Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO)

 - Class of 1930

Page 1 of 244

 

Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection, 1930 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 244 of the 1930 volume:

COLORADO COLLEGE „ A D V MIMIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIHIIIMII(ji L IdKAK i COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO Library j D D Library JVo.-93-lLl_3 j | From -_Ax|-£L- ) | Rece uec ._iiU-njB-A-3L3Q | • . : . i nil: ill! linillllllii ' ililillllll Ill l ll 1 1 lllllllllllllli:illi;illlllllllilll X LIBRI5 THe PIKBS P6AK Nawer ANNtTAI KIBLICAT10N Op THe JUNIOR CLASS OF COLOXAPO cotLe e ' 931 COLORADO CCLL£GE LJS7T.RY COLOR CO UP ilMGS, COLORADO DeDICATIOM BGCAUSe H6 STANDS fonTHe M§Hesr we OF SPORTSMANSHIP uie.THe CLASS OF 1 931, DCDICATe THIS NU§§eT TO COACH iilllMTpiSVAtlK lp ' P . ; C?6 Ai , ? -}, z i3Z 2 FOIOTRP TO HOLD TOR THe wrum a FLeeriMQ yekKof COW0C0LI£§eUFe- ' that has BeeNTHe 0B06CT OF THe 1931 HUQQeT Divisions THe couwge CAMPUS ACTIVITI6S OW5AMIXAT10NS BeAury ATHLeriCS UQMAiPPe In CDemoriam Susan F. jCeaming The Peak The Fine Arts Hall and the Library ;: : :; : :i r, f ■ ■?■ ■■■■ 4 ' - - V V fe -; t M38 jmms i LWJBmEto Old Cutler Ihfc 3Mtf2£9E ■•• ' ._ :... - ' :: .. j mmsessss MmmMSM ■lv .-zph; A Mountain T Palmer Hall— the Peak in the background E JSS The Road to Bern: is The Tigers ' Lair s ofc coLLeGe AM11NISTRAT10 BOARD OF TRUSTEES PRESIDENT MIEROW CHAIRMAN Charles C. Mierow President of the College TRUSTEES EMERITI John Campbell .Denver, Colo. Irving Howbert Colorado Springs, Colo. TRUSTEES Willis R. Armstrong ' 99 Colorado Springs, Colo. Glenn A. Bowers ' 13. ...New York, New York A. E. Carlton Colorado Springs, Colo. William I. Howbert. Colorado Spri?igs, Colo. William S. Jackson Colorado Springs, Colo. William Lennox .... ..Colorado Springs, Colo. A. Watson MeHendrie ' 00 Trinidad, Colo. George Foster Peabody . ..Saratoga Springs, New York Thomas Harris Powers .. Colorado Spri)igs, Colo. Oliver H. Shoup Colorado Springs, Colo. E. P. Shove Colorado Springs, Colo. Philip B. Stewart Colorado Springs, Colo. Edmund C. van Diest Colorado Springs, Colo. ALUMNI REPRESENTATIVES ON THE BOARD Leo W. Bortree ' 06 Colorado Springs, Colo. Harold D. Roberts ' 08 Denver, Colo. Lloyd Shaw ' 13 Colorado Springs, Colo. Judson T. Williams ' 15 Colorado Springs, Colo. OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION PRESIDENT EMERITUS William Frederick Slocum w 1 -  ' B IB f i P3 ®mI B Mr h : Mr Km Jem k • ■ k 1 DEAN HERSHRY Charles C. Mierow ...President of the College William W. Postlethwaite Treasurer William D. Copeland ...Secretary Charlie B. Hershey Dean of the College William V. Lovitt Dean of Men Louise W. Fauteaux Dean of Women Josephine R. Morrow Registrar Guy H. Albright Director of the Summer School Leo W. Bortree Medical Advisor William S. Jackson Attorney for the College Louise F. Kampf.. Librarian Arthur Baylis Supt. of Buildings and Grounds Jack F. Lawson Director of Publicity E. Louise Purves Director of Dormitories Mrs. Ruth Montgomery College Nurse Dorothy D. Roberts Manager of Dining Rooms Mrs. Allie E. Brown . Assistant Registrar Helen Baxter Owen Secretary to the President C. E. Hathaway... ... Cashier Flossie Day... Secretary to the Treasurer Lorena A. Berger ...Assistant to the Secretary Elizabeth Starrett Assistant to the Secretary Review of the Academic Year Colorado College offers through some thirty de- partments courses in arts, engineering, and science. Affiliated with the Liberal Arts College is a School of Music and The Broadmoor Art Academy. Courses in Applied Art, Interior Decorating, Cos- tume Designing, and Costume Illustration are included among the various types of work offered. In addition, the location and resources of the Academy present un- usual attraction for the student of landscape painting or for those whose chief interest lies in figure and por- Dean Fauteaux trait work. Art appreciation and history of art are taught by Miss Thayer, who temporarily fills the posi- tion left open by the death of Professor Learning. Under the direction of Professor Albright, the history and positions of the solar system were studied in the Department of Astronomy. Courses in the Biology Department are arranged to meet the needs of students who wish to satisfy the minimum science requirement, for those who wish to major in biology, and for medical school preparation. During the past year, Dr. Gilmore has been doing research work with the salamander. Dr. Penland, studying in co-operation with the Carnegie Foundation, has been studying plant life in high altitudes. The Chemistry Department offers courses to fulfill the science requirement and to provide a major in chemical engineering. In the past year, research work has been conducted in regard to: new method for electrometric titrations, graphitic acid and transformation of aruosphous carbon into graphite, quali- tative analysis of anions, and synthesis of anaesthetics. Dr. Barnes received an appointment as instructor in chemical warfare for the Eighth Corps area. The Engineering Department offers courses that enable students to re- ceive the degree of Bachelor of Science with a major in Civil Engineering. Economics and Business Administration are closely affiliated departments. A. P. R. Drucker, dean of the department, had published during the year, in the Accounting Review, an article, Budgeting and the Sales Quota, and in the magazine of the I. L. U. S., Service, an article, Education, the Greatest Force for Democracy. Courses in the Department of Education are designed to provide an intro- duction to the problems of the public schools, to meet the requirements for a graduate certificate, and to make students eligible to teach in the N. C. A. C. S. schools. The Degree with Honors at Colorado Col- lege by Dean C. B. Hershey was published in School and Society. Next year, Dean Hershey will make a study of the public school systems in Germany. Colorado College has one of the best equipped Forestry Schools in the United States. It possesses a 6,200 acre tract of wooded land timbered with a relatively young stand of western yellow pine and Douglass fir. Excellent buildings and other camp facilities are provided so that the tract may be used for a field laboratory and forestry taught in the forest. Dean Lovitt The Fremont Experiment Station and the Monument Nursery, units of the Forest Service, are close at hand and are used by the department. The Geology Department offers a full curriculum in petroleum and struc- tural geology. Work in this department is also taken up extensively by students interested in satisfying the minimum science requirement. For those students who wish to satisfy the social science requirements, and for students who plan to enter law school, the History Department offers a variety of courses. Dr. Hulbert, working under the Stewart Commission, has published articles entitled: The Dead Wood Stage Route, Letters of an Overland Stage Agent in Utah, The Provincial Basis for Patriotism, The First Wagon Train on the Road to Oregon, The Soil Factor in American History, and Frontiers. Dr. Binkley has been continuing his work on the history of Texas. Under the direction of Jack F. Lawson, city editor of the Colorado Springs Gazette, the Department of Journalism offered a general survey course in newspaper work. An advanced course will be offered next year. Mr. Lawson was the author of an article, Pickwick Papers, which appeared in the maga- zine, Motor Travel. The Department of Mathematics was host to the American Mathematical Society and the Mathematical Association of America, last summer. Professor Sisam presented a paper entitled Threespread Multiply Generated by Right Line. He also published in the Messenger of Mathematics of London, an article, Ruled Three Dimensional Varieties of Order Five. For women students interested in taking graduate courses in library work, Miss Kampf, librarian, offered a practical elementary course in library science, second semester. The School of Music offers courses in vocal and in instrumental music. Majors in this department receive the degree of Bachelor of Arts. Frequent recitals and the meetings of the musical society, Euterpe, are features of the annual program of the department. Wm. PostlEthwaite Courses in the various branches of philosophy are conducted in the Department of Philosophy under the direction of Dr. Wilm. High standards with the idea of creating the technique of dealing with intellectual problems is the aim of the department. In an issue of the Nation, an article, The College and Main Street, written by Dr. Wilm, was published. In the Department of Psychology, a new course, Contemporary Psychology, was offered this year for the first time. Research work on the study of mental growth was made by Miss Angeline Keen, an assistant in the department. Under the direction of Mr. Olson, the electric machines in the laboratory of the Physics Department were redesigned. Research work on the sputting of thin films, the measurement of the field intensity of Broadcasting Station KFUM, and the remodeling of the oscillography is in progress under the direction of Mr. Boucher and Mr. Olson. An article by Mr. Olson, An Observed Periodicity in the Packing Fraction, was published in the Physical Review. Believing that practice should be combined with theory, Dr. Bramhall, of the Department of Political Science, last year became a candidate for mem- bership on the city council and was elected. Students in the department took part in the Model Assembly of the League of Nations conducted by students of foreign affairs in the universities and colleges of Colorado. The Assembly met in Denver in March. Dr. Bramhall is active at the present time in working on the committee which is attempting to secure a revision of the Constitution of Colorado. The Department of Romance Languages offers work in French, in Spanish, and in Italian. In addition to people who take courses in this department to satisfy the minimum language requirements, a number of language major students always are enrolled. The French club will be re-established, next year, after a lapse of some time. Connected with this department are courses in the German language and literature. Child Labor in Agriculture and Farm Life in the Arkansas Valley of Colorado by Bertram H. Mautner and W. Lewis Abbott of the Department of vSociology was among the articles published by Colorado College faculty members during the year. The article was also published by the National Child Labor Committee. Original research work was done in 1929 by Miss Dorothy Rehm, a graduate student in the department. Miss Rehm ' s subject was Changes in the Attitudes of College .Students. Under the direction of Arthur G. Sharp, Jr., of the English Department, a number of plays were pre- sented during the year. Programs were also pre- sented by the Department of Dramatics. The Department of English contains the names of two new instructors, Mr. George Ranson and Mr. Arthur vSharp. Professor Jessie Hutsinpillar, who is on leave of absence, is spending the year in Washington, D. C. This year the department has taught its customary list of courses with a few minor changes. Professor Rose has reorganized the course in Mythology, which is now devoted exclusively to the study of Northern Sage and Legend. Mr. vSharp is conducting a new course in Dramatic Technique and Production for those especially interested in the problems of stage management and acting. Professor Goodenough has organized a course in Scientific Exposition, which is designed to meet the needs of science students and others who desire ad- ditional training in English composition. Professor Amanda Ellis published A Celtic Treasure House in Poet Lore. Josephine Morrow Besides its regular courses the Department of Classical Language and Literature introduced a new class, Vergil and his contribution to World Literature, given by the President of the College in special commemoration of the two-thousandth anniversary of the birth of Vergil. Both Dr. C. C. Mierow and Dr. H. E. Mierow have published several articles this year. The Field Secretary of the college, Mr. W. D. Copeland, has been active- ly engaged in the work of carrying on the endowment campaign for two and one-half million dollars which was authorized by the Board of Trustees. In addition, the secretary ' s office is in direct contact with all the high schools of the state supplying them with information concerning the college, and ad- vising students who intend to enter Colorado College. Mrs. Louise W. Fauteaux, Dean of Women, and Dr. William V. Lovitt, Dean of Men, have continued the customary work of their offices in exercising general supervision over undergraduate activities. Dean Fauteaux ' s duties cover a wide range of problems. The Dean of Women has an additional duty this year in serving as ex-officio and advisory member of the legislative board of the Associated Women Students of Colo- rado College. In addition to the usual functions performed by the office of the Dean of Men, analyses of students ' grades have been made at regular intervals under the direction of Dean Lovitt who introduced the system last year. Prof. Bramhali, Faculty Edith C. Bramhall, Ph. D. — Head of the Department of Political Science. A. P. R. Drucker, A. M. — Dean of the Department of Business Administration and Banking. William F. EarlE, M. B. A. — Instructor in Business Administration. Dean Drucker Prof. Binki.ev W. C. Binkley, Ph. D. — Head of the Department of History. A. B. Hulbert, L. H. D., F. R. G. S.— Professor of History and Director of the Stewart Commission of Western History. John Campbell, Ll. D. — Professor of American Constitu- tional History. Leon W. Fuller, A. M. — Instructor in History. Jacob Swart, A. M. — Head of the Department of Eco- nomics. Prof. Swart Faculty C. B. Hershey, Ed. D. — Dean and Head of the Depart- ment of Education. Dean Hershey C. H. Sisam, Ph. D.— Head of the Department of Math- ematics. William V. Lovitt, Ph. D. — Dean of Men and Professor of Mathematics. Catherine Hood, A. M. — Instructor in Mathematics. Martha C. Belschner, A. B. — Instructor in Mathe- matics. Prof. Sisam W. Lewis Abbott, Ph. D. — Head of the Department of Sociology. Bertram H. Mautner, Ll. B. — Associate Professor of Sociology. J. Bradford Murphey, M. D. — Instructor in Sociology. Alice E. van Diest, A. M. — Instructor in Sociology. Prof. Abbott Robert S. Ellis, Ph. D. — Head of the Department of Tl.Jf Psychology. Prof. Ellis Faculty Guy H. Albright, A. M. — Head of the Department of Astronomy and Professor of Mathematics. n Prof. Albright Paul E. Boucher, Ph. D. — Head of the Department of Physics. William F. Drea, M. D. — Instructor in X-Ray. Howard Olson, M. S. — Instructor in Physics. Prof. Boucher Frank M. Okey, C. E- — Head of the Department of Civil Engineering. Charles B. Page, B. S. — Instructor in Engineering. Prof. Okey Gordon Parker, M. F. — Head of the Department of Forestry. John V. K. Wagar, M. S. F. — Assistant Professor of Forestry. Prof. Parker Faculty Emil C. Wilm, Ph. D. — Professor of Philosophy. Ralph J. GilmorE, Ph. D. — Professor of Biology. C. William T. Pbnland, Ph. D. — Associate Professor of Biology. Prof. GilmorE Frank W. Douglas, Ph. D. — Professor of Chemistry. Otis A. Barnes, Ph. D. — Associate Professor of Chem- istry. Alida D. Israel, A. B. — Instructor in Chemistry. Prof. Douglas I. Allen Kbyte, A. M. — Professor of Geology. Henry E. Mathias, A. M. — Associate Professor of Geology. Prof. Keyte Faculty Jack F. Lawson, — Instructor in Journalism and Director of Publicity. Mr. Lawson Charles T. Latimer, A. M. — Head of the Department of Romance Languages. RebEkah M. Hartness, A. M. — Associate Professor of French and German. Vera H. Buck, A. M. — Instructor in Spanish. Dorothy M. Graves, A. B. — Instructor in French and Spanish. Anna B. Sutton, A. B. — Instructor in French and German. Pauline Drucker, A. B. — Instructorin FrenchandSpanish Prof. Latimer Dean Hale Edward D. Hale, Mus. D. — Dean of the School of Music. Mrs. Beatrice F. Barnes — Instructor in Dramatic In- terpretation. Mrs. Myrtle M. Bridges — Instructor in Public School Music. Edwin A. Dietrich — Instructor in Violin. Beryl Griswold — Assistant Instructor in Piano. Mrs. Edith C. Landes — Instructor in Expression. Mrs. EmiliE Reutlinger — Assistant Instructor in Music. Mrs. Fanny A. Tucker — Instructor in Music. Barbara Thayer, A. B. — Instructor in the Department of Art. Faculty James G. McMurtry, Ph. D. — Head of the Department of Biblical Literature. Prof. McMurtry Prof. Goodenough Aubrey W. Goodenough, Ph. D. — Head of the Depart- ment of English. Albert H. DaehlER, A. B. — Professor of English. Milton S. Rose, A. M. — Assistant Professor of English. Amanda M. Ellis, A. M. — Assistant Professor of English. William D. CopELAND, A. M. — Instructor in English. George J. Ranson, A. M. — Instructor in English. Arthur G. Sharp, Jr., A. B. — Instructor in English. Herbert E. Mierow, Ph. D. — Head of the Department of Classical Language and Literature. Charles C. Mierow, Ph. D. — President of the College and Professor of Classical Language and Literature. Elinor Dorothy Breeze, A. M. — Instructor in Classics. Florence L. Smith, A. B. — Instructor in Classics. Prof. Mierow Louise F. Kampf, A. B. — Librarian. Laura E. Tate — Assistant Librarian. Grace Andrews, A. B. — Cataloguer. Lydia W. Foster, A. B. — Assistant Librarian. Vestal Ingraham Dewey Sheldon Wilson Harmon The Associated Students of Colorado College The Administrative Council of the Associated Students of Colorado Col- lege, working as a unit and not as representatives of different campus organ- izations, has had a constructive year in regard to forwarding successful co- operation in campus activities and promoting spirit and enthusiasm on the Colorado College campus. Constructive traditions were inaugurated while those which had outlived their usefulness and were likely to bring discredit to the college were abolished. The new constitution which was approved by the student body has en- abled much progressive legislation to come from the student council. This new instrument has made it possible for conditions to be met as they arise, for activities to be regulated by the council for the best interests of the college, and has gone far toward eliminating that ever-present evil, campus commercial- ism. The document provides for machinery for government but leaves the final power in the hands of the council which must bear the ultimate responsi- bility. Many of the managerships of college activities are now a source of income to the school, and thus worthwhile organizations are given the help which is necessarv to their existence. OFFICERS OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE COUNCIL President. S tewart Wilson Secretary. Sarah Sheldon Treasurer . Harold Harmon : V; jA V flT ajH .kv REid Campbell Trippel DORLAC Keyser Engel In continuance of the policy of the treasurer of last year ' s council of keeping the council within its income, the treasurer of this council has main- tained nearly untouched the surplus left from last year, in spite of the heavy demands made upon the council by a new organization, the Associated Women Students. Men ' s debate also has needed extra help this year because of the long trip that was made and because of the debate conference that was held here. A delegate was sent to the conference of the National Student Federation of America, an organization which, though still in its infancy, does much to promote better student government in the colleges and universities of the United States. The Federation is planning an inter-collegiate news bureau and a traveling secretary, improvements which can materialize only if the members of the Federation continue to support its activities until it achieves prominence. Stewart Wilson, the Colorado College delegate to the conven- tion, which was held in Palo Alto, California, brought back many useful suggestions, and the reorganization of the student government as allotted to the council by the new constitution was carried out along the lines suggested by our delegate. COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Finance ...Harold Harmon Social.. Virginia Dewey CLASS OFFICERS Harold Harmon Sarah Sheldon Elizabeth Smith Frank SeelEy SENIOR CLASS Harold Harmon ..President Sarah Sheldon Vice-President Elizabeth Smith Secretary Frank SEELEY ..Treasurer JUNIOR CLASS Grace Perkins.-. President Charles Wilgus. ... Vice-President LEWIS Wiley .... Secretary William Hinkley Treasurer 9 r . v Grace Perkins Charles Wilgus Lewis Wiley William Hinkley CLASS OFFICERS Robert Doyle Alyce Ireland Elizabeth Lansdown Kenneth Pomeroy SOPHOMORE CLASS Robert Doyle President Alyce Ireland . Vice-President Elizabeth Lansdown - Secretary Kenneth Pomeroy Treasurer FRESHMEN CLASS William Walters - President Martha Herbert Vice-President Elizabeth Skidmore Secretary John MetzleR - Treasurer William Walters Martha Herbert Elizabeth Skidmore John Metzler Top Row — Dewey, Weinberger, Strachan, Gallagher, Perkins Second Row — Stubblefield, Gillen, Seebach, Ferguson Third Row — Barr, Stinger, Horan, Hageman, Trippel The Associated Women Students of Colorado College The Associated Women Students of Colorado College is an organization composed of all women students on the campus. The work of the group is carried on by a legislative board consisting of a president, a vice-president, a secretary, a treasurer, and representatives from the society and the non-society girls, from the hall girls and the town girls, and from the sponsors ' organization. MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE BOARD Randalin Trippel .President Virginia Dewey Vice-President Mary L. Strachan Secretary Mary Gallagher Treasurer Grace Perkins Minerva Lois Seebach Hypatia Helen Hageman Contemporary Elizabeth Sweetman Zetalethian Josephyne Hildrich Senior Independent Margaret Gillen. Junior Independent Margaretta Barr Junior Independent Dorothy Stinger Sophomore Independent Jean Horan ...Freshman Representative Evelyn Stubblefield... ...Student Government Mariorie Ferguson ...Town Girls ' Association Marian Weinberger Sponsor Association Dean Louise W. Fauteaux Ex-officio Member Top Row — Stubblefield, Powell Second Row — Hayden, Ward Third Row — Watts Fourth Row — Kennedy, Ohrstedt Fifth Row — Case, Higginbottom Student Government Association The Student Government Association is the organization which makes regulations for women living in the dormitories. It is also the duty of the Association to see that the rules so made are enforced. The work of the organization is carried on by a board composed of representatives from the three dormitories, elected by the girls living in the halls. MEMBERS OF THE BOARD Evelyn Stubblefield .. President Jeannette Case Senior Representative Elizabeth Hayden ...Bemis Hall President Katherine Powell McGregor Hall Representative- Clydette Higginbottom Tick nor Hall Elizabeth Kennedy Sophomore Representative Eleanor Watts Sophomore Representative Laura Ward. ...Freshman Representative Anebel Ohrstedt.. Freshman Representative Top Row — Ingraham, Thurston, Pomeroy, Vanderhoof Second Row — Perkinson, Wade, Southard, Baylis COMMITTEES Magna Pan Pan Magna Pan Pan, the all-college vaudeville show, was managed by Kenneth Pomeroy, assisted by Ben B. Griffith, Jr. Junior Prom The Junior Prom Committee for 1930 was headed by John Thurston and Harold Ingraham. Enthusiasm Com mittee The Enthusiasm Committee, in charge of all pep meetings and rallies, was headed by Glenn Wade. Traditions Committee William P. ,Southard, chairman of the Traditions Committee, was in charge of all Tiger customs and traditions. Varsity Jubilee Under the direction of Arthur Baylis and Paul Conover, the Varsity Jubilee, an all-college evening composed of bridge, a show, and a supper dance, was put on in February. Homecoming The Homecoming celebrations were directed by Richard Vanderhoof, chairman of the committee. Senior Play The Senior play was presented under the management of Mark Perkinson. Junior Play What Happened to Jones, was the farce produced by the class of ' 31. It was managed by Richard Vanderhoof. seNioPyS Alice Constance Aaby Minneapolis, Minn. Romance Languages Hvpatia; Exclamation Club; Pan Pan, 4; Eager Heart, 4; Dais, President. Selma Azar Raton, N. M. Sociology Foreign Relations Club; Athenian; Junior Councilor. Margery Elizabeth Barkley Pueblo, Colo. Art Zetalethian; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; Tiger Staff, 4; Athenian. SONIA CONSTANTINE BENDEROFF Colo. SpgS. Sociology Minerva; Koshare, 2, 3; Glee Club, 1; Eager Heart, 1; Hiding Club, Treasurer, 3, 4; W. A. A. Board, 3, President, 4. Margaret Bissonnette Colorado Springs English Phi Beta Kappa; Tiger Staff, 1; Centurion, 3. C. Harry Blunt Colorado Springs Economics BetaThetaPi; Football, 1; Baseball, 3, 4; Red Lantern; Question Club; C Club; Nugget, Manager, 3; Pan Pan, Manager; Junior Farce. John Albert Brown Roberts, Idaho Geology Beta Theta Pi; Red Lantern; Question Club; C Club. George Hyndman Burnham Colo. Spgs. Physics Delta Alpha Phi; Koshare; Physics Colloquium; Delta Epsilon. Robert Atchison Caldwell Denver, Colo. English Delta Alpha Phi; Tau Kappa Alpha; Phi Beta Kappa; Debating, 2, 3. JEannette Rebecca Case Garrettsville, 0. Education Zetalethian; W. A. A., 4; Student Government Board, 4; Eager Heart, 4. Earl Harry Clark Pueblo, Colorado Biology Phi Gamma Delta; Sigma Delta Psi; C Club; Red Lantern; Question Club; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 4; Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 3, 4; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball, 4. Jerry Albert Cogan Colorado Springs Chemistry Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Eta Sigma Phi; Nugget Staff, Editor, 3; Junior Faree; Delta Epsilon. John Penney Cogan Colorado Springs Chemistry Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Eta Sigma Phi; C Club, President, 4; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Delta Epsilon. Harriet Elizabeth Crannell Colo. Springs English Hypatia; Crescent Club; Koshare; Exclamation Club; Tiger Club; Junior Farce; Pan Pan. Eva Helen Crowder Sedalia, Colo. Art Hypatia; Crescent Club; Exclamation Club; Tiger Club, 2, 3; Tiger Staff, 1; Centurion, 3; Pan Pan, 1, 2, 4. Genevieve E. Curry Colorado Springs Mathematics Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Epsilon. Richard Pender Darnell Cripple Creek, Colo. Geological Engineering Virginia May Dewey Colorado Springs Romance Languages Hypatia; A. S. C. C, Council, 3, 4, Chairman of Social Committee, 4; Crescent Club; Exclamation Club; A. W. S., Vice-President, 4; Vice-President of Class, 1; Pan Pan, 1, 2, 3; Tiger Club, 2, 3. Eileen Glen Edmondson Des Moines, N. M. English Eta Sigma Phi; Classical Club. Frances Dorothy Faus Colorado Springs English Hypatia; Crescent Club; Exclamation Club; Tiger Club, 2, 3; Junior Farce; Pan Pan, 2, 4; W. A. A., 1, 2; Secretary of Class, 2. Joseph William Ferguson Colorado Springs Ph ysics Phi Beta Kappa; Physics Colloquium; Delta Epsilon. Marjorie Elizabeth Ferguson Colo. Spgs. Sociology Tiger Staff, 3, 4; Nugget Staff, 3: Manager of Home- coming Dance, 3; Town Girls ' Association, President, 4; A. W. 8. Board. 4; Manager of Eager Heart, 3, 4; German Club. Mary Letitja Finn Colorado Springs Political Science Hypatia; Foreign Relations Club, 3, 4; University of Colorado, 1; Alpha C.ii Omega. David Ditcher Forest Colorado Springs Economics Frances Charlotte Glau Colorado Springs Education Zetalethian; Intersoeiety Council, 2, 3, 4; Classical Club; Classical Club Play, 1, 3; Tiger Staff, 1, 2, 3, 4; Town Girls ' Association. Helen Elizabeth Hageman Las Animas English Contemporary; Intersoeiety Council, 3, 4; Colonial Ball Minuet, 2; McGregor House Board, 3; Bemis House Board, 4; May Fete Committee, 2; Tiger Club, 4; Glee Club, 2. Winfred Arthur HaiglER Colorado Springs Business Administration and Banking Sigma Chi; Men ' s Glee Club, 1; Growlers ' Club. Oscar Hugo Hammer Colorado Springs Biology Growlers ' Club; C Club; Track, 2, 3; Band, 1; Delta Epsilon. Harold Collyer Harmon Colorado Springs Business Administration and Banking Phi Gamma Delta; Alpha Kappa Psi; Theta Alpha Phi; Diary Correspondent, 4; Koshare, President, 4; Growlers ' Club; Manager of Sophomore Barbecue, 2; Treasurer of Class, 3; President of Class, 4; Delegate to N. S. F. A. Conference, 3; Manager of Junior Farce; Manager of .Junior Prom; A. S. C. C. Council, 3, 4, Treasurer, 4; Bed Lantern, Secretary, 4. Elizabeth Harriet Hayden Breckenridge Political Science Zetalethian; Foreign Relations Club; Sponsor, 2; May Fete, 2; Junior Councilor, 3; Student Government Board, 4; Bemis House President, 4. Louise Lincoln Hiller Alamosa, Colo. History Thomas Denison Jones New Wilmington, Pa. Economics Kappa Sigma; Tiger Staff, 1; Class Vice-President, 3; Red Lantern. Viola Frances Johnson Castle Rock, Colo. History Anceline Myra Keen Colorado Springs Psychology Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Epsilon; Eta Sigma Phi, 1, 2, 4, Vice-President, 4; Riding Club, 1; Glee Club, 2, 3, Secretary, 3; Euterpe, 4; Nugget Staff, 2, 3. Max Allen KeyTE Colorado Springs Geological Engineering Beta Theta Pi; Junior Farce, 3; Delta Epsilon. Helen V. KnowlEs Colorado Springs Latin Contemporary, Vice-President, 4, President, 4; Phi Beta Kappa; Eta Sigma Phi, Secretary, 4; Pan Pan 4; German Club, 4. Mary Ella McConnell Colorado Springs Romance Languages Minerva, Secretary, 4; Colonial Ball; Minuet, 2; Town Girls ' Association. George Thomas Merideth Colo. Springs Physics Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Epsilon. Elizabeth Adelaide Meston Pueblo, Colo. Romance Languages Hypatia; Exclamation Club; Crescent Club; Inter- society Council, 3, 4; Vice-President of Sophomore Class; Pan Pan, ], 2, 3, 4; Junior Councilor; Colonial Ball; Minuet, 2; Tiger Club, 2, 3. Gordon Eugene Minter Colorado Springs Chemistry Sigma Chi; Theta Alpha Phi; Koshare; Growlers ' Club, President 3; Junior Farce; Football, 1; University of Colorado, 1. Helen M. Nelson Colorado Springs Latin Eta Sigma Phi; Classical Club. Edward Harold Parker Colorado Springs Electrical Engineering Kappa Sigma; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 3, 4. Mark Brandon Perkinson Colorado Springs English Phi Gamma Delta; Nugget Staff, 2, 3, 4; Tiger Staff, 4; Manager of Senior Play. Florence Reeva Pickett Colorado Springs English Euterpe, Secretary, 2, Vice-President, 3, President, 4; W. A. A. Board, 3, 4; Town Girls ' Association, Secre- tary, 4; Nugget Staff, 3; May Fete, 2, 3; Minuet; Classical Club. Ruth Ellenor Rambo English Pueblo, Colo. George Louise Robinson Breckenridge Chemistry Beta Theta Pi; Football, 1; Manager of Baseball, 4; University of Colorado, 1, 2. Frank SeelEy, Jr. Colorado Springs History Kappa Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; Tan Kappa Alpha; Inter-fraternity Council; Class Treasurer, 4. Sarah Elizabeth Sheldon Denver, Colo. Sociology Minerva, President, 3, 4; Tiger Staff, 2; Student Government Board, 3; Tiger Club; Crescent Club, Treasurer, 2; Exclamation Club; A. S. C. C, Secretary 4; Class President, 3; Class Vice-President, 4; Minuet; University of Denver, 1. Elizabeth J oy Smith Rochester, N. Y. English Minerva; Koshare; Pan Pan; Nugget Staff; Minuet; Tiger Club, President, 4; Exclamation Club; Class Sec- retary, 4; Junior Farce; Centurion. William P. Southard Trinidad, Colo. Business Administration and Banking Phi Gamma Delta; C Club; Question Club; Koshare; Alpha Kappa Psi, President, 4; Football, I, 3, 4; Chairman of Traditions Committee; Junior Farce. Milton Elmer Sprenger Colorado Springs Geology Beta Theta Pi; Red Lantern; C Club; Inter-Fra- ternity Council, 3, 4; Football, 1; Baseball, 3. Evelyn Jane Stubblefield Pueblo, Colo. English Contemporary; Student Government Board, President, 4; McGregor House Board, 1, 3; Bemis House Board, 4; Tiger Club; Exclamation Club; Colonial Ball; Minuet, 2; A. W. S. Board, 4; Secretary of Junior Class. Randalin Trippel Colorado Springs English Minerva, Treasurer, 3; Phi Beta Kappa; A. W. S., President, 4; Intersociety Council, Chairman, 4; A. S. C. C, 4; Town Girls ' Association; German Club; Tiger Staff, 1, 2; Centurion, 3; Pan Pan, 3, 4. J. Roy Yandenberg Colorado Springs Business Administration and Banking Phi Gamma Delta; Alpha Kappa Psi; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 4; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4; C Club; Question Club; Red Lantern; Freshman Football Coach. Paul Anthony Vestal Pueblo, Colo. Biology Delta Alpha Phi ; Growlers ' Club, 2, 3, 4; Inter-Fratern- ity Council, 3, 4; A. S. C. C, 4; Red Lantern; Men ' s Glee Club, 1; German Club, 4; Delta Epsilon. Glenn Wade Denver, Cola, Sociology Phi Delta Theta; Sigma Delta Psi; President of Class, 2; Yell Leader, 2, 3; C Club; Curie Scholarship; Argo Scholarship; A. S. C. C. Council, 3, 4, President, 4; Chairman of Enthusiasm Committee; Baseball, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 4; Student Representative to Rotary Club; Student Representative to Kiwanis Club; Junior Farce; Red Lantern; Inter-Fraternity Council. James Edward Weir Colorado Springs Geological Engineering Sigma Chi; Tiger Staff, 1, 2; Football Manager, 4. Stewart Graham Wilson Manhattan, III. Political Science Beta Theta Pi; Eta Sigma Phi; Growlers ' Club; Red Lantern; Homecoming Committee, 3; A. S. C. C. Council, President, 4; Vice-President of Rocky Mountain Association of Student Presidents; Tiger Staff, 2, 3, 4; Nugget Staff, 2, 3; Delegate to N. S. F. A. Congress, 4. Richard Joseph Woodward Pueblo, Colo. Geological Engineering Delta Alpha Phi; Eta Sigma Phi; Classical Club; Growlers ' Club, 2, 3, 4; C Club, 2, 3, 4; Forestry Club; Track, 2, 4; Delta Epsilon. Clayton Scott Wynn Colorado Springs Chemistry Delta Epsilon. Kuzuo Asami Kyoto, Japan Warren Kelly Lewellen Colorado Springs Political Science Civil Engineering Frances Amelia Bradley Colorado Springs French Emmalou McBroom Colorado Springs Stephens College. 1, 2; German Club. Latin Zetalethian; German Club; Eta Sigma Phi, Treasurer 3, President, 4; Pan Pan. Thomas Estill Colorado Springs Economics Murial Imogene Miller Colorado Springs Romance Languages Stephens College, 1. 2. Alice Jane Evans Colorado Springs Sociology Loretta Heights College. 1, 2; Orchestra, 3. MARGARET ROBISON Canon City, Colo. Sociology Josephyne Nancy Hildrich Colorado Springs Political Science Flora Doris Simmons Colorado Springs Zetalethian; W. A. A. Board; A. W. S. Board; Riding Club English Minerva; Tiger Stuff, 2; Koshare. Clare Douglass Jencks Colorado Springs Business Administration and Banking Delta Alpha Phi: Alpha Kappa Psi: Band, 1, 2, 3. 4. WlLLIAM HENRY YoRRIETER Loveland, Colo. Electrical Engineering Robert Burge Lackey Colorado Springs History Marion Young Colorado Springs Kappa Sigma; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4. English JUNIORS Charles Earl Armstrong Denver, Colo. Electrical Engineering Delta Alpha Phi. Margaretta Jean Barr New Wilmington, Pa. English A. W. S. Board; Gorman Club. Carolyn A. Bayless Colorado Springs English Edith Waleska Blotz Rocky Ford, Colo. English Hypatia; Koshare; Exclamation Club; Riding Club; Colonial Ball, Minuet. Frank G. Dentan Colorado Springs Business Administration and Banking Alpha Kappa Psi; Tiger Staff, 1, 2, 3. Lorna Doone Dorlac Colorado Springs Psychology Hypatia; Exclamation Club; Crescent Club; Women ' s Sponsor Organization, President, 2; Class Secretary; Minuet; Junior Farce; A. S. C. C. Council, 1, 3; W. A. A. Board, 2. Thelma LEE Dorroh Colorado Springs History Tiger Staff, 3; Nugget Staff, 3. Carol Vinita Edwards Pueblo, Colo. Psychology Zetalethian, Secretary, 3; Tiger Club; May Fete, 1; Exclamation Club; Junior Councilor; W. A. A. Board; Phi Beta Kappa. Lloyd Harris Ellis La Junta, Colo. English Phi Gamma Delta; Tiger, I, 2, 3, Editor, 3; Nugget, 1. 2, 3. Franklin Hall Emery Colorado Springs Business Administration and Banking Kappa Sigma; Class President, 1; Golf, 2, 3; C Club; Question Club; Assistant Manager of Junior Prom; Editor of Student Handbook. Genevieve Grace Engel Colorado Springs English Minerva; May Fete, 1; Pan Pan, 2, 3; A. S. C. C. Coun- cil, 3; Intersocicty Council, 3; Class Vice-President, 2; Exclamation Club, 2; Junior Farce. Frank Willard Pales Castle Rock, Colo. Business Administration and Banking Beta Theta Pi; Tiger Staff, 1, 2, 3; Nugget Staff, 1, 2, 3; Manager, 3; Pan Pan, 1, Manager, 2; Centurion, 2; Growlers ' Club. Harry Joshua Figge Silver Cliff, Colo. Biology Growlers ' Club Alvin Foote Glenwood Springs, Colo. English Beta Theta Pi; Tiger Staff, 1, 2, 3, 4, Editor, 4. Virginia Dale Freudenburger Colo. Spgs. English Contemporary. Jessie Elizabeth Fuson Milliken, Colo. Sociology Contemporary; Glee Club. Gladys Bernice Geraghty ColoradoSprings Chemistry Contemporary. Albert SmedlEy Giesecke Denver, Colo. Art Beta Theta Pi; Nugget Staff, 2, 3; Inter-Fraternity Council, 3; Junior Farce. Effie Georgia Gilbert Colorado Springs Latin Tiger Staff, 3; Nugget Staff, 3. Margaret Laura Gillen Colorado Springs Political Science A. W. S. Board; Nugget Staff, Associate Editor, 3; Tiger Staff, 1, 2, 3; Town Girls ' Association; Sponsor Organization. Margaret Emelyn Gragg Colorado Springs English Minerva; Class Secretary, 1; Exclamation Club; Crescent Club. Ruth Majel Griffin Colorado Springs Mathematics German Club; Eager Heart; Tiger. Maurice Frank Griffith Palisade, Colo. Electrical Engineering Kappa Sigma; Band. Margaret Mary Hansman Colo. Springs Mathematics Phi Beta Kappa. Mildred Elizabeth Hazlett Paonia, Colo. Music Zetalethian; Exclamation Club; Euterpe; Tiger Staff, 2, 3. Twila Clydette Higginbottom Ordway, Colo. Biology Zetalethian; Tiger Club; W. A. A., 1, 2, 3; Student Government. William Charles HinklEy Denver, Colo. Political Science Phi Gamma Delta; C Club; Koshare; Question Club; Junior Farce; Football, 1, 2, 3; Basketball, 1, 2, 3; Baseball, 1, 2, 3; Class Treasurer, 3. M. Helen Huffman Limon, Colo. Music Euterpe; Glee Club; Riding Club; Colonial Ball, Minuet, 2. Ellsworth Carter Hutchinson Salida, Colo. Geological Engineering Phi Gamma Delta; Football, 1. 2. Harold Ward Ingraham Littleton, Colo. Economics Kappa Sigma; Question Club; C Club; Football, 2, 3; Basketball, 1, 3; Baseball, 1, 3; Class President, 2. William Charles Irwin Castle Rock, Colo. Geological Engineering Beta Theta Pi; Question Club; C Club; Inter-Fra- ternity Council; Football, 1, 2, 3; Baseball. William Marks Jaillite Colorado Springs Geology Phi Delta Theta; Inter-Fraternity Council; Red Lantern. George W. KasE Cincinnati, Ohio Forestry Sigma Chi; Football, 1; Baseball, 1, 2; Forestry Club; German Club. James F. KeyseR Salt Lake City, Utah History Sigma Chi; Tau Kappa Alpha; Koshare; Tiger Staff, 1, 2, 3; Nugget Staff, 2, 3; A. S. C. C. Council, 2, 3. Ward Lester Manitou, Colo. English Jane Lowell Colorado Springs English Hvpatia; Nugget Staff, 1; Crescent Club; Exclamation Club. Maxine Mildred Moore Colorado Springs Spanish Hypatia; A. W. S. Board; Junior Farce; Colonial Ball, Minuet; May Fete. Trellyen Ernest Nowels Colo. Springs English Beta Theta Pi; Nugget Staff, 1, 2; Tiger Staff, 1, 2, 3; Growlers; Golf, 2. James Monroe Patterson Stillwater, Okla. English Sigma Chi; Tiger Staff, 1, 2, 3, Manager, 3; Nugget Staff; Question Club; Inter-Fraternity Council. Grace Elizabeth Perkins Colo. Springs Sociology Minerva; Class President, 3; Glee Club; A. W. S. Board; Pan Pan, 2, 3; Intersociety Council. LAI Katherine Louise Powell Las Animas, Colo. Romance Languages Contemporary; .Student Government; Glee Club: Tiger Club; Sponsor Committee; McGregor House President. Richard Charles Ragle Colo. Springs Geological Engineering Delta Alpha Phi; C Club; Golf. 2, 3. Harvey William Reinking Colo. Springs Business Administration and Banking Phi Delta Theta; Baseball, 2, 3. Ivan Grant Ridge Colorado Springs Business Administration and Banking Pi Kappa Alpha; Question Club; Growlers ' Club; Tiger Staff, 3; Alpha Kappa Psi. John Carr Sandford Pi Kappa Alpha. Ma niton, Colo. C. F. Humphry Saunders Colo. Springs Political Science Phi Gamma Delta; Koshare, Treasurer, 3; Class Treasurer, 2; Nugget Staff, 2, 3; Editor, 3; Pan Pan. Thomas Scott Colorado Springs Business Administration and Banking Phi Delta Thota; Tiger Staff, 2, 3. Bernice Arline Sechrist Durango, Colo. Spanish Lois Louise Seebach Rochester, N. Y. English Hypatia; Crescent Club; Exclamation Club; Nugget Staff, 1; A. W. S. Hoard, 3; Intersociety Council; Colonial Ball; Minuet Mary Elizabeth Sevier Denver, Colo. Spanish Zetalethian; W. A. A.; Tiger Club; Minuet; Inter- society Council; Sponsor Organization. Robert Shonsby Pueblo, Colo. English Beta Theta Pi; C Club; Golf, 1, 2, 3. Captain, 3. Margaret Louise Southmayd Rapid City, S. D. French Minerva; Glee Club. Mary Ledingham Strachan Colo. Springs English Zetalethian; Junior Farce; Koshare, Secretary, 2, Vice- President, 3; A. W. S. Board; W. A. A. Board; Tiger Club; May Fete. John Foster Thurston Denver, Colo. Economics Kappa Sigma; Question Club; Junior Farce; Alpha Kappa Psi; Growlers; Inter-Fraternity Council. Robert DeWitt Tucker Denver, Colo. Economics Kappa Sigma; Alpha Kappa Psi; Junior Farce; Ques- tion Club; Class President, 1; Growlers ' Club; Manager Homecoming Parade, 3. Richard Culver Vanderhoof Colo. Spring Sociology Phi Gamma Delta; Barbecue Manager; Chairman Homecoming Committee; Junior Farce Manager; Growlers ' Club, President, 3. William F. Van Dyke Pueblo, Colo. Business Administration and Banking Phi Gamma Delta; Koshare; Growlers; Alpha Kappa Psi; Pan Pan; Question Club; Football, 1; Basketball, 2; Track, 2. John Augustus Veeder Colorado Springs Civil Engineering Delta Alpha Phi; Growlers ' Club; Inter-Fraternity Council. Donald Story Warning Colorado Springs Business Administration and Banking Kappa Sigma; Football; Basketball; Track. Marion Hoight Weaver Colorado Springs English Sigma Chi; Red Lantern Club, President, 3; Football, 2, 3; Inter-Fraternity Council. Harold Carl Westesen Olathe, Colo. Electrical Engineering Delta Alpha Phi. Jane WhitecraFT Colorado Springs Biology Minerva; Crescent Club; Exclamation Club; Colonial Ball; Minuet. Josephine BarksdalE Wickes Colo. Springs English Riding Club; W. A. A. Geneva Dorothy Wildin Pueblo, Colo. Art Zetalethian; Tau Kappa Alpha; Colonial Ball Minuet. Blanche Lewis Wiley Colorado Springs English Contemporary; Tiger Staff, 1; Class Secretary, 3; Tiger Club; Intersociety Council. Charles Augustus Wilgus Colorado Springs Economics Kappa Sigma; Class Vice-Presiilent, 3. Geraldine Williams Colorado Springs French Zetalethian; Koshare; Tiger Club; Colonial Ball Minuet; Glee Club; May Fete; Town Girls ' Associ- ation, Treasurer, 3. Matilda Anne Willis Colorado Springs Biology Minerva; Crescent Club; Koshare; Junior Farce; Minuet; Tiger Staff, 1; Nugget Staff, 1, 2, 3; Tiger Club. Delma Marthelle Wright Grand Junction English Richard Decker Young Denver, Colo. Economics Phi Delta Theta. Lois Margaret Brown Manitou, Colo. Chemistry Zetalethian, Treasurer, 3; May Fete, 1. Heman Rowlee Bull Grand Junction, Colo. Biology Kappa Sigma; Band, 1, 2, 3. Mary Josephine Chamberlain Clarendon, Tex. English Junior Madison Chappell Mathematics Traek, 2. Cortez, Colo. Darwin Dewayne CoiT Colorado Springs Political Science Kappa Sigma. Charles Aldwin Collard Colorado Springs English Arthur Riley Cool Colorado Springs Geological P ngineering Byron Albert Davis Colorado Springs English Reginald Dukelin Davis Colorado Springs Chemistry Samuel Garvin Colorado Springs Civil Engineering .Sigma Chi. Dale Edward Harper Potomac, III. Electrical Engineering Kappa Sigma. Raymon George Hayden Loveland, Colo. Business Administration and Banking Kappa Sigma; Football, I, 2, 3. Louise Lewis Hilswick Stephenville, Texas English Sarah Howells Colorado Springs Biology Contemporary; W. A. A. Board, 2; Colonial Ball Minuet, 2; May Fete, 1. Mary Margaret Creighton Elmira, N. Y. English Margaret Winifred Killian Colo. Springs English Jack H. Lasley Colorado Springs Political Science Phi Gamma Delta; Koshare; Foreign Relations Club; University of Kansas. Joseph William Mercer Colorado Springs Economics Phi Delta Theta; Football; Track; Baseball. George Ralph Merritt Colorado Springs Business Administration and Banking Armor Dale Peisk er Education Center, Colo. Alious Rockett Colorado Springs Philosophy Henry George Roebke Denver, Colo. Chemistry Phi Delta Theta. Effie Evelyn Stroud Colorado Springs English Kelly Dolphus Stroud Colorado Springs Political Science Velma Jane Perry Colorado Springs English Richard Hyland Tubman Colorado Springs Forestry Delta Alpha Phi; Forestry Club. Elsa Marie PylE Colorado Springs Clifford Herbert Vessey Colorado Springs Mathematics Economics Kappa Sigma; Tau Kappa Alpha; Debating; Tiger Staff, 3; Junior Farce. Virginia Kathryn Rayburn Colorado Springs Romance Languages Hypatia. Mildred Ona Volentine Estico, Arkansas Music Ellsworth Ray Richards La Junta, Colo. Biology Charlotte Ellen M. West Denver, Colo. Phi Gamma Delta; Growlers ' Club. Geology SOPHOnORGS Harold Samuel Akin, Mack, Colorado William Lee Anderson, Toledo, Ohio Selma Azar, Raton, Neic Mexico Arthur Eugene Baylis, Jr., Colorado Springs William Maxwell Bell, Colorado Springs Hazel Biddlecome, Greenriver, Utah Chauncey H. Blodgett, Nantucket, Mass. Mary Carolyn Bloom, Colorado Springs Florence Bote, Manitou, Colorado Clifford Verne Brice, Colorado Springs Nelson Clarence Brown, Colorado Springs Rosella Lillian Burbank, Red Cliff, Colorado Hilda Ruth Burch, Denver, Colorado Carl Verner Burke, Colorado Springs Julia Frances Buzz, Colorado Springs ikk John Robert Camp, Wooster, Ohio Margaret Josephine Campbell, Pueblo, Colo, Earl Billie Cochran, Colorado Springs Charles Alexander Cogan, Colorado Springs Harold William Cotner, Pueblo, Colorado James Henry Craig, Colopaxi, Colorado Winthrop Ballard Crouch, Colorado Springs Robert Elmer Doyle, Deerjield, Kansas Mowbray P. Drummond, Colorado Springs Mary Elizabeth Gallagher, Colorado Springs Bertha Annetta Garrett, Colorado Springs Harry Clifford Goodson, Colorado Springs James William Gwyn, Denver, Colorado Marie Frances Hagemeyer, Colorado Spring William Quintus Haney, Colorado Springs Wilmoth Margaret Harris, Avondale, Colo. Alonzo Sidney Hartman, Montrose, Colorado Thomas Russell Henritze, Trinidad Colorado Katherine Mary Herbert, Colorado Springs Archie Davilla Hess, Weslcliffe, Colorado Ralph Everette Heter, Colorado Springs Winifred Esther Howarth, Pueblo, Colorado Helen Frances Hultman, Denver, Colorado Alyce Mabel Ireland, Denver, Colorado Jean Carr Johnson, Colorado Springs Arthur Boughton Kelly, Denver, Colorado Elizabeth Mead Kennedy, Johnstown, Colo. Raymond Irving Kennedy, Colorado Springs George Robert Kerr, Fountain, Colorado Harriet Marie Kingsley, Colorado Springs Walter James Knodel, La Junta, Colorado Elizabeth Stewart Lansdown, Walsenburg, Colorado James Alexander Magruder, Hattiesburg, Mississippi Guy Charles Martin, Denier, Colorado John Harry Matheson, Canon City, Colorado Robert Leigh Maunder, Colorado Springs Rupert Paul McClung, Trinidad, Colorado Thomas Albert McCrory, Cotopaxi, Colorado Charles George McGrory, Whittier, Calif. Gerald Eugene Miles, Colorado Springs Clarence Hilary Moseley, Quanah, Texas Buckley Burton Paddock, Colorado Spring Harry Peterson, Colorado Springs Charlotte .Tune Pipkin, Colorado Springs Katherine Louise Poland, Ardmore, Okla. Kenneth Ritz Pomeroy, Fonlenelle, Wyoming Constance Postlethwaite, Colorado Springs Garland Lucile Prather, Colorado Springs James .Juan Reid, Colorado Springs Myra Marie Reinking, Colorado Springs Margaret C. Rhoads, Colorado Springs Gilbert McKesson Rice, Los Angeles, Calif. Joseph Hull Rohrer, Jr., Colorado Springs Velma Verone Rose, Pueblo, Colorado June Isabelle Rosen, Denver, Colorado Howard Max Schmidt, Brush, Colorado Clark Edward Schnurr, Manitou, Colorado iA.j David William Scott, Denver, Colorado Martha Catherine Sharer, Colorado Springs Frederick William Short, Denver, Colorado Walter Duane Slocum, Brush, Colorado Adda Whaite Smith, Denver, Colorado Dorothy Carolyn Smith, Burlington, Colorado Elvis Seth Starbuck, Salida, Colorado Merrell Leon Starbuck, Salida, Colorado Dorothy Evelyn Stinger, Colorado Springs Kendrick MacLean Stone, Colorado Springs Mildred Gilbert Strachan, Colorado Springs Rebecca Todd, Lamar, Colorado Eleanor Tremayne, Florence, Colorado Dean Elwin Triggs, Rivera, California Lillian Martha Turner, Canon City, Colo. Sam W. Vickerman, Westcliffe, Colorado Marifrances Vollmer, Colorado Springs Eleanor Watts, Salt Lake City, Utah Jeannette Cooper Watts-Johnson, Colorado Springs Marian Weinberger, Colorado Springs Frances Catherine Willis, Colorado Springs Elsie Lois Winship, Colorado Springs Minnie Louise Winston, Colorado Spring Harry Lewis Wood, Colorado Springs Louis D. Yard, Colorado Springs Roland Roger Anderson, Colorado Springs Hugh Burton Baker, Morley, Colorado Marie Lucile Benning, Pueblo, Colorado Francis Erwin Beyle, Colorado Springs Field Bohart, Jr., Colorado Springs Clark Sheldon Butterfield, Chico, Calif. Virginia Bard Dailey, Philadelphia, Perm. Eric Gustavus DeFlon, Colorado Springs Philip Drucker, Colorado Springs Catherine Rinche Elkins, Colorado Springs Joseph William Esch, Colorado Springs John Dow Fisher, Colorado Springs Camillo Calandrella, Colorado Springs Wayne Robert Campbell, Longmont, Colo Rita Wilhelmine Conklin, Colorado Springs Paul Marion Conover, Colorado Springs John Gilbert Coward, Richmond, Calif. Dorothy Tiletta Crews, St Louis, Missouri John Edward Fitzgerald, Colorado Springs Stanley William Geshell, Colorado Springs Alice Rand Gillett, Taiyuanfu, Shansi, China Howard Benson Goff, Colorado Springs Virginia May Graham, Denver, Colorado Bruce Edgar Gray, Colorado Springs Ben Barret Griffith. Colorado Springs Elvin Harold Griffith, Dalhari, Texas Elmer Daniel Hampton, Rox, Neva In Edgar Louis Hartmann, Denver, Colorado Dohothy Marie Haskin, Colorado Springs John William Haussermann, Jr , New Richmond, Ohio Cora May Peisker, Colorado Springs James Dale Perryman, Colorado Springs Emma Lee Randall, Colorado Springs Harold Elmer Rea, Denver, Colorado Clarence Robert Reams, Bells, California Wayne Everett Rex. Colorado Springs Clarence Oliver Hill, Littleton, Colorado Raymond Hilligoss, Jr., Manitou, Colorado Howard Howell James, Colorado Springs Lyle Franklin Jones, Grand Junction, Colo. Franklin Knott Koerner, Colorado Springs Carl Kropf, Qrdway, Colorado Paul Baker Richards, Wetmore, Oklahoma Francis Alvin Robbins, Colorado Springs Richard Dore Sanderson, Colorado Springs Harold Medill Sahkisian, Denver, Colorado Joseph James Schneider, Westcliffe, Colorado Ivan Schweninger, La Junta, Colorado Charles William Kruger, Greeley, Colorado William Methven Leslie, Colorado Springs Marian Luella McCleary, Ordway, Colo Winthrop William Martin, Colorado Springs Edward Howard Mason, Colorado Springs Leighton Coleman Massey Medill, Pueblo, Colorado Henry Robeht Smith, Denver, Colorado Marguerite Dumont Smith, Omaha, Nebr. William Whitney Sutton, Colorado Springs Elizabeth Catherine Sweetman, Calhan, Colorado Basil Foster Tipton, Colorado Springs John Jay Vandemoer, Grand Junction, Colo. Dale Merritt, Colorado Springs Marion Nassour, Colorado Springs William Hensley Neumarker, Columbus, Nebraska Barratt, O ' Haka, Chicago, Illinois Virginia Adelene Orris, Colorado Springs Virginia Patterson, Manitou, Colorado Cleo VANDENBtrRGH, Colorado Springs Bert Vandervliet, Danforth, Illinois Ernest Edward Waters, Denver, Colorado FResHne J£. k Aft Melba Marion Adams, Pueblo, Colorado Kenneth Hout Alderson, Ordway, Colorado Thomas Gilbert Alsbury, Colorado Springs Roy Rudolph Anderson, Leadville, Colorado J. Sherburne Ayers, Littleton, Colorado William Mowers Baker, Pueblo, Colorado William C. Beatty, Jr., Denver, Colorado John Ferguson Bennett, Colorado Springs Arthur Greenwood Bishop, Denver, Colorado Edward Lincoln Blaine, Colorado Springs James Howard Boyd, Canon City, Colorado Margaret Beatrice Bradfield, Grand Junction, Colorado Ruby Lorene Brewer, Canon City, Colorado Harold Monroe Britton, Colorado Springs Mabel Lucile Buck, Colorado Springs James Francis Burshears, La Junta, Colo. Harry Eugene Burton, Colorado Springs Emra Lee Butler, Brush, Colorado Dorothv Mabel Chamberlin, Colo. Springs I,oren Irving Chaney, Everest, Kansas John Ritchie Chestnolvioh, Nashua, N. H. Edwina Walbridge Creighton, Manitou, Colorado Margaret Helen Crissman, Paonia, Colorado Jean Marie Critz, Colorado Springs Halbert Burnham Cruzan, Los Angeles, Call for ni Mabel Lydia Davies, Colorado Springs Martha I.orayne Dean, Claude, Texas Marion August Deutsch, Monte Vista, Colo. Anna Josephine Dickison, Colorado Springs Virginia Elizabeth Easton, Colorado Springs Marian Gray Edmondson, Des Moines, N. M. Orlo Marv in Engebretson, Colorado Springs Margaret Mary Enyart, Ordway, Colorado Ruth Tom Frame, Ardmore, Oklahoma Lois Maxine Frederick, Colorado Springs Raymond Fries, Brush, Colorado Hobert Fritz, Florence, Colorado Flora May Gallatin, Palisade, Colorado Lillian Beatrice Gibbs, Brush, Colorado Richard Thornton Grant. Go den, Colorado Edward Gray, Freehold, New Jersey William Edgar Gregory, Fountain, Colorado Richard Valentine Hale, Littleton, Colorado Sidney James Harding, Pueblo, Colorado Martha Hester Herbert, Colorado Springs Hay Horatio Hess, Westell ffe, Colorado Margaret Farr Heyse, Colorado Springs Norma Marguerite Holmquest Coloratlo Springs Jean Lorraine Horan, Colorado Springs Dorothy May Horn, Colorado Springs Donald Horton, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Helen Margaret Hummel, Monte Vista, Colo. Lewis Edward January, Florence, Colorado Margaret Maxine Johnson, Colorado Springs Hattik Uuth Johnson, Pueblo, Colorado Gladys Murrelle Johnston, Fort Morgan, Colorado Alberta Ollie Jones, Ignacio, Colorado Bernice May Jones, Colorado Springs Evelyn Lucille Jones, Ignacio, Colorado Martha Keene, Denver, Colorado Mary Frances Kingsley, Colorado Springs Olive Ailene Klein, Colorado Springs Mildred Genevieve Kruse, Kiowa, Colorado Gene Charles Lague, Monte Vista Laura-Eloise Carolyn Lilley, Colorado Springs, Colo. Ruth Frances MacDonald, Pueblo, Colorado Marion Regina MacMillan, Pueblo, Colo. Helen Gay Mather, Colorado Springs George Glen Markley, Jasper, Texas Emanuel Lee Martin, Brush, Colorado David Livingston McArthur, Denver, Colo. Elinor O. McCleary, Ordwag, Colorado Mb A A Margaret Lou McClelland, Hanna, Wyo. James Joseph McCluskey, Trinidad, Colo. Margaret W. Melis, Canon City, Colorado John ' Franklin Metzler, Colorado Springs John Randall Miller, Denver, Colorado Virginia Mae Miller, Colorado Springs David Jesse Moffett, Trinidad, Colorado Joseph Hartley Murray, Colorado Spring John Irwin Myles, Colorado Springs Carl Howard Nelson, Westcliffe, Colorado Frederick Doveton Nichols, Trinidad, Colo. Anebel Dorothy Ohrstedt, Denver, Colorado Phyllis Hegina Ormsby, Denver, Colorado M. Kenneth Peterson, Colorado Springs Georgia Lucile Pickett, Colorado Springs Mary Elizabeth Pitts, Pueblo, Colorado Clay James Pomeroy, Portland, Oregon Thomas James Pulliam, Trinidad, Colorado Harold Roland Rahm, Colorado Springs Virginia Lee Raywood, Denver, Colorado Kenneth Wilfred Renken, Denver, Colorado Robert Merritt Ritter, New Castle, Colorado li Lloyd Stephen Roberts, Vona, Colorado Jack Harris Roreh, Salida, Colorado Marvin Jay Russell, Colorado Springs Mariana Wray Sackett, Ft. Collins, Colorado Eleanor Jane Schaff, Monte Vista, Colorado Fred Woodford .Schmidt, Delta, Colorado Roy Christian Schumacher, Steger, Illinois Mary Albina Seidl, Colorado Springs Gretchen Alice Sherk, Greeley, Colorado Elizabeth Louise Sherman, Saguache, Colo. Relda Elizabeth Skidmore, Colorado Springs Irene Slane, Saguache, Colorado Ralph Eugene Smith, Colorado Springs Everett F. Stapleton, Palisade, Colorado Ruth Elizabeth Stephens, Manzanola, Colo. Miller Heckes Stroup, Sedalia, Missouri Jane Sutton, Colorado Springs William Henry Thomas, Van Nuys, Calif. Helen Thompson, Gooding, Idaho James John Thompson, Littleton, Colorado Priscilla Eleanor Todd, Lamar, Colorado Hazel Estella Tolton, Las Animas, Colo. Ida Mae Tolton, Las Animas, Colorado Rose Helen Torp.it, Fountain, Colorado Frances Pauline Villano, Denver, Colorado William Walker Walter, Colorado Springs Laura Frances Ward, Monte Vista, Colorado Mary Agnes Wehrle, Denver, Colorado Harold Weidman, Pueblo, Colorado Agnes Marie Welsh, Colorado Springs Henry Francis Wershing, White Mills, Perm. William Lee Wilder, East St. Louis, Mo. Martie Key Bowman, Colorado Springs Bertha Olive Bradley, Colorado Springs William Clinton Bradshaw, Monte Vista, Colorado Joseph Edward Brady, Colorado Springs Morley F. Brandborg, Monte Vista, Colorado Duane Brough, Dividend, Utah Ladislaus D. deHolczer, Denier, Colorado Margarette Gail Dein, Colorado Springs Ralph Dial, Colorado Springs James Lingle Dodson, Colorado Springs Vernon Eastman, Thermopolis, Wyoming Kent Schoff Ehrman, Colorado Springs William James Elders, Decatur, Alabama Leonard John Cahoon, Colorado Springs Edward Tom Cass, Colorado Springs Clinton Carlyle Cheek, Mamanola, Colo. Lincoln Doyle Coit, Colorado Springs Marian Antoinette Coles, Grand Junction, Colorado Helen Marie Freudenberger, Colo. Springs Marjorie Mabel Gilbert, Colorado Springs John Delos Gloyd, Salida, Colorado Siegfried Theodore Gross, Colorado Springs Sherman Merwin Gulick, Goodland, Kansas Clarence James Williams, Walsenburg, Colo. William Henry Willie, Manitou, Colorado Margaret Wolever, Colorado Springs Alfredda Wooton, Paonia, Colorado Marguerite Sabrina Alley, Burlington, Colo. Stephen John Allison, Denver, Colorado Almira Louise Attane, Mancos, Colorado Emma Louise Bales, Colorado Springs Charles Henry ' Barnes, Hartsel, Colorado Clarence Isaac Boese, Vona, Colorado Isabel Gladys Conroy, Colorado Springs Ormond Elvin Cox, Colorado Springs Leland E. Crawford, Colorado Springs John Paul Critz, Colorado Springs Sophia Bertha Crowe, Colorado Springs John Crump, Memphis, Tennessee Betty Brown, Green Mountain Falls, Colorado Vona Mae Brown, Fruila, Colorado Homer Thompson Bruce, Manitou, Colorado Cleophes Foraker Bruster, Colorado Spring s Louise Grace Buckley - , Hartsel, Colorado Lester Henry Butler, Vona, Colorado Richard White Ellison, Colorado Springs George Edwin Engstrom, Little Rock, Ark. John Hodda Erickson, Colorado Springs Janet Palmer Fisher, Colorado Springs Grace Dorothy Fitzgerald, Colorado Springs Harriet Louise Floyd, Trinidad, Colorado John Irvin Hall, Grand Junction, Colorado Gertrude Helen Hammer, Colorado Springs David Hilton Hancock, Jasper, Texas John Donald Haney, Colorado Springs Olive M. Harner, Colorado Springs Jane Matilda Hedrick, Colorado Springs Leland Charles Henrie, Richfield, Utah La Mar Lonious Hill, Thistle, Utah Helen Jeanette Hooper, Scottsbluff, Nehr. Lyman Perkins Houghton, Colorado Springs Reginald Kemball House, Williarnstown, Vermont Eldon Vaiden Hunt, Colorado Springs Edgar LeRoy Jamison, Englewood, Colorado Francis Duane Osborn, Colorado Springs Owen Owens, Randlett, Utah Eunice Fern Parry, Colorado Springs Raymond Pezoi.dt, Colorado Springs Bennie Pitler, Colorado Springs Richard Frederick Price, Manitou, Colo. Eugene Jerome Randall, Colorado Springs Frank Almon Randall, Colorado Springs Patricia Manning Raney, Colorado Springs Francis Marion Redman, Genoa, Nebraska Robert Emmett Roark, Denver, Colorado John Raymond Ryan, Colorado Springs Frank P. Jasper, Edgewater, Colorado Edwin Eugene Johnson, Glenwood Springs, Colorado Fred Oscar Jones, Peyton, Colorado Ralph LeRoy Jones, Grand Junction, Colorado Hermina Gertrude Kahn, Denver, Colorado Jack Andrew Kintz, Loveland, Colorado John Forsythe Kurie, Colorado Springs John Kenneth Langum, Litchfield, Colorado John Merle Larson, Colorado Springs Miriam Hayden Lockhart, Colorado Springs Annie Mary McAnn, Colorado Springs Virgil Raymond McClurg, Cedaredge, Colo. Stanley Barton Ryerson, Denver, Colorado Daniel Frederick Santry, Colorado Springs Edmund Henry Schiddel, Colorado Springs Harold William Schultz, Colorado Springs Donald Brice Sevitz, La Junta, Colorado Darcy Adriance Shock, Colorado Springs Frances Pearl Smith, Colorado Springs John William Smith, Mancos, Colorado Robert Edward Speegi.e, Guymon, Okla. Robert Morris Stillman, Pueblo, Colorado Edna Mae Stroud, Colorado Springs Tandy Louis Stroud, Colorado Springs Margaret Marie Sullivan, Colorado Springs Katherine Alice Sweet, Salt Lake City, Utah James Thomas McElvain, Denver, Colorado Albyn Mackintosh, Mack, Colorado Charles Mackintosh, Mack, Colorado Raymond Sylvester Martin, Trinidad, Colo. W. M. Metzler, Colorado Springs Gale Warren Middlestetter, La Junta, Colorado Charlotte Virginia Mitchell, Colo. Springs Abe Mogilner, Colorado Springs Philip Montenie, Denver, Colorado Arthur AloNZO Morrell, Colorado Springs Trent William Nichols, Goodland, Kansas Harry Edward Onuerock, Colorado Springs Wilfred Standi.ey Swenson, Colo. Springs Thomas Coe Tate, Los Angeles, California Theodore Thulemeyer, Jr., Cheyenne, Wyo. Robert Clay Tracy, Loveland, Colorado Dean Trembly, Hope, Indiana Dorothy Ellen Trotter, Colorado Springs James Howard Turner, Colorado Sprmgs Dorothy Brewster Underwood, Lamar, Colo. James Morrison Waddell, Loveland, Colorado Nathaniel Walker, Madisonvil e, Ohio Suzanne Marie Walker, Colorado Springs Lulu Lee Walter, Sugar City, Colorado Florence Marie Walters, Fairmont, Minn. Sarabell Weintraub, Denver, Colorado Byron Allen Whaley, Colorado Springs Carlton Robert White, Colorado Springs COBUR UBwy Qcms Acnvmes PUBLICATION Top Row — Bennett, Gilbert, Blodgett, Easton, Cochran 2nd Row — Heyse, Ellis, Murray, Dorroh 3rd Row — Willis, MacMillan, Nichols, Johnston, Johnson 4th Row — Baker, Perkinson, Saunders, Keyser 5th Row — Gillen, Sutton, Pickett, Smith THE PIKES PEAK NUGGET The Pikes Peak Nugget, the official year book of Colorado College, is published by the Junior Class. Every effort has been made to catch in this Nugget a picture of Colorado College life as well as to record permanently the chief events of the school year. Although we have failed to present much that is fundamental in campus life, it is our hope that we have done more than compile a history for the year, but have in some measure held a little of the sentiment of under- graduate days. By introducing linoleum engravings, the art work of the book has been carried out along more modern lines than any of its predecessors. It is hoped that this rather unique medium will afford an acceptable change from the colored plate work usually favored by college year books. The theme of this year ' s Nugget is the portrayal of the gradual development of the college as marked by its progress in building, culminating this year in the Shove Memorial Chapel which is now being erected. As a minor motif, undergraduates of the period in which the build- ing was constructed appear in the foreground of each cut. To the staff, and most especially to the associate editor, the editor takes this opportunity to extend his thanks for their diligence and co-operation in making this edition of the Nugget possible. Top Row — Peterson, Wilder, Grant, Rice 2nd Row — Russell, Miller, Smith 3rd Row — Fales, Wood, Patterson THE PIKES PEAK NUGGET EDITORIAL STAFF ADMINISTRATION Humphry Saunders, Editor Lloyd Ellis CLASSES James Keyser Virginia Eastern Helen Hooper ORGANIZATIONS Jane Hedriek Margaret Heyse ATHLETICS William Baker Margaret Gillen, Associate Editor John Bennett Thelma Lee Dorroh Effie Gilbert Jane Sutton Barratt O ' Hara Jean Johnson Georgia Pickett Chauncey H. Blodgett, Jr. Howard GofT Philip Drucker PHOTOGRAPHY ART Albert Giesecke Hartley Murray Gladys Johnston Earl Cochran William Hillhouse Richard Grant Jack Miller James Patterson FEATURES Mark Perkinson Matilda Willis Elizabeth Smith Fred Nichols BUSINESS STAFF— Frank W. Fales, Manager ASSISTANT MANAGERS Harry Peterson Gilbert Rice Marvin Russell Ralph Smith William Wilder Harrv Wood Top Row — Pipkin, Foote, Barkley, Gilbet, Nichols, Harris 2nd Row — Baker, MacMillian, Blodgett, Glau, Keyser 3rd Row — GillEn, Ellis, Murray, Bishop, Rose 4th Row — Hagemeyer, Perkinson, Horton, Furguson THE COLORADO COLLEGE TIGER The Tiger, official student publication of Colorado College, is issued each week. An innovation this year was the change in the make-up of the paper. A weekly news magazine, rather than the typical college paper, has been introduced. The magazine, a four-column, twelve-page publication, offers a decided improvement over the Tiger of former years. The editor and the manager of the Tiger are selected by the Adminis- trative Council of the Associated Students of Colorado College. Other mem- bers of the staff are chosen by the editor from students who try out at the first of the year. Any students who desire to be members of the staff may ask for assignments from the editor or may volunteer stories. News, features, editorials, and student opinion are included in the Tiger. An effort is made to present controversial questions in a fair and impartial manner, and students are urged to express their views in the section devoted to campus opinion. It is the policy of the Tiger to support all worthwhile college activities. Top Row — Stone, Nowels, Wade, Baylis 2nd Row — Burke, Dentan, Wood 3rd Row — Brown, Giesecke, Smith, Patterson 4th Row — Peterson, Goodson, Adams, Hess, Ritter THE COLORADO COLLEGE TIGER Lloyd Ellis, Editor, First Semester James Keyser Chauncey H. Blodgett, Jr. Melba Adams William Baker Arthur Baylis Arthur Bishop Carl Burke Wayne Campbell Marjorie Ferguson Erne Gilbert James Patterson, Manager Nelson Brown Homer Bruce Sherman Guliek Byron Whaley Alvin Foote, Editor, Second Semester EDITORIAL STAFF Mark Perkinson Barratt O ' Hara REPORTERS Marjorie Gilbert Frances Glau Clifford Goodson Marie Hagemeyer Wilmoth Harris Archie Hess Don Horton Hermina Kahn Marian McMillan Margaret Gillen John W. Haussermann, Jr. Hartley Murray T. E. Nowels, Jr. Velma Rose Ivan Schweninger Ralph Smith Kendrick Stone Thomas Tate Clifford Vessey Frank Dentan, Jr., Advertising Manager MANAGERIAL STAFF Harry Wood Merritt Ritter Margaretta Barr Jack Fisher Ruth Griffin Charlotte Pipkin Marguerite Smith Glen Wade Elsie Winship Franklin Emery THE STUDENT HANDBOOK The Student Handbook presents to the student body the traditions and customs of the school, the songs and yells and information concerning college rules, campus organizations, and student and faculty officers. It is a handy reference book containing a wealth of valuable information especially for freshmen. This year ' s book was compiled by Franklin Emery. acti vines HOMECOMING Homecoming, one of the leading traditions of Colorado College, was celebrated the first of November. The feature of the program for the week-end was a football game between Colorado College and the University of Utah. President and Mrs. Mierow entertained at open house for alumni and friends of the college after the game. The annual alumni luncheon was given in Bemis Hall, and breakfast and buffet suppers honoring alumni were held at the various fraternity and society houses. Richard Vanderhoof was gen- eral chairman of the committees in charge of arrangements. MAGNA PAN-PAN Magna Pan-Pan, the annual all-college amateur vaudeville show, was held in Perkins Hall on the evening preceding the closing of school for the Christmas holidays. Acts were presented by each society, each fraternity, and any other organization desiring to participate. No attempt is made to commercialize Pan-Pan, and the admission charge is nominal, itspurpose being to help defray expenses. Cash prizes for the best acts presented were won by Phi Delta Theta and by Hypatia Society. Kenneth Pom- eroy was manager of Pan- Pan, and Barret Griffith was his assistant. VARSITY JUBILEE The Varsity Jubilee, a comparatively new tradition at Colorado College, was organized to supplant the All-College picnic, and has been gaining in popularity since its inauguration two years ago. The Jubilee is one of the affairs on the social calendar which is featured as being all-college. The various fraternities on the campus are urged to support the Varsity Jubilee, and an effort is made to make it one of the most interesting events on the social schedule. The Jubilee offers an evening of varied entertainment for the guests. This year the program began with bridge and dancing at the Broadmoor Hotel. Supper and dancing at the Chapel Inn followed, and the final feature of the evening ' s entertainment was a theater party. The managers of the Varsity Jubilee for 1930 were Arthur Baylis and Paul Conover. COLONIAL BALL The Colonial Ball, an annual event on the social calendar, is presented every year under the auspices of the women of the Sophomore Class. All Colorado College women are invited to attend the affair which is held in Bemis Commons. A feature of the program of the evening is the minuet presented by girls selected from the Sophomore Class by try-outs held several weeks before the ball. The girls in the minuet, as well as the other guests at the dance wear colonial costumes. The importance of the Colonial Ball lies not only in the fact that is is an interesting party, but also in that it provides an opportunity for all Colorado College women to be together for one evening, regardless of other affairs which may tend to divide their interests during most of the year. Alyce Ireland, vice-president of the Sophomore Class, was in charge of plans for the Colonial Ball this year. Top Row — Burbank, Smith, Fuson Front Row — Dein, Gillett, Underwood, Melis, Wolever, Huffman, Jones, Rhoads, SOUTHMAYD, MacDoNALD WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB The Women ' s Glee Club is composed of members selected by tryouts at the beginning of each semester. The organization gives concerts each year and takes part in various programs in the city and on the campus. Mrs. John vSpeed Tucker directs the work of the Club. MEMBERS Helen M. Huffman Elinor McCleary Alice Gillett Rosella Burbank Margaret Southmayd Margaret Rhoads Gail Dein Dorothy Underwood Marion McCleary Helen Hummel Wilmoth Harris Ruth Tom Frame Laura Ward Margaret Melis Eunice Parry Bernice Jones Ruth McDonald Margaret Wolever Louise Sherman Florence Bowe Jessie Fuson Irene Slane Gladys Johnston Frances Smith Top Row — W. M. Metzler, Vessey, Kurie, Dodson, Bennett, Gregory 2nd Row — Bayijs, Copeland, (Coach), Brown, Vandervliet DEBATING After a successful season in conference debating, the Colorado College squad of five men and Coach W. D. Copeland climaxed the year with a 2,500 mile trip, visiting schools in the Middle West, East and South. Debaters making the journey were Roland Anderson, Arthur Baylis, Nelson Brown, Bert Vandervliet, and Clifford Vessey. In addition to carrying a heavy schedule of contests all winter, the members of the debating squad were hosts to the conference debate meet which was held in March, with forensic stars from the schools in the Rocky Mountain Conference coming for the three day meeting. DRAMATICS Under the direction of Arthur G. Sharp, Jr., of the English De- partment, dramatics have this year taken a new lease on life. In the past, the interest in play production has been confined to a few interested students, but this year has seen great increase in dramatic activity on the campus. The season was opened with Ibsen ' s Wild Duck which was adequately presented and very well received. The leads were carried by Mary L. Strachan and James Keyser who gave very acceptable interpretations of their roles. At Homecoming, Koshare prepared a one act play for the entertainment of alumni and friends of the college who did not care to attend the Homecoming dance. This play, A Night in an Inn , was well received and showed a marked improve- ment over past Homecoming bills. In March, a bill of three one-acters was presented, including The Rising of the Moon, The Boy Comes Home, and The Return of Private Krutch. The last named, written by Mr. Sharp, was entered in the Little DRAMATICS Theater Tournament at Den- ver where it took first place among the college entries. Miss Strachan, playing Liese Krutch, was awarded first prize for be- ing the best actress in the tournament, while Mr. Sharp received second place for his play in the Colorado authors ' competition. It is evident that a decided improvement in the character of the plays presented this year will be observed by anyone who has followed Colorado College dramatics in the past. It seems only natural, therefore, that there should be a corresponding improvement in the quality of the acting in the plays pre- sented. Plays difficult in interpretation have been presented, and the resulting performances have been notably smooth and finished. Under the direction of Mr. Sharp latent talent has been discovered and trained in such a way that remarkably good productions in dramatics have been the result. A second bill of one act plays is to be presented in May which will be made up of His First Dress Suit, The Monkey ' s Paw and My Turn Next. This bill will close an unusually successful dramatic season at the college. ' ■■: ::: - - ■■ -i: : ' . :%i a 5S ; : - ' KOSHARE DRAMATIC CLUB PLAYS THE WILD DUCK — Henrick Ibsen Directed by A. G. Sharp, Jr. Werle Fred Nichols Gregers Werle Loren Chaney Old Ekdal Morley Brandborg Gina Ekdal James Keyser Hedvig.-. Mary Strachan Mrs. Sorby Eleanor Tremayne Dr. Relling Suzanne Walker Milvik Gene Lague A NIGHT IN AN INN — Lord Dunsany Directed by A. G. Sharp. .lr The Toff Harold Harmon Bill. Arthur Bishop Sniggers T. E. Nowei.s, Jr. Albert Kenneth Renken Idol. .. i Marvin Russell PriestsJ Gene Lague, David Moffett, Lyman DeGeer THE RISING OF THE MOON — Lady Gregory Directed by William Van Dyke A Ragged Man Bruce Grey A Sergean t-.. Marvin Russell Policeman A Fred Nichols Policeman B William Henry Willie THE BOY COMES HOME — A. A Milne Directed by William P. Southard, Jr. Phillip Kenneth Pomeroy Mary Rita Conklin Aunt Emily Rosella Buhhank Mrs. Higgans Suzanne Walker Uncle James-- Clifford Vessey THE RETURN OF PRIVATE KRUTCH Directed by A. G. Sharp, Jr. L| ese Mary Strachan Dietrich Harold Harmon K ;lr l Humphry Saunders An Officer-- Gordon Minter Two Soldiers William Hinkley, Juan Reid THE MONKEY ' S PAW Directed by Bruce E. Grey Mr White William P. Southard, Jr Mrs. White .W Laura Lilley Herbert Wayne Campbell Sergeant Major Morris. . . Joseph Mercer Mr. Sampson -.Arthur Morrell THE FIRST DRESS SUIT Directed by A. G. Sharp, Jr. Teddy Donald Haney Betty Larry Johnston The Mother Rossella Burbank Johnny Drake... Mowbray Drummond MY TURN NEXT Directed by James Keyser Tarxicum Twitters Hugh Baker Tim Bolus ..Paul Richards Peggy. Katherine Sweet Lydia. Beth Smith Cicely ' ° Campbell Tom Trap. ' . Jack Lasley Parmer Wheater Kenneth Peterson JUNIOR FARCE WHAT HAPPENED TO JONES — George Broadhurst Directed by A. G. Sharp, Jr. Jones William Hinkley Prof. Heatheriy .. Clifford Vessey Bishop of Balerat Humphry Saunders Richard Heatheriy De Witt Tucker Bigbce John Thurston Fuller.. Albert Giesecke Holder- ..John Thurston Mrs. Goodlv. Mary Strachan Cissy.. Maxine Moore Marjorie Lorna Dorlac Minerva. .- Matilda Willis Helma. - Genevieve Engel Alvina. Geraldine Williams PICTORIAL Both faculty and students enjoy the mountains: three snaps of skiers doing their stuff; Prof. Sharp takes a good bite; (below) three profs. on a hike. COLORADO COLLFGE LIBRARY COLORADO Si ,. NGS, COLORADO ■ — : ■fill PALHOil HALL OK§AHL2ATiOHS FRATCRNITieS KAPPA SIGMA F Eeta Orr.eg Flower — Lily of the Valley w. d. copeland Roland Anderson, ' 32 Arthur Baylis, ' 52 Chauncey Blodgett, ' 32 Nelson Brown, ' 32 Heman Bull, ' 31 Carl Burke, ' 52 Darwin Coit. ' 31 Lincoln Coit, ' 33 Paul Conover, ' 32 Ralph Dial, ' 33 Franklin Emery, ' 31 Marvin Engebretson. ' 33 Jack Fisher, ' 32 Elvin Griffith, ' 31 Clinton Cheek, ' 33 Arthur Morrell, ' 33 ounded at University of Virginia, 1869 a Chapter Established at Colorado College, 1904 Colors — Scarlet, MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY H. E. Mierow C. C. Mierow White, Green ACTIVE MEMBERS Maurice Griffith, ' 32 Dale Harper, ' 32 Raymon Hayden, ' 31 Oliver Hill, ' 32 Harold Ingraham, ' 31 Lyle Jones, ' 32 Ralph Jones, ' 33 Thomas Jones, ' 31 Jack Kurie, ' 33 Robert Lackey, ' 30 Hilary Moseley, ' 32 Edward Parker, ' 30 PLEDGES Virgil McCll7rg, ' 33 Jack Kintz, ' 33 Clay Pomeroy, ' 33 Harold Rea, ' 32 Francis Robbins, ' 32 Joseph Rohrep, ' 32 Fred Schmidt, ' 33 Frank Seeley, ' 30 John Thurston, ' 31 DeWitt Tucker, ' 31 Clifford Vessey, ' 31 William Vorrieter, ' 30 Donald Warning, ' 31 Byron Whaley, ' 33 Charles Wilgus, ' 31 Louis Yard, ' 32 E. Vaiden Hunt, ' 33 James Waddell. ' 33 V ♦ Top Row — Seeley, Schmidt, Tucker, Griffith, Baylis, Parker 2nd Row — Pomeroy, Thurston, Blodgett, T. Jones, Engebretson 3rd Row — Emery, Brown, Ingraham, Mosley, Yard, Wilgus 4th Row- Rohrer, Burke. Warning, Griffith SIGMA CHI Flower- Founded at Miami University, 1855 Beta Gamma Chapter Established at Colorado College, 1905 White Rose Colors — Blue and Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS William Bell, ' 32 Gordon M inter. Edward Blaine, ' 33 Carl Nelson, ' 33 Homer Bruce, ' 33 James Patterson, Emra Butler, ' 33 Harold Rahm, ' 33 Loren Chaney, ' 32 Juan Reid, ' 32 John Coward, ' 32 Kenneth Renken Robert Doyle, ' 32 Paul Richards, ' 3 John Erickson, ' 33 Merritt Ritter, ' Raymond Fries, ' 33 Marvin Russell, Winfred HaiglER, ' 30 Howard Schmidt, Ralph Heter, ' 32 Walter Slocum, LeRoy Jamison, ' 33 John Vandemoer, George Kase, ' 31 Marion Weaver, James Keysor, ' 31 James Weir, ' 30 Emanuel Martin, ' 33 Wm. Thomas, ' 32 William Willie, ' 30 ' 31 , ' 33 3 33 ' 33 ' 32 32 ' 32 ' 30 33 Top Row — Schmidt, Blaine, Renken, Weaver 2nd Row — Kase, Minter, Keyser 3rd Row — Butler, Weir, Patterson, Haigler 4th Row — Fries, Heter, Rahm 5th Row — Russell, Reid, Martin, Doyle 6th Row — Chaney, Bell, Ritter 7th Row — Nelson, Willey, Kennedy, Slocum PHI GAMMA DELTA Founded at Jefferson College, 1848 Chi Sigma Chapter Established at Colorado College, 1908 Flmver — Purple Clematis Color — Royal Purple MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY Guy H. Albright Ralph J. Gilmore Arthur G. Sharp, Jr. Stephen Allison, ' 33 William Anderson, ' 32 Hugh Baker, ' 32 William Baker, ' 33 John Bennett, ' 33 Arthur Bishop, ' 33 Harold Britton, ' 33 Charles Cogan, ' 32 Jerry Cogan, ' 30 John Cogan, ' 30 Earl Clark, ' 30 Mowbray Drummond, ' 32 Lloyd Ellis, ' 31 Jack Lasley, ' 31 ACTIVE MEMBERS Barret Griffith, ' 32 Harold Har mon, ' 30 Russell Henritze, ' 32 William Hinkley, ' 31 Carter Hutchinson, ' 31 Gene Lague, ' 33 John Metzi.er, ' 33 Rupert McClung, ' 32 Hartley Murray, ' 33 Frederick Nichols, ' 33 Barratt O ' Hara, ' 32 PLEDGES DuanE Osborn, ' 33 Mark Perkinson, ' 30 Jack Rorer, ' 33 Humphry Saunders, ' 31 William Southard, ' 30 Elvis Starbuck, ' 32 Leon Starbuck, ' 32 Robert Stillman, ' 33 Roy Yandenberg, ' 30 Richard Vanderhoof, ' William Van Dyke, ' 31 Ernest Waters, ' 32 Harold Weidman, ' 33 Ivan Schweninger, ' 32 31 Top Row — Weidman, J. P. Cogan, Britton, .Southard, Saunders, Metzler 2nd Row — Van Dyke, J. A. Cogan, W. Baker, Vandenberg, Clark, Rorer, Bishop 3rd Row — Perkinson, Murray, Ellis, Harmon, Hinkley 4th Row — E. Starbuck, C. Cogan, Vanderhoof, McClung 5th Row — Drummond, L. Starbuck, Nichols, Lague 0th Row Hutchinson, Bennett, Henritze, Anderson Flower — Rose BETA THETA PI Founded at Miami University, 1839 Gamma Delta Chapter Established at Colorado College, 1914 Members in the Faculty, Dr. J. Bradford Murphey Colors- Pink and Blue ACTIVE MEMBERS Harold Akin, ' 32 Roy Anderson, ' 32 William BeaTty, ' 33 Harry Blunt, ' 30 Albert Brown, ' 30 Winthrop Crouch, ' 32 Harold Cruzan, ' 33 F. Willard FalES, ' 31 Alvin Foote, ' 31 Albert Giesecke, ' 31 Clifford Goodson, ' 32 Edward Gray, ' 33 Charles Irwin, ' 31 Arthur Kelly, ' 32 Max KeyTE, ' 30 Jack Chestnolvitch, ' 33 PLEDGES Harry Matheson, ' 32 Charles McGrory, ' 32 T. E. Nowels, Jr., ' 31 Burton Paddock, ' 32 Harry Peterson, ' 32 Kenneth Pomeroy, ' 32 Gilbert Rice, ' 32 George Robinson, ' 30 Robert Shonsby, ' 31 Ralph Smith, ' 33 Milton Sprenger, ' 30 Everett Stapleton, ' 33 Dean Triggs, ' 32 Stewart Wilson, ' 30 Harry Wood, ' 32 John Miller, ' 33 ri k Top Row — Kelley, Anderson, Nowels, Brown, Wilson, Shonsby 2nd Row — Irwin, Sprenger, Giesecke, Miller, Beatty, Robinson, Akin 3rd Row — Stapleton, Fales, Grey, Rice, Foote, Paddock, Blunt 4th Row — Goodson, Triggs, Keyte, Crouch 5th Row — Wilder, Peterson, Chestnolvitch, Pomeroy, Matheson 6th Row — Cruzan, McGrory, Wood, R. Smith PHI DELTA THETA Founded at Miami University, 1848 Colorado Beta Chapter Established at Colorado College, 1913 Flower — White Carnation Colors — Azure and Argent MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY William T. Van de Graaff Wayne Campbell. ' 32 Ladislaus de Holczer Marion Deutsch, ' 33 Vern Eastman, ' 32 Richard Grant, ' 33 Bruce Gray, ' 32 Mervin Gulick, ' 33 Donald Haney, ' 33 William Haney, ' 32 Edgar Hartman, ' 32 Marks Jaillite, ' 30 Edwin Johnson, ' 33 Walter Knodel, ' 32 James Magruder, ' 32 Ormond Cox, ' 33 ACTIVE MEMBERS ' 33 PLEDGES Guy Martin, ' 32 James McElvain, ' 33 Joseph Mercer, ' 31 Dale Merritt, ' 31 Eugene Randall, ' 33 Harvey Reinking, ' 31 Robert Roark, ' 33 Henry Roebke, ' 31 Stanley Ryerson Thomas Scott, ' 31 Fred Short, ' 32 Kendrick Stone, ' 33 Glenn Wade, ' 30 Richard Young, ' 31 Frank Jasper, ' 33 33 Top Row — Haney, D. Scott, Reinking, Martin, Knodell 2nd Row — Magruder, Deutsch, T. Scott, Jaillite 3rd Row — Stone, Young, Wade, Grant, Short DELTA ALPHA PHI Flower- Carnation William C. Binkley Founded at Colorado College, 1924 MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY Charlie B. Hershev Colors — Silver and Green Frank M. Okey ACTIVE MEMBERS Charles Armstrong, ' 31 Clifford Brice, ' 32 George Burnham, ' 30 Robert Caldwell, ' 30 Earl Cochran, ' 32 Harold CotnER, ' 32 James Craig, ' 32 Edgar Gregory, ' 33 Donald Horton, ' 33 Clare Jencks, ' 30 George Kerr, ' 32 ShErbltrne Ayers, ' 33 Miller H. Stroup, ' 33 PLEDGES John Langum, ' 33 Winthrop Martin, ' 32 Thomas McCrory, ' 32 Gerald Miles, ' 32 Richard Ragles, ' 31 Richard Tubman, ' 31 James Turner, ' 33 John Veeder, ' 31 Paul Vestal, ' 30 Harold Westesen, ' 31 Richard Woodward, ' 30 Charles Barnes, ' 33 Raymond Pezoldt, ' 33 Top Row — Kerr, Armstrong, Ragle, Horton, Cochran 2nd Row — Ayers, Gregory, Veeder, Westesen 3rd Rou — Brice, Woodward, Craig, Wershing, Miles 4th Row — Vestal, Cotner, McCrory, Caldwell PI KAPPA ALPHA Founded at University of Virginia, 1868 Beta Rho Chapter founded at Colorado College, 1920 Flower — Lily of the Valley Colors — Garnet and Gold MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY Paul Boucher ACTIVE MEMBERS Kenneth Alderson, ' 33 Joseph Esch, ' 32 Sidney Harding, ' 33 Lyman Houghton, ' 33 Fred Jones, ' 33 Franklin Koerner, ' 33 Carl Kroph, ' 32 David McArthur, ' 33 Howard Olson Leighton Medill, ' 32 Owen Owens, ' 33 Ivan Ridge, ' 31 Loyd Roberts, ' 33 Richard Sanderson, ' 32 John Sandford, ' 31 Joseph Schneider, ' 33 Bert Vandervliet, ' 32 Clarence Williams DuanE Brough, ' 33 Lyman De Geer. ' 33 Leland Henrie, ' 33 PLEDGES James Thompson, ' 33 Robert White, ' 33 Roy Wilson, ' 33 Top Row — McArthur, Alderson, Sanford 2nd Row — Roberts, Williams 3rd Row— Ridge, Harding, Thompson INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL The Inter-Fraternity Council, composed of two representatives from each fraternity on the campus and two faculty members, has charge of all questions concerning fraternities such as pledging, intramural sports, and intramural functions. Edward Parker Charles Wilgus Marion Weaver William Van Dyke Glenn Wade Charles Irwin Paul Vestal KAPPA SIGMA John Thurston (First Semester) Frank Seeley (Second Semester) SIGMA CHI PHI GAMMA DELTA PHI DELTA THETA BETA THETA PHI PI KAPPA ALPHA Leighton Medill DELTA ALPHA PHI FACULTY Prof. Charles W. T. Penland James Patterson Earl Clark Henry Roebke Milton Sprenger John Veeder Prof. Otis A. Barnes Top Row — Seeley, Vestal, Patterson, Parker 2nd Row — Thurston, Wade, Van Dyke, Clark, Veeder 3rd Row — Sprenger, Irwin, Wilgus, Weaver societies Flower — White Rose Dorothy Graves MINERVA Founded at Colorado College, 1891 Colo MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY Catherine Hood Louise Kampf ACTIVE MEMBERS Blue and White Amanda Ellis Sonia Benderoff, ' 30 Genevieve Engle, ' 31 Mary Gallagher, ' 32 Margaret Gragg, ' 31 Alyce Ireland, ' 32 Betty Lansdowne, ' 32 Mary McConnell. ' 30 Grace Perkins, ' 31 Virginia Easton, ' 32 Marian Gretzinger, ' 32 Helen Hooper, ' 32 Matilda Willis PLEDGES Rebecca Todd. ' 32 Velma Rose, ' 32 Sarah Sheldon, ' 30 Doris Simmons, ' 30 Beth Smith, ' 30 Randalin Trippel, ' 30 Marian Weinberger, ' 32 Jane Whitecraft, ' 31 Frances Willis, ' 30 Kay Poland, ' 32 Garland Prather, ' 32 Margaret Southmayd, ' 33 Top Row — Benderoff, Poland, Ireland, Sheldon, Gragg 2nd Row — Whitecraft, M. Willis, Easton, F. Willis, Prather, Sharer 3rd Row — Weinberger, Rose, Perkins, Southmayd, Smith 4th Row — McConnell, Todd, Gallagher, Trippel, Lansdown, Engel CONTEMPORARY Founded at Colorado College, 1899 Flower — Carnation Colors— Red and White ACTIVE MEMBERS Mary Bloom, ' 32 Virginia Freudenberger, ' 31 Gladys Geraghty, ' 31 Helen Hageman, ' 30 Sarah Howells, ' 31 Elizabeth Kennedy, ' 32 Helen KnowlEs, ' 30 Virginia Patterson, ' 31 Katherine Powell, ' 31 Evelyn Stubblefield, ' 30 Marifrances Vollmer, ' 32 Lewis Wiley, ' 31 Jessie Fuson, ' 31 Marie Hagemeyer, ' 32 PLEDGES Elsie Winship, ' 32 Jean Johnson, ' 32 Charlotte Pipkin, ' 32 Top Row — Pipkin, Wiley, Freudenberger, Johnson, Winship 2nd Row — Stubblefield, Hagemeyer, Knowles, Powell, Vollmer 3rd Row — Kennedy, Fuson, Hageman, Geraghty, Bloom HYPATIA Founded at Colorado College, 1903 Flower — Daisy Colors — Green and White Alice Aaby, ' 30 Kdith Blotz, ' 31 Josephine Campbell, Elizabeth Crannell. Eva Crowder, ' 30 Virginia DailEy, ' 32 Virginia Dewey, ' 30 Lorna Dorlac, ' 31 Dorothy Faus, ' 30 ACTIVE MEMBERS 30 Letitia Finn, ' 30 Katherine Herbert. ' 32 Jane Lowell, ' 31 Maxine Moore, ' 31 Constance Postlethwaite. ' 32 Myra Reinking, ' 32 Lois Seebach, ' 31 Adda Smith, ' 32 Mildred Strachan. ' 32 Eleanor Watts, ' ? 2 PLEDGES Marguerite Smith, ' 32 Top Row — Moore, Watts, Dorlac 2nd Row- K. Herbert, Strachan, Crowder. Meston 3rd Row — Dewey, Reinking, Postlethwaite 4th Row — Campbell, Lowell, A. Smith, Finn 5th Row — Faus, Aaby, Crannell, Seebach, Blotz ZETALETHIAN Founded at Colorado College. 1026 Flower — White Chrysanthe mum Colors — Lavender and White ACTIVE MEMBERS Margery BarklEy, ' 30 Lois Brown, ' 31 Carol Edwards, ' 31 Alice Gillett, ' 32 Frances Glau, ' 30 Elizabeth Hayden, ' 30 Mildred Hazlett, ' 31 Jeannette Case, ' 30 Ruth Griffin, ' 31 Geneva Wildin, ' 31 PLEDGES Clydette Higginbottom, ' 31 Helen Hultman, ' 32 Emmalou McBroom, ' 30 Mary Sevier, ' 31 Mary Strachan, ' 31 Elizabeth Sweetman, ' 32 Geraldine Williams, ' 31 Jo Hildrich, ' 30 Lillian Turner, ' 32 Top Row — Edwards, Hayden, Strachan, Higginbottom, Williams 2nd Row — Barkley, Hazlett, Griffin, Wildin 3rd Row — Sevier, Case. Turner, Hultman, Glau INTER-SOCIETY COUNCIL The Intersociety Council is composed of two representatives from each of the four societies on the campus, the president of the Associated Women vStudents of Colorado College as an ex-officio member, and an advisory member. Advisory Member Mrs. W. Lewis Abbott The Associated Women Students Randalin Trippel, President Minerva Grace Perkins Genevieve Engel Hypatia Elizabeth Meston Lois Seebach Contemporary Helen Hageman Lewis Wiley Zethalethian Frances Glau Mary Sevier Top Row — Trippel, Seebach, Wiley, Glau, Meston 2nd Row — Sevier, Hageman, Perkins, Engel HONORARY 10 Top Row — Seeley, Hansman, Curry, Caldwell Second Row — Bissonnette, John Cogan, Keen, Merideth, Trippel Third Row — Jerry Cogan, Edwards, KnowlES, Ferguson PHI BETA KAPPA Founded at William and Mary College, 1776 Established at Colorado College, 1904 MEMBERvS IN THE FACULTY Martha Belschner Charles T. Latimer Edith C. Bramhall James G. MeMurtry Dorothy E. Breeze Charles C. Mierow Amanda M. Ellis Herbert E. Mierow Ralph J. Gilmore Charles H. Sisam Dorothv M. Graves Seeley K. Tompkins E. D. Hale William T. Van de Graaff A. B. Hulbert Margaret Bissonnette Robert Caldwell Jerry Cogan John Cogan Genevieve E. Currv SENIORS Carol Edwards William Ferguson JUNIORS Angeline Keen Helen Knowles Thomas Merideth Frank Seeley, Jr. Randalin Trippel Margaret Hansman !• • ?! Top Row — Woodward, John Cogan, Merideth, Burnham Second Row — Vestal, Keen, Curry, Jerry Cogan Third Row — Keyte, Wynn, Hammer, Ferguson DELTA EPSILON National Scientific Fraternity Founded at Colorado College, 1921 MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY O. A. Barnes Martha Belschner C. H. Boissevain P. B. Boucher F. W. Douglas W. F. Drea R. S. Ellis R. J. Gilmore George Burnham Jerry Cogan John Cogan Genevieve Curry C. B. Hershey Catherine Hood I. A. Keyte Alida Israel W. V. Lovitt H. E. Mathias F. M. Okey SENIORS William Ferguson Oscar Hammer Angeline Keen Max Keyte Virginia McKay Howard Olson C. B. Page Gordon Parker C. W. T. Penland W. W. Postlethwaite C. H. Sisam J. V. K. Wagar E. C. Wilm George Merideth Paul Vestal R. J. Woodward Clayton Wynn Top Row — Woodward, J. P. Cogan, Case, Knowles, Wilson 2nd Row — Adams, J. A. Cogan, Schaff 3rd Row — Gilbert, Keen, Edmondson, Hultman, Nelson ETA SIGMA PHI NATIONAL CLASSICAL FRATERNITY Founded at Chicago University, 1924 Established at Colorado College, 1926 MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY Elinor D. Breeze Dr. Charles C. Mierow Dr. Herbert E. Mierow Florence I. Smith Jeannette R. Case Jerry A. Cogan John Cogan Eileen Edmondson James Dodson Carlton R. White Dr. James G. McMurtry ACTIVE MEMBERS Helen Hultman Angeline Keen Robert B. Lackey Emmalou McBroom Helen V. Knowles PLEDGES Melba Adams Effie Gilbert Amanda M. Ellis Helen Nelson R. J. Woodward Alious Rockett Stewart G. Wilson Eleanor Schaff Wayne Robert Campbell Top Row — Tucker, Dentan, Henritze, Southard Second Row — Van Dyke, Thurston, Anderson, Baylis Third Row — Brown, Scott, Rice, Harmon ALPHA KAPPA PS I NATIONAL BUSINESS FRATERNITY Founded at New York University, 1904 Established at Colorado College, 1919 MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY A. P. R. Drueker W. D. Copeland William F. Earle W. W. Postlethwaite UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS William Anderson Arthur Baylis Nelson Brown Paul Conover Frank Dentan Joseph Eseh Thomas Estill Harold Harmon Russell Henritze Oliver Hill Clare Jeneks Gilbert Rice Ivan Ridge David Seott William P. Southard, Jr. John Thurston De Witt Tucker William Van Dyke Ernest Waters Top Row — Vestal, Cogan, Clark, Harmon Second Row — Jones, Weir, Wilson, Jaillite, Blunt Third Row — Sprenger, Parker, Weaver RED LANTERN CLUB The Red Lantern Club is the senior men ' s honor organization of Colorado College. Twelve men are selected in the spring of their junior year on the basis of their record of achievement during their first three years. The purpose of the club is to promote all worthy activities and to encourage school spirit. HONORARY MEMBER Dr. Harry Woodward ACTIVE MEMBERS Harry Blunt Earl Clark John Cogan Harold Harmon Marks Jaillite Thomas Jones Albert Brown ALUMNI IN SCHOOL Roy Vandenberg Edward Parker Milton Sprenger Paul Vestal Marion Weaver (President) James Weir Stewart Wilson Glenn Wade Top Row — Brown, Wildin, Keyser Second Roiv — Seeley, Caldwell, Baylis TAU KAPPA ALPHA National Forensic Fraternity Founded at Butler University, 1908 Established at Colorado College, 1916 William D. Copeland Amanda M. Ellis Arthur Baylis Nelson Brown MEMBERS Bert Vandervliet PLEDGE Roland Anderson James Keyser Frank Seeley, Jr. Robert Caldwell Geneva Wildin THETA ALPHA PHI NATIONAL DRAMATIC FRATERNITY Founded at Oklahoma A. M., 1918 Established at Colorado College, 1919 MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY W. D. Copeland A. G. Sharp, Jr. ACTIVE MEMBERS Harold Harmon Gordon Minter SIGMA DELTA PS I NATIONAL HONORARY ATHLETIC FRATERNITY Founded at LTniversity of Indiana, 1912 Established at Colorado College, 1914 MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY C. C. Mierow F. M. Okey Guy H. Albright A. B. Hulbert W. D. Copeland ACTIVE MEMBERS Earl Clark Edward Parker Glenn Wade CAnPtfS 4fr -4 . Top Row — Drummond, M. Willis, Nichols, Saunders, Crannell, Hinkley 2nd Row — Tucker, Moore, Thurston, Williams, Lester 3rd Row — Campbell, Chaney, Tremayne, Gallagher, Bishop, Dorlac 4th Row — Van Dyke, Minter, Lague, Harmon 5th Row — M. Strachan, Renken, Blotz, F. Willis, Peterson, M. L. Strachan nth Row — Watts- Johnson, Southard, Doyle, Keyser, Engel KOSHARE DRAMATIC CLUB The Koshare Dramatic Club is the play producing organization of the college. It selects its members on the basis of demonstrated dramatic ability or stage craft. OFFICERS President Harold Harmon Vice-President Mary Strachan Recording Secretary. Josephine Campbell Corresponding Secretary.. Mowbray Drummond MEMBERS Hugh Baker Harold Harmon Humphry Saltnders Arthur Bishop William Hinkley William Southard Edith Blotz Evelyn Hummel Mary Strachan Morley Brandenborg James Keyser Mildred Strachan Josephine Campbell Gene Lague John Thurston Loren Chaney Jack Lasley DeWitt Tucker Elizabeth Crannell Ward Lester Suzanne Walker Lorna Dorlac Gordon Minter Jeannette Watts-Johnson Robert Doyle Maxine Moore Geraldine Williams Mowbray Drummond Frederick Nichols Frances Willis Genevieve Engel Kenneth Peterson Matilda Willis Mary Gallagher Kenneth Renken Clifford Vessey Top Row — MacDonald, Campbell, McCleary, A. Smith, Frame 2nd Row — K. Herbert, M. Herbert, Ireland, Sharer, F. Willis 3rd Row — Strachan, Sherk, Reinking, Skidmore, Ormsby 4th Row — Chamberlain, Horn, Horan, Easton, Postlethwaite CRESCENT CLUB The Crescent Club is a social organization composed of girls from the sophomore and fresh- man classes. Its purpose is to further the social interests of underclass girls. first semester Katherine Herbert Adda Smith Myra Reinking Constance Postlethwaite Mildred Strachan OFFICERS President ... Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Social Chairman. MEMBERS Josephine Campbell Dorothy Chamberlain Isabel Conroy Virginia Easton Katherine Herbert Martha Herbert Jean Horan Dorothy Horn Alyce Ireland Ruth McDonald Ruth Tom Frame PLEDGES Eleanor McCleary second semester Adda Smith ..Frances Willis Mildred Strachan Constance Postlethwaite .Josephine Campbell Phyllis Ormsby Constance Postlethwaite Myra Reinking Martha Sharer Gretchen Sherk Elizabeth Skidmore Adda Smith Marguerite Smith Mildred Strachan Frances Willis Jane Hedrick Top Row — Stubblefield, Aaby, Johnson, Rambo, Meston 2nd Row — Azar, Sheldon, Crowder 3rd Row- Hayden, Case, Hageman, Hiller, Smith DAIS The Dais is an organization composed of all senior women who live in the dormitories. Guests of honor are always entertained at the Dais in the dining room at Bemis Hall. Formal dinners are held from time to time throughout the year at the Dais. The senior women may make and enforce dining room rules if they so desire. The Dean of Women is an ex-ofhcio member of the Dais. MEMBERS Alice Aaby, President Selma Azar Jeannette Case Eva Crowder Helen Hageman Elizabeth Havden Viola Johnson Elizabeth Meston Ruth Rambo Sarah Sheldon Elizabeth Smith Evelyn Stubblefield Louise Hiller Top Row — Rhoads, Huffman, McCleary, Frederick Second Row — Thompson, Keen, Todd, F. Pickett Third Row — Bowe, Hazlett, Wiley, G. Pickett EUTERPE MUSICAL SOCIETY Euterpe Musical Society was organized by Dean Hale of the School of Music in 1910. The purpose of the organization is to aid the advancement of music at Colorado College. Students enrolled in the School of Music are eligible for membership. MEMBERS Dean E. D. Hale Mrs. John Speed Tucker Miss Beryl Griswold Mrs. Myrtle Bridges Mrs. Emilie Reutlinger Mr. Edwin A. Dietrich Mrs. Beatrice Barnes Florence Bowe Vona Brown Elizabeth Brown Dorothy Crews Ethel B ' ley Smith Marion Gretzinger Alice Gillett Lois Frederick Mildred Hazlett Helen Huffman Jack Kintz William Layton Elinor McCleary Florence Pickett Georgia Pickett Margaret Rhoads Angeline Keen Esther Stuewe Rebecca Todd Helen Thompson Mrs. Bessie Trevorrow Dorothy Underwood Nina Vette Margaret Wolever Robert Speegle Mrs. Joseph Friedman Estelle Friedman Lewis Wiley Cecil Clark Top Row — Hazlett, K. Herbert, Dorlac, Grago, Engel 2nd Row — Dewey, Meston, Faus, M. Herbert, Whitecraft 3rd Row — .Sheldon, Smith. Lowell, Crannell 4th Row — Seebach Strachan, Crowder, Horan, F. Willis Exclamation Club Top Row — Wade, Blunt, Doyle, Paddock, Anderson, Miller, Waters 2nd Row — Ingraham, Brown, Drummond, Deutsch, Vandenberg, Pomeroy 3rd Row — Weaver, Tucker, Thurston, Southard, Reid, de Holczer, Ryerson, Clark, Irwin, Rice 4th Row — Fries, Patterson, Roark, Schmidt. Henritze, Foote, Heter The Question Club Tow Row — W. Haney, Wastesen, Vestal, Veeder, Griffith, Doyle, Armstrong 2nd Row — Blodgett, Nowels, Van Dyke, Vanderhoof, Hess, Kales 3rd Row — McClung, C. Cogan, Vickerman, Figge 4th Row — Thurston, Tucker, Giesecke, Peterson, Hammer, Reinking 5th Row — Brown, Young, D. Haney, Keyser, Roebke THE GROWLERS ' CLUB The Growlers ' Club, the Colorado College Men ' s pep organization, is composed of members selected from the various fraternities and from the independent group, on a representative basis. The purpose of the organization is to promote school spirit, especially in athletic contests. The Growlers attend the inter-collegiate games in a group, and usually present special features or stunts between halves. They also take an active part in pep meetings. Top Row — Watts, Ireland, Lansdown, Wiley, Vollmer, Strachan 2nd Row — K. Herbert, Killian, Stubblefield, Edwards, Sevier, Hageman, Williams 3rd Row — Campbell, Reinking, E. Smith, Willis, A. Smith, Kennedy THE TIGER CLUB The Tiger Club is an organization composed of members selected from the women ' s societies and from the non-society group. Its purpose is to secure organized support for all worthwhile campus activities, particularly athletics. The group attends inter-collegiate games in a body, and often arranges special features or stunts to be presented between halves. The Tiger Club also takes part in some of the more important pep meetings. 1 1 Top Row — Thomas, Walker, Swenson, Tubman, Mason 2nd Row — Engstrom, E. Starbuck, Camp, Wershing, Sturgis 3rd Row — Prof. Wagar, Brandborg, Burshears, Kase. Horton, Prof. Parker The Pikes Peak Foresters ' Club The Foresters ' Club was organized by students majoring in forestry. The purpose of the organization is to promote a spirit of good fellowship among those interested in the subject. Students in the Department of Forestry are brought into closer contact with each other than are those in other departments due to the fact that each year they spend several weeks together at Camp Colorado where they study the trees in the Manitou Forest. The club is under the supervision of Professor Gordon Parker and J. V. K. Wagar of the Department of Forestry. Top Row — Wade, Weaver, Henritze, Pomeroy, Sprenger 2nd Row — Ingraham, Akin, Clark, Heter, Triggs, Emery, Hayden, Doyle, Warning Blunt 3rd Row — HinklEy, L. Starbuck, Scott, Southard, Yandenberg, Reid, Parker, Hammer, Slocum, Cogan C CLUB The Colorado College C Club is composed of men who have won letters in varsity sports. It is the honor roll in athletics. HONORARY MEMBERS FOR LIFE W. C. Jones Dr. Shaffer Dr. MacKinnie C. E. Shorb O. E. Mclntyre O. H. Shoup Dr. Mullin P. W. Woods D. G. Patterson Dr. Woodward Harold Akin Earl Harry Clark John Cogan Robert Doyle Franklin Emery Stan Geshell Oscar Hammer William Haney Raymon Hayden Russell Henritze Ralph Heter William Hinkley Oliver Hill ACTIVE MEMBERS Franklin Koerner Harold Ingraham Charles Irwin Lyle Jones Guy Martin Charles McGrory James Magruder Edward Parker Kenneth Pomeroy Richard Ragle Harold Rea Juan Reid Robert Shonsby Walter Slocum Elvis Starbuck Leon Starbuck William Southard Dean Triggs Roy Vandenberg Glen Wade Donald Warning Ernest Waters Marion Weaver R. J. Woodward fyirit ' Beauty honors 12 iss Priscilla T Second Beauty honors t hird Beauiy honors ® ® ® ® © M © © i@ 5® i@ ® i© In my opinion, Alyce Ireland Ivill qualify for first place in the O s (ugget beauty Qontesl for 193 1 with Vriscilla Roodd, second Eleanor IjDatts, third — and aru honorable mention for ( YCarion zMacoMillan. ©? g © . @? ©? ®1 (3 ®4 ©? @? @i @J? ®i ©P 1 . @? § ©V § . © (SA we g ©? Sg ©? 3 © §k ©e (§A ©C- Is ©? © . ©V sfc @ @ ©? I . ©? © sg ©? ®X ©V fe @ ■i cossirr J9 ' 4 ' vO ATHLerrcs vA4i V-X At i ! Dutch Clark — All American Quarterback A letter in every major sport, twice captain of the basketball team, captain of the football team, and Ail-American quarter-back — these are some of the outstanding accomplishments of Colorado College ' s greatest athlete, Earl Harry (Dutch) Clark. To alumni of the college he has brought fulfillment of their dreams of a nation wide reputation in athletics for the Black and Gold; for us — his classmates — no small share of reflected glory; and for future Tigers, a record which they may well strive to emulate. COACHING STAFF Coach Van de Graaff COACH WILLIAM T. VAN DE GRAAFF Coach Bully Van de Graaff completed this year his fourth season as head coach and director of ath- letics at Colorado College. During this time he has developed champion- ship contenders each vear. Though handicapped by an extremely small squad, hardly two full teams, Van de Graaff has made the Tiger teams feared on every campus in the Rocky Mountain Conference. Before coming to Colorado Col- lege, Bully served as an assistant coach at the F niversity of Alabama, his Alma Mater. In his under-graduate days, Van de Graaff played tackle for the Crimson Horde, receiving Ail-American tackle selection. After being graduated from Alabama, he went to West Point where he played three years at tackle for the Army. Besides being a football coach of the first water, Bully is a man of the character who can instill the highest type of sportsmanship and loyalty into his men. To this, even more than to his ability as coach, the Tigers attribute their successes. COACH WALTER HUGHES Coach Hughes has been connected with the Tiger coaching staff for three years. In 1927 he served as Frosh mentor, and since then as an assistant varsity coach. This year, Coach Hughes has taken over the baseball squad, and pre-season games point to a stellar Bengal nine for 1930. Walt is a former Tiger football star, and was also on the receiving end of the famous Hughes-Hughes battery. COACHING STAFF Coach Herigstad, serving his first year at Colorado College, comes from Central High School at Pueblo where he was head coach. Ole holds the position of assis- tant football coach and head coach in basketball. Under his direction the Bengal five were Eastern Division title con- tenders, losing to the C. U. team. Although his team started slowly, Ole had the Black and Gold hoop- sters playing first rate ball at the end of the season, and has trained some good material for next year. Coach Herigstad While an undergraduate at Aggies, Herigstad played end on the football team, and alternated between center and guard on the basketball floor. COACH IRISH Coach Irish for four years has coached the Tiger track team. In his under-graduate days at the University of Illinois, he was captain of the fresh- man varsity track team. In 1917, Jo was chosen on the official All- American track team as broad jumper. FRED PICKARD Coach Pickard also came to Colorado College from Alabama where he was All-American tackle for two years. Pickard served as line coach for the Bengals. MANAGERS Coach Jo Irish Jo Irish, track coach and graduate manager, is to a great extent responsible for Colorado College ' s successes in athletics. As a track coach he has put out squads which finished high in the meets of the conference, and has brought out several conference record breakers. Irish holds such records as 24 feet in the broad jump, 6 feet 2}4 inches in the high jump, and 9 4-5 seconds for the hundred. In 1917 he was chosen on the All-American for the broad jump. In this business of football and other varsity athletics, the graduate manager ' s efficiency has gradually brought Colorado College athletics back on a sound financial basis. Assisting Irish are student managers who are assigned to various sports. THIS YEAR ' S STUDENT MANAGERS Football James Weir Basketball. Russell Henritze and Gerald Miles Track — Russell Henritze Baseball Richard Grant Trainer — .William Anderson Equipment Manager. ... - - Robert Lackey Weir Lackey Anderson FOOTBALL FOOTBALL REVIEW OF THE SEASON FOR 1930 From a squad of less than twenty-five candidates, Coach Bullv Van de Graaff built a team that was heralded as the most feared in the conference. Forming his offense around Dutch Clark, All-American quarterback, Van de Graaff put what was probably the strongest Tiger team of all times in the field. The following men received letters: Captain Clark, Ingraham, Hinkley, Cogan, Southard, Hayden, Irwin, Weaver, Rea, Warning, Ried, L. Starbuck, E. Starbuck, Jones, McGrory. ALL-CONFERENCE SELECTIONS End Watkins Tackle Botzman Guard Graves Center Jonas . .. Guard Olsen Tackle. Simpkins University of LJtah Denver University Colo. Agricultural College University of Utah University of Utah University of Utah End Worthington .... Montana State College Quarterback Clark Colorado College Halfback Price University of Utah Halfback. Somerhays. . University of Utah Fullback—. ...Pomeroy University of Utah .. ( j v . . i: -•- ' ' To ? JJot — Herigstad, Coach, E. Starbuck, Heter, Weaver, Rea, Ingraham, Warning, Cogan, McGrory, Van de Graaff, Coach 2nd Row — Pickard, Coach, Hayden, Southard, Irwin, Hinkley, Clark, Jones, Hartman, Martin, Campbell 3rd Row — Anderson, Trainer, Matheson, L. Starbuck, Reid, Pomeroy, Triggs, Nowels, Lackey, Equipment Manager FRESHMAN FOOTBALL Under Coaches Vandenburg and Roessner, the Frosh carried out success- fully the unpleasant task of providing opposition for the Varsity. Fort D. A. Russell invaded Washburn Field for the first game. This game showed the potential strength of the yearlings although the Army men won by a 12 to 6 score. The following week, the Wyoming Frosh invaded the Jungle and fought the Tiger cubs to a standstill. Neither team was able to muster sufficient offensive strength to push over a score. A great defensive battle was the result of the Denver invasion. A soggy field handicapped the ballcarriers, and the result was another scoreless tie. Gunnison was the scene of the only serious defeat suffered by the Fresh- men. The experience and co-operation of the men on the Mountaineer eleven proved to be too much for the Tiger cubs. Western State won by a 33 to score. In the season ' s final game, the Frosh defeated the Grand Junction College team. An improvement in both individual and team play was responsible for the success of the first year men. The final score was 15 to 7. Top Row — Vandenberg (Coach), Deutsch. Bradshaw, De Holtczer, Roark, Walters. Thomas, Sghnurr, Allison, Stillman, Wiedman, Moffat, Ryan, Roessner (Coach) 2nd Row — Willey (Manager), Butler, Rorer, Beatty, Fries, Owens, Stapleton, Hall, Jones, Rahm, Pulliam, Onufrock, Grant, (Manager) 3rd Row — Chestnolvitch, O ' Hara, Critz, Butterfield, Pomeroy, McCluskey, Smith, Hilligoss, Brough, Martin, Yandemoer, Mercer, Dial, Markley, Metzler Colorado College 14 In the second game of the season, a fighting Tiger team took the field determined to upset the Aggie jinx, and after sixty minutes of magnifi- cent football, the Bengals emerged with a 14 to 13 victory. The Black and Gold line played inspired ball and endeared itself to every Tiger follower. Leon Starbuck and Mc- Grory were towers of strength in the forward wall. L. STARBUCK A long pass, Clark to Ingraham, by Hinkley, was responsible for the period, after a series of successful end run for the second Bengal points after touchdown with perfect The Aggies made a great come- short of tying the Tigers ' lead, the Farmers crashed over for two dropkick was blocked by Cogan, This was the first time that C. C. :ultural College 13 1 B i ' tea V kI ' •I CLARK McGRORY coupled with beautiful interference first Tiger score. In the second passes, Clark made a sensational touchdown. Dutch scored both dropkicks. back in the last half that fell just Using power plays built around Day touchdowns, but the first attempted Tiger end. had defeated Aggies in four years. Colorado College 3 Denver University 2 The C. C. -Denver game, the season opener, did not bring out the brand of football which the Tigers displayed in their other games, but it will long he remem- bered for its many thrilling moments Throughout, the game was more like a movie thriller than a foot- ball game. With less than two minutes to play and the Pioneers IRWIN leading 2 to 0, Dutch Clark kicked yard line. To make things more ball went directly over one of the was the score allowed. Another spectacular run by the D. U. three yard line where he was that he ' fumbled the ball and C. C. The Pioneers made their only a Tiger back was caught behind his for a safety. £l Following the game, a Clark, a first class Denver - man, defeats a great tribute to a great player. INGRAHAM HINKLEY a field goal from the thirty-three like a college football picture, the uprights and not until some minutes exciting feature of the game was a captain from mid-field to the Tiger ' s brought down by Clark so hard recovered. tally early in the second period when own goal giving D. U. two points paper carried the headline, ' Dutch ' Denver, a first class team. Truly Colorado College o Utah Agricultural College 10 In journeying to Utah, the Tigers met their first defeat at the hands of the Utah Aggie eleven at Ogden. The C. C. team was greatly handi- capped by injuries, Weaver being forced to retire after the first few plays because of injuries sustained in practice, while Cogan, Reid, and Heter were hurt in the game to an extent which undoubtedly slowed them up. SOUTHARD The Aggie touchdown came by runs which the Tigers were unable The Bengal line showed up well, Aggies completely, and forcing them play. McGrory and L. Starbuck ing in an almost perfect defensive HAYDKN COGAN virtue of a series of passes and end to solve. for the most part stopping the to rely solely on an open style of were outstanding in the line, turn- game. Colorado College 3 University of Utah 12 A crushing defeat was the best the newspapers could see in store for the C. C. team in its homecom- ing game with the powerful Ute eleven. The Tigers lost, but it was a defeat more glorious than any of their victories. While the game was yet in its infancy, Captain Clark kicked a field goal which was the first thrill in one of the greatest football games ever played on Washburn Field. REID Eight times the Utes advanced line; six times the Bengals repelled line in the conference, the Black and crumble, and the two times that were able to break through to after touchdown. Coach Van de Graaff ' s team was rushes of such great backs as Pom- played his usual great game, and far above the expectations of even JONES WEAVER the ball beyond the Tiger ten yard the onslaught. Before the best Gold forward wall refused to Utah was successful the C. C. men thwart the attempt for the point the only one to check the charging eroy and Price. Dutch Clark every other Tiger reached heights the most ardent Tiger fans. Colorado College 54 Western State College 21 Playing a driving game that broke down the weaker Western State line, the Tigers ran through their opponents almost at will to win by the one-sided score of 54 to 2 1 . The Mountaineers were completely out- played and out-witted in practically every department of the game. The game was a walkaway for the Tigers from the start till the final period, but with only a few minutes to play Western State opened up a REA dazzling passing attack which was final gun found the Tigers still un- led by Captain Rickard, stellar end The Mountaineers ' comeback was the lead piled up by the Black and scored almost at will for the Tigers, put him in the lead for high-scorer The Starbuck brothers and Mc- formers in the line, while Ed Hart- field. WARNING good for three touchdowns. The able to solve the attack which was on the Gunnison eleven. not enough, however, to overcome Gold aggregation. Captain Clark turning in a total of 34 points which of the conference. Grory were the outstanding per- man played brilliantly in the back- E. STARBl ' CK Colorado College 7 Colorado University 1 3 In spite of a great comeback in the second half, the Tigers were unable to overcome State ' s early lead, and came out of the game on the short end of a 13 to 7 score. The C. C. aerial attack reached its height in this game, and had it not been for the slippery field the Tigers might have been even more dangerous in the overhead game. A long pass, Ingraham to Clark, and a beautiful run that proved the HARTMAN Dutchman ' s All-American ability touchdown. The passing combi- good for many yards until the latter of a knee injury. C. U. displayed a great running Reagan. Each of these men was only after repeated thrusts at the Tiger line. Clark starred both on offense and Grory were towers of strength. POMEROY was responsible for the only Tiger nation of Clark to Ingraham was was forced from the game because attack featuring Captain Smith and able to cross the Tiger goal line, but stubborn defense put up by the defense, while Ingraham and Mc- HETER Colorado College 1 3 Colorado Mines o Due to the fact that Captain Dutch Clark had gained such a reputation throughout the country, the college authorities scheduled his last appearance on the gridirons of the conference in his home town, Pueblo. The Tigers closed their 1929 season on Thanksgiving day with a 13 to victory over the Miners. The game was hard fought with AKIN many thrills, chief of which was a Captain Carr of the Orediggers who team. The whole game was feat- and Clark who, time after time, Two reserve backs, Akin and game giving promise of great things buck played their usual outstanding turned in a great game also. In the carried the brunt of the attack. Four seniors, Clark, Cogan, careers in a blaze of glory. PARKER 62 yard run, back of a kick-off by almost eluded the entire Bengal ured by spectacular runs by Carr brought the spectators to their feet. Pomeroy, found themselves in this next year. McGrory and L. Star- game in the line while Hayden backfield, Clark and Ingraham Southard, and Parker ended their DR. WOODWARD 111 - 5 1 1 I ■■-■.•■ : BA5K6TBALL Under the coaching of Ole Herigstad, the 1930 basketball team came within an ace of put- ting C. C. in her old position at the top of the conference standing. After getting away to a slow start, the Tigers started a scoring streak that carried them from the cellar position up to within striking distance of the championship. Due to defeat at the hands of Western State, and one at the hands of the Teachers, the Bengals took third place in the per- cent column. Their strength may be shown by Captain Clark the fact that they tied a brace of games with the strong Wyoming five, and lost the title by splitting with the champion State team when they needed both games to take the Eastern Division. The season opened with the Tigers working far from smoothly, losing two pre-season games to Kansas Aggies, two to De Paul, and their first two con- ference games to Teachers and Western State respectively. In the second game with Western State, the Tigers were able to gain a victory, but suffered defeat in their next contest at the hands of Denver University. Following a little shift in the lineup, however, the Black and Gold five settled down to uphold the C. C. reputation and took seven straight games. The feature of the 1930 basketball season in the Rocky Mountain Conference was the two game series between C. C. and C. U. The Bengals needed both games to head the division, but lost the first one, after a terrific battle, by three points. Although they were able to even things up with the Boulder five the next night by a 39 to 36 victory, because of defeats suffered at the beginning of the season, the title went up- state. The team was led this year by Captain Dutch Clark who finished his fourth and last Captain-Elect Ingraham year with the hoop squad. His brilliant floor work and heady generalship have drawn the admiration and plaudits of fans for four years, and he has placed on all-conference teams each season. Prospects for next year are even better than they were this year: Ingraham, Waters, Doyle, Sloeum, Hinklev, Reid, Martin, and others of the regular squad will be back. The team will be led by Harold Inky Ingraham who has served the Tiger Colors for two years on the basketball floor and is well- known for his bullet-like passes and his accurate shooting. Last year, due to a leg injury received in football, Inky was on the sidelines, but he came back this year to uphold adequately the reputation made in his freshman year. BASKETBALL Pop Slocum was a newcomer to the Bengal team this year, and set the conference on fire by his meteoric rise in the scoring column. Last year, he wasted his efforts on fraternity basketball, but this year, he alternated with Doyle on the forward end of the team. He is slated for two more stripes. Bill Hinkley will return next season for his fourth stripe in basketball. His work at guard cinched his berth on the first five, and as a sideline, he has pulled several games out of the fire with his long shots. Juan Reid turned in a perfect score at guard this season, playing his second year with the team. He will be back for two more stripes on the hoop squad, as well as another pair in football. J Slocum Guy Martin played a second string guard last year but earned his letter in the latter part of the season by action in several hoop games. He has two more years before graduating. Hinkley Reid BASKETBALL Loren Chaney, a newcomer in the Bengal ranks, played a reserve guard, getting into several games. He will be back bidding for a regular position, next year. Ernie Waters, diminutive forward, was the fightinest player on the squad this season. What he lacked in avoirdupois and altitude, he more than made up in scrap. He has two more years. Bob Doyle made his second letter in basketball as a forward. Doyle is a fast clever man and has a dead eye for the hoop. Fries, rangy center and for- jb ward, showed up well on the sec- ' ■  ond string. His height will be of ' •k | j considerable advantage to the Tigers next year. MXS I Chaney £ fto i n ma WJfcfr mMft • . Fries Waters Doyle ALL-CONFERENCE SELECTIONS Forward Davis .... ...Utah Agricultural College Forward ...Parkinson, Utah Agricultural College Coder Ward Montana State College Guard Clark Colorado College Guard ...Coughlin ...University of Wyoming CONFERENCE STANDING WON Colorado University 1 1 University of Wyoming 7 Colorado College 9 Colorado Teachers College 7 Denver University 7 Western State College 6 Colorado Agricultural College . 4 Colorado School of Mines 1 LOST I ' CT. 3 .786 3 .700 5 .643 7 .500 7 .500 6 .500 10 .286 11 .091 Top Row — Smith, Ingraham, Reid, Fries, Slocum, Butler, Warning, Herigstad (Coach) 2nd Row — Owens, Waters, Hinkley, Clark, Doyle, Ryerson, Martin, Chaney 3rd Row — Miles (Manager), Anderson (Trainer), Van Dyke, Irish (Graduate Manager), Grant, Allison, Schmidt, Lackey (Equipment Manager) sPRing sports BASEBALL Captain Wade Baseball last year met with little success, with the nine holding the cellar position in final conference percentage columns. The team played six games but failed to win any. Under Captain Glenn Wade, the squad played at Fort Collins, Denver, and Boulder, with two games in each place. Ineligibility hit the team last year as well as this, and as a result, the nine was considerably weakened from lack of experienced players. This season there are three letter men of last year that failed to pass the required ten hours or came under the five year ruling. These are Triggs, Wade, and vScott. Blunt, Hill, Ingraham, Hinkley, Pomeroy, and Sprenger are all letter men and are playing this season. BASEBALL ' %HP Captain-Elect Pomeroy At the time of going to press, the squad had divided a brace of games with the State Teachers ' nine, in games played at Greeley. Ken Pomeroy was elected to head the squad for the season in the place of Glenn Wade. Results of last season ' s games were as follows: Colorado Aggies, 13, (at Fort Collins). Colorado Aggies, 15, (at Fort Collins). Denver University, 14, (at Denver). Denver University, 7, (at Denver). Colorado University, 5, (at Boulder). Colorado University, 4, (at Boulder). Batteries for all games were Anderson, Hinkley, Wade, Jacobs, and vSprenger. Colorado College, 5 Colorado College, 8 Colorado College, 3 Colorado College, 3 Colorado College, Colorado College, 2 Top Row — Robinson (Assistant Manager), Peterson (Manager), Rex, Pomeroy, Reinking, Baker, Reid, Twitchell (Coach), Slate (Trainer) 2nd Row — Triggs, Hinkxey, Hill, Sprenger, Blunt, Yoltng, Wade (Captain), Jacobs BASEBALL 1929 THE LINEUP Wade Catcher Jacobs and Anderson Pitchers Elunt ... 1st Base HiLL- 2nd Base Hinkley... 3rd Base Triggs Short Stop Scott... -Left Field Pomeroy... Center Field Young Right Field Top Row — Slate (Trainer), Groves, Jones, Crouch, Cochran, Magruder, Haney 2nd Row — Irish, (Coach), Cogan, Lamberson, Slocum, Prince, L. Starbuck, Hammer, Baggs (Manager) 3rd Row — Penberthy, Clark, Lackey, Schisler, Parker (Captain). Eastwood, Alexander THE TRACK SQUAD 100 yard dash. Schisler, Lackey 220 yard dash .Schisler, Lackey 440 yard dash Haney, Penberthy, Smith Half mile... ...Woodward, Magruder, Groves Mile Hammer, Cogan Two mile... Parker High hurdles. . ...Vandenberg Low hurdles Vandenberg, Prince High jump Slocum, Crouch, Alexander Broad jump Eastwood Pole vault Vandenberg Shot put Clark Discus Clark Javelin .. ' .... Schisler Hammer Clark, Lamberson, L. Starbuck Parker SEASON OF 1929 In the Colorado relays, at Boulder, the Bengals placed fourth by taking second in the mile relay, (Prince, Schisler, Penberthy, Haney) and third in the two mile relay (Prince, Hammer, Parker, Schisler). Final results were: C. U. 28, Colorado Aggies 17, D. U. 9, C. C. 5, Wyoming 3, Teachers 2, Chadron Normal 2. By the next year, the Tigers had developed into a serious threat and finished a strong second: Wyoming 74, C C. 60, Teachers 40. First and second in the 440 and in the two mile, first in the broad jump, first in the discus, first in the relay, with several thirds and fourths went to the Black and Gold men. In the discus, the Tigers placed three men, Clark, Lamb- erson, and L.Starbuck, Dutch making the toss. Clark P iF l On May 11, the Bengals took in Denver University to the tune of 79 to 61, and the next week at the Eastern Division meet at Denver, C. C. placed third with eight schools compet- ing. A feature of the meet was the discus event in which Beatty of Aggies, Clark of C. C, and Clark of D. U. all broke the con- ference record, the last-named winning the throw. At the conference meet at Salt Lake City, Colorado College finished sixth among twelve entries. Placing Tigers were: Schisler, second in the 440; Barker, second in the two mile; Prince, second in the 220 hurdles; Clark, third in the hammer throw. Jh Eastwood Haney SEASON OF 1929 Track, during the last season, was hampered by the cold and rainy weather which continued through the training season. The squad, how- ever, added several victories to C. C. track and field history, as well as finishing high in divisional meets held on both sides of the Rockies. Ed Parker captained the squad last season, and will head it again this year. He is the class of the two-milers of the conference, and made a name for himself in two events at the National A. A. U. meet held in Denver last summer. Hammer Penberthy Magruder Lackey The team was hard hit by graduation, and less than a half dozen of last year ' s squad will be back next year. Four- teen won letters, including Parker, Clark, Hammer, Haney, Eastwood, Lackey, Penberthy, Prince, Schisler, Slocum, Smith, Vandenberg, Woodward, and Magruder. In the first meet of the season, on April 13, the Tigers were overwhelmed by the strong C. U. team by a score of 110 to 30. Captain Parker, in the two mile, and Clark, in the weights, made the only two first places for the Tigers. Prince THE LETTER-MEN Ed Parker, captain and captain-elect. Star distance man, and National A. A. U. junior champion in the mile steeplechase. Dutch Clark, performs in the weight events; holds the National A. A. U. junior championship in the hammer; has one more year of track. Oscar Hammer, runs the mile and two mile, will be back for another letter next vear. Bill Haney, made his letter in the 440 and relay. As he is only a freshman, he should do big things before he graduates. Art Eastwood, four letter man in the broad jump, one of the Tigers ' most consistent point gainers. Bob Lackey, speed mer- chant in the century and fur- long, will graduate this year. Schisler fim Magruder, half-miler. Another freshman who will be heard from in the future. Penney Penberthy, made his letter in the 440 and in the Relay Carnival. v Al Prince, freshman sprint- er; runs both the dashes and the hurdles. Schis Schisler, last year ' s captain. He runs the dashes, and is always good for points in the javelin throw. Pop Slocum, high jumper and another first year man. Henry Smith, earned a letter in the relay. Swede Vandenberg, four letter man. The Tiger ' s mainstay in the hurdles, and also a pole vaulter. R. J. Woodward made his letter in the half mile. Slocum WIMOR SPORTS TENNIS Due partly to the lack of material, and partly to the inclement weather that prevailed last spring, the Tennis Team did not make a clean sweep of its matches for the season. Franklin Koerner heads the squad for this year, coming into the berth with a good record in last year ' s matches, as well as putting the school on the tennis map in tournaments in the state last summer. Captain Danson, of last year ' s squad, played a consistent game and won a good share of the matches for the team. Geshell, Koerner, Waters, and Danson were all awarded letters at the end of the season. Top Row — Lamberson, Danson (Captain), Koerner Front Row — Waters, Geshell GOLF Golf, a sport in which the Tigers usually have led in the conference, suffered a set-back in the 1929 season. Matches were played at Wellshire, Broadmoor, Lakewood, and Cherry Hills, the squad ending up in the center of the per- centage column at the end of the season. Armstrong turned in the low net score at the conference meet at Cherry Hills, but the team score was not sufficient to take the match. Seven men were awarded letters in golf, headed by Captain Armstrong. Vollmer, Killian, Ragle, Shonsby, Emery, and Henritze were the others. Four of the team will be back again this year. Top Row — Henritze, Shonsby (Captain), Killian, Emery Front Row — Vollmer, Armstrong, Ragle INTRA-MURAL SPORTS INDOOR BASEBALL Eight teams, divided into two leagues, were entered in the interfraternity indoor series. The Kappa Sigs played heads up ball to win their division and also the championship. In the other bracket, the Phi Gams came out on top, but lost to the campus champs in the play-off. The games were well played and drew a good crowd: although there were a few pitchers ' duels, most of the contests were sluggers ' battles. FALL COMPETITION CUP An innovation in inter-fraternity contests was introduced last fall when a cup was offered for the highest aggregate points gained in tennis, horseshoe pitching, and swimming. The plan was a complete success, and it is expected that the competition will be continued. By taking the swim meet, two events in the horseshoe tournament, and runner-up position in the tennis matches, the Kappa Sigs took the cup with a comfortable lead over their nearest opponents, the Phi Gams. RESULTS Swimming Kappa Sigma 1300 Phi Delta Theta .....1050 Phi Gamma Delta... 1000 Beta Theta Pi . 500 Sigma Chi 150 Horseshoes Tennis Singles, Slocum, Sig Chi. Doubles, Murray and Cogan, Phi Gam. Doubles, Rea and Hill, Kappa Sig. Singles, Murray, Phi Gam. Consolation doubles, Camp and Mason, In- Runner-up in doubles, Brandborg and Blodg- dependents. ett, Kappa Sig. Consolation singles, Rea, Kappa Sig. Runner-up in singles, Blodgett, Kappa Sig.  i Inter- fraternity Track Meet INTRA-MURAL SPORTS TRACK Beta and Kappa Sig track and field stars divided the honors in the annual inter-fraternity track meet held in Washburn field last spring. All entries were bunched at the finish, but these two, with 32 points apiece, were each awarded a cup. The Phi Delts placed third in the meet, and the Phi Gams fourth with 25 and 24 points respectively. BASKETBALL Led by Ed Blaine, who scored 103 points for his team, the Sigma Chis went through the 1930 basketball schedule with flying colors to win their third campus title. The Phi Delts finished in second place with one game lost, and the Fijis rated third by losing two games. The race for the hoop pennant was featured by many close games, but the outcome was little in doubt after the Sigs had demonstrated their class in the first game. Following the season, Sig Chi quintet journeyed to Denver and added other laurels to their record by winning the state Sigma Chi title by defeating other chapters of their fraternity by decisive scores. FINAL STANDING Won Lost Percent Sigma Chi ...7 1000 Phi Delta Theta . ..6 1 857 Phi Gamma Delta .....5 2 714 Delta Alpha Phi 4 3 571 Kappa Sigma ...3 4 429 Independents 2 5 286 Beta Theta Pi ___1 6 143 Pi Kappa Alpha ..._.. 7 000 Top Row — Schmidt, Minter, Heter. Blaine, Martin. 2nd Row — Wea ER, WillEy, Bell, Rahm, Patterson The Women ' s Athletic Association The Women ' s Athletic Association is composed of members who have won distinction in one or more of the sports conducted under the direction of the Department of Physical Education for Women. Election to the association is on the basis of a point system, and awards and honors of various sorts are presented to women who secure the requisite number of points. The purpose of the Women ' s Athletic Association is to increase interest in sports, in such a way as to promote good health, democracy, and better sportsmanship. The work of the organization is carried on by a board consisting of a president, two vice-presidents, a secretary-treasurer, and heads of the following sports: hiking, basketball, tennis, volley ball, swimming, bowling, riding, soccer, and baseball. The Riding Club, an important branch of the W. A. A., conducts a meet every spring. Organized hikes, basketball games, swimming meets, tennis tournaments, and other types of contests are included on the annual calendar of the organization. The Women ' s Athletic Association sponsors the annual May Fete which is held each year. In May, the members of the Colorado College W. A. A. were hostesses to representatives from the Women ' s Athletic Associations of the colleges and universities of Colorado and Wyoming at their annual Play Day. ugriAiPPe Bro a dmoor Hotel Open The Year Round — Accessible By Air— Motor— Rail The Mid-continent ' s Greatest Recreation Center INVITES YOUR PATRONAGE Everything For Your Amusement A schedule of Winter Dances on Saturday nights is afforded the patrons of Colorado Springs. One of the finest Swimming Pools [indoor), chlo- rine filtered, absolutely pure. During the Summer the Broadmoor Bathing Beach on the lake, lockers, attendants, etc. Saddle Stables — 150 horses. Luncheons, Dinners and Private Dances arranged. See Cheyenne Lodge — A Bit of Broadmoor atop the World 183 j I j W. I. LUCAS Phone 900 120 N. Tejon i Everything for the Sportsman 5 I i SPORTING GOODS CO. i LILLIAN BYERS Own (Made Candies I Specialize in Party Favors and Novelties I j 108 E. Pikes Peak Main 573 j j I o ®e Successful in anything you undertake, your personal appearance means much. Keep your garments neatly clean- ed and pressed and you will be agreeably surprised how much longer you will enjoy wearing them. j CLEANING, STEAMING, PRESSING, | DYEING, REPAIRING, i ALTERATIONS jj Phone Us First— Main 2958 825 N. Tejon C. O. BILL HOBBS— Your Cleaner ' LOCATED in the heart of the city near business centers, shops and theatres, the Cosmopolitan offers you the UTMOST in enjoyable, comfortable living. Spacious well-appointed rooms with bath and running ice water. Luncheon and dinner dances daily — life here, is indeed on its MOST INTERESTING plane. Denver ' s Newest and Largest Hotel COSMOPOLITAN HOTEL Management B. B. MORSE M. L. TRACY Chas. P. Bennett H. N. Shellenijerger President Secretary The Bennett-Shellenberger Realty Company REALTOR REAL estate insurance and loans 2 EAST PIKES PEAK AVENUE I I Compliments of PLATTE AVENUE FLORAL COMPANY 1417 EAST PLATTE AVENUE Telephone Main 2605 184 THE 1931 PIKES PEAK GOLDBRICK The very unofficial publication of Colorado College Affectionately DEDICATED to Ralph Rolypoly Gilmore Because he possesses in no mean degree that great quality common to elephants, mountains, and washerwomen; Because he never tires of publicly rehearsing the adult jokes with which he belabors long suffering lecture students trying to guffaw their way to a passing grade; Because a pair of rompers are the one touch needed to completely carry out the intellectual effect already suggested by his baby face; Because, in the Greater Colorado movement, he is our candidate for the chair of Applied Electicity; Because he is either ignorant or disdainful of the practice of girth control; Because, if he ever loses his present position, he can easily establish a well deserved success as an ambling advertisement for a rummage sale; Because he maintains an endless griping mutter against the college admin- istration; Because, finally, he is doubtless the school ' s most polished example of that time-honored specimen commonly bearing the name, Goldbrick. FOREWORD The purpose of this little Goldbrick is: To prove that all aren ' t Nuggets that glitter; To let you know the truth that the aforementioned may make ye free; To have the opportunity of rising to remark that Saunders and Fales are rapidly acquiring the dizzy appearance, the pompous air of empty importance, and general display of oafishness which seem so essential to the whole breed of yearbook carpentrv. May you receive this tender orphan of the academic storm with tolerant welcome and more grins than gripes — you probably aren ' t so funny yourself. The large spoon is for the soup. 185 The House of Quality and Service st Mshed 1884 Cleaners. Duers. Hatters HONES 1711-1222 COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO. REFRIGERATED FUR STORAGE Expert Cleaners of Oriental, Domestic and Navajo Rugs A College Man Demands a Neat, Up-To-Date Haircut We Satisfy Manicuring Campbell ' s Barber Shop ;j j 109 East Pikes Peak Ave. WE HAVE A LAUNDRY SERVICE TO FIT EVERY FAMILY BUDGET THE PEARL I LAUNDRY CO. i Colorado Springs, Colorado The Laundry that uses Ivory Soap Exclusively he ( Manitou Baths Manitou Springs, Colorado Most Complete for HYDROTHERAPY PHYSIOTHERAPY ELECTROTHERAPY USING THE WATERS OF THE FAMOUS ORIGINAL MANITOU SODA SPRINGS Open Every Day in the Year H. L. STANDLEY 1 PHOTOGRAPHER j 224 N. Tejon St., Colorado Springs, Colo. j Commercial Work Photo Finishing, Copying J Lantern Slides • Enlarging and Coloring j: ; HAND-COLORED VIEWS In all sizes, framed or unframed BARTHEL ' S CONFECTIONERY Candy, Ice Cream and Ices for Parties. Complete line of Home Made Candies. Lunches Served at our Fountain are always the best. Just one trial will convince you. 131 N. TEJON ST. Main 920 186 tyVfc . THE CLASS OF 1930 Dorothie Boop-a-doop La Fans. Who is making a perserving effort to emu- late the glittering career of one Peggy Hop- kins Joyce in a small way; with the inde- fatiguable support of Lowell and Crannell, the whispering sopranos, has mewed indis- criminately for four years in a mud spattering treble; who came to college not to get a husband but to annex stock in a third rate jewelry emporium; who bids fair to be the toast of every fraternity on the campus if the crumbs hold out; and whose watchword in handling men is, Stop, Look, and Loosen. MADE IN COLORADO SPRINGS The World ' s Most Famous Art Pottery Van Briggle Art Pottery Visitors Always Welcome Jeremiah Ambrose Coogan. Who looms forth as an incomparably lucid explanation of why membership in Phi Beta Kappa; who makes his own clothes and tatts beautifully; whose impressive holier-than- thou attitude is really too comical to be irritating; whose amorous leanings tend to- ward things with giggles and mother-gossey ideas; and who was sober for the first time in months a week ago Tuesday. OUR ONE-DAY WEEK-END SERVICE LS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE THE PEOPLE ' S FAMILY LAUNDRY 516 W. Colo. Ave. Main 517 For Your Parties If ever in need of Delicacies to make your affair a success, you can depend on Knorr ' s for the finest in imported and Domestic Foods. Come in any time. We will be glad to t give you suggestions. KNORR ' S MARKET 123 N. Tejon Phones 2602-3 187 Portraits hat Please WAGNER-FULTS STUDIO BURNS THEATRE BUILDING Phone Main 3328-J ' o of r COLORADO SPRINGS COLORADO 188 + + Oldest Bond House West of the Mississippi River +,_ _— _..— ..+ Municipal and Corporation Bonds E. H. ROLLINS SONS (Founded 1876) 212 SECURITY BUILDING DENVER, COLO. Boston San Francisco Los Angeles Milan New York Chicago London Paris Buenos Aires Morning Glory Cosmetics Guardians of Beauty Manufactured and Distributed by Super-Laboratories, Inc. 1437 Welton Street DENVER, COLORADO K„ Edinger Terrill Margrete Hengen Thos. B. Wack Edinger f s CAFETERIA Since i8q6 1637-41 Stout St. Keystone 096% Denver Colorado Also Mcniitou. Colorado 108-120 Canon Are. HOLLY SUGAR The best that science and education can produce HOLLY SUGAR CORPORATION COLORADO SPRINGS COLORADO If you wish to PATRONIZE COLORADO FIRMS and keep your dollars in the state, buy where quality can be depended upon and fair prices prevail — from DENVER ' S LEADING MACHINERY AND SUPPLY HOUSE Your Inquiry will Receive Prompt and Courteous Attention Hendrie Bolthoff Manufacturing and Supply Co. Denver, Colorado 189 Wrandalin Abigail Trip pel. Who, in attempting portrayal of the coquettish coed according to College Humor specifications, has digressed slightly to give a convincingly authentic interpretation of the giddy shades of Mrs. Pankhurst and Carrie Chapman Catt ; who, after many barren years of longing for notoriety, probably will dimple delightedly in private over this, her first success; who is popularly recognized as the awful reality of the Famous Forty Mishaps; who always gets one vote for Minerva pres- ident unless she votes twice; and who is the inspiration of that collegiate dating maxim, Ask her — she noes. JNO. A. BROADBENT ! ' The Insurance Man ' Specialist in Fire Insurance 221 MANITOU AVENUE MANITOU, COLORADO We Don ' t Sell Seconds Although a century apart in time we are as rigidly careful of the Quality of our merchan- dise as the Old Craftsman. That is why we don ' t sell seconds, and why, for ex- ample, the inner soles of our shoes are made of the same tough, long-wearing leather as the outer. Quality is that part of your purchase you must trust to our honor and keeping faith with our customers for over a quar- ter of a century has built up our business. J. C. Penney Co., Inc 19-21 North Tejon Street Colorado .Springs j HEYSERVICE j I j The Heyse I j Sheet Metal Works j I Inc. ! ! i { 219 North Weber Street j ■ Phone Main 552 Colorado Springs !l G. R. LEWIS I DRUG COMPANY j! WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS f Serves the Druggists who serve you 228 NORTH TEJON STREET Colorado Springs 190 Those Charming Goivns you see at the Proms ' the stunning frocks you envied on the Campus — ask the girl who owns one where it came from — and the answer invariably is RAE ' S The only shop catering exclusively to the needs of the Miss M S87-W 8 North Tejon Street, Colorado Springs | When it is Promised n j THE | | Prompt Printery Co. D. S. GilmorE, President j | E. J. Roesch, Secretary j j Phone Main 536 j ? 12 and 14 EAST KIOWA STREET Colorado Springs, Colo. 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 cone, 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. M ottTlfe Just across from tin- Cam pus HIGH HEAT I j CONTENT I JAMES HOWARD BARBER SHOP II Kurie Coal Co. 15 North Tejon Phone 261 I i 19 EAST BIJOU STREET COLORADO SPRINGS 191 Offers advantages of the same grade as those in the best Eastern Institutions n. Founded in Colorado Springs, |H Colorado, in the year eighteen hundred and seventy-four CHARLES CHRISTOPHER MIEROW, Ph. D., LL. 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 Service and the like DEPARTMENT OF ENGINEERING Electrical, Chemical, Civil, Geologic, and Irrigation Engineering DEPARTMENT OF FORESTRY DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS (Broadmoor Art Academy affiliated with Colorado College) (See Page 197) DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC Courses in Vocal and Instrumental Music Composition and Orchestration For Information Apply to W. D. COPELAND. Secretary 192 Cutler Hall Main Engineering Building 193 he Young Men ' s Store This space is taken each year as an assurance of our interest in your activities. We are always interested in young men and by contact we are able to keep up with the spirit of youth PERKINS SHEARER CO. I F. H. SAUNDERS I I i ! ! I RIDING ! I I S INSTRUCTOR i i 820 Paseo M. 5056 ART WORK BY I ! I L. E. BURNETT, JR. ( I I I ! i j i I Cleaning and Dyeing I Phone Main 667 5 j j We Call. We Deliver. 10 EAST BIJOU STREET j Firestone Tires and Repairs | jj Washing and Lubrication j ' ' Motor Oils j 11.5-1 17 N. Nevada I Phcne M. 202 j j 194 M. Bomming Bluntte. Who, as a mortician magnate ' s heir, has been luxuriously transported through Seientia et Diseiplina in Carriage Two, the stately slow roller of many a funeral parade; who will never believe that a riding habit is an equis- trienne costume — not necking; who composed the tuneful Grave-diggers Stomp, I ' d lift the earth for you; and who, after several dis- astrous failures while cast as the gay Lothario, is now content to humbly Kris Kringle for the benifit of a well-corralled Fiji Switi. C. A. Hibbard Co. I i A MODERN ; DEPARTMENT STORE ] I The Collier Lumber Co. Building Materials of Quality A. E. OLSON PLUMBING AND HEATING CO. 543 W. Colorado Ave. Main 386 116 North Weber Phone M 3066 THE HAIGLER REALTY CO. REALTORS 2IIIIIIHIIIII Own your own Colorado Springs Home iiiiiiiiiiiiii 408-41 1 Exchange Natl. Bank Bldg. Colorado Springs, Colorado Benrus Wrist and Strap Watches Bud and Blossom Diamond Rings QUALITY JEWELERS 16 SO. TEJON ST. Phone 686 195 Qapping the Vyramid cr HE capstone on the mighty pyramid of Cheops is but a small part of the structure, but before it could be laid many an Egyptian toiled many a long year on broad foundations and solid blocks of stone. Leadership in our chosen field is a goal well worth striving for, and the tasks which seem so remote from our specialized profession are less irksome when we realize that the crown of success goes to him whose foundations in the arts and sciences, in the practical and the cultural, are broadest and best laid. Public Service Company of Colorado College Bake Shop I Quality First CAKES — PIES — ROLLS PARTY SPECIALTIES Phone M 1 3 1 7 J TRACHAIY ■WEET SHO BIJOU AND NEVADA Sarah Rah raw Sheldon. Who, while absorbing a slightly higher education, has found occasion to portray an amazing gamut of roles ranging from Sing- apore Sal to Elsie Dinsmore; who has blatant brick-red hair and is secretly proud of it; who, as a baby kissing back scratching Little Sun- bean, is rather hard on all combines and a severe nervous strain to any one who has out grown a taste for Pollyanna; and who has earned the reputation of being 99 and 44-100 per cent purr. 196 Manufacture to order, finish and repair all kinds of furniture Lieberman Kapsch Upholstery and Cabinet Work Antiques A. Lieberman M. Kapsch Telephone Main 1158-W Broadmoor Art Academy 30 West Dale Street Colorado Springs, Colorado 322-324 N. Tejon St., Colorado Springs I I I J. J. McTigue H. B. Blackburn Makers Everything in Canvas The ENTERPRISE TENT AWNING COMPANY AUTOMOBILE TRIMMING, CAMP EQUIPMENT Manufacturers of High Class Tents, Sleeping Porch Curtains, Awnings 123 S. Nevada Ave. Colo. Springs, Colo. Phone Main 1264 All Colorado College Students arc Eligible for Scholarships under Carnegie Corporation Fund SUMMER SCHOOL June 9th to September 6th, 1930 FACULTY Randall Davey Life Ernest Lawson, N. A. Landscape W. P. McCrossin, M. D. Lecturer on Anatomy Ira D. Waterman, B. A., Director Write for Catalogue HAZLEHURST FLANNIGAN CO. I Specialists in High Grade INVESTMENT SECURITIES ! i Highest Standard of Workmanship in Dry Cleaning Pressing and Dyeing Plus a service that is really SUPERIOR SUPERIOR DRY CLEANING CO. 129 N. Tejon St. Phones 1364 and 1365 131 EAST PIKES PEAK AVE. COLORADO SPRINGS MAIN 44 The Dollar Building a nd Loan Association (Incorporated under the laws of the State of Colorado) This institution offers 7% on savings and a helpful program of regular monthly deposits from $5 up Your funds are secured by first mort- gages on improved real estate E. C. SHARER, President 116 N. Tejon Street 197 (Compliments of the ty of Qolorado Springs Light and Tower Departments « Ta. j ' «« Qity cAuditoriuvru 198 _ fTffc -,,v U Rt K!!H IV IfeTftEt ' S - SALE ML i | Ok- HE E inn _ STA$EDrs£ v (FOR A ' - • ■ il„ i i ■ Kappa Sigma. Signifying: Kome-On Suckers. Founded by: Chance. Standing: Good — at Cobwebb Inn. Motto: Three million bv 1935 — Lets beat the Elks. A view of a charming corner of the Kappa Sig Building. This fraternity (second only to the Republican Party in size) is composed of the ambitious, far-sighted lucre-snatchers of the campus their repertoire including every thing from the innocent old army pastime to managerships. When the lads leave their non- age for the business world, they join luncheon clubs and spectacularly enter Big Business as shine boys and waiters. The Sanitary Laundry IjOe Specialize h Fluff Dry (No Starch) Wet Wash Finished Pressed Finished Thrif-T-Service Float Ironed Rough Dry (Starched) 2517 IT . Colorado Avenue Phone Main 814 I— OODS from every section ■ • of the country — from every quarter of the globe — make this the outstanding food service store in the en- tire West. Don ' t give up until you have tried Sommers. 113 South Tejon n F Main 4100 ! WILLSON ' S ! j EVERYTHING FOR THE TABLE iiniiiiiiiiit Two Stores 1528 N. Tejon St.— M. 934 BROADMOOR Elm Avenue at First St. — M. 363 GOOD TIME PARTIES — at— Bruin Inn Open the Year ' Round We Always Welcome College Students Famous for Steak Dinners Dancing Frank Run von ! I i i i i j c Mrs. D. W. Evans I j 199 Acacia Hotel I FACING ACACIA PARK in Center of City ; J. W. ATKINSON Pres. and Mgr. LEO ' S MEN ' S SHOP International and Beau Brum me! Tailored Clothes Individually Made. Here ' s the answer to how to dress smartly and inexpensively 12.no N. TEJON STREET E.W.Hughes Co. 405 Mining Exchange Bldg. Colorado Springs, Colo. Main 410 Investment Securities Three good things, a part of school life Who in C. C. won ' t re- member those Saturday Candy Features at Dern ' s. Who won ' t remember the fragrant, delicious coffee — Derngood Freshly Roasted Coffee — the beverage for every lunch and get-to- gether? And that Derngood Mayonnaise a n d Russian Dressing, always available fresh as true dressings of these types should be? Dern ' s 26 South I Tejon BISSELL ' S PHARMACY FOR PURE DRUGS STATIONERY CANDY SODA and CIGARS Corner Dale and Weber Phone Main 980 200 Supplies — Rentals Expert Repairing A. L. STARK TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE Agents for the complete line of Underwood Typewriters 831 NORTH TEJON STREET Phone Main 4571 Sigma Chi. Signifying: Sorry Collection. Founded by: Colorado Springs Newsboys Association. Standing: Minus six. Motto: Fifty thousand freshmen can ' t be wrong. — Weaver. They are easily the champions in holding championships, some of which include: great- est number of alumni pledges, heaviest house mortgage, and Haigler is a Sig. THE WONDERFUL Cave of the Winds At Manitou, Colorado A Mile of Caves and Underground Passageways, Resplendent in Color and Fantastic Formations. A most unique and inspiring natural wonder. Admission Charge, $1.00 RENDERING BUILDING SERVICE SINCE 1873 and we ' ll still be rendering it when you get ready to use it. ZIP SERVICE NEWTON ' S 201 T.C.KIRKWOOD ' K Formerly Giddinss Kirkwood A slore that for over fifty years has put the customer first and the sale second The Colorado Springs Music Co. OUR STOCK OF MUSIC AND MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS IS MOJ5T COMPLETE 1 17 East Pikes Peak Ave. Main 1838-1839 CLASS ' 93° 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. :. E. Whitaker J. E. Burmeister I Dr. Edwin I. Backus ! ! I DENTIST 700 Exchange National Bank Bldg. Main 761 THE i ; ELIZABETH INN A SELECT PLACE TO EAT One price the year-round 106 and 106 J 2 E. PIKES PEAK AVE. Colorado Springs, Colo. Service a la Carte and Table d Hole 202 Phi Gamma Delta. Signifying: Proud Gong Dingers. Founded by: Swift Packing Company. Standing: Tottering. Motto: Curse you shall not ring tonight. Here, simple reader, we have a southern exposure of any Phi Gam. The chime (indi- cated by the ice-pick) is symbolic of his high attainments in the manly art of bell tolling. For Over 39 Years— ! consistently low prices and the highest quality work. You will find it a pleasure and satisfac- tion to send your laundry to the Elite. takes care of your suits, ties shirts, gloves, hats, etc. Send it all together and it will be returned all together. ! The Dry Cleaning Department j OPY CLEANIN 117 NORTH TEJON STREET BAUGHMAN ' S BAKERY The place to get those sweet goods, such as COOKIES, BINS, CAKES and all other PASTRY GOODS BREAD and all KINDS OF BREAD ROLLS iiiiiiiiimir 109 SOUTH TEJON STREET Phone Main 1807 T. W. Baughman, Proprietor | The J. G St. John ! J Plumbing and Heating Co. ! i Incorporated ,, I We invite you to ask for estimates j j on any plumbing or heating work | you may have, from the largest to the , I smallest job. 226 North Tejon ! Phone Main 48 I i The Colorado Planing Mill Co. MILL WORK OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS 525 W. Colorado Ave. ! ! Colorado Springs I i CITY COAL The Ideal Fuel for RANGE, FURNACE and HOT WATER HEATER CITY COAL MINES 15 East Pikes Peak Avenue Phones 67 and 120 203 YOUR NEIGHBOR USES HOT CLEAN CLINKERLESS WHOLESALERS RETAILERS PRODUCERS The PIKES PEAK FUEL Co General Offices — South Tejon Street TELEPHONE MAIN r Colorado Springs Colorado 204 j tyresh Sea tyoods I Barbecue meats, Fried Chicken, I Trout, Salads and Fountain j DINE and DANCE ! at the ! I i Red Feather Bar-B-0 i j i Pavement at Crystal Park Road 8 I Phi Delta Theta. Signifying: Paper dolly tots. Founded by: The Day Nursery and the Rover Boys. Standing: Not without assistance. Motto: Two lumps, please. The accompanying illustration graphically depicts the favorite indoor (and outdoor) sports of the knightly lodge. The boys are widely noted for their enthusiasm and excel- lence in this highly technical field of activity. Some of their other dilettantisms are crap- shooting, sofa rugby, and skipping rope. j j Colorado College j = j | BUMSTEAD ' S I HEATING and PLUMBING j ! for building a foundation of wealth— SENSE where your dollars have wore— CENTS j i Thej. S. BROWN MERCANTILE CO. 17 NORTH CASCADE WHOLESALE GROCERS DEL MONTE CANNED FOODS Compliments of QUALITY CLEANERS Illllllllllllt 10 E. KIOWA Fone 1-8-1-1— We ' ll Call H. A. THOMPSON Telephone Main L j The Seldomridge I I j uram Co. j j j FLOUR, FEED, GRAIN, HAY 1 AND SEEDS f ' l 1 j | I 21 South Cascade Avenue I! OUTING EQUIPMENT The Out West Tent Awning Co. Colorado Springs, Colo. 22 North Teion 205 1 JL • ' Beautiful Jeten al s and South Qheyenne Qanon FULBRIGHT ' S i GLASSES : Takes the hurt out of your eyes, : The ache out of your head, ' J and puts nerve energy and brain ( power there instead. I R. M. FULBRIGHT I 23 Independence Bldg. Phone Main 917 Have Us Check Any Baggage from your room to Destination | Phone Q i Main O I 97 ' I Kiowa WANDELL T OWE J Transfer Storage Co. ] DECKER SON I I UNDERTAKING CO. j J 225 North Weber j | FUNERAL DIRECTORS ( f M. J. DECKER D. E. DECKER i) Lady Assistant and Embalmer Phones 412-413 ••GOOD COAL QUICK The Colorado Springs Fuel Company H. C. HARMON President 24 EAvST KIOWA PHONE MAIN 230 ROBINSON GRAIN CO. Grain, Hay, Flour, Seeds Beans 218-WCOLORADO AVENUE Grain Hay Flour Seeds Beans i 0 206 u tigers $c and ioc c 3-£amburgers Get them by the Bag White IjOay System Eleven North Tejon Beta Theta Pi. Signifying: Bigger Tea Parties. Founded by: Name withheld on request. Standing: Even worse than ever. Motto: Meet me in Wooglin. The Betas are all incurable (even by the Keeley method) lovers of Nature in the rough and often spend the night in God ' s great out- of-doors beneath the twinkling stars, finding congenial companions and kindred spirits among their fellow creatures of the Wild. R. S. DAVIS INDIAN RUGS, JEWELRY AND SOUVENIRS Bath House — Manitou Hidden Inn — Garden of the Gods Marcel and Water Waving Facial and Scalp Treatments Telephone M. 7 17- J PAUDRE PAUFFE BEAUTY SHOPPE ReKreator Reducing Studio Permanent Waving a Specialty- Hair Dressing, Shampooing, Manicuring Hair Dyeing Marineilo and Burnham Operators in charge 222 N. TEJON STREET P HONE MAIN 1288 Coutures have bee i members of the Master Dyers and Cleaners Association for over 15 years. You will also like their prompt service! 218 North Tejon J rench jjyers and Cleaners. EVERYTHING IN FLOWERS Say it with Flowers 105 NORTH TEJON STREET PHONE MAIN 599 207 REMEMBER YOU WILL WANT TO KEEP IN TOUCH WITH COLORADO SPRINGS, YOUR FRIENDS HERE AND C. C mi nut i SUBSCRIBE TO EVENING ! TODAY ' S NEWS TODAY J I i I IIIIIIIIIIIIU I j i j AFTER YOU LEAVE COLORADO COLLEGE, ! ! THE THE j ! GAZETTE and TELEGRAPH I 20J ' =2 Pi Kappa Alpha. Signifying: Police Kourt Adolescents. Founded by: Danny Daniels. Standing: Prone. Motto: For Rent — Furnished. Two prominent members of Pi Kappa Alpha (strong in the South, you know) take their morning work-out in their new gym at Cascade a t Costilla. They find it necessary to keep their sledges card-indexed, so the playful brothers won ' t take them home as souvenirs. 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 equip- ment for your favorite sports Hunting and Fishing Licenses issued at this store. The Colorado Sporting Goods Company I Absolutely Fireproof -:- European Plan j Restaurant Famed i: THE ANTLERS Colorado Springs ' Largest and Best Hostelry We Specialize in Parties and Banquets of any size Compliments of J | The Apache Inn on the way to Manitou Phone H viand 181 EL PASO ICE Phones: i 46 91 I Safe, reliable — made from distilled water COAL j The highest grades of Bituminous ' ; ' and Lignite coals. Always of the 9 same, lasting quality, together j with the best possible service. , 9 The El Paso Ice and Coal Company 107 East Kiowa I 209 MEET AT MURRAY ' S Our Fountain Has Been the Popular Meeting Place for C. C. Students for More Than Twenty Years —FOR— Sodas — Lunches — Malted Milks EXCLUSIVE AGENCY FOR Whitman ' s and Baur ' s Chocolates OFFICIAL DISTRIBUTORS Colorado College Text Books and Supplies i main store T ne Murray Drug Co. north store j ! 1 South Tejon Superior Service Stores Oppos : te Campus I Tkd Do Fo Law C® I MJMoER BY INVITATION rtlrtans — ai i i I 116 Neirftlfo Mowadla I i i { 5 N. Tejon iy 2 N. Nevada j 2 Shops | Quality Lunch TRY OUR HAMBURGERS AND CHILI I : Orders over $1.00 Delivered Free j Main 1784 Main 1463- J j The Arapahoe Food Stores Co. 5 STORES 129 So. Tejon 122 N. Tejon 10 N. Nevada 2431 W. Colo. Ave. 1431 West Colorado Ave. If it ' s smart It ' s here, If it ' s here It ' s smart LADIES APPAREL 24 .South Tejon 210 Delta Alpha Phi. Signifying: Don ' t Ask, Please. Founded by: Procter and Gamble. Standing: Better since Jencks left. Motto: No thanks, Pi Kaps. The Delts are an aggregation of the school intelligentsia, the thinkers, and the scientists. Here we see a representative pair conducting an experiment to determine the velocity of the Jonathan that aided Sir Isaac Newton in discovering the Laws of Gravi- tation. Were Always for the tigers 9£ Crissey Fowler Lumber Co. Main 101 117 W. Vermijo Bob Mills Bob Crowder -Ko tftWUflk MEN ' S SHOP 111 PIKES PEAK AVE. MAIN 5500 i Publix theatres BURNS PARAMOUNT and RIALTO New Show World Talking Pictures The Greatest Stage and Screen Stars j The Finest Short Specialties J l Homes of Paramount Pictures 211 Compliments of The Automobile Dealers of Colorado Springs I cZAlivays I I the Appropriate Gift j Pictures Books Pottery Stationery Leather Goods Greeting Cards ( CROW-NORRIS ART STATIONERY CO. 1 1 1 No. Tejon We Give Zd?l . Green Discount Stamps. WRIGHTS frV vef Stance ftcttenptiOf Stofran in Our Dawnjtoir Ompt Calling Main 1674 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. PLUMBING and HEATING CO. Phone 1674 312 X. Custer fM.en who know quality DRINK ORIGINAL MANITOU Pale Dry Ginger Ale, Ginger Champagne and Sparkling Water Featured at such Famous Hotels as The Broadmoor, The Hotel DelCoronado, Etc. In new sterilized bottles, natural carbonation from famous O. M. Spring. Finest flavor and longest sparkle. Men-nervous. Founded by: R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Standing: Anything in Pants. Motto: Inhale, inhale, the gang ' s all here. Semi-annual scene at impressive Minerva pledging ceremony. The oldest girls society (some things like wine and fiddles improve with age; hen fruit, tuition obligations, and oldest girls ' societies fare less well) welcomes happy little members into the joyous little circle of Also Rans. The Sob Sisters (colleg- iate for Minerva pledges) will exchange their blackballs — sour grapes aren ' t that big — for moth balls and go somewhere else to school next semester. 213 214 Can ' t-tempt. Founded by: Peeping Tom. Standing: Alone on the highway. Motto: We ' re just bully. Here we have the Contemps (now open for business and pleasure in the old Wolcott Observatory, hours — dark until bedtime) con- ception of an enormously large evening. This group of enterprising young scientists, en- grossed in their galant war on the deadly night shade, has determined that some men still wear sox appealers and long red itchies. Their claim to having the finest peek in the campus range is probably justified. I BETTER LIVING I t I for LESS I Stock Bros. Food Store 119 East Colorado Avenue Phones M. 4303-4304 The Cleanest and Most Up-to-Date Drug Store in the City QUALITY — The best of everything SERVICE — Prompt and Courteous PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS Just what the doctor orders The Johnson-English Drug Company Corner Bijou and Tejon Main 1400 Zautalman — Shiaan (leutefaij L Optical J r. Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground DIAMONDS, CLOCKS, WATCHES Tel. Main 674 121 N. Tejon Street ! i KLINE ' S ARMY STORE CLOTHING FOR OUTING Shoes, Boots, Etc. 122 SOUTH NEVADA AVENUE Up She Goes! I America ' s greatest sport is flying j gliders. It is also instructive. Under our plan of club ownership, one can • learn to fly an Alexander Trainer for less than the cost of one hour of air- plane instruction. You, too, can enjoy i this fascinating sport. Write for infor- f mation on how to form a glider club ;, among your friends. Colorado Springs, Colo. 215 IN THE VERY HEART OF THE PIKES PEAK REGION Hunting, Fishing, Hiking, Horse Back Riding — anything for a Real Out-of-Door Vacation. 36 Miles from Colorado Springs at FLORISSANT, COLORADO CITY ADDRESS 20U E. COLORADO AVE.— M. 5181 K HE cover for this V - Annual was creat- ed by The Pub- lishers ' Press Room and Bindery Company, 1840 Stout Street, Denver, Colorado i ! McRAE RESTAURANT AND THE ANN LOUISE CAFETERIA WE NEVER CLOSE 216 Highpacers. Founded by: The Gold Dust Twins. Standing: Somewhere in the Jungle. Motto: Reach for a Santy instead of a Sweetie. Color plate from the newly released Hy- patia pamphlet, Those Amateurish Ama- zons, issued by the Coed Press (not an adv.; not a wrestling term). The nature of the subject matter developed in this authorotative little treatise is indicated by such chapter- headings as How to entertain your male friends with card tricks — making the Jack disappear; All the James brothers had sisters; Be a sensation at a dance — learn the new Fraternity Skake-down; What to do for itching palms; and, The slaves that Lincoln over-looked, a touching story of today, tomorrow, and whenever you can. Compliments of j®GGrloss SIfvrnitvre tv . 113-115 North Tejon Main 568 Established 1881 Mail Orders a Specialty The Davis Jewelry Company Native Jewelry and Cut Stones Indian Jewelry, Rugs and Curios Colorado Souvenirs and Specimens 20 EAST PIKES PEAK AVE. COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO. INVEST YOUR SAVINGS FIRST MORTGAGE LOANS 6% PAYABLE SEMI-ANNUALLY AMOUNTS FROM $250 UP The COLORADO INVESTMENT AND REALTY CO. 7 NORTH TEJON STREET Phones Main 7 and Main 173 FOR POPCORN | V.S.T T „ E , K S T EES I KANSAS CITY, MO. Country Club Plaza = DENVER. COLORADO ! 1 1 Broadway i MANITOU, COLORADO Soda Pavilion I COLORADO SPRINGS. | COLO. Busy Corner i J ! i j I PIGGLY WIGGLY I All Over The World Five Convenient Stores 122 South Tejon 132 North Tejon 717 North Weher 332 North Institute 2505 H West Colorado Ave. 217 PLAZA DINING ROOM A Qood Tlace to Eat We Use IXL Butter and Sintons Milk Exclusively PLAZA HOTEL MAIN 2515 J i FOR HIGH QUALITY BUTTER USE ! UTE CHIEF ! I ! J GENUINE I MANITOU I j Pale Dry Ginger Ale YOU WILL LIKE SINTONS HIGH SCORING HOLLAND SPECIAL RAW MILK From Finely Bred Guernsey and Holstein Catt le Visit Our Dairy Farms MAIN 442 The EDWARDS Bakery Supply Company 13 West Colorado Ave. ! j DANCING j ' Ballet, Character, Acrobatic, Tap and j Clog — Ballroom, Classes and Private — Assemble Dancing Colorado Conservatory of Music 814 N. Tejon Street Phone Main 290 218 77 ; Other Society. Founded by: Colorado State Orphanage. Standing: Don ' t be silly. Motto: God loves us and we can sit on our hands. No reward at all is offered for the infor- mation leading to the whereabouts of the girls pictured above, lost since pledging to Zetalethian, something founded by nobody knows whom early in the year of we don ' t remember when for no imaginable reason. Reading from left to right are: the missing link, the mathematical Miss X, the face on the barroom floor, the Silver-Masked Tenor, and the Unknown Soldier ' s sister. Address all communications to Bebe Daniels. With years of experience and capabilities which enable him to put your thoughts and your message in pictures, the work of Shantz is repeatedly chosen t y those who are exact in their art requirements ADVERTISE WITH SHANTZ ART 213 MINING EXCHANGE BLDG. Phone Main Ml Hart Schaffner Marx Clothes i WAYMIRE i CLOTHING COMPANY j 24 South Tejon Street Colorado Springs, Colorado Beth-El j j GENERAL HOSPITAL j ' m ! i G. M. HANNER, Superintendent COLORADO .SPRINGS, COLO. HELLO TIGER Wanna Save a Dime? Petes Barber Shop We Guarantee 8 East Cucharras Street Xa THE TYPEWRITER MAN 125 N. TEJON Colorado Springs We will sell you any ?nake typewriter on monthly payments as small as $5.00 a month Colorado Springs ' Drug Store Co. i TWO STORES | 18 N. Tejon, Ferguson Bldg., Phone M. 491 I 101 S. Tejon, Phone M. 478 ! The Original Cut Price Drug Store j Sanitary Fountains Good Lunches j i 219 The Fountain Valley School of Colorado A SIX-FORM BOARDING SCHOOL FOR BOYS FROM TWELVE TO EIGHTEEN YEARS Preparatory for College OPENING SEPTEMBER, 1930 FRANCIS MITCHELL FROELICHKR, Head Master COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO Catalogue furnished on request y i Popular Colorado College Jonah sets forth on Transatlantic flight (yeh, flight) sponsored by the local Ministerial Association. Indications are that the hazardous course being charted by the doughty adventurer may be adopted later as a popular route for other of his colleagues plan- ning long vacations. At the last moment, the Flatt Foote entry dropped out of the race. 220 Made from Clean, Carefully Selected Cream HOLLYWOOD BUTTER DOUBLE PASTEURIZED AT YOUR GROCERS THE HOLLYWOOD CREAMERY COMPANY Say it with floU ' ers tottl, JOE MORIN. 30 N. Tejon Street j Phone Main 214. Colorado Springs, Colo. i i i j William C. I Craron j Optometrist and I Optician Over Woolworth ' s T. Hee Nowles, Jr., (genus Mediterraneanus fruitus fly) who was awarded all the ribbons in the recent eampus-wide contest, What ' s worse than fleas and compulsory chapel? , by a vote which lacked two of being unani- mous. Somebody must owe the San Luis pride some money. Late Wire Flash: Forty-three tenants of Manitou Burro Barn die of humiliation. j I Colorado Springs most ! popular restaurant Discriminating people evince a decided preference for this unique Inn and its unexcelled cuisine. (Hijapel Jnn Pikes Peak Avenue at Weber Street I Buy your Sport Shoes and Dress , Pumps here— I $6 to $10 | Wu MSAoe Co. S fashionable-, ' footwear i io So. Tejon 221 .-, ESTABLISHED c. 222 Patronize Nugget Advertisers Acacia Hotel 200 Alexander Industries 215 Antlers Hotel 209 Apache Inn 209 Arapahoe Food Stores 2 10 Automobile Dealers of Colorado Springs 212 Bacus, Dr 202 Barthel ' s 186 Baughman Bakery 203 Bennett-Shellenberger 184 Burnett, L. E., Jr 194 Beth-El Hospital 2 19 Bissell Drug Co 200 Broadbent , Jno 190 Broadmoor Art Academy 197 Broadmoor Hotel 183 Broncho Dude Ranch 216 Brown Mercantile Co 205 Brui nlnn 199 Bumstead Heating and Plumbing 205 Byers, Lillian 184 Cave of the Winds 201 Campbell ' s Barber Shop __186 Chapel Inn . _ 221 City Coal Mines 203 Cleaver Carpet Cleaners 202 Col lege Bake Shop 196 College Cleaners 184 Colorado College 192-193 Colorado Conservatory of Music 218 Colorado Sporting Goods Co 209 Colorado Springs Music Co __202 Colorado Springs Drug Co . . 219 Colorado Springs Fuel Co 206 Colorado Investment Co. . 217 Colorado Planing Mill 203 Cosmopolitan Hotel 184 Collier Lumber Co 195 Couture ' s 207 Craron, Dr 1___221 Crissey-Fowler Lumber Co 211 Crow-Norris 213 Davis Jewelry Co 217 Davis, Roy A __219 Davis, R. S 207 Decker and Son 206 Dern ' s 200 Dollar Building and Loan 197 Edinger ' s 189 Edwards Bakery Supply 218 Elite Laundry 203 Elizabeth Inn 202 El Paso Cleaners and Dyers 194 El Paso Ice and Coal Co 209 Enterprise Tent and Awning 197 Fountain Valley School 220 Fulbright, Dr 206 Gazette and Telegraph 208 Haigler Realty Co 195 Hazelhurst and Flannigan 197 Hendrie and Bolthoff 189 Heyse Sheet Metal Co 190 Hibbard ' s 195 Hollywood Creamery 221 Holly Sugar Corporation 189 Howard Barber Shop 191 Hughes, E. W 200 I. X. L. Creamery 218 Johnson-English Drug Co 215 Jardine and Knight 213 Kapelke ' s 195 Kirkwood, T. C 202 Kline ' s Army Store 215 Knorr ' s Market 187 Kurie Coal Co 191 Law, D. F 210 Lauterman-Dugan 215 Leo ' s 200 Lewis Drug Co 190 Lieberman and Kapseh 197 Light and Power Co. of C. S- 198 Lucas Sporting Goods Co 184 Manitou Bath House 186 Manitou Mineral Water Co. 213 Mills, Robert 211 Mowry Creamery Co 191 McRae Restaurant 216 Murray Drug Co 210 Nassour ' s 210 Newton Lumber Co 210 Olson, A. E _ _ ..195 Out West Printing Co 222 Out West Tent and Awning Co 205 Patsys 217 Paudre Pauffe Beauty Shoppe 207 Pearl Laundry Co 186 Peerless Furniture Co 217 Penney, J. C 190 People ' s Family Laundry 187 Perki ns-Shearer Co 194 Pete ' s Barber Shop _ __. 219 Piggly-Wiggly 217 Pikes Peak Floral Co _ ___ ______ _ __207 Pikes Peak Fuel Co _ ___ ___ _ _ 204 Platte Avenue Floral Co 184 Plaza Dining Room 218 Prompt Printery Co 191 Public Service Co. of Colorado 196 Publishers Press Room 216 Publix Theaters 211 Quality Cleaners 205 Quality Lunch .210 Rae ' s 191 Red Feather Bar-B-Q 205 Robinson Grain Co 206 Rollins, E. H 189 Sanitary Laundry 199 Saunders, F. H 194 Seldomridge Grain Co 205 Seven Falls Co 208 Shantz Art 219 Sign of the Rose 220 Sommers 199 Standley, H. L 186 Stark, A. L 201 Stewart Bros 214 Stewart, Dr. Chas 211 Stock Bros 215 Strachan ' s Sweet Shop 196 St. John, J. C 203 Sign of the Rose__ 221 Sinton Dairy Co 218 Smith Bros 186 Superior Dry Cleaners 197 Super Laboratories 189 Udiek Tire Shop 194 Ute Chief Mineral Water Co 218 Van Briggle Art Pottery Co 187 Wagner-Fults Studio 188 Wandell and Lowe 206 Waymire ' s 219 White Way System 207 Willson ' s 199 Wright ' s 213 Wulff Shoe Co 221 223 224


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

Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

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

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

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Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

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Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

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Colorado College - Nugget Yearbook (Colorado Springs, CO) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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