Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH)
- Class of 1932
Page 1 of 196
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 196 of the 1932 volume:
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COPYRIGHT PAUL S. GARWOOD Editor i ami;l van voohkis Business Manager The Adytum PUBLISHED BY CLASS of 1933 Miss Jean Woolson of the Class of 1 93 5 whose unfortunate and untimely death was deeply lamented by her many friends among the facu lty and students of Denison University. To her we hereby dedicate this book. PREFACE We hereby submit to the faculty and students of Denison University our sincerest apologies for the delay in the appearance of this book. Although this delay was indeed unfortunate, yet at the same time not entirely avoidable, we hope that it may still be received as a representative piece of work of the class of 193 3. These are he: Constant kindly interest; gentility of soul; courageous optimism. Seven Nine Eleven THE CLASS OF 1932 President: Tom Gabele Vice-President: Martha Kemper Secretary: Garry Spencer Treasurer: Ed Fellman Thirteen EDNA ADAMS E. Springfield, Mass. Alpha Phi Phi Society; Math Club 1 May Day Festival; Y. W C. A. 1, 2; W. A. A. 1, 2 Centennial Committee 2; Car negie World Peace Club 3 President Alpha Phi 4; Stu dent Assistant 2, 3, 4. MARY ARMSTRONG Toledo Pi Beta Phi Butler University 1 ; Uni- versity of Illinois 2; Indiana University 3; Detroit City College 3. HOWARD ASHTON Chicago, III. A. C. C. DONALD BLACKBURN Toledo Beta Thcta Pi Jaw Bones 3, 4; Debate 4; Football Manager 4; D Association 4; Y. M. C. A. I, 2, treasurer 3, president 4; M. S. G. A. 4; Adytum 2, 3; Denisonian 2, 3. GEORGE BOYD Corry, Pa. Beta Thcta Pi Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Football 1, 2; Engineering Society 1, 2, 3, 4. DOROTHY AMRINE Zanesville Shcpardson Club W. A. A. 2, 3; All-Shep- ardson Archery 4; Big Sister 3, 4; Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4; El Circulo Castellano 2; Cosmo- politan Club 4. RUTH ARNOLD Wilmette, III. Kappa Alpha Theta Orchesis 2, 3, 4; W. A. A. 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4. CHARLES P. BAKER Chicago, III. Phi Gamma Delta Baseball 1, 2, 3; Class Offi- cer 3; Student Council 4; Glee Club 1; Green Friars; D Association 2, 3, 4. RICHARD BLACKBURN Cincinnati Beta Thcta Pi Pan - Hellenic Council 3, president 4; Theta Pi 4. President Beta MARION BOWMAN Cleveland Heights Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 1, 2, 3, 4. treasurer 3; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3; Cosmopolitan Club 3, 4; Big Sister 2, 3, 4. Fourteen CLARA BOYER Library, Pa. Shepardson Club W. A. A. 1, 2. Board 3, 4; Archery 3 ; All - Shepardson Archery 4; Baseball 2, 3, 4; Basketball 3, 4; Hockey 3, 4; Swimming 2; Track 2, 3; Volley Ball 4; Apparatus 1, 2, 3; Student Assistant 3, 4; Orchestra 1; Biology Club 1; Big Sister 3, 4. PEARL BURGOON Mi. Vernon Shepardson Club Math Club 1, 2. 3, 4; Phi Society; Student Assistant 2, 3, 4; Board of House Presi- dents 4; Big Sister 4; Phi Beta Kappa. CARL CAPEN Indianapolis, Ind. 4. C. C. Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Phi Mu Alpha 2, 3, president 4; Phi Alpha Theta 3, 4; Jaw Bones 3, 4; Board of Control of Music 4; Cosmopolitan Club 2, 4, president 3 ; Stu- dent Government 4. HELEN COWMAN Greenfield W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 1, 2, 3, vice-president 4; Big Sister 3, 4; Biology Club 1, 2, 3; George Piatt Knox Club 4. LAURABELLE DAVIDSON Chili.icotiie Alpha Omicron Pi Miami University 1, 2; Randolph Macon 3; Franco Calleopean; Denisonian 4; W. A. A. 4: Swimming 4; Publications Bureau 4. MARGARET BRAKEMAN Oil City, Pa. Shepardson Club W. A. A. 1, 2, 3; George Piatt Knox Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Board of House Presidents 3 Student Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4 Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4. Chorus 1; Big Sister 3, 4; Biology Club 2. DOUGLAS BURT Salem Phi Delta Theta Math Club 1; Unaffiliated Men ' s Organization 1, presi- dent 2; Engineering Society 2, 3; Pi Delta Epsilon 3, 4; Publications Bureau 2, secre- tary 3; Junior Prom Com- mittee. SCHULER CARROLL Granville Phi Delta Theta Miami University 1, Track 3, 4; Adytum 3, 4. ARTHUR DARROW Granville Phi Delta Theta Class Officer 1, 2; Pi Delta Epsilon 3, ; Adytum 1, 2, business manager 3, board 3; Board o f Control of Publica- tions 4; Varsity Cross Coun- try 2; Varsity Track 2; Var- sity Tennis 2, 3, 4; Varsity Basketball 3, 4; Chairman Centennial Committee 3 ; Pub- lications Bureau 3, 4; Biology Club 2, 3, 4. LINDA DAVIS Newark Kappa Kappa Gamma Phi Be! a Kappa; Phi So- ciety; Franco - Caliopean 4; W. A. A. 1, 2; Track 1; Apparatus 1, 2; Swimming 1; French Club 2; Big Sister 3, 4. Fifteen MORTIMER DEAN Erie, Pa. Phi Delta Tlicta Masquers 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2, 3; Granville Debate 3, 4; Football 1 ; V. M. C. A. 3, vice-president 4; Pan-Hel- lenic Council 4; Board of Oratory and Debate 4; Presi- dent of Phi Delta Theta 4. EUGENE DIETZ Richmond, W. Va. A. C. C. OLLIE DETWILER GOLDFIELD, NEV. W. A. A. 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, secretary 4; Taw Bones 2, 3, 4; Big Sister 2, 3, 4. MARIAN DUNCAN OSTRANDER Alpha Xi Delta Sigma Delta Phi, president 4; W. S. G. A. Board 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Archery 3, 4; Alpha Sigma Alpha 1, 2; EI Circulo Castellano, president 4; Chorus 1; Big Sister 3. 4; Math Club 1. ROBERT EDWARDS Granville Phi Delta Theta Phi Beta Kappa 3, 4; Foot- ball 1, 2. 3, 4; D Associa- tion 2, 3, 4; Math Club 1; Biology Club 3. GABRIEL DeCICCO YOUNGSTOWN A. C. C. Cosmopolitan Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Chemical Society 2, 3, 4; Math Club 1 ; Student Assis- tant 4. FREDERICK DETWEILER Granville Sigma Alpha Epsilen STANLEY DREWS Cleveland Sigma Alpha Epsilen Blue Key 3, 4; Pi Delta Epsilon 3, treasurer 4; Sigma Delta Pi 3, 4; Cheer Leader 3, 4; Adytum 3; Denisonian 1; D Association 4; Pan- Hellenic Council 3, 4; Fla- mingo 1. MARY ELIZABETH EDDY Granville W. S. G. A. 3; W. A. A. 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 2, 3, 4; Intersorority Council 3, 4; Women ' s D Association 3, 4; Big Sister 3. THEODORE EVERITT Lancaster A. C. C. BERTHA FANG China Cosmopolitan Club 2, 3, 4. LOWELL FINLY Millers burg Sigma Alpha Epsilon Publications I, , 2; Presi- dent Chess Club 3, 4; In- tra-murals 1, 2, 3, 4. LOLA FRANCIS E. Chicago, Ind. Alpha Phi Engwerson Chorus 1 ; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; George Piatt Knox Club 1, 2; Or- chesis 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3. MURRAY GAGE Johnstown Alpha Xi Delta Big Sister 3, 4; Chorus 4; Glee Club 4; Alpha Sigma Alpha 1, 2, 3; Archery ' 2, 4; Y. W. C. A. 3. HARRY GRADY Cleveland A. C. C. Jaw Bones 3. 4; Student Government 2, 3, secretary 4; Cross Country 1, 2, 4, cap- tain 3; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; D Association 2, 3, 4; Pan- Hellenic Council 3 ; Adytum 3; Honor Court 3, 4; Inter- national Relations Club 4. EDWARD FELLMAN Milwaukee, Wis Phi Gamma Delta Class Officer 4; Junior Prom Committee; Secretary of Blue Key. FRED FOSTER Newark A. C. C. Chemical Society 2, 3, Student Assistant 2, 3, 4. THOMAS GABELE NORWALK Beta Theta Pi Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; D Association 2, 3, 4: Alligators 4; Green Friars 3, 4; Class Officer 4. LOUISE GIFFIN Granville Shepardson Club W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Base- ball 1, 2, 3, 4; Volley Ball 4; All-Shepardson Hockey 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 1; Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4; Cosmopolitan Club 3, 4; Student Fellowship 3; President 4; Big Sister 4. MABEL GRANDSTAFF Granville Teacher of Public School Music; Granville Music So- ciety. Seventeen FRANCES GUCKERT Granville Kappa Alplia Thcta Math Club 1; Glee Club 1, 2; Engwerson Chorus 1, 2, 3; Franco-Calliopean Society 2, 3, president 4; Denisonian 2, 3, 4; Adytum Board 3: Prom Committee 3; Prolngue Edi- tor 4. LOWELL HAMILTON Mansfield Sigma Alpha Epsilon Math Club 1; Chess Club 3; Intramurals 2, 3. LUCILLE HARRIS Centerburg Alpha Xi Delta W. S. G. A., Vice-presi- dent 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, Cabinet 3, 4; Eta Sigma Phi; Big Sister 3, 4; W. G. G. 2, 3, 4; Archery 4; Volley Ball 2, 3 ; Engwerson Chorus 2, 4. NEALE HOLLINGWORTH Granville Lambda Chi Alpha Glee Club 1, 2; Band 1, 2, 3; Jaw Bones 3, 4; Spanish Club 3. ADOLLPH HUMLICEK Chicago, III. A. C. C. Swimming 1, 3; Cosmopol- itan Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Jaw Bones 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club 3, 4. HENRY HALLEY Chicago, III. A. C. C. Cosmopolitan Club 3; Bi- ology Club 3. ALETHEA HANSON Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Kappa Kappa Gamma Phi Alpha Theta; Phi So- ciety; Freshman Y. W. C. A. Commission, Vice-president; W. A. A. 1, 4, Board 2, 3; Student Assistant 3, 4; W. S. G. A. 3; Hockey 1, 3, 4; Basketball 1. 3. 4, manager 2; Volleyball 3, 4; Apparatus 1, 2. 4, manager 3; Baseball 1 , 2, 3, 4; Track 2, 4, man- ager 3; Mathematics Club 1, 2; Biology Club 3; Big Sister 3, 4; President Kappa Kappa Gamma 4. ERNA HART Bexley Chi Omega W. A. A. 1, 2, Board 3, 4 All-Shepardson Baseball 1, 2 3; All-Shepardson Golf 1, 2 3; Tennis 3; Track 3, 4 Hockey 1, 2, 3, All-Shepard son 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 Big Sister 3, 4; W. S. G. A, 2; Inter-Sorority Council ' 3 4. CARYL HUGHES Chicago, III. Delta Delta Delta W. A. A. 1, 2, 3; Eng- werson Chorus 1, 3; Spanish Club 1, 2, 3; Biology Club 2, 3; Sigma Delta Pi 3, 4; George Piatt Knox Club 4. FRANCES HUTCHINSON Newark Kappa Alpha Thcta W. A. A. 1, 2; French Club 2; Y. W. C. A. 3, 4; Phi Society; Engwerson Chorus 4. Eighteen HELEN L. JACKSON Washington C. H. Alpha Delta Sigma Western College for Women 1, 2; Pan-Hellenic Council 3, 4; W. A. A. 3, 4; Swimming Club 3; Hockey 3, 4; Swimming 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 3, 4; Jaw Bones 4; Big Sister 4. CARRIE JOHNSON Newark DOLORES KEADEY Centerburg Alpha Xi Delta Delta Omicron 3, vice- president 4; Math Club 2, 3; Engwerson Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2, secy.-treas. 3, manager 4; Big Sister 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; W A. A. I, 2, 3, 4; Volley Ball 1, 2; Archery 1, 2, 3, 4; Board of Control of Music, secretary 4. ELBERT F. KENNARD Cleveland Heights Phi Gamma -Delta President Phi Gamma Del- ta 4; Denisonian 1, 2, 3. RICHARD KRUSE Perrysburg Sigma Chi Debate 1, 2, 3, 4; Deni- sonian 2, 3, associate editor 4; Adytum 2, 3; Glee Club 2; Phi Society; Tau Kappa Al- pha 3, 4; Student Govern- ment 2, 3, president 4; Junior class president 3 ; President Sigma Chi 4; Alligators 4; Pan-Hellenic Council 3, treas- urer 4; Y. M. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Curriculum Committee 3. DWIGHT JEWETT Utica A. C. C. Chemical Society 2, 3, vice- president 4; Student Assist- ant 2, 3, 4. BARBARA ANNE JONES Granville Kappa Alpha Theta W. A. A. 1, 2, Board 4; Basketball 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2 ; Engwerson Chorus 1 ; Or- chesis 2, 4; Pan-Hellenic Council 4; Adytum 2; LTni- versity of California 3; Crossed Keyes 3. MARTHA KEMPER Charleston, W. Va. Delta Delta Delta Delta Omicron 2, 3, 4; Eta Sigma Phi 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, cabinet 4; W S G. A. 1, 3; Glee Club 1, 2; Engwerson Chorus 1, 2; In- ter-Sorority Council, presi- dent 4; President Crossed Keys 3; Cap and Gown; Class Officer 2, 3, 4; Big Sister 3, 4; Student Assist- ant 4; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Red D 3; Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 3, 4; Tennis 1, 2; Volley Ball 2, 3, 4; Swim- ming 1, 2; Junior Prom Committee; Adytum Board 3. HARRISON KORNER Cleveland Sigma Alpha Epsilon Graduate Student. GLENN KYKER Cincinnati Beta Kappa Masquers 1, 2, 3, president 4; Denisonian 1, 2; Franco- Calliopean Society 2, 3; De- bate 2, 3; Eta Sigma Phi L 2. Nineteen JOHN LATTA Thonze, Burma, India Sigma Alalia Epsilmi Wilmington College 2; Football 1; Track 1; Cheer Leader 1; Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Adytum I. MERLE LEACH Jamestown Alpha Phi Engwerson Chorus 1 ; Eta Sigma Phi 1, 2, 3; Masquers 2, vice-president 3 ; Crossed Keys 3; Inter-Sorority Coun- cil 3, secretary 4; Franco- Calliopean Society 3. MARGARET LEPPER Bluffton, Ind. Kappa Alpha Theta W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Phi Society ; Engwerson Chorus 3; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, cabinet 3, president 4; Geneva dele- gate 3, 4; Crossed Keys 3, 4; Cap and Gown 4; Class Offi- cer 3; Phi Beta Kappa 4; W. S. G. A. 4; Curriculum Com- mittee 2; Adytum Board 3. ELIZABETH LEV IS Akron Slicpardson Club Student Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 3, 4, pres- ident 2; Cosmopolitan Club 4; Debate 1, 2; W. S. G. A. 3, 4; W. A. A. 4; Crossed Kevs 4; Big Sister 3, 4. DOROTHY McELROY Chicopee Falls, Mass. Slicpardson Club W. A. A. 2, 3, 4; Archery 2. 3; Biology Club 2, 3; Big Sister 3, 4; George Piatt Knox Club 3, 4; Engwerson Chorus 4. fe ; 1 0 fit 1 : WILLIAM LAYCOCK Chicago, III. P ti Gamma Delta Denisonian 2, 3, editor 4 Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 3, 4 Alligators 4; Football 1, 2 Pi Delta Epsilon 4; Secretary International Relations Club 4; Student Council 4; Ady- tum 2, 3; Pan-Hellenic Council 3 ; Franco-Calliopean Society 3, 4; Board of Con- trol of Publications 4. RUSSELL LEEDY Fredericktown A. C. C. Muskingum College 1 ; Spanish Club 2; Student Assistant 3, 4. ELOISE LEWIS Canton Kappa Kappa Gamma Tau Kappa Alpha 2, 3, president 4; Phi Alpha Theta 4; Debate 1, 2, 3, 4; Fresh man Debate Coach 3 ; Fran co-Ca lliopean Society 4; W A. A. 2, 3, 4; Big Sister 3 4; Denisonian 2, 3; French Club 2; Y. W. C. A. 2, 3 Volley Ball 3, 4; Student Assistant 1, 2, 3, 4. ANNIE KATE LUNSFORD Xenia Lincoln Memorial Univer- sity 1 ; Engwerson Chorus 2, 3, 4; W. A. A. 3, 4; Big Sister 3, 4; Math Club 3, 4; Hockey 3, 4; Track 3. JOSEPHINE McFARLANE Lynbrook, N. Y. Alpha Delta Sigma Barnard College 1, 2; Glee Club 4; Engwerson Chorus 3, 4; Jaw Bones 3, secretary- treasurer 4; Y. W. C. A. 3; Big Sister 4; Ensemble 3, 4. wenty joy Maclean Waltham, Mass. Shepardson Club Engwerson Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4; Franco-Calliopean Society 4; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Cos- mopolitan Club 2. 3, president 4; Student Fellowship 1; Y. W. C. A. 1, 3; cabinet 2. BARBARA MASON Melrose, Mass. Shepardson Club Colby Junior College 1, 2; Y. W. C. A. 3, 4; Engwer- son Chorus 3, 4; George Piatt Knox Club 4. SELMA MENTALL Cleveland Kappa Kappa Gamma Cap and Gown 4; Glee Club 1, 2. accompanist 4; Delta Omicrcn 3, 4; Adytum 2; Big Sister 3, 4; Math Club 1, 2; Chemical Society 3, 4; Student Assistant 3; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, Board 4; Orchesis 3, 4; Red D 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Hockey 2, 3; Tennis 1, 2, 3; Volley Ball 2, 3. MARIAN MOHR Lima Alpha Omicrou Pi W. A. A. 2, 3, 4; Orchesis 3, 4; Inter-Sorority Council 3, 4; Adytum 3 ;- Dormitory president 4. MARY E. NIST Canton Kappa Kappa Gamma W. S. G. A. 1, 2, 3, presi- dent 4; W. A. A. 1, 2. 4, Board 3; Phi Scciety; Math Club 1, 2; Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 2, 3, 4; Volley Ball 1, 2, 3, 4; Tennis 1, 2; Big Sister 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1 ; Adytum 3 ; Cap and Cown 4; Crossd Keys 3, 4; Stu- dent Assistant 2, 3, 4; Red D 3, 4. RUTH MABEE Lewiston, Maine Shepardson Club Cap and Gown 4; Y. VV C. A. Cabinet 4; W. A. A. Board 3, 4; Hockey 2, 3, 4; Swimming 1, 2; Baseball 1, 2, 3; Tennis 1, 2. 3; Student Assistant 3; Cosmopolitan Club 2, 3; Big Sister 3. 4; Engwerson Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4; Franco-Calliopean Scciety 4. LILLIAN MAE MAURER West Lafayetee Shepardson Club George Piatt Knox Club 1, 2, 4; El Circulo Castellano 2, 3; W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Cos- mopolitan Club 4; Jaw Bones- 3, 4; Phi Alpha Theta 3, treasurer 4; Student Assist- ant 2, 3, 4; Big Sister 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa 4. GENEVIEVE MERCER YOUNGSTOWN Women ' s Debate 2, 3, 4; Tau Kappa Alpha 3, 4. SUSAN MONTGOMERY Newark Kappa Kappa Gamma Mount Holyoke College 1 ; Big Sister 3, 4; Franco- Cal- liopean Society 3, 4. DORIS PALMER New York City Alpha Omicrou Pi W. A. A. 1, 2, 3 4- Y W- C. A. 1, 2, 3; Editor D Book 3; Masquers Assistant 3. T luenty-One EMMA PRETORIUS Dover Shcpardson Club W. A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; George Piatt Knox Club 1, 2, 3, president 4; Student Assist- ant 4; Big Sister 4. ANNA ROBBINS Chattanooga, Tenn. Kappa Kappa Gamma Agnes Scott College 1, 2; Phi Alpha Theta 3, 4; W. A. A. 3; Tennis 3, 4; Basketball 3; Big Sister 4. IRENE ROBINSON Toi i in ' Delta Delta Delta Orchestra , 2, 3, 4; Big Sister 3; Spanish Club 4. EARLE RUPE Tippecanoe City Football 2, 3, 4; Basketball 2, 3, 4; Baseball 2, 3; D Association 3, 4; Big Sister 2, 3, 4. ALBERT SCRIV ' EN Cleveland Heights Lambda Chi Alpha Math Club 1 ; Denisonian 1, 2, 3, business manager 4; Adytum 1, 2; Pi Delta Epsi- lon 3, vice-president 4; De- bate 3; Jaw Bones 3, 4; Franco-Calliopean Society 4. ELMER RANZ Trenton, III. A. C. C. Tli. B., Northern Baptist Theological Seminary; Chem- ical Society 3, 4. RICHARD ROBERTS Granville Beta Theta Pi Football 1; Band 1, 2; Chemical Society 2, 3, 4. DONALD ROSSITER Canton Sigma Alpha Epsilon Flamingo 1 ; Math Club 1 ; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1; Jaw Bones 3, 4; Pan-Hellenic Council 4; In- ternational Relations Club 3, president 4; Junior Prom Committee; Student Assistant 4; D Association 4; Tennis 2, 3; President Sigma Alpha Epsilon 4. RICHARD SAUER Hamilton Beta Theta Pi Football 1, 2, 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Track 1; D Association 2, 3, 4; Blue Key 3, president 4; Green Friars 3, 4. RAYMOND SCOTT Dayton Beta Theta Pi Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Basket ball 1, 2, 3, captain 4; D Association 1, 2, secretary treasurer 3, president 4 Baseball 1, 2, 3; Green Friars 3, 4; Alligators 4 Board of Control of Athletics 4; Denisonian 4. jenty-TiLO HERBERT SHORT Hamburg, N. Y. A. C. C. University of Buffalo 1; Chemical Society 3, 4; Stu- dent Assistant 3, 4. JULIETTE SPENCER Columbus Kappa Alpha Theta W. A. A. 3, 4; Orchesis 2, 3, 4; Class Officer 4; Ady- tum 2, Feature Editor 3 , Denisonian 2, 3. HARRY STECK Oak Park, III. Lambda Chi Alpha Jaw Bones 3, president 4. GEORGE STOECKMANN Ableman, Wis. A. C. C. Northern Baptist Theologi- cal Seminary 1, 2; George Piatt Knox Club 3; Biology Club 3. MARGARET THOMPSON Detroit, Mich. Shcpardson Club Student Council 2, 3, vice- president 4; Engwerson Chorus 1, 2, 3; Debate 1, 2, 3 ; Freshman Debate Coach 2, 4; Tau Kappa Alpha 3, 4; Eta Sigma Phi 2. 3, 4; Cos- mopolitan Club 3, 4; Big Sister 3, 4; Student Fellow- ship 1; Phi Society; Curricu- lum Committee 3. WAYNE SMITH Dayton Beta Thcta Pi Adytum 1 ; Denisonian 2, business manager 3 ; Y. M. C. A. 2, secretary 3 ; Pi Delta Epsilon 3, president 4; Track 3 ; Publications Bu- reau 2, president 3. LILLIAN SPROUSE Portsmouth Alpha Omicron Pi W. A. A. 2. 3; Y. W. C. . 1, 2, 3, cabinet 4; George Piatt Knox Club 4. MARJORY STEVENS Dayton Kappa Alpha Theta Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Math Club 1, 2; Big Sister 3, 4; Adytum 3; W. A. A. 4: W. S. G. A. 4. JOHN TALBOT Tiffin A. C. C. Heidelberg College 1, 2; Spanish Club 3, 4. CLIFFORD TURNER Cleveland Kappa Sigma Baseball 1, 2, 3; Pan-Hel- lenic Council 3, 4; Blue Key 4; Jaw Bones 4; Engineering Society 1, 2, 3, secretary 4; Junior Prom Committee; President Kappa Sigma 4. Twenty-Three JAMES UEBELHART Canton Phi Delta Tli eta Phi Beta Kappa 4; Mas- quers 3, 4; Phi Society; G. L. Herrick Geological So- ciety 1 ; President Phi Delta Theta 3. PROSE WALKER Dover Plains, N. Y. A. C. C. Glee Club 1, 2; Quartet 2; Track 1 ; Student Assistant 3. WILLIAM WHEATLEY Lorain JACK WILLE Canton Beta Theta Pi Denisonian 2, 3 ; Interna- tional Relations Club 3, 4. WILLARD WILLIS Wei.lston Beta Theta Pi Denisonian 1, 2; Glee Club 2; Biology Club 2; Junior Prom Committee. m W 3 s - T 1 Si J km ROBERT VAN VOORHIS Newark Beta Theta Pi Adytum 1; Trainer 1. 2; International Relations Club 4. HARVE WASHINGTON East Cleveland Kappa Sigma Football 1; Denisonian 1, 2, 3; Adytum 1, 2. 3; Editor Prologue 4; Press Club 3, 4; Franco-Calliopean Society 4; Junior Prom; Glee Club 2, 3; Engwerson Chorus 1, 2. DOROTHY WILEY Granville Kappa Kappa Gamma Cap and Gown 4; Crossed Keys 3, 4; Student Council 4; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 2, 3, 4, secretary 2; W. A. A. 1. 2, 3, president 4; Student Assistant 4; Class Officer 2; Orchesis 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1; Hockey 2, 3, 4: Swimming 1, 2. 3; Basketball 3, 4; Baseball 3. WALTER WILLIAMS WlLLARli Lambda Chi Alpha Tiack 1, 2, 3, 4; D Association 2, 3, 4; Basket- ball 1, 4; Pan-Hellenic Coun- cil 3, 4. GENE WOLFE Marshall, Texas Kappa Sigma Football 1, 2, 3; Basket- ball 1; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 2, 3, treasurer 4; Masquers 4; Junior Review 1, 2; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Quartet 1, 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club 1, 2; Board of Control of Music 3; Engwerson Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4; Choir 1, 2, 3, 4. Twenty-Four THE CLASS OF 1933 President: Tom Craig Vice-President: Ann Piatt Secretary: Betty Webb Treasurer: Bob Bridge Twenty-Five ROBERT ADAMS Dayton Kappa Sigma REX ALEXANDER Canton Sigma Chi DALE ARCHIBALD Columbus Kappa Sigma EDISON ARGUST Geneva Sigma Alpha Epsilon HAZEN ARMSTRONG Saginaw, Mich. Phi Delta Theta ETHEL AUGENSTEIN Marion Shepardson Club JOSEPH BALL Zanesville Beta Theta Pi DANA BARKER Granville Beta Theta Pi HAMILTON BECK Pittsburgh, Pa. Kappa Sigma RUTH BIGGLESTONE Melrose, Mass. Chi Omega RACHEL BOYNTON Clarksburg, W. Va. Shepardson Club CHARLES BRADLEY St. Joseph, Mich. WILHEMINA BREITENWISCHER Toledo Kappa Alpha Theta ROBERT BRIDGE Canton Sigma Chi BERTHA BROWN New Lexington Delta Delta Delta CHARLES BROWN Mansfield Beta Theta Pi SAMUEL ANDERSON Newark Sigma Chi RUTH ARMITAGE Homer, N. Y. Alpha Phi CHARLES P. BAKER New York City Sigma Chi PHILIP BEATLEY Lakewood Phi Delta Theta FRANCIS BINGHAM Cleveland Alpha Omricon Pi KATHRYN BRAUNSCHWEIGER Dayton Kappa Alpha Theta CHAS. BROUGHTON Granville Sigma Alpha Epsilon MILDRED CHAMBERS Princeton, Ind. Chi Omega Tiuenty-Six PAUL CHERNEY Cleveland Phi Gamma Delta MURIEL COGHILL Fallsington, Pa. Shcpardson Club GEORGE COOPER Zanesville Phi Delta Theta FERN DENNIS Lancaster Chi Omega VIRGINIA DIEHL Dayton Chi Omega MARY DURNELL Dayton Chi Omega GLENN ELLISON MlDDLETOWN Kappa Sigma. WENDELL FINK Fredericktown Beta Kappa RUTH CHRISTOPHERSON Chicago, III. Shepardson Club ELIZABETH CLARK Evanston, III. Delta Delta Delta HENRIETTA COLLETT Wilmington Chi Omega DOROTHY COLLINS Norwood Kappa Kappa Gamma THOMAS CRAIG Washington C. H Beta Theta Pi JEAN DAWSON Parkersburg, W. Va. Clii Omega WILLIAM DENxNTY Cambridge Sigma Chi ROBERT DE PUY Dayton A. C. C. GIBSON DILDINE Lima Phi Gamma Delta CLAIRE DOBSON Elmhurst, N. Y. Chi Omega WILFRED EATOUGH Pawtucket, R. I A. C. C. FRANK ELLIOTT Newark Phi Gamma Delta VIRGINIA ENGLISH Canton Kappa Kappa Gamma JOHN FELKER Toledo Kappa Sigma JOSEPH GABEL St. Clairville Lambda Chi Alpha PAUL GARWOOD Dayton Phi Delta Theta Twenty-Seven EMMA GIBBS Canton Chi Omega MARGARET GILBERT Dayton Delta Delta Delta ADA GRAFENSTADT Brooklyn, N. Y. Delta Delta Delta ROBERT GREEN Kent Phi Delta Theta CORBLY GREGG Lewisburg, Pa. Kappa Sigma HOWARD GRENDON Tiffin Sigma Alpha Epsilcn EDITH GUTZEIT St. Joseph, Mich. Shepardson Club HAROLD HANEFELD Toledo Sigma Chi LOUISE HORNOR Clarksburg, V. Va. JAMES HUCHISON Madreie Sigma Alpha Epsilcm JAMES HUMPHREY Bedford Lambda Chi Alpha MARGARET HUTCHINSON Newark Kappa Alpha Theta HOWARD JACOI Ceveland Kappa Sigma LEE JOHNSON Hammond, Ind. A. C. C. RODERIC JONES Newark Phi Gamma Delta STEPHEN KELIH Cleveland A. C. C. MARY GOODYEAR Urichsville Kappa Alpha Theta ELIZABETH GREENE Urbana Kappa Kappa Gamma CELIA GUNTRUP Detroit, Mich. Kappa Kappa Gamma LUCILE HERRIN Kingston, Okla. Shepardson Club RICHARD HUME Urbana Lambda Chi Alpha PATRICIA IRELAND Birmingham, Ala. Kappa Alpha Theta NORMAN JOHNSON X 1 1 . f s Phi Gamma Delta HERMAN KLEIN Cincinnati Beta Kappa Twenty-Eight GEORGE KNOX Granville Lambda Chi Alpha PAUL KUBIK Cleveland A. C. C. WILMA LAWRENCE Newark Shcpardson Club RUTH LEEDY Fredericktown Shepardson Club MARGARET LITTLE Russel, Kan. Alphi Phi KATHRYN U ' EHHKN Youncstown Alpha Omricon Pi ROBERT McCREARY New Philadelphia RALPH McGEORGE Cleveland Heights Sigma Alpha Epsilon WILBUR KOHLMAN Sandusky Sigma Alpha Epsilon ELNORA KREBS Newark Chi Omega MARY JANE LAMSON Granville Kappa Kappa Comma ESTHER LANDRUM Columbus Chi Omega REESE LAWYER Newark Lambda Chi Alpha MAURICE LEE Oak Park, III. Lambda Chi Alpha HENRY LEHRER Sandusky Phi Delta Theta GWENDOLYN LIGHT Canton GEORGE LOUYS Stryker Phi Delta Theta DONNA VAN LUDWIG Orrville Sigma Alpha Epsilon MARY JANE LYONS Pleasant Ridge, Mich. Chi Omega JOSEPH McCRACKEN Newark Beta Kappa GEORGE McCRERY Urbana Beta Theta Pi janet Mcdowell Lakewood Delta Delta Delta ALICE MATHEWSON Oakdale, Pa. Chi Omega CHARLES MEGAW Granville Kappa Sigma Twenty-Nine CHARLOTTE MERCHANT Indianapolis, Ind. Alpha Delta Sigma CATHERINE MILLER Newark Shcpardson Club YUZO MIYASAKI Hawaii A. C. C. ELIZABETH MOSHER White Plains, N. Y. Alpha Omricon Pi LOIS OLDHAM Crosse Point Pk., Mich. Alpha Delta Sigma MORTIMER PACKER Toulon, III. A. C. C. OSCAR PETERSON Burlington, Vt. A. C. C. ANNABEL PIERCE Granville Kappa Kappa Gamma ELEANOR POPE Berwyn, III. Alpha Xi Delta KITH POTT EH Worthington Chi Omega JAMES RANDEL Mount Vernon, N. Y. Phi Delta Theta OLIVER ROBERTSON East Cleveland Kappa Sigma ( LA R 1- SHARKEA Dayton Sigma Chi JOHN SHEPARD Granville Beta Theta Pi JAMES SHRAKE Canton Sigma Alpha Epsilon JANE SMITH Marion Kappa Kappa Gamma ft i ROLAND MILLER Cleveland -4. C. C. MARTHA MOUSER Granville Shcpardson Club ERANIMS PEASE Berwyn, III. Kappa Alpha Theta ANN PLATT Mount Vernon Kappa Alpha Theta JAMES PRATT Birmingham, Mich. DELMAR SERAFY East Liverpool A. C. C. RUTH SHEWMON Indianapolis, Ind. Delta Delta Delta 3ERTRAM SNYDER Cincinnati Sigma Chi WILLIAM SOHL East Cleveland Sigma Alpha Epsilou MARY SWEET Granville Kappa Alpha Theta RUTH THURMOND Mineola, Fla. VIRGINIA VAN BEUREN Evanston, III. Kappa Kappa Gamma RUTH WACHS Winnetka, III. Kappa Kappa Gamma ALLEN WARNE Centerville Phi Delta Theta ELIZABETH WEBB Pleasant Ridge Mich. Chi Omega CAROLYN WHITE N. Uxbridge, Mass. Alpha Xi Delta CHAS. STONEKING North Bend A. C. C. ROBERT SWAIN Clinton, Conn. Kappa Sigma FAYE THOMAS Akron Kappa Kappa Gamma MABEL THROCKMORTON Winnetka, III. Kappa Kappa Gamma JACK TREHARNE Martins Ferry A. C. C. RALPH TUPPER Southville, Mass. A. C. C. DANIEL VAN VOORHIS Camp Knox, Ky. Beta Theta Pi DOROTHY VAN VOORHIS Coshocton Shcpardson Club ELBERT WALDORF Painesville A. C. C. HOWARD WALKER Johnstown Sigma Chi LAURI WART Ashtabula A. C. C. EDGAR WAYBRIGHT Jacksonville, Fla. Kappa Sigma EDNA WEDEL Norwood Alpha Xi Delta GLENWOOD WEIDEMAIER NORWALK Beta Theta Pi ROBERT WHITE Cincinnati Lambda Chi Alpha STEWART WICKHAM East Cleveland Kappa Sigma Thirty -One President: Howard Keech Vice-President: Ruth Darrow Secretary: Gerry Stickney Treasurer: Bill Kemper Thirty-Three Anderson Baily Barth Blum Broadhead Brown Ashbrook Baily Baxter Bodamer Breining Brunner Ashman Bailor Bellamy Boar Brown Burner Bachrach Baird Binder Borden Brower Burnside Bacon Baker Blasdel Boyles Brown Campbell Thirty-Four Thirty-Five Thirty-Six I k-rfbu Ml i Jacobs Kaufman W. Kimball Laman D. Lee McClelland Jaycox Keech Kirby Landfear E. Lee McCIure Thirty-Seven McConnell Mavon Moreland Orcutt Patterson Piper McCray Melick Morgan Ortman Pease Price Mcintosh Messenger Murray Oxley Pekmezian Pyle McKensie Miltenberger O ' Bannon Oxreider Pickard Ransbottom Marks Montgomery Ogsbury Page Pilot Reed Thirty-Eight Forty Forty-One CLASS OF 1935 President: Dick Ashley Vice-President: Connie Addenbrook Secretary: Marg Spelman Treasurer: Chubby Rogers F or ty -Three Forty-Four M. Cook M. Detweiler E. Doughty Emsweiler Fleming Gaumer Greenlee Cooper R. Detweiler M. Doughty A. Evans Foot George Griffin Cornell Ditzel Dunbar J. Evans Freda Gifford Griffith Craiglow Dorr Dunlap S. Evans Gage Gibbs Gutzeit Cregar Dorsey Ebaugh Ewell Garwick Graham Hage Cunningham Dotts Eddy Fleischauer Gault Goulette Hansen Forfy-F Forty-Six Forty-Seven % ' Si A % JHHflr |- - , % ; 1 ■« I I ' ll —4 1 Jl Orr Payne Pierce Riefstahl W. Rogers Russell Schmitz Osborn Peirce Postle Riley Rosel Russelo Schutt Osmond Penson Railsbach Robbins Rosenfied Rutkowski Scott R. Owen Perry Rainey Robuck Roudebush Schaff Sears Parr Petty Rector Roffey Rowe Schatzinger Seiler Patten Phillips Rice Rogers Rusler Schertz Seitz Forty-Eight 1 :• II _ pi §p H Senhauser Simmons Snyder Streiner Teegartin Volkens Weber Shirk E. Smith M. Spelman Strosnider Thomas Wadsworth Weimert Shively H. Smith R. Spelman Stull Thrumston Walden Wells Siegler Smoot Starkey C. Taylor Thomas Ware Wheeler Siekman Smythe Stoker E. Taylor Tuttle Warren White Sieplein Snapp Stockwell R. Taylor Veale Watkins Whyte Forty-Nine Fifty-One Fifty -Two Fifty-Three Fifty-Five ALPHA ETA Ashbrook Ball Barker D. Blackburn R. Blackburn Boyd Boyles Brown Campbell Craig Ebaugh Falconer Gabele Hundley Isaac Klunder Landfear McClelland MacKay Orcutt CHAPTER ROLL Robert Acomb Paul Ashbrook Joseph Ball Dana Barker Homer Bireley Donald Blackburn Richard Blackburn George Boyd El wood Boyles Charles Brown Charles Campbell Thomas Craig Paul Ebaugh Robert Falconer Thomas Gabele Marion Hundley Lloyd Isaac Harvey Klunder Robert Landfear Joseph McClelland John MacKay Daniel Orcutt Robert Owens Andrew Pease BETA THETA PI Owens Rudin W. Smith Weidemaier Pease Sauer Stockwell Wille Price Scott D. VanVoorhis Willis E. Roberts Shepard R. VanVoorhis Wilson R. Roberts E. Smith Weber Witt CHAPTER ROLL Although Woogs , mascot dog, was de- feated in the May Queen election, Betas did succeed in electing their second Student Government president in three years. On off nights the men of W o o g 1 i n studied enough to gain second i n the scholastic standings at the same time maintaining their first in social standing. Edwin Price Edwin Roberts Richard Roberts John Rudin Richard Sauer Raymond Scott John Shepard Edward Smith Wayne Smith Richard Stockwell Daniel VanVoorhis Robert VanVoorhis Herschel Weber Glenwo od Weidemaier Jack Wille Willard Willis Lewis Wilson Elliot Witt Edward Spear Walter J Thomas FRATRES IN FACULTATE Livingston Edson Rupp Dr. Russell Williams Fifty-Seven CHAPTER ROLL Vernon Anderson Richard Ashley Richard Baird Charles E. Baker Richard Beeby Martin Brunner Paul Cherney Kenneth Coughenour Russell Dakin Gibson Dildine Frank Elliot Edward Fellman Thomas Hage Grant Hudson Daniel Jenkins Harold Johnson Norman Johnson Roderic Jones Elbert Kennard William Laycock Fifty-Eight PHI GAMMA DELTA Jones Olt Sharp Kennard Osmond Siekman Laycock Penson Tollerton McBride Postle Warren Mavon Rutkowski White Montgomery Scribner Winsor CHAPTER ROLL In addition to the Thetas, Phi Gamma Delta entertained during the year one honest-to-goodness masked robber. A Centennial highlight was the victory of the Phi Gam float in the historical parade. An- swering the phone at the Fiji lodge were a pair of flashy foot- ballers, a Denisonian editor, and several de- partmental leaders. Philip Mavon John Montgomery John Olt John Osmond Roderick Scribner Ralph Siekman Robert Tollerton Lucian Warren Charles White Herbert Winsor Ross Sharp FRATRES IN FACULTATE Clarence D. Coons Clarence M. Eddy Joseph L. King Danner L. Ma hood Karl H. Eschman Fifty -Nine OHIO IOTA CHAPTER ROLL Hazen Armstrong Mortimer Dean Edwin Bacon Carr Dix James Bailey Robert Edwards Philip Beatley Thomas Ferguson Arthur Brintnall Thomas French John Broemmelsiek Paul Garwood Herbert Brown Herbert Green Douglas Burt Robert Green David Butterfield Richard Hoffhine Joseph Carey Raymond Isenhart Schuler Carroll Richard James George Cooper Hamson Jaycox Judson Crandell Ernest Jensen Arthur Darrow Jensen Keech Kimball Lehrer Leitch Louys McClaskey McConnell Mcintosh McKee Marvin Randell ansbottom Rodgers Rupe Schatzinger Stull Sullivan Sweet Thrumston Uebelhart Warne Watkins Wiley CHAPTER ROLL Everyone must know by now that Phi Delta Theta took first in the scholarship contest. Two strong Phi Delt rushing arguments are Rupe ' s collection of white D ' s and the only two Phi Bete keys along the Row, belonging to Edwards and Uebelhart. Phi Delt boasts the larg- est chapter among the Greeks. Lloward Keech Richard Kimball Henry Lehrer Robert Leitch George Louys Roger McClaskey Robert McConnell William Mcintosh Wade McKee Robert Marvin James Randell Alfred Ransbottom Spencer Ricketts George Rodgers Earl Rupe John Schatzinger Charles Stull Rodger Sullivan Frederick Sweet Tracy Thumston James Uebelhart Allen Warne George Watkins Harold Wiley Sixty -One MU Alexander Blasdel Dunbar Amos Bridge Fleischauer Anderson Brown Greenlee Antes Coulton Hanefeld Baker Denny Harmon CHAPTER ROLL Rex Alexander Robert Amos Samuel Anderson Richard Antes Charles P. Baker Sherwood Blasdel Robert Bridge Winship Brown Jay Coulton William Denny Howard Dunbar Winston Fleischauei Charles Greenlee Harold Hanefeld Richard Harmon Woodrow Hayes Sixty-Two SIGMA CHI Hayes Niehoff Sharkey Husted Ogsbury Synder Kruse Robbins Taylor Lee Schumacher Walker Lowry Scott White CHAPTER ROLL First fraternity on the campus in 1868, Sigma Chi is still first according to co-ed opinion. Conserva- tive to the proper de- gree, men of historic Mu chapter have in- herited the secrets of campus success. Sigs are prominent a 3 office holders, glee men, club leaders, journalists, and sur- prisingly often as students. Wallace Husted Richard Kruse Donald Lee Robert Lowry Karl Niehoff James Ogsbury Frederick Robbins Joseph Schumacher Hoyt Scott Clare Sharkey Bertram Snyder Frank Taylor Howard Walker David White W. A. Chamberlin 1 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Sidney Jenkins Sixty-Thr OHIO MU CHAPTER ROLL Edison Argust Wade Barth Charles Broughton John Clark Richard Coelho Erving Conklin Robert Cook Frederick Detweiler Stanley Drews Ralph Emswiler 1 . i well 1 inhv Mac Fleming Walter Furin Joseph Graham Howard Grendon Lowell Hamilton Harry Henry James Huchison Charles Kaufman William Kemper Wilbur Kohlman Harrison Korner xty-Four SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON CHAPTER ROLL Granville awoke one morning last winter to find 17 new S.A.E ' s at large, Alpha Theta Sigma having been absorbed by Ohio Mu of Sigma Alpha Epsi- lon. Now, next in importance to the week-end parties at the S.A.E. house, is the problem of annex- ing that big yellow ranch on Broadway. Adrian Lanning Jack Latta Eugene Loughrin Donnavan Ludwig Darwin McElwee Ralph McGeorge Ralph Morris William Pierce Bertram Pilot James Remmele Lewis Riefstahl Ronald Rossiter Paul Saurer Edwin Senhauser Harry Shank James Shrake William Sohl Charles Specs Jack Tingley Paul Weisenbarger Ned Wetherill Dwight White Wilbur Wright Donald Zell FRATRES IN FACULTATE C. L. Williams Sixty-Five GAMMA XI Adams Agin Archibald Beck Bickford Blum Borden Cassel Ellison Felker Fitzgerald Gaumer Gregg Hansen Hauser Jacob Laman Martin CHAPTER ROLL Robert Adams Edward Agin Dale Archibald Hamilton Beck Marshall Bickforc Karl Blum Robert Borden Samuel Cassel Glenn Ellison John Felker Byron Fitzgerald Thomas Gaumer Corbly Gregg James Hansen John Hauser Howard Jacob Frank Laman Stanley Martin Kenneth Maxwell Charles Megaw Arthur Mentall Richard Osborn Sixty-Six KAPPA SIGMA if J Maxwell Sloat R. Waybright Megaw Swain Wickham Osburn Taylor Wolfe Rainey Turner Wooten Robertson Washington Zeller Rogers E. Waybright Zimmers CHAPTER ROLL A Kappa Sigless Denison would be hard to imagine, for these men are every- where and in every- thing, seemingly at the same time. Kappa Sigma annually con- tributes a major por- tion of Denison ' s ath- letes. Besides being prize serenaders, in- tramuralists, athletes, and social lights, they are occasionally stu- dents. Stuart Rainey iver Robertson Walter Rogers Donald Sloat Robert Swain Robert Taylor Clifford Turner Karl Woxman Harve Washington Edgar Waybright Roger Waybright Stuart Wickham Eugene Wolfe James Wooten Karl Zeller Neal Zimmers FRATRES IN FACULTATE John L. Bjelke Donald Fitch August Odebrccht Malcolm E. Stickney Sixty-Seven ALPHA IOTA ffSn 1 l HE vylM mm m mi « ' lit; JB i 1 Bodamer Gray Broadhead Hermann Campbell Hobbs Fink Kirby CHAPTER ROLL Paul Bodamer Alfred Broadhead George Campbell Wendell Fink Russell Gray George Hermann Harold Hobbs Herman Klein Sixty-Eight BETA KAPPA CHAPTER ROLL Glenn Kyker Reynolds Lair Joseph McCracken Robert Rusler Paul Sheetz Wendell Wood Denison ' s baby fra- ternity, Beta Kappa, added new honors during the past year. With a dramatist and a playwright cooper- ating. Beta Kappas guided Masquers. And when the band broke up the white house in- herited enough red and white monkey suits to outfit campus Santa Clauses for years to come. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Paul Biefeld T. A. Lewis Sixty-Nine GAMMA IOTA ZETA Bloomingdale Bowerman Cornell Gabel Hollingworth Hume Humphrey Lawyer Lee Martin Mittendorf CHAPTER ROLL Alfred Bloomingdale Emert Bowerman Maurice Cornell Hugh Espey Joseph Gabel Elmer Hickox Neal Hollingworth Richard Hume George Knox Reese Lawyer Maurice Lee Ira Martin Albert Mittendorf Merrill Patterson Charles Robb William Saefkow James Humphrey LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Robb Scriven Valentine Saefkow Shakley Simmons White Wilcox Schaefer Steck Wiley Schmitz Taylor Williams CHAPTER ROLL Early cultivatin ' last fall resulted in record crops on the Lambda Chi farm this season. A few ath- letes, a Denisonian business manager, a quota of departmental men, and several Stone Hall favorites went westward each night. With the grad- uation of last year ' s seniors Lambda Chi night in Newark was a failure this year. William Schaefer Charles Schmitz Albert Scriven Lloyd Shakley in Simmons Charles Taylor Robert White Robert Wilcox Walter Wiley Walter Williams Harry Steck FRATRES IN FACULTATE Frederick Detweiler Richard K. Howe Alfred Johnson Kenneth Martin George Morgan Eri J. Shumaker Seventy-One CHAPTER ROLL Norman Adams Howard Ashton Alex Bachrach Thomas Bailar Norman Bayless Burson Baylan Carl Capen William Czap Daniel Davies Clifford Davis Gabriel DeCicco Robert DePuy Eugene Deitz Kenneth Dotts Francis Doughty Wilfred Eataugh Theodore Everitt Albert Foot Fred Faster Russell Fox Seventy-Two AMERICAN COMMONS CLUB Ml. MM t F - ' ' i iJ i . ■i k. 1 1 Fox Grady Halley V. Hayes C. Helfrick Humlicek Jacobs Johnson Kelih Kincheloe Landon Larkin Leedy Lohrentz McDaniel CHAPTER ROLL Denison Chapter of the American Asso- ciation of Commons Clubs, sticking religi- ously to the ideal of democracy on which it was founded, fills a vital place in the campus scheme. With the largest chapter roll on the campus, the Commoners have athletes, glee men, club leaders, and one recently crowned Phi Bete. Harry Grady Henry Halley Victor Hayes Ralph Helfrick Adolph Humlicek Gerald Jacobs Lee Johnson Stephen Kelih Robert Kincheloe Paul Kubik Harold Landon James Larkin Russell Leedy Wilbur Lohrentz George McDaniel David McKechnie Elden Mays Roland Miller Henry Miltenberger I Seven fy-T ' hree DENISON CHAPTER McKechnie Mays Miller Miltonberger Myiasaki Moore Ortman Packer Peterson Pickard Powell Railsback Ranz Rector Russell Russelo Serafy Short CHAPTER ROLL Yuzo Miyasaki James Moore Thomas Ortman Mortimer Packer Oscar Peterson George Pickard William Powell David Railsback Elmer Ranz Ralph Rector Charles Russell Delmar Terafy Roy Shilling Herbert Short John Siegler Pennington Smith Eugene Sterling John Stevenson A Club tradition de- mands that each year A.C.C. men dominate the varsity cross- country team, win the intramural champion- ships in wrestling and cross-country, and keep the path be- tween the Old Brick and Stone Hall in constant use. The Club never fails in its contribution to the glee club, honoraries and departmentals. ' enty-Four AMERICAN COMMONS CLUB Siegler Stoneking Walker Smith Talbot Wart Sterling Treharne Watkins Stevenson Tupper Wells Stoeckman Volkens Wheeler Stollatis Waldorf Wymer CHAPTER ROLL Denison needs the Commons Club. The democracy of the group guarantees a college home to every Denison man. That the American Asso- ciation of Commons Clubs is proving a new and driving force in the fraternity world is recognized by all fraternity lead- ers. Denison is proud of the fact that the organization was born on its campus. George Stoeckman William Stollatis Charles Stoneking John Talbot Jack Treharne Ralph Tupper Milton Volkens Elbert Waldorf Prose Walker ' Lauri Wart Richard Watkins Robert Wells George Wheeler Thomas Wymer FRATRES IN FACULTATE F. Dewey Amner L. Richard Dean Samuel S. Gelfer Bruce D. Greenshields Chosaburo Kato Forbes B. Wiley Seventy-Five Seventy-Seven ■ir, m BETA TAU Adams Addenbrooke Arnold Ashley Blasdel Braunschweiger Breitenwischer Brower Burner Cherney Conley Forrest Goodyear Guckert Hess Hunter F. Hutchinson M. Hutchinson Ireland Jones Keeling Knapp Kwis Lepper CHAPTER ROLL Adams, Eunice Addenbrooke, Constance Barton, Viva Blasdel, Patricia Braunschweiger, Kathryn Breitenwischer, Wilhelmina Brower, Beth Burner, Nelle Cherney, Marjorie Conley, Helen Forrest, Jean Goodyear, Mary Kathryn Guckert, Frances Hess, Helen Louise Hunter, Eleanor Hutchinson, Frances Hutchinson, Margaret Ireland, Patricia Jones, Barbara Keeling, Mary Jane Knapp, Elizabeth Kwis, Margaret Seventy -Eight KAPPA ALPHA THETA Lindstrom Petty Shepard Teegardin Lohr Phillips Simon Wietzel Menaul Piatt Smythe White Nightingale Reed Spencer Woodyard Page Roberts Stevens Young Pease Roderick Sweet Barton CHAPTER ROLL Running neck and neck with the best, the typical Kappa Alpha Theta girl is one of the most popular co-eds in college. Always an ac- tivity-all, and occasion- ally a May Queen, a Y. W. C. A. president, or a Phi Bete, she majors in the Hut, the Phi Gams and Betas, and week-ends. Lepper, Margaret Lindstrom, Jean Lohr, Marjorie Menaul, Sally Nightingale, Ann Pease, Frances Petty, Nancy Phillips, Hazel Piatt, Ann Reed, Dorothy Roberts, Eileen Roderick, Kathryn Shepard, Barbara Simon, Esther Smythe, Marjorie Spencer, Juliette Stevens, Marjory Sweet Mary Teegardin, Betty White, Ruth Wietzel, Helen Woodyard, Jane Young, Jane Seventy-Nine GAMMA OMEGA Anderson Ballard Black Bloser D. Collins M. Collins Cooper Darrow K. Davis L. Davis M. Eddy M. E. Eddy Flory Green Guntrup Hanson Highl CHAPTER ROLL Anderson, Elizabeth Ballard, Betty Black, Catherine Bloser, Mary Casselberry, Mary Ann Collins, Dorothy Collins, Marjorie Cooper, Ann Linda Cunningham, Charlene Darrow, Ruth Davis, Kathleen Davis, Linda Eddy, Martha Eddy, Mary Elizabeth English, Virginia Flory, Frances Green, Elizabeth Hanson, Alethea Highland, Linda Jackson, Nan Betty Davies, Elizabeth Eighty KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Lamson Mentall Roach Throckmorton Lewis Mercer Robbins McClure Montgomery- Smith Veale VanBeuren Wachs C. McCormick Nist Stoker Wiley F. McCormick Pierce Thomas Witt CHAPTER ROLL We are the Kappas, Kappas are we. We run W. S. G. A. two consecutive years. We make the W. A. A. varsity walking team, and we campaign earnestly for Y. W. C. A. We dominate seve- ral honoraries, and oh so many men. We even study — enough to take fourth place in scholarship. Our Key opens everything. We are the Kappas. Lamson, Mary Jane Lewis, Eloise McClure, Margaret McCormick, Clarita McCormick, Frances Mentall, Selma Mercer, Genevieve Montgomery, Susan Nist, Mary Elizabeth Pierce, Annabelle Roach, Rosalie Robbins, Anna Smith, Jane Stoker, Margaret Thomas, Faye Throckmorton, Mabel Van Beuren, Virginia Veale, Elizabeth Wiley, Dorothy Witt, Gretchen SOROR IN FACULTATE Olney, Helen Eighty-One BETA KAPPA CHAPTER ROLL Adams, Edna Armitage, Ruth Ashmun, Corrinne Brown, Gertrude Cook, Gladys Detweiler, Muriel Frances, Lola Joy, Ruth Bryan, Helen Mae Eighty-Two ALPHA PHI Stickney Whyte CHAPTER ROLL When only a scat- tering of actives re- turned to school last fall, Alpha Phi faced an up-hill struggle. A fine pledge class saved the situation. False publicity, turned on their proposed showing o f lingerie, caused Alpha Phis to cancel the event. Why should Alpha Phi parties be so popular among the men? Leach, Merle Little, Margaret Moores, Jean Smith, Virginia Stickney, Geraldine Thomas, Elizabeth Thuma, Lela Willard, Frances Wingert, Lucille Whyte, Mary Lenore Eighty-Three DELTA CHI Brown Clark Clifford A. Cline H. Cline Coe Coons Detweiler Evans Gilbert Clithero Grafenstadt Griffin Harper Hughes Jacques E. Kemper M. Kemper CHAPTER ROLL Brown, Bertha Clark, Betty Clifford, Carolyn Cline, Adeline Cline, Henrietta Clithero, Margaret Coons, Jane Evans, Shirleymae Grafenstadt, Ada Griffin, Mary Harper, Bee Hughes, Caryl Jacques, Dorothy Kemper, Elizabeth Eighty-Four DELTA DELTA DELTA Kennedy Robbins Snider Komarek Roudebush Straughan McClure Schutt Sturgeon McDowell Seiler Toren i J j | rk i ' wm, J , iff L II Pierce Shewmon Tuttle Robinson Snell Wolfe CHAPTER ROLL Tri - Delts scatter their affections equally, and party night in the hill-top mansion resem- bles an inter-fraternity conference. Tri-Delts take their majors in the Hut and their minors on the hill. Don ' t forget, however, that library statistics proved Delta Delta Delta the most read group in sc hool. Kemper, Martha Komarek, Henrietta McClure, Marthabelle McDowell, Janet Pierce, Mary Elinor Robbins, Mary Ellen Robinson, Irene Roudebush, Ida Schutt, Marjory Shewmon, Ruth Snell, Elizabeth Snider, Betty Straughan, Harriet Toren, Dorothy Tuttle, Mary Wolf, Doris Eighty-Five Baker Bayless Bigglestone Chambers Collett Conover Craiglow Dawson Dennis Diehl Doughty Durnell Ewell George Gibbs Harford Hart Johns CHAPTER ROLL Baker, Mildred Bayless, Marian Bigglestone, Ruth Chambers, Mildred Collett, Henrietta Conover, Marjorie Craiglow, Elsie Dawson, Jean Dennis, Fern Doughty, Mary Durnell, Mary Frances Ewell, Jean George, Carol Gibbs, Emma Jean Harford, Jeannette Hart, Erna King, Ella Krebs, Elnora Diehl, Virginia Eighty-Six CHI OMEGA v. , A A King Mathewson H. Smith A. Landrum Neptune M. Spelman E. Landrum Newton R. Spelman Lyons Potter Taylor McBurney Schneller Webb Marks Smith Willsey CHAPTER ROLL After annexing a record pledge class Chi Omega scored a hit with the men this year by holding several par- ties at Granville Inn. With the winning aid of a few Phi Delts the Chi O ' s handled Mas- quers. Under the lead- ership of their junior president, Chi Omega enjoyed a banner year. Landrum, Antoinette Landrum, Esther Lyons, Mary Jane McBurney, Ruth Marks, Dorothy Mathewson, Alice McKenzie, Helen Neptune, Frances Newton, Sara Potter, Ruth Schneller, Margaret Smith, Helen Spelman, Marjorie Spelman, Ruth Taylor, Eleanor Webb, Elizabeth Willsey, Florence SOROR IN FACULTATE McNeil, Carol M. Eighty-Seven E. Baxter M. Baxter Bellamy Bingham Bondeson Daniels Davidson Dickerson Dorr Estey Freda Grant Handy Hartshorn Hollingworth Hudson CHAPTER ROLL Baxter, Elizabeth Baxter, Mary Bellamy, Carolyn Bingham, Frances Bondeson, Betty Daniels, Barbara Davidson, Lurabelle Dickerson, Anne Dorr, Carol Estey, Mary Grant, Ann Handy, Beatrice Hartshorn, Dorothy Hollingworth, Jeannette Hudson, Mildred Eighty-Eight ALPHA OMICRON PI Jackson Mohr Perry- Johnson Montgomery Rowe Jones Mosher Luebben Oxrieder Sears Shepardson Sprouse Mathews Palmer Weimert CHAPTER ROLL Within two years Alpha Omicron Pi grew from a local into one of the strongest Greek groups. A. O. Pis claim their share of representatives in all activities. And when it ' s party night at the Thresher street house, Kappa Sigma turns out in a body. Jackson, Barbara Johnson, Harriet Jones, Theodora Luebben, Kathryn Mathews, Rebecca Mohr, Marian Montgomery, Sara M. Mosher, Elizabeth Oxrieder, Mona Palmer, Doris Perry, Lucille Rowe, Margaret Sears, Miriam Shepardson, Martha Sprouse, Lillian Weimert, Jane Eighty-Nine DENISON CHAPTER Amrine Augenstein Boor Boynton Brakeman Christopherson Coghill Cregar Giffin Goulette Gutzeit Gutzeit Herrin Lee Leedy Lewis Mabee CHAPTER ROLL Amrine, Dorothy Augenstein, Ethel Boor, Lola Boynton, Rachel Brakeman, Margaret Burgoon, Pearl Christopherson, Ruth Coghill, Muriel Cregar, Martha Goulette, Helen Gutzeit, Dorothy Gutzeit, Edith Herrin, Lucile Lee, Evelyn Leedy, Ruth Lewis, Elizabeth McElroy, Dorothy MacLean, Joy Giffin, Louise CHAPTER ROLL Following custom, Shepardson Club won the scholarship contest this year, producing one Phi Bete. The group fairly ran W. A. A. with several ath- letic co-eds among their number. And, in case you haven ' t heard, the Shepardson Club house is one of Granville ' s most historic resi- dences, having once housed run - away slaves. Mabee, Ruth Madill, Elizabeth Mason, Barbara Maurer, Lillian Mouser, Martha Obenland, Florence Orcutt, Esmah Pekmezian, Naomi Pretorious, Er Thompson, Margaret Thompson, Roberta Tuller, Vera Varnell, Edna Mae Van Voorhis, Dorothy Ware, Mildred Ann Wood, Thel ma Zimmer, Mildred SORORES IN FACULTATE Hopkins, Ruth Marsh, Rilda Ninety-One BETA DELTA Consaul Davies Duncan Evans Evans Gage Gage Harris Hooper Hubbell Keadey CHAPTER ROLL Consaul, Lillis Davies, Ruth Duncan, Marian Evans, Eleanor Evans, Ruth Gage, Marjory Gage, Murray Harris, Lucille Keadey, Dolores A ALPHA XI DELTA Kauffman Sommers McDonald Mirise Oxley Sieplein Lunsford Wedel Weinz White Wilkinson CHAPTER ROLL Oxley, Marguerite Sieplein, Dorothy Sommers, Julia Tope, Eleanor Weinsz, Eleanore White, Caroline With a new shining charter from Alpha Xi Delta, these former Delta Psi co-eds defi- nitely established a place for themselves during the past year. Their president was se- lected for Phi Beta Kappa honors. Strong nationally, Alpha Xi Delta chose wisely in placing this chapter. SORORES IN FACULTATE Akers, Miriam Overturf, Mrs. N. H. Mirise, Gwendolyn Ninety-Th DENISON CHAPTER Dunlap Bell Jackson Binder Herrick Hayes McCauley CHAPTER ROLL Bell, Mary Alice Binder, Jeannette Dunlap, Sara Hayes, Alta Marie Herrick, Ruth Hoffman, Faye Jackson, Helen Louise Kauffman, Lois A Ninety-Four T ALPHA DELTA SIGMA McFarlane Walden C. Merchant G. Merchant Wisch Oldham Workman CHAPTER ROLL Baby among the sor- ority Greeks, Alpha Delta Sigma has grown rapidly since its inception as a local in 1930. The girls have performed wonders on that resurrected house on Mulberry Street. A national charter for this up and doing group appears not far away. McCauley, Ruth McFarlane, Josephine Merchant, Charlotte Merchant, Gladys Oldham, Lois Walden, Virginia Wisch, Hazel Workman, Elizabeth Ninety-Five Ninety-Seven PHI BETA KAPPA FACULTY Avery A. Shaw F. Dewey Amner Willis A. Chamberlain L. R. Dean Frederick G. Detweiler Karl H. Eschman W. Alfred Everhart Donald R. Fitch Richard H. Howe CHAPTER ROLL H. Rhoades Hundley Alfred J. Johnson Thomas A. Lewis August Odebrecht Anna B. Peckham Eri J. Schumaker Alma B. Skinner Malcolm E. Stickney Frank J. Wright UNDERGRADUATES SENIORS Pearl Burgoon Linda Davis Robert Edwards Margaret Lepper Lillian Maurer -James Uebelhart -Charles Welling (■' Elected in Junior Year) JUNIOR Charles Stoneking Phi Beta Kappa, honorary scholastic fraternity, has among its members the undergraduate and faculty leaders in every educational branch. Membership is restricted to those who attain a high scholastic record. Ninety-Eight PHI SOCIETY MEMBERS 1929 Edna Adams Elaine Ashley Pearl Burgoon Linda Davis Aletha Hanson Ethel Hurley Frances Hutchinson Margaret Lepper Mary E. Nist Margaret Thompson Robert Edwards Thomas Gabele Richard Kruse William Powell James Uebelhart Charles Welling 1930 Frances Bingham Muriel Coghill Jean Dawson Mary Jane Lamson Wilma Lawrence Margaret Little Florence Obenland Hazen Armstrong Robert Bridge Gibson Dildine Wilfred Etough Joseph Gabel Oscar Peterson Charles Stoneking 1931 Lola Boor Nelle Bummer Elizabeth Davies Ruth Grimmell Theodora Jones Dorothy Marks Eilene Messenger Margaret Oxley Mary Schneller Martha A. Shepardson Virginia Smith Geraldine Stickney Lela Thuma Ednah Mae Varnell Sherwood Blasdel Judson Crandall Russell Fox Ernest Jensen Howard Keech Joseph McClelland Marion Moreland Allen Murray Danial Orcutt George Pickard John Stevenson William Umbach Roberta Thompson Thomas Ortman Phi Society, a junior organization to Phi Beta Kappa, has among its members the out- standing students in scholarship in the freshman class. Phi Society is the first step toward a Phi Beta Kappa Key. Ninety-Nine ALLIGATORS Gabele Kruse Laycock Scott Alligators is an honorary organization for Senior men. The members are chosen for ability in all forms of college activity. Numbered on its rolls are the Denison men who have excelled in athletics and student leadership. lie Hundred CAP AND GOWN Cap and Gown is restricted to women in the senior class. They are chos2n for school loyalty, scholarship and womanliness. The aim of this group is to promote and support the worthwhile activities in school and to help create a greater Denison spirit. One Hundred One EL CIRCULO CASTELLANO Denison University Spanish Club MEMBERS Mr. Wiley Mr. Amner Dorothy Amrine Maurine Burnside Barbara Daniels Marion Duncan Evelyn Frieda Dorothy Jacques Florence Kiess Rebecca Mathews Ruth McCauley Wade McKee Frances Neptune Irene Robinson Naomi Rosenfield Phylis Snyder Pennington Smith Julia Sommers Marjorie Spellman Ruth Spellman Elizabeth Strosnider John Stevenson Virginia Van Buren El Circulo Castellano is the organization in school made up of Spanish majors and those interested in the language. Each year the club gives a play in the original Spanish which is appreciatively attended by many of the students and faculty of the college. e Hundred Two Braunschweiger Bingham English Landrum Light Little Piatt Potter Sweet Van Buren Webb Crossed Keys is an organization composed of women elected to membership in the latter part of their sophomore year. Organized in 1926 this group has ever since been outstanding in its attempt to promote better feeling between classes and uphold the time honored traditions of Denison. One Hundred Three SHEPARDSON DEBATE Showing that they are not to be outdone by their brother debators, the girls of Denison have stepped rapidly forward and not only made a name for themselves here, but also among the other schools of Ohio where they have made many trips to show their prowess in this art. One Hundred Four TAU KAPPA ALPHA Ande Kruse Lewis Thompson Tau Kappa Alpha is a national debating society made up of both men and women. All are eligible who have participated in a certain number of intercollegiate debates and who are interested in making debating a thing of interest on the Denison Campus. One Hundred Five Y. W. C. A Ashman Bowman Brown Cowman Dennis Detwiler Eddy Estey Fang Guckert Harris Jackson Kemper Lepper Mabee Marks Merchant Nist Reed Smith Sprouse Stickney Sweet Wiley The Denison Y. W. C. A. has this year lived up magnificently to the name and place it holds on the Denison campus. Prominent in its effort to aid the new girls the Y. W. holds frequent social events where all girls may become acquainted and the new girls particularly made to feel at home. ne Hundred Six GRANVILLE DEBATE Since intercollegiate debating was established as an extra curricular activity in the Ohio colleges not many years ago, the boys of Denison, under the name of the Granville Debating Society, have shown an unusual amount of interest in this line and we may find a number of excellent speakers in their midst. One Hundred Seven COSMOPOLITAN Amrine Capen Fleming Bailor De Cicco Giffin Bailey Detweiler Green Bowerman Etaugh Gutzeit Boynton Fang E. Gutzeit The Cosmopolitan Club holds an important position on the campus in that it brings together a group of students who are interested in the problem of racial distinctions. The motto of the club is Above all nations is Humanity . ne Hundred Eight ft CLUB Humlicek Lewis Rodgers Jensen MacLean Sears Kirby Miyasaki Taylor Komerik Maurer Thompson Lee Pekmezian Workman As students of Denison we are indeed fortunate in being able to have near us the members of this club. We here receive the opportunity to become acquainted with the members of other races and are enabled to enlighten our views on their problems as well as our own when seen from another side. One Hundred Nine MEMBERS Boyd Wilcox Isenhart Patterson Gabel Broadhead Orcutt Wiley Prof. Ladner Prof. Greenshields Although Denison is not primarily an engineering school, this club under the able leader- ship of Prof. Greenshields, has succeeded in making a name for itself in its effort to become a strong organization. One Hundred Ten Miss Marsh Mrs. Stark Prof. Stewart Ethel Augenstein Thomas Bailor Marshall Bickford Lola Boor Bursan Boylan Margaret Brakeman Henrietta Cline Helen Cowman Martha Cregin William Czap Mary Doughty Jean Ewell Max Fleming MEMBERS Patricia Gibbs Edward Giffird Helen Goulette Lawrence Grant Mrs. Grant Ruth Herrick Caryl Hughs Nancy Kennard Robert Kincheloe George ,Knox Henrietta Komarek Paul Kubic Harold Landon Marjorie Lohr David McKechnie Dorothy McElroy Barbara Mason Lillian Mae Maurer Keneth Maxwell Florence Obenland Emma Pretorius David Railsbach Max Russello Delmar Serafy Lillian Sprouse Geraldine Stickney Ralph Tupper Ruth Thurmond Ednah Mae Varnell George Wheeler Thelma Wood The George Piatt Knox Club, although just a local organization has made itself prominent on the campus under the able leadership of Prof. Stewart. Its membership is composed of those students who are interested in Christian Education. One Hundred Eleven WOMEN ' S STUDENT GOVERNMENT Bingham Braunschweiger Coghill Duncan Eddy English Estey Harris Jones A. Landrum E. Landrum Lepper Lewis Little Nist Potter Shepard Stevens Thompson Van Buren Wiley Founded, like the Men ' s Student Government Association, on the principle of free expression of opinion, this group serves as a clearing house for governmental discussion. Bound as they are by many restrictions, the women of the University find that their representation makes for a greater understanding between student and administrator and easier adjustment of disciplinary difficulties. e Hundred Twelve MEN ' S STUDENT GOVERNMENT Ashley Baker Blackburn Blackburn Capen Craig Gabele Grady Keech Kruse Laycock Warne Holding that the principle of democracy is the political birthright of every Denisonian, the college early fostered the system of student government. No voice is refused the prerogative of expressing opinion. Officers are chosen on the basis of ability rather than on affiliation. Regular meetings with the faculty and women ' s group insure smooth-running machinery for the undergraduate world. One Hundred Thirteen THE MEN ' S Agin Bridge Dix Alexander Capen Dorsey Archibald Cassel Hayes Beck Czap Isaac Bickford Denny Jacobs The Men ' s Glee Club is perhaps the best known organization on the Denison campus. After they had succeeded in gaining first place in the district contest the club journeyed to St. Louis where the boys managed to take fifth place in the national Glee Club contest. e Hundred Fourteen GLEE CLUB Jensen Kelih Kimball Kinchloe Kubik Lawyer McKechnie Olt Senhauser Snyder Taylor Weber Wheeler Zeller Schirmer Not content with making a national name for themselves the boys in the club often find time every week or so to make short trips around the country side, through which they have succeeded in becoming doubly popular. Our hat goes off to the Glee Club. One Hundred Fifteen THE WOMEN ' S Baker Bayless Binder Best Bryan Cook Dennis Detweiler Durnell Estey Ewell Gage Harford Herrin Hollingworth Jackson Johnson Keadey Kemper Kiess Kirgan Knapp Komarek Denison must stand by its women singers in their attempt to make the Women ' s Glee Club in this institution a successful thing. In the effort to bring out the women Glee Clubs of the country in the last few years, the girls of Denison have stepped admirably to the front. e Hundred Sixteen 1 GLEE CLUB Lee Lindstrom Little Mathewson McClure McFarlane Mentall Pease Perry Rosel Shepard Shepardson Smith Smoot Snapp Starkey Stickney Thuma Thompson Tuttle Wilkin son Wingert Yaggi Although the women do not have the same chances that the men do to make a national name for themselves, they have succeeded in making a local name which brings equally large audiences as the men sing to. One Hundred Seventeen PHI MU ALPHA Phi Mu Alpha was installed in Denison in 1912 as an honorary musical fraternity for men. Founded in New England in the late nineties, the Denison chapter of this fraternity may be well looked upon in the college musical world. e Hundred Eighteen BLUE KEY Argust Fellman Garwood Johnson Klein Lee Sauer Shrake Turner Walker Although Blue Key is our newest National honorary organization in school it is not new to the Denison Campus as a group. Founded as Boosters this club has done much to help the college in the efforts to make inter-fraternity and inter-class relations more practical. One Hundred Nineteen DENISON ORCHESTRA Stilled tongues of waiting audiences . . . raised arms of the director with his long, nervous fingers ... a moment of tense anticipation . . . then the swift crescendo of the opening bars of a famous symphony . . . that ' s Recital . . . the hush of a tall-windowed cathedral . . . black-robed rows of waiting chorus . . . the director steps to his music-stand . . . long fingers poise the tiny wand in mid-air ... his arms swing downward . . . that ' s the Messiah . . . and in the Spring . . . gathered on the South Plaza . . . chairs grouped to permit the entrance of Orchesis ' dancers . . . waiting soloists who sing the leading roles . . . expectant music-lovers sitting on the slope of the Hill . . . that ' s Orpheus. One Hundred Twenty DEMSON BAND Flaming scarlet . . . gleaming white . . . throbbing pulse of martial melody . . . sixty feet beating a regular tattoo on frozen ground . . . flash of silver as the baton whirls in dextrous fingers ... a red-and-white chequer in a sloping grandstand of brilliantly coloured toques and scarves . . . wildly exultant blare of trumpets when the Big Red marches to victory . . . loyal, lilting encouragement in the face of defeat . . . that ' s the Band. One Hundred Twenty-One ETA SIGMA PHI Augenstein Breining Coghill Crandall Harris Johnson Kemper Lawrence Light Little Marks Miller Leedy Powell Stevenson Thompson Eta Sigma Phi is made up of students prominent in the classical languages. Besides being merely an honorary organization this group often presents the plays of the olden days for the benefit and enjoyment of the faculty and the students. e Hundred Twenty-Two DELTA OMICRON Ashley Bigglestone Coghill Coons Dennis Keady Kemper Little Mathewson Mercer Shepard Shepardson Stickney Thuma Van Voorhis Wilkinson Delta Omicron, a national organization for women, was founded on the Denison campus in 1912. Although only women of exceptional music ability are invited to join, we find that each year the group has its full quota of those talented in the musical line. One Hundred Twenty-Three THE DENISON Anderson Armstrong Bailey Beck Bellamy Bridge Dean Ellison Heald Klein Masquers, the dramatics organization in the school, has made rapid steps toward the little theatre movement. The plays chosen this year were well received by both the town and the students, and everyone is looking forward with a great deal of anticipation to as good a season next year. ne Hundred Twenty-Four MASQUERS El b M l ' J 1 ■■■■. Kyker Stickney Landrum Sweet Leach Ublehart Linder Zimmers Peterson Woelhaf This organization owes much of its success to the able direction of Prof. Woelhaf. Although there are many budding actors in the University, we find that the membership of Masquers itself is restricted to those students who are considered to have exceptional ability. One Hundred Twenty-Five One Hundred Twenty-Eight ADYTUM Shepardson Smith Husted Marks Ashbrook Dorr Larki Pierce Augenstein Stull Weinz Daniel Van Voorhis Business Manager Published each year by the Junior class, this book is always a living tribute to the industry and conscientious recognition of trust that char- acterizes its staff. One Hundred Twenty-Nine THE One of the foremost publications in its field, this newsheet has long been a careful herald of coming events and accurate in its reports on college events. William Laycock Editor One Hundred Thirty DENISONIAN mm . ... : , „M Mfci ' iHi ■Maxwell Swain Rutkowski Sweet Scott Warren Sharkey Waybright Shepardson Woolson Bert Scriven Business Manager Zealous editors have maintained its reputation as the voice, not of a paternalistic administra- tion, but of a living social order that expects and deserves the right of the free press. One Hundred Thirty-One One Hundred Thirty-Three One Hundred Thirty-Four One Hundred Thirty-Five One Hundred Thirty-Seven Adams, End Borden, Tackle HILLSDALE GAME One Hundred Thirty-Eight One Hundred Thirty-Nine Gabele, Full Henry, Guard CINCINNATI GAME One Hundred Forty One Hundred Forty-One Walker, Quarter Wart, Center OBERLIN GAME One Hundred Forty-Two One Hundred Forty-Three White, Craig, Rape, Gabele, Waldorf, Adams, Walker, Davies, Gray, Ortman, Hutchinson, W ' msor. Coach Rich, Coach Livingston, White, Kelih, Price, Henry, Hauser, Wart, Dakin, Ellison, Price, Coach Morgan, Coach Rogers. W aybright, Edwards, Borden, Scott, Border, Miller, Piper, Blackburn. FRESHMAN SQUAD Amos, Scott, White, Martin, McDaniel, Clark. Bachrach, Hayes, Kimball, Rogers, French, Osborn, Greenlee, Graham. Coach Rogers, Rogers, Hanson, Evans, Johnson, Ferguson, MacKay, Bolton, Blum. One H u n d red Forty -Four One Hundred Forty-Five Darrow, Forward Davies, Guard After a somewhat successful barn storming trip during the Christmas holidays, the Big Red, under the keen eye of Coach Walter Livingston, opened their court season with a decisive 40 to 18 win over Miami on the latter ' s court. The following game saw Wittenberg march off with a 37 to 30 verdict in a closely played game at home. It was Stork Robbins, Denison ' s six foot five center who registered 1 1 points to cop the scoring honors for Denison. A trip to Cleveland proved disastrous as they were whipped by a strong Western Reserve team 5 3 to 29. Denny, Guard Knpe, Guard One Hundred Forty-Six McCoiinell, Forward Robbins, Center A pair of wins, one over Wabash and Cincinnati put the locals back into the win column, but Wittenberg again scored a victory this time by a score 3 5 to 22. Wesleyan won an overtime game at Delaware 3 3 to 31, but a double loss to Wabash and DePauw sunk the Big Red further down in the loss column. They came back with a win over Miami again 3 6 to 3 3, but Oberlin and DePauw tripped them again 3 8 to 2 8 and 21 to 19. The latter game was close throughout with Howard Walker dropping in the tying basket near the end of the game, but to no avail. Rossiter, Guard Sauer, Guard One Hundred Forty -Seven Scott, Forward Walker, Forward Wesleyan wound up the Big Red ' s season on the Wigwam floor, with a 58 to 34 win over Denison. The first part of the game was close, but during the second half the losers cracked and, headed by Hendricks, Duncan and Ginaven, the visitors went on a scoring spree to assure them of a victory. Such men as Walker, Captain Scott, the All-Buckeye Honorary Captain, Rupe, and Davies aided greatly in bringing victories to Coach Livingston. One Hundred Forty-Eight VARSITY first Row: Denny, McConneU, Scott, Captain, H. Walker, Sauer. Second Row: Waybright, Manager, Davies, Rossiter, Harrow, Robbins, Morgan, Rupe, and Coach Walter J. Livingston. One Hundred Forty-Nine One Hundred Fifty-One Adams, Catcher Chapman, First Although Denison ' s baseball record for the 1931 season does not look so good, Coach Sidney Jenkins had a squad of loyal men who gave their best for him. The records show that the Big Red nine won but a single game during the season. This they won from Ohio U. on the home lot by a score of 8 to 4. Ed Spear won the decision for D. U. The Oberlin game was another close affair, the visitors winning out in the ninth inning by a score of 5 to 3 after the score had been tied at 3 all up to that time. The remainder of the games were won by the opposing teams. One Hundred Fifty-Two Coach Jenkins ' ball tossers took to the road during the week-end of May 8th and 9th meet- ing Miami and Cincinnati where they lost a brace of games to the hosts. The following week saw them in Oberlin where they also dropped another encounter, as they did at Athens against Ohio U. Wabash, touring into Ohio, trounced the locals by a lopsided score, while Miami brought Denison ' s baseball season to a close with a victory over the Red and White on Deeds Field. Amongst the squad one finds Glenn Wright, center fielder, who ran away with the batting honors. One Hundred Fifty-Three H. Walker, Right O. Walker, Short In right field was Howard Walker and Ray Scott in left; whereas the infield consisted of Chapman at first, Trask at second, Saurer at third, and Otto Walker at short. The pitching staff was composed of all right handers; Couchey, Spear and Stoneking, with Adams and Rupe sharing in the receiving. Denison ' s baseball hopes went fluttering last year as the sport wass abolished due to the lack of finances and enthusiasm in the sport. Wright, Center Jenkins, Coach ne Hundred Fifty-Four VARSITY Left to right, seated on ground: Spear, p., H. Walker, r.f., Johnson, c. Second Row: Sfoneking, p., Turner, s.s., Couchcy, p., O. Walker, s.s., Trask, 2b., Baker, o.f., Wright, c.}., Saurer, lb., Beafley, lb. Standing: Welling, Trainer, M. Lee, Manager, Adams, c, Chapman, lb., Scott, . ., Brown, o.f., Rupe, c, and Jenkins, Coach. One Hundred Fifty-Fiv One Hundred Fifty-Seven DePuy. Espey. Under the direction of Walter Livingston, head track coach, the Big Red opened their 1931 campaign by dropping a dual meet to Cincinnati on the latter ' s track by a score of 79 to 5 2. Pete Weidemaier was the star of the day, taking three firsts, while Sweetland and Greenlee won the low and high hurdles respectively. Denison, however, was weak in the field events, failing to come through in the discus and javelin throws. In the long distance runs DePuy and Humphrey placed second in the mile, two mile and half mile events. Efaugh. Hutson One Hundred Fifty-Eight Humphrey Gabele The following week saw Denison shine in the Ohio Relays held at Columbus. This time De Hutson was the Big Red luminary by beating McCormick of Notre Dame in the century. Pete Weidemaier was second to his team mate in the college 100 yard dash on the previous day, while he surprised the fans by beating Tolan in the second heat on the final day. Hutson ' s time was 9.7 and Weidemaier ' s was 10 flat. In a dual meet with Ohio University Denison lost a 71 to 60 decision to the Athens boys. Denison was in the lead 5 9 to 5 8 at the start of the final event, but lost out again in the field events. Greenlee Schneider One Hundred Fifty-Nine Weidemaier Williams Ohio Wesleyan was the next team of cinder artists to engage the local boys and they, too, walked off with a win. The score was 79 to 5 2. Weidemaier ran away with the Denison scoring honors, registering 1 1 points, just 4 points behind Mears, of Wesleyan who was high scorer of the meet. The meet was marked by the breaking of the pole vault record by Schneider of Denison who vaulted 11 ft. 11 in., breaking the former Denison record by 2 inches. To wind up the season Denison took fourth in the Buckeye meet with Miami again winning by a good majority of points. One Hundred Sixty VARSITY First Roil ' , left to right: Schneider, Williams, Shepard, DePtcy, Kohlman. . Second Row: Lehrer, Trainer; Hutson, Smith, Gregg, Greenlee, Bailey, Wolfe, Gabele, Eatongh, Waybright, Trainer. Standing: L. Ward, Manager; Sharkey, Manager; R. White, Jacob, Wcidcmaier, Ellison, Miller. R. Green, Coach Walter Livingston, Asst. Coach Gregory. One Hundred Sixty-One THE D ASSOCIATION First Row: McCowtell, Weidemaier, Walker, Pres. Shaw, Scott, Sauers, Humphrey, Grady. Second Row: Etaugh, DePuy, Blackburn, Winsor, Adams, Ellison. Third Row: Wart, Miller, Robbins, Edwards, White, White, Benny, Gabele. Fourth Row: Williams, Gabel, Border, Shepard, Davies, Spear, Hauser. The wearing the coveted D represent Denison in all lines of sports. These lines include varsity football, basketball, track, and baseball. In some cases the man may win as many as three letters after which he is given a blanket in appreciation of his work in placing Denison athletics on a par with other colleges throughout the country, and maintaining a high standard of clean sportsmanship in all athletic contests. e Hundred Sixty-Two One Hundred Sixty-Three WOMEN ' S ATHELETIC INSTRUCTORS Miss Petrosky Miss Bloomer Miss Darrow Hundred Sixty-Four THE WEARERS OF THE D First Row: Hanson, Collins, Bingham, Light, Hart, Cowman, Jackson. Second Row: Brown, Coghill, Sweet, Mabee, Pease. ThirJ Ron 1 : Jones, Eddy, Boyer. Th3 Women ' s Athletic Association also gives the coveted D for the girls who are abb to earn a certain number of points along athletic fields. These points are given for hiking, camping, hockey, swimming, basketball, baseball and track. Class teams are organized whereby girls are able to earn their points for a D. Cue Hundred Sixty -Fiv W. A. A. BOARD President Dorothy Wiley Vice President Ruth Potter Treasurer.. Barbara Shepard Secretary Frances Pease Custodian Elizabeth Davis Apparatus Selma Mentall Archery Clara Boyer Baseball Virginia English Basketball Betty Webb Dancing Ruth Darrow Golf Mary Sweet Program Chairman Margaret Little Publicity Chairman Dorothy Toren Hockey Nan Bingham Outing Dorothy Collins Tennis Ruth Mabee Track Gwendolyn Light Volley Ball Berth Brown Social Chairman Anna Kate Lunsford Head of Swimming Muriel Coghill This organization has become a strong factor in placing women ' s sports on a par with the men. A girl may be chosen by the organization and enters all lines of sports in an endeavor to win a certain number of points necessary to be initiated into the Women ' s Athletic Asso- ciation. The association is a preparatory step for the women in obtaining their D ' s . Aside from being an athletic group it has risen to become quite a social organization also, holding dances, dinners and other types of social activities. One Hundred Sixty-Six In the fall one finds the girls battling for supremacy in their hockey league. Hockey is the leading fall sport among the girls. Even on scrap day hockey teams are chosen amongst the freshmen and sophomores to decide the winner on this eventful day. Once each season the Shepherdson hockey team meets the alumnae team. This season the grads defeated the coeds by a score of 3 to 1. Wilma Jones ' 31 proved to the losers that the old timers still knew all about hockey. A freshman and sophomore team represented Denison in a collegiate woman ' s athletic contest held in Columbus on December 6th. The home talent came out victorious over their rivals from Ohio University, Ohio State and tied the Wesleyan girls ' team at 5 all. One Hundred Sixty-Seven Contrary to the beliefs that scrap day is held for the men only, the women also play a big part in making scrap day a success. The above picture verifies this statement. The girls hold some exciting contests among themselves. Much to the enjoyment of the men they do an excellent job of hair pulling, shin kicking, and clothes ripping which goes to make up a portion of an exciting scrap day. Each of the under classes hire a hay wagon and interesting fights are had by the members of one class attacking those of the other class, while the drivers frantically try to hold Old Dobbin from running away with the fair lassies. These tiffs usually hold forth while the co-eds are witnessing the men ' s cage ball game to determine which class is superior in this line competition. One Hundred Sixty-Eight SWIMMING .mi Aside from basket tossing, the girls go for swimming in a big way at Denison. A class teams are chosen and meets are held between the four classes to establish a winner This time the sophomores were the victors. Those mermaids were Eunice Adams, Beth Brower Jane Coons, Elizabeth Davies, Eileen Roberts, Theodora Jones, and Frances Willard. TRACK The cinder oval calls quite a number of the feminine athletes. Of course, the distances are cut down considerably as compared to the distances run by the men. The 5 0 and 7 5 yard dashes and hurdles, the baseball throw and broad jump are some of the events taken up by the women tracksters. BASEBALL When the sun breaks through the wintery skies one finds the co-eds taking to the track and baseball diamond as well as the tennis court. Here, again, we have class teams running off their schedules with a winning class emerging from the melee. Many of the women take up baseball as a spring sport. One Hundred Sixty BASKETBALL The winter months find the women engaged in that season ' s biggest drawing card — basketball. Different class teams are chosen and captains elected. A schedule is drawn up and they set out to decide the winner. Last winter the juniors were the court artists among the women of Shepherdson College. Amongst the celebraties of the court are Frances Bingham, Bertha Brown, Kay Braunschweiger, Muriwl Coghill, Dorthy Collins, Patricia Ireland, Gwendolyn Light, Frances Pease, Mary Sweet, Ruth Potter, Marg Hutchinson, Edna Wedell and Ruth Armitage. ▼ ARCHERY One of the most recent sports which has won a distinct favor amongst the women at Denison is archery. In the fall, as well as in the spring, the girls line the lower campus with their bows and arrows aiming away at the big straw targets. Class teams also are chosen for this sport and the competition is extremely keen among the classes. The sophomores took the honors last fall in archery with Eleanor Sturgeon leading in highest number of points registered for her team. The score was 82 5 to 597 for the junior archery team. Isabelle Yaggi ran a close second for highest number of points attained. Hundred Seventy One Hundred Seventy-One ADMINISTRATION Avery A. Shaw — President Clarence M. Eddy — Admissions Director Alfred J. Johnson — Bursar Russel H. Williams — Physician Mrs. Eliz. Briggs — Matron of Dormitories Martha Geach — Assistant Bursar Ruth Hopkins — Nurse Mabel Batchellor — Secretary, Registrar Mary Swartsel — Secretary, Bursar Rilda Marsh — Secretary, President Donald R. Fitch — Registrar Mrs. Brumback — Secretary, Dean of Women Clarence D. Coons — Business Manager Annie Louise Cragie — Librarian Mrs. Overturf — Assistant Registrar Isabel Hatch — Secretary, Admissions Director Ardella Barth — Assistant Nurse Mrs. Lillian Moore — Dietitian Louise Wellman — Secretary, Dean of Men One Hundred Seventy-Tivo n Frederick G. Detweiler — Dean of Men FACULTY H. Rhodes Hundley — English and German Willis A. Chamberlain — Modern Language Malcolm E. Stickney — Botany Paul A. Biefeld — Astronomy Forbes B. Wiley — Mathematics Thomas A. Lewis — Psychology Walter J. Livingston ■— Physical Education Karl H. Eschman — Music L. Richard Dean — Classical Languages Arthur W. Lindsay — Zoology J. Leonard King — English Frank J. Wright — Geology Frederick W. Stewart — Christian Education F. Hillis Lory — Political Science Leland J. Gordon — Economics Helen Petrosky — Physical Education Bruce D. Greenshields. - — Engineering Leon E. Smith — Physics Harold H. Titus — Philosophy Lionel Crocker — Speech One Hundred Seventy-Three August Odebrecht — Modern Languages William T. Utter — History Anna B. Peckham — Mathematics Miriam C. Akers — Greek Miss Helen Olney — Dean of Women Fannie J. Farrar — Music Richard H. Howe — Physics Alma B. Skinner — -Modem Languages Frances B. Cressey — Latin John C. Larmore — English Sidney Jenkins — Physical Education Daner Lee Mahood — English George Morgan — Zoology F. Dewey Amner — Modern Languages A. Collins Ladner — Mathematics Thomas R. Wiley — Modem Languages Harvey A. DeWeerd — History Mary R. Fitch — Voice One Hundred Seventy-Four W. Alfred Everhart — Chemistry Sam S. Gelfer — Violin Allan F. Schirmer — Voice Thomas A. Rogers — Physical Education William Felt — Modern Languages Brayton Stark — Organ Sue Haury — Piano Richard Woelhaf — Speech Gwendolen Cadley — Education Don Wilder — Publicity Charlotte Rice — Psychology Henry S. Sharp — Geology Chosaburo JCato — Mathematics Carol M. McNeil — Music W. C. Ebaugh — Chemistry m One Hit nd red Seventy-Fiv One Hundred Seventy-Seven I Compliments of I The | I Newark [ Clearing House Association | Member Banks § I THE UNION TRUST CO. J THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK I 1 THE LICKING BANK AND TRUST CO. | I THE NEWARK TRUST CO. | I THE PARK NATIONAL BANK f H j ' ■iia iai:ai ' i.ia iai.aMi ianai :ii:iai iMi ' iirai ' i-ii ' iai iiii.iii;Bi i ii::ii i.i|iiii iiiB iii;ira,ia ' iEi,i!i i.ii!iti iiib iimii ■i ' a.ii:iii:ai iiiaiiiu [S] iai.ai:a ia:iai.Biia ' iBiiii.ia!iaiiai:Biia iii iiia iai ai a iiiai ■Mi iai.ai i ia:iHi.Bi ' a iaiiBi ' a.ii:iiiiBiiaLianaiiai ' Biia iii,ai ' B ; ia!iiiiai.aiia:iBiiai:Biiaiia:iaiia j TYPEWRITERS | | and 1 I LEAD PENCILS [ I AND ALMOST EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN ] X at 1 i THE UNIVERSITY STORE | | Best in Students ' Supplies § One Hundred Seventy-Eight ■] i Bi ' a-iB iaiiai.vi ' a ibjibi ■i;B iai,ai:a.iai,ai:aiiBiiai ai ■iai:ai ■!:■:!■! laiianaiiBiiai ■iiBiiairaiiaMBiiai aiiB iaiiaMa ibi bi s ia;:ai ia:iBi s:iB!iaMB!ia.i ] em ones to go with you through the years Keep Your Memories Forever With Pictures TAKEN ANYWHERE, ANYTIME Adytum Photographers THEM.H. 35 yiR.OADE o. ■■ii i i i ■■■i ■■i i i i I ■■i i ■I i ■r i ■i ■i i i f i i i i ■■i ■i i ■■i ■■i ■i i k , , , One Hundred Seventy-Nine MailHMBMailV][BIIBIIBIiajrBIIBIJHI[BIIHIiai]BIIBIIHtJHIIBMailBt]Bliaj[BIIBhlBIIBirailBMHIla!iailBMBMH][BIIHriBliailHlfBIIHriHMBIIBI[BIIBJIJiriBi:HI[aiiajianBIIBI{HliaQ j THE NEWARK TELEPHONE CO. 1 . . Local and Long Distance Service . . Our lines and connections reach practically all oper- ating stations throughout the United States and extend into adjacent territories. THE NEWARK TELEPHONE CO. C !■! ' ! ■• !■; ■■! • • ■! ■' ' IEMI 0 ' ■' .D! I !■iC C 1 C Ci I, 0 :0 Ei B IE ,|l S. ' I IB |i I. I .| ' .B: |. I i 9 m |, a lim.gi l.ig.n:!!!.!! a :1 II ' W; 60-62-64 HUDSON AVENUE NEWARK, OHIO It is the reputation for originality that we have established that inspires us to avoid the commonplace and show only modern fash- ions of genuine merit at prices that everyone can afford. YOU WILL NOT BE DISAPPOINTED VISIT NEWARK ' S BEST STORE ■i ■' ■■: ■' ■i|: i : ■.B ' li ii.:ai i. i iB ' :ti iB ' :ai ii ■iimii.bi ■; • ii ' iii.aiia ii iai.ai iiiiii.ira. ' i la ' iai.Hi.ai.a a.ilj: One Hundred Eighty {gjiiiiiiuiniiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniiininintiniiiimimnnnninnnnnnigj i j m ■1 1 ■1 1 ■i j ■1 1 ■1 1 ■1 1 ■1 1 ■lis j i ■1 1 ■I j ■i ta j i ■I j ■1 1 ■11 ■n ■1 1 ■11 ■u ■i [■1 1 ■I i ■i !■II ■I ] ■«THE Adytum IS A PRODUCT OF The JUDSON COMPANY Producers of EFFECTIVE PRINTING since 1885 1009-13 ROCKWELL CLEVELAND, OHIO E M R O N . . .Takes the lead in . . . MEN S FURNISHINGS 1 1 S. W. Side Square f I NEWARK 1 IMIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiihiihihi gJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllliiMillllliiiiiiniiniuiiinigj I Some Facts About | I THE BAPTIST MISSIONARY I TRAINING SCHOOL | —A School with the World ' s Fair | | at its Door = — A representative group of stu- | s dents s = — A vocational technique from spe- = = cialized instructors s | — A cosmopolitan field for Chris- i = tian social service = | — A medium of inspiration for f a Christ-like living = — An Alumnae devoted to the ex- | s tension of the Kingdom 5 — A Baptist School loyal to Baptist = = principles - One Year Course Offered to = | Graduate Students I I ADDRESS . | Miss Alice W. S. Brimson, Pres., | = 2969 Vernon Avenue S | Chicago i n ■■i ■■i ■i i i i ■■■i ■i ■i i , i , , , , n One Hundred Eighty -One [I IIMII IMI IIMII |l |,;| II III II |,;| 11,111,11 || | !I || ' 11,11. |,:B n - 8-7-8-9 the correct combination to the JONES SHOPPE Gifts Cosmetics Hose Stationery CASEY ' S Rendezvous for College Men and Women Since 1899 The Best c c A H N O D A C I N O E D l_ S A GRANVILLE j (Sllll]llllllllllinilllllllllllll!lllllllllllll!llllllllllllllllll!9lllllll!0lll)llSI g]llllllllll[llllllllllllll]lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllll(gj I SAFETY. j | at all times. § I INTEREST ... | | — a personal interest | | in you. | | — Interest on your | | savings. = THE PEOPLES STATE BANK = in = | GRANVILLE j lllllllMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllHl [g|iiiiiiiiiMiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliili!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiig] We know you! You ' re the guy that came in here to buy your meat all this year. And we ' re thanking you for your patronage, and hop- ing you ' ll 1 et us serve you again next year. Whoops! There goes the doorbell. So long. See you again next year. Piper ' s IlllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMIllIIIIMIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIgi SflllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIII® One Hundred Eighty-Two iiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini PRINTING ▲ is the Inseparable companion of achievement (gjllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllH] I GEO, STUART I I JEWELER and I OPTOMETRIST = - Granville, Ohio = _ @IIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIII||I||I|II||I|||||||IIIIIII@ _ [ ]IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!ll|[IlllllllimillI||IMI||||||!||||||||||||||{g | I GAGE I | | for I I i EXCLUSIVE MILLINERY I West Main St. Newark ill I II ill ' E III l ll il|:| III ■l|i;|| l.lliill ' l III !,!■Hi;! | r ;i, u;. ' i in I iii.imi ill iiiriii.iiinji 1 in ■ir : ii i in imiiiii ■iihini y. I Furnas Ice Cream i = ...is a health food made of | = pure, rich milk and cream | and the same ingredients = s you would use yourself. THE GRANVILLE TIMES I NEWARK, OHIO Phone 4054 ISllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIBIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIII gJIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinnnninininininun,,,!,,!,,,,,,,,,,, s Compliments of = i HORNER ! 1 HARDWARE COMPANY f General Hardware Dean Barry Paints | Phone: 8115 Broadway f ISIiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiininniiinniing One Hundred Eight y-Thr Ii II I ' ■lIMIi I il ll::ll:IMI iilii I llilli ililll l ll:illlll ■IIMIIIII ' IMI llllll.liig ' lBl.lMll ' lJlllllill 1,11 ' llMli.li li ■li I ;■lliili ■ways at your service! The OHIO POWER Cc tM} ■iianHiiaiiiiiBi iimii :n iiMBi aiia ' iai a.ii ' iBiiiiia.iBiiii iiiBMii ai ' BiiiiiiiiBiianai B;iB iBMiraiia ' iiiiDi aiiiiiii; i ' Biia:iiiiii;Bi:a ' iaiiai B!ia:ia ' iiiian 3 |Hj iiiiii iiii ' iiiiiih.iiiiii in iiinri linn mi iii.iiii.iBiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ; , iiihiMi.iiini iji linn n i ii : iii mi iiiiiliiii iiniiiiiiiiii iiiiiiny; owers | j IRAK PERRY of all kinds | I STAPLE and FANCY ! I GROCERIES j $0 THE | 1 | THOMAS FLORAL CO. | 1 I : GRANGER ST. | | Phone: 82 3 0 Granville | I.ll III T ' 9 llllll llll ' lll I: I II Ml I II ' II l.il llllll Ml IIM: I II ,ri-j (§!llllllllllnlIII!llllllll!ll!llllll!lllllllllll!l!IIIIIMIIIIIIi]IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl|S| iiB.iai:ai a.ia:iBi:ai:B laiiaiia iaiiaiiaiia iai Bi B ibi bi a ib ibi bi b isi ai a ia iai ai a ibi bi a ia iai:Bi a a ib ibi bi b lanai aiiBiia isnbi ■MaiiBMaiiaiiaija I SPECIAL TERMS AND PRICES j = Given to fraternities and boarding clubs. s Our bread and rolls are baked and delivered daily. | = Our whole wheat bread is sure to please. I | QUALITY SERVICE | [ THE A. B. C. BAKERY | s Pataskala, Ohio | a ' iai:arBiia iaiiai:a: b.ib ' ib :bi b::b;ibi b:ib ib:!Bi b: b ib ibi bi b ibiibi a. a ibiibi bi b iB ' iB! a; a :a ia;iBi.a:iE ia :ai ai B iB iaiiai ai b::b ib ibiibi.bi.biibi: l ] One Hundred Eighty-Four IIMI H ' ImI ll:;ll II! H ' l UMl ' l ll: li I n:ili ill li ■III li I I ;i ;|i I :r I, I !MI I I .1 I I ;■! , s , a , , , , , , , im T7 T7Cn 1 1 li •: ■■li li ■• •: ■: « ■n t ■■■• i ■o ■•: l ■■e ii ■• • ■■n f • gi i n ■• ■r, ■il • a li il • ■n • • n ■Pi []IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIBIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ' I||||||||I|||||||||||IM|||||||jg] gJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMlllllllllllllllip The GRANVILLE Motor Stages Inc. GRANVILLE NEWARK BUS LINE Phone 3717 GRANVILLE INN AND GOLF COURSE, Inc. A delightful place to spend your vacation — the comforts and service of the city combined with the peace and quiet of the country. A Donald Ross golf course which is considered one of the finest in the state. Dancing every Saturday night during the summer. Music by Don Deeley and his Granville Inn Tune- smiths. Our rates are reasonable. Ask for them. i in ii i mill ■i in ii ■ii mi i ■r i :| ir i i ii i. i i: ■■(g]i One Hundred Eighty - Fii
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