver Margaret Baker, ' 28, Denver Eleanor Bullock, ' 27, Colorado Springs Lois Coleman, ' 29, Denver Verlene Coleman, ' 27, Colorado Springs Stella Currie, ' 27, Colorado Springs Myrtle Curtis, ' 27, Colorado Springs Willa Danks, ' 27, Steamboat Springs Katheryn Dudley, ' 28, Pueblo Eunice Gardner, ' 28, Pueblo Lavinia Gilles, ' 27, Colorado Springs Helen Goldthwait, ' 27, Denver Ruth Gordon, ' 29, Colorado Springs Virginia Manning, ' 27, Colorado Springs Barbara Potter, ' 28, Colorado Springs Norma Raley, ' 27, Colorado Springs Mary RiTTER, ' 29, New Castle Ellen Ruth, ' 27, Raton, N. Mex. Frances Thatcher, ' 29, Colorado Springs Katheryn Van Stone, ' 28, Santa Fe, N. Mex. Margaret Waterton, ' 27, Colorado Springs Ruth Bates, ' 28, Pueblo Charlotte Brown, ' 29, Denver PLEDGES Helen Elliot, ' 28, Colorado Springs Lucille Hunter, ' 29, Trinidad Mary Rose, ' 28, Pueblo 162 c - 97iQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Hypatia Literary Society MA,t,A ± .dik Top Row — Raley, Atwater, Baker, Gilles, Danks, Elliot, Goldthvvait. 2nd Row — Waterton, Curtis, Manning, Coleman, Rose, Bullock. 3rd Row — Ritter, Bates, Hunter, Potter, Curie, Van Stone. 4th Row — Gordon, Gardner, Dudley, Ruth, Coleman, Adams. o u - 7h.Q PIKES PEAK NUGGET . NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT CJ Zetalethian Literary Society Founded April, 1926 Colors — Lavender and White Flower — White Chrysanthemum Officers FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Mary Morse President.... ■ Wilma Charles Jessamal Brophy ..Vice-President Marjorie Mason Alma Rattini Secretary Irene Shaver Virginia Russell . Treasurer Virginia Russell Margaret Davies Tiger Correspondent. Margery Barkley ACTIVE MEMBERS Margery Barkley, ' 28, Pueblo Jessamal Brophy, ' 28, Red Lodge, Mont. Winifred Bull, ' 29, Grand Junction Wilma Charles, ' 27, Cripple Creek Margaret Davies, ' 27, Colorado Springs Blanche Horsley, ' 28, Colorado Springs Helen Houtz, ' 27, Colorado Springs Kathryn Lace, ' 27, Colorado Springs Ruth Lefwenhagen, ' 27, Colorado Springs Marjorie Mason, ' 28, Colorado Springs Elsie Medill, ' 28, Pueblo Ione Ward Mildred Moore, ' 29, Grand Junction Marjorie Morrell, ' 29, Colorado Springs Mary Morse, ' 27, Grand Junction Anita Osborn, ' 28, Colorado Springs Alma Rattini, ' 27, Durango Virginia Russell, ' 27, Denver Eugenia Shaver, ' 27, Glasgow, Mont. Irene Shaver, ' 27, Glasgow, Mont. Bessie Shepard, ' 27, Colorado Springs Florence Smith, ' 29, Montrose Gladys Thomas, ' 27, Canon City , ' 27, Ordway Virginia Asmus, ' 29, Ft. Morgan Mary Kirby, ' 29, Manitou Verla Parker, ' 29, Cheyenne, Wyo. Alberta Williams, ' 29, Colorado Springs ' .tfi . 164 u HtiQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Zetalethian Literary Society Top Row — Lace, Barkley, Smith, Bull, Morse, Horsley, Shaver. 2nd Row — Parker, Kirby, Houtz, Medill, Charles, Moore, Shaver. 3rd Row — Mason, Rattini, Russell, Ward, Thomas, Morrell, Brophy. 4th Row — Shepard, Lefwenhagen, Asmus, Osborn, Davies, Williams. ran m Iti dk Berkley Ward Van Stone RockaField Ruth Intersociety Council OFFICERS AND MEMBERS Ellen Ruth, President Student Government Grace Berkley, Secretary .._ Minerva Esther Roekafield .Contemporary Katharine Van Stone. Hypatia lone Ward Zetalethian The Intersociety Council is composed of representatives from each of the girls societies and one from the .Student Government Organization. In addition to its power to change and regulate the rules of the organizations, its principal function lies in the governing and direct- ing of the election of new members to the four societies. It is cus- tomary for the Student Government representative to serve as president of the council. FRATERNITIES c - 7hQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT O y ( -ij Top Row — Phelps, Hutchinson, Haymes, Anderson, Lewis, Wade, Chinn. 2nd Row — McEnany, Graham, Swenson, Otten, Sarcander, Forslund, Cronk. Interfraternity Council President .Prof. F. M. OkEY Vice-President John Haymes Secretary Walter Forslund Treasurer Troy Wade FACULTY Prof. Okey Prof. Penland MEMBERS Beta Theta Pi Phi Delta Theta John Haymes Emmett Graham Field Phelps John Cronk Delta Alpha Phi Phi Gamma Delta John Often Walter Forslund Michael McEnany Keith Sarcander Kappa Sigma Pi Kappa Alpha Troy Wade Wesley Swenson Ralph Anderson Howard Hutchinson Sigma Chi Maurice Lewis Clifford Chinn - aJ. 168 ,rv 97z ? PIKES PEAK NUGGET N E T E E N HUNDRED T W N T V EIGHT ■ Xj Kappa Sigma Founded at University of Virginia, 1869 Established at Colorado College, 1904 Colors — Scarlet, White and Green W. D. COPELAND MEMBERS IN FACULTY H. E. Mierow ACTIVE MEMBERS Flower — Lily of the Valley C. C. Mierow ' 1 Arlington Beery, ' 29, Colorado Springs Clifford Beery, ' 29, Colorado Springs Fred Blackford, ' 27, Rocky Ford G. Andrew Cecil, ' 28, Denver Darwin Coit, ' 29, Colorado Springs Everett ConovER, ' 29, Colorado Springs Gerald Downing, ' 28, Montrose Clarence Downing, ' 30, Montrose Franklin Emery, ' 30, Colorado Springs Joy Enyart, ' 27, Ordway William Gallagher, ' 29, Colorado Springs Paul Gorham, ' 27, New Haven, Conn. Stanley Griffith, ' 28, Palisade Paul Harper, ' 28, Potomac, 111. Selby Young, Thomas Jones, ' 30, New Wilmington, Pa. Charles Justis, ' 30, Greenville, Term. Robert Lackey, ' 29, Colorado Springs Eugene Mast, ' 29, Colorado Springs James McTigue, ' 29, Colorado Springs Ralph Moss, ' 29, Jacksonville, Fla. Edward Rohrer, ' 29, Colorado Springs OrvillE Schisler, ' 29, Colorado Springs Frank Seely, ' 30, Colorado Springs Calvin Thierfelder, ' 28, Simla Arthur Troutman, ' 29, Colorado Springs Edward Vollmer, 30, Colorado Springs Troy Wade, ' 28, Victor Leslie Wood, ' 29, Colorado Springs 29, Colorado Springs Sylvester Benbow, PLEDGES ' 30, Colorado Springs Edward Parker, ' 30, Colorado Springs Top Row — Anderson, Thierfelder, Yorrieter, Schisler, Moss, C. Downing, Parker 2nd Row — Mast, MeTigue, Mierow, Wasson, Cecil, Harper, Ritchey, A. Berry. 3rd Row — Emery, Conover, Coit, Trautman, Griffith, Rohrer, Benbow. 4th Row — Young, Wade, G. Downing, Blackford, Enyart, Wood, Justis, Copeland. 5th Row — Lackey, Jones, Vollmer, Gallagher. 169 97zq PIKES PEAK NUGGET . NINETEEN H.UNDRED TWENTY E t G H T Sigma Chi Founded at Miami University, 1855 Established at Colorado College, 1905 Colors — Blue and Gold Flower — White Rose ACTIVE MEMBERS Robert Adams, ' 27, Colorado Springs James Albert, ' 27, Colorado Springs William Bell, ' 29, Cheyenne Leonard Bohasseck, ' 29, Elmhurst, 111. Paul Brackett, ' 27, Colorado Springs Clifford Chinn, ' 28, Arvada Ralph Conroy, ' 30, Colorado Springs James Fahey, ' 29, Colorado Springs Sam Garvin, ' 30, Colorado Springs Donald Gibboney, ' 28, Long Beach, Calif. George Gibbs, ' 29, Brush James Gormley, ' 28, Grand Junction Winfred Haigler, ' 29, Colorado Springs Willis Haverstock, ' 29, Long Beach, Calif. WlLLARD WULFF, ' 28. Guy Herstrom, ' 28, Denver Ira Hodge, ' 29, Colorado Springs Jack Jacobs, ' 29, Springfield, Mo. George Jenks, ' 29, Colorado Springs Melzar Jones, ' 29, Colorado Springs Maurice Lewis, ' 27, Colorado Springs Richard McCoy, ' 29, Bartlesville, Okla. Gordan Minter, ' 29, Colorado Springs Hubert Moody, ' 27, Pueblo Fred Petty, ' 30, Edgewater Carl Stafford, ' 30, Syracuse, N. Y. Walter Tait, ' 29, Detroit, Mich. Lloyd Vaughn, ' 28, Palisade Marion Weaver, ' 29, Colorado Springs Colorado Springs PLEDGES Dennis Garrett, ' 30, Pueblo James Weir, ' 30, Colorado Springs Paul Willis, ' 30, Farmington, N. Mex. Top Row — Tait, Jenks, Weaver, Minter, Stafford, Bell. 2nd Row — Jacobs, Lewis, Brackett, Chinn, Wulff, Garvin. 3rd Row — Weir, Bohasseck, Gormley, Petty, Conroy, Fahey. 4th Row — Haigler, Vaughn, Jones, Herstrom, Gibbs, Haverstock, Garrett. 170 c 97ze PIKES PEAK NU NINETEEN H U N D R TWENTY Xj Color — Royal Purple Guy H. Albright Phi Gamma Delta Founded at Jefferson College, 1 848 Established at Colorado College, 1908 MEMBERS IN FACULTY ACTIVE MEMBERS Flower — Purple Clematis Ralph J. Gilmore Preston Albright, ' 28, Colorado Springs David Armstrong, ' 29, Colorado Springs George Baggs, ' 28, Colorado Springs Earl Clark, ' 30, Pueblo Philip Clay, ' 29, San Francisco, Calif. Jerry Cogan, ' 30, Colorado Springs John Cogan, ' 30, Colorado Springs Forrest Danson, ' 29, Colorado Springs Arthur Eastwood, ' 29, Brooklyn, N. Y. Walter Forslund, ' 28, Colorado Springs Benjamin Griffith, ' 30, Denver Harold Harmon, ' 30, Colorado Springs William Hillhouse, ' 29, Colorado Springs Frank Hoag, ' 30, Pueblo Earl Kaufman, ' 30, Marshfield, Mo. Charles Kruger, ' 28, Eaton Alfred LaFontaine, ' 30, Minneapolis, Minn. Harry Lamberson, ' 30, Colorado Springs William Van Frank Lewis, ' 29, Colorado .Springs Lyman Linger, ' 30, Hooper Douglas McHendrie, ' 27, Trinidad Earl Morgan, ' 28, Trinidad Merle Powell, ' 27, Las Animas Harold Proctor, ' 28, La Porte Ellsworth Richards, ' 29, La Junta Clarence Ryan, ' 29, Colorado Springs Keith Sarcander, ' 27, Fort Collins Mark Shaffer, ' 28, Colorado Springs James Simon, ' 28, Colorado Springs Charles Smith, ' 30, Brownsville, Tex. William Southard, ' 30, Trinidad Harry Spicer, ' 27, Pueblo Richard Street, ' 29, Evanston, 111. Horace Todd, ' 29, La Junta Frank Truby, ' 30, Colorado Springs Roy Vandenberg, ' 29, Colorado Springs Dyke, ' 30, Pueblo Toi How — Clark, Forslund, Harmon, Armstrong, Kaufman, Hoag. 2nd Ron — Danson, Lamberson, Linger, Truby, LaFontaine, Cogan, Vandenberg 3rd Row — Baggs, Griffith, Clay, Sarcander, Lewis, Eastwood, .Smith. Richards. 4th Row — Powell, Shaffer, Morgan, McHendrie, Spicer, Ryan, Van Dyke. jth Row — Southard, Todd, Cogan, Hillhouse, Albright. c 97? Q PI RES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN UNQRED TWENTY EIGHT Xj Colors — Azure and Argent Phi Delta Theta Founded at Miami University, 1848 Established at Colorado College, 1913 MEMBER IN FACULTY William T. Van de Graaff Flower — White Carnation ACTIVE MEMBERS David Bowes. ' 28, Clearfield, Pa. Eugene Cervi, ' 29, Arvada Ben Charles, ' 30, St. Louis, Mo. John Cronk, ' 28, Denver Ray Davis, ' 28. Manitou Roy Doran, ' 29, Denver Fred Ebinger, ' 29, Denver Lawrence Fitzgerald, ' 29, Denver Emmett Graham, ' 27, Denver Robert Hall, ' 30, Clinton, Mo. William Hall, ' 27, Denver Don Harrison, ' 29, Colorado Springs Embree Jaillite, ' 30, Colorado Springs Marks Jaillite. ' 30, Colorado Springs Harold Johnson, ' 29, Clearfield, Pa. Coburn Jones, ' 29, Denver Stewart McInroy, ' 30, Denver Jack Miller, ' 27, Colorado Springs Edwin Morrison, ' 30, Great Bend, Kansas Joe Ray, ' 29, Denver Robert Rebillot, ' 28, Canton, O. LEE Shull, ' 30, Denver Fred Shultz, ' 28, Woodmen Ernest Simpson, ' 28, Denver George Simpson, ' 29, Denver William TwillEy, ' 27, Colorado Springs Glen Wade, ' 29, Denver Richard Warner, ' 27, Beacon Falls. Conn. PLEDGE Frederick Smith, ' 30, Colorado Springs Top Row — Shultz, Doran, Johnson, Graham, Shull, McInroy. 2nd Row — Jamison, Smith, Warner, Fitzgerald, Harrison, Charles. 3rd Row — Martin, Hall, Van de Graaff, Miller, Hall, Cervi, Morrison. 4th Row — Ray, Davis, Cronk, Tw-illey, E. Simpson, G. Simpson, Ebininger, Rebillot. )TH Row — Jones. Wade, Pendleton, M. Jaillite, E. Jaillite. . a 172 o cT 7 lQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E E N HUNDRED TWENTY EIG ppf- Colors — Pink and Blue Beta Theta Pi Founded at Miami University, 1839 Established at Colorado College, 1914 MEMBER IN FACULTY Ross Keyte ACTIVE MEMBERS Flower — Rose Kelly Alexander, ' 30, Hollandale, Miss. James Austin, ' 29, Denver Albert Bevan, ' 28, Colorado Springs Charles Blunt, ' 30, Colorado Springs Florian Boyd, ' 27, Denver Fred Bruns, ' 30, Denver Roy Burghart, ' 28, Colorado Springs Wilfred Burton, ' 28, Denver Robert Campbell, ' 29, Trinidad Bruce Cool, ' 29, Colorado Springs Wyan Cool, ' 28, Colorado Springs Alvin Foote, ' 30, Glenwood Springs John Haymes, ' 28, Colorado Springs Hugh Honnen, ' 28, Colorado Springs Max Keyte, ' 30, Colorado Springs James Killian, ' 29, Colorado Springs Jackson King, ' 27, Colorado Springs Eldridge Waldron, James KnowlEs, ' 28, Colorado Springs Richard Leggett, ' 29, Colorado Springs Joyce Miller, ' 30, Colorado Springs Dale Osborne, ' 28, Denver Sterling Owen, ' 30, Evansville, Miss. J. Forrest Phelps, ' 28, Colorado Springs W. Field Phelps, ' 28, Colorado Springs William Robinson, ' 29, Breckenridge Frank Rand, ' 30, St. Louis, Mo. Robert Rothrock, ' 30, Colorado Springs Wm. Schortinghuis, ' 28, Winnipeg, Canada Virgil SeibT, ' 28, Colorado Springs Thomas Sevits, ' 30, La Junta Elton Slate, ' 27, Colorado Springs Edward Speir, ' 28, Colorado Springs Kenneth Speir, ' 30, Colorado Springs Milton Sprenger, ' 29, Colorado Springs 28, Colorado Springs PLEDGES Donald Reed, ' 30, Greeley Jack Sherk, ' 30, Greeley Top Row — Rand, Owen, Sherk, Boyd, Honnen, Austin, Knowles, Slate. 2nd Row — E. Speir, Waldron, W. Cool, Sprenger, Murray, Osborne, Sevitz, Schortinghuis 3rd Row — Foote, J. Phelps, Burghart, B. Cool, Seibt, Robinson, Blunt, Campbell. 4th Row — Killian, Leggett .Bevan, King, Burton, F. Phelps, Haymes, Bruns. 5th Row — Alexander, K. Speir, Miller, Rothrock, Keyte, Reed. PEAK NUGGET N E T E E M HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Pi Kappa Alpha Founded at University of Virginia, 1868 Established at Colorado College, 1920 Colors — Garnet and Gold Flower — Lily of the Valley MEMBERS IN FACULTY Paul Boucher Alvin G. Twitchell ACTIVE MEMBERS Ray Althouse, ' 28, Colorado Springs Charles Collins, ' 30, Hartford, Conn. Bevier Gray, ' 27, Colorado Springs Harold Heckenlively, ' 28. Colo. Springs Howard Henderson, ' 28, Colorado Springs Howard Hutchinson, ' 29, Eaton Eldon Larecy, ' 30, Hugo, Okla. Glen Leech, ' 27, Colorado Springs Robert LilEs, ' 30, Colorado Springs Leighton Medill, ' 30, Newark, Del. Robert Moore, ' 30, Versailles, Mo. Robert Moses, ' 28, Colorado Springs Ivan Ridge, ' 30, Colorado Springs Fred Smith, ' 29, Sheridan, Ind. Wesley Swenson, ' 28, Colorado Springs Raymond Wall, ' 29, Colorado Springs Eugene Weinberger, ' 29, Colorado Springs Cyrus Wilcox, ' 30, Beacon Falls, Conn. Jack Williamson, ' 29, Culman. Ala. Leo Wolgamood, ' 29, Colorado Springs PLEDGE Harold Wilm ' 30, Colorado Springs. Top Row — Collins, Wilcox, Williamson, Smith, Wall, Henderson. 2nd Row — Medill, Moore, Wolgamood, Ridge, Wilm, Liles. 3rd Row — Weinberger, Swenson, Heckenlively, Gray, Leech, Hutchinson. 174 r hQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET , NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Delta Alpha Phi Founded at Colorado College, November 2, 192 + Colors —Silver and Green Flower— Carnation ACTIVE MEMBERS Ivan Asay, ' 29, Alamosa William Bender, ' 28, Hamilton, O. LylE Brokaw, ' 27, Colorado Springs Adolphus Burleigh, ' 29, Trinidad George Burnham, ' 29, Colorado Springs Robert Caldwell, ' 30, Denver Kenneth Cummings, ' 29, Colorado Springs Maurice Davies, ' 29, Cleveland Heights, O. Edgar Drumeller, ' 27, Colorado Springs Richards Edwars, ' 29, Colorado Springs John Emmerson, ' 29, Canon City Albert Forde, ' 28, Salida Winston Fox, ' 30, Canon City Harold Hofer, ' 29, Aledo, 111. Clare Jencks, ' 29, Colorado Springs Edward Jordan, ' 28, New Castle Mike McEnany, ' 29, Alamosa Gerald Miller, ' 29, Monmouth, 111. John Otten, ' 28, Rossville, Ind. Darryl RagsdalE, ' 29, Waverly, Kansas Harold Robinson, ' 28, Cripple Creek Robert Row, ' 29, Denver Cozine Strang, ' 30, Colorado Springs Richard Woodward, ' 30, Pueblo PLEDGES Donald Klein, ' 30, Holly Edwin Booth, ' 29, Sheldon, la. Top Row — Emmerson, Edwards, Booth, Jencks, Bender, Row. 2nd Row — Caldwell, Fox, Miller, Hofer, Strang, Klein. 3rd Row — Asay, Burleigh, Davis, Woodward, Cummings, Burnham. 4th Row — Brokaw, Otten, Jordan, Forde, McEnany, Drumeller. 175 mm® m HONORARY c 7hQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET N- I N T E HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT U ,- ' Phi Beta Kappa Founded, College of William and Mary (Virginia), 1776 Founded at Colorado College in 1904 The Colorado College Chapter elects each year one-seventh of the members of the graduating class less two, primarily on the basis of scholarship. To this number are added two members of the Junior class chosen on the same basis. OFFICERS 1926-27 President, R. J. Gilmore Vice-President, Edith Bramhall Secretary-Treasurer, J. G. McMurtry ACTIVE MEMBERS In Faculty Edith C. Bramhall Marjorie Davis Clay Freudenberger R. J. Gilmore Dorothy M. Graves E. D. Hale A. B. Hulbert C. T. Latimer C. C. Mierow H. E. Mierow F. V. Scholes C. H. Sisam R. F. Snyder W. T. Van de Graaff J. G. McMurtry Seniors Bernice Baylis Martha Belschner Helen E. Crane Margaret Davies Erma Hestwood Dorothy Hodgkinson Jackson F. King Douglas McHendrie Emmett Martin Cecil Read Rose Ripley Dolly Taylor Juniors Westley Curtis Olive Swan m .£ ' i- Top Row — Latimer, Mierow, McMurtry, McHendrie, Gilmore. 2nd Row — Scholes, Mierow, Sisam, McLaughlin, Martin, Curtis. 3rd Row — Read, Hestwood, Crane, Hodgkinson, Taylor, Baylis, King. 4th Row — Davis, Bramhall, Belschner, Graves, Ripley, Davies, Hale. 178 cj 97ze PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N U N D R TWENTY EIGHT Delta Epsilon OFFICERS President ..Prof. I. A. Keyte Secretary-Treasurer Prof. C. W. Penland Member of Executive Committee ..Prof. 0. A. Barnes Senators... .Profs. P. E. Boucher and Gordon Parker HONORARY MEMBER Alex W. McCoy GRADUATE MEMBERS P. A. Smoll Harold Davis Russell Hunter FACULTY M EMBER vS Prof. Wilm Prof. Boucher Prof. Penland Prof. Sparks Prof. Parker Dr. W. F. Drea Prof. Glaze Prof. Barnes Dean Hershey Miss Hood Prof. Page Prof. Okey Miss Warner Prof. Keyte Dr. Boissevain Ross Keyte Prof. Wagar SENIOR MEMBERS Eleanor Bullock Linton Gardner Edwin Harmon Erma Hestwood Robert Adams Bruce Foster Frank Figge Mrs. Blanche Erickson Martha Belschner Bertram Schiele James Waldie Cecil Read Emmett Martin , Top Row — Harmon, Page, Barnes, Schiele, Sparks. 2nd Row — Boissevain, Read, Penland, Waldie, Gardner. 3rd Row — Foster, Glaze, Gilmore, Douglas, Boucher, Figge. 4th Row — Hershey, Sisam, Belschner, Hestwood, Okev, Kevte. 179 L 97?Q PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Tau Kappa Alpha National Forensic Fraternity Founded at Butler University, 1908 Established at Colorado College, 1916 OFFICERS President... .— Frank Smith Vice-President Ruth Lefwenhagen Secretary.... .. Josephine Van Fleet Treasurer John Emmerson MEMBERS John Emmerson Sherman Sheppard Ruth LefwenUagen Frank Smith Mildred Moore Virginia Russell Susie Sanford Josephine Van Fleet FACULTY MEMBERS W. D. Copeland Glen McLaughlin In the eleven years of its local activity Tau Kappa Alpha has done much to promote and develop debating activities at Colorado College. The out- standing eve nt of the fraternity this year was the success with which it enter- tained the Colorado Debate Conference for three days this spring. Top Row — Russell, Sheppard, Read, McLaughlin, Moore. 2nd Row — Emmerson, Lefwenhagen, Smith, Van Fleet. 180 tS y lQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Xj Alpha Kappa Psi National Business Fraternity Founded at New York University, 1904 Established at Colorado College, 1919 OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Merle Powell President ...Troy Wade Joy Enyart ....Vice-President Earl Morgan William Gallagher Secretary and Treasurer .G. Andrew Cecil Leo Roessner ...Master of Rituals. Walter Forslund Fred Blackford Diarv Correspondent G. Andrew Cecil Fred Blackford Florian Boyd Paul Brackett Roy Burghart G. Andrew Cecil John Cronk Clare Jencks MEMBERS David Edstrom Joy Enyart Walter Forslund William Gallagher Jack King PLEDGES Maurice Lewis Earl Morgan Merle Powell Leo Roessner Calvin Thierfelder L. M. Vaughan Troy Wade Edward Rohrer Top Row — Enyart, Morgan, Lewis, Powell, Wade, Cecil. 2nd Row — Vaughn, Edstrom, King, Blackford, Roessner, Cronk. 3rd Row — Brackett, Rohrer, Boyd, Forslund, Jencks. Jones Sharer Coleman Theta Alpha Phi National Dramatic Fraternity Founded at Oklahoma A. and M., 1918 Established at Colorado College, 1920 Elizabeth Sharer MEMBERS Melzar Jones Lois Coleman MEMBERS IN FACULTY W. D. Copeland Mary Clegg Owen Theta Alpha Phi now has fifty-four chapters in leading American colleges of which the Colorado College chapter is the eleventh. It was established to maintain interest in dramatics and unite socially students and instructors of dramatic ability. Theta Alpha Phi publishes a monthly magazine, The Cue, to promote national interest in dramatics and to keep each chapter informed of the national affairs of the fraternity. CAMPUS r c - ES PEAK NUGGET , h -r NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIG . ' 1 • ' ' Top Row — Mierow, McMurtry, Lackey. 2nd Row — Mierow, McBroom, Ross, Pyle, Asay. 3rd Row — Goldthwaite, Davis, Edmondson, Keen, Figge, Groscurth. 4th Row — Ross, Smith, Boyd, Dentan, Rose, Brown Kappa Chapter of Eta Sigma Phi P resident Robert C. Dentan First Vice-President Florence L. Smith Second Vice-President Florian G. Boyd Recording Secretary.. Winifred C. Bull Corresponding Secretary Lodema Ruth Brown Treasurer Dorothy Helen Rose Sergeant- at- Arms Jamie Lincoln Ross HONORARY MEMBERS Joan Heckenlively Anna Jane Hitchcock Evangeline Joder MEMBERS Robert Claude Dentan Charles Christopher Mierow Richard John Street Florence Leverton Smith Herbert Edward Mierow Ivan Asay Florian G. Boyd James Gilmer McMurtry Philip Clay Winifred Constance Bull Marjorie Davis William E. Crews Lodema Ruth Brown Dorothy Printup Hulbert Don Leroy Harrison Dorothy Helen Rose Eada L. Gilberg Guy M. Herstrom Jamie Lincoln Ross Helen M. Goldthwait Robert B. Lackey Geraldine DeWitt Hazel I. Martin Richard M. McCoy Margaret Figge Mildred A. Groscurth Clair Roberts Mary Greenwood Edna M. Pyle Lloyd M. Vaughan G. Andrew Cecil Eileen Edmondson Emmalau McBroom Jerry A. Cogan Angeline Keen Lois Ross During the past academic year the club received from Eta Sigma Phi, the national classical fraternity, a charter entitling it to become affiliated with the fraternity. All literary meetings of the Classical Club and the classical frater- nity are held jointly. 184 J 97ze PI RES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E E N U N D R TWENTY EIGHT o B i I B 1 BB S U ' fin. Ibm JIMS Hf : B W : fc iJ fit 8 BT - 3T 3 Hr ™J H7 ' wl B% f «■ mu 3 f Sf| ' r ■ ■ 1 Ti A . « -p 9 ba JVjl V ' : - l P flB B - SI i 1 J BBt BP- I Top Row — Lace, Moore, Russell, Lefwenhagen, McLaughlin, McBrien. 2nd Row — Sheppard, Houtz, Rattini, Ripley, Clark, Groscurth. 3rd Row — Barkley, Van Fleet, Davies, Horsley, Oliver, Medill. Athenian Debating Society OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Ruth Lefwenhagen.. President Margaret Davies Helen Houtz Vice-President Blanche Horsley Jessamal Brophy. ... - Secretary-Treasurer. .. Elsie Medill Elsie Medill... Critic Jessamal Brophy Margaret Davies Tiger Correspondent Josephine Van Fleet Mildred Moore.. Factotum Verna Oliver Margaret Davies Helen Crane Helen Houtz Ruth Lefwenhagen Rose Ripley Virginia Russell Alma Rattini Bessie Shepard Margery Barkley MEMBERS Jessamal Brophv Mary Cla k Helen Ferguson Mildred Groscurth Blanche Horsley Marjorie McBrien Elsie Medill Susie Sanford Josephine Van Fleet Dorothy McLaughlin Mildred Moore Verna Oliver Ruth Johnson Selma Azar Genevieve Winstanley Louise Stewart Evelyn Jones Kathryn Lace Believing that there was a need in the college for a women ' s forensic organization, a group of girls founded Athenian Debating Society in 1919. Through this group forensic activity has been carried on and encouraged, so that now women ' s debating in Colorado College is at a high standard. 185 c EAK I RED TWENTY EIGHT Top Row — Griswold, Hale, May, Bridges, Reutlinger. 2nd Row — Brown, Figge, White, Totten, Boutellier, Downey. 3rd Row — Jones, Sawson, Warner, Parker, Hamilton, Scholes, Dugan. Euterpe Society President. Madeleine Warner Vice-President Verla Parker Secretary and Treasurer Mrs. Joseph Friedman i Hazel Boutellier Mrs. Bridges Rosalie Buchmann Mary E. Burgess Adele Campbell Wilma Charles Elizabeth Downey John Emmerson MEMBERS Joseph Friedman Mrs. Friedman Virginia Gooch Beryl Griswold Dean Hale Gertrude Hamilton Beatrice Hanks Mrs. Landis Mildred May John Otten Verla Parker Florence Pickett Mrs. Reutlinger Isabelle Totten Mrs. Tucker Madeleine Warner Euterpe had a predecessor named Pierian, which became infected with the sorority bug. Sororities had not the approval of Colorado College. Pierian it was suggested, might physic the bug or else adorn a page of history. It chose the latter, and after decent burial and a befitting season of mourning, a new society was organized which promises to live longer. Affiliation may take place later with one of the national groups and Euterpe share vitally in the future of music. u - 97ze PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E E N U N D R E D TWENTY EIGHT Brown Williams Van Fleet Warner Girls ' Riding Club President Josephine Van Fleet Secretary and Treasurer Charlotte Brown Manager of Riding Madeleine Warner MEMBERS Charlotte Brown Rosalie Buchmann Dorothy Davidson Carmen Durkee Mary Moore Ruth Morey Susie Sanford Josephine Van Fleet Madeleine Warner Josephine Wickes Virginia Williams Adelaide Wilson The Colorado College Riding Club was organized in the spring of 1923, and held its first Rodeo on Mav 12 of that year. The regular spring meet has been a feature fostered by the club ever since, and has proved a very fascinat- ing part of the work. Regular riding classes offered by Miss Davis for beginners have been the basis for riding in C. C. The riding club has attempted to go a little beyond this in constituting itself the honorary and advanced group toward which these riders strive. In the last year the prerequisite for mem- bership has been raised; and contrary to former practice beginners are not considered members of the club but must first rise to the rank of intermediate riders when they are automatically made members of the club. 1S7 97zq PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T H U N D R N T V EIGHT - o Top Row — Jones, Boyd, Harmon, Emmerson, King. 2nd Row — Giddings, Thomas, Raley, Hatfield, Beeson, Knox, Twilley. 3rd Row — Simmons, Sharer, Crannell, Truby, Hodgkinson, Baylis, Hanes. Koshare Dramatic Club President William Twilley Vice-President Norma Raley Secretary Lavinia Gilles Treasurer Jack King Director.... Mr. Blaine f John Cronk Play Committee Mark Shaffer (Elizabeth Sharer MEMBERS Berniee Baylis E. V. Graham Elizabeth Nelson Mary Beeson Loine Hanes Norma Raley Florian Boyd Harold Harmon Mary Rose Eugene Cervi Don Harrison Mark Shaffer Lois Coleman Mildred Hatfield Elizabeth Sharer Elizabeth Crannell Dorothy Hodgkinson Doris Simmons John Cronk Melzar Jones Elizabeth Thomas John Emmerson Jack King Marian Truby Ralph Giddings Dealome Knox William Twilley Lavinia Gilles Ronald Martin Harold Weaver Koshare draws its membership, which is limited to thirty, from both men and women of the undergraduate student body. By means of try-outs those with exceptional abilitv and interest in dramatics may become members. c - 97iQ PIRES PEAK NUGGET NINE-TEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT X, i J m u r% £ ' 1 f -flpra If v A 1 y iJ W ' Top Row — Coleman, Sargent, Faus, Potter, Kirkpatrick, Hunter. 2nd Row — Crowder, Hills, Forbush, Larson, Meston, Atkins, Espey. 3rd Row — Crannell, Dewey, Davidson, Humble, Thatcher, Jackson. Crescent Club FIRST SEMESTER OFFICERS SECOND SEMESTER Lois Coleman President Louise Humble Louise Humble Vice-President Frances Thatcher Frances Thatcher .... ...Secretary... Virginia Dewey Frances Thatcher ...Treasurer Dorothy Davidson Lucille Hunter. .Historian ...Elizabeth Crannell Ruth Atkins Lois Coleman Elizabeth Crannell Eva Crowder Dorothy Davidson Virginia Dewey Charlotte Brown Carmen Cross MEMBERS Eddye Duvall Rachel Espey Helen Forbush Louise Humble Maxine Hunter Lucille Hunter PLEDGES Dorothy Faus Dorothy Hills Ruth Jackson Mariam Larson Elizabeth Meston Mary Ritter Frances Sargent Frances Thatcher Margaret Kirkpatrick Mary Potter The Crescent Club was organized to promote culture, scholarship, and social service. The membership is limited to twenty-five members to be drawn from the Freshman and Sophomore classes. 189 97z ? PI RES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T E HUNDRED TWENTY G H T Top Row — Leonard, Griffin, Waterton. 2nd Row — Benning, Beeson, Hunt, Dworak. Y. W. C. A. CABINET Marion Hunt President Margaret Waterton Vice-President Mary Elizabeth Burgess ._ Secretary Olive Swan Treasurer COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Virginia Irwin Undergraduate Representative Ruth Lefwenhagen Rest Room Mary Leonard Posters Mary Beeson Publicity Lenore Benning ..: ....Program Gertrude Griffin Ways and Means Marjorie Morrell Girl Reserve Vivian Dworak Social Dolly Taylor .Employment The Y. W. C. A. fosters a great number of activities on the campus. On the first Sunday of the year the organization gave the Freshmen flowers and the Sophomore members entertained the newcomers a week later with bridge parties, tacky parties and the like. At Christmas time a very successful bazar was held under the direction of Gertrude Griffin. During the holidays Marion Hunt represented the Y. W. C. A. at the convention in Milwaukee. 190 u 97 G PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Top Row — Mast, Heckenlively, Griffith. 2nd Row — Swenson, Smith, Foote. L- Y. M. C. A. OFFICERS Frank Smith President Wesley Swenson Vice-President Eugene Mast ....Secretary Stanley Griffith. .Treasurer CABINET Frank Smith Eugene Mast Forest Danson Wesley Swenson Stanley Griffith Alvin Foote Harold Heekenlivelv The Y. M. C. A. is an association of young men banded together to pro- mote Christian living and to apply Christian principles to social and political problems. An important activity of the organization this year was the maintaining of a social and recreation room in the basement of Hagerman Hall. Students may pass their spare time here pleasantly reading, playing pool or chess, and singing. A prominent part of the Y. M. C. A. work is promoting discussion through such groups as the International Relations Club and through unusual speakers of which there have been several this vear. 191 •J- - ■ flQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET N I N E T HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT O Top Row — Totten, Williams, Hatfield, Burgess, Rose, Pingrey, Wilson. 2nd Row — Johnson, Rose, Dixon, Hetherly, Downey, Swan, Wilm, Frazier. 3rd Row — Dnvall, Buchmann, Tucker, Rockafield, Ross, Hamilton. Womens 1 Glee Club OFFICERS President .Esther Rockafield Secretary... ..Rosalie Buchmann Treasurer Jamie Ross Librarian Dorothy Rose Director. ... ..Mrs. John Speed Tucker Accompanist Olive Swan Theresa Bailey Margery Barkley Rosalie Buchmann Mary Elizabeth Burgess Doris Dixon Elizabeth Downey Eddye Duvall MEMBERS Mary Alice Frazer Gertrude Hamilton Josephine Hetherly Ruth Johnson Graeme Pingrey Esther Rockafield Dorothy Rose Mary Rose Jamie Ross Louise Stewart Isabelle Totten Alberta Williams Clara Wilm Adelaide Wilson 192 tS 97 ? pi NET Top Row — Sherk, Owen, Rand, Justis, Stafford. 2nd Row — Mast, Colegrove, Knowles, Curtis, Wilm, Haigler. 3rd Row — Alexander, Gray, Heckenlively, Row, Klein, Vestal, Burton. 4th Row — Weinberger, Campbell, Austin, Miller, Blunt, Miller, Emmerson. Men ' s Glee Club Director Manager. George L. Miller W. D. Copeland Ivan Asay James Austin Dennis Garrett Winfred Haigler James Knowles John Otten Kelly Alexander Harry Blunt Wesley Curtis MEMBERS Albert Forde Bevier Gray Donald Klein Eugene Mast Gerald Miller Harold Wilm Robert Campbell Sterling Owen Robert Row Jack Sherk Carl Stafford Paul Vestal Wilfred Burton Robert Colgrove Alvin Foote Charles Justis Dobson West Harold Heckenlively Eugene Weinberger 193 o 7he PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT ■ x V-r Top Row — Wade, Thierfelder, Downing, Cecil, Enyart, Avery, Longwell, Grant, Heckenlively, Harper, Raymond. 2nd Row — Drumeller, Herstrom, Buckley, Gray, Swenson, Anderson, Ryan, Schultz. 3rd Row — Campbell, Austin, Roessner, Spicer, Ebinger, Mast. Colorado College Band Director ...Fred G. Fink Assistant Director ..Harold Heckenlively Manager. . —Fred Schultz Drum Major Bernard Longwell V- N J ' . MEMBERS Cornets — Adolphus Burleigh, Alvin Foote, Howard Grant, Harold Hecken- lively, Francis Raymond. Clarinets — Warren Buckley, David Hdstrom, Fred Fink, Oscar Hammer. Trombones — Gene Irwin, Eugene Mast, Fred Schultz. Baritone — Harrison Tout. Saxophones— Ben Griffith, Gerald Miller, Willis Poynter. Drums — Winfred Haigler, William Robinson, Virgil Seibt, Richard Wilson. Alto Paul Harper. 4 194 o -v 97?(? PIKES PEAK NUGGET NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT Top Row — Bender, Sheppard, Jordan, Row, Moses, Young, Austin. 2nd Row — Weinberger, Street, Waldron, Speir, Jones, Harper. 3rd Row — Wade, Rohrer, Ray, Bohasseck, Swenson, Burton, Haigler, Hillhouse. The Growlers OFFICERS President Secretary-Treasurer. David Armstrong James Austin William Bender Leonard Bohasseck Wilfred Burton Fred Ebinger Walter Forslund George Gibbs Winfred Haigler Paul Harper Wilfred Burton Paul Harper MEMBERS William Hillhouse Clare Jeneks Melzar Jones Edward Jordan William Mason Robert Moses Harold Paekham Joe Ray Edward Rohrer Robert Row Sherman Sheppard Fred Smith Edward Speir Jack Street Wesley Swenson Glenn Wade Troy Wade Archie Waldron Eugene Weinberger Selby Young Phe Growlers, the Colorado College boosters club composed of .Sophomore and Junior men selected from each of the fraternities and the indepen- dent group, was organized in the fall of 1925. Its purpose is to support college activities, particularly athletics, through an organized stimulation of school spirit. , L CK % m ' ■41 L, 195 w F ' T - Top Row — Morgan, Vaughn, Edstrom, Bender, Enyart. 2nd Row — Powell, Brackett, Jencks, Rohrer, King. 3rd Row — Lewis, Gallagher, Boyd. A and B Club first semester William Gallagher Joy Enyart OFFICERS SECOND SEMESTER President Paul Brackett ...Secretary Earl Morgan William Bender Florian Boyd Paul Brackett Edna Brandenburg Forest Danson David Edstrom MEMBERS Joy Enyart William Gallagher Howard Grant Lester Haines Harold Heckenlively Clare Jeneks Ronald Jones Maurice Lewis Jack King Earl Morgan Merle Powell Susie Sanford Lloyd Vaughn The A and B Club was organized in 1921 to promote scholarship among the students in the Business Administration and Economics Departments. In 1925 it was extended to include Sociology majors. Monthly meetings were held until 1925, at which time it was decided to have the club purely honorary and social, with one meeting each semester. .- £-_- 196 c 7 lG PI NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY L.IGHT 1 ..-.1 or Top Row — Kruger, Henderson, Wagar, Klein, Proctor, Simon. 2nd Row — Honnen, Wilm, Row, Chappell, Parker, Raymond. Pikes Peak Forestry Club OFFICERS Forester .....William Schortinghuis Recorder .Hugh Honnen Fiscal Agent James F. Simon FACULTY REPRESENTATIVES Prof. Parker Prof. Wagar ASSOCIATE MEMBERS E. Claypoole Prof. Penland F. Fitzgerald E. Everest The Pikes Peak Forestry Club was organized several years ago for the purpose of stimulating a greater interest in the study of forestry among its members. Meetings are held fortnightly at which time topics of general interest are discussed. From time to time speakers of authority on forestry subjects address the members. 197 o J - 7 lQ PIKES PEAK NUGGET N 1 N E T N HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT - u Top Row — Raley, Bullock, Ruth, Morgan, Coleman, Van Stone, Rose, Dudley, Patterson. 2nd Row — Coleman, Truby, Morris, Baker, Adams, Danks, MacDougall. 3rd Row — Warner, Moore, Conrov, Sellers, Dworak, Elliot, Hunter, Atwater. Exclamation Club « r 198 97 0 PIKES PEAK NUGGET , NINETEEN HUNDRED TWENTY EIGHT - Top Row — Jones, Powell, Ray, Forslund, Yandenberg, Street, Wade, Spicer, Jamieson, Cecil, Graham. 2nd Row — Stafford, Enyart, Blunt, Phelps, Cool, Boyd, Rothroek, Simpson, Hall, Gormley, Wade, Gibbs, Gibboney, Speir. 3rd Row — Cronk, Clark, Herstrom, Williamson, Moore, Lewis, Downing, Moses, M organ, Linger, Shull. The Question Club ■ • L - r-sj-aji as . Top Row — MacDougall, Pingrey, Burch, Morse, Hestwood, Thomas. 2nd Row — White, Patterson, Lee, Rattini, Danks, Remington. 3rd Row — Hunt, Latimer, Atwater, Baldwin, Goldthwaite. The Dais OFFICERS Advisor Dean Lee President .Dorothy MacDougall Members Senior hall girls Definition The high or principal Table Dates Mostly Stuffed Purpose .... Nourishment Colors... Most Anything Flowers. In the Spring — Lilacs Motto When do we eat? Meetings Three times a day Dues Now and Then Insignia Dinner Ring I • ' I i % «« ' ' TSfl 1 . ' IP is£ ' i ' ll Moses Hallett V TOSES HAJLLETT, jurist during the territorial period •L - ■ and after Colorado became a state. Probably no west- ern jurist has exerted a greater influence in mining juris- prudence than Judge Hallett. He served as Chief Justice of the Territory of Colorado in 1866, was reappointed by Presi- dent Grant to the Territorial Supreme Court until Colorado became a state. President Grant appointed Judge Hallett to the U. S. District Court for Colorado, a position he filled until he retired in 1906. During a later period of his life, in addition to attending to his large private interest, he was executor and trustee of the estate of George W. Clayton, who left a large fortune for the establishment of the George W. Clayton College for orphan boys, which was in a few years turned over to the city of Denver. ■I 1 CI W ' ill,, If Iff w i.U ilttrd  ivooi F1 omas , ' ! i i, i ' tun. ttdllfiH 898 oM bohgq Ifiiiotiiid} arijr JS|  4 HV ,; ' TTajJLAH 838 ° -189W on yMbcHoi 1 ! .9lBl8 b sniBostd obfiioloO 19lTtB bee -ahuj. gninim ni 93 n9uRni i9lB9Tr§ a b9li9X9 aeri laiiiji ate o 9Dtl80l l9if!D 8B b9V79!j!;9fH. : JSJ9iJfiH 9gbuL HEftl 93n9bmq -iag-i ! d b9inioqqB9i «ew ,dd8I m obeioIoO to ypottvis ' t 9ril obeioIoO lilnn ItuoD 9nt9iqu3 ifinolinsT aril ol lnBifD iinisflr llallfiH 9§bul bamioqqB JobiD lmbi89-i ' t I : .,9J, .f8  ?! fl p9! li | b9llft sri noiliaoq s ,051810103 tol liooC) l3irl8iO, :T 3 J ; r ] [3!.fjt(l ' ol, .riflPI ni b9iil9i 9ri litmi [he pmicipa iDle r, Snibodlls ol noiiibbB ni f 9lil airi }o boitsq 191bI %|$J|$$ [ 3tiiffecl o 99l8Ull bOB 101039X9 86W 9.rf ,l8919lnl 9lBViiq 9|j1£[ ?A,d OJ to1 annl ' to S ' gttftl b itet oriw ,rrol Bl3 ..W a iosiO lb 9iBi89 ' 4JnT no! 9 9lIo3 noi BO .W -9gioaD 9ril to tVHffilMirai ' iirfl ' aril ol 1970 bsmim aiB9y; wal « .mi 8«w ri3iri a d rt ftjffriq 1 ib :s ' Xii9 it«9dOL to yJid ingi Three times a day .7 and ' I Q i. is ,13 r PROMINENT COLLEGIANS SELECTION BY A STUDENT VOTE Most Popular C. C. Type KATHERINE VAN STONE DOUGLAS McHENDRIE SELECTION BY THE SENIOR CLASS Most likely to succeed ELEANOR BULLOCK JACK KING to i i iii 1 inn i i i i i m % Catherine Van 5tone Douglas HcHendrie Eleanor Bullock Jack Kinq HARGARET KlRKRATRICK Eddte Duvall Beauty Contest winners: MARGARET KIRKPATRICK EDDYE DUVALL THE SELECTION OF THE FIRST TWELVE WAS SECURED BY A VOTE OF THE STUDENT BODY. FROM THESE THE TWO MOST BEAUTIFUL WERE CHOSEN AT THE JUNIOR PROM BY THE FOLLOWING COMMITTEE: MRS. WM. I. HOWBERT MRS. JOHN NICHOLS MRS. O. H. SHOUP MRS. A. G. SHARP MRS. GEO. FOWLER, JR. f -..■; f|l iliii AX $ I -i I William Newton Byers m i ' to ' WILLIAM NEWTON BYERS, journalist, came to ' Denver in 1859, bringing by wagon, the equipment for a news- paper. He printed the first issue of the Rocky Mountain News April 23, 1859. This was Colorado ' s first newspaper, of which Mr. Byers was editor and manager for nineteen years. Mr. Byers was one of the most historic figures in the up- building of Colorado, not only as a journalist, but in the promotion and advancement of many enterprises. In the political, industrial,, educational, and, in fact, in every feature of life that moulded and encouraged western spirit, activity, and development, Mr. Byers stood out pre-eminent. f i jMnnmu. A. IMIMI «|I(||l!« ' , i:i| jjjjimiiwmf A lis ,ilW K Mf ' | l!|. a3± BpfcnttsfcCo Beautv Contest PATRICK | ; IE se ;cti ••■ T ii: Pis n twkia e BODY -gwan B iol Jfi9rnqiup9 9rit (rtd fiy y.d nigniid f PS8I ni ▼ nifiJnuoM y„ tooiI. 9dt lo 9U82i }8in 9rfJ b9Jniiq 9H .i9qeq to ,i9qeq8W9n ig-rfi fc ' objriolbC) 8BW giriT . S8i f ££ Ii iqA 8W9H .8 ijs9y n99J9nin ioT: t9gBHKttt bnn t€frib3 ajjsw 819 9 .iM rfoirfw -qu 9fli ni 89iu ft phptairi Jgpm 9 1? 9r no bbw 819 8 .iM 9ii) ni ind f J8ilemi)6[ u sb v.rrio on ,bbfiioioO lo gnibliud 9dl ni .898iiqi9 ' d if MXlo| .i! 3.it 7fii ;bne nohomoiq Y I9V9 ni ,Hob ni ,bni? JfinoiJfioub9 Jfiiiiaubni ,IeoiJiIoq ,Jiiiq8 ni9J89w b9§fiiuoon9 bne b9bIuom JfiriJ alii o siulssl .Jn9iiini9-9iq Juo booJg 8i9Y_9 .iM f }n9mqol9V9b bits ,yiivhoG THE CAT {Broadmoor is Colorado ' s choicest year-round playground incere appreciation is me first and most lasting reaction nen your invitation reads: At me Broadmoor. For me guest is quick to sense mat refinement of service wnicn cares for him as our guest as well as yours. Fraternities ana Sororities ever na e looked wim favor upon mis remarkable hotel w ' hen planning Colorado College functions, borrowing freely of its prestige, delighting in its adroit v?ay of meeting difficult tasks. Our appreciation of mis fact will continue to be shown bj) me measure of service given. l 7ho BRO A DMOOR Featuring Saturday ' Uea Dances and Dinner Dances, and Cotion c Pi£lures twice a week. EDWARD G. BURKE £M. a n a g er See Cheyenne Lodge — a bit of {Broadmoor atop the world! 209 Three good things, a part of school life Who in C. C. won ' t re- member those Saturday Candy Features ' ' at Bern ' s. Who won ' t remember the fragrant, delicious coffee — Derngood Freshly Rossted Coffee — the bev- erage for every lunch and get-together? And that Derngood Mayonnaise always avail- able fresh as a true mayon- naise should be? Dern 26 South Tejon Before you try the rest try the best PEOPLE ' S DAIRY FOR QUALITY and SERVICE Our QUALITY BUTTER is excelled by none 401 S. TEJON TEL. 1488 J Buy your Com mencement requirements in Fine Shoes here $6 to $10 WuMSAoe Co. y J yashtotiab e-) ' v v footwear no So. Tejon The Musick Drug Co. - — - 1- Complete stock of Drugs, Chemicals, Toilet Articles and Sundries JOHNSON ' S AND CRANE ' S CANDIES ' Service with a smile 109 E. Fontanero Street PHONES 177 AND 447 The Dollar Building and Loan Association (Incorporated under the laws of the State of Colorado) This institution offers 7% on savings and a helpful program of regular monthly d2posits from $5 up Your funds are secured by first mort- gages on improved real estate E. C. vSHARER, Fresidtnt Exchange National Bank Bldg.. Colo. Springs. Colo. 210 DR.G.W.PAULY,B.S.,D.O. OSTEOPATH Registered Medical Practitioner Office, 118 N. Tejon Street Suite 201, 202, 203, 204 De Graff Bldg. Fhone Main 1701 Residence, 1532 North Nevada Ave. Phone Main 956 Make it your special duty to complain if your CAT is not delivered reg- ularly and satisfactorily. Five dollars in cash will be paid for evidence lead- ing to the arrest and con- viction of anyone caught stealing Cats from sub- scribers ' home or from our wagons. Don ' t hesitate to call up Mr. Albert Bevan. Yesterday the circula- tion of your CAT was 250,000 which was over 30 times as great as the foreign owned paper. Sta- tistics also show the CAT excelled this other paper in every department. Why not co-operate with us and help us make bigger and better CATS and don ' t forget the CAT IS YOUR BIG BROTHER. VOL. XXXX COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO No. XXX G. DADDLESKINK Voted most typical Colorado College man in elections of 1871. KOEDS KIDNAP KATTY KLASSMATE By Associated Distress The kidnapping business is becoming quite prosperous and prevalent among some of our more popular C. C. Coeds ac- cording to a statement made to our international correspondent by Chief H. D. Harper this morn- ing. The girl bandits, it seems, dress in slickers and masks and pick up all unsuspecting fair rivals that they meet anywhere between Bemis and Cutler. They then gag and bind them and take them out in the woods where they threaten them with cruel stories of long walks and blackmail. The leader of the gang is said to speak Spanish fluently and wears an Indian ring, that is, did wear an Indian ring. Friends of both parties con- cerned say that jealousy was responsible for this sudden out- burst of feminine ferocity. It is rumored that there is in this, as in all other similar affairs, the eternal triangle. (The End) Colorado College Academy of Wrestling (606 Character Building) San Luis School, conducted under the auspices of the Colorado Springs Police department has proved a very valuable asset in producing athletes at Colorado College as only the stronger and less nervous boys may survive. Notwithstanding the miscon- ception that the co-eds are not allowed, it is to be noticed that many of our fair damsels have made themselves quite conspic- uous in this body building sport. We would like to call to the reader ' s attention the following testimonials: Dutch Clark, all-high school toe dancer, says, I have develop- ed my famous wind mill glide and owe my entire muscular and physical development to San Luis and will prove my statement by allowing any skeptic to feel my muscle. Ten Pin Bevan, veteran alley grappler, joins Three minute Harrison in approving of the smoothness and tact employed at San Luis. Whispering Johnson, ex-Bull tosser from the big three, Swink, Fountain and Kelker, has achieved great success after his first ten lessons. For once he is at loss to voice his opinion. Captain Sarcander, stellar pole vaulter, although not of wrestling fame, since training at San Luis clears the bar at a height which is no longer a matter of inches. (Continued on Page 215) G. DADDLESKINK, Jr. Voted most typical Colorado College man in elections of 1935. BETAS ESTABLISH PURITANICAL LEAGUE A branch of the Puritanical League of America has been established at Colorado College with headquarters at the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house. Action was taken after it was discovered that a member of this fraternity had placed his pin out on a girl in a stat e reformatory. The exact officers of this local branch are not known, but it is understood that all of the members are co-operat- ing in the program for pure, un- polluted manhood. Campaigns have been launched over the campus to bring other fraterni- ties and societies into the fold. Late last night the Phi Gams were on the fence. It was expected that they would hit the sawdust trail before morning. This is the first time that such a wholesome wave has been felt at Colorado College. Much is expected to develop therefrom. Already fraternity dances have been abolished, and it is rumored that the Betas are serving Sin- ton ' s Special at their regular Monday night gatherings. The (Continued on Page 22S) 211 Peoples ' Family Laundry We give the best and quickest Service in town Phone 5 1 7 5 1 6 West Colorado BAUGHMAN ' S BAKERY The place to get those sweet goods, such as Cookies, Buns, Cakes, and all other Pastry Goods. — K — 109 SOUTH TEJON STREET Phone Main 1807 I. W. Baughman, Proprietor BREAD is essential to every hike lunch, picnic, class party, luncheon — bread for the sandwiches at least. One loaf stands out for its ideal size, its adaptability to slicing, to any use. That ' s Zim ' s 1 wins —crisp — crusted —delicious —clean — fresh every morning The Zimmerman Baking Company Comebacks A LL stores have Comebacks, but here at Giddings Kirkwood ' s nearly all of our Comebacks are for more merchandise — not adjustments and complaints. Why — because we try at all times to sell only quality merchandise in the newest styles and at fair prices. o i ?v wafi ffi xk ooA A VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY Join our University Cruise. The only all- educational trip in the world. The tour on which you go places — do people — see things. We guarantee that you will learn more on this trip in six months than you could learn in C. C. in two weeks. Write right now! The picture shown above was sent us by two of our students while taking the tour. They say What, with the stars and the moon so bright, and the air so balmy, we could not feel more at home at a San Luis dance. TOM WALLACE TAILOR, CLEANER and DYER Will clean and press your suit for 75c Press only. 35c Ladies ' Plain Suits and Dresses same price — No odor Will call for work and deliver in any part of the city Phone Main 2034J 303 South Tejon $1 GOOD AT EITHER SHOP $1 50 50 50 50 50 Save $1.00 BY USING THIS COUPON Lightning Shoe Shops 50 50 50 50 50 One trial is all we need 50 to show our High Quality, 50 m . Service and Workmanship _ $1 $1 T H E Alamo Laundry We would rather refer you to hundreds of our Satisfied Customers, than tell you how good we do our Dry Cleaning and Laundry Work. A WIFE SAVER H. D. PIERRON, Manager 19 E. Cucharras St. C. W. ZIEGER Op to me tr is t IS NOW LOCATED AT 502 BENNETT BUILDING Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted Phone 1680J Quality to Men Since 1887 A SECRET ABOUT CLOTHES COST Here ' s the way to find the real cost of a suit of clothes: CJDivide the price by the num- ber of days of wear. CflTry that and you ' ll always wear fine clothes. They not only look better, give more pleasure, but they cost less, really. CfOur clothes are that kind. TEJON AND COLORADO AVE. 213 TRUBY ' S FOR GRUEN WATCHES HUDSON ESSEX BOXLEY COLE MOTOR CO. SALES AND SERVICE !5 X. Cascade Tel. M. 287 Simple ! It is an easy matter to select the best candy procurable — and when you give candy, you want to give the best. All you need do is get a box that bears the name — $r$it ' : ' GET ACQUAINTED PACKAGE SEXTETTE CHOCOLA TES CHERRIES-IN-CREAM CHOCOLATE COVERED NUTS and many other delicious assortments SOLD EVERYWHERE Made by Brecht Candy Co, Denver, Colorado, l T . S. A. Swan ' s Funeral Home The House by the Side of the Road -•• All About You is Life! A continuous movie of comedy, drama, tragedy. If you don ' t see perfectly, you miss the best entertainment in the world — fur- nished free by your fellow-man ! R. M. FULBRIGHT ( ptometrist COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO Phone Main 91 7 23 Independence Bldg. Pete ' s Barber Shop Sit in the Barber Chair with the satisfaction of knowing Expert Work T T T 8 EAST CUCHARRAS 214 MATTRESS FACTORY We repair old mattresses and also carry entire new stock. Box Spring Work — Feather Mattresses We appreciate patronage of Fraternities and Dormitories 212 South Tejon A. A. ORMAN 27 17 WOOD AVE. M 2663 W Dawn Donuts Ask for them at your grocers or favorite cafeteria Also DAWN POTATO CHIPS There ' s a difference 306 S. Tejnn Main 2867J Mary Rose, possessor of the deadly head lock, says, Since training at San Luis I have been able to throw more men than a I any other time, even excelling my enviable record achieved at Bes- semer. Sandstorm Van de Graaff, feared because of his scissor hold, says, Until I came in contact at San Luis, I presumed West Point the greatest institution for man building but believe San Luis brings forth more manly instincts with a greater personal touch. Gorilla Cecil as quoted, After drinking three of San I, Pore Opener. bottles After drinking 3 bottles of San L Pore Opener, I was able to reach the rafters without any effort and am now wearing cast iron hose to keep from leaking. Maxine Hunter, late of Colo- rado University, and famous in contortionist circles, says, I have improved my technic and science by training with such masters as Senor Spicer and Duco Pacham who are responsible for the success I have attained to date. Dean Lee, popular matron at Colorado College, indorses this Calling Main 1341 Means Prompt Plumbing Service In an emergency — when a pipe bursts or a drain clogs — to call Jardine and Knight means a prompt answer. It means our quickly dis- patching a capable man to the job who will do his work efficiently and without loss of time. Jardine and Knight PLUMBING and HEATING CO. Phone 1341 312 N. Custer Fireproof and Non-Fireproof Storage You Needn ' t Even Check Your Trunk When you have your trunk ready for the trip home, just call W L and worry no more with the details. We ' ll check it from your room right thru to its destination. And if you have any- thing you want to leave here until next Fall, we ' ll store it safely in our ware- houses. 22 North Tejon St. Main 97 w ANDELL LOWE Transfer Storage Co. 215 Highest Standard of Workmanship in Dry Cleaning Pressing and Dyeing Plus a service that is reallv SUPERIOR SUPERIOR DRY CLEANING CO. 129 N. Tejon St. Phones 1364 and 1365 BILLIARDS BOWLING C.C. Headquarters for Ladies and Gentlemen DIXON f MILLER Finest Recreation Heat quarters in the West it is a pleasure for us to ALWAYS PATRONIZE AND BOOST TIGER ACTIVITIES UPSTAIRS, STRATTON BLDG. 27 SOUTH TEJON CIGARS FOUNTAIN institution to the fullest extent, claiming that aside from the physical development it affords a wonderful opportunity for char- acter perfection, the girls always coming home with a greater appreciation of the dear old halls. Fat Harmon and Tubby Ritter were loud in their praises proclaiming that no other place provides such facilities for re- ducing. Dean Hershey was sober again Sunday. Merle Powell ' A Boy ' s Best Mother. ' glibly rendered Eriend is His SOCIETY A rousing good time was had by all at the annual Swan Song given by the members of Phi Gamma Delta. After the ninth stein, Merle Powell glibly rendered A Boy ' s Best Friend Is His Mother. George Baggs did a natty little clog on the Steinway, and Preston Albright entertained with some quaint acrobatic stunts on the banister and chandelieres. Stag teas, pink affairs with THE AUDITORIUM HOTEL DENVER NEW MODERN QUIET 200 ROOMS Rates: $1.50 per day, and up, with detached bath. $2.00 per day and up with private bath. Located in the heart of the shopping and theatre district. Take Car No. 4, front of depot, get off at Stout Street, hotel one-half block to right. The Newest and Most Complete Moderate Priced Hotel in Denver W. L. BEATTIE Proprietor and Manager THE BLUE LANTERN INN AND GIFT SHOP 17 and 19 Pike Street, Manitou, Colo. BREAKFAST, LUNCHEON, DINNER, PICNIC LUNCHES, AFTERNOON TEA Special Arrangements made for College Parties and Dinner Dances THE SELDOMRIDGE GRAIN COMPANY 13 S. CASCADE x HAY, GRAIN, FLOUR, FEED POULTRY SUPPLIES AND SEEDS 216 The CANTEEN Is always glad to be at your service. Our sand- wich and light lunch trade speaks for itself — it is de- servingly the best. We will gladly deliver your midnight lunches for your convenience. Cigars-Cigarettes-Candies-Soft Drinks Near Beer on Tap Johnston s Milwaukee Chocolates I lb. to 5 lb. packages Arch ELLIOTT BROS. Jack 25 - 25 1 .9 East Colorado Avenue HOLLY SUGAR x The best that science and education can produce K HOLLY SUGAR CORPORATION COLORADO SPRINGS COLORADO Hungarian Flour For Baking (HARD WHEAT) Harvest Queen Flour ForPastr y (SOFT WHEAT) PURINA CHOWS Horses, Cows, Poultry, Hogs The Robinson Grain Company DISTRIBUTORS 218 West Colorado Ave. Phone 505 217 THINGS ELECTRICAL LET YOUR UNCLE DUDLEY DO IT (At It Twenty-Seven Years) Paso ectric CO. ECTRIC SHOP KINS.Mcr dudley j. elkins 208 EAST PIKES PEAK AVENUE OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Phone Main 216 W. I. LUCAS SPORTING GOODS CO. EVERYTHING FOR THE SPORTSMAN Phone 900 19 N. TEJON Hard to Find PHONOGRAPH RECORDS Can Usually be Found Here We curry the largest ami most complete stock of records in the city. The three leading makes — Victor, Brunswick and Columbia Phonographs and Records — assuring you of a wide variety of artists and compositions to choose from. The Store with a Personality M. N. KRAUS MRS. A. POINT 1 1 S. Tejon St. Main 461-W PLAZA DINING ROOM HOME-COOKED MEALS AT REASON- ABLE PRICES A Good Place to Eat Regularly Plaza Hotel M. 2515 218 DRINK DELICIOUS AND REFRESHING ...THE... Lowell-Meservey Hardware Co. 1 06 South Tejon Street Phone 307 Phone 327 Knorr ' s Market Co. GOODS of the HIGHEST QUALITY 7p DELIVERY Phones 2602-260 3 The Arapahoe Food Stores Co, Store No. 1 — 125 South Tejon Street Store No. 2—2+31 West Colorado Avenue Store No. 3—122 North Tejon Street Manitou Bissell ' s Pharmacy f PURE DRUGS STATIONERY CANDY SODA and CIGARS B CORNER DALE and WEBER Phone Main 980 JAMES HOWARD BARBER SHOP 19 EAST BIJOU STREET COLORADO SPRINGS The World ' s Greatest Fishing HERE IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY! How high will you climb in the next four years? Will you be a success? Will those who jeer you now, applaud you later? Try our new correspondence course on How to manage Junior Proms. We guarantee you anywhere from $100. 00 to $200.00 profit per evening. If you will enclose 3c in a letter with your address we will send you some nice letter paper favors. Thank you. P. S. the 2c is for postage. The extra penny is to cover cost of article. Name MAIL TODAY 219 Marcel and Water Waving Facial and Scalp Treatments Telephone M 7 17- J PAUDRE PAUFFE BEAUTY SHOPPE Permanent Waving a Specialty Hair Dressing, Shampooing, Manicuring Hair Dyeing Marinello and Burnham Operators in charge 222 N. TEJON STREET HAMBURGERS THE BEST IN ToWN Cook ' s Near Beer, Ice Cold, on Draught All Kinds of Sandwiches Free Delivery VERNON ' S PLACE l()8i 2 S. TEJON Phone M. NW French Pastry are again the fashionable men anil cracked ice ogue among the Chandler Hale, Leonard Bohasseck, Bill Burton, Prof Snyder, Willis Strachan, and Edward Speir are among those who have entertained. Everyone will remember the delightful tea given by John and Edward Speir last June, that added so much to the esprit de corps at the finals Miss Katherine Van Stone, popular member of the intelle- gensia is the leading figure of the new Suicide Club. You see, Miss Van Stone coyly explained The guests of girls- about- town on a recent joy-ride. to The Cat Reporter, just as women formerly answered the Question Club with the Excla- mation Club, we are now answer- ing the — —with the new Suicide Club. Your wit, Miss Van Stone, said The Cat Reporter devilishly, is inimitable. Messrs. James Killian and Don Harrison were the guests of girls- about-town on a recent joy-ride. Killian excused himself shortly after midnight, and enjoyed an invigorating walk home in the V- ALUES in clothes mean a combination of good-looking ma- terials cut with an un- derstanding of style and with pleasing at- tention to the details of finish — all at a price a man feels like pay- ing. At least, such are Nathan ' s Value Clothes. 24 South Tejon The I louse ol Kuppenheimer Hotel Cosmopolitan Denver, Colorado 460 Rooms with Bath Opened June 5, 1026 The Largest and Finest Hotel en the State THE LEADING HOTEL IN DENVER Highest Class Restaurant and Best Coffee Shoppe In Denver Pall Room and Special Banquet Rooms Available for Unusual Functions Roy ' s Cosmopolitan Orchestra Every Evening CALVIN II MORSE, Manager 220 WE ARE THE BERRIES Personal Attention Given to Farm Lands and City Property Since 1910. It is a pleasure for us to help you get a home or a farm. We welcome you to our City, and will appreciate it if you will call at our office, 210 Mining Exchange Building for Loans, Insurance and Exchanges. J. W. BERRY LAND COMPANY 210 MINING EXCHANGE COLORADO SPRINGS COLORADO Telephone 287 6W Frank Mitchell, Mgr. The Colorado Planing Mill Co. MILL WORK OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS HKH 525 W. Colorado Ave. Colorado Springs BILLIARDS CIGARS Meet Me at Baum ' s 114 E. PIKES PEAK AVE., COLORADO SPRINGS Headquarters for Colorado College Students National and American baseball scores daily. Headquarters for .Sporting News SODA CANDY Young men who wear Perkins - Shearer Clothes are as a rule successful, not because of the clothes, but because they have the knack of knowing good values when they see them. Perkins-Shearer Co. = 221 --.. I! ©ebtcateb to ©ux ®umb Animate ESTABLISHED 1887 Gray Iron Castings Structural Steel Sheet Metal Work Heavy and Light Machine Work Colorado Springs, Colo. IRA C. DUG AN J EWELER and OPTOMETRIST Glasses Fitted Lenses Duplicated Expert Watch Repairing Watches, Clocks and Jewelry 129 34 North Tejon Street The Collier Lumber Company Lumber, Cement and Plaster Builders ' Hardware and Roofing Phone M. 386 543 West Colorado Ave. PIGGLY WIGGLY ' ' All Over the World — M— 122 South Tejon Street 132 North Tejon Street 2505 Y2 West Colorado Avenue 332 North Institute — K — Meat Markets and Bakery Depart- ments at all four stores 222 Did you Ever Stop to Think That OWNERS ARE SAFER GUIDES THAN SPECIFICATIONS THE COLORADO SPRINGS MOTOR COMPANY 23 South Nevada Phone Main 297 C.F.ARCULARIUS JEWELER Gifts that Last DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY SIL ERWARE and NOVELTIES 9 S. Tejon St. Colorado Springs Top Row- Tout Baylis Slate Armstrong Trubv Tout 2nd Row- -Knox Tout Robinson Hillhouse Tout vStrachan CATTIEST MEMBERS OF THE OAT STAFF GLIDDEN, MORRIS c CO. New V o r k E. W. HUGHES, MANAGER HIGH-GRADE INVESTMENT BONDS 406 Mining Exchange Building Colorado Springs, Colo. Phone Main 410 T ' ell your advertising story effectively by using SHANTZ ART 213 MINING EXCHANGE BUILDING PHONE 361 SKAGGS UNITED STORES DISTRIBUTION WITHOUT WASTE MONEY SAVING — CASH STORES SOUTH STORE 118 South Tejon Phone Main 563 NORTH STORE 202 North Tejon Phone Main 2060 lovely moonlight. Don and the rest of the party were out till the small hours, Harrison reporting that it was one of the most suc- cessful joy-rides of a busy season. Society awaits with interest the women ' s inter-society track meet. Slate predicts that Dudley of Hypatia will run away with the dashes, as she is easily the fastest girl on the campus. Mary Rose, also of Hypatia should place in the weights, and Mary Hardy should cinch the discus throw for Minerva with her extraordinary form. Slate predicts that Dudley of Hypatia will run away. Faculty nits, excuse us, — notes. Professor Albright, instructor in the popular astronomy courses, has been absent this week on account of a contract for posing at the Broadmoor Art Academy as St. John the Baptist. Dean McMurtry was highly disturbed last Friday, when he discovered his Bible 7- 1 1 class had left when some wag had written No class today on the black- board. GRAND VIEW GREENHOUSES AND NURSERY — H— E. R. RIPLEY SON 3178 W. Colorado Ave. Phone Main 265 7 DRIV-UR-SELF ENJOY YOURSELF HERTZ driv-ur-self SYSTEM New clean cars for rent by the day mile or week PHONE 4S00. Any car will be delivered free at once Colorado Springs Station : 121 EAST BIJOU, Opposite Acacia Park =+ Marksheffel Motor Company MARKSHEFFEL BUILDING Phone 5260 224 The J. S. Brown Mercantile Co. 17 North Cas:ade WHOLESALE GROCERS new York ' s mild cigars WHEN IT IS PROMISED THE Prompt Printery Co. D. S. GilmorE, President E. J. Roesch, Secretary Phone Main 536 12 and 14 EAST KIOWA STREET Colorado Springs, Colo. S. P. Winger C. P. vScOTT The Davidson Dairy Company Wholesale and Retail Telephone M. 385 Rear 105 S. Weber BARTHEL ' S CONFECTIONERY Candy, Ice Cream and Ices for Parties. Complete line of Home Made Candies. Lunches served at our Fountain arc- always the best. Just one trial will convince you. 131 N. TEJON ST. Main 920 oAbove all — the right fyat and let that hat always carry the label of this exclusive little shop. Silver Fox Shop 111 E. Pikes Peak YOU ARE SURE OF SERVICE ' Insured with T H E CHAS. T. FERTIG INSURANCE AND INVESTMENT COMPANY Colorado Springs, Colorado Phone 2() )0 109 E. Kiowa 225 x 1 25 N. TEJON THE TYPEWRITER MAN Coloraco Springs We will sell ycu any make typewriter on monthly payments as low as .15 a month A. L. Stark Typewriter Exchange District Agenti Typewriters Adding , • for Remington and Dalton Machines RENTALS SUPPLIES, EXPERT REPAIRING convection with The Dale Street Fuel Co. 831 North Tejon Phone Main 4670 + LAUNDRY Our Machines do the Work — It takes a lot of money to equip a laundry with all the modern machinery, but we have made the outlay, and find that it pays because we can take care of our fast-growing business with greater speed and satisfaction. We ask you to make up a bundle of family laundry this week and give us an opportunity to show what we can do. Phone Main 1085-1086 329-331 NORTH TEJON STREET THE PEARL LAUNDRY The La ,Z d y ry soap l Uses Suits Golf Hose Tucker-Dodson ' s refilled quaUty Shirts Knickers 226 QUALITY LUNCH BUSY CORNER LIGHT LUNCHES, PIE, COFFEE, AND HAMBURGERS We are conveniently located; offer better service and our food is strictly of the best A COLLEGE MAN Demands a Neat, Up-to-Date Hair Cut We Satisfy Campbell ' s Barber Shop 109 East Pikes Peak Ave. Cl.TRUBY Here we have Greasy Graham and Smuthe Sarcander, two of the Hagerman Lodge snakes, condescendingly pausing to get a line on the real freshman class. Incidentally, that know- ing leer on Greasy ' s face doesn ' t mean a thing, and Smuthe is really not asleep, merely being engrossed in the enticing contortions of his talented playmate ' s ears. Public Stenographer and Notary MRS. ELIZABETH V. HITE 201 Mining Exchange Bld OFFICE MAIN 757 RESIDENCE MAIN 4073 By Appointment Made in Colorado Springs The World ' s Most Famous Art Pottery VAN BRIGGLE ART POTTERY VISITORS ALWAYS WELCOME EVERYTHING I N FLOWERS SAY IT WITH FLOWERS 105 NORTH TEJON STREET PHONE MAIN 599 227 Absolutely Fireproof -:- European Plan Restaurant Famed THE ANTLERS Colorado Springs ' Largest and Best Hostelry   a We specialize in Parties and Banquets of any size. FURS of QUALITY and STYLE AT LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS Re-styling, Repairing, Relining and Fur Storage Estimates Gladly Given Westercamp Fur Tanning Co. 318 N. Tejon Phone Main 318 ATTENTION! COEDS! Try SAYRE FOSTER for Altering Repairing Dressmaking Hemstitching 407 DE GRAFF BUILDING Main 1685-W Sigma Chis, because of this in- fluence, have ordered a crate of Sunkist lemons and are preparing for a hot season. In this way all of the men are falling in line, and by their ex- amples and delegations are win- ning over the girls to the ideal of pure, sweet, womanhood. With Hypatia there was no difficulty, but the other societies seem to kick over the traces. The faculty is up in arms over the situation. They refuse to change their standards to con- form to those of the students. One faculty member remarked yesterday that it was a shame that the students were always taking the joy out of life. But they are helpless before such a wave of goodness and light. Have ordered a crate of Sun- kist lemons for Sigma Chi. A TIRED BUSINESS MAN A tired business man stalked home to his wife and child. He found his wife in the bed room. She told him not to go into the bath, so, of course he did. And what did he see? He saw a gentleman sitting in the bath tub quite nude except for a silk hat which he tipped gracefully saying, Believe me or not, sir, but I ' m waiting for a taxi. Did the tired business man shoot the gentleman in the bath tub? Of course not, dear reader, it was his poor demented brother- in-law. Why don ' t the devil skate? ' How in hell can he? McRAE RESTAURANT t and the Ann Louise Cafeteria 105 TO 113 E. PIKES PEAK AVE. Colorado .Springs, Colorado + i Headquarters for All Luncheon Clubs ROTARY CLUB KIWANIS CLUB LIONS CLUB GYRO CLUB MINISTERIAL ALLIANCE AD CLUB REAL ESTATE BOARD INSURANCE MEN ' S ASSN. BAR ASSOCIATION D. T. CLUB DRUGGISTS ASSOCIATION MASTER PLUMBERS ASSN. WE OPERATE Our Own Dairy Our Own Bakery Our Own Laundry Our Own Refrigeration Plant Our Own Ice Plant Our Own Storage Plant Our Own Poultry Farm Industrially we are the largest in 1 f the Pikes Peak Region, employing as many as 2.50 persons in season. SEATING CAPACITY 1400 FOUR BANQUET ROOMS OF VARIOUS CAPACITY One of the Twenty Largest Restaurants in the U. S. and One of Six in Completeness of Equipment. COMBINED DAILY CAPACITY TWELVE THOUSAND PATRONS We Never Close! Tfor better milk SIMONS to be sure PHONE MAIN 442 A DEPENDABLE MILK SUPPLY Means more to you than having something to pour in your coffee. It means that nature ' s best food is placed at your door each day, rich in vitamines, ready to give young and old an alert mind and strong muscles. Plenty of good milk, produced and bottled under strict sanitary methods, is the best insurance obtainable and will give your body that unseen reserve vitality that is needed to win the battles of today. Dr. Edwin I. Backus DENTIST ▲ ▼ 700 Exchange National Bank Bldg. Main 761 = VULCANIZING FIRESTONE RETRE. TIRES DING I ( - 0 M |203 iM STATION Phone SOLID TIRE 5 115-117 North Nevada A Good Place to Tracle = Comfort, Shop here for Graduation Gifts Frat House Furnishings AND .... Everything for the Home Contentment, Satisfaction! We aren ' t in business just to sell a chair, or a lamp, or a table — in other words, our aim is not so much to sell you goods, as to insure you com- fort, contentment and satis- faction. That ' s the sort of SERVICE that has made the Peerless A Good Place to Trade for over 19 years. sjn GGrloss FVRNITVRE W. 113-115 N. Tejon Street 229 Max Schneider ' s Fancy Pastry Shop 21 EAST KIOWA ST. COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO. Party Orders a Specialty Urthday mid Wedding Cakes Phone M. 1031 STANDLEY ' S CAMERA-ART PICTURES OF THE PIKES PEAK REGION Photographic Reproductions of Colorado Scenery, colored by hand in water colors or oils, sepias or grays. Framed from SI. 50 up. Unframed from 25c up. STANDLE Y— Photographer 224 N. Tejon Street Always — the gift appropriate One always finds just the thing to give at Crow-Norris. A wide variety of pictures, pottery, glassware, leather goods and other useful articles, makes gift choosing easy and interesting — and a pleasure. T Crow-Norris ART AND STATIONERY CO. ill N. Tejon From Foundation to Roof Crissey-Fowler yards and warehouses and mill are constant sources of the raw materials for every type of building — from foundation to roof. Good materials first mean longer satisfaction in any building. Manufacturers of HIGHEST GRADE MILLWORK Crissey Fowler Lumber Company Main 101 West Vermijo THORSEN ' S The Thrift Store 28 So. Tejon St. 22 E. Colorado Ave. Two floors and a basement also an annex, filled with Dry Goods, Millinery, Men ' s Goods and Shoes. We sell for cash and give you a discount, in Thrift Stamp with every purchase, we have registered 3500 savers of these stamps in 3 months, join them and they will aid in thrift and prosperity. A Dividend with evsry purchase THE BIRDSALL-STOCKDALE MOTOR COMPANY PACKARD AND NASH MOTOR CARS — K — 13-19 NORTH NEVADA AVENUE 230 Quality that Insures Economy THE Platte-Cascade AN INDEPENDENT HOME FILLING STATION Snappy service combined with an atmosphere of friendliness and courtesy. QUAKER STATE MOTOR OIL PARCO GASOLINE LET US: Type your Theses Multigraph your Frat Letters H. Catherine Williams 301 Burn, Bldt Phone Main 543-W The janitor had to be called in to take the fourth hand Monday when Mr. Hale could not find one of the golf soxs he had scheduled to wear that day. I ' ve been robbed he told a Cat reporter, and of course I could not wear another pair, for that would throw the whole plan off — one which took me weeks to perfect. Mr. Robert Snyder, late of the Romance Language department is leaving for Harvard soon where he will do some advanced work. Mr. Hale could not find one of the golf soxs he had scheduled to wear. =  = EDITORIAL By Our Editor Plea for a Pretty Campus Let ' s make our campus beauti- ful. I have put over every big thing in this school so far. I am responsible for smoking on the campus. I have decided that the College must be made a bigger, grander, prettier place. I want all those who don ' t know anything about anything, to stand behind me in this campaign and vote as I vote, for I will vote correctly. I always pick the winners and vote accordingly, so I ' m pleading, begging, asking all of you who are pOUTURE ' S FRENCH CLEANING AND DYEING CO. 218 North Tejon Street Colorado Springs Colo. Phones— Main 1288 and Main 12S9 ELK HOTEL COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO. Under New Management Newly Furnished and Decorated Popular Prices Geo. F. Miller, Mgr. = Parlor Car Bus Service To Denver 12 130 p. m. 4 :oo 7 :oo To Pueblo i :oo p. m. 4 :oo 8:30 ' Phone 146 DENVER, COLORADO SPRINGS, PUEBLO MOTOR-WAY, INC. COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO 14 South Nevada A v. 231 HEMENWAY ' S The House of Prompt Service We carry the most complete line of Groceries, Meats, Vegetables and Fruits in the city. We buy in large quantities, at good discounts and our customers get the advantage. Forty years in business under this name and at these street numbers 113-115 S. TEJON STREET 1201 N. WEBER STREET CLASS 1927 Has our best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous Future. We thank you heartily for your stay among us and for your Special Service to us. Sincerely, Cleaver Carpet Cleaning Co. This is No Joke HE — How do you manage to dress so well on so small an allowance? SHE -Eve joined the K. B. B. B ' s. HE — What ' s that —a new sorority? SHE — No, it ' s a new symbol of saving. It means Kaufman ' s Bar- gain Basement Buyers. A MEN ' S DEP ' T, TOO. FIRST FLOOR Safety, 6% Availability CITY SAVINGS computes interest at 6 per cent, on the actual money you have on deposit. In this way you can deposit as you wish, and withdraw such sums as you need from time to time, without loss of interest. THE CITY SAVINGS is the largest savings association inColo.Spgs. 15th year in business Walter C. Davis President Ci.if Sayinas, Resources more than One Million Dollars Prexy presents Prof. Wilm with famous Spinoza Portrait. On one of his extended Eastern trips, our President was able to pick up for practically nothing this rare etching. It is rumored that the picture only cost our President three beer checks and a car slug; but as he was heard to remark, Nothing is too great a sacrifice to make for any of my dear friends. 232 flowers always make the occa- sion — whether it be just a bud on the tea table, or decorations for a church wedding. And you can Say It with Floivers by wire any place. CUT BLOOMS CORSAGES BOUQUETS GROWING POTTED PLANTS VASES BASKETS Joe Morin C. E. Dietrich 30 North Tejon Phone Main 214 Oldest Bond House West of the Mississippi River Municipal and High Grade Corporation Bonds E. H. ROLLINS SONS (Founded 1876) 212 SECURITY BUILDING DENVER, COLO. BOSTON PHILADELPHIA SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES NEW YORK CHICAGO PORTLAND LONDON Official Outfitters for the Tigers We are proud to say that we furnish the Tigers with their Athletic Equipment. Our experts will gladly help you select the proper equipment for your favorite sport, whether it ' s Tennis, Golf, Base Ball, or any other outdoor activity. Hiking and Sports Clothing Our stock of Sweaters, Leather Blouses, Hik- ing Breeches and Boots, offer you a wide selection to choose from. «K The Colorado Sporting Goods Co. Otis E. McIntyrE, President Earl MacTavish, Manager 107 N. TEJON ST 233 = = earners ESTABLISHED ers 1864 Haters PHONES 1221 1222 I I3-I5E- KIOWA Broadmoor Stables We Furnish the Horses for the C. C . Riding Club Main 4 ISO Wm. Irvine G I pods Candy 5c ME TOO RICH— DELICIOUS Old English style Toffee 10c— 25c— 50cPkgs. EVERYBODY LIKES IT :+ = THE OUT WEST Tent Awning Co. HIKING CLOTHING SPORTING GOODS ATHLETIC SUPPLIES TENNIS SHOES TENNIS RACKETS OUT DOOR EQUIPMENT C. A.Hibbard Co. A Modern Department Store - = 2.S4 CORLEY MOUNTAIN HIGHWAY TO CRIPPLE CREEK THROUGH THE HEART OF THE ROCKIES TO THE LAND OF GOLD — H — The Trip that Bankrupts the English Language. Theo. Roosevelt HARRY M. IMLTS Prcst. WM. L. RAHM Vice-Pres. and Sec ' y ' 7VUcS erVicG I Z I T S INi ORPOfc MflJ i l l 21 WColorAdoAve Qk jL0 - PHQME 706 iu _ ' - Coloi-ado Sprintis.Colo. AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING Acetylene Welding, Blacksmithing, Horse- shoeing, Auto vSprings and Bodies Repair Service —All Makes of Automobiles =+ The IDEAL Bread For Every Use Every Day of the Year — KLEEN MAID BREAD Single or Double Loaf IDEAL BREAD Single or Double Loaf Large orders direct from Bakery or your Grocer IDEAL BAKERY Telephone M. 1 12(1 THEG. R.LEWIS DRUG COMPANY WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS — H — 228 North Tejon Street colorado springs MARTHA WASHINGTON CANDIES SHIRI TOILET PREPARATIONS — M — THE ROBINSON DRUG CO. THE BUSY CORNER Phone Main 4 Colorful Spring Footwear! Footwear in any number of charming styles and colors for every type of costume. Red, green, and blue kid, black and white — parchment, waterlily and gray kid. Come in and see these newest arrivals of ours. Cox Brothers 26 North Tejon St. 235 Wherever You Go . . . BUICK MOTOR CARS ARE ALWAYS THE Standard of Comparison STRANG ' S H. D. MacDonald, Mgr. Goodyear Tires Prestolite Batteries new here (or might as well be) to follow my advice. Vote for a campus beautiful. Here ' s to bigger and better dandelions. The Editor has heard some rather strong language used in connection with the Pretty Campus ticket which he offered to the unattached (and not at- tached) students in todays issue. It is to be expected under the peculiar circumstances, yet those who have confidence in him and the general cat policy realize that it is a very strong argument. Everyone has his own opinion and is entitled to it. Why can ' t we dig out the worst dan delions from our nice campus, leaving only the prettiest and yellowest ones? ' Pleas for a Pretty Campus Years ago the spirit of the College was not so careless. The students took an interest in campus appearances and campus policies. How long has it been since any one has cared enough to decorate our grounds with stuffed birds, animals and flowers. How long — ye Gods — how long, will such things be ignored? Vote and vote today. Please co-operate with your editor in this and you can ' t go wrong. Pretty please — I thank you. Catch me, Clarence, I ' m so dizzy. Wassamatter? I ' ve been readin ' a circular letter. — Dirge. Your Satisfaction — Our Success ' ' Where you are assured of that Superior Quality of Workman- ship our 20 years of experience will give you. CO. (BILL) HOBBS. Prop. Phone us first Colleg ' E 2958 825 North Tejon COLORADO SPRINGS Contacts with C. C. People for over 25 Years C. C. Grads who are now doctors — Undergrads who stop for sundaes or chillis, or kodak films, or for their finished prints — the girls who learn the ad- vantage of finer perfumes or toiletries — There are so many useful contacts to be established at D. Y ' s that we can look back over 25 years appreciative memories of C. C. patronage. utchei 4 DRUtT- CO. TWO STORES Corner Opposite the Postoffice Main 90, 750 Golden Cycle Bldg. on Tejon, next to P. P. Fuel Co. Main 456, 720 236 Acacia Hotel FACING ACACIA PARK in Center of City J. W. ATKINSON Pres. and Mgr. I -DON ' T-CARE 5c The macle-at-home bar — it— LYONS CANDY CO. THE HAIGLER REALTY CO. REALTORS OWN YOUR HOME IN COLORADO SPRINGS 408-409 EXCHANGE NATIONAL BLDG. Coloraco Springs, Colo. THE ADAMS MOTOR COMPANY Cadillac and Chrysler Motor Cars COLORADO SPRINGS Phone Main 5200 237 = THE PIKES PEAK FUEL COMPANY PRODUCERS WHOLESALERS RETAILERS General Offices 1 South Tejon Street TELEPHONE MAIN i ' . j r. ' vS BETH-EL HOSPITAL SPECIALIZING IN SURGICAL, OBSTETRICAL and MEDICAL CASES AND THE NATIONAL METHODIST SANATORIUM For the Treatment of Tuberculosis — K— Both strictly modern Plants. Situated in East Colorado Springs, overlooking Pikes Peak and the entire range Our nurses are all High Sehcol graduates, courteous and efficient. 1 400 E. BOULDER STREET G. M. Hanner, Supt. Delicacies Unusual Foods are Always Available No Matter Where You May Live Through familiarity with the range of gcod things at Sommer ' s, gained throvgh years at C. C, many who leave the school send us orders for thos; delicacies which are not obtainable in every locality. Imported and domestic delicacies are available by mail order, no matter where vou mav live. s ommers M in HOI) The Young Men ' s Christian Association Welcomes you when you are down town. Make this your down town home. The Association offers you the opportunity for fellowship. . . ' . . ' Meet vour friends here :: :. ' OPEN EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR BIJOU STREET and NEVADA AVENUE Colorado Springs, Colorado 239 nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n n Portraits by Photography ! The only things we make, but we make them good ! We have had a world of experience Professional Finishing for the Amateur Pay to n Studio OVER ROBBINS ON THE CORNER 000 000 000 000 000 000 00 000 000 000 240 DRY CLEANING as well as a Complete Laundry Service — this number will take care of your every cleaning needs. — laundry, suits, hats, coats, evening dresses — rugs, curtains, pillows — in fact, anything that is washable or cleanable — the Elite is equipped to handle PROPERLY. Sometime soon call for an Elite driver and let him tell you of the many services we have to offer you. MDRY ona _ ifflY CLEANING ' 117 NORTH TEJON STREET DECKER SON UNDERTAKING CO. 225 North Weber FUNERAL DIRECTORS M. J. DECKER — D. E. DECKER KM Lady Assistant and Embalmer Phones 412-415 =+ CITY COAL THE IDEAL FUEL For RANGE, FURNACE and Hot Water Heater CITY COAL MINES 15 East Pikes Peak Avenue Phones 67 and 120 = Here ' s a Valuable Tip Y HEN you leave Colorado Spring s after you ' ve finished your College Course, or on vacation, you ' ll want to keep in touch with your friends here. Subscribe to The Gazette or Evening Telegraph and have it sent to your new address in any part of the world. It will keep you posted on College Sports and supply you with information about what your friends and acquaintances are doing in Colorado Springs. The Gazette and Telegraph Co. Morning Gaze s un ? a v graph Evening mi THE SIGN OF THE ROSE Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing, Relining, Hat Blocking DEPENDABLE SERVICE U-FONE 1-8-1-1— WE ' LL CALL QUALITY CLEANING CO. 10 East Kiowa H. A. THOMPSON THE COLLEGE SHOE SHOP Across From Murray ' s CONVENIENTLY LOCATED FOR COLORADO COLLEGE STUDENTS BOB GEDDY PLATTE AVENUE FLORAL COMPANY — «— C. M. WEAVER, Proprietor 1417 E. PLATTE Phone M 2605 PICTURES, FRAMING, KODAK FINISHING EXPERT WORKMANSHIP oMasselos £Kn Shop 13 S. TEJON Phone 1363 W. Hazlehurst Flannigan Co, Specialists in High G r a d e INVESTMENT SECURITIES 31 EAST PIKES PEAK AVE. COLORADO SPRINGS MAIN 44 242 Trade With The Boys The Home of College Men ( v - i c You ' re always at home when you ' re here. You ' ll feel at home anywhere in clothes that came from The Boys. EL PASO ICE . . . COAL The highest grades of Bituminous and Lignite coals. Always of the same, lasting quality, together with the best, possible service. PHONES 46 and 91 The ElPaso Ice and Coal Company 107 E. KIOWA The safest, surest, and most economical method of refrigeration. Manufactured in our own plant from Distilled Water. Knowledge is Power Hundreds of Colleges and Universities are maintained throughout the country to pro- vide the nation with Mental Power. Hundreds of miles of inter- connected electric transmission and distribution lines are main- tained by this company, trans- mitting power to further the ingenuity of man. The power of mind and the power of electrical current are the two most wonderful agencies in present day civilization, when united through the medium of acquired knowledge. Public Service Company of Colorado ♦- 243 ▼ |TV AMTtONWIDB f% | I I 1 INSTITUTION- f ' jLMenneytp. J ' V.A DEPARTMENT STORES where savings are greatest This is our 25th Year This Nation-wide business was founded in 1902. The first Store was opened in the Spring of that year. Accordingly, 1927 is the 25th or silver anniversary year. It is to be celebrated in a way that is fitting to a business that has been buildcd upon Public Confidence and Good Will. During a quarter of century of storekeep- ing, a service of human helpfulness has won millions of friends for our Stores who will want to celebrate with us. We shall tell you of our plans a little later on. Again, in having just crossed the threshold into another new year, we wish to thank you who by your patronage have made our con- tinued growth possible. Bust) Corner -Optical Chiropractic Parlors DrHoliman Phone. 1067 an NO DROPS USED IN THE EYES THAT BLINDS YOUR VISION FOR A DAY OR TWO. Popular Prices EAT WELL AND BE WELL Xiiiii itn  x KRAFT I Kl CHEESE XlllllMlltllllMIIIMIKX ALL VARIETIES BLUE RIBBON MAYONNAISE KRAFT KAY DELICIOUS FOR SALADS AND SANDWICHES ASK YOUR GROCER « THE RUSSELL PRODUCE CO. DISTRIBUTORS 244 Gotham Gold Stripe Silk Stockings thatWear- += LONG LIFE Gotham Gold Stripe Hose are made from 100% pure thread silk and have garter run protection. No run that starts above the gold stripe can pass it. DYEING SERVICE Gotham Gold Stripe Stockings will be dyed to match any given sample without extra charge. Two weeks time is required to give you this unusual service. Priced from 11.85 to $2.50 V|k The Store ' for ROSTON mJf : - 27 Norm m OtherSilk Hose at 98c VICTORIOUS C. C. BASEBALL CLUB Once upon a time, way back in the gay nineties, C. C. had a championship baseball team. These jolly boys, pictured at the side, victoriously led our school thru one merry victory after another — for two whole years they did this, until the faculty couldn ' t stand it any longer. So this nonchalant nine agreed to stop winning championships — and being trusty lads, they have never even unto this day, broken their sacred pledge. Invest In Business Training Last year the Barnes School received 1579 applications from business firms and filled 1167 positions — an average of four positions filled for every working day of the year. The Summer Term is just opening — an excellent time to start. Full information about courses, terms, etc., will be found in our new catalog, copy of which will be mailed free upon request. BARNES COMMERCIAL SCHOOL Barnes Building, Denver, Colo. Member of Association of Accredited Commercial Schools 245 WHEN THIRSTY SAY UTE CHIEF MANITOU — K — Ginger Ale and Mineral Water WILLSON ' S . . . TWO STORES EVERYTHING FOR THE TABLE 1528 N. Tejon St.— M. 984 BROADMOOR Elm Avenue at First St. — M. 363 Fraternity and Society Pins. RICHMANS FINE ALL-WOOL SUITS— $22.50 From Our Factory to You. With just two profits — Yours and Ours. No Middleman ' s. S. LEOPOLD Phone M 432 334 First Nat. Bank Bldg. The Manitou Springs Journal IS FOR COLORADO COLLEGE AND THE TIGERS ALL THE TIME THE WONDERFUL CAVE OF THE WINDS AT MANITOU, COLORADO A MILE OF CAVES AND UNDERGROUND PASSAGEWAYS, RESPLENDENT IN COLOR AND FANTASTIC FORMATIONS. A MOST UNIOUE AND INSPIRING NATURAL WONDER 246 R. S. DAVIS VANITOU BATH HOUSE INDIAN RUGS, JEWELRY AND SOUVENIRS Drink M R Quality Car- bonated Beverages (All Flavors) Sweet Apple Cider Delicious— Refresh i ng MaKinney- Roberts Co. COLORADO SPRINGS D. M. BOHON F. O. GRAHAM COLUMBINE CAFE WE STRIVE TO DO THE IMPOSSIBLE PLEASE EVERYBODY 204 MANITOU AVE. Phone Hyland 165 MANITOU, COLORADO THE SANITARY LAUNDRY J. A. NELSON, Pro]). QUALITY and SERVICE Phone M. 3407 2517 W. Colo. Ave. n mm PALE DRY GINGER ALE Sparkles with the lively effervescence of natural gas from the famous Manitou Springs. Manitou Pale Dry is an intriguing — far finer ginger ale. Imparts a sparkling vigor to all fruit juices. ' Just Naturally Good JNO. A. BROADBENT The Ins lira me Man SPECIALIST IN FIRE INSURANCE — K— 221 Manitou Avenue Manitou, Colorado 247 Offers advantages of the same $tep r f tts Founded in Colorado Springs, grade as those in the best |o| I 111 f% Colorado, in the year eighteen Eastern Institutions J?J!m hundred and seventy-four CHARLES CHRISTOPHER MIEROW, Ph. D., President DEPARTMENT OF ARTS AND SCIENCES DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS ADMINIS- TRATION AND BANKING Course designed to meet the needs of students planning to enter Business — Banking and the Consular vService and the like DEPARTMENT OF ENGINEERING Electrical, Chemical, Civil and Irrigation Engineering DEPARTMENT OF FORESTRY DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS (Affiliated) DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC Courses in Vocal and Instrumental Music, Composition and Orchestration For Information Apply to W. D. COPELAND, Secretary. 248 PALMER HALL 249 Power Light SERVICE You buy gas at the burner and electricity at the switch. Our service produces gas or electricity and delivers it to you, ready for use any hour of the day or night. We build and maintain the plants necessary, lay the mains, construct transmission and distribu- tion lines, to provide service upon your demand. When you want to use either of these commodi- ties you require instant service, without limitation of its use. In providing the plant and equipment, we must likewise add to this investment the cost of being constantly ready to serve you any minute of the twenty-four hours, under any and all conditions. Being ready to serve you instantly is one of the elements in the total cost of making gas and electricitv available for vour use. City of Colorado Springs LIGHT AND POWER DEPARTMENT CITY AUDITORIUM PHONE 2400 2.50 If you want a Box of CHOCOLATES Good as Made Go to WALLACE CANDY CO. RIALTO THEATRE + A. E. OLSON PLUMBING AND HEATING CO. 116 North Weber + Phone M 3066 =+ WANT ADS The Leading Student Tours to Europe. Chartered tourists Class famous Cunarders. All expenses sea and land, $255 up. Organized entertainments. So- cial delights; it ' s the new way of happy travel. Find out why!! Slate Travel Club. YOUNG LADIES— Why not take orders for birthday and Christ- mas cards. Samples on request. Eleanor Bullock, Hypatia Square. DAY GIRL WANTED, respec- table after the holidays. Albert Bevan. Have a look! Dealer in old and second hand clothing. • ' MY LIFE AND TIMES by G. R. Leech. This book is very companionable — full of mem- ories that will the more endear him to his friends. For $.75 you can own it!! Wanted: Two ladies to wash dishes and one man. College Inn. If you are driving to Swynk or Calhan and can carry from two to three hundred pounds extra, please communicate with Miss M. Latimer, Main 938. 1919 Ford, 2 Touring Car, 5 cord tires, very good. Refinished in dust proof gray. Lady driver. Everything O.K., $85. Phi Delt Motor Car Company. BUMSTEAD ' S Heating and Plumbing 414 E. Dale Street m Phone Main 597-4797W Colorado Springs, Colorado =z+ HEDRICK WALL PAPER AND PAINT COMPANY Phone Main 886 18 East Kiowa Street PICTURE FRAMING INVEST YOUR SAVINGS n FIRST MORTGAGE LOANS 6% PAYABLE SEMI-ANNUALLY IN AMOUNTS OF $250 UP The COLORADO INVESTMENT AND REALTY CO. 7 NORTH TEJON STREET Phones Main 7 and Main 173 251 fcMSmh TMoirSiffeet MpIffldlrTSei i l £J7 T T ' Colorado Springs I ; ] . ■ ' Your story ltv pictures leaves nothina untold 252 CHAS. P. BENNETT H. N. SHELLENBERGER The Bennett- Shellenberger Realty Company REALTORS REAL ESTATE INSURANCE AND LOANS 2 EAST PIKES PEAK AVENUE The J. C. St. John Plumbing and Heating Co. Incorporated We invite you to ask for estimates on any plumbing or heating work you may have, from the largest to the smallest job. ?6 North Tejon Phone Main 48 -Coats -Dresses Phoenix Underwear -Gordon Hosiery AN EXCLUSIVE SHOP FOR COLLEGE WOMEN THE VOGUE Opposite the Alamo Hotel -GOOD COAL QUICK The Colorado Springs Fuel Company H. C. HARMON President 129 EAST PIKES PEAK AVENUE PHONE MAIN 230 The Pikes Peak Warehousing Company MOVING— PACKING— STORAGE H. C. HARMON, President PHONE MAIN 160 PIKES PEAK SERVICE The Ice Cream That ' s a C. C. ' institution In fact, Mowry ' s — just across from the Campus — has become a factor in C. C. life — The between-class cones, the sandwich materials and candy, the ice creams and ices for class and club functions. From frosh to grad, it ' s the place every Tiger knows. Just across from the Cam pus + = 253 THE BURNS THEATRE TAKES THIS OPPORTUNITY TO THANK THE SENIOR CLASS FOR ITS PATRONAGE AND FOR THE RESPONSE THAT IT HAS SHOWN, AND WE CAN ASSURE THE UNDER-GRADUATES THAT THEY WILL ALWAYS FIND A HIGH- CLASS OFFERING FOR THEIR ENTERTAINMENT FTPlffyy One of the Publix Theatres (The Coast to Coast Chain) I EVOTED TO THE FINEST IN ENTERTAINMENT BUY PUBLIX PHFY Save and Enjoy Can be used in anv Publix Theatre in the United States and Canada $2.50 Books, $2.25 5.00 4.50 10.00 9.00 Publix Theatres Wherever You Go The Home of Big First-Run Pictures AMERICA THEATRE ENTERTAINMENT AT A PRICE WITHIN REACH OF ALL 254 The Colorado Springs Music Co. OUR STOCK OF MUSIC AND MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS IS MOST COMPLETE 1 17 East Pikes Peak Ave. Main 862 THE ELIZABETH INN A SELECT PLACE TO EAT One price the-year-round 106 and 106 ' 2 E- PIKES PEAK AYE- Colorado Springs, Colo. Service a la Carte and Table d ' Hcte 3 lc t-i (2olotS o Sptinda, @Il iS o We train young men and young women for successful and useful lives We do this one thing and do it right .... Blair ' s--- The School That Cares SUMMER SCHOOL SPECIAL HOURS, SPECIAL RATES Many of our Colorado Springs friends Motor- ing to Denver, have ex- pressed their delight with our $1.50 table d ' hote Dinner We are always pleased to see you at The BROWN PALACE HOTEL Made from Clean , Carefully Selected Cream HOLLYWOOD BUTTER Thoroughly Pasteurized .4 Your Grocer ' s The Hollywood Creamery Company DISTRIBUTORS OK PHENIX CHEESE AND CHOW-MAY SANDWICH SPREAD Ask for them ALL by mime 255 he cover for this Annual was cre- ated byThe Pub- lishers ' Press Room and Bindery Company, 1840 Stout Street, Denver, Colorado += -+ = FRANK S. CRONK EDITOR-PUBLISHER Industrial Trade Literature (EXCLUSIVELY) DENVER, COLORADO THIS YEAR BOOK Is a Sample of what Colorado Firms can do. From cover to cover it was executed by Colorado Artists, Engravers, Bookbinders and Printers. Why not have your 1928 Annual or Year Book done in your home state? We ' ll gladly supply the desired information. THE MASTER PRINTERS OF COLORADO, Inc. EXECUTIVE OFFICE 620 DENHAM BUILDING DENVER SIGMA CHI APACHE DANCE The picture above was taken by mistake at a Sigma Chi party. The boys and their fair pardners may be seen seated on the couches, benches, or what had they? Any- way, everyone said that it looked like a darn good party. The bar was upstairs and the pictures on the walls were clothed in darkness. MAPS For Schools and Colleges POCKET GUIDES (The famous Clason Green Guides, 3:c each) COVERING EACH STATE IN THE UNION TOURIST ATLAS of U. S. The most complete Atlas in one volume ever published, 75c Clason Map Co. The Colorado House DENVER A rtists Engravers Map Makers 256 Commercial Ai4 7redMohr Studio 1987 Broadva Denver 1 i| 1 ■ ,, FRtO MOHP i||!!|iJijjjlMi,. Rendering Building Service Since 1873 And we ' ll still be rendering it when you get ready to use it fijfs NEWTON ' S Frank F. Crump Established in 1898 FLORIST Choice Cut Flowers and Plants Corsages and Flowers for All Occasions Store— 104 N. Tejon St. Telephones Main 1186-1187 257 Martin Bros. Co. BUTTER, EGGS and CHEESE A ««► T 1 441 Market Street, Denver M. 25 8 GOOD TIME PARTIES AT BRUIN INN OPEN THE YEAR AROUND And we always enjoy College Students K FAMOUS FOR STEAK DINNERS, SODA FOUNTAIN SERVICE DANCING Complete set of textbooks prac- tically new, inclusive of Fresh- man year. By appointment, Raymond Davis, Manitou. YOUNG lady would like some- thing nice to do at home. Call 690— K. V. S. WEAR CORRECT GREEK PINS. Send sample of hair, state color of eyes and com- plexion. If possible send snap- shot. Send a dollar to Personal Pin Service, F. C. Rand, Jr., St. Louis, Mo. YOU TOO, CAN BE GOOD- LOOKING. Imperfect features removed. All cases guaranteed. Charges moderate. If out of town mail us your photograph and I will write you full v. Dr. J. F. King, 727 N. Nevada, Colorado Springs. PERSONAL— Percy, come home to Mama. Your darling, M. T., Box 2, Latonia. Don ' t Be A WALL-FLOWER: read that fascinating little pam- phlet, The Secret Of Success edited by the Kappa Sigmas. WANTED: A salesman: just an ordinary salesman. If you are not one, I can make you one. B. Baylis, 1418 N. Royer. We Can Find Out Anything You Want To Know: (be careful what you want to know!) Sig Chi Detective Agency. Am trying to get a start. Your advertising published free. Call 3512W. MURRAY ' S THE OLD MEETING PLACE OF C. C. STUDENTS FOR MORE THAN TWENTY YEARS COLLEGE AND FRATERNITY GOODS, TEXT BOOKS .AND SUPPLIES — « — BAUR ' S CHOCOLATES AND CONFECTIONS ARE SOLD EXCLUSIVELY IN COLORADO SPRINGS BY THE MURRAY STORES If you wish a Box of these Delicious Candies, drop us a line and we will deliver your order anywhere in the u. s. with no extra charge THE MURRAY DRUG CO., Superior Service Stores North Store — Opposite Campus Main Store — 21 So. Teion St. !58 INDEX OF ADVERTISERS Name Page Auditorium Hotel 216 Arapahoe Food Stores 219 America Theatre 254 Adams Motor Co - 237 Arcularius, Jeweler 223 Alamo Laundry 213 Acacia Hotel _ .237 Antlers Hotel 227 Broadbent, Jno ..-247 Burns Theatre... ...254 Blue Lantern Inn 216 Baums 221 Birdsall Stoekdale 230 Bethel Hospital 239 Bissel Drug Co 219 Blairs Business College . 255 Barnes Woods , i 243 Barthels 225 Bennet Shellenberger Realty Co. .253 Boston Store 245 Backus, Dr , 229 Beery Land Co 221 Bumstead Plumbing Co 251 Broadmoor Hotel 209 Broadmoor Stables 234 Baughman Bakery 212 Boxley Cole Motor Co 214 Bruin Inn 25S Butcher Drug Co 236 Brecht Candy Co 214 Brown Palace Hotel 255 Barnes Commercial School 245 Clason Map Co 256 Cronk, Frank S 256 Cave of the Winds ' 246 Collier Lumber Co 222 Columbine Cafe 247 College Cleaners 236 Colorado Sporting Goods Co 233 Cox Shoe Co 235 City Coal Mines 241 Colorado Springs Motor Co 223 Corley Mountain Highway 235 Colorado Springs Music Co 255 Crissey Fowler Lumber Co 230 City Sav., Bldg. and Loan Assn 232 Coutures Cleaning Co 231 Campbells Barber Shop 226 Crow Norris Camera Shop 230 Colorado Planing Mill Co 221 Colo. Inv. and Realty Co 251 Coca Cola Co 218 Colorado College 248-249 Cleaver Carpet Cleaners 232 Crump Floral Co 257 Cosmopolitan Hotel 220 Colorado Springs Fuel Co 253 Canteen 217 Decker Son Undertaking Co 241 Dugan, I. C., Jeweler 222 Dollar Bldg. and Loan Assn 210 Davidson Dairy 225 Derns 210 Dixon Miller 216 Dilts Service 235 Dawn Donut Co 215 Davis, Roy 226 Name Page Davis, Ray. . ...247 Elizabeth Inn ' _._ ...255 Elite Laundry . _ ...241 El Paso Electric Co ___218 El Paso Ice and Coal Co. . . . .243 Elk Hotel ...231 Fulbright, Dr 214 Fertig Ins. and Investment Co. 225 Gazette and Telegraph 241 Giddings Kirkwood 212 Geddy ' s College Shoe Shop . . .,242 Glidden-Morse Co.... 223 Grand View Green House 224 Hite, Mrs., Public Stenographer 227 Hedrick Wall Paper Co... 251 Hollywood Creamery 255 Hassel Iron Works 222 Hibbard Co... 234 Howard Barber Shop . . ' 2 19 Holly Sugar Co 217 Hazelhurst Flannigan 242 Hertz Drive- Yourself-Co 224 Holiman, Dr. W. O , 244 Haigler Realty Co 237 Hemenway Grocery 232 Hungarian Flour Mills 217 Ideal Bakery 235 J. S. Brown Mercantile Co 225 Jardine Knight, Plumbing 215 J. C. Penny Co 244 Kaufmans 232 Knorr ' s Market 210 Kraft Cheese Co 244 Lowell-Meservey Hardware Co 218 Lightning Shoe Shop 213 Light, Heat and Power Co 250 Lucas Sporting Goods Co 218 Lyons Candy Co 237 Lewis Wholesale Drug Co 235 Leopold, Simon, Richman Clothes .246 Mohr 257 Masselo ' s Art Shop 242 Manitou Springs Journal 246 Marksheffel Garage 224 Makinney-Roberts 247 MacRae Restaurnat 228 Murray Drug Co 258 Mowrys 253 Musick Drug Co 210 Martin Bros. Co 258 Master Printers 256 Newton Lumber Co 257 Nathans 220 Orman Mattress Co 215 Original Manitou Water 247 Olsen Plumbing Co 251 Out West Tent and Awning Co 234 Out West Printing Co .260 Pawley, Dr. G. W 210 Peoples Laundry 212 259 Name Page Peoples Dairy . . 210 Platte-Cascade Filling Station 231 Phonograph Shop ..218 Piggly Wiggly... ...222 Plaza Dining Room . 218 Pete ' s Barber Shop 214 Perkins-Shearer Co 22 1 Pikes Peak Floral Co. . . . .227 Prompt Printery 225 Platte Avenue Floral Co 242 Pikes Peak Fuel Co ...238 Poudre PoufTe Beauty Shoppe 220 Pearl Laundry 226 Peerless Furniture Co 229 Pikes Peak Warehousing Co 253 Pay ton Studio. . . . .240 Parlor Bus Co. . .231 Public Service Co 243 Publishers Press Room 256 Quality Lunch 226 Quality Cleaning Co 1 242 Robbins on the Corner 213 Roods Candy Co ...234 Hobinson Drug Co 235 Robinson Grain Co .217 Rialto Theatre 254 Rollins Son 233 Say re Foster 228 Schneider ' s Pastry Shop... ...230 Skagg ' s Stores 224 Sanitary Laundry 247 Swan Funeral Home 214 Sommers 239 Stewart, Dr., Veterinary __ 222 Sign of the Rose 233 Sinton Dairy Co 229 Stark, A. L ...226 Silver Fox Shop ... 225 Superior Dry Cleaning Co 216 Seldomridge Grain Co 216 Strang Garag? Co 236 St. John Plumbing Co 253 Stewart Bros 252 Smith Bros., Cleaners 234 Shantz, Artist 224 Standley, H. L 230 Tucker-Dodson 226 Truby, F. M ...214 Thorsens 230 Udick Tire Shop. . . .229 Ute Chief Mineral Water Co 246 Van Briggle Pottery 227 Vernon ' s Place 220 Vogue 253 Willson ' s Market 246 Wandell Lowe 215 Williams, Catherine, Public Steno._231 WulfT Shoe Co. . _ 210 Wallace Candy Co ..251 Westercamp Fur Co 22S Wallace, Tom, Cleaners. . . .213 Y. M. C. A 239 Zim ' s Bakery 212 Zieger, C. W., Optomerrist . _ 213 260


Suggestions in the Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) collection:

Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930


Searching for more yearbooks in Colorado?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Colorado yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.