Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH)
- Class of 1938
Page 1 of 214
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 214 of the 1938 volume:
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Mrs. Mary Emestine Fouls Apartment 4407 1 3373 Plaza del Rio Blvd. Peoria AZ 85381-4873 , 1 -1 ,., ,- fr -1. ..:.. .. . 4 ., Q ' F vi - - . ff' :aw ya ..--' ' -- , l.. f. .- ,Y ' .4 . 1 . - .!l! , LU V - . - 4 .4 ,M 2 H NWI . i - - I , , '1 , 'J ' 5 Q, , 4 . ,- . .-, -X - V --Y-- . .fl -1.--MM a .v ,4 H. -ssl wwf 1-, ga:- ' ms mia mmm an ' - H ms mn mm swf nga um? A -MSE H .X-NN nv- -airwa- H., I M' ha a AN. -QQVS. Hx, infill 2 fwf? ,Al .W 1 'w s. ,qw The Junior Class presen s WK Denison University the pictorial recorci of the year XVUNI1, G9 6 E SWZYB-. 2, is Q ?4 'VlLLF--680 V r I 0 DONALD B. WA i t Q WALLACE Bus. Mgr C O P Y R I G H T I DUCT XON Narm docks a'c sri-'rhrrrv . . . heavv evehds in ecqhi o'cXoc.hs . . corcee downkown ar 'cen durcnq a chapeX buck . . . 'che noon- dav scren when evervone checks hrs 'ccmepcece . . . rhe scqh or reher when Xonq ar'cernoon Xeorures draq 'co a dose . . . 'che sodraX cehow- ship ak 'che evemnq dincng 'cabXes . . . socfraX racchiakcon durcng everfcnq hours or s'cudv . . . 'cha'c hqhrhearkedness a'c seven when vou reah-Le vou have no srudvcnq 'co do cor 'comorrow . . . huh ses- scons behcnd dosed doors when prors are panned, se-Ms dcscussed, d pXans are born . . . 'co hed and dreams or 'che comcnq dav. 'cres rorn From che pages or Denison hcsrorv and mem- Kd die are 'chese. To m9mOTR8YX1G 'che ieehnqs, dreads and 'co commemorare and endeavor or 'rhcs annuah ' cences mav one ' 'corcahv an Vkqne or'res rha'c never shou 'che Xoves, rhe hares, and 'rhe ' 'ce rhem io posrerrcv shah be 'che ' r coheqe davs rema'rn and reminrs 'ms or 'chcs s'carc. To record pro resen'r R'c 'rn a srorv 'corm as a ' n . . . vour cor dedcca Thar memorres o dav be possr'oXe are 'che ar 'che hcsrorv or a schooX vear and 'co p oh-Xenqch noveX seems ro be khe soh1'cron. wKXdermen'c or vour Ycrs'c davs or or'ren'ca'cro s during rushcnqfvou 'cook advankaqe rhe reckdess abandon or Scrap 'Dav he ec.s'c a'cKc, reher when sud- rhose Spdnq n was bo The be ' m or a rew dav Kd nor Xas'c . . . 'cernahsm . . .R shman dcnhv . . . when 'che moo weeh-end ou eqohs vou knew Kr c.ou . . . vour KrCr'cKa'cXon Xnro rra denhg von no Xonqer wore vour he pkcnrcs a'c Sunser HN or up Rn Sprcnq Vahev hxh and 'che voung marf s 'rancv 'curned hqhrhg 'co Xove . . . sorhes 'ro Bucheve Lake . . . 'che carch 'rn vour 'chroak when v reah-Led 'cha'c vour senior ircends wouXd soon enrer che ranks or 'che BXUYGHR. FH- :he gene! al jam 'P iii. ,,,. , ' ' Iv -. ' V T everyone To know 7-,4,..- '- ln-JM,.,.-f- ' 7 1 ' 'EYKT' gf-K., , xy h o porTuniTy or d'T'onai Denison GENERAL JAM. T The Generai Jam is T e p iThe whoie sTudenT body and here The Tra i 1 T T'TeTTo becomes a symboi. ProTessors' homes are Open T Houses To incoming sTucTenTs as They do Their parT in weicom- .W Mg you pn THE ing The new ciass. The TirsT Two weeks Then become a sampTe oT whak he may expecT in The TuTure in respecT To Denison's TradiTion oT Triendiiness. indeed, Tew coiieges can boasT oT such hospiTaTiTy as is shown in our homes and in our insTiTuTion. May each new ciass perpeTuaTe This TradiTion. .XA in i P age' Eight When Wis iad comes as a iresfn- i'ii':Li.O spirii Wai makes Denison man, 'ne is si'iorWg cauqiii in We sociai ciisiinciive among universiiies. Fra- maeisiroms and his piebe year swings ierniiies and sororiiies make We new- aionq iiurrieciiq . Camps inciianoia comers ieei We sciwooi is Weirs wiW and Ohio provide ampie opporiuniiq Weir oid qiaci hand. Uiiie do We ior acquainianceskiips 'ro iorm. in irosiw reaii-1.e,i'iowever, Wai We back- ' We iniormai spirii oi camp iiie We siappinq wiii soon be iowered io an- upperciassmen and proiessors speed oWer more iender poriion oi We aionq We iniroduciions. Soon We anaiomy. Dr. Avery Shaw, ciiskin- iresiwmen are imbued wiW We con- quisiied as a qeniieman and as a qeniaiiiy, We ieiiowsiiip, and We presideni, piaqs 'nosi io We eniire Wrong in Weir iirsk week. i W s am: i 4' ,Q- irq: ,.:'f'e ' ' 44 , . . ,:.s,vf' A DECADE OF SERVICE A. A. SHAW, A.B., A.M., D.D., LL.D., D.C.L. ,wad fjqifiagfvr-fav-f'f'i'1' Presidenf ,,.:al3- -ff? ,.:fiz+w ,- ,. j,..433-2' Y ' .tgrzsgiiszs f - f.,-ss? .11-:-ff' .Ay ,- WY. .-.. . wg, , , . li 1 igfmizfgg' , - gm , . l ' Y 5 fuk V 1 ...tg-Q..W f f -- Je. . ,, C. F. RICHARDS, B.Sc., B.D., A.M. Dean of Men 514 V af il A --s .Q Y LA. . , Y 5. F. B. WILEY, A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Mafhemafics, Dean of Freshmen HELEN OLNEY, s.s., AM. ' Q , wi '- ,i l Page Ten ' .21 1---3 Dean of Women ',..4 x Alfhough Dean Richards has been wifh fhe sfudenf body of Denison buf one shorf year, he has found his righfful place in school acfivifies. Wifh 'rhe resignafion of Dr. Defweiler as Dean of Men if was felf fhaf an abile successor would be hard fo find. ln facf we had fo fravel clear fo Canada fo find fhaf man, buf affer a year's associafion we find fhaf Dean Richards was well worfh fhe efforf. His work wifh fhe men and fheir governing body has been iudi- cious, diplomafic, and unfailing. He is picfured here wifh Jack Rader, presi- denf of Men's Sfudenf Governmenf. l Dr. Forbes B. Wiley, as 'Phe freshman clean, has confinued his fine work in fhe orienfafion of 'fhe freshman and many an upper- classman owes him mpch for his work in fhe firsf few weeks of school. The exfensive programs of fhe opening days ofschool are under his supervision. This school year has seen The wcrl: of fwo Deans of Women. During Miss Olney's leave of absence, Denison co- eds are forfunafe in having fhe capable leadership of Mrs. Arnold. Boih have cooperafed fo a 'lo 'l'he girls whaf whaf fhey have is seen here in Brizell, presidenf high degree in giving fhey have needed and desired. Miss Olney conference wifh Peg of fhe Women's Sfu- denf Governmeni' Associafion. l l 4 4 l 32- 3, LW. J. L. BJELKE, A.M. A. J. JOHNSON, A.B., M.B.A. D. R. FITCH, Ph.B.. M.S. Secrefary ol: fhe Alumni Bursar and Business Manager Reqisfrar and Examiner A smoolh running lriumvirale is lhis group of execufive officers of Denison Universify. And lhey mus'l' click for if one fell down The ofhers would also sfumble. Mr. John Biellce, as alumni secrelary, sees +0 il' fhal' every year our enrollmenl' is complele yel' seleclive. Mr. Donald R. Fifch, regislrar, fakes +hem off Biohn's hands and regisiers +he new s'ruden+s. Mr. Alfred John- son, as business manager and bursar, relieves The sludenfs 'lhen of such small ilems as fuilion, lab fees, and ac'rivi+iy fees. ln order fhal' such a irio can work mosl cohesively, frequenf conferences musl' be held fo discuss maH'ers of execufive dulies. Thus in 'rhe hands of 'lhese men lies lhe real Des+iny of Denison. Page Eleven CHEMISTRY HV' x W. C. EBAUGH, B.S., Ph.D. Professor of Chemisfry W. A. EVERHART, A.B., M.S., PI'l.D. Associade Chemisfry Professor of I V J I,I fn. J s, . ., .L-is ' I. ,lsr 1' X x. N ,Q .I Xfx ix i. x ,ffl fr 'Jil TT . ii Ii II, ii. ii L- ol! EDUCATION S- ECONOMICS Page Twelye CLASSICAL LANGUAGE L. R, DEAN, A.B., Ph.D. Professor of CIessicaI Languages J. L. KING, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of English E. J. SHUMAKER, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Associafe Professor of English A. M. MacNEILL A , ,B., A.M. Associafe Professor of English R. W. WHIDDEN, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assisfanr Professor of English D. L. MAHOOD, B.S., M.S. Assisfani' Professor of English E. O. SHANNON, A.B., A.M. Assishanf Professor of English I E. B. HAWES, Ph.G., B.S., M.S. Professor of Educarion L. J. GORDON, B.S.,A.M.,PI1.D. Professor of Economics G. H. HAND, A.B., A.M. Assisfanf Professor of Economics E. C. MORRONN, A.B., LL.B. SpeciaI Insrrucfor in Economics ENGLISH I ENGINEERIN G SCIENCE A. C. LADNER, A.B., A.M.. Assis+anI Professor of Marne- maiics and Engineering C. S. ADES, C.E., M.C.E., D.C.E. Insfrucior in Engineering Science C I MATHEMATICS F. B. WILEY, A.B., A.B., PILD. Professor of Iviafhemarics E. C. RUPP, Ph.B., M.S. Associeie Professor of MaII1erna+ics W. T. UTTER, B.S., A.M., PI1.D. - KA-I-O' Blsq Mis. gofessor of Hisfory and Assisianjr Professor of Ovemmem Mafhernafifs H. A. DeWEERD, A.a., AM., PI1.D. Associafe Professor of Hie- 'rory and Governrnenf A. A. RODEN, A.B., D.Sc.PoI., PI'1.D. AssisIanI Prof . essor of H' Iory and Governmeni D. W. LATTIMER, A.B., M.A. Insrrucfor of Hisjrory and Governr'nenI IS- GEOLOGY F. J. WRIGHT, A.B., A.M., Ph D Professor of Geology HISTORY AND OVERNMENT Page Thirlcmz I ff .pf ' 4,-JI' 1 -ff If V. 7' ' ,ffgiddyf ff' A ODEBR JSIZEANGUAGE ECHT, Ph.6., PII.B., Professor of M od ern Languages H. J. SKIPP, A.B., A.M. AssIsIanI Professor of Mod- ern Languages A. B. SKINNER, Ph.B., A.M. Assisfani' Professor of Moo- ern Languages F. D. AMNER, A.B W. MUSIC K. H. ESCHMAN PIIB , . ., A.M. Professor of M ' usIc and Di- recfor of Ihe Conservafory KING KELLOGG, A.B., B.M.. Ph.D. AssisIanI Professor of Music EMIL BEYER Insfrucfor of Piano A. L. HUFF, A.B. Insfrucfor of Public School Music PHILOSOPHY H. H. TITUS, A.B., B.D., TI1.M. Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy Page F0l!I'fEL'7I I .. A.M. AssisIanI Professor of Mod- ern Languages N. FELT, A.B., A.M. AssIsIan'I Professor I o Mod- ern Languages R. WILEY, A.B., A.M. AssIsfanI Professor of Mod- ern Languages .ff f, r ' L' I . ., V ff' I .ff 'Q .f fy! I I I I sf wif' I RELIGION F. W. STEWART. A.B. B.D. , A.M., Professor o F Religion PHYSICS L. E. SMITH, B.S., PI'1.D Professor of Physics. R. H. HOWE, B.S., M.S. Assisranf Professor of Physics MEN'S PHYSICAL EDUCATION W. J. LIVINGSTON, B.S. T. A. ROGERS, Ph.B. Professor of PhysicaI Assisfanf Professor of Physi- Educafion CaI Educafion SIDNEY JENKINS, B.S., A.M. SIDNEY GILLMAN, A.B. Assisfanf Professor of Physi- Ins1'ruc+or in Physical cal Educafion Educafion PSYCHOLOGY WOMEN'S PHYSICAL ED UCATION H. I. BADENOCH, B.S., A.M. Assisfanf Professo I T. A. LEWIS, A.B., PILD. V 0 PIIYSI' Professor of PsychoIogy cal Educafion C. RICE, A.B., Ph.D. S. L. HOUSTON, A.B., M.S. A551 1- Insfrucfor in Physical Educafion sanf Professor of Psychology Page Fifteen HOSPITAL I D. DAVIS, R.N. Assisfanf N urse R. H. WILLIAMS, Bs., M.D. Physician R. HOPKINS, R.N. I Nurse SOCIOLOGY F. G. DETWEILER, A.B., B.D Ph.D. PPoIessor of Sociology A. W. LINDSEY, A.B., M.S., Ph.D. Professor of Zoology I G. D. MORGAN, B.S.. M.S.. Ph.D. Associafe Professor of Zoology L. G. CROCKER, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Speech I I I LIBRARY I H. INNESS, A.a., s.s. cs. GROGAN, A.B., B.s. y A. L. CRAIGIE, A.B., B.S., AM. M. BABBS, A.B., A.a.L.s. L PEOPLES, A.B. I W. e-. EVANS, A.B. B. HOLLINGSWORTH, A.s. L. WOLFE, A.B. I Page Si.1'I1'rn TRUSTEES Fronf row: Barker, Brelsford, Green, Shaw, Richards, Lewis, Fordham. Back row: Zollars, Wilfsee, Chambers, Beck, Sfouf, Shepardson lcleceasedl, Burwell, Stilwell, and Colby. TO THE STUDENT BODY: The responsibility for the management of the finances and the direction of the program of development for Denison University rests with the Board of Trustees By the provisions of the charter the Board consists of thirty-six members, six of whom are elected by the society of the Alumni. At present twenty of the Trustees are alumni of Denison. A majority are residents of the State of Ohio with members also from Indianapolis, Chicago, Pittsburgh, New York, and Boston. During the past year two members have died, Ambrose Swasey and Francis W. Shepardson. Both of these contributed much in gifts and in counsel, and through their influence gave an interational reputation to Denison. The campus of Denison was started in l854 by the purchase of 27 acres on the top of the hill. lt has been added to by purchase and gift until now the campus proper contains 250 acres, and l5O acres to the east of North Street have been purchased for future developments. The gifts of Colonel Edward A. Deeds in l9l7 of more than two-thirds of the present campus were notable, and have made possible the development of one of the finest college campuses in America. During the past year through the generosity of Mr. Franklin G. Smith of Cleveland a complete survey of the entire campus has been made, with the tracing of elevations, the location of roadways and trees, and the charting of the loca- tion of present and future buildings. Plans for landscaping have also been developed so that sections of the campus may be completed as funds are provided. The HDenison Destiny Programn, announced in 1956, sets a goal of three million dollars additional to the endowment and approximately the same amount for new buildings and equipment. Something over 3500,000 of this was secured by October, 1957. Plans for the HSecond Stepu in this program are now in prepa- ration. Yours very truly, 1 Page Sea enfeen was CROCKEP' NU ' DR- A When freshmen arrive in Granville, fhey are enferfained nof only by fhe school, 'rhe Greek leffer orders, and fhe presidenf, buf also by members of fhe faculfy. As pro- fessors play hosf 'ro fhe incoming sfudenfs Em ERT NN l4Nr' QW ,Q n QM V FQ A, Kgn l N ,J A7 F L :rn Ay, ,X yo' N , ry ,Y l bl if M -im -as lffli' rr l ,, A. ro r ii H r co mllijffllL!1QQsriwi.s i l DR. QOH l s N AUXASES no DO H fhey creafe an inifial rapporf which lafer erases fhe aloof and impersonal elemenf from fhe classroom. Faculfy and sfudenf body become acquainfed and form endur- ing friendships before fhey ever meef in fhe classroom. Open Houses of faculfy members in fhe fall do nof, however, pre- clude dinners and conferences in fheir homes lafer in fhe year. For many professors are nofed for fheir gracious hospifalifies and sfudenfs look forward fo such invifafions. Page Eiglzfcczz is comes 510994 we MAKER ml r. DR- SMU l I l l l ll iii.: fi, s. A. E. ' ' FACULTY 9 my BANQUET li y 5' -, il l ll 5 l il QS an ill lil li all ll , , '. l FRESHMEN i Freshman camps are conducfed ihai ihe ncoming freshmen may lcnow his classmafes 'nore iniimafely before siudies commence. Ni+h 'rhree days in which +o become ac- quainfed, friendships are formed which lafer irafernal Hes cannoi separafe. When ihe Jrofessors 'lhen mingle wiih fhe siudenfs, :lay ball wi+h fhem, joke wiih fhem, discuss Jroblems wiih fhem, ihey heighfen ihe re- zpecf of fhe 'Frosh considerably. 'M R. WP-'Gm LeCTU'LE5 XN HELD Page N1.llPfFF11 Page Twcuiy Perhaps fhe mosi' perplexing duly of 'ihe new srudenl' may be 'rha'r of regisfering. Following 'rhe inrricacies of regisfrarion ofren disfurbs rhe seasoned upperclassmen, so rhe accompanimeni' of Big Brorhers and Sisrers becomes a necessiry. Conferences wifh advisors and regislrars aid 'lhem in choosing rhe proper curriculum. The Freshman Banquei' provides ar leas'r rhree Things. Firsr, ir gives rhe freshman a chance 'ro look over his class crirically and 'rhereby become a daring bureau for rhe following days. Sec- ondly, rhe leaders of 1'he school, borh of The adminisrrarion and sfudenl' body, presenl informal falks which are borh inferesring and informarive. Lasrly, if marks rhe opening signal for fraferniry rushing and wirh +he lasr speech our of rhe way rhe new men are swepl' along fhe social slream in a mad week of rushing and pledging. 'iw HMAN CLASS OF Our Chapfer One in ihis novel of college life we would like 'lo allol' ro fhe freshmen, fhe class of l94l. One of 1'he largesl classes ever +o enroll a+ Denison, ifs numbers will decrease greafly in 1'he span of four years, and many of 'this group will never walk down +he aisle in Swasey, diploma in hand. Bul' 'lo each person rhe school af 'I'he Top of fhe Drag will endow memories rich wifh pleasanlries and sreeped in 'rradi1'ion. To carry on a confinuiiy wi'l'hin fhis s+ory we musf also include wilh 'rhe classes, each season's aciivifies. For ins+ance, wi+h The 'Freshmen we infroduce The 'fall acfiviiies. ln fhis manner we may 1941 confinue +hrough +he classes and 'lhrough ihe seasons, carrying a cohesive accounf of The year's hisfory. And so, wi+h 'lhe fall, a young man's fancy furns 'lo fhe gridiron. QUNCM' FRESHMAN C . Xiovaclw' G rau18Tn X r F' 'K Row: -legreilihbgd Urals- Tal 0 iT5 , gurc ' ROV' Saf-Ona nbbals. R ' ' 'E-.av 14 -:Egg V ,Ia ' ' , ,v .,V'1'i .N L, q ,, f Q :- :. 3 ,K -Q rpg., -. N235 f' ' . :.f' T' . it Y 'sv . - Hr' , -, '-V. vm-hi . 'El--'qi ' f gg.-1 ,jg-'i -A , . i sa' 7 --5-:J . 2 41' YZ . A ','4l!i'flM ,- alvg. .- ' 'PT glib ij-'A Page Twenty-one Y .L Page Twenty-two Adams Alpers Anderson ArneH' Aschinger Afwafer Banlrharclf Barbour Barhoover Barlow Barnes Barney Bair Barran Barringfon Beckham Benneh' Biggar Bighouse Biellse Blair, E. Blair, M. Blaisdell Blosser Bond Bonnell Bonnei Booltser Boffomley Boughner Bowman, Bowman, Brauning Brockway Brown, S. Brown, W Bryson Buchanan Bunie Burchard H. C. H ,.,ff .I FRESI-IME X w,. . 4. fx 1 ,ARL NZM V Burlxharl Burkholder V Bufler, B. Bufler, M. Cafhan Chalmers Champney Cheadle Cheffla Chesebrough LASS OF 1941 QQ? 5,559 fag- 'Q' QP , -Ki ui? -9 .M Ax f5E54ffQ.zy1 YF.: wfly- il' V ax 'fQ3wQ?:'Ef.uj? meg wwffE4fAiMefJ, nf, RN XX .fs 2' Wx f 4 5 Ki ,ff ,,,f,ff ' 'Q s- 15. ' 5-W 1 j Akin -i is ,KS C ' . ' Y, ,-, ' 'ji -5:6 VV iii V-Q:-if, Ihrisfian Efigff Zope Iowgill Zraig Snrirjbf-rrger gglnercungs, M. 1222, PeLong Pevi Vivexniss Porsey, H. Vorsey, J. 'rake lflilond dwards Ilis psfein van5, E. aris I 1' 1 , lenbiner 61. ,A5..,' if '72 xi.: ! --in .. ,. f V l '.. J, H .- ' X 53 ' -.,. .Q I H. , I: V, .45 ', If , Page Tuwzvly-in 0 , , , ,X , mx 'N .iyx , . . N i l i l l IRL N ii Gold e Goux Gowdy . i Gregg Greenslade Grimm Gross Hall, J. Hall, R. Halsey Hammafl Hammer Hammerle Hanna, S. Hansen, A. Hansen, N. Harris Harrison Hassard Hayes He'F1' Henry Hickman, J. Hinfzelmann Hoopes Hoover Howland Hubona Huff Huffman Hun? Hurley lnnis, J. irish Irwin Page Tfwejz ly- fou 1- Firch Fleicher Flory, D. Ford Forsyfhe Fosrer, E Fosier, R Freer Frye Galloway Gagnier Gardiner Gafes Gaffon Gillespie fJl ,, l llly XE ll J K ll J lg lf J l FRESHMEN CLASS OF 1941 Jeffrey Jenks Jeweif Johnson, H. Johnsfon Jones, E. Jones, W. Jorclan Keiber Kelly Kemp Kibby Killian, B. Killian, J. King, J. Klemm, J Klepfer Klenli Klomann Koncana Kovachy, Kosfyu Kulhanelr Kyle Laegler Lancashire Lahm L. Lawfon, E. Laycock LeRow Page Twenty-five Page Twenty- Yi L' Lewis, A. Lewis, L. Lofland Logan Longabaugh Lundy McCarlney McClana'l'han McCoy, M. McKinnie McKnigh+ McNeill Macomber Marlin, J. Marshall Masleller, M. ,.' Q. 1 f , f X x M, I, . , ,1 ,f'Mnshllor. W. 5' jliilmpin Xellglxflnv-'allQ K. M5xwql4,, 1. wx -I X. Menlc Mereness Miner Mllclwell, D. Miiferling Monlgomery Moore, J. Moore, J. Muenclm Mulcahy, D. Neal Nebel Nelms Nleclerhofer Nixon Norpell Ol+ Owens Palmer, C. Parsons T l l FRESHME l l , 4' ' 'Tx Pax'l'on Pearch Peasley Pelralris Plckerln Plclnrel Pierce, Pierson Pifer Pococlz CLASS 0F 1941 N M' ? K 33 P ,Egg Wig Eli N N336 Q' ' WW: U LLJXQ -Af? f U W 1' a LA- .Qa., - --w-- F milk i 2 . H ' l 3 1 U W , Xb !1 W -Al M I. :ls 1 S lson sn, B. Jn, P. D worn Ner ri' ici . u., I .. --, M, - Page Twenty-swan E' Sharlrey Sims, H. Sfacy S+ephens Srewarl, B. Sfilwell S+rai+h Swariz Tallman Taylor Thomas, H. Thomas, M Thompson Thomson Tibbals Tice Timm Timrud Townsley Trebing Troulwine Turnbull Umsied VanDeven+er Van Horn, E. Varney Vierling Wager Wallgren Walker, E. Wallar Waihne Waflcins, P. Welles, C. Wesi, R. Wesrerburg Whifehead Whifney Page Twenly-eight Wicker Wilcox Wiley Willis NVilSOn, Winsor Wolf , A Wolfe, J Wolf, L Wrighi B J If Qs. f , I F- ,. A -1,- 45' H N xxx' - - X df af ff G nf, 'I 'F , ,pl ,- pf ., QI- . 1.YL 5v ' 1 94' . 1 gf- 2: ' WU 1 , , A -is .. .gs v., V., -vi 'z fx , 3 it ,aw- ffm ' Al. I A A I Pi 7 4r l r A.- ,Q , R. 1' 1 , B ' 1 I m ,tix ' V. V i ' 6 I r cu. . In I 6 v Q . X F , .A xv J Y ' . -fx X R .J I ...F In F9 3 5 W,.,,- if N V 4 I-nf U Ef' - Q .S r lf, V: A 14 Q , I 2 .- fi 543 1' I ' - .. , ,Vinum ' , ar-,,- ,, , 4, , J- - , .. g.,. , .-vlnw ,, A X ,.- L Ha wr, gl ,, V 4 Pa ge Th irly n MW FIRST ROW, Orme, Crawford, Sheefs, Crifes, Blackburn, Gehrandf, C. Vincenf, Kovachy, Duffy, Balter, Haynes, PeTTiT, OaTman, W. J. LivingsTon. SECOND ROW, Ass'T. Coach Gillman, Davis ICusTodianl, Bisbee lMgr.l, Snider, Lenh. P. Vinceni, SchulTe, Geneser Sfein, Brooks, Riddell, Whife, Coach Rogers, Hover ITrainerI, Sweiher IMgr.l THIRD ROW, King, Tamblyn, Marquardi, Banning, Reinhold. P. Boggs, Hanna, GiITin, Miller, R. Boggs, Cleff, Wafkins, LeRoy, Davis. STATE CHAMPIONS!!! ThaT is The TiTIe given To Denison's Big Red TooTball Team lasT Tall. CompleTing an eighT-game schedule wiTh six vicTories, one Tie and one deTeaT, The Gridders, under The careful TuTelage OT head coach Tom Rogers and line-coach All-American Sid Gillman, were acclaimed as The number one TooTball Team in The sTaTe Tor The season. Led by co-CapTains George Kovachy and Charles VincenT, The Rogersmen clicked Through one of The mosT successful TooTball seasons in The hisTory of The school. Kovich was nominaTed To The all-sTaTe newspaper selecTions by The UniTed Press, and made The posiTion Through his cleverness as a quarTerbaclc and field general, while Charlie very Thoroughly handled his iob aT rIghT end and was The spark-plug oT The line. GraduaTing Trom This championship squad were George Kovachy and Charles VincenT. co-capTainsg Bob GehrandT, John CriTes, Don WaTlcins, Dave OaTman, Ralph Baker, Bill SheeTs. Jack CleTT, Harold Haynes, and Bob King. ProspecTs Tor nexT year are Tom Orme and Lou PeTTiT baclc as co-capTains, many of lasT season's linemen and backs and a promising squad of freshmen, and The re- sulTs Tor The l938 season can be looked Torward To as even more 'Favorable Than Those of This preceding campaign. FIRST ROW, Wallar, Barran, Hickman, Siaddon, Brown, Burkhart Schneider, Thomas, Wolf. Caplan, Hough. SECOND ROW, Grey, Maxwell, Hoover, FiTch, Muench, Hoopes, Reed, Price, Maupin, Taylor, Coach Hand. THIRD ROW, Irwin, Drummond, Innis, Gregg, DeLong, Nelms, Downs, Gowdy. Page Thirty-one 9 I Einar x e A x ,R , 1 xv ' H w Y , A 'fl v Q-Az, m e L f Q - , in I . Y . . ll ' Hn- : , .,-iff 'E . Qu, l f . .,, ,: - 1 K , Mir - i Den Den Den Den Den Den Den Den ison ison ison ison ison ison ison ison 45-Defiajnce... O-Ohio lNor'rhe 20-Wiffenberg. I3-Muskijngum.. fHomecomingj I3-Heidelberg, I4-Mi. Dnion.. 6-W o o s if e r .... fDacl's Day, 2--Oberllin .... WF!-I -Fv 'P WF -i'ffv1 -'g F I .,, ' ' -. H H ' ' ' A M ,hr ' ' -+n.rvah as 'il'---LL is -f -Eg if ' A 2' - . A ikiiz, 4 ,A 1 I ik' A -V.-A 'Sl ' Yellowiaciceis Slaughfered 'fn ' ii Fog Had Somefhing To Say Aboui' This Score iiflsi. 5 Lufherans 60+ a Good Tasfe of Denison Power Hia Alumni Wifnessed Tommy's S1'a're Champs A+ Bes'r fw f, Somefhing of a Nighfmare Pui' On A+ Our Expense pjiiii Lisfless Game, Bu+ Big Red Had Whai' I+ Took 1531 ' V Ir' i Dads ,Saw Our Perfecf Record Spoiled Gloves, and Ear Muffs Hauled Oui i i i.s-,g-g.:Q.e.- gr s , -V i -- Q . p . i i I Page Thirty-four ' l' y l l DENISON 45-DEFIANCE 7 Denison opened iTs grid season by smoThering DeTiance by an overwhelming 45-7 score. Fumbling and lobse ball-handling in The TirsT half oT The game kepT The Big Red Trom opening up iTs scoring advances, buT Took The lead aT lTalT-Time I3-7. Scoring was made on a pass Trom Kovachy To WaTkins, and by Orme on a specTacular run wiTh PeTTiT cdnverTing Tor The exTra poinT. Corning back wiTh a sTrong deTense and a Terrific oTTense, Tarnblyn, Snider and Gif-i Tin scored Touchdowns in The Third periods: Orme and PeTTiT lmade a score each in The lasT period on a TorTy-yard run and a plunge OTT Tackle respecTively To end Deni- son's scoring Tor The day. FeaTure OT The game was Orme's long broken Tield run Toy a Touchdown. I DENISON 0-OHIO NORTHERN 0 Ohio NorThern'sl Polar Bears were The TirsT To mar Denison's record in any slighT Torm by holding The Big Red To a scoreless Tie. T Only Twice in The TirsT halT did The play bring The Tans To Their TeeT: Once in The opening quarTer Kovachy inTercepTed a Polar Bear pass and ran iT back ThirTy yards beTore being dowrTed. Then again in The second sTanza Tamblyn hooked anoThe NorThern pass andyran iT back Tor TwenTy Tive yards. y NorThern made iTs only scoring bid earl in The Third period, buT The rally was sTemmed and The Big Red wenT on an un- successTul rampage oT Their own which lasTed Through Thel Tinal quarTer. The kicking OT NorThern's Nemic was Th ouTsTanding Thrill TT The conTesT. DENSON 20-WITTENBERG 7 Uncorking a serTsaTional passing aTTac and playing The breaks wiTh Tinesse, The Bi Red avenged Thein deTeaT OT lasT year ir The Third nighT home game oT The seaso againsT WiTTenberg Red Devils by a 20- score. Co-CapTain Miki Kovachy disTinguishe himselT in This Tray by having TwenTy-Tw passes and compleTing TiTTeen oT Them To a ToTal oT T38 yards. Moose Snider scored The TirsT six poinTs by scoo ing up a blocked kick and racing across The goal line. lmmediaTely Tollow- ing This score, Don WaTkins, TleeT-TooT of The Big Red squad, Took a punT on his own TwenTy. and in a bursT of speed ran eighTy yards Tor Denison's second Tally. A lasT score came in The Tinal quarTer when Ko- vachy plunged Through Tor a Touchdown. DENISON I3-MUSKINGUM 0 Inspired by a rousing pep-rally The nighT before, The Denison gridders wenT ouT on The Tield To conquer The highly TouTed Muskingum TooTball Team I3 To O. Before a Homecoming crowd oT old grads, The Big Red line held The lvluskies old while The backs were pushing over Two liiouchdowns To bring Their counT To Thir- Teen. Passing and kicking TeaTured The game, wiTh The Rogersmen proving To ouTnumber The lads Trom New Concord. An eighTy yard march in The TirsT period broughT The TirsT Tally, Tamblyn pushing over Tor The -climaxing score. Again in The Tinal period Boggs inTercepTed' a Muskie pass, and Three plays laTer Tamblyn scored his sec- ond Touchdown To bring The Tinal counT. DENISON I3,-HEIDELBERG I2 AlThough The score doesn'T show iT, Denison walked all over The Heidelberg 'BTuclenT Princes in The TirsT ouT oT Town game Tor The Big Red. Scoring was done in The second period hen WaTkins raced around end inTo The nd-zone, and PeTTiT converTed whaT roved To be The deciding poinT oT The ame. Heidelberg broughT The counT To 7-6 'naking a score on a 'Forward pass, buT The Try Tor exTra-poinT was wide. Then Deni- on wenT TurTher inTo The lead when Ko- achy Took a punT on his own ThirTy and an sevenTy yards Tor a Touchdown. LaTer in The TourTh quarTer, WaTkins made a TiTTy yard Touchdown run which was called ecause of a Denison penalTy. Heidel- erg scored again on a Big Red Tumble, uT was unable To Tie The score when The ry Tor exTra-poinT was again wide. DENISON I4-MT. UNION 0 Held scoreless in The TirsT half, The Big Red broke loose in The lasT porTion of The Fame To score Two Touchdowns and hold he MounTs To a scoreless game. ln The Third quarTer, Snider inTercepTed la MounT laTeral pass on his own TwenTy- ive and ran Through a mob of opposing Tacklers To give Denison iTs TirsT score oT Lhe conTesT. PeT'TiT converfecl for The sev- nTh poinT. VW. Onxon Wen fnade a 'oxd Sxox a sooxe KYXGXLXOQ Sxxxle 5xxxs'x downs 'xn sxxooessxon XBYGXCANIO 'xnkexoeodxed a oass and ' d oexsxecix 'xndxexsxexenoe sxox a coxe. Qxkgxxn oafne 'xn We 6'l3YY6'Q6N0X and end X04 Noefxoxe xaoed Xoexnxn second Yixq Xled s qafne bxo oonslexdx We We sconnq Sxox We daq. N509 ,DAN oosxxexu YL axxed xeooxd osx We XQTI YN a Sxasx xnnnxnq a'x- sxex Book ,xeafn ana. a se- 02 Uenxson s xxnxxx ason was sooned 5x We soeedxl NNOO aoxdxxq Cad S daxq ox e fxxxsx ,xo scoxe on xnns, Xoxxk Sxaded ,xo CX- ,xo xxe We NN axxllxns, cove se ok o a oao as W end e doa n YN Sxox s 'xxaf Bxa Xoegxoxe NN oosfx ex Q4 osx Yxne and Oenxson earn ass, an end xxx a Yxne Qkxnqe Ylxok Sxox We ei n nes oonslexk. X.-I'xW a Q ass and 'Vne QXBCG oxxdndoxrl sooxe a Qxxoslexo XON1 Loo Yekbxxbx. ooxnlx was Hooked. onnq We vfxnnxnq, X xoeofxed a 'dxq Ysed Sc, Wexl 'xnbxe Pa fjg , I'1 . Ilply-sil- a 5xxnaN sooxe. Pxqaxn We Ps Oenxson XJN1 Trias ' s vlenbx oslex Sxox a s xxxXed as Sxox- oxlex Sxaded. ack as NN afxkxn n 5 Qnoslexoass vla no sooxe. OYQYRNQYX Q 'x Sxoqs Sxox We N s oXaXqed ext-ed ix vine xrlaxd and Was UVGYXXSOXA 'Lf N160 senxoxs donned Wex osx We season wnxcin Frla e 'ww adxnq Ysoqexsxnen Sxxexd wldnxffn vlas cosi- novl. Jfnancgxnq n vias ix ge Nasx qacne ax Oxoedxn. 'W oxfx a 'LO wfxn on a ex ed Qxfxxn Sxoox 'xnclnes osx s Xnkense c,oNd cnade qodd 'O 'xfnoossQOXe, and as a xesxdyx Oenxso nnaNoXe Ko scoxe ani Bxonckxdoxrlns. Yvxfx a Xdfxg gafne, fixgnse ine Qixq fxeddvl as adx no bxxqne ' anqex o exnq sooxe noon. enxsons oxdxl QC5WXS OOWG 'xxx We XXYQW5 QXQGYXGY afxxxex We Jxsxbxoxs Xnad wade a desx- ' Xoxd ,xo sooxe sw ooxn'xs and ended XQQOQQGYQS one5xoo'x Yxne. O'oexYxn 'onbx on We a'x,xex0Q,x6d Q6 dn We Yxne 'xo 6061- Dx an ankognaxxo X xnxdxe on We Rook We NOEN, 'x'x Xoxoke Wxoxiq, qixsle Uenxson a fnosk snooessgxxx Qadxdx 'xdls 606 oxnbx sasxedxxn fxxne end osx W ' qn. 9 'Vnes KQQX oafnoax W TH H T' ASSQCTATON Firsi Row: Gehranclf, Jenkins, Vinceni, Livingsfon, Gillman. Second Row: Shanaberg, Adair, Roof, Rader, Kovachy, WaTkins. Third Row: McNeill, ScoTT, LidsTer, Haynes, Sharp, Snider. FourTh Row: Duffy, Hopkins, Scl1ulTe, Sweifzer, Boggs, PeHiT. Fiffh Row: Brooks. Reed, Giffin, Myer. The D AssociaTion, made up OT ouTsTanding college men who have earned Their leTTer by aThleTic or managerial service, has sTriven To mainTain Denisonian TradiTions ThroughouT The year. Besides carrying ouT This, Their main TuncTion, They have been The disciplinarians who have kepT wise freshmen Trom sTraying Too Tar. The wielding oT an occasional paddle achieved This end remarkably well. NOT only has This year's group presenTed an enTerTaining iamboree aT The Gran Villa, buT They have prepared an enTire musical revue which will be presenTed Too laTe Tor any commenTs in This book. The Greeks Go NaTive, an original play by John STewarT and Marvin Walker, was The TirsT aTTempT aT someThing as Tremendous as a musical revue. Charles VincenT was presidenT Tor The year. Page Th irty-seven SOPHOMGRE SOVEREIGNS 9'-X. Nr? ,. D. X51 T, X so V Q J af ff' ny , :E 5-6 f'1N f . 5:2 f if I Page Thirty-1'igl1t if l 'G' xr ef-' SiiFfy Gordon Flip McCollum and Chief Venning DoHy Priclrnarcl ..Bu+ch.. Syein UMOOT Snider Jeanne Shaffer and Jean Sanborn Baby Leroy Helen MCCOY Ginny Chrisiina Taylor Lenfz and Helm Pyle Chuck Bearclsley 10M LENT7' wgesv 2521233 'QSSBOLD Q, Wifh Tommy Lenfz as fheir presicleni 'I'he class of '40 fhoroughly subdued 'rheir rivals in fhe annual collegiafe carnage of Scrap Day. Wi+h fhe sophomore class we come fo winfer, and if is in fhis season 1'ha'r fhe Wigwam resounds wi'l'h 'rhe fhuds of bouncing baslcefballs. Some 'Few of ihe more daring souls sally forfh fo dare lhe cold on fhe sled, +he ski, or 1'he shale. Mosh however, are conl'en'I' fo lea dance, Grille-lounge, sfarf bull sessions, or even sfudy. During The firsl' year in a frafernily, one remains a pledge and, as such, is 'Forced +o perform many dis+as'reful dufies. No maHer how enioyable his 'Freshman year may have been, he is glad 'lo see his days as a pledge a+ an end. Therefore, if is in +he sophomore year, as a full-'fledged acfive, +ha+ frafernalism is en- ioyed fhe mosf and Thai' fhe appreciaiion of if is rhe greafesf. And so wi+h fhe sophomores, we presenl 'lhe frafernifies and Page Thiriy-nine Pagv Fnrly Ahlers Ammon Ashmun Behr Barlow, B. Barlow, M. Barfholomew Beardsley Beaver Bellavia, A. Bersfecl Belhune Bifzer Black Blake Blasdel K Z Block Boggs Bogman Bolin Borland Branf Braun Burl' Cady Caplan Carey Chalmers Chrisfena Clark, J. Clark, R. Clark, W. Clemenfs, B. Clemenfs, E. Collander Conan? Coons Cowman Crawford Curlis SCDPHOMCDRE Daugherfy XXX Daych Deane Dean Deer de Beauclair Dell Deubler DZ Domenica Dickson CLASS OF 1940 Wlgtaglfgg, 1 wa.: . ,,,,, ' -K 1: Y: f ik -,f .1-1 L A Vifr X W Y Ziyi' T2 - :BA J, Q! N V. Q, W 'fs' I I, 2' . iw! mfryf V fi.. Q ' 1.,vZ,5 Q?L Q I W x li It xi. K I ,I f-. A V' Y ,Tx . ff r -'-L gt -H. ,,. -,fx '. ' 5' K- 'U' L f, ' WJ ' or Ki, M -' xml .A ' fr U r ,' X , 1, ' Y? ' EQ! fm. V R. Dixon Doring Duffey Durranf Duffon Egberi' Ellioff Eschman Evans Evensen Ewarf Falis Ferguson Frosf, W. Galloway, R. Geneser, W. Glass Glenn Gordon, J. Greegor Gregg, M. J. Gregg, R. Hanna, A. Harding Hayward eckman 5 1.. 1 ,N I Y 'E F i L L ., , 5 r. 1 ri m -1' Nw. YR , 'W -X5 'XQL N. nfgg A 5, -I nr if Page Forty-0212 ii.. ii XX , Nl., X, N Kull Ladd Lamb l.en'l'z Lindaman Lindsfrom Lowe McCarroll McCoim McCoy. H. Mackelfresh Mandel Mariin Mand ry Marfinciaie Maffhews Menard Menendian Merchani Molen Monahan Morgan Morris Morrison, F. Morrison, S. Morse Moihersbaugh Mowery Murphy Musai Norman Nichoiie Newfon, J. Newfon, F. Orcu+'f, M. Pago I arty-two Hough Hudson Huliigan lnnis lsaly lzanf Jacob JeweH', S Jones, V. Kelis King Klemm Koos Kopf Krieg r K l r we ig l ri' f 55? lil' , 93 '.- L 'E xl 1, gall I Y G3 lb Qfwiijgfl fgff, Sl ,rf large v f ll+llllY l' S1 'llliiff lil l ll VM , 1 W' ll lm, wwf I 5 , SOPHOMCJRE CLASS OF 1940 Oxley Parsons, H. Perry Philipps Pierce, P. Pinlxham Poslce Price, W. Quarrie Raclebaugh Randolph Rehn Reinhold Rimer Romei Rose Saclzeff Samman Sanborn Sailerlield Saunders Schneider Schulfe Sears Shaffer Shank Shaw Sheldon Shepard Sherman, P. l Page F0 My-H1 We II I-.K 'x Q :fl V 1 I, Y. x 'x X. R W. R Y . Rx Southend .. sem Sflirrgiv se: cm. Vplipni Pagv Forty-fmu' S+ .ll ,Xl x 'w Sfoner S+ump'F Sweef Taylor, B. Taylor, E. Taylor, F. Thomas Thrasher Townsley Van Horn, E. Van Voorhis Venning Vicir Vorhis Waii' Walker, A. Wallcer, B. Walker, C. Wafson Webb Welcher Welles Wesicoff Wheeler, C. Wheeler, E. Wheeler, R. Whife. G. While, R. Wiley, R. Williams, B. Wilson, G. Wilson, J. Wolfe, R. Wrighf, R. Yeager Yule Sherwood Shively Shock Simpson Slxinlcle Slcipp Smifh, H Smifh, R. As suddenly as Death itself strikes into the life of a community, do we halt our story long enough to pay rev- erence to those who have been taleen from our nzidst through this past year. To those who have made their places in the hearts of Denisonians and then passed on, we humbly give thanks for the good they have done us. In sorry tones we regret our flagrant laeh of appreeiation displayed to those who deserved so nzueh niore. Yet 'we are relieved when we read of lVIiln1an, I t innat- ters not at what lzour the ri ghteous fall asleep. Death cannot eonie untimely to hint who is ht to die. The less of this Cold world, the more of heaven: the hriefer life, the earlier ini- niortality. ' ' Page Forty-Jive Page Forty-six AM BROSE SWASEY l846- I 937 Business execufiveg manufacfurer of slcilled insirumenisg builder of 'rele- scopes including 'rhose for ihe Yerlces and Lick observalories. Disiinguished ciiizen of Cleveland and for many years aciive in ils civic, philanlhropic and religious affairs: honored by Chambers of Commerce, scienlific socieiies, universifies and governmenis Throughoui fhe world. Trusiee and beneiacior of Denison: chairman of 'rhe board of Trusiees from l9I9 'lo I923. The Swasey observaiory and ihe Swasey chapel are his enduring monumenls on The Denison campus. FRANCIS WAYLAND SHEPARDSON I862-I937 Francis W. Shepardson graduafed af Denison in fhe Class of l882. In I883 he wrofe Granville, l Love Thee which Denisonians sing round The world. l-lis enrire life was given fo educalion and educarional inferesfs. For fwenfy-five years he raughf hisrory in fhe Universiry of Chicago. I-le was mosf acfive in Jrhe Bera Thelra Pi fra+erni+y and known and loved by frarernify men everywhere: he led in 1'he esrablishmeni of Phi Bela Kappa af Denison: he was an alumni member of The board of frusrees af 'rhe lime of his deafh. I-lis memory will be perpeiuafed in The Cora Whifcomlo Shepardson and fhe Francis Wayland Shepardson scholarships esfablished by his bequest Page Forty-sv'Uen l RALPH E. BARR l l9l6-I937 l We pause in The memory oT Ralph E. Barr oT Cleveland, Ohio, a menTber oT The class OT '38 whose work and sTudy were inTerrupTed and sTopped iusT Three monThs beTore his graduaTion.. l-le wasla member oT Phi Gamma DelTa and a True Denisonian. l-lis liTe was lived To make oTher lives brighTer and our memories will hold him a Triend. FREDERICK OYSTER I9 I 7-1938 To Frederick OysTer we pay TribuTe. IT musT have been Fred ThaT WebsTer had in mind when he deTined The word genTleman. For Fred was a genTleman and a scholar as he lived Tully his Two years in Granville. Loyal To his TraTerniTy, he is missed greaTly by his TraTerniTy broThers in Sigma Alpha Epsilon. lawn P 21 fy Hgh! ROBERT VAN BLA RCUM RoberT came To school Too laTe and leTT Too soon Tor many oT us To know him. YeT, Those who became acquainTed wiTh him have advised us of our loss. ATHL WINTER ETICS 1. 'f1-I , DI . A .uf 41'f, figa a,- 4 ' -'-f'- f - - . -f . ' ,, '- ., .k-.RV ', -T v ' ' . ,X 'Tl 'ip' , A . ' f' , -' - miesrfgiw- 1 F- , Lf' A w 1w L- ,. , ' r --rf - .fkf in-J ' 1X 5.. T 1 f N Q ' -N R 71 Page Forly-nine lx I I I DICK BLAKE DICK REINBOLD JOE GORDON SIDNEY JENKINS af' DON WATKINS AL McNElLL BUD MYER CHARLES BEARDSLEY BILL WEST CLEM McNAMARA Denkon Denkon Denhon Denkon Denhon Denkon Denhon Denkon Denkon Denkon Denkon Denkon Denkon Denkon Denkon 32-CapiI'aI 42 36-Kenyon 43 29-Offerbein 37 4I-Hobad 36 3l-Woosfer 72 38-Capifal 44 42-VVHnHng+on 40 40-VVHning+on 50 32-VVH+enberg 63 32-MI. Union 37 42-Kenyon 48 4I-Ofierbein 3I 47-Oberlin 38 49-Heidelberg 33 24-Muskingum 40 SSE ELLIOTT RALPH F S vi 1 li -ghhd Ro l l N i l l x N XTX. d Waiuns MG e . Na'-Wa' A Go, on. Xie Beardslvi- Mc . . 5 ' Wesi.Re'nboi Marquafak B f R55 Row I hen09r' ef. H 1 coug d P-owfTAYlo My 1 W econ COUGHENO l, i H 'i l i it l l l I. l v' i 'i ,-, O e Coach- Jenkms' ffxgfman' CAPITAL 42-DENIS Th ' ON 32 e inilial game of 'rhe year wilh Capilal found Capilal on 'lop lo The Tune of 42 To 32. Paul Weaver, Capilal forward, led The Bexley five +o lheir viclrory over 'rhe Big Red, rallying 2l poinls. ln The Tirsf few minules of play Capifal garnered nine poinls, holding Big Red scoreless. Unable ro overcome This lead, The Denisonians were on The shorl end of a 25-12 score af The half. The main- slay of The Big Red offense was Dick Reinbold, UR sophomore forward, who rallied fwo field goals and four free shols for eighf poinls. KENYON 43-DENISON 36 The Tirsl home game, like The firsl season game, was a disappoinlmenl' Tor The Denison cage squad as Jrhey emerged from The Kenyon encoun+er seve poinfs behind. A+ The end of The lirsf half The Big Red was ahead l7 fo I4, buf The Tirsl few momenls of second period play quickly changed mafrers. The game was rough and Reeder of Capilal and Warkins and Reinbold of D. U. lefl The game on personal fouls. Despilre being eiecled 'From The game, Reinbold led The scoring. Diclc had five field goals and a foul sho? 'lo his credil when he lell. The closesl' Denison cager To Reinbold's rally was McNeill who counred six. Following +he failure of a lasl minure rally, The Denisonians were forced 'ro admif defeaf 43 To 36. H Pngv Fifty-rule f i Page Fifiy-two OTTERBEI N 37-DENISON 29 lnabiliTy To Take advanTage oT Tree Throws was The big reason Tor Denison's Third deTeaT in as many sTarTs. The reTerees awarded The BapTisTs ThirTy-one chances To score Trom The saTeTy Tape and They only capiTalized upon ThirTeen. Coupling This wiTh The speed and TaulTless ball handling oT The Cards gives The reason Tor The 37-29 score. WaTkins and Reinbold were The big guns in The Denison aTTack. This Time WaTTy Tallied nine poinTs. ln spiTe oT This eTTorT, however, The Big Red was only ahead aT Two Times early in The iniTial period. DENISON 4I-HOBART 36 Denison capTured iTs iniTial vicTory oT The year deTeaTing T-lobarT's Tive Trom Geneva, New York. Taking The lead early in The game, The Big Red losT iT only momenTarily in The second halT and Tinishing on The long end oT a 4l-36 score. The conTesT was marked by numerous Touls resulTing in Two T-lobarT men and one oT The local Tive leaving The compeTiTion Tor The evening by The Toul rouTe. Dick Blake was The high scorer oT The evening Tor The Big Red wiTh Ten Tallies. The resT oT The scor- ing was done, Tor The mosT parT, by Reinbold and McNeill. DENISON 3l-WOOSTER 72 Playing only ordinary ball againsT WoosTer's TighT man Tor man deTense, Denison suTTered iTs TourTh deTeaT oT The season aT The hands oT Woos- Ter by a 76 To 3I score. Added To WoosTer's suc- cessTul deTense was The liTTle maTTer oT Nick Fras- cella, The Torward who ran up ThirTy-Three poinTs on his own accord. Frascella leTT The maioTiTy oT The cleTensive playing To his Team-maTes as he remained in The oTTensive courT mosT oT The game. l The score aT The halT was 38-I5 wiTh WoosTer holding The advanTage. ThirTy-Two oT These poinTs TNGF8 Fras- cella's. The sophomore cenTer Tor Denison, Blake, led The Big Red scorers again wiTh eighT poinTs. The game was roughly played ThroughoLlT wiTh The resulT ThaT Denison made eleven Tree Throws and WoosTer Twelve. N DENISON 38--CAPITAL 441 Playing a reTurn conTesT wiTh The CapiP'al cagers, Denison Tailed, in The lasT Tew minuTes, To down The visiTors. The Tinal score was 44 To 38 ih Tavor oT The LuTherans. The Big Red displaying a good brand oT ball in The TirsT Three periods, maTched The aggressive play oT The boys Trom Bexley. How- ever, in The TourTh quarTer Denison's dTTempT To overcome CapiTal's slighT lead Tailed and The vic- Tory was seized by The LuTherans. One df The main diTTiculTies in The Big Red's aTTempT To crush Their opponenTs was Weaver, The LuTherans' sophomore guard who Tallied seven Tield goals and Tive Toul shoTs. Dick Reinbold and AI McNeill paced The Denison poinTmakers wiTh ThirTeen and eldven poinTs respecTively. l DENISON 42-WILMINGTON To ln The TirsT oT a Two game series, Denison nosed ouT The WilmingTon quinTeT 42 To 40 on The local Tloor. This game marked The second iTicTory Tor The Big Red in seven sTarTs. Dick Reinbold, Deni- son speedy guard, led The aTTack on Tllie Greens wiTh nineTeen poinTs. Finn WaTkins vlas runner- up Tallying I2 poinTs. WilmingTon Torged ahead early in The TirsT halT when They Took a Tour To Two lead by virTue oT successive baskeTs. Bill WesT and Dick Blake collaboraTed wiTh The high .scorers To keep ahead oT The Greens' lasT period drive which Tell shorT. l DENISON 40-WILMINGTON 50 The second game oT ,The 'Denison-WilmingTon maTches was played aT WilmingTon and This Time The Greens Turned The Tables 50-40. Dick Blake played his besT game oT The year so Tar as scoring is concerned. The big sophomore cenTer rolled up six Tield goals and Three Toul Q: 1. ' a ToTal oT TiTTeen poinTs. In spiTe o 'I es spree. Denison was in The lead f' only Three or ig in- uTes aT The opening oT T e TirsT hdmd Th fi' Tell behind where They sf ained unTiI The Ti -r.-f DENisoN sz- nsrsugga 'lr' The beginning oT The new ig sTer b vfl TT '- oT The old semesTer's ill . e-f by The second-halT opener. Playing WiTT nber ' aT SpringTield, Denison was crushed by The 1 erwh lm- ing score oT 62 To 32. One brighT spoT Th de- TeaT, however, was The game which Bill T 0 T played aT guard. NoT having much acTive service beTore This, MarquardT Turned in a good game boTh deTensively and oTiensively. Reinbold was The high scorer OT The aTTair Tor The Big Red and MarquardT Tollowed closely in second posiTion. Big Red hopes DENISON 41-OTTERBEIN si Suddenly Tinding a winning sTride, The Big Red unleashed an aTTack upon OTTerbein which spelled deTeaT Tor The visiTors 4l-3l. Paced by sopho- more Reinbold, The Big Red sTarTed in The middle oT The T' ' To really go .To work. WaTkins led Th ay wiTh a ' ld goal and Reinbold Tound The T on Qve! su cessive shofrs. AT The half, De ' mas F r in a 22-I6 lead. Four Cards w 1 eiecTed T ha ng more Than The permissible n er of ouls.li' DENI N 47-OBERLIN 38 r ig Red c P' f- Their march To The vicTory er as The crushed Oberlin 47 To alT was all berlinls as The Yeomen 2 TThe l -.W e .' oT Di TN- lak again showed his abiliTy as an ouT- ia. . f T T wen a half-Time le d oT,27-24. The play sT l - , ' ' eman. ' cove ng many Oberlin shoTs TT The kboard, - - ' E ned Them inTo Denison p inTs a Te seco d laTeAnT The end oT The game To - Blake wiT To r go s and Tour Touls To his cre . '- M ei Toppe . e D. U. scorers, how- ever, i-T . - eld 0 + d Tive Toul shoTs. A sTeady dr ., - gi ' score To 36-34 and up The yn li 47 markersf e b T ThaT The Yeornen Reinbold, M , a hs? CN ill wenT on To roll wer able ia do was 'ba eTs in The closing were raised in whaT sTarTed To be a producTive ml TeiTTT'Tf' second period rally. l-lowever, This Tailed wiTh The 1 ,4 NISON . - DELBERG 33 6332 TSSUTT' I on Trounc e berg 49-33 in The Tinale DENISQN 32-MT, UNIQN 31 - e I937-38 a -- schedule. ATTer geTTing OFF ln The game wiTh MT. Union on The local co T.' e Peel She! ' e fifST hehi- Defhseh Unleashed The Big Red paid The price oT a lisTlessly pl ed ' ' 5eTTe5 QT 5heT5 and PlaY5 which Qamed Them TirsT period, losing 37-32. The-TirsT halT ende wiTh The Tee .Teh They held for The Teme'hdeT OT The The MounTies saTely in The lead by a score 20 T hTeS H DTCTT Relhheld Wes The TheSTeT OT eeTe' 8. ln The second period, however, The D - L. TTB' TOT The evemhg as h.e made Seven Tehg displayed TighT and drive which made '-' like an enTirely diTTerenT Team Than, played T - period. Led by McNamara, Blake and Reinbol , Denison sTarTed an aggressive drive ThaT had- spec- TaTors encouraged. The MounTies made a Tew scaTTered poinTs, however, which sufiiced To proTecT Their lead and Denison was caughT Tive poinTs shorT when The Time was up. A DENISON 42-KENYON 48 I Kenyon scored iTs second vicTory over'Denison aT Gambier To The Tune oT 48 To 42. The Lords scored early in The conTesT and The men Trom D. U. were unable To check The Purple. 'The score aT The halT was 2I-I2 in Tavor oT The Gambier boys. ln The TirsT period The Kenyon Ti-ve showed class. Their ball handling and TooT-work was TasT, and iT looked as if a rally was going To Take place. How- ever, These Tears were parTially dispelled when Reeder, sparkplug oTA The Gambier quinTeT, was ruled ouT oT The game on Touls. 1 der-baskeT shoTs Tor a ToTal oT TourTeen nTs The remainder oT The D. U. scoring was equall divided The game was raTher one-sided in The sing Tew minuTes as The Big Red Took The ball d r The Tloor and Tound The hoop wiThouT o Trom The Princes. ENISON 24-MUSKINGUM 40 --: . al game oT The- season, TD. U. vs. Muskin- . 9- The Big Red humbled by The Muskingum a 40 To 24 seore. -This deTeaT ended A. J Lak e game winning sTreak and seT The Tinal ac- 'ounTing oT The season aT six vicTTories and Ten de- TeaTs Tor The Big Redf McNeill was high scorer Tor The Tribe wiTh eighT poinTs. AnoTher dark spoT on The Denison horizon was The TacT ThaT The New Concord conTesT was The lasT Tor Finn WaTkins. The only senioron The Denison quinTeT. AlThough he was unable To counT in The scoring column Tor This conTesT, WaTTy will be,greaTly missed source oT sTrengTh boTh ToTTensivelTy and d y. Page Fifty three 1 :, T ' 'W 'lulalg if .1 :1,. In HT? l ,G f J V X N r T M WRESTLING Bela Kappa 'look 'rhis year's wres+ling crown by a good margin from a Held of buf five leams. Second place wenl To Kappa Sigma and Third 'lo The Befas. HANDBALL The Phi Dells lraded places wilh 'lhe Belas on fhe hand- ball courf This year by equaling fhe record of a season of no defeals made by The Belas lasl year. The A. C. C.'s, Sig Alphs refained 'their places in lhe upper braclnel by ialring second and lhird, respeclively. Page fzflx four WX fl, firzi ,a, A Q 3 if! 1 Emu A S - 5 5' X l BASKETBALL The Belas came up The scale lhisl year in bolh baslrelball leagues. So greal' was Their relafive gain Thai' bolh maior and minor crowns were awarded lhem. ln rhe maior league, Kappa Sigma fool: second, while The Phi Gams and The Club locked for fhird. The minor league was rnuch 'lhe same, The 'third place lie-up being belween +helPhi Dells and Kappa Sigs. wilh The Sig Alphs, lasl year's lop and second Team in The A and B league respeclively, fairing second. SWIMMING T The Fiii lslanders seemed To lake lo fheir envlronmenl of wafer and fool: 'rhe swimming 'lille for anolher season wilh liHle +rouble excepl from The Sig Alphs, who losl' in 'lhe 'lournamenl by The slim margin of one poinl. FOUL SHOOTING T The Sigs moved up from second place Toi lalre lhe 'Foul shooling award wilh a record of l2.l per man in 'lhe buclrei in 25 Tries. The Kappa Sigs fool: an undispufed second. 5:52. ill- lr. SE! When fhe firsi' snow of win'l'er 'Falls O 5 Licking Hills, Denison collegians saggy fhe warmesf spofs in Granville a r an fhere fill fhe lasi' snow melfsqdlx, mosi of ihem dog buf a fe IT ardy indi- viduals brave fhe co 'lxni winier sporis in Granville. omges when life is un- usually drab a e snow is easy 'lo paclc, snow iw do s arf. Complainfs offen iurn o and brolren windows gg no+ enough snow around 'lhe on ' ' . Bu? for fhe maioriiy who lead less hardy lives lhey have 'I'he less sfrenuous parlor sporfs such as bull sessions, bridge, +ea dancing, grill-si'H'ing and ofher more mild 'forms of exercise.. The downfown ho+- spo1's provide chances 'For public lounging and nickle dafes. .Bull sessions and dorm spreads consume ihe midnighf hours as col- legians and coeds pass fhe winler evenings. Sfudying also becomes one of lhe pasffimes of 'l'he long, cold nighfs. si f gi- Q is . Page Fifty-fif'e Page Fifty-six L l I ATERNITIES XXX' XX XXX XX ,,,- ',,,,- ff' 4 ,7- ,,..f- s ' ',... . . ',.4v 17 'X . fir-' ' Among all lhe colleges and uni- versilies in lhe coun+ry no 'Fra+er- nrly syslem is on a higher slandard lhan Denison Universily. Wilh such a remarkably high percenlage of men in fralernalism, i'l' is worlhy lo nole lhe congenialify and frue friendliness which exis+s befween 'rhe campus groups. May we quole an ap+ phrase which expresses lhe lrue senlimenl of fralernalism, Fralerni+y is lhe concenlrafed e x p e r i e n c e s of h U ll uman relahons. From 'lhe 'lime when each group plans and exe- cu+es i+s sales campaign lo pledge nfs desired quofa of neophyles +ilI h l al group hands over iis chapier reins lo lls younger members, life musi' be mel squarely by lhem. bofh Individually and colleclively They musl learn 'lo lake if as well as give it Each person musf fake h. IS +urn, firsf as 'lhe subordinale who receives 'lhe more or less de- do gra ing hardships of pledgehood, and laler as fhe superior who musi give orders inlelligenlly and com- mand +he res e 1- f fake lhem. The brolhers in one's own fra- , l' ' ' p c o lhose who ernlly and rhe 'Friends in ofher groups are bonded by somelhing h u 0 ere a+ Denison which will noi l + e ihem be forgoH'en in fhe la'l'er years of life. So we advise fhe hecklers of f 'r ' ni+ies ARE here +o slay. ra ernalnsm, Frafer- Page Fiffy-Swygn LasT spring The inTramural Torces Trom The STone Pile annexed The soTTball championship, were awarded The sporTsma shi Tropll, and, in acldi-1 Tion, won The all-year inTramural Trophy The nd c nsecuTive year. On reTurning T Gr nville i SepTember,QplediedEsixTe new men, TIT-l Teen om een i ed. Our s er-recepTion Tor The new Dean ky M . . . medi T ollo d T e opening oT school, and was a Tlne oppor uniTy everyone To geT acquainTed. This year has seen Sigma Chi Taking an acTive parT in all campus acTivi- Ties. There were eighT Sigs on The TooTball squad, including Co-CapTain Kovachy and Tom Orme, nexT year's co-capTain. Three oT our men were on The baskeTball Team, wiTh CapTain WaTkins and Dick Reinbold seeing almosT conTinuous acTion. Four Sigs played on The Big Red baseball Team. Donl WaTkins was co-capTain oT This Team. Three Track men and one golTer com-l pleTe The lisT of Sigma Chis in spring sporTs. Also, There was George Bisbee, TooTball manager, and Three Trainers OT whom Bob Wolfe and John Shivel I Y are TooTball and Track managers, respecTively, Tor nexT year. Ten Sigs wear The Denison D now. Sigs in M. S. G. A. were Beardshear, Orme, and WaTkins. Orme wasl iunior class prexy, and Reinbold was Treasurer oT The sophomores. Beard-l shear was presidenT oT Tau Kappa Alpha, and Franco-Calliopean SocieTy, and vice-presidenT oT Masquers. Mellinger was secreTary oT Franco. Carney was presidenT oT Phi Mu Alpha, and WhiTney was presidenT OT Freshman Y. lvl. C. A. Sigs in oTher campus oTTices include: DeeTer, Treasurer oT The lnTerTraTerniTy Council: WaTkins, Treasurer oT The D AssociaTion: l-larT-, man, vice-presidenT oT Blue Key: and DeeTer, vice-presidenT oT The Engi- neering SocieTy. Tom Orme is presidenT oT nexT year's sTudenT governmenT, while Bisbee and McCollum are also on This body. Molen, Thompson, and Carney march in The Big Red band. Forensicsl Tind Beardshear Shively and Bisbee on The varsiT debaTin Team , . . ly g . Skipp, Tallman, and McCollum have Taken parT in dramaTic producTions. lv1cCollu fT1 6 is an assoclaTe ediTor oT The Denisonian, Bisbee is sporTs ediTor and Thre Sigs are reporTers Tor The paper. There were Three Sigma Chis on The AdyTum sTaTT This year's social TuncTions have provided a greaT deal oT Tun and a inTeresTing varieTy in our college liTe. ln addiTion To The regular TuncTions H a hay-ride and barn parTy, The Bloody BuckeT Bar parTy, chapTer smokers andi The newly Tormed Sig Briar Club have provided real enjoyable enTerTainimenT and have helped To make The year a long remembered success. Page Fifty-eiglzt ,AC lker Thompson' i-mi. SWS ' Wa 1 an' Beard. d. Whitney V qer. Gaim DY'-'mmon r Mel in rris0n' ovens- ,, owe' Ui, W' C new- H ,ima - , sw Tallrnan-Mc ar ney- Cum a A new-We' .bee refer' . si Row, Kxomann. wgml Car h C,-uwior . add' Bus . wGa9nlilw,sh2e'5' iaeiiofi- warms. Randal? l . Shivelll- Sane' Second' Martin. Mtiowehead. stench Venmn9. SW'3 4,f ei'Y' Welle Wien- W Thi' , swvv- w 2- Monahan ,JahnSl0 ' O Fourih Row Orme- gcfh Blasdell SENIORS George Kovachy Frank Marlin Benron Mellinger Reber? Moorehead David Carman Norfon PoH'er William Sheefs Donald Wafkins Allaerf Beardshear Roberf Carney Arihur Cash Harold Cole Henry Cowgill Richard Cullen Roberf Deefer William Harfman J UNIORS Tom Orme Roberf Siuarf William Markle Ralph Boggs Roberl' Banning George Bisbee Donald Meyer SO I PHOMORES Eugene Blasdel Howard Crawford Duncan Ferguson Jim McCollum Frank Molen Frank Monahan Frederick Morrison Warren Perry Roberl Randolph Richard Reinbold Allen Safferfield John Shively Frank Skipp Jack Venning Roberf Wolfe F RESHMEN Charles Daring David Drummond Fred Gagnier Dick Hall Howard Johnson Karl Klomann Wallace Masfeller Bill McCar+ney Willard Owens Dick Paxfon Jack Servis John Tallman Walfer Thompson Crayron Walker Frank Whilney Page Fxflx :une QE 'Y i Alpha ETa oT BeTa TheTa Pi again TerminaTes a prosperous year in main- Taining iTs prominence in The Denison TraTerniTy world. Laurels an recogni-T Tion came To The TraTerniTy noT only as individuals buT also Th work of The chapTer as a whole. WiTh The succession PaTrick Vinc T ove William Cornell as presidenT in recenT lecT s, Be heTa Pi should conTinue To mainTain iTs high posi 'on in 'son a airs exT year. Having br hT r-y career as drum major and chieT builder of The Big Red bans To gl ious Tinish aT mid-year, Reid Anderson reTurned graduaTion a d To receive The recogniTion oT his elecTion To Phi BeTa a a. T l ln The leadership Tield, Charles VincenT and James Overhuls werel awarded The badge OT Omicron DelTa Kappa. VincenT has served as vice-T presidenT of Men's STudenT Government as co-capTain oT TooTball, and as presidenT oT The D AssociaTion. Overhuls was TirsT ediTor oT The new liT- erary magazine,rPorTfolio: presidenT oT Pi DelTa Epsilon, and on The boardy oT conTrol oT publicaTions oT M. S. G. A. Thomas LenTz as presidenT oT The sophomore class was also a member oT sTudenT governmenT. RepresenTing The TraTerniTy in oTher maior campus organizaTions were' Cornell as vice-presidenT oT The lnTer-FraTerniTy Council, STanTon CondiT asl vice-presidenT OT M. S. C. A., and Taylor MackelTresh, Treasurer. FirsT presidenT OT The newly-Tormed Denison Camera club was STanley SouThard., Five Alpha ETa men gained varsiTy D's in The pasT TooTball season. They were Charles VincenT, Monroe Snider, Leroy Giiiiin, James SchulTeg and Granville Sharp, manager. Baseball This spring Tinds Cornell co-ca Tain, wiTh Snider, GiTTin, and RoberT Blackburn also on varsiTy. Collins WighJT is base- ball manager, while James O'Rourlce and Willard MarquardT have places on The varsiTy Tennis rosTer. These men bid Tair To augmenT VincenT and Thei seven oTher Alpha ETa members oT The D AssociaTion. AlThough nineTeen' BeTa pledges showed ThaT They possessed scholarship when all made Their iniTiaTion grades TirsT semesTer, several also gained aThleTic rewards. Nu- merals were won by Ira Price and William Brown in TooTball, and in baslceT- ball by Charles Jordan. To win every game in boTh A and B inTramural baslceTball leagues:l ThaT was BeTa TheTa Pi's record This year, and iT was The TirsT Time in several' years ThaT such a record aT Denison has been made. STrong speedball, golT. and Tennis Teams also made Alpha ETa a major conTender Tor The inTramuraly Trophy. Page Sixty l l i l l , l l i C. l JUNIORS SOPHOMORES SENIORS Reid Anderson William Burrill William Cornell Eli Craig John Dobson Roberl Herron Roberf Jeliiries Roberr Lepper James O'Rourlre James Overhuls R. Boofh Shepard Charles Vincenf . tenegs. GowdY- Scafflil' Me Swarh-. r. 'lelmesi cl l'loU9l ' Caplan' h ard Cowell' Leppe Shar?- Bnl S BP l u B rland GrB99' .lol C iq Anderson- B' b n Holi. Van Home S .am , o ' s. a - - . i - Eirsi' RUW Brown- Hoop: Henan' it his. Mclclb e A Blacltbllfn' n Maxwell' C vm,-f-v'1 . Overhg S- van XJQDT Shepaf i swrd lwiaulfaii. Dobson' wiqhf- ' T. . H ll. . I Giiiln' Oqgourke. Schulie' J:.l:llailil2lresh6 ?vL1:1lLrq:afdh Siem h. d Rrawf eni- h fd, Y e' T ieigdgsg yihchell. Four Budeh-nan. Lenh- The chapier has had men aciive in Masquers and on ihe Adylum and Denisonian siarfs. On 'rhe lalier, William Burrill was business manager: and Taylor Mackelfresh, circulalion manager. Nine Beias sang wiih The varsiiy glee club, of which Conclii will be s'ruden+ leader nexl year. Bul Alpha EJra's year was noi' all worlc io The delerrence of her social life. Ouisiancling were ihe Chrisimas formal, ihe Triad wilh Sigma Chi and Phi Della Theia ai 'ihe Granville i cl nn: an besi of all-lhe inimiiable infor- maliiy of The lourlh annual Grand Bela Miliiary Ball. Ralph Budelman Charles Caplan H. Sfanlon Condii William Holi' Philip Johnslon Roberi McKibl:zen Henry Pearce W. Thomas LaRue N. Woodward Rupp Granville Sharp Richard Van Horne Pafriclc Vincenf Collins Wight Roberf Blaclzburn Kennelh Borland Richard Dixon E. Leroy Giffin Norman Hough Thomas Lenlz Taylor Maclrelfresh Willard Marquardl' Howard Pyle James Schulfe Thomas Shepard Monroe Snider Sfanley Souihard Roberf Sfein Samuel Van Voorhis FRESHMEN William Brown James Burchard Edward Deeds Roberi' Gowdy Thomas Gregg James Hall Chesfer Holrlesvig John Hoopes Charles Jordan Thomas Maxwell Roberl Mereness David Mifchell Ira Price Emory Richards Ralph Scarrifi Timofhy Swarlz CU LTY A William C. Ebaugh Waller J. Livingsfon Thomas Rogers Edson Rupp Edson Rupp, Jr. Dr. Russell Williams Page Sixty-one Page Sixty-fzc'0 VH Lambda DeuTron has enjoyed a highly successTul year under The able leadership oT Len Welles, presidenT: John David Jones, Treasurer: Bill SmiTh, recording secreTary: Ralph Barr, corresponding secreTary, and Joh Ree hisTorian. The Fiiis will long remember such soci ccasions as N is Pig Din- ner aT l-lomecomi , Da 's y, sm 's RecepTion, MoTher's Day, o s Three Tor arTi nd n ouses and vicTrola parTies. The ouT- xsTanding ci e nT as The SecTion ConvenTion and will long be remem- bered by every PIII presenT The members oT Lambda DeuTron were well represenTed on The various college aThleTic Teams. Lou PeTTiT and Bill Geneser were members of The TooTball Team. PeTTiT being elecTed co-capTain Tor The coming season: Al McNeill and Jesse Elliorr won Their varsiTy awards in baskeTball: Spence MeilsTrup, Al McNeill, AlberT l-lage and Don DuTTy were members oT The var- siTy baseball squad: Al LidsTer, John LindsTrom, Ernie Evans, Bud Corson and Dick WhiTe were members of The Track Team. Bud Coughenour was varsiTy baske+baII manager. ln inTramurals The chapTer capTured Two championships, speedball and swimming. The following members oT Lambda DeuTron gave much OT Their Time To campus acTiviTies and honoraries: Bill SmiTh, Bob Van Wagoner, and Len Welles were acTive members oT lvlasquers: Wally SmiTh was prom chairman: Council: Wally SmiTh, business manager oT AdyTum: Bud l-lage, adverTising manager of Denisonian: Al McNeill and John LindsTrom were members oT The Denisonian and AdyTum sTaTFs: in Omicron Del+a Kappa, Welles and Van Wagoner represenTed The Fiiis: Van Wagoner, Gifford Moore, and l-lage and Wally SmiTh are members oT Pi DelTa Epsilon while Bill SmiTh, Joe Shai, Moore, and Don BeThune represenT Lambda DeuTeron in The Franco-Calli- opean socieTy: glee club represenTaTives include Bud Pearse, Hamilron Web- sTer, manager Bob Van Wagoner, Bud Hage, Don BeThune, Dick WhiTe, Bob WrighT, Jack l-lurley and Don FiTch. ln scholasTic circles Bill Lewis and Len Welles represenl' The Eiiis in Phi BeTa Kappa. Don BeThune and Bob WrighT were elecTed To Phi socieTy. Len Welles, Tormer presidenT of chapTer, was presidenl' of lnTer-EraTerniTy i l l l l JUN IORS Ralph M. Coughenour Richard K. Corson Donald B. Duffey Charles F. Eddy Irwin F. Evans Jaclc Geneser Alberf M. Hage James L. Hahn Alan Y. Lidsfer Allen L. McNeill Spencer S. Me Louis B. Peffif John W. Reed Joseph P. Shai Wallace C. Smifh ils+rup Fourth Row HU' xl. loam' A NOYPB H ,Sgr . xml! Sxeqel. - h 6- 5 .W e' Welles. While ea ,l nes. Baff- Pearse H Fuel... Wesl. ,th L Welles. 0 P HH Shel. ,Fra . Sm' ' ' hn. e ' Wh. llow l hone. Sheldon. Reed. uh EAM- Ha I Sheldon. Srm NIC A I Shanabelql C son Cougl-N09 ser Wrxghlr J alrs 8 Or ' I new , HB9 - .L ,emow WM' Wa'-3 e SENIORS Clinfon D. Adair Ralph E. Barr Carl A. Frazier John D. Jones William D. Lewis Gifford W. Moore Richard J. Pearse Franlr J. Shanaloerg Thomas M. Sheldon Roberf L. VanWagoner H. Hamilfon Websfer Leonard G. Welles Gene Mexlslrup. Badge- Llndslrom. Bekhune. SOPHOMORES Donald S. Be+hune Jesse S. Elliot Wilson A. Geneser John Hurley John A. Lindsirom Jack McBride Bob McGiFfin William H. Sheldon George S. Seigrisf Richard H. Whife Roberf J. Wrighf FRESHMEN Donald R. Fifch David P. Flory William H. Hassard Donald A. Nicholie Thomas E. Norpell John Praff John H. Roehm Howard Siegle Claude A. Welles Raymond W. Wesl' Richard H. Whifehead Page Szrfv three Page Sixiy-fum' Kappa Sigma has come To The compleTion T a y r aughT w h high scholasTic prowess. a considerable shar aThWic su , a renewed in- TeresT in campus poliTics, and wholesome ioyme T oT a novel social season. WiTh Tull deTermin n To win The TerTraTerniTy Scholarship Trophy, The ch Ter To d aga' T The Top in scholasTic sTanding Tor The Third Time in The sT Tou semesTers To make The cup a permanenT possession. Donald Everha achieved The peak OT undergraduaTe honors by winning Phi BeTa appa. STan Hanna won The Thrasher Scholarship, The award Tor The highesT grades in The Treshman class, numbering The TourTh Kappa Sig To hold The honor wiThin The pasT Tive years. Kappa Sigma Took second place in inTramural A baskeTball, as well as in wresTling. Two new wresTling champions, Bill Dean and Ames l-lanna, were crowned vicTors in The l45 lb. and l55 lb. class respecTively. LasT spring we placed second To Sigma Chi in indoor baseball. ln a posT season challenge game The Sigs were again vicTorious: as a resulT we TreaTed Them To a smoker and surrendered The liTTle brown Tug, The annually awarded Sigma Chi-Kappa Sig Trophy. The TooTball season ended wiTh Baker and ScoTT being iniTiaTed inTo The D associaTion, while baskeTball Tollowers saw Beardsley and McNamara earn Their D's on The hardwood. Two Treshmen, l-larrison and Drake, were picked Tor The myThical all-inTramural A baskeT- ball Team. Drake was high scorer in The league. Six Gamma Xi Treshmen, Harrison, Drake, Maupin, DeLong, Maxwell, and PiTer, won numerals in Tresh- man TooTball and baskeTball. The brighT spoT oT The social season occurred when we held our Tamed prison dance as our Tall parTy. The Colonial mansion was TransTormed inTo a Tug and equipped accordingly while TorTy sTripe-bedecked couples danced To Larry STember's band. Several novel open houses have enTer- Tained us on week-ends in addiTion To The annual ChrisTmas and spring Tormals. ln campus musical organizaTions EverharT, SCOTT, SiverTsen, Ronald Wiley, BranT, GilberT, STan Hanna, Sherman, and Wager were acTive, eiTher playing in The band, or singing in The glee club. Don EverharT played an imporTanT parT in The opereTTa, Le lvledicin lvlalgre Lui. l-le is also a member OT chapel choir, glee club, band, orchesTra, and The Denison sTring quarTeT. EverharT, GilberT, and Wiley are members oT Phi lvlu Alpha, musical hon- orary. SiverTsen was manager oT The band. SENIORS Blaffk' Crockeiir . gon. D smirk. k SOON, Swe ne' Pierce. . Bravmng' G- FWS' .X ' Bro' 'h Pakrick' Brkiariied- Sherman' GY. Fullef- R' Wiev Price- Drake. 1-hllibls ' Everha' ' 9- Bam . Careil- Cuyfrisr - g ROW' Qilbefi' -reg. G-'feq ,,nm9- una. his d Rowf a B'W.i Bafflngion' si R' Bra ck S' Ha SGW' MCNBNB' 'MauP -ron. tw- W' ' xey. Bl' ' burn- ,rs nf- rr. Wig .Ha a- .Swag Third Rowl bhibiheisbailgcianr lush' ,DelOU9' Wie' Mani: hr,Waqai' Burllilolder' paurfl' o,i-ramf e . M Rev' Flizaardson. Brauning was presidenl of 'rhe Chemisrry Sociely, and was succeeded in The spring eleciion by Parriclr. Gilberr was made vice-presidenr in 'rhe same eleciion. Gordon Frosr and Parriclc are members of Blue Key, while Blaclc is an officer in MSCA. ln Masquers producrions, Black had several large paris. Siverrsen had a supporring role in Yellow Jack. Wilson had a leading parr in ihe freshman play, and Bearclsley, Curris, Hammer, and Black made up parl of 'the casr for lhe D revue. Siverrsen is manager of Por+iolio. A number of Kappa Sigs ralre aciive parr in orher organizarions and deparrmenrals on rhe campus. Ralph Balmer John Brauning Colin Croclreff Gordon Frosr Roberf Hillibish Julius Romei Reber? Scoff Philip Smifh Warren Siverfsen JUNIORS Joseph Blaclrburn Philip Browne Donald Everharf Prescolf Fuller Paul Gilberf Richard Larned Clemenf McNamara Minard Parriclr Donald Sherman Ronald Wiley SOPHOMORES Charles Beardsley James Black John Branl' David Carey Lawrence Curlis Foresf Dean Wilbur Frosf Roberi Gregg Ames Hanna Edward Mofhersbaugh Philip Pierce William Price Roberi' Wiley FRESHMEN Edward Barney John Barringion Roberl Brauning Joseph Buhr David DeLong Ralph Drake John Hammer Sranley Hanna Roberr Harrison Richard Lewifr R. Maupin Roberl Maxwell Roberi Pifer Richard Wager William Wilson FACULTY John Biellre Donald Fiich Augusf Odebrechf Malcolm Sriclrney litlgf SLVI5 j Page Sixty-six Ohio loTa oT Phi DelTa TheTa concluded The year wiTh an enviable reg d . in campus acTiviTies under The leadership oT Thorndike Dwell Morgan, chapTer presidenTs TirsT and second semesTers ecTi ConTinuing a long line oT Phi DelT 'ourn 'sTs. Marvin alke wi guide The desTinies oT The Denisonian and T raTe during The nexT year. l-le succeeded Thorndike lley as edi r-in- hie . OTher Denisonian sTaTT members were amaer, ' k BenneTT, and Dick Fishell. eorge s e ecl by The sTuclenT body To head The Men's STu- nT3hrisTian A ciaTion nexT year, and Willard Kibby will acT as secre- . lso prominenT in campus governmenT will be our Three members of Men's STudenT GovernmenT. Marvin Walker will be secreTary, while George Sims and Jack Tamblyn will each compose halT The boards oT conTrol oT mu- sic and aThleTics respecTively. SporTswriTers placed Jack Tamblyn among The Ten highesT-scoring backs in Ohio collegiaTe TooTball lasT season. l-le will reTurn as regular nexT Tall. Jack CleTT and Roland Miller also saw plenTy oT service on lasT season's Team. Freshman TooTball players included ArT STaddon, Jack Downs, and John Nelms. Mack Biggar played Treshman baskeTball. Bill Cameron and Karl Faelchle are boTh running varsiTy Track This spring, while Chuck Goux, Bob Macomber, Doug Mulcahy, Ralph Aschinger. and Dave Taylor are compeTing on The Treshman Team. Jack Cleff, Bud Maire, and Jim Quarrie represenTed us in varsiTy base- ball, and Don Cumming capTained The Tennis Team wiTh Jack Kull playing number Two posiTion. Marv Walker was Track manager lasT spring, while Louis l-lover is presenT manager oT ThaT sporT. SeTh Norman, Chuck Wheeler, and Jim EggerT will manage TooTball, baskerball, and baseball nexT year. Four Phi DelTs have been members oT The D AssociaTion This year. Phi DelT inTramural Teams have won Tour Trophies Thus Tar, and have placed high in compeTiTion Tor oThers. These championships include: Tennis and golT Tor lasT spring, The indoor Track meeT, and handball. OTher miscellaneous acTiviTies Tound Phis equally prominenT. Thorndike Dwelley was vice-presidenT oT Omicron DelTa Kappa, vice-presidenT oT Pi DelTa Epsilon. appeared as a principal in Two plays by Masquers, and won lisTing in The annual Who's Who in American Colleges. John Dunnick served as senior class presidenT, was a member of Omicron DelTa Kappa, Treasurer oT Pi DelTa Epsilon, and Treasurer oT Masquers. Marvin Walker was a member oT Blue Key, Pi DelTa Epsilon, Phi Mu Alpha, and The Glee Club. OTher members oT The glee club included George Sims and Al Musal, who were also members oT Phi Mu Alpha, TogeTher wiTh John STewarT. Jim Morgan served as Treasurer oT Blue Key. SENIORS Tom Boflomley Jaclr Cleff Don Cumming John Dunniclr G. T. Dwelley L. Ewing Horace Hamlin Louis Hover Duhfnck' Morggni Dweiieii' Davis. 6 Sims. gt Hove Faelchle. ' yin, cle 8,-on. h . Him I ui Cam S. S. Tambwnl p,hMg::m:inql Spa-.fled Joe .N,,lms. Ku D Muxch,y.nH. im First 39:54 Radabaufl LNheeler. v'xuE?gvJaii. Relax naar Cadriilor Coin. eww i Bo 0 ' nl i 1 . Co a ,' T' a ' Second RovgQ::'l:,i,usal. ll. H OAeY'Nq:::-rig-qqah Aschmqe Walker. B une ' 9 ' e John ,Skaadoih Downs' xvaaihiafgafiov. xmsbv Karl Faelchle was a member of Jrhe debaiing squad, as well as coach of freshman debale. John Slewarf served as associaie edilor of Porlfolio, wilh Bill Cameron as assislanl business manager. Slewarl' also collaborafed wiih Marvin Wallcer To wriie 'rhe music and lyrics for This year's D Associafion revue. Willard Kibby was awarded a principal role in lhe freshman play. George Sims served as Treasurer of 'rhe iunior class. Ralph Aschinger, Dave Taylor, and Reid Bryson serve on ihe Adyium siafi. A. Roland Miller Roland W. Miller John Sfewari William Wilson James Morgan Bob Radebaugh JUNIORS Dean Beier W. Cameron Karl Faelchle Jaclc Kull Julian Maire 6. R. Sims K. Sperl J. Tamblyn M..Wallrer Russell Mulcahy SOPHOMORES Ned Collander James Eggerl' Allen Musal Joe Nelms Sefh Norman Chuck Oxley Jim Quarrie Bob Smifh Chuck Wheeler Roberl Cadwell Eric Johnson John Romei F RESHMEN Ralph Aschinger Richard Benner? Mac Bigger Don Barlow Reid Bryson Jaclt Downs Irving Eggerf Richard Fishell Charles Goux Roberf Macomber Doug Mulcahy John Nelms Harry P. Sims Jr. Ari' Staddon Dave Taylor Willard Kibby Page Sixty-sezfcn Page Sixty-eight L Gamma-lola Zela ol Lambda Chi Alpha arliculaled ils aclivilies during A e H e lhe school year I'-737-l938 wilh each man in lhe chapler making a' d ' conlribulion loward leadership-leadership on lhe campu and ilhin lralernily. My Fllleen lreshmen chose lo wear lhe co me Lamb i Alpha, so wilh I9 pledges and 20 aclive mem rs, l ys n lhe Ranch began lhe school year. ln lhe II, bdg Alpha was represenled on lhe varsily loolball le m e an Duliy. The lreshman loolball coach lound leur ol a a's reshmen-Burlcharl, Thomas, Schneider, and Wolle-oul- Ala prospecls lor nexl year's leam. Jesse Skrilelz played an aclive parl in Masquers lhis year as lechnical direclor ol all produclions. Slallord Webb, John Criles and l-layes Clark represenled Lambda Chi in Masquers' second play, Yellow Jack. Burio Lamb carried a minor parl in lhe same play, and Slcrilelz and Gordon also worked in a one-acl vehicle. Slcrilelz made his lasl appearance on lhe Deni- son slage in l-lay Fever. Masquers' members are: Criles, Slcrilelz and Webb. Aclive on lhe Glee Club squad were: Criles, Taylor, Purvis and Moore. Criles served as barilone soloisl lor lhe club lor his second conseculive year. Bolh Moore and Purvis are pledges lo Phi Mu Alpha while Criles and Taylor are aclive members ol lhal organizalion. Criles was honored in lhe lall eleclions ol ODK by being elecled lo lhal body. Jewell was elecled lo Blue Key as Gamma lola's iunior repre- senlalive. Randolph, Cosway, and Slcrilelz were lhe senior members ol lhis organizalion. In lhe debale lryouls held in lhe lall. G. I. had live men wilhin lhe lirsl six places-Gordon, Cosway, Webb, Slcrilelz and Lamb. Bros. Cosway, Gor- don and Slcrilelz represenled lhe chapler in Tau Kappa Alpha, nalional hon- orary lorensic lralernily, and lhe chapler is honored by having Bro. Cosway as local presidenl ol T. K. A. chapler. Bros. Cosway and Gordon were members ol M. S. C. A., and Bro. Gordon served on lhe M. S. G. A. cabinel. The lale winler season lound Bros. Haynes. Taylor and Boam on lhe bas- kelball squad. On lhe 'freshman squad were Bros. Burkharl and Thomas. Gamma-lola has also been well represenled in olher campus aclivilies. Bros. Moore and Bogman on lhe Denisonian slalf: Bros. Cosway, Ela Sigma Phi: Bro. Gordon, Franco-Calliopean: and Bros. Jewell, l-larding and Webb in lhe band, Bro. Webb, Jr., represenlalive ol l. F. C. lf? SENIORS John Crifes Harold Haynes RoberT King Jesse Skrilefz rin' T Skrileh. Haw e, Co5wBYi n an Ciemenil' C Wes. gordon' Than Boarh. Kelis' rl i'n9 JeweTTi Taxlior' a ' r . cirapan, John Medan r ii s. aeweh- Sie' iesnu, sch'-male Firilxizhgad, King' L mb Webb- Rani-lop l J Mc.Clana'fl an' T 5 I QE ZXNTXSOD. Hayes. Wolfe- Second Pijiaiding. Bogmani . Moore. Klenk' Deer, t PufVl5i -nxomas. fgurlthai' 5 Goll. Third ROW is' 5rurriP- Brinhef- Simi ATTer worlcing diligenTly in The Tall, The boys on The ranch won The Blue Ke Dec T' T h b cl y ora ion rop y y ecoraTing The house in Typical ranch sTyle. Lambda Chi Alpha's lris goes This year To Bro. ClemenT Tor having been elecTed inTo Phi BeTa Kappa. The Spring saw Bros. Haynes and DuTTy Throwing The iavelin on The varsiTy Traclc Team and Bro. WhiTehead piTching and Bro, STumpT in The ouT- Tield on The varsiTy baseball Team. The men aT The house have buT one regreT Tor The enTire year' namely The moving OT The Tossle Trom The leTT To The righT Tor Bros. SlcrileTz, CriTes, l-laynes, King and WhiTehead. To Those graduaTing. iT means The compleTion of Tour years oT happy college experiences: buT To The undergracluaTes oT Gamma-loTa, iT means a heavy loss in Tive ouTsTancling men. William Wl-riTehead JUNIORS David Boam John Chapin Roberi' Clark Harry Clemeni Richard Cosway Harry DuFFy RoberT Gordon Roberf Harding Hugh Kelis Burio Lamb John Mcclanafhan Herberf Randolph S OPHOMORES Charles Bogman Gordon Deer STerling Jeweff Fredrick Taylor Sfaiiford Webb Gordon Wilson F RESHMEN Roy BurlrharT Roberi' Goll Roberf Hayes Sfiles JewiTT Kennefh Klenl: Frank KosTyu John N. Moore Donald Purvis Wilbur Shorfs Paul Snider Ralph Sfumpf Howard Thomas ChesTer Varney James Wolfe Pug? 5'i,r'ty-:line Page Safzcnty X Looking back over The year S A E 's oT old Ohio Mu are able To say iusTly ThaT iTs pasT Ten monThs oT acTiviTy have been happily success X N 0 y o T Under The presidency oT Bill WesT, The cha Ter sTa a brisk beginning by pledging The lar e Tr h p on c mpus Tor The Third consecuTive year Thes me wi Thblr meTTle on The cinder . vka Track, on The iamond, EMEOT all Tield. l-lusky pledges l-lickman, Barra , a H, as s rri g members oT The Trosh TooTball squad, helped o p mos invincible varsiTy lasT Tall, showing unusual TooTball hopes. a so puT The sixTeen pound shoT over 42 TeeT Tor a TirsT place in inTra- mural weighTs. Chuck Podorean is looking Torward To The varsiTy baseball squad nexT spring. OuTsTanding among The freshmen cinder men are WesTer- burg, Marshall, Hickman, and Hanson. Among The upperclassmen, GehrandT reTurned To The gridiron Tor The lasT Time, playing Tackle in every game, and winning All-Ohio recogniTion. Blake, Gordon, Meyer, WesT, and Welsh became an invaluable parT oT The varsiTy baskeTbalI squad. Paul Welsh was capTain oT The varsiTy golT squad, ably assisTed by Gene DurranT and Jim RooT, all oT whom shooT in The low sevenTies. Bill WesT holds down Third sack on The baseball Team. Bob BroughTon and Lew l-lopkins are veTerans oT The cinder Track: Bob a leTTer man in hurdles and The broad jump. Lew in The mile, halT mile and relay. Don SmiTh is a member of The Tennis squad. S. A. E. finished TirsT lasT Tall in The inTramural relays, capTuring a beau- TiTul bronze Trophy. LasT year The Ohio Mu boys placed second in The all- inTramural Trophy race. So Tar This year They have a close second. BaTes and Fulcher nosed ouT The Sigs To bring The archery plaque To The house. Bill WesT was associaTe ediTor oT The Denisonian, wiTh Tour boys on The sTaTT. Don SmiTh is ediTor oT The AdyTum, wiTh several aspiring assisTanTs Trom The house. Jack Rader was presidenT of The chapTer Tor The second,semesTer, as well as presidenT oT M. S. G. A. Don SmiTh was elecTed vice-presidenT oT M. S. G. A. Tor The coming year. wiTh BaTes and WesT serving on The board. Several men are members oT The Glee Club, one oT The orchesTra, Two oT The band, Two oT Phi Mu Alpha, one oT Masquers. and Three oT Blue Key. Ed Filkins is box oTTice manager Tor Masquers. r, How' lrne Neal- Pa Kuhn- Weslerberq. began. Ho'-We Non. Ro n Marshall- Poaerani 1 Rader. West' smug BBW' ' R00 ' hilii-PPS' ,Cove . haief- - wr. V - Q ROV' l boro- . Nrede' . - 'Wfl9 wi A nom-9' Ros les rancher. E . exam- F'l S an la Row,DW-'Bev' Zaman X 0eFosse'f. Elmer' don Hickman' . C ' - e. gov ' Seci:i:i1G'- Hopkmill- gieriwoler. OYSWY' Ring W-ison Berskesl- Mich B l ' - Rov M' l mn. Welsh' y Schwafh- Third Smith' MH dark Bloc - gram. Hanson. ' ,P-ifflel' P-OV' r -Ml' x . oMcColm. Bla e SENIORS JUNIORS SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN Roberi Broughion Thomas Bares Roger Bersied Merle Niedefhofef Roberl Gehrancll C. William Coffman Rlflllorcl Blake Chffles B' Palmer Jack E. Rader Gordon DeFossef Roberf Block Ohs Rosbofo Roberf Robeson Irving DuBey Eugene Durrani Alfred Baffan James Roof Ed Fiihins Jaclr Fulcher John Myer Edwin C. Niederhofer Allan L. Piiher Donald B. Smiih Alberf Gram Jack Gibson Lewis Hoplrins Fred E. Ringle Carl D. Sfiner Paul L. Welsh Burdeile Wrighf Charles A. Murray Bill Wesl' Harold A. Halsiein Joe Gordon James Wilson Neil Henson Harry McColm Roberi Mariin Thomas Phillips Roberf Rimer Glenn Whife William Cope Jack Hickman James Howland Overion Kuhn Jack Marshall Jack Monigomery Charles Podorean Sam Romig Donald Wallar Page bezcnty om Page Sv-zmlily-tivo AlThough handicapped by being The youngesT group on The campu well as The smallesT numerically, Alpha loTa oT BeTa Kappa has ' no way These TacTors inTerTere wiTh iTs sure and sTeady upwar progress Led by PresidenT Dave Turner and Ru hing Cha n Vern owman, The chapTer secured I4 pledges, The larges mber in e 'sTory oT The group. Coupled wiTh II acTi es, a sTrong and peraTive uniT was Tormed which gave The chapTer Th osT successTul year in hisTory. AlThough emphasis was plac upon a - iT chapTer raTher Than upon individualism, an un- y larg percenTage OT The members were ouTsTanding in some personal e . WiTh Gene LeRoy and Vilah Brooks Taking The l65 and I75 pound championships and Phil Davis being runner-up in The I45 pound class, The chapTer secured The inTramural wresTling Trophy. Brooks and LeRoy were also ouTsTanding in TooTball, wITh The Tormer winning a leTTer Tor his work aT guard, and These Two along wiTh Davis and Ralph Riddell received gold TooTballs emblemaTic OT The Ohio championship. Freshman TooTball men in- cluded John lnnis and Don Irwin, while Ward Lahm received his numerals in baskeTbaII. An unusual honor Tell To The chapTer when Three oT iTs members, Dave Turner, John Turnbull and Franklin Wood were elecTed To membership in Phi BeTa Kappa. Turner was also Treasurer OT The senior class and a varsiTy Track man: Turnbull was presidenT of The chapTer The second sernesTer: and Wood, sTudenT leader oT The Glee Club, Treasurer oT M. S. 6. A. and a member oT O. D. K. General progress was made along social lines, when The ArTisTic Ball in November and The winTer Tormal in December proved To be Two oT The mosT successTul dances in The shorT chapTer hisTory. The house was improved greaTly Through The addiTion oT new TurniTure, papering and painTing. A library was sTarTed, and numerous improvemenTs were made in house Tech- nique, records and similar iTems, which so oTTen spell The diTference beTween The success and Tailure oT a chapTer. lT is said ThaT a good man cannoT be kepT down, and wiTh This in mind, Alpha loTa, despiTe her youTh, is prepared To Take her righTTul place upon The Denison campus in The noT Too disTanT TuTure. X SENIORS Earven Andersen Edward Jenkins Harold Smifh David Turner John Turnbull Franklin Wood Wood- kinSf jen gowman' M-ns' E5- h m Turner. Nlcleise: Riddell. H' sen Edwards. . wa - er. bun Le ROY' will if Hullonl Biimawokf.. Lam' meg ,J.T'-'fn I Deubler. e I Turnbu- gfgi Row P Davis. ,S Syarr. F' A Rowf - ln J. lnhl 1 S3505 hvll I Third Row, JUNIORS SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN Vilah Brooks Vern Bowman Phillip Davis Lawrence Deubler Sam Dunham Harry Jenkins Charles lnnis Eugene LeRoy Ralph Riddell Jack Edwards James Huifon Ward Lahm Frank Leegeler John lnnis Gilbed Scamahorn Rowland Siarr Franklin Turnbull Donald Irwin FACULTY R. W. Whidden T. A. Lewis lnon mem ber advisor, Page Sczfcnlv tluee E various acTiviTies on The campus are as Tollows: Nickie TiTus, Page Swcniy-four C, The opening oT The school year Tound TwenTy-Three acTl T ng To The Old Brick. AT The end oT rushing This group wa Te by a Tine pledge class OT sixTeen. For The second Time in succession The e hapTer house was The scene oT The NaTional ConvenTion OT Th i n AssociaTion oT Commons Clubs over The ChrisTmas holid C oners Trom various chapTers in easTern and cenTral parTs h ed STaTes garhered To celebraTe The American Commons lubs' 'co ing oT age. ln The honora e Tind Nickie TiTus in O. D. K., lvlasquers, and Tau Kappa A ha d as ore, Urven EpsTein, and Phil Robinson in Phi Mu Alpha, d T er and Bud Bashore in Blue Key. Commoners who held TTI 1 si nT OT lvl S C A as well as a member oT Franco Calliopean and de 1 Ted Erler, vice-presidenT oT ChemisTry socieTy1 George Muench, vice- presidenT oT Treshman YH: Jack l.oTland. head oT The social welTare work Tor M. S. C. A.: Verne l.ogerquisT, Treasurer OT Engineering socieTy: George Hopes, Treasurer oT MaTh club: Archie T-ludson, Treasurer oT CosmopoliTan club, and Gene Vodev, Treasurer oT The Torum. Club men in The glee club are MerT Barlow, pianisTq Bud Bashoreg Joe CavagroTTi, soloisTg Urven EpsTeing and Phil Robinson. AlThough Tinishing slighTly above average in The Tall and winTer sporTs on The inTramural card, A. C. C. has been oT considerable Trouble To Teams conTending Tor The supremacy. The handball Team oT ClayT Bromley and Harley KlepTer Tinished in second place, losing only To The Phi DelTs. In varsiTy Track we were represenTed by veTeran ClayT Bromley, who made his D lasT spring, and Ed Cooper and Joe Dickson, boTh new To varsiTy com- peTiTion. George Muench and George Reed played on The Trosh eleven while Jack LoTland was our only conTribuTion To The hardwood. Open houses were held aT TrequenT inTervals wiTh an occasional special parTy such as The BuTch and Sadie ATTair, The bacon baT, and a PaculTy men's smoker. The social calendar was Topped by The ChrisTmas dinner- dance which This year was held aT The chapTer house. WiTh Ward Collyer, presidenT, and Verne LogerquisT, vice-presidenT. we are looking Torward To an equally successTul year Tor T938-39. S er I od eil 1 V Off- . . sfomlel' ww. Cum Quisk Erlei' Titus H mmai. Laguna' h 819. l Leger - nh a MuenG . Glenn' I Conn X ndeil Bellavii- Hopes' ver. UGYCM' Barlow kin Napier' He pe Firsi ROC Roe- , M Dioksonbijggrokia Parsons. F-PS9 53:53 ggwillr Mandalclbinsonl Kee . . n . TFidgaowisvgnieraarhoover' Sie? ' house. ENIORS JUNIORS SOPHOMORES Clayfon Bromley Edwin Cooper Theodore Erler Raymond Giffin Verne Logerquisl Leslie Orr Nicholas Tiius Eugene Vodev Delphon Bashore Joseph Cavagrofii Wardham Collyer George Hopes Arfhur Janssen Alden Sanderson Merion Barlow Kenneih Beaver Alphonse Bellavia Robert Conanf Donald Daych Joseph Dickson Archie Hudson David Mandry Roberf Vick FRESHMEN Paul Barhoover Roberf Bighouse Marvin Cummings Urven Epsfein Richard Kelley Harlan Klepfer Jack Lofland Curfis McKinnie George Muench Spencer Parsons George Reed Philip Robinson Walfer Sfephens Page Ssfucnly-jim' 1,7 1 1 i 1 1l .,l 411 E 1- 4,1 As' 5'0- vgg 4 V ,. :v:-: P, X W-N 'W' 'P Jn X WHEN GREEK MEETS GREEK Page Scmvzfy-si.1' ii piiiffElQI 1 1 I NVi1'h such an evidenl' and pleasani' s'rress on 'Phe social phase of college life, Denison Universi'I'y be- comes nofed 'For iis po+en1'ial niafch-making. As +he social seasons progress, couples find fheir com- panionship ripening info love and 'finally culminai- ing in pin-plan+ing and engagement Swasey Chapel has become a favorife choice of s'l'uc.leni's refurning fo middle-aisle if wiih fheir sweefhearfs of col. lege days. l INTER FRATERNITY COUNCIL Rm, Fosseiig ,eff fo ' . Sims '9hf: Brow ' Deere, He . D ' Wo d welley' THU: - Baker, Hopes lnTerTraTerniTy smokers and The Freshman exchange were Two main acTiviTies of The lnTerTraTerniTy Council during The pasT year. The group was headed by Leonard Welles, William Cornell, RoberT d R l h B k r in iTs successTul season which did much To DeeTer an a p a e promoTe inTerTraTerniTy Triendliness on The Denison campus. The Denison Council was represenTed aT The NaTional lnTer- T T 'T Conference in New York CiTy by Leonard Welles and Al ra ern: y Beardshear. Problems relaTing To TraTernlTies were discussed: and as a resulT of This meeTing iniTial plans Tor a cooperaTive consumers associaTion among Denison TraTerniTies were TormulaTed. ' Cflfes ' Turner ' Welles . Corneill De PAN HELLENIC COUNCIL The moTives and ideals oT eighT Denison sororiTies are merged h inTo one governing body-The Pan Hellenic Council. T e purpose oT The council is To sTrengThen The relaTions beTween The groups and To solve problems conTronTing all sororiTies. The council under BeTTy Shoemalcer's guidance. was responsible x, . -N' nijigl :vt-cg.. T Th TormaTioh OT The new DelTa Gamma sororiTy. Also The coun- or e cil puT inTo eTTecT The quoTa sysTem oT rushing To equalize The mem- berships oT The various groups. Fif5i gow J rqen5?ft. Shoemakeh NiET10Era33n.Wxllia Grimih' Webb' at at-ibhlfq' Magchi h H. H yer. Row: Wiffviiihouf- HEC 4.1 - 3' 1. 1'3 ' 'J ms. nd ' Seco 1 I' Si lx Peg Zell, pledge misT es re ing up a year ThaT has been successTul in every way. Rush' , 'T ancy l-larT as chairman, assisTed by Tish Taylor, Tinished in '- le ' g oT TwenTy girls. The pledges elecTed Peg Davey as Their presi - a me Kulhanek, vice-president Jeanne l-linTzelmann, sec- reTa 7 and ' . SmiTh, Treasurer. The pledges had Tull charge oT The Pan The Chi Omegas, ug d!rship oT Mary l-lecker, presidenT, and T e girls enTerTained Their daTes amid black and whiTe silhoueTTes aT The all Tormal, and gave a novel under-The-sea ChrisTmas dance. The Tradi- Tional gingham Tormal was held aT The Inn, preceded by a dinner. Chi Omega members are again acTive on The campus. BeTTy ScoTT and RuTh Wheeler were Crossed Keys members, and KaTe Sparks and RuTh Wheeler were members oT Pan l-lell. Kaki Oxley was social chairman oT Y. W. C. A. and Treasurer oT Masquers. KaTe Sparks was The vice-presidenT OT CosmopoliTan club. Phyllis Logan had The lead in The D AssociaTion mu- sical comedy, The Greeks Go NaTive. ln addiTion To individual acTiviTies, Chi Omega was well represenTed in Y. W. C. A., W. A. A., glee club, chapel choir, Masquers, and CosmopoliTan club. For nexT year, BeTTy ScoTT is The presidenT of W. A. A., and Mary l-lecker is senior member on iudiciary. BeTTy Sherwood is secreTary of W. S. G. A., Mary P. SmiTh, corresponding secreTary oT Y. W. C. A., and RuTh Wheeler, Y. W. program chairman. . Virginia STraiTh, The pledge making The greaTesT improvemenT in grades, was awarded The scholarship ring aT The Pledge Tormal aT The lnn. The chapTer is looking Torward To The coming year wiTh sixTeen new ac- Tive members, wiTh Peg Zell as presidenT, and Edna Di Domenica, pledge misTress. Il ' d We C ana. Page Se cniy-viglit SENIOR5 Mary Elizabelh Elizabefh Slack Nancy Harl Jane Brush Kalhryn Oxley Marlha Smilh Jane Roberls Calherine Sparks Bibby Rohan-ls. V. Scoli. Blblw I . M' SPH' 5' X golin. I M. gmil X sl pal s. l 7-ell' Hacker eler. when 6 as Trnrn. Sl ck Hifi- Olav' an Dell' wha l nn Dufneli' l Brush. 5 l od. Ffeem l . Hinh-5 ma l , R vlf W0 M. th. Firgl Cclafli- Smnue' -raY:3r.P'?l15:nuh' J. 5235! yrunl, R. Sem Second Howie. Jacobs' illian. Place' . . Domen lx. n B. K X., gavev Elia Row,J. Kxillgkgr- ,CL Calhan. Bai . T lliaris. Lofianigulhaneic, SBCl9wl ROW' Fourlil JUNIORS SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN Elinor Clark Mary Heclner Louise Freeman Margarel Zell Rulh Wheeler Jane Falls Belly Scoll Dorolhy Bilzer Belly Bolin Janel Clark Mary Lou Dell Edna Di Domenica Agnes Jean Walker Carolyn Glass Mildred Jacob Belly Sherwood Dorolhy Slcinlzle Mary P. Smilh Elizabelh Taylor Jean Killian Elizabelh Hunl Rulh Smilh Virginia Slrailh Jane Pierce Mary Divelbiss Dorolhy Timm Jeanne Hinlzelmann Barbara Killian Elizabelh Deal Rufh Vierling Margarel Davey Phyllis Logan Laverne Kulhanelr Helen Faris Margarel Durnell Belly Slade Page 51 Lum :une Page Eiglziy The LiTTIe WhiTe I-louse oT BeTa Tau chapTer has housed many Tu Tion during This successTul year iusT compIeTed Campus leaders in many organizaTions ass ily IDTOQI iT p rTa s. JaneT Shepard is presidenT oT W. . I . . . A. elen Jones is vice-presidenT, and Evelyn Mu n ifgxas er. Th These girls along wiTh Eleanor Osborne were el d EhiIB a Kappa. BeTTy Shoemaker is presi- denT oT n Ilenic C nc . ildred Green was appoinTed one oT The covirq y Day. For T e coming year Libby Way has been eIecTed To Take over The presi- K d denT's duTies in Y. W. C. A. Sue OIT is secreTary. BeTTy Klemm and BeTTy Williams were given imporTanT posiTions in W. A. A., and Mildred Green and BeTTy Klemm hold minor oTTices in W. S. G. A. We were honored by a visiT OT our naTionaI grand presidenT, Mrs. D. Bligh GrasseTT, in January. Also we were TorTunaTe To have Mrs. BanTa, our general grand rush chairman, as The speaker Tor our Founders' Day BanqueT aT The Granville Inn. Thefa was proud To have Two queens in iTs midsT. Lucille JeTTries was queen oT The Junior Prom, and Lois Champney was Triad queen. JaneT Shepard and BeTTy Shoemaker were This year's sTage-sTruck TheTas. JaneT sang in The DelTa Omicron opereTTa, and BeTTy had one of The leads in The Masquers' producTion, I-lay Fever. BeTTy Williams held The presidency oT This year's pledge class oT I9 girls. AT The iniTiaTion banqueT prizes were awarded To Sue OIT Tor being boTh The besT sTudenT and The mosT ouTsTanding pledge, and To Mary Ann Sears Tor having Turned in The besT pledge noTebook. We look Torward To nexT year wiTh The greaTesT expecTaTions under The leadership oT Mildred Green, presidenT: BeTTy Cowman, vice-presidenT: Carolyn Wolfe, recording secreTary: DoroThy Lee Sullivan, corresponding secreTary: and Peggy Truesdall and Virginia MarTindaIe as co-chairmen oT The social commiTTee. S ENIORS Virginia Andrew Jane Bryson Helen Clemenls Harriel Crawford Dorolhy Darrow Rulh Harlman Helen Jones Evelyn Murlon Eleanor Osborn Janel Shepard Belly Shoemaker Belly Lindslrom .lellf9Y' MCN nu eil. Bowma Richie bb. . we' Oli' n Mrs. Bo -y 1. we Murlo - SharP Chernalwi co Hman Shoemaker, Q While. Row,-B. Wllllilililiardl. lord. Osbvfn- Ha' - A Green' Wal I Flisi EinleY- Ba gwson. Ciawchews. Sulliwn' Un I Shermln' RuPP. zshepard. Darrow' An Mvmhell. is ww. Q Klemm. Second-x Ri: Undslrom- H puns' J. Jogjfg B. Clemenxluesdall. Merdlan' H. or ' ey- O l. Cow l . O ull. l Third RowfCl1B3Z:a'a' MCCa1:9r9uson' Mont. rc E. Williams- M Y Dorsey ears' ChnS'fe ' goo 56 - yor' Se ROW' er. TAY Follfll' . dale. Sion Maffln JUNIORS SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN Mildred Green Kale Hopkins Janel Jones Lorenze Lind Marianna Milchell Dorolhy Lee Sullivan Elizabelh Way Mildred While Eleanor Williams Carolyn Woll Virginia Chrislena Belly Clemenls Elizabelh Cowman Belly Klemm Charlolle McCarroll Virginia Marlindale Jane Menard Mariorie Merchanl Peggy Morris Marian Orcull Roberla Poslne Dorolhy Prifchard Mary Ann Sears Peggy Sherman Rulh Sloner Belly Taylor Peggy Truesdall Anne Whealley Belly Williams Jane Bankhardl Eleanor Bielhe Barbara Boolser Harriel Bowman Lois Champney Gladys Cherna Jane Dorsey Marlha Ferguson Barbara Finley Jenny June Gales Lucille Jeffrey Mariorie McNeil Sue Oll Maridan Richler Madeline Rupp Dorolhy Sharp Nancy Wilcox Page Ezghty one Pagf' Eiglziy-two D l l Followin Th T 1 A g e re urn of several of The girls for freshman am ek, Chi sTarTed The fall season wifh The usual rushing acTiviTies: a an Ty show consTiTuTed our firsT parfy. wifh a for wh dinner as Ti a bir. before pledging ninefeen girls. T The mosT excifing ev f M w The Sunday affernoon when Delfa Chi me bers receive es T e official opening of The new chap- Te ho Lkzlicl our a :ous eyes waTch The whiTe Colonial house grad utha e i o I s presenf form and The pledges were ro d T h l f , p u o od The ir arTy in The big social room-Their pledge formal. Ofher campus social groups proved Their fine spirifs by offering Their houses for our parfies, or by enTerTaining us aT open houses. The Tall formal was held in The Sigma Chi house, while The Phi Gams generously lenT Their aid for our Chrisfmas formal dance and buffef supper. The pan-hellenic parTy was a sweafer dance aT The Kappa Sig house: and The spring formal dinner-dance was The second large parfy in The chapfer house. Many alumni refurned for The iniTiaTion banquef in March. Our freshman debaTe Team again won The inTer-sororiTy debafes making Tri DelTa eli ible T T ' g o re ain The cup permanenfly. Ginger l-lammerle was elecfed freshman beauTy queen aT The W A A C ' l . . . armva. and Eleanor Piclc- rel wielded The gavel in Freshman Y. W. C. A. Rufh Jennings sang one of The leads in The Delfa Omicron-Phi Mu Alpha annual opera, was elecfed sTudenT direcTor of The Women's Glee Club, and was given a leading role in The D Revue Celia I l . nna sey and Joan Gufh- ridge were sTudenT managers of The Gle CI b e u . and Celianna, Barb Eschman, and Libby Osmond were elecfed To Della Omicron, of which Jeanne Deeds was preside-nT. Cafhrin Coons and Buddy Eschman wer ' d d e in ucTe inTo Morfar Board: Margaref Shurnaker, BeTTy Tumbleson, and Carol Griffifh received Crossed- Keys. and Budd E h ' y sc man was elecfed To Phi BeTa Kappa. Doris Jean Flory had one of The parTs in l-l F ay ever, presenfed by lviasquers: Buddy Eschman was vice- resid T TW r h p en o .S. G. A., and Joan Gufh- ldge and Jean Speckman were me b f ' ' ' m ers o The Council. Judiciary Council ad Barbara WalTho , M S ' ' ' ' ur ary prmg, Connie Winchesfer, and Libby Osmond. :si-.ii i V SENIORS Marydell Baldwin Calhrin Coons Elinor Eschman Joan Gulhridge Isabelle Hepler Anna Pierce Mary Spring Barbara Wallliour Jeanne Vloods erle- e Hamm ebrou9l Bum l C595 'n gxacv- aaldw' ' akef. I Hepl8l'- ck MgKnigah':n:n?llJlg'lin. Waxyhaur. Guklxridfie. Lawson. poeo - . T' o an' X son, ,Henry - y, nbme b Est'-l ' 1 mb? Fira gilt. johnslon. FE 'looong' Pierce, E dk Bruckeg, Flxriixlgxnglil Ellis. F Coons. e . . e. , . , !5P,-m9- New Ra n Bowye . Beauclair. na KQV' . hegleh. sped-ma ' nl de Sewoods. HY' Pufnamu gcyfaygr, Kiehm. agar' Yuxettifvjfliri Era RovI'Sh?lllill1 Ellor. M' we Kooi- Grixewkoni F' T bsmond, Gri L y PickrehNUig egbefl- J' Sin-le ru l ah- 0 l ROW' Esclim Fourll! I sim' Welles Belly Tumbleson and Helen Ellor were on Y. W. C. A. Cabinelg Anna P. C h. . . ierce, al rin Coons. and Carol Grilhlh were members ol W. A. A. Board: Helen Bowyer was sociely edilor ol lhe Denisonian. Doris Jean Flory was vice-presidenl ol lhe Spanish Club: Helen Bowyer was publicily chairman ol Franco-Calliopean which had lhree Tri Dell . a members. Della Chi looks forward lo a grand year wilh ils new chapler house on Mulberry slreel. JUNIORS SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN Helen Bowyer Ellen Bruclrerl Jeanne Deeds Janel Egberl Helen Ellor Doris Jean Flory Carol Grilililh Celianna Isley Rulh Jennings Norma Kiehm Phyllis Lawson Elizabelh Osmond Belly Radlre Margarel Shumaker Jean Speckman Belly Tumbleson Connie Winchesler Jeanne cle Beauclair Belly Braun Frances Coons Barbara Eschman Marion Greegor Belly Hulligan Belly Koos Eleanor Lowe Fannie Newlon Jeannella Newlon Jeanne Samman Bealrice Shaw Janel Yule Ann Pulnam Sue Sharkey Carolyn Bowman Jean Bunie Margaret Chesebrough Belle Ellis Phyllis Finlrenbiner Jeanne Flelcher Virginia Hammerle Belly Ann Henry Louis Johnslon Jane Marlin Mary McKnight Eleanor Pickrel Marjorie Pococl: Diana Shuebrulr Eleanor Shumalrer Phyllis Slacy Arline Wolf Pclgf' Eighty-flirec Page Eighty-fam' Gamma Omega of Kappa Kappa Gamma en a e xinlg season by pledging I9 new girls. I A ln spiie of The lac? Thar e s Qi re iremenl was lowered by The oca Pan Hellenic G r ked high and Ellzabelh Plum was l l - ' , a ' ' elecie T i ra KM Alberia Morse, Jeanne Shaffer, and Jean San- embers of Phi Socieiy freshman honorary organizahon rn e , i ' - MB Hy owman, chapler presidenl, was secrelary of The senior class, and arbara Warson was vice-presideni of The sophomore class. For Jrhe second consecuiive year a Kappa reigned as Homecoming queen. This year The s'ruden'r body chose Belly Bowman. Cornelia Carrier, ediror of Jrhe lirsi chapfer newspaper, was honored by having a shorl biography in ihe I937-38 edilion of Who's Who in Amer- ican Colleges. She is a member of Pi Delia Epsilon, iournalisiic fraierniiy. Members of +he chapler worked on ihe sraiils of Jrhe Adylum and Denisonian. Kappas had prorninem' paris in nearly every Masquers producrion. Barbara Nichols had 'rhe lead in Craig's Wife. Barbara Walson had a parl in one of ihe group of one-acl plays, while Frances Porimann acled in l-lay Fever. Fran Tibbals and Belly Sfewari had paris in The Freshman Guild producfion, Spring Dance. Barbara Nichols and Barbara Waison had parrs in 'lhe D Associalion Revue. Dororhy Frazier, Sue Palmer, and Porlia Miller represenled 'rhe chapier in Crossed Keys. Lucia Wicker sang in The women's glee club, Barbara Vorhis in chapel choir, and many ofhers rook par? in Jrhe Fesiival Associalion presenlaiions. Becky Galloway and Elizabefh Plum were members of Delia Omicron, while Poriia Miller, Barbara Nichols, Barbara Wa+son, and Helen McCoy were members of Orchesis. On The board of Women's Sludenr Governmenl were Sue Palmer, Jean Clark, Elizabeih Plum and Becky Gallo- way, while Belly Bowman, Sue Palmer, Poriia Miller, Doroihy Frazier, and Alberla Morse served on W. A. A. board. Millie McCollum, Frances Porr- mann, Cornelia Carrier, Carolyn Thierwechfer, and Barbara Nichols are members of Franco-Calliopean liferary sociely. SENIQRS JUNIORS SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN g lf -.--' y . 'H Y, ,X if , Aer. .. 5 ls. 1 lllemm D mSCl '0 Gardinef- nb 6 Walhne- Knapp n Homer' A llovaclwv Treblnq' . Bowma i Befll-ell' Anae,-gon. D Saw-Nay, Swan' Pierce- h his Fra-,jer- Firsl RZvIRow,5an1i. TuQe.k xNarner,uul:xu Era9in. Shock Wilkins. Wi99 k xg Mailer. Secon s. Car ' gl M000 i 5 ffl- . I . Nic O I . A Rowfperquann. Bryan l1almerS. Sang? Lews' ggon. Paimer wie ger Town Miner- C giewafl' K,-Req Wa 3' ' - Mer- . nli55- l nn. I Fourlli ROWXTJ-dlZef9a'ai' Pre n HUbach?ie,GTebom5S' 'U-iiervlec ' VAS' Tl'omsoVorl1is, Sha igiarreil- ,L. U' . 9- ll WHY' Vinh Ro' si. claw' Wiifial. R- Ga 0 1hrasherLMcCoy- Ma Siykll Row Gamma Omega enlerlained wilh lhree lormal dances and numerous viclrola dances. The house was redecoraled and landscaped in anlicipalion ol lhe chapler reunion in June. Anolher successlul year lor Kappa has been compleled under lhe guid- ance ol Belly Bowman, presidenl: Frances Porlmann, marshall: Elizaloelh Pierce, secrelary: Millie McCollum, lreasurerq Neil Carller, pledge mislress. Belly Bowman Belly Bryanl Cornelia Carller Jean Clark Evadne Cragin Mereclilh Damschroder Belly Fergus Ann Hornor Mildred McCollum Elizabelh Pierce Elizabelh Plum Jane Sloan Nancy Warner Belly Bedell Dorolhy Frazier Virginia Hubach Jean Knapp Porlia Miller Barbara Nichols Sue Palmer Kalherine Prenliss Jeanne Sanzi Marie Sergarcli Carolyn Thierwechler Mary Wiggins Mariorie Wilkins Ellen Chalmers Rebecca Galloway Belly Glenn Mary Virginia Horner Jeannelle Krieg Helen McCoy Doris Mandel Alberla Morse Jean Sanborn Jean Shaffer Janel Shoclr Mollie Slarrell Nancy Lee Thrasher Barbara Vorhis Barbara Walson Barbara Anderson Priscilla Barbour Dorolhy Galloway Mary Gardiner Jeanne Klemm Lillian Kovachy Ann Lewis Lucy Lewis Dorolha Miner Elizabeth Slewarl Mario Thomas Jean Thomson Mary Frances Tibbals Kalhleen Tice Charlene Trebing Ellen Walhne Lucia Wicker Page Frglztx five For Alpha Phi This year opened wiTh a grand sTarT. N' Teen gi re pledged and, under The direcTion oT Alison EwarT as Thei residen m ch was achieved. Their TirsT underTaking w s The sTarTing oT T e annual pledge Teas Topped by a clever pled dance decoraTions done by Elise BonneT. The gracious and willing a vi of RuT C ell, pledge misTress, was OT con- siderable assisTa To The as T These ni een ple ges, sevenTeen became The TruesT oT Alpha Phis in Feb a y oT This year. Orchids were handed To The new iniTiaTes and The chapTe upon The burning oT The morTgage on ThaT memorable day. Our annual Pig RoasT Dinner was anoTher grand success This winTer, Mr. STiclcney oTTiciaTing as ToasTmasTer. ATTer This hearTy dinner aT The Granville Inn, we reTurned To The house To dance in an aTmosphere oT champagne bubbles . . . buT, oT course, noT real champagne. A shorT Time laTer we again danced, buT This Time iT was a wedding recepTion in laTe January Tor alumna Muriel DeTweiler. The wedding Took place in Swasey Chapel. We Teel ThaT we can say, Where There's an acTiviTy, There's an Alpha Phi. We are proud To boasT Two members in Who's Who in American Colleges and UniversiTies . . . lv1argareT Brizell, who has been acTive in many campus acTiviTies, especially in The Women's STudenT Governmenjr, oT which she is head This year, and JeaneTTe PosT, OT MorTar Board, Crossed Keys and Y. W. C. A. Besides our Who's Who members, we have DoroThy Lindaman and BeTTy SmelTz, members oT DelTa Omicron. The laTTer has The oTTice oT social chairman. Virginia Beck, who holds TirsT posiTion in Orchesis, gave a Tine performance in The annual dance reciTal. ln dramaTics, Camille Slcalalc, Teminine lead in The Freshman Play, musT noT be overlooked. .x!XTx l 3 . 1 67,' -ii ! Page fzqlziy-six S ENIORS Virginia Beck Margarei Brizell Rufh Covell Marlha Hering Dorolhy Linville Shirley Masch Rufh Jane Por+er Jeaneile Posi Jane Sanderson Belly Smell! Valeria Wells Mawll' Pad Heflnq' - 'lle. ill ii. Ur CM ' Smelh-. Yost Cove Mhews. Gooalwel . 9 Brhell, Wells' an Heel!-WBSQ3 lrxbwefsi' Cfonberqer. picketing- r - - m 1 e - . Rowfklarllou eff. Beck' E-Navi. Lmqtgeri Sloll' Gr dy, Skalalf- Firsl AETSONWW9 X ghank. get gehne' ,mn 0au9l'e 5 n Z . . g ' s 1 Sejona Row R333 vqnzofc- alter' Bongekipziemenls. Sclmep el i-Nell Ne el n. E' lone I ,S ' N' 0 Thlg?rai:o'l'1.Rii:hafCl5on' lx This year we ranlc high in scholarship, wilh 'lhree members ol Phi Bela Kappa. Two are seniors, Margarei Brizell and Valeria Wells, while lhe Third is Ida Jeanne Dagger, a junior, who is also l-lead of Judiciary 'For nexl year. Greal advances were made lhis year under Presideni Dororhy Linville. Dorolhy has clone more lhan iusl preside over our meeiings and councils- she has been a leading spirii in all our aciiviries. So ends anolher year for Alpha Phi. May nexl year be as memorable under lhe guidance of Prexy Jean Ralph. l-ler able assislanls will be Macille Mowery as vice-president Florence Sloll as recording secrelary, and Ida Jeanne Dagger as corresponding secrelary. J UNIORS Ida Jeanne Dagger Kalhryn Gooclhue Chrisline Harlburg Jean Ralph Rulh Schoepfle Jean Wilson Rebecca Wingerl' S OPHOMORES Emily Clemenis Nancy Daugherfy Alison Ewarf Mary Jane Gregg Doro+l-iy Lindaman Gloria Maflhews Macille Mowery Judifh Radebaugh Befiy Schneider Rurh Shank Florence Sioll Virginia Swear F RESHMEN Elise Bonnei Elizabeih Cowgill Barbara Cronberger Belly Fosfer Eloise Jones Eleanor Nebel Elizabefh Nixon Carolyn Peasley Mary Virginia Pickering Jean Presfon Nancy Richardson Camille Shalah Mary Conslance Slilwell Belly Ja ne Slraffon Page Ezghfi sou n Page Eigliry-viglzf We inauguraTed The year wiTh a large pledge class OT nineTeen, i w 'ch was Tound much TalenT along musical and arTisTic lines. Lois , we Longabaugh, Mary Jean Alpers, and Mary Er esTi SmR3:li e I b OT sororiTy debajring, reaching The semi Tin bworgein eTeaTed by The Alpha Phi's. Q M Our re e in ca acTiviTies has been high This year. MosT oT g g T Y. W. C. A. and abouT halT The chapTer belong To W? l A A we had Mary ReiTer as a vice presldenT Jean Yoder . .A. n . . . i ' - ' , A Ls Treasurer. DoroThy MaTcheTT was The Third member oT The class oT '39 To receive her D. RuTh Geil, KaTherine Wolf, and DoroThy Burnham were members oT DeITa Omicron. Along wiTh RuTh and KaTherine, Jacqulaine Jones, Mary STeinberg, and Jean Yoder sang in Women's Glee Club. In ETa Sigma Phi we had Lorna PiloT and MarTha Jump. The laTTer pre- sided as presidenT Tor The second year. Though no scholasTic record among sororiTies was Taken This year, we were honored To have MarTha Jump and Susie ShelTon elecTed To Phi BeTa Kappa. The social calendar had many open houses, a Bond Holders MeeTing Tor The Tall Tormal, our annual winTer dinner-dance, a Grape-Vine Swing Tor The pledges. and The spring Torrnal. In dramaTics, Jacqueline Jones, as a sTudenT direcTor, had compleTe charge oT one oT The one-acT plays, in which Two A O Pi's appeared. I-lelen Evans was casT in T-lay Fever, and Doris Lundy had a small parT in The Freshman play, Spring Dance. Jeanne BurT did her parT by creaTing all oT The dances Tor The opera and The D AssociaTion musical. All in all, A O Pi has had a Tine year under The able guidance oT our presidenT, MarTha Jump, and we are able To look back on The year I937-38 wiTh pride. SENIORS Emma Collins Mary Louise Holaday Jacqueline Jones Clara Jorgenson Marfha Jump Mary Reiler Mary Kirby Susie Shelfon evl cl Barn65- C' i W lie Morrisw- L. D ' . GH199' llmi- wh' Bon I A YI Co ham' chanan. M' Sm' Jorqensen' Howbil. meer' Bum e Posfle- Bu R iker. 'lump' Marshall- Del Eliiabelh RoW'DoiS Yi Shellon- e Brxfson' Horn. Bull' F-iTS,f l Jonah . Wolfe- . Van r. . J. X K- Edikh Bla' Rovlflalfbxl' Pugh Ge' ' Alpert Seconclk wfsieinberq. MCCOY' Aiwaier. . o . A rarer Laraasfmn ROW' B Foudh Horn. Eyanin Van JUNIORS SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN Lenore Bryson Jean Bahr Mary Jean Alpers Frances Deibel Jean Burl' Helen Barnes Gladys Dicer Helen Evans Mary Blair Ruflw Sell Suzanne Morrison Jean Gregg Dorollwy Ma'lcl'1e'H' Lorna Pilol' Kallwerine Wolf Jean Yoder Eliza bein Van H orn Jane Bond Shirley Brown Lois Buchanan Dorofhy Crew Dororliy Laycock Virginia Longabaugh Doris Lundy Mary Ann McCoy Jeanne Posile Mary Jane Reynolds Mary Ernesfine Smirh Mary Steinberg Eclifh Van Horn Lois Wolfe Page Ezqhlx nine i l l Pagc Nincly L Having answered hundreds oT guesTions abouT our house Trom SepT - ber Through April, iT may easily be imagined wiTh how ch Thusqw Alpha Xi Delfa opened her new chapTer home To ac d en . We were ioyous ThaT aT lasT our Trie s could see sh wiTh us The Things abouT which we had beerxuellxand exuberan y Tallcing Tor so long. l-lowev r The ndicap oT having a house has meanT buT liTTle To T me oT Bader. We have parTicipaTed whole-hearTedly in The bg ca us chedule. Our girls can be Tound lisTed under The membership oT racTically every acTiviTy on campus. Kay Webb planned and successTully carried Through The many clever banqueTs and enTerTainmenTs oT W. A. A. As an ouTsTanding social chairman Tor This organizaTion her eTTorTs were ap- preciaTed by nearly all her sororiTy sisTers Tor They are pracTically all mem- bers oT W. A. A. ln Y. W. C. A. Too, Alpha Xi Del+as were acTive. Mary Lib Wood compleTed The year as presidenT oT The Spanish Club while EsTher Goldie SmiTh. who is a Phi BeTa Kappa, held The oTTice oT vice-presidenT in ETa Sigma Phi. We have among us also members oT MaTh Club, PaleTTe Club and Franco-Calliopean. Kay 'Webb displayed her abiliTy as a member oT Orchesis in The dance reciTal. June Ammon became a charTer member oT Junior Orchesis. As a member oT The debaTe Team, along wiTh her worlc on The various sTage producTions, Barbara Cady was l4epT busy. Mary DiTToe porTrayed an amusing characTer in one oT The plays given by Masquers in December. Likewise we were very well represenTed in The musical organi- zaTions wiTh various members in Glee Club, Chapel Choir and OrchesTra. Mary Lib Wood was iniTiaTed inTo DelTa Omicron. These acTiviTies have by no means been all Thaf has lcepT The members oT Alpha Xi DelTa Trom becoming bored. Socially we have been acTive Too. Our rushing season Tound us enTerTaining aT The Granville Inn, Campus Cor- ner Tea Room and The house oT our lcind paTroness, Mrs, Mary FiTch. Ten 12 . K .ff ,ff . - fr ir- ,. ! ., ' ' X ' SENIORS JUNIOR S D SOPHOMORES wma Dime' .. . bb, . SGW ' K Y- We . Dill0Y- Mis endian. .Towns e Barr. Wllev' Mamet' ler. Men delle ,K Ro.,,,CaClB- H xme Whee Hansen. Ma Y-irs n 9 ' mon. Evense ' ' rn. Am Rovlf MS Grim Second . .leflc xcheadle. Third 'W very line girls were pledges. ln November we enlerlained our dads and formally laid lhe cornerslone of our new house. Also in November we col- laboralecl wilh ihe Tri Dells in having a formal parly al lhe Sigma Chi house. Ai' olher iimes during lhe year we had parries af lhe Alpha Phi, A. O. Pi and Bela Kappa houses. A+ lasl on May firsl' we officially opened our house amid Jrhe ohs and ahs of our guesrs. The annual Rose Dance in May was The culminalion of all our desires. If was our firsl formal parly in our charming new house. Besides all lhis our capable social chairman, Margarei Menendian, planned unfold olher good limes for us. During lhe year we enlerlained Mrs. Eunice Clarlc, our Province presidenf, and Mrs. Grace Carl- son, our Narional presidenl. ln March, when chapier offices were 'ralcen over by 'rhe new execulive commiliee, il was wilh a feeling of conienl wilh lhe progress of The chapler 'rhar Eslher Marner could pass fhe vesimenls of presidency io Kalherine Webb. Olher people insralled in offices were vice-presidenl, June Ammon: recording secrelary, Elinor Evensen' correspondin se 1' . g cre ary, Anna Louise Wiley: and Treasurer, Elnora Wheeler. at E Smnh. ' Cady. l Mary Lou Cacla Marguerile Dilley Mary Diffoe Esfher Marner Esfher Goldie Smilh Mary Elizabe+h Wood Barbara Cady June Ammon Liberfy J. Janura Elinor Evensen Mary Jane Townsley Margaref Menenclian Kafherine Webb Elnora Wheeler FRESHMEN Mary Barr BeHy Boughner Emma Lou Cheadle Lillian Grimm Marfha Halsey Avis Hansen Esfher Helme Deborah Jenclrs Mary Masfeller Ann Wiley Page Ninety-one Page Niizrty-two Through The eTTorTs oT The local women P l-lellbociew, a chapfer oT DelTa Gamma, a naTiomRoriTy, was in d aT Denison in May oT This year. arly I Oda Mrs Russell Widasin, province secreTary, visiTed The ca s an i ervie ed a group oT unaTfiliaTed girls To deTermine The pos- sibi oT es ablishing a chapTer aT Denison. BeTore leaving, she selecTed TwenTy-Tour girls and organized Them inTo a prospecTive DelTa Gamma group. Three oT This number resigned Trom membership and Tive were added beTore The Tormal pledging. Mrs. l-larvey DeWeerd and Mrs. l-larold TiTus, TaculTy wives, accepTed inviTaTions To ioin as pledges and become paTronesses oT The local chapTer. Y During The winTer monThs, while acTive and alumnae chapTers oT The sororiTy were voTing on The conTemplaTed expansion, The group held regular weekly meeTings To Talce care of immediaTe business and To TormulaTe plans Tor The TuTure, Formal pledging was held February 5 aT The Granville lnn wiTh Epsilon oT Ohio STaTe and Alpha Rho oT Ohio Wesleyan oTFiciaTing. lmmediaTely Tollowing pledging, The DelTa Gamma colony renTed a house To use unTil The end oT This school year and seTTled down To acTive pledge work. The group was formally iniTiaTed and insTalled as a DelTa Gamma chapTer May I4. Miss Helen Badenoch and Miss Helen Barr, insTrucTors in The physical educaTion deparTmenT and DelTa Gamma alumnae, were appoinTed advisors oT The group. Mrs. John Campbell. alumna oT Alpha Rho and residenT oT Granville, acTed as pledge misTress. ShorTly aTTer The esTablishmenT oT The prospecTive group, The Tollowing oTTicers were elecTed and served ThroughouT The remainder OT The year: PresidenT, Sarah Josephine Davis: vice-presidenT and scholarship chairman, Sue Le Row: recording secreTary, Jane BarTholomew5 corresponding secre- Tary, Carolyn Craig: and social chairman, Winifred Jones. DelTa Gamma, a sororiTy oT high naTional ranlc, was Tounded in I874 aT The Lewis School, OxTord, Mississippi. IT has TiTTy acTive chapTers in highly raTed colleges as well as a number oT sTrong alumnae chapTe.'s and associaTions. M ch. w.. Badeno Bariholomevl, Jones XNuaaSiH. Ba vis rr. Us ' Lello vi, Pinkham SENIORS Sa h ra Josephine Davis . wwe B dhoxomew, Mrs ard- lef- Laila' w. 5 y s. PM - , m Davis. La Ro Rhoion.Wai ln Troukwiner craig Jones. pxnkha ' h , wxomlev- wesmvf. Mrs. Tihai- H Rea. Welc e i in Schuberl. Pirsl R01 wflioncanar Sacljfiiis Christian- Sclw Second O . Wee l I fvqmgofr mid Ro' Reid- JUNIORS SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN Emma l.a'H'a Jane Barfholomew Blanche Bufler Rulh Pinkham Kay Boifomley June Chrisfian Mariorie Ladd Carolyn Craig Winifred Saclreir June Freer Marian Welcher Winifred Jones Priscilla Wesfcoif Jean Koncana Helen Mary Winsor Sue Le Row Sally Rea Peggy Reid Dorofhy Rhofon Virginia Schuberi Shirley Schuh Wilmaneffe Troufwine Violer Wallgren Phyllis Wafkins Suzanne Willis Page Niuely-three WINTER DANCES Pagf' Nincly-four Along wifh fhe fempo of swing 'lunes 'l'his social season, swepf fhe while iie and fails and fhe craze of ihe Big Apple. And wi+h lhese innovafions came fhe original Prison Dance of Kappa Sigma when brofhers of Sammi XI called for dafes in sfripes, and in a paddy wagon. Formal dances were, as usual, excellenl' oppor- funifies for pin-planiing and several 'look advanlage of fhem. ln- formal noveliy dances such as Esquire, Shipwreck, Bloody Buclcei, and Hard Times parries filled 'Phe week-ends for fhe social lions on +he campus. JUNIOR CLASS OF 1939 The Two prime TuncTions oT The iunior class are To enTerTain wiTh a Junior Prom and To publish a yearbook. This year's class has puT TorTh iTs bes+ To do boTh. The junior year is essenTially The college year Tor acTiviTies. IT is in This Third year +ha+ Those who have sTriven in any oT The various exTra-curricular acTiviTies TirsT receive recogniTion Tor Their labors. So iT is wiTh a purpose ThaT we inTroduce acTiviTies wiTh The iunior secTion. FurTher, in order ThaT you may Tollow The ploT OT This sTory more easily, we include The honorary wiTh The acTiviTy. BETTY scorr s +.s y WALLACE SMITH R p Page Nincly-six JUNIOR CLASS Ginny Andrews drilfes a gray coupe all over Granville . . . Brown-skin Banning from Miami divides lime belween +he Kappa house and his Ford . . . Bashore in- lramurals for The Club . Bacchus Bales assisls Doc Wrighl in roclcology . . . Belly Bedell- Moose Snidel-'nul said . . . ll U.'s Duchin breaks E sirings and signs lwc bands for all Proms . . . Bisbee, sporls edilor and lireside alhleie of Sigma Chi . . . Blaclc- burn may be reached a1U8223-Jralce a num- ber, girls . . . Dave Boaym hauls brolhers Jro and from lhe Ranch . . .l The good Doc+or Boggs--iusl a s+one's ihrow from Sunsel l-lill wilh Wiggle . . . Vern Bowman makes nighily Jrrelcs 'ro Slone l-ljall . . . Sheri pock- e+s Bowyer wriies, and wriles, and wriles. OF 1939 OHo Browne, look al lhe birdie and smile . . . Lenore Bryson lhinks Bulgaria is a swell counlry . . . Toar Budleman hauls mail for Poslmasler Lamson . . . Dolly Burnham wears lhe crescenl and lhe slar of Gamma Xi . . . Trigger Cameron burns rhe cinders lor Livy . . . Cavagrolli blows a wicked Trombone and why nol? . . . Chapin slings hash for Lady Wells . . . Elinor Clark-iusr look for l-lerb . . . l-larry Clemenl, a Phi Bere and social lion combined . . . Wild Bill Coffman is super de luxe slage hand for lvlasquers . . . Sian Condir, Bela man-abou?-Grille . . . Kenl Corson- Toledo women far surpass D. U. coeds . . . Cosway, silver longued oralor . . . Coughenour, iusr call me Junior . . . lda Jeanne Dagger qualifies for +i+le oi B. W. O. C .... Phil Davis grunls and groans for Bela Kappa . . . Elizabelh Danner commules from Newark . . . Frances Deibel, Cleve- land, Beaver, and A O Pi . . . Gladys Dicer-for informalion call 85702 and 8276 . . . De Fosser, The smoolh one from Cincy, iusl ask me . . . Dobson, The lucky fellow who dares Rulhie Porrer . . . Scralch DuBey -where's lvlirch? . . . Slrongboy Duffy shows Rogers how il's done on The gridiron . . . Dunham, a big smile lor everybody. . . Wurli+zer Eddy, lhe man everybody knows. Browne Bryson Budleman Burnham Cameron Cavagroifi Chapin Clarlr Clemenf Coffman Condif Corson Cosway Coughenour Dagger Davis Deibel Danner Dicer DeFosse+ Dobson Du Bey Duffy Dunham Eddy Page iVi11cIy-.rczwz J 'N-DUN! RAJI Page Ninety-eight uNloR CLASS Ellor should lake more courses in Malh, eh Rupp . . . Doc Everharl flashes a Phi Bere pin already and works for Doc Wrighl Tor lhe sake of rockology . . . lhe Moron look Faelchle lo The cleaners long agol. . . Filkins, The Holy Prophet holds nighffly prayer meelings al The Sig Alph house. . . Doris Jean Flory, l-lold my hand, Len . . . Rosemary Forsylhe came clear from Alexandria lo sing- and she can . . . Dollie Frazier- l wanlna go lo Turkey . . . Louise Freeman-The Moron golf her along wilh Faelchle . . .Jack Fulcher, Sig Alph brain lrusler . . . Bus Fuller of Gamma Xi spends mosl of hyis free lime wilrh Dancer Burl . . . Rulh Geil-home lown gal makes good . . . Jack Geneser, on Jrhe shores of Miami Beach . . . l-lool Gibson, formerly of Caldwell, land new S. A. E. prexy . . . Paul Gilbert Kappa Sig maeslro and chemisl . . . Alice Faye Goodhue, The Sweelhearl of Old D. U. . . . Tiger Gram, grappler of highl calibre . . . Jean T Gregg of Oak Park and A O Pi . . . Millie Green-8070 of Mill 'n Bill . . . Carol Griflilh. an Econ major, God ' bless herl . . . Gabby, more lhan a word for everybody . . . Bud l-lage-B. M. O. C. and goes sleady loo. A i l' Ellor Everharf Faelchle Filkins Flory Forsyfhe Frazier Freeman Fulcher Fuller Geil Geneser Gibson Gilberf Goodhue Gram Gregg Green GriFfi'l'l't Hahn Hage H cker ring Hopes Hopkins Hopkins H bach eY nssen nura J nkins E Jenkins V Johnslon P Johnslon J Jones J nel Jones K ehm O F 1 9 3 9 Sally l-loll is one ol lhe imporlanl cogs in Alpha Ela's inlramural machine. . . Chris- line l-larlburg gels lellers lrom Gambier when he's nol clown here . . . Mary l-leclcer, Chi O prexy who loves lhose Big Men lrom cle Soulh . . . Marlha l-lering, ex- Aclylum beauly queen, relurns lo Granville aller year's absence . . . George l-lopes, lhe Club linance commillee . . . Kale Hopkins, anolher Thela queen . . . Loose-limb Hop- kins- l'cl run a mile lor Livy . . . Virginia l-lubach, Kappa lransler . . . Celianna lsley, now wearing Palriclcs crescenl ancl slar . . . Arl Janssen, properly man par excellence . . . Liberly Janura lrom Berwyn on lour-a . . . Gumbo Jenkins lhrows lhe weighls lor Livy and huslles his Bela Kappa wresllers inlo championships . . . l-larry Jenkins, B. K. linancier, in conslanl company ol Jeanne Deeds . . . Verna Johnslon, also lrom Ber- wyn . . . Pea Brain Johnslon, lhe good- loolcing boy lrom lhe Fiii garage . . . Jac- queline Jones, Thespia superba . . . Janel Jones, Thela lransler lrom Slale . . . Norma Kiehm, Tri Dell, lelephone number is 8266. Page Niu Knapp Larnecl Lalla Lawson Lidsler Lind McNama ra McClanalhan cKibben cNeiIl Maire Malchell M M Pngv Om' Hundred JUNIOR CLA SS Jean Knapp-whal's lhe maller wilh Denison collegians? . . . Dick Larned, a champ lrom lhe cily ol champs . . . Emma Lalla prelers Denison lo Slale aller a year ol each . . . Phyllis Lawson, Tri Dell blond lrom Cleveland l-leighls . . . Olie Lidsler, Fiji lheorisl, and dash man . . . Lorenze Lind, exolic blond ol K. A. T .... Clem McNa- mara, Kappa Sig prexy and plenly hokay genl . . . John McClanalhan, Lambda Chi smoolhy . . . Bob McKibben, a Bela lrom lhe lar-oll shores ol Calilornia . . . Snow- shoes McNeill, all-round good alhlele and lhe boy who has his pin on lasl year's Ady- lum queen . . . Buckel Maire, Phi Dell saxophonisl . . . Dollie Malchell, all-Amer- ican W. A. A. Eileen Meacham commules lrom Newark . . . Porlia Miller, all-round girl and lhe good-looking Kappa phrexy . . . Rollo Miller was on crulches lor monlhs allerl loolball iniuries-lough luck, Rollie . . . Marianna Milchell, Thela queen, seen ralher conslanlly wilh Dubie . . . Russ Mulcahy, Phi Dell, relurns lo Broadway brighl lighls . . . Charlie Murray, Sig Alph slrong man lrom Caldwell . . . Raleye Myer relains Jane Rose's lavor while she malriculales al Slale . . . Bunny Nieolerholer, Sig Alph big boy who knows where he slands wilh lhe women . . . Barb Nichols, aclress superb, and Kappa queen who likes lhe almosphere ol lhe Grille . . . Tommy Orme, really a big B. M. O. C. Sig prexy, M. S. G. A. prexy, co-caplain on lhe gridiron, and an all-round good genl . . . Libby Osmond, Tri Dell sludenl who believes lhal lhere is somelhing in college besides lhe books . . . Sue Palmer, B. W. O. C. who linds plenly ol lime lor l-lunkey Cornell-lransler, En- gineer-l-lallslein. OF 1939 Pafrick, good boy of Kappa Sig, couldn'f resisf fhaf lsley fempfafion . , . Pancake Pierce, fhe Befa brillianf scholar who doesn'f even own a book . . . Lorna Pilof, sweef Co-op young lady who does gef around . . . Al Pifher, Sig Alph money man, fruly a capifalisf . . . Taf Prenfiss, Kappa, Beflal, found her love her freshman year, and all is sfill well . . . Esfher Price, all fhe way from Alexandria fo prove herself a Phi Befe . . . lfchy Pile, Befa brain sform who believes fhaf sfudies should never inferfere wifh an educafion . . . Beffe Radke, Tri Delf smoofhy, loves bridge and fhe people af fhe Grille . . .Jean Ralph, Alpha Phi prexy, Morfar Board, and Crossed Keys as a few acfivifies fowards her well-earned B. W. O. C .... l-lerberf Ran- dolph, Lambda Chi popular big shof wifh a friendly smile for everybody . . . Fred Ringle, popular Sig Alph Newark-nife-club fellow always looking for a place fo resf his elbow . . . Evelyn Rope, Norfh Coffage acfivify girl from fhe Smokey Cify . . . Woody Rupp, Befa mafh shark, wifh a D in baskefball fo help him follow his fafher's sfeps. Meacham P. Miller R. Miller Mifchell Mulcahy Murray Myer Niederhofer Nichols Orme Osmond Palmer Pafriclr Pierce Pilof Pifher Prenfiss Price Pyle Radke Ralph Randolph Ringle Rope Rupp Page One Hzn'1drc'd Ori JUNIOR CLASS l Alden Sanderson, bridge experl ol A. C. C. and a swell inlramural man . . . Jeanne Sanzi, Kappa gueen who likes Joe Clollege Bollomley's loud Ford . . . Rulh Schoeplle, malhemalics major in Alpha Phi, and a helping hand lor everyone . . . Belly Scoll, W. A. Al prexy who seems lo dislike Lawrence's absence . . . Marie Sergardi, undecided Bela girl, likes Delroil, and likes lhe Grill . . . Joe Shai, Fiii's big slrong boy lrom Newark wilh lwo kinds ol Zephyrs lo drive . . . Don Sherman, helps lo keep lhe co-eds' ligures lhe way he likes lo see lhemg he works al lhe Sem . . . lvlarly Shumaker, Tri Dell redhead who lhinksllhal lour years ol college is plenly . . . George Sims, only Phi Dell who linds lime lor lhe . lvl. C. A. and he's lhe prexy . . . Don Smilh, Wallyl Smilh, Edilor and Manager ol lhe year book-loo much said . Q . Jean Speckman, lillle girl ol Tri Dell wilh a way ol knowing how lo geliaround . . . Kenny Sperl, Talbol Counlry Club loud alumnus, and a keeper ol lhe books al Phi Della Thela . . . Carl Sliner, Granville boy makes good wilh lhe girls, sludies, elc., elc .... Bob Sluarl, lell lhe books al selneslers lo grasp a working educalion . . . Dolly Sullivan, likes lhe girls, lilies lhe school, likes lo sludy, and likes a Slale Sig Alph . . . l-larry Sweilzer, leading man ol lhe G. D. l.'s, a wearer ol lhe D, and a good wrileri. . . Jack Tamblyn, anolher loud Phi Dell, likes lhe books and makes grades good enough lo play loolball . . . Carolyn Thierwechler, Kappa Adylum beauly who car- ries lhe Woll's Sig Alph badge . . . Belly Tumble-son, anolher Tri Dell queen and anolher Sig Alph badge . . . Sanderson Sanzi Schoepfle Scoll Sergardi Shai Sherman Shumaker Simmons Sims Smilh, D. Smilh, W. Speckman Sperl Sliner Sluarl Sullivan Sweilzer Tamblyn Thierwecher Tumbleson V: T Van Horne Vincenf, P. Walker Wallis Way Webb Welsh Wesf Wheeler WighT Wiggins Wiley Wilkins Williams Wilson Wincl1esTer Wingerl' Wolf Wolfe WrighT Yoder or 1939 Dick Vanl-lorn, undecided abouT love, buT never rushes inTo anyThing . . . PaT VincenT, BeTa prexy, varsiTy TooTball, TalboT CounTry Club member Trom way back . . . Marve Walker, Phi DelT's B. M. O. C. prexy, EdiTor oT The Denisonian, and his pin is on Miss MerchanT . . . Lois Wallis, ChemisTry shark Trom CaliTornia, may be reached aT 8278 .. . Libby Way, lheTa DebaTer, Y. W. C. A. and likes Them beTTer ouT oT Town . . . KaTy Webb, Alpha Xi's ruler aT NorTh CoTTage, good sTudenT, and a good Alpha Xi . . . Paul Welsh, a pro on The golT course, and a king among men . . . Bill WesT, may his exTem- poraneous verbal erupTions be lucid and more To The poinT . . . RuTh Wheeler, always on The books, and always geTs good marks . . . Spook Collins, BeTa's lack-oT-all-Trades, he's a masTer aT anyThing, and a perTecT ianiTor in The Fiji garage . . . Mary Wiggins, a True sweeThearT oT Sigma Chi, she even washes Doc's car . . . Ronald Wiley, Kappa Sigma's Benny Goodman, and a sTudenT par excellence . . . Marge Wilkins, anoTher Sig sweeThearT, buT Banning's car never needs a wash . . . ShorTy Williams, 'l'heTa's wonder girl wiTh arT and dance combined . . . Jean Wilson, popular D show Tap dancer wiTh her hearT seT on The Alpha Phi's . . . Connie WinchesTer, Tri DelT sisTer and BeTa sweeT- hearT . . . Rebecca WingerT, keeps a check on The books in The new library . . . Carolyn WolT, anoTher oT The queens in lheTa land who Tinds The boys noT up To par . . . KaTh- erine WolTe, sTudenT, musician, and an A. O. Pi Granville girl who can'T be sTopped . . . BurdeTTe WrighT, Granville Econ major wiTh hopes oT leaving The big ciTy soon . . . .lean Yoder, acTiviTy girl and good sTudenT, Crossed Keys, MorTar Board . . . Peg Zell, lasT buT noT leasT, The Chi O Trorn Beaver l-lall. Page One Hundred Three 'QL rhe Kong irain worn by former ' She headed My D AY u'r1FuX gid was added 'ro so honored Xasr sprmq. a banks and waiched. bou a Xa 1 -bby W4 Th me of a bea ' ' 'Dorrrenkza was on rhe phi h gamhoXed a L Misses Pgg e Om' Hm,d,.l,d F, fur e na s Sxhlra Dx oihers sai Yon as e danrs 'che nd May Queens a 'rhe processKon as anxious rn Fearher Lamson arrracied no hihe arren r uXderinq hKs harreh The queen had For aHen ery, WaXker, Barnes, Vanderbih, Fokker, a FrXar Tuck, sho ' Brouqhron. Moniqorn Louer, Howeh. .6- , , an v 1 .ge' r, , . Z rr r . L ' . .' g fr JE? N I ' ,III 3 D355 i - .N W I W r'.',e-'rf,.,. . OR PR a'or socia We r of a se- ' i eveni oi The success of Wis dance, which is caiied We m r year, iies in We hands oi We eniire siudeni body, and We erior s Aecied few oi We iunior ciass who form We execuiive commiriee. This year, 'Naiiy SmiW, as We chairman, proved his ieadership and abiiiiy in seiecring We various heads oi We commiirees. Through Weir paiience and coopera- tion, We dance wiii go down in We heads of many as We besr dance ever sponsored at Denison. The Junior ciass owes many Wanics io Biii SmiW, a senior who iook 'ng We barren Wigwam inio a nighi ciub. Dean Beier, in iimenred For his originaiiiy in obiaining boW ' h We music. This was We iirsr We e oi changi usr be comp d n to iurnis ds J iirey from charg oi bands, m Eddie Cam e nbariie oi ban . i s Luciiie e erieci Prom charge Hemp and to siage a i s, chose M s 'se oi We p 'iie as his ohnny nison ever i of We cas our and por i om Granvi ance at De Tom Orme, presiden h reveaied aii We giam Mi s i4aWerine Young r Grand March. reshman ciass w o ueen. Waiiy SmiW chose s arrner 'fo accompany him ar We head oi We Page O ne Hzmdfpd Fizlr JUNIOR GENTRY fi' - 4 ll rv?f,':- ,I M. .Y , s 4' w , ' :AFM 5, 1 v l 1 If ,. rf. ,fa s- , Q WW if 9 Xl '45, X X ' , X n STX: -an L 5 5 1' I r X A1 ,, 5 .3 .1 ff ,E er rr Q l X Y . V 1 ,' l-J , Fr--mi , L 4' ' , x lu X 2 in 1 'J ai gg, 4. ET 4 ,ffl in 1, l ' lv 1 ' l M H' , U , 5, W ,, HI ,M Marie Sergardi Irv DuBey N Q ll - f Q Y M ll ll V ' Johnny Reecl Kay Webb - l , N 'A 7 M 1. ,, Tom Orme Harry Duffy I V ',N W My ,Q,f.+j,pjf' y ,N full' y My M H ,,l A I I Al Pither Ken Sperl 'lu 44' iff K Ugg ' l l Y, ' 1 Bill Markle Doc Boggs .HL W' ., 1, 'V ' ' l I Marv Walker Al Hage Libby Osmond SCIENCE O MUSIC LEADERSHIP SCHOLAREE PUBLICATKS DRASEIICS KRATURE LANGUAGE FORENSICS ATHLETICS GOVERNMENT O RELIGION ACTIVITIES Jack Rader President Men's Siudenlr Governmenf Associarion I x Skoemmaofgoidi Bead .giaeni dxf' we Yxexxe W vi Tom Orme President Junior Class 1 -X ,M W0 P394 - '0 efi SYN Oaq wlexaiiee W W idx Nei ,Snake XNGX XG' A W Yeo? Q04 ' CIO oaf Gai x x6 A Q00 Thorndike Dwelley Charles Vinceni' Edifor, Denisonian i President D Associaiion William Burrill Donald Smi-I-In Business Manager, Edifor, Adyfum Denisonian YN x,f-W x. was Xofgfegxxiiiooxe C 509 Nas WQSVXG6 in x-We fgxdevx 'QNX Q0 X . QSWAZQQXXOQ NPO 6 05 1 swf' Q1 Dei-X00 ,xex .deny 5005 Ba Yegx .CPXS QPXMQM Margaref Brizell John Dunnick President Senior Class Presidenf Women's S+uden+ Governmenf Associanon X 0: os QV - 0 Ne? xfkokxixsxxa af' 609. Cf se QY69 605 XNOGXCFKXOQ o Page XXE 'xx .X L. if TT if 'ii i-5,-I ' 5 A-,-,F-Lair' iq-f . I ' I' I - 'jf 5 I I, :'5'if'II? Sealed: Bowman, Thrasher, Sweifzer, Williams, Lindsfrom, Marlin, McCollum. Slanding: Walson, Galloway, Miner, R. Galloway, McCoy, Sackell, Mereness, Shock, Mifchell, Molen, Bryson, Bisbee, ScarriH. THE ADYTUM STAFF OF 193 DONALD B. SMITH ,..... WALLACE C. SMITH ....... DR. REGINALD WHIDDEN .... HARRY SWEITZER .... JAMES MCCOLLUM .,.. ELEANOR WILLIAMS ...,. VERN BOWMAN .I..... DAVE MITCHELL .,..... JOHN LINDSTROM ,.... FRANK MOLEN .,... .......EcliFor-in-chief, ...Business Manager . . .Facully Advisor . . . .Associaie Eclilor ....,.SporIs Edilor .. . . . . .Divisions Eclilor . . . . . .Organizalions Edilor Eclilor Assislanl Business Manager ......CircuIalion Manager Frank Marlin, Reid Bryson, Roberl Mereness, Al McNeill, George Bisbee, Ralph Scar- I rill, Janel Shock, Winnie Sackeiur, Helen McCoy, Rebecca Galloway, Nancy Thrasher, Dorofha Miner, Dorolhy Galloway, Dick Whileheaczl, Lewis Hopkins, Jack Marshall, Alison Ewarf, Collins Wighl, Jean Sanborn, John Barringlon, Jack Venning, Frank Skipp, James Rool, Phil Browne, Bob Slein, Fred Brockway, Dick Paxlon, and Tom Lenlz. L2'.g....Q15,.g-.3. TT' gl O. T iff FTF. 1 T, I Page One Himdred Tm When The forerunner oT The AdyTum was con- ceived in The year l882, iT was The desire OT ThaT ambiTious sTaTF To ediT a publicaTion which would survive The years. In so doing They were Thus able To commernoraTe The days oT undergraduaTe years OT The eighTies and nineTies. Today Those momenTs may be lived and relived in The hundred odd copies scaTTered across The conTinenT. So iT is wiTh The ediTors OT This year's annual- ThaT The AdyTum noT be simply a work OT modernis- Tic layouT, nor a supplemenT OT high-sounding copy. nor a collecfion oT preTTy picTures. IT musT be more Than ThaT beTore we can be saTisTied. IT musT possess Those qualiTies which will bring The alumni back To Their undergraduaTe days. IT musT record wiTh exTreme accuracy The evenTs which The sTudenTs experience daily and which lay The Toun- daTions Tor IaTer liTe. For The many who may have wondered as To The meaning of such a sTrange worcl as The name oT This yearbook, The AdyTum, iT means The inner and mosT sacred parT oT a heaThen Temple, or The sancTuary Trom whence The oracles are given. When The Tounders oT The book were searching Tor an appropriaTe name Tor Their TirsT publicaTion, The laTe Dr. Shepardson came across This LaTin word. derived ini+ialIy Trom The Greek word, adyTon. The a meaning privaTe. and The dyo meaning enTrance. Every ediTor oT every yearbook always praises his TaiThTul sTaTT when The book is puT To bed aT The prinTers, and iusTly so. This annual can noT be an excepTion Tor The members oT The sTaTT did work ThaT was boTh painsTaking and reliable. WiTh- ouT Their eTTicienT handling oT many oT The deTails The book could never have been published This year. OThers in school, in no way connecTed wiTh The annual, have cooperaTed To help make This book represenTaTive oT This iunior class. A word oT Thanks is due To boTh Dean Richards and Dean Olney Tor Their help, and To The adminisTraTors, Messrs. FiTch, Johnson. and I-lodges. A word oT praise To Dr. Shaw is due Tor his paTience as a phoTographic subiecT. The Alumni oTliice wiTh Biohn Bielke, Jimmy and lvlarsena Cox, aided im- measurably in The producTion OT This yearbook. So To all who had Their hand in giving you This book in iTs presenT Torm, we Thank you Tor your whole-hearfed consideraTions. 1' , i I . ' 'TJ Donald B. SmiTh Wallace C. SmiTh . Sxxzfrz' - .J Page One Hundred Eleven I lv' if -' ll I ' .3 1-4- ii' - Sealed: Nadel, Walker, West Dwelley, Burrill, Bowyer, McCollum. Slanding: Bisbee, Slewarl, Macomber, Fulcher, Moore, Mereness, Van Voorhis, Hough, Wighi, CarH'er, Sweiher, Freer, Maxwell, Benne'H', Borland, Piclrrel, Nebel, Samman. ENISONIAN STAFF O Tl-IORNDIKE DWELLEY .,., .- ....... Edilor-in-chief WILLIAM BURRILL .......... ..... B usiness Manager DR. REGINALD WHIDDEN. .. ..... Facully Advisor JAMES MCCOLLUM ..., Associare Edilor MARVIN WALKER ..,. Associale Ediror BILL WEST ....... ..., A ssociale Edilor GEORGE BISBEE .... ..... S porls Edilor I-IELEN BOWYER ,,.. .... S ociely Edilor NORMAN NADEL ....,.. Music Edilor I-IAM WEBSTER .... . .... Slahf Pholographer GENERAL NEWS STAFF Jane Barlholomew, Tom Bales, Al Beardshear, Dick Bennell, Charles Bogman, John Branl, Neil Carlrer, Susan Chalmers, Virginia Chrisfena, BeHy Cowman, Larry Curlis, June Freer, Jaclc Fulcher, Bolo Macomber, John Moore, Eleanor Nebel. Marian Orcull, Eleanor Piclcrel, Jeanne Samman, Jean Speclcman, John Slewarl, I-larry Sweilzer, Bolo Mereness. SPORTS STAFF John Barringlon, Jim Blaclc, Ted Coelho, Mil Green, Ralph Scarrill, Diclc Wager. ALBERT I-IAGE ......,...,...,........................, Adverlising Manager Norman I-lough, Claude Welles, Dick Fishell. TAYLOR MACKELFRESI-I ............,..,...,.,.......... Circulalion Manager Sam Van Voorhis, Emory Richards, Tom Maxwell, Collins Wighl, Kennelh Borland. Page One Hznzdrcd Twelve F 1938 EnTering iTs eighTy-TirsT year of publicaTion, The Denisonian conTinued To win esTeem This year by iTs record oT service To The universiTy and The sTu- denT body. Thorndike Dwelley direcTed The des- Tinies of The Denisonian as ediTor-in-chieT. He served as associaTe ediTor his iunior year, and TirsT became a member of The sTaTT in his sophomore year. The ediTor's righT-hand men during his Term in oTTice were associaTe ediTors: Jim Overhuls, Mar- vin Walker, and Bill WesT. Jim McCollum was promoTed To This posiTion Trom The sporTs deparT- menT in The middle OT The year, when Jim Over- huls reTired To assume ediTorship of The PorTTolio. Each associaTe ediTor had direcT charge oT The Denisonian every week on a roTaTing schedule, and was responsible Tor assignmenTs, copy and proof- reading, and page make-up. OTher deparTmenT heads also earned crediT Tor The high qualiTy of Their worlc on The Denisonian. Norman Nadel, noTed Tor his Tranlc and readable criTicism in The OverTones column, compleTed his Third year as music ediTor. Helen Bowyer creaTed a brighT column as socieTy ediTor, and George Bis- bee gave new liTe To The sporTs page as iTs ediTor. Harry SweiTzer conTribuTed maTerially Through his services as columnisT and criTic. I Bill Burrill handled financial aTTairs as business manager. assisTed by Al Hage, adverTising man- ager. Their compeTenT guidance oT The business deparTmenT was responsible Tor a surplus aT The end oT The year. Taylor Maclcelfresh replaced Ralph Coughenour as circulaTion manager early in The year. The Denisonian Tool: a lively inTeresT in sTudenT aTTairs This year, advocaTing admission of a new sororiTy To The campus land securing iTl, criTicizing The sysTem OT class and chapel bucks, and com- menTing on various oTher currenT issues. STudenT opinion was moulded, and conTroversy aroused over These viTal campus conTroversies Through The me- dium oT The ediTorial and leTTers column. OriginaliTy in news sTories and TeaTures was The goal soughT Tor by The ediTors oT The Denisonian, and susTained reader-inTeresT rewarded Their ef- TorTs. AppropriaTions were increased Tor arT-worlc, resulTing in exTensive use oT picTures in every issue. ExperimenTs were Tried Tor new sTyles in headlines and page make-up To secure a dressy paper. A school oT journalism was inauguraTed by The Denisonian This year, in which candidaTes Tor sTaTT posiTions were given a brief course in news-wriTing. SelecTion of reporTers was made Trom The con- TesTanTs who placed highesT in The Tinal examina- Tion following The course. . t ,,, T . 1 ------r- , . THORNDIKE if A A DWELLEY ,. , WILLIAM BURRILL K ,sb Page One Hnndzrrl Thirteen ' FSTTY A P'-12' . T 1, l J T P o R T F o L I o Ever since The deaTh oT The Collegian, year' ago, Denison UniversiTy has TelT The need oT a magazine as an ouTleT Tor her liTerary and arTisTic pursuiTs. Thus, lasT year, Through The unTiring eT- TorTs oT Dr. Reginald Whidden and oThers as prime organizers, The general sTudenT body expressed Their desire, and PorTTolio, The liTerary magazine of Denison universiTy, was born. PorTTolio, Though in iTs inTancy, can hold iTs head high among college magazines. IT made iTs pri- mary challenge wiTh Three aTTracTive issues, com- posed oT worThy conTribuTions Trom undergradu- aTes, TaculTy, and alumni. PorTTolio appeals ThaT iT is published by and Tor all persons inTeresTed in The liTerary TurTherance oT Denison unive-rsiTy. Because oT a laTe sTarT, because oT The diTTiculTy oT esTablishing a sTaTT Tor The garnering oT accepT- able rnaTerial, and because oT The deTerminaTion oT The ecliTors noT To publish anyThing below a high sTandard, The magazine was unable To appear more Than Three Times in This, iTs TirsT year. However, now an esTablished Denison publicaTion wiTh a means Tor Tinding and sTimulaTing creaTive work among The sTudenT body, PorTTolio promises To carry ouT a Tull publicaTion schedule in The TuTure. PorTTolio has been greaTly indebTed To Franco-Cal- liopean ThroughouT The pasT year Tor ThaT organi- zaTion's aid in arousing general liTerary inTeresT. Page One Hundwd Fourteen l l Bowyer, Brizell, Sweiher, Overhuls, STewarT, Fra- zier. l i l FirsT ediTor OT The magazine was James Over- huls, who Turned over The oTTice aTTdr spring va- caTion To l-lariry SweiTzer. AssociaTe ,ediTors were SweiTzer and John STewarT, while WarTen SiverTsen acTed as business manager. DoroThy Frazier, Peg Brizell, l-lelen Bowyer, l-lelen ClemenTs, Don Be- Thune, and Frank Skipp served as liTeralry agenTs To encourage conTribuTions. l PorTTolio's aim is To be cosmopoliTan, To repre- senT as many oT The Tields oT inTeresT and general TasTes OT The Denison body as is possilble. Conse- quenTly, alThough primarily TicTional,,The liTerary magazine also includes deparTmenTs on books, The- aTre, arT, and music, and occasional arTicles oT a scienTiTic naTure, or on Travel, or on cu,rrenT evenTs. lT aTTempTs also To promenade phoTography and arTisTic illusTraTion. l Among The more prominenT conTribuTors This year have been Richard WhiTehead, Jyr., wiTh boTh sTory and arT, DoroThy 'Deane and John STewarT wiTh Time wriTing, Pewilla Dick and Adela Beckham wiTh enviable poeTry, Jane Brush wiTh sophisTicaTed humor, and David lv1iTchell and Gordon Wilson wiTh admirable illusTraTions. PorTTolio pas honored wiTh a TirsT year cover by lVlarTha STubbleTield oT The Denison arT deparTmenT. Overhuls, Dwelley, CarTTer, Dunniclt, Bearclshear, Burrill, Cullen, H a g e, Nadel, Smifh, D.: SmiTh, W.: Van Wagoner, Wallcer, Wesf, Whidden. PI DELTA EPSILON V The ouTsTanding evenT OT The year Tor The members oT The Denison chapTer oT Pi DelTa Epsilon, naTional iournalisTic honorary TraTerniTy, is The naTional convenTion. DelegaTes anTicipaTe long in advance The ioys oT aTTend- ing This conclave and Tor some sTrange reason seem To Take an equally long Time in recovering. DespiTe This emphasis on good Tellowship The iournalisTic honorary is probably The mosT acTive on The Denison campus. Pi DelTa Epsilon sponsors such proiecTs as The sTudenT-TaculTy direcTory, prinTing and sale oT TooTball programs. publicaTion OT The Denison bloTTer, and managemenT oT The college bridge TournamenT. ln addiTion. The group serves as a guiding influence over The clesTinies OT The various Denison publicaTions. The group sTands always ready To conTribuTe To all worThy universiTy proiecTs. The chapTer enjoyed an acTive year under The leadership oT Jim Over- huls, presidenT: Thorndike Dwelley, vice-presidenTp Neil CarTTer, secreTary. and John Dunniclc. Treasurer. Five members oT The local chapTer aTTended The naTional convenTion oT The organizaTion aT George WashingTon Univer- siTy in The Tall, where co-ed members were oTTicially admiTTed. Pi DelTa Epsilon membership represenTs The besT in iournalisTic acTiviTy on The Denison campus. A high sTandard has been seT Tor admiTTance and only The superior sTudenTs on The sTaTTs oT The Denisonian, AdyTum, and PorT- Tolio are eligible Tor membership in The honorary. Denison iournalisTs are eligible Tor membership aT The end oT Their iunior year. MeeTings are held bi-weekly aT The various TraTerniTy houses. FaculTy members who conTribuTe boTh wiTh Their presence and parTicipaTion are Reginald Whidden, Danner Mahood, and Dr. Russell Williams. MEN'S DEBATE Firsf Row-Tifus, Pifher, Beardshear. Second Row-Gordon, Crocker, Cosway, Faelchle. Third Row-Skrilefz, Niederhofer, Coffman. Shades of Old Thespisl!! Denison Universiry is represenred in The forensics by noi only men bui also women as The 'female orarors progress rapidly in rhe arf of debare. Coached by Dr. Lionel Crocker of 'rhe speech deparrmenr, 'rheir program Tor The year has been very diversified. During 'rhe season Kaihryn Oxley. Barbara Cady, and Elizaberh Ann Way made up 'rhe Traveling Team. Besides encounrers on rhe plaiiorm wilh Ohio Wesleyan, rhey roolc an exiensive rrip info Michigan, debaiing wiih Albion, Wesrern Siaie Teachers' College, and finally parriciparing in a radio debare wiih women from Michigan Siaie College. Ouisianding during The season was The debaie rournameni sponsored by The Tau Kappa Alpha Conveniion in Cincinnaii. Libby Way made The semi-finals in Jrhe one-man heclcle debaies. Jean Yoder acied as chairman oi 'rhe board of conrrol oi debare for W. S. G. A. The quesfion for The Team during Jrhe year I937- 38 was Resolved: Thai' The Naiional Labor Rela- Jrions Board be empowered To enforce arbirraiion in all indusirial dispuies. Borh freshmen and up- per-class women debaiecl This quesrion. Paqe Ouc Hundred Sixiccn The men who pariicipaied in debaies 'for Deni- son during The I937-38 season were Alberi Beard- shear, George Bisbee, William Coffman, Richard Cosway, Richard Dixon, Carl Faelchle, Roberr Gor- don, Roberf l-lillibish, Burio Lamb, Edwin Nieder- hoier, Allan Pirher, John Shively,l Nicholas Tiius, and Srafford Webb. Denison was represenfed ar 'iheiiournamenr for varsiiy men's reams of Ohio colleges, held ai Keni Srafe College, Kent Ohio. On March 7+h, Denison's negarive Team mer 'The Ruigers Team. Denison received iihe decision of rhe iudge ar This Time. This was The only debare losr by 'rhe Ruigers' feam on an exiensive 'four Throughoui' The Middle Wesi. y Among The schools mei by Deriison's reams, in rournamenr and non-decision debaies, were Berea, Capiial, Case, Cincinnaii, Kenyon, Mouni Union, Muskingum, Ohio Universiiy, Ruigers, and Toledo. l WOMEN'S DEBATE 5 Cady, Geil, Way, Oxley, Yoder, LaH'a TAU KAPPA ALPHA Bearclshear Oxley Welles Skrilefz Way Tifus Cosway Crocker Embryonic Bryans and feminine Pafriclc l-lenrys are included in The membership of Tau Kappa Alpha, which is The naTional forensic honorary on The Denison campus. The presidenT of Tau Kappa Alpha for The pasT year was, Lowell Thomas, well- lcnown radio commenTaTor. Dr. Lionel Crocker. The Denison faculTy member and advisor, in addiTion To being The presidenT of The Ohio associaTion of College Teachers of Speech, is ediTor oT The Speaker, official magazine of Tau Kappa Alpha. AlberT Beardshear, as presidenT, and KaTherine Oxley, as secreTary, headed The local group during The pasT year. The honorary concerned iTself chiefly wiTh debafe and oTher forensic acTiviTies. Tau Kappa Alpha sponsored a debaTe wiTh RUT- gers College and a recepTion following The debaTe. The chapTer also aTTended The regional convenfion oT TKA aT CincinnaTi, March 25Th and 26Th. Some of The TKA members, TogeTher wiTh debafers, aT- Tended This convenTion, Taking parT in debaTes, an afTer-dinner speaking conTesT. and a forum on cole lege honesTy. Along wiTh having iTs members in men's and women's inTercollegiaTe debaTing, Tau Kappa Alpha aided maferially buT less direcTly in oTher speech acTiviTies on The Denison campus. The hon- orary gave indirecf aid To The inTer-sororiTy de- baTes, members acTing in The capaciTy OT iudges. The Lewis Prize ConTesT was handled by The speech deparTmenT under The direcfion of Dr. Crocker. Several members of Tau Kappa Alpha parficipafed in This conTesT. Richard Cosway was one of The winners. The annual Bible Reading ConTesT was also held under The auspices of The speech deparTmenT. and here likewise, several members of Tau Kappa Alpha were To be Tound parTicipaTing. ln addiTion, The local chapTer conTribuTed Through iTs members quiTe a biT To The various pre- senTaTions of Masquers. Page One Hundred Szrvenleen MEN'S GLEE CLUB EVGT .h-eikh Mackel Woli. jokinskonl , Mafkel' Wriqili' J, Cavaq - . yy r. h. ma - Wood- WB B , ,Webs lTownsl9Yi lor, STB' ' BUG a Sea'Ie:owfSco'tT. Barlowwxagpesl Bashofe' Fifsi - Robinson' Tein. 0 had. R WZPUWHS-,A-,Qcl1ell, EPs second ,.,lwheele Lasi so B uw'-ie. rokki. E Denison TraTerniTies are noTed Tor Their good singing: consequenTly The men's glee club, which conTains The cream oT These groups, is one oT The besT male groups in Ohio. ATTer successfully com- pleTing iTs TiTTy-TiTTh season in concerT, The men's glee club conTinues To be known as one oT The ouT- sTanding organizaTions on The Denison campus. IT has been esTimaTed, by a reliable auThoriTy, ThaT nearly 2,650,000 people lisTened To recenT broadcasTs OT The club. IT goes wiThouT saying ThaT The glee club is a Tremendous aid in promoTing good will and publiciTy Tor Denison. The annual home concerT, presenTed on April I3Th To a crowded ReciTal T-lall audience, gave To TaculTy, Townsmen, and sTudenTs, Their TirsT chance To hear The I938 club and give Their enThusiasTic applause. JusT a Tew days beTore, The rnen's club had concluded iTs annual spring Trip, Traveling I IOO miles during an eighT-day period. On This Trip, six Tormal concerTs were given and There were nu rnerous oTher less Tormal buT equally impressive I mfr Um' Hmzdrfd Iiiglzlvm appearances. DeTroiT and Chicago were The prin- cipal ciTies visiTed. N In DeTroiT, The club broadcasT over sTaTions WWJ and WXYZ: Two days laTer They sang over sTaTion WMAQ Trom The NBC sTudios irl Chicago. AT The close oT The TirsT sennesTer The club made appearances in Newark, Columbus, and DayTon, where They were TeaTured over sTaTion WHIO. Newspaper and radio criTics have gone inTo such greaT deTail abouT The splendid harmonies eTTecTed ThaT iT makes unnecessary any TurTher commenT on Their consisTenTly good singing. The crediT Tor The year by year andl susTained successes of The glee club is due To Thel keen mu- sicianship and splendid direcTorial abiliTy oT Karl Eschman, who in addiTion To being head oi The ConservaTory, is direcTor and leader oT lThe men's glee club. Mr. Eschman was aided during The pasT year by Franklin Wood, who served in The capaciTy oT sTudenT leader. The Tinancial aTTairs and The responsibiliTy oT meeTing expenses weTe in The hands oT l-lamilTon WebsTer. 1 WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB WiTh Their excellenT singing only being exceeded by Their good loolcs The Women's Glee Club oT Denison UniversiTy, proved To be one oT The beTTer agencies Tor spreading The name and Tame oT Deni- son abroad ThroughouT The middle wesT. In The pasT, The men's glee club has held somewhaT oT a monopoly on Traveling and consequenTly a Travel- ing wome-n's glee club is sTill raTher an innovaTion so Tar as Denison is concerned This year marked The TourTh successTul year oT concerT Touring by The club. The group underTool4 Two Trips: one in- cluding Toledo and Cleveland and The oTher Wheeling, Charleslron, and l-lunTingTon. On These Trips They were TeaTured over The radio, in churches, and as a concerT group. Under Dr. Kellogg's direcTion The club had a varied program oT The qualiTy expecTed oT Denison and was enThusiasTically lauded by alumni Through- ouT Their Trips. So Tar as audience recepTion was concerned, perhaps The greaTesT amounT oT ap- FirsT Row: Yoder, Rupp, Rope, Golden, E., 6uThridge, Jen- nings, Geil, Isley, Wicker, Shumelrer Second Row: Grimm, Sfeinberg, Gregg, Simmons, Beam, Hari- burg, Spring, Lindaman, Win- geri, Barr, Eschman Third Row: Logan, Rhoion, Timm, Ahlers, Evans, E. ForsyThe, Cow- gill, Winsor, Vorhis, J o n e s J., LaTTa plause was given To The women's pan-hellenic sere- nade. The club sang aT each oT The local churches, in The various vesper services, as well as in concerTs in neighboring Towns. Mrs. Kellogg was The guesT oT The club on all oT The Trips and is almosT a parT oT The group iTselT. ATTer The home concerT The enTire group was enTerTained aT The Kellogg home wiTh a recepTion. The Denison ocTeT was a TeaTured parT oT The group, perTorrning independenTly on several occas- sions, including a broaclcasT over WCOL, Toledo. Members oT The ocTeT are RuTh Jennings, Joan GuThridge, Phyllis l-luTTman, Evelyn Rope, RuTh G-eil, Emma LaTTa, Mary Barr, and Mary STeinberg. OTFicers oT The club This year were Joan GuTh- ridge, manager: Celianna lsley, assisTanT manager: RuTh Geil, secreTary-Treasurer: RuTh Jennings, sTu- denT direcTor: Eleanore Golden, librarian: and KaTherine Wolie, accompanist Pnyr Om' Hmzzlnzl X I CH PJ' U' CRCHES Violins Mrs. W. H. Adams Prof. Clifford S. Ades Edwyn Dickerson Edna DiDomenica Wayne Fosset Alvisa Freeman Jasmine Garapedian Sam Gelfer Errol Gutliph Wallace Hard Isabel Hepler William Kennedy Curtis McKinnie Mrs. E. L. Morrison Martha Robinson Gilbert Scamahorn Eleanor Shumaker Robert Smith Harry Townsley Robert Vick Mary Elizabeth Wood Trumpets William Hite Burt C. Menk Trombones Norman Nadel Robert Carney Franklin Wood Timpani Merton Barlow ci-TCT TRPX Violas C. W. Dowling Barbara Eschman John Hoover Phyllis Huffman Violoncellos Jane Coons Elinor Eschman Donald Everhart Arthur Huff Dr. R. W. Jones Dorothy Lindaxnan Mrs. Gilford Davis Lois Wallis Basses Dean Beier John Stewart Flutes Louise Johnson Oboe Lawrence Goodel Frank Hirst Clarinets Dorothy Burnham Jack Fulcher Philip Robinson Bassoon Dr. W. T. Utter Ronald Wiley Horns Rev. Donald Doss Rosemary Forsythe Paul Gilbert James Wolfe Payv Om, f'1llIl0iI'f'd T'Zf'L'I1fy Firsi' Row: Jennings, Sipple, l Vierling, Rope, Wingerf, Golden, E. Barr Second Row: Fischer, Rho- Ton. Logan, Hariburg. Guihridge, Beam, Bow- man, C., Sieinberg Third Row: Grimm, Sim- mons, Huffman, Forsylhe, Cowgill, Vorhis, Linda- man, Menendian, Mas- Teller Fourlh Row: Everharrl, Bar- low, Slarr, Bashore, Kel- y logg, Burchard, Sims. Hammai, Wolfe, Pilher, Hurley R The chapel choir, made up oT mixed voices Trom The men's and women's glee clubs, has had a very successTul year under The excellenT guidance OT iTs leader, Dr. King Kellogg. This group pracTices a halT hour on The Three days a week when There is no chapel service, and Tor an hour on Monday evenings. T ThroughouT The year The choir has provided music Tor chapel and vesper services, and aT ChrisTmas Time sang one large work, Dudley Buclc's The Coming oT The King. SoloisTs during The year were RuTh Jennings, Joan GuThridge, Mary Fischer, Elinor Eschman, George Sims, Jack l-lurley and Don Everhari. The Denison orchesira presenTs an annual symphony conceri and assisTs The Chorus in iis presenTaTion oT oraTorios and operas. During l937-38 The orchesTra accompanied l-landel's Messiah, Brahms' German Requiem and The Gounod-Moliere opera, A DocTor in SpiTe OT l-limselT. In addi- Tion To The symphony concerT The orchesTra presenTed numbers aT The annual MoTher's Day Program. WiTh The beaT-beaT-beaT of The TomTom and The roar of The Denison crowds The Big Red band sTruT- Ted and sTrained iTs way To iTs mosT impressive showing in recenT years. Following The flaming baTon oT Drum Maior Reid Anderson, The band carried on iTs season in a liTeral fanfare oT glory and blew iTs way inTo a place in The Denison mu- sical sun. This year was The culminafion of The work o Anderson and Warren SiverTsen in eir effor o puT a fiTTy piece band on D ed's fie They were aided in reaching This obie ive by Their new di- recTor, ArThur L. . Thro h various drives The band was able To enough money To purchase nearly ousand dollars' worTh of uniforms and approxi ly The some amounT for insTrumenTs. The public had a chance To see The band aT all oT The home Toofball games where inTricaTe leTTer and figure formafions were worked ouT by The well- drilled band. The performances aT nighT games were parTicularly impressive. Deed's Tield was dark- ened and The band paraded behind The fiery arc of The Anderson baTon. The band members, hav- ing small elecTric lighTs aTTached To Their caps, gave The impression of musical fireTlies as They made such figures as Those oT a revolving wheel and air- plane. l i The band played Tor all oT The ho keTball games and conTribuTed ma rially To ainfaining a high degree of enThusias addiTion To These appearances The nd was n hand for all of The pep-meeTings an ic geT-TogeThers. lTs appear- ance aT The NorThwesT TerriTory CelebraTion on ay 4, which consisTed of a parade in Newark and ageanT aT Deed's Tield, was perhaps iTs mosT imporTanT showing. Under a new plan of The AThleTic deparTmenT The members of The band who have served Tor Three years receive a suiTable award, in The Torm of a sweaTer. Those who received The awards This year were: Warren Siverfsen, Ted Erler, Nicholas TiTus, Bob Carney, Norman Nadel, and Franklin Wood. ln speaking of The band The work of Reid An- derson cannoT be evaluaTed Too highly. Along wiTh being a drum major par-excellence, Reid's or- ganizafional capaciTy and drill leadership made possible To a greaT exTenT The fine showing of The band. ln recogniTion oT his conTribuTions, The D associaTion, in an unprecedenTed acfion, awarded Anderson a varsiTy leTTer and elecTed him To mem- bership in The aThleTic honorary. Page One Hundred Tzunty one F il , fc ffl ii F V .yxiwffu YW fiiii T iii? ir-J iiiiaiis li .a5lLi'iTT For over a quarTer oT a cenTury Phi Mu Alpha SinTonia, naTional honorary music TraTerniTy, has been represenTed on The Denison campus - and represenTed acTively and consTrucTively - by The broThers oT Nu chapTer. ThroughouT This Time iTs members have been leaders in music aT school, al- ways Tollowing The TraTerniTy's sTaTed ideal oT Tor- warding music by and Tor Americans. ln This, The TwenTy-sixTh year oT iTs exisTence, The chapTer has inauguraTed anoTher guarTer-cenTury ThaT promises To be even more TruiTTul Than The lasT. Along wiTh such acTiviTies as The opera Le lvledicin Malgre Lui, by Gounod, and The annual recepTion Tor music sTudenTs, boTh in collaboraTion wiTh DelTa Omicron. The group has conTribuTed leaders and valuable members in band, orchesTra, glee club, TraTerniTy song leaders, and in publica- Tions. ln keeping iTs own sTandards high, iT has helped To mainTain a higher sTandard OT music aT Denison. Through iTs presiclenT, RoberT Carney, iT has made valuable conTribuTions To The naTional or- ganizaTion. Along wiTh having members in mosT oT The sTudenT reciTals during The year iT conTrib- uTed a compleTe chapel program of iTs own. IT has sTriven To recognize individual achievemenT and To TurTher sTimulaTe members and non-members in Their musical acTiviTy. FaculTy members of The group are: Messrs. Am- ner, DeTweiler, Eschman, Gelfer, Kellogg, STiclmey, UTTer, FiTch, i-luTT and Morgan. Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia came inTo exisTence in 1898 aT The New England ConservaTory oT Music, when a group oT musicians decided To organize Tor The purpose oT enioying music TogeTher and doing someThing consTrucTive Tor music in America. In I9l2 a charTer was granTed To Denison. The TraTerniTy now numbers among iTs members almosT all The leaders in musical acTiviTy in This counTry. IT has lcepT To iTs purpose ThroughouT iTs exisTence by producing music ThaT was American in spiriT and workmanship. As Emerson made a DeclaraTion oT Independence Tor American liT- eraTure in I837, in like manner is Phi Mu Alpha sTriving To TosTer an American TradiTion in music. In 1' Uni' Ilziflrlrvd 'li'z.'u11,'y-livri T l l V i l I l ik T Carney Anderson Naclel Hard Bashore BaTes CriTes EverharT Fulcher Gilberf HiTe Musal Sims STewarT Taylor Walker Wiley Wood WrighT Eschman Kellogg DELTA OMICRON As Phi BeTa Kappa is To scholars, DelTa Omicron is To Teminine musical sTudenTs. The Denison chap- Ter is no excepTion To ThaT sTaTemenT and did much To mainTain ThaT sTandard during The pasT year. The ouTsTanding evenT was The chapTer's being hosTess To The province convenTion on April 29Th and 3OTh. DelegaTes Trom Ten chapTers aTTended a program which included a musicale, a reci+aI, a Tea, and a bangueT aT The Granville Inn, in addi- Tion To The usual business meeTings. Several na- Tional oTFicers were presenT and much was accom- plished, For several years, DelTa Omicron has wanTed To redecoraTe iTs room in The ConservaTory. WiTh The impeTus OT a convenTion and The desire To presenT as aTTracTive a place as possible, The proiecT was underTal:en. Mrs. Lindsey, TaculTy advisor, and The commiTTee, accomplished a greaT deal Toward making The room worThy oT The honorary group. This work will be carried on and added To in TuTure years. The oTTicers oT DelTa Omicron Tor The pasT year were: Jean Deeds, presidenTg l-larrieT Beam, vice-president KaTharine WolTe, secreTaryg and RuTh Geil, Treasurer. Under Their direcTion and in collaboraTion wiTh Phi Mu Alpha and under The auspices OT The Granville FesTival AssociaTion The group sponsored Gounocl's comic opera. A DocTor in SpiTe OT l-limselT, RuTh Jennings, Elinor Esch- man, and JaneT Shepard singing The leading Tem- inine roles. The opera was well received by an en- ThusiasTic audience, and played Three nighTs To Tull houses. Phi Mu Alpha and DelTa Omicron gave Their an- nual recepTion lasT Tall To which The TaculTy. and The sTudenTs connecTed wiTh The ConservaTory, were inviTed. A shorT program was given by a Tew arTisTs in each group. DelTa Omicron was esTablished in SepTember, l909, aT The CincinnaTi ConservaTory oT Music To creaTe and TosTer Tellowship among musicians during Their sTudenT days wiTh The idea oT aTTaining The highesT degree oT musicianship individually. DelTa chapTer was insTalled aT Denison in I'-7I5. FaculTy members oT The club are Mrs. A. A. Shaw, Mrs. A. W. Lindsey, Miss Sue l-laury, and Mrs. I-lorace King. Deeds Beam Wolfe Geil Davis Eschman Gufhridge Shepard SmelTz T' Page One 11'1nz-:1'rvd Twcniy-Ilwcc TiTus Smiih Rader Befhune STewarT TiTus W Mackelfresh l Webb Condif SiverTsen MEN'S STUDENT CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION The sTaTed purpose OT The Men's STudenT Chris- Tian AssociaTion is To uniTy The religious and social acTiviTies on The Denison campus, To develop Chris- Tian personaliTy and leadership, and To serve Deni- son sTudenTs and The larger communiTy. Working Through iTs cabineT oTFicers and commiTTees. The M. S. C. A. works wiTh The Y. W. C. A. in meeTing The religious needs oT The sTudenTs on The Denison campus. Freshman Camp, wiTh Jim Morgan in charge, was held aT Camp lndianola and served as a Tine orienTaTion period Tor The large number oT Tresh- men who aTTended. Through The eTTorTs oT This same commiTTee, The Treshmen were organized inTo a Freshman M. S. C. A.. which meT aT various Times during The year and held discussion groups led by sTudenTs and TaculTy. The depuTaTion commiTTee was headed by Louis Hover, who organized speakers and singers inTo Teams which visiTed churches in ciTies ThroughouT Ohio. Page One Iliuzdred Yiefmty-fozzr l The social commiTTee was headed by STan Con- diT and assisTed in sponsoring The Treshqnan dance aT The beginning OT school. Warren SiverTsen, as chairman oT The social service, assisTed The Y. W. C. A. in sponsoring a ChariTy Ball Tor Newark chil- dren and in ,sending cloThes Tor relieT vilork in The war-sTricken areas. STudenT Forums, under The leadershipl oT Dean C. R. Richards, have Taken up The work oT The dis- cussions commiTTee, oT which Tom BaTes is in charge. lT is hoped ThaT These Forums will conTinue nexT year, Tor They have proved valuable as a sounding-board oT sTudenT opinion. Phil SmiTh, head oT The chapel and vdsper com- miTTee, helped plan The Religious Emphasis week. This year's speaker was Rev. Ted Adams OT The FirsT BapTisT church oT Richmond, Virginia. The oTTicers for The pasT year were Nipkie TiTus, president Phil SmiTh, vice-presidenTg John Turn- bull, secreTary: and John STewarT, Treasurer. FaculTy advisors This lasT year were ProTessor F. W. STew- arT and Dr. l-l. l-l. TiTus. YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION As one oT The leading acTiviTies Tor women on The Denison campus, Y. W. C. A. has mainTained iTs fine repuTaTion under The guidance OT JeaneTTe PosT and I-Ielen Jones. As oTficers oT The group, They have gone forward in keeping wiTh The worThy ideals oT Y. W. C. A. The firsT large underTaking Tor The group was The preparaTion oT a Mofher-DaughTer banqueT given on lvIoTher's Day. On ThaT Safurday morning The freshmen prepared The breakTasT Tor The mofhers. By selling candy in The dorms, enough money was earned To send nine deIegaTes To Lake Geneva in Wisconsin where The nafional convenfion was held. There, These girls received many Tine ideas and broughT back much enThusiasm To The local group. MosT convincing oT The convenTion's value was The excellence in panel discussions held This Tall aT The associaTion meeTings. The various inTeresT groups worked diligenTIy during The enTire year. The social service group gave a Thanksgiving parTy Tor poverTy-sTricken chil- dren oT Newark and gave food To desTiTuTe fam- ilies. AT ChrisTmas The selT- expression group gave The pageanf, Why The Chimes Rang. JusT pre- ceding The ChrisTmas holidays The inTernaTionaI re- laTions commiTTee held a bazaar which proved quiTe successful. The group concerned wiTh The philos- ophy of liTe sponsored Mr. and Mrs. Ted Adams for The Religious Emphasis week. This was Y. W.'s besT underTaking of The year for iT succeeded in geTTing all The sTudenTs inTeresTed in The religious phase of life. As has been The cusTom on VaIenTine's Day There was a I-IearT'SisTer banqueT which culrninaTed a week oT acTiviTy. Y. W. C. A. is responsible Tor one chapel hour a monTh and one vesper service a monTh. These were ably handled by The worship commiTTee headed by I-lelen Jones. ThroughouT The year The cabineT and associaTion were guided by Mrs. Milne, The advisor. The presidenT and her cabineT have Tried This year To uniTe in The desire To realize full and cre- aTive liTe Through a growing knowledge of God, as is sTaTed by The creed of Y. W. C. A. 1 0 ' WHY un. VOS' Shenan- 5 U-An95Ton' Oxrk. MurT0 ' Iey Mr ' r. BNC ' Y Seafeaz ox or. Shoema e , II Skanafng' TIOPB G'eeqOTi WheeT8I' Gov eII- Heian' Webb. de Bei 3 nes . Page One Himdrcd Twenty-five The Denison ChemisTry socieTy was or anized Tor sTudenTs who are inTeresTed in misTr and who have shown a cerTain ma ogolarship in The DeparTmenT o C mg. I has had a conTinuous exisT ce We Tober I5 l909 a record oT wn in The sc1enT1Tuc world have been in iTs ranks l e re iusTly proud. Many men now well The socieTy has had a very evenTTul year under The able leadership oT our presidenT, John Braun- ing, and The counselling oT Dr. Ebaugh and Dr. EverharT. For The TirsT Time This year, The iniTiaTion OT our ThirTeen neophyTes was recognized aT a din- ner held aT The Granville Inn. Our programs This year have been mosT inTeresT- ing. Don Winchell Told oT his work wiTh various The incre e acT I n inTernaTional aTFairs on camp as responsible Tor The reviviTicaTion Qlrhe od lnTernaTional ATTairs Club. The TirsT eeTing was held aT Cleveland I-lall under The su- pervision oT Dr. A. A. Roden aT which Time The Tol- lowing oTTicers were elecTed: Gordon Del:osseT. president RoberT I-lillibish, vice-presidenTg Libby Way. secreTary7 Gene Vodev. Treasurer. U4 The Denison Engi e ingcgwas Tounded in l904 and is aegone oT The oldesT deparT- me s orxhe ampus. Membership in The socieTy Q To Those sTudenTs maioring in physics and k S li e gineering and whose scholarship is oT a suT- TicienTly high average. The meeTings during This pasT year were led by such guesT speakers as B. l-l. Frasch, division en- Paqc One Hundred Twenty-six C9 special alloy sTeels. Erven WhiTe gave an illusTraTed Talk on cellulose and iTs derivaTives. William Tay- lor presenTed a demonsTraTion lecTure on The dis- TillaTion oT buTyl and amyl alcohols. ilvlinard PaT- rick Told oT his research on Radium and Radio- acTiviTy. John I-loward Bigelow oTlThe DeparT- menT oT ChemisTry aT Ohio STaTe UniversiTy spoke on his work wiTh ElecTrolysis in Liquid Ammonia. Paul GilberT wiTh The aid OT Dr. Rohrer has worked ouT a meThod by which each member may casT his own key, and Frank Molen has demonsTraTed The meThod oT gold-plaTing keys. . I OTTicers Tor The year were: John Brauning, presi- denTg Theodore Erler, vice-presidenTg Lois L. Wallis, secreTary-Treasurer. ' One OT The early meeTings was giveh over To E. J. CuThberTson who led a discussion on a naTional paciTism movemenT. The oTher meeTings have been spenT in inTeresTing round-Table discussibns oT world problems and The possibiliTy oT a nexT war, Thus much good has been derived by The members by TosTering an inTeresT in The currenT evenTs oT Toreign counTries. l gineer oT The sTaTe highway deparTmenT aT The an- nual banqueTg Dr. Ades, The newly abquired en- gineering insTrucTor: represenTaTives oT The Na- Tional Brick Paving company and The ll-lollophane Glass company respecTively. The group was direcTed by Willilam Wilson. pre-sidenTg RoberT DeeTer, vice-presidenTg Verne LogerquisT, Treasurer: and Reid Anderson, secre- Tary. 5-'-,Q-Hffgwf E ' iirc7hwl3rilvuwn y I 'aft .. El, N. Ida xi,- ' Er, il: 'F ,fr wh fa Page Ona I-lzuzdred Twefzty-sezfen S E QB Y 'K Y Franco-Calliopean LiTer ywbmlded Eng- lish honorary on T cr a lished iTselT This year as a - MG in The wheel oT college ac- Tivi 'e . h iTs eTTorTs combined wiTh Pi DelTa ' e orT'folio was broughT To The campus B as The climax oT The year To see our idea Take Torm and become a commendable addiTion To The school. Following a proTound lecTure bygJ. B. PriesTley, Franco was hosT aT The recepTion Tor The English auThor aT which Time he was made an honorary member. LaTer in The year John Crowe Ransom, Tamous souThern poeT and, aT presenT, head oT The English deparTmenT aT Kenyon College, was The guesT speaker aT The iniTiaTion banqueT when he was also made an honorary member. Under The leaders ' dw ElizabeTh Wood and ProTessors negd iley, EI Circulo Cas- Tellano lmdx very successTul year. AT The ini 'n ecember, 25 new members were ad ed To The enrollmenT. The purpose oT El Circulo CasTellano is To give The sTudenTs an inTellecTual undersTanding and knowledge oT Hispanic cusToms and hisTory. Pro- 'NTT ETa Sigma Phi is a n io ho or y TraTerniTy fvhose membershi is ose showing excel- lence in cksic nguages. The ZeTa chapTer Denissvas Tounded in I926 and is now well lished in iTs work OT promoTing The humaniTies. Since courses in classical languages have been made opTional, ETa Sigma Phi is desirous oT pre- senTing The beneTiTs oT classical knowledge To enTer- ing sTudenTs. A social meeTing wi+h Treshmen on Page One H imdrczi Twenty-eiglzl P54 , Each member was required To read several novels, reporTs oT which were given aT The meeT- ings. Original poems, skeTches, andlsTories were read along wiTh reviews oT currenT works oT well- known auThors. AlThough memberships were limiTed lrhis year and sTandards oT requiremenTs were raised, an iniTiaTion oT Twelve new members was held aT The lnn in March. Franco-Calliopean is gradually aTTaining iTs ideal-To be recognized as an indispensable parT oT The exTra-curricular program:l as The only Denison English honorary. OTTicers are AI Beardshear, presidenT: l-lelen ClemenTs, vice-president Ben Mellinger, secreTaryg Joe Shai, Treasurer: Helen Bowyer, publiciTy chair- man. l grams oT greaT inTeresT To members,were given during The year. The Topics discussed aT The meeT- ings during The year had as Their principal Theme Those aTTairs which viTally concern The Spanish- speaking naTions. The club has been inviTed To join al naTional in- sTiTuTe oT Spanish clubs. AssisTing Mary EIizabe+h Wood were: Doris Jean Flory, vice-presidenT: Norma Kiehm, secreTaryg Lenore Bryson, Treasurer. l OcTober I9 and a Tea Tor sub-Treshmenl on lvlay I l TurThered This aim. T Programs oT The year have increased realizaTion oT The culTural opporTuniTies available bT Denison. Dr. Dean in an illusTraTed Talk on November I9 de- scribed his summer Travels in lTaly, linking hisTorical wiTh conTemporary inTeresT. LaTer in The year, Dr. DeTweiler discussed The AdvanTage QT Classical STudies To a SociologisT and emphasized The cog- naTion in many languages oT words ThaT deTine hu- man relaTionships. Page Om' Ilumlrvd T'ZUL'llfj'-Ilflll' The PaleTTe socieTy was Organi in T ll oT This year wiTh The senior a aiors charTer mem- bers. The purpos The cl is To inauguraTe and TOsTer an ' TeresT 1 rT acTiviTies on The campus an in The muniTy. To TurTher iTs inTenTs The cl s sponsored This year a series OT exhibiTiOns O sTudenT and TaculTy work and has aided in The collecTing and mounTing oT Tine conTernporary works OT arT. This cOnTemporary arT cOmpilaTion is To be a loan cOllecTiOn Tor individuals and campus The CosrriopoliTan clublwas orga years ago To give Toreign sTu . H un e iTy an OppOrTuniTy To be i ially. The scope oT The lub gne reaTly since iTs or- ganiza 'On l a -' ome a Torum Tor discussion a r and an inTrOducTion To The habiTs c ms OT OTher cOunTries. The roll call is an- swered by a news iTem in The aTTempT To give a quick survey OT world aTTairs. The mOTTO OT The club is: Above all naTiOns is hurnaniTy. The preservaTiOn OT peace, Then, is a TundamenTal desire OT The members, and Through The educaTion oTFered by The club, They are able To develop a cOsmopoliTan aTTiTude Toward The world. This year saw The TirsT aTTempT T TTecT s e kind OT organizaTion amo The am r phOTOg- raphers on The De ison ca . AT The beginning OT The year, T u The e orTs OT Don SmiTh and The vice OT . eon SmiTh, The local addicTs OT This o lar hobby TOrmulaTed plans Tor The school year. STan SouThard was elecTed presidenT, Phil Browne, vice-presidenT, and Bob Mcliibben, Treas- urer. The highlighT OT The year's acTiviTies was The dis- play which was hung in The basemenT OT Doane Library. PhoTOgraphs by ProTessors Thomas Wiley and Leon SmiTh were ouTsTanding, buT The work Pug: Om Hiurclrm' Tliirfy groups. This year The senior members have all pre- senTed a series OT lecTures on arT books and many OT The principles and elemenTs OT arT sTrucTure. These usually lasTed abouT an hour each. The club's membership is resTricTed To junior and senior arT maiors wiTh The selecTion being based upon abiliTy and advancement OTTicers OT The charTer group are Bill SmiTh, presidenTg BeTTy Lind- sTrom vice-presidenT: and ElizabeTh Pierce, secre- Tary-Treasurer. During The pasT year The club, wiTh an acTive membership OT TorTy, has discussed Turkey, Ger- many, Bulgaria, and race problems in America. A group OT Bulgarians, Roumanians, and lTalians Trom Newark gave represenTaTive dances and songs. lvlilena Yaneva and Eugene Vodev' presenTed a Typical Bulgarian dance, and Jeanne BurT danced a ScoTch num ber. l DelegaTes Trom The club aTTended The lnTerna- Tional Day aT WilberTOrce College aT Xenia, Ohio, on February 22nd, and came back wiTh a new con- cepTion OT The negro problem in America Today. lvlilena Yaneva Talked on Bulgaria aT a meeTing held aT Dr. Shaw's. l OT The sTudenTs was almOsT as high in qualiTy. John BranT, Dick PaxTon, Jim R ooT, ChesTer Varney, Charles Jordan, WalTer Thompson, Bob STein, and Phil Browne all exhibiTed phoTos and en- largemenTs. y A second accomplishmenT OT The camera club This year was The compleTion OT a darkroom Tor The use oT members. AlTred Johnson, The school busi- ness manager, coOperaTed whole-hearTedly wiTh The members in Tinding a suiTable room Tor such a pur- pose and equipping iT wiTh running waTer and shelves. l 66 1 ' sf in I gi GU '-L15 i ve-v-r'f gf -'nl Page One Hundred Thirty-one MASQUERS Page One Hundred Thirty-two Overhuls Nichols Shoemaker Slrrileh Oxley Dwelley M. Smiih W. Smifh Lindsfrom Porfman Beardshear Beam Coffman Welles Van Wagoner TiTus Crifes J o n es Under The leadership oT a new dramaTics di- recTor, Mr. Edward A. WrighT, Masquers hiT a new high This season in drarnaTic class enTerTainmenT. The aim oT lvlasquers is To give recogniTion To Those sTudenTs who have aTTained excellence in The various phases oT TheaTer work and To oTTer pracTi- cal experience To aspiring Thespians. Membership To This honorary is resTricTed To iuniors and seniors who may be elecTed aTTer compleTing 50 hours oT work in acTing, on The Technical sTaTT Tor produc- Tions, or in a business capaciTy. The Tour major producTions under The superior direcTion oT The TaculTy direcTor, Edward WrighT, composed an unusually well-rounded program. Craig's Wife. by Kelly, was presenTed in The Tall. Tollowed by Yellowiack Tor which a modern adapTa- Tion oT Elizabejrhan sTaging was used. Mrs. EThel Salisbury l-lanley appeared as The guesT arTisT in The leading role OT Noel Coward's Hay Fever given in The spring. This was Tollowed shorTly by anoTher oT Masquers' producTion, Spring Dance. This play OT Philip Barrie's was presenTed by The Freshman Guild whose aims are To encour- age and develop TalenT in The TirsT year class. Much OT The crediT Tor lvlasquers' unusually ex- cellenT season musT go To Bill SmiTh, president aided by Jesse Sl4rileTz, vice-president BeTTy Shoe- maker. secreTaryq and KaThryn Oxley, Treasurer. Now SH Dwlmf QBEHINDTHE CURTAINS 5JEFfEi ffm ' Q3 ,gif 'IJ F ' , , 4 ij, , V A F7 ' Lf '- QPQ Q .. pa Egg ? 'V' I .L-fix if I' A q- , 1 I -2 5' '-I-1 1 1 1 r. 5,114 H F2 rw, Mjtr -4 lyxl Ill: -el ., .Hg ll ,.-c-,z ' f.zE ' ga, '- --1 gjll',1.v W ' A , 1 . . '- . k':::5'f . ,':. ' if , ' ' - Y ,- - . .wi-Y .' , f ' ' ,- ' ': 352 Q' . , ,. , . . . ' -., vu . '.', ffiq-'f,- '.11 1 1 ' . ' '- f'1 ,1-if4LN15M: l?5V.'TgYG1' fl ', ' , ,Q 'Y l 4 , i ,r 1' . ' ' ' , ' ,N . H W , V I, . , ' , 4 TI fi' ' - v ' TA 5' ' Q 'SUN V 1 aS3,:f2,f.1,,ff::. ,, .fa 4 - - I 1 :fx -gs -' za: :fu 'iv , A A ffl. 53.-?Zb?:giif1 -, IEZKQQ. 5 3- pi? E177-.i' , ,,'Q:- , ,L 4 f..1-:,...i , -g,.. r-74' Q 'A ..-4..., 27 '5 ef- 'J'-1 1' ' ' Q,-Q., f' 4 ' 7-i' , b. f..- riff' Page One Hundred Thirty-three FirsT Row: Slrrileh, Harfman, Morgan, Bashore, Boggs, Bowman. Second Row: CondiT, Cornell, Cosway, Erler, Fillzins, FrosT. Third Row:-McNeill, Mulcahy, PaTriclc, Randolph, Turnbull, Van Wagoner BLUE KEY Blue Key, naTional honorary TraTerniTy, has cone Tinued To live up To iTs sTrong repuTaTion as a working organizaTion which will aid willingly in Denison acTiviTies. Several new proiecTs were inauguraTed by This TraTerniTy This year which proved useful and ornamenTal To The campus. Perhaps The mosT successTul proiecT was The worlc on Homecoming Day This year when They TeaTured The donaTion oT a loving cup To be presenTed To The TraTerniTy or sororiTy wiTh The rnosT clever decora- Tions. This is The renewal oT an old TradiTion which Blue Key believed worThy oT re-esTablishing. The TirsT social organizaTion To win This cup Tor Three Times will be awarded permanenT ownership. Win- ners oT The cup lasT year were The Lambda Chis as They TeaTured a ranch house wiTh True aTmosphere. Page Om' Hundred T11TYf3l-f01lf AnoTher proiecT was The sponsoring oT a recep- Tion Tor Mrs. EThel Salisbury l-lanley and members oT Masquers aTTer Their lasT performance oT l-lay Fever. As Their Tinal proiecT oT The year Thjey worked in cooperaTion wiTh The alumni oTTice inlhandling The hordes oT sub-Trosh Tor The annual Sub-Freshman day. Members OT Blue Key are selecTed Trom The ouT- sTanding iuniors in each oT The various TraTerniTies. The oTTicers Tor The pasT year were: Jesse SlcrileTz, president Bill I-larTman, vice-presidenT: Bob Gehr- andT, secreTary: and James Morgan, Treasurer. CROSSED EYS Crossed Keys, an organizaTion elecTing from The sophomore girls who display parTicular leadership in Their TirsT Two years, began iTs acTiviTies aT a Tormal banqueT and iniTiaTion in May lasT year. ShorTly aTTer iniTiaTion, The newly elecTed mem- bers combined wiTh The preceding class oT Crossed Keys To hold a ioinT brealcTasT one Sunday morning in May. This brealcTasTing Toolc place up on SunseT I-lill. The TirsT worlc of The year was The oTliciaTing as marshals aT The May day exercises and laTer as guides for Sub-Treshman day. ln June The organizaTion spenT The lasT Friday aTTernoon of examinalrions piclcing daisies Tor Class day exercises. In This enTerprise The group had The assisTance of several ex-Crossed Keys and innu- merable male escorTs. The following morning all ioined in The weaving oT a daisy chain To be used by The senior class in Their exercises. ThroughouT The year Crossed Keys has held TorT- nighlrly supper meeTings aT The Kappa house, oTTen wiTh seniors or wiTh Taculfy guesTs. These have been inTerspersed by Sunday breakTasTs aTTer which The whole group aTTended church. Cne beneTiT movie was given by The group. Leading The group were The following officers: PresidenT, Ida Jeanne Dagger: vice-president Carol GrilTiTh: secreTary, PorTia Miller: Treasurer, Elizabefh Way: social chairman, DoroThy Frazier. Dagger Grifififh Miller Way Frazier Gregg Palmer ScoH Shoemaker Tumbleson Webb Wheeler Yoder Page One Hundred Thirty-five Page One H zma'1'ed Tliirty-six Spring is differeni in Granville. Wheiher if is because of i'rs locafion in Ceniral Ohio and 'l'he wind currenfs affecl' 'l'he clima+e sfrangelyg or whefher glaciers once cleposired an unusual sor-I' of glacial soil: +he facl' remains spring is diFFeren+ ai' Denison. Spring s'l'ar'is here when siudenfs come back from Chrisfmas vacafion and begin io falk of Spring Valley, Cai Run, and Sunsei' Hill. When March has come in like a lion and gone our like a lamb, all +hough+s have furned +o golf, +ennis, swimming, picnics, and walks in 'l'he moonlighi. By rhis 'I'ime, plans have been born and week-ends already reserved. So, when 'rhe grass 'iurns gr,een, ihe leaves shade 'lhe s'l'ree+s, and 'ihe air is warm and balmy, collegians are already enjoying spring Spring IS differenl' in Granville. SPRING ATHLETICS Page One Hmzdred Thi .lv XX fra' X X. ,4. -A X - um .. Se' qi. . ,ff Agia.. -F 1 r ii - , J 'VKX 1 .' .W X Vs :N V+ wf . 'M , i ' Hi- M. .- x ' ' ul 'itil 807 , , , i in , 12151: i . L v WJ ' ' 'lf ' , - L S . hzailgzif ' Blackburn Perry Coach Gillman Snider Gilifin Meilsfrup Cornell Denison 4 .. Denison Zl . Denison 2 .... Denison I I .., Denison I0 Denison 8 .. Page One Hundred Thirty-eiglzt Wesf Wafkins Siumpf .... Oberlin 6 .. . Ollerloein O . . . . Woosler 9 . . . O+'rerbein 2 Muskingum I2 . . . . Kenyon I Cullen 1 Ferguson McNeill i i S As March 20 rolled around, Denison's l938 base- ball squad was already on The Deeds Field diamond under The guidance OT Sid Gillman. WiTh veTerans WaTkins, Cornell, McNeill, WesT, MeilsTrup, and Cullen again on The rosTer: wiTh Ferguson, and STumpT bidding Tor cenTer and righT Tield posTs, and CleTT and Blackburn compeTing Tor caTcher, The Big Red showed early promise. To re- place The loss oT Wick and Morrow To The piTching sTaTT was The immediaTe problem, and The answer was Tound in The hurling arms OT sophomores Perry, Snider and GiTTin. ATTer nearly a monTh oT concenTraTed pracTice, Denison was in good shape as The squad Took To The Tield againsT Oberlin in The TirsT conference game oT The year aT Deed's Tield. WiTh errors playing a large role, The game was losT 6-4. Warren Perry piTched The enTire nine in- nings Tor The Big Red, allowing six runs, and nine hiTs. Denison collecTed Tour runs wiTh eighT base blows. Oberlin Took an early lead, scoring Two in The TirsT Trame. ln The TiTTh Denison scored her TirsT run. only To have Oberlin baT in Three more in The sixTh, making The score read 5-I as The sevenTh in- ning sTarTed. ln The sevenTh, a Three run rally puT The Big Red back in The ball game. Oberlin scored once more. and The conTesT ended 6-4 wiTh Denison on The lighT end. As if in re+aliaTion againsT The Oberlin deTeaT. Denison Traveled To WesTerville on April 22, and swamped OTTerbein wiTh a sixTeen hiT barrage, gar- nering 2l runs To Their opponenTs' none. Snider held The OTTers To no runs and seven hiTs in This one-sided Triumph. ln The TirsT inning, Cornell smashed a homer pasT leTT Tield wiTh bases loaded, scoring Tour runs. WiTh Two down MeilsTrup singled. coming home on WesT's double To make The inning's ToTal Tive runs. OTTerbein ThreaTened To score in The second Trame. A double by Shope was followed by anoTher by Young, buT Cornell's Throw Trom leTT Tield held Shope on Third. Snider reTired The nexT Three men in order wiTh a sTrike-ouT and Two inTield Tlies. The Big Red hiTTing resumed in The Third when CleTl hiT a home run wiTh Two on base, and conTinued unTil The sevenTh when a lone Tally con- cluded The scoring. GiTTin Took The mound Tor Snider in The eighTh, reTiring The side in order. l-le sTruck ouT Three in The ninTh To end The game. As Tor The remainder oT The schedule: OTTerbein has proved iTselT To be no problem, buT The Mus- kingum, CapiTal and Kenyon home and home series, and The reTurn game wiTh Oberlin are cerTain To place Denison beTore Teams which will aTTord TighT and Thrilling conTesTs. WiTh The Tielding improv- ing daily, and The piTching becoming more pre- dicTable. we mighT safely prophesy ThaT Denison will end in The TirsT division oT The conTerence. Page One Hundred Thirty mne 1937 DIAMOND l-lereToTore, Denison yearbooks have picTured The aThleTic squads oT The preceding year. .This year we are aTTen:1pTing To righi' This by displaying boTh lasT year's and This year's Teams in Two of The spring sporTs. IT is our hope ThaT wiTh The nexT publucahon The ed1Tors will need To include only The Then presenT season. ,, W .,,.,-1 'TT T 41040. x Gordon, masccf FronT Row: Wick, Cornell, Haas, WesT, Pyle. Second Row: Vincenf, Cullen, McNeill, MeilsTrup, Morrow. Third Row: Sharp, iManagerl, Rupp, Gillman, iCoachl, Shively, TAss'T. Manager., DENlSON T31-OHIO STATE ibl Dave lvlorrow held The ScarleT and Gray hiTless Tor Tive innings buT weakened in The laTer Trames. The Big Red TirsT broke The ice in The TiTTh when WaTkins singled, sTole second, wenT up To Third on an error and scored on a wild piTch. A ninTh inning rally sTaged by Denison Tell shorT by Three runs. DENISON l9l-KENYON ill The piTching assignmenT again wenT To Morrow, who held The Lords To a ToTal oT Two hiTs Tor The enTire game. ATTer scoring one run in The TourTh Denison broke loose wiTh a barrage oT hiTs, com- bined wiTh a number oT errors, neTTing six runs. AlThough The Big Red baTs pounded ouT only six hiTs They were aided by eighT cosfly Kenyon errors. McNeill led The aTTack againsT The Lords wiTh Three hiTs or halT The Denison ToTal. DENISON T4l-MUSKINGUM l3l Ten innings were necessary beTore Denison Tinally pulled This game ouT oT The Tire, scoring The big run in The exTra Trame. The Two nines, wiTh Wick on The mound Tor Denison, baTTled scoreless Through seven innings beTore Muskingum counTed a Trio oT runs in The eighTh. The Big Red pushed a pair over in Their halT oT The eighTh, Tollowing Them up wiTh one each in The ninTh and TenTh. DENISON T81-WOOSTER T5l WiTh Ed Wick and Dave Morrow working on The mound Tor Denison, The WoosTer nine goT a ToTal oT seven hiTs. Going inTo The eighTh inning The score was Tied up aT 2-2. ln The eighTh each Team scored Three runs and The score was sTill knoTTed. The Big Red. however, produced Three runs in The ninTh. McNeill, TvleilsTrup and Morrow led The Ten hiT baTTing aTTack on WoosTer piTching wiTh Two hiTs apiece. DENISON ibl-MUSKINGUM T41 Ed Wick piTched The enTire game allowing six hiTs and sTriking ouT seven. Six scoreless Trames were played unTil The Muskies Tinally broke The ice wiTh Three runs in Their half oT The sevenTh. The Big Red scored Two in Their halT oT The sevenTh. Tied The score in The eighTh and wenT ahead To win in The ninTh. Wick and Cornell led The eighT-hiT aTTack wiTh Two hiTs each. Page Ona Hrmdrc'a' Forty DENISON T31-OHIO WESLEYAN T61 Denison's mound duTies were again perTormed by Ed Wick wh allowed The Bishops eighT hiTs ancl sTruck ouT eighT. Wesleya grabbed an early lead scoring Three runs in The second inning an adding Two more in The sevenTh. The Big Red, held scoreless unTi The eighTh, came Through wiTh Two runs and added one more in Th ninTh aTTer McNeiIl's Triple. McNeill and Wick collecTed Tour o The six hiTs allowed The BapTisTs. i DENISON lbl-CAPITAL T21 ln a loose game Denison pounded CapiTal piTchers Tor TiTTee hiTs and six runs. Pyle, WaTkins and Cornell led The baTTing spree WaTkins collecTing a homerun and a Triple. Morrow showed hi superioriTy on The mound when he allowed The CapiTal nine onl seven scaTTered hiTs. l DENISON U41-KENYON i2l This Time on The Kenyon diamond The Big Red parTicipaTed i a Tield day aT The expense oT Kenyon To Take a second decision ove The Lords. DENISON T31-CAPITAL T41 AlThough Ed Wick piTched a Tive hiTl game and sTruck ou TourTeen oT The CapiTal baTTers, Denison Iosr when Their opponeni' scored Three runs in an ill-Ta+ed eighTh inning. l-laas was The onl man who connecTed safely more Than once, while WaTkins increase his sTolen base ToTal by marking up Two. l DENISON lOl-WOOSTER l7l ln The second ConTerence game wiTh WoosTer on our Tield The Big Red baTTers suTTered a no-hiT, no-run deTeaT. WoosTer col lecTed a ToTal OT nine hiTs which paved The viray Tor Their seven runs The Tinal game oT The season wiTh Ohio STaTe was posTponed o accounT oT rain. The Big Red nine was coached by Sid Gillman. WiTh buT Tou men graduaTing and a promising Treshman squad coming up, pros pecTs were good This year. 1937 CIND Denison 54lf2 WoosTer 76V2 Denison lO3 OTTerbein 27 Kenyon 32 Denison 7l Muskingum 59 Denison 79 MT. Union 52 Ohio ConTerence-Denison 3rd place-25'f2 DENISON 54V2-WOOSTER ny, On Deeds Tield in The iniTial Track meeT oT The I937 season The Denison TracksTers Tell To a superior WoosTer aggregaTion by a score oT 76lf2 To 54'f2. The ouTsTanding evenT oT The day carne in The discus Throw when BOOT STewarT hurled The plaTTer I30 TeeT, I IV2 inches Tor a new school record. ln The pole vaulT, Bromley and AusTin placed TirsT and second respecTively as did ChrisTman and LidsTer in The IOO yard dash. Griggs SmiTh broke The Tape Tor The Big Red in The 220 yard dash, while Lew Hopkins compleTed our scoring by winning The halT mile run in The mosT exciTing race oT The aTTernoon. DENISON Tl03T-KENYON T321-OTTERBEIN T271 A Triangular me-eT wiTh Kenyon and OTTerbein saw Denison swamp Their opponenTs when They won ThirTeen ouT oT TiTTeen evenTs. John Harman and Griggs SmiTh spliT The high oinT honors Tor The Big Red, Harman wiTh a TirsT in boTh The iaveiin and broad iump, and SmiTh wiTh TirsTs in The 440 and 220 yard dashes. A grand slam was chalked up in The 880 and 440 yard evenTs, while in The pole vaulT, mile run, I20 yard high hurdles, 220 yard low hurdles and The 220 yard dash The Denison Thinclads Took boTh TirsT and second place poinTs. DENISON UI,-MUSKINGUM T591 AT New Concord The Denison Track and Tield Team wiTh Two sophomores leading The aTTack deTeaTed a Tavored Muskie Team. SmiTh. again high poinT man, scored wiTh TirsTs in The 440 and 220 yard dashes and a Third in The T00 yard. Hopkins conTribuTed To The ToTal wiTh TirsTs in boTh The 880 yard and mile run. All Three places in The T00 yard dash were Taken by The Denison TracksTers wiTh Chri5Tman leading The sprinTers To The Tape. The Big Red demon- sTraTed Their superioriTy by Taking TirsTs in nine ouT oT The TiTTeen evenTs To win by a saTe margin oT 7l To 59. DENISON my-MOUNT UNION qszi Back on Deeds Tield in a dual meeT Denison ouTpoinTed MounT Union, Taking Twelve ouT oT TiTTeen evenTs. and placed aT leasT sec- ond in every evenT excepTing The Two mile run To win easily by a ToTal score oT 79 To 52. SmiTh and Hopkins again repeaTed Their high poinT pericorrnances. each Taking Two TirsTs in Their specialTies. SmiTh in The 440 and 220 yard dashes and Hopkins in The mile and halT mile runs. The Times recorded Tor The meeT were slow due To a soggy Track. OHIO CONFERENCE MEET WiTh sevenTeen Teams compeTing in The annual Big Six Ohio ConTerence Track and Tield meeT aT Oberlin, Denison amassed a ToTal oT 25'f2 poinTs To cop Third-plaace behind Oberlin T571 and WoosTer T46lf2l. Griggs SmiTh wiTh a ToTal oT eighT poinTs was The Big Red individual high poinT man Taking seconds in boTh The 220 and 440. ln The pole vaulT AusTin and Bromley placed second and Third giving The Big Red The mosT poinTs oT any Team in a single evenT, while in The high iump Thorsen recorded a second. The Comference meeT marked The end oT a good year Tor The Denison Track Team under The direcTion oT Livy. WiTh The sophomores showing up especially well in every meeT The prospecTs Tor This year's squad are beTTer Than usual. A week beTore The Spring recess began, WalTer LivingsTon called The TirsT ouTdoor Track pracTice. Among Those who reTurned To The cinder paTh This year were Lou Hop- kins, lasT year's sTar oT The 440, 880, and relays: Ernie Evans, who was noT in school lasT year, buT who is again showing The class he exhibiTed Two years ago in The dash and hurdle evenTs, Bob BroughTon and Ed Cooper, running maTes oT Evans: Al l.idsTer, sTrong dash man, and ClayTon Bromley, mainsTay pole vaulTer. 0uTsTanding among Those bidding Tor varsiTy berThs were Joe Dickson, disTance man: Carl Faelchle, Bill Cameron. and Glenn WhiTe in The 4405 and Bob Ashmun in The mile. The TooTball squad Turnished Ralph Riddell and Bob STein Tor The shoT-puT, DuTTy and l-laynes Tor The iavelin, and DuTTy, Mar- quardT and CrawTord Tor The discus. These gridders TogeTher wiTh Cooper Throwing The iavelin, and Ed Jenkins puTTing The shoT, and Throwing The discus comprise The weighT Throwing conTingenT. On April 23 The Big Red Thinclads Took To The cinders in a Triangular meeT wiTh OTTerbein and Kenyon aT Deeds Field Tor Their TirsT TesT under Tire. Taking ThirTeen TirsTs and eleven seconds Denison had liTTle Trouble amassing I06lf2 poinTs To 30 Tor Kenyon, and 25'f2 Tor OTTerbein. Denison Took all honors in The shoT-puT wiTh Riddell, STein, and Jenkins Tinishing in ThaT order. The iavelin gave D. U. a TirsT and second as DuTTy Threw The spear I5l '2 , Tollowed by Cooper. In The discus Jenkins, DuTTy, and MarquardT garnered Denison a TirsT, Third, and TourTh place. STarTing his sprinT early, Boren oT Kenyon was able To nose ouT Lou l-lopkins in The mile run, buT l-lopkins' second, and Faelchle's Third oTTseT This vicTory. l-lopkins and WhiTe Tinished one-Two in The 880, as did Cameron and ErosT in The 440. LidsTer and Cameron Took The 220 in ThaT order, wiTh l.idsTer and Evans Tinishing TirsT and second in The I00. The high hurdles gave Evans and Cooper an easy TirsT and second place, as was The case in The 220 low hurdles wiTh Evans and BroughTon. Page One Hundred P01717-f'ZCL'0 , I . Rx 1 +1 -3 -'r' T v-il 'T A 'T ,T ii,..'Tiiiiii il ,y.ii,,T ,, ' ZI1 '....-Ql4, i'L.. T i Evans Orme l F lhl C f d J lr FEW Ol' Denison Denison Denison Denison ae c Whif rosy, Kenyon 30, oiierlaein 25lf2 9l .............. sey2 ..... ..... I03. ....CapiTal 40 .WodsTer 74lf2 WiTTenberg 28 Hopkins Finishing sTrongly, Tar ahead oT his Team- maTe, Bob Ashmun, who was The nearesT conTender, Joe Dickson Toolc The Two mile run wiTh ease. ClayTon Bromley won The pole-vaulT, The only evenT in which Denison did noT place more Than one man. D. U. was saved Trom a shuT-ouT in The high-jump when Tom Orme, and ClayT Bromley lumped To a Tour-way Tie Tor TourTh. Denison's Team oT FrosT. Wiley, Lind- sTrom, and Hopkins won The mile relay in 3:39.7 To conclude a successTul aTTernoon. The Big Red promises To have a greaT I938 season, and we loolc Torward eagerly To see Livy loring his boys Through wiTh Top honors. Page One Hmzdrcd Forty-three GOLF Dropping buT one decision in eighT maTches, The Big Red golT Team challced up an impressive record during The l937 season. The lone deTeaT charged againsT The Tormidable Denison quarTeT was a one- poinT, 6'f2 To 5lf2 loss adminisTered by MarieTTa. and ThaT humbling was avenged laTer in The season when The same club was downed by a 7lf2 To 4V2 Tally. Two veTerans, CapTain Paul Brady and ArT Cash. reTurned Trom The I936 aggregaTion To Till capably Two posiTions. Jim RooT. alTernaTe The previous season, and Paul Welsh, a sophomore, rounded ouT The squad. During The course oT The schedule Kenyon, Ohio Wesleyan, and WoosTer were each conquered Twice, and a pair OT maTches wiTh MarieTTa was di- vided. The Denison conTingenT amassed a ToTal oT 9OV2 poinTs againsT 35lf2 Tallies chalked up by all iTs opponenTs. The highesT scoring mark oT The year was esTab- lished in The second maTch wiTh Kenyon when The Denison golTers copped all buf one oT The eighTeen counTers. In no oTher maTch save ThaT losT To Ma- rieTTa did The opposiTion come wiThin Two poinTs oT equaling The Denison ToTal. AlThough They would have been esTablished among The TavoriTes on The sTrengTh OT Their sea- son's record, The Big Red golTers were unable To compeTe as a Team in eiTher The Ohio ConTerence or Ohio lnTercollegiaTe TournamenTs. TENNIS Denison's 1937 varsiTy Tennis Team. greaTly han- dicapped by a laclc OT experienced perTormers, en- ioyed buT indiTTerenT success in a rain-abbreviaTed season. Four OT Ten scheduled maTches were washed ouT, and oT The halT dozen remaining TilTs, The Big Red ouTTiT won buT one. Two oTher deci- sions were losT by one poinT. - The lone Denison vicTory was Tashioned in The lasT conTesT OT The year and came aT The expense oT OTTerbein. The OTTerbein neT men vanquished The Big Red upon anoTher occasion. and CapiTal and WoosTer each marlced up Two vicTories againsT The Denison squad. Don Cumming, playing The number one spoT Tor The second successive year, and Bill Bunie were The only reTurning veTerans. Aside Trom This pair The only oTher man To win a leTTer was Kernohan, who ioined The club aTTer The beginning oT The cam- paign. Jacobi, O'Rourlce, and SmiTh were oTher members oT The squad. Page Our Hmzdrrd Fnrfv-four CaSh N, NN elsh RQOTI gfadv .,::: .ur i- 5: , if ' .TJ 'J T Ti 5' 'T Q ,T T ,T 0 , K ' , 41- Cumminq Bufde Oi Rourke SmTTl1 I Kemohan SPRIN TENNIS A fighfing Phi Deli 'feam esfablished ifs 'iennis prowess lasf fennis season afier being 'lied af fhe close of fh schedule by fhe Befas and fhe Befa K Wofl 'l'hey defealed e appas. ln fhe play- fhe Beias fo falre fhe crown affer 'Phe Befas had dropped 'lhe Bela Kappas io fhird place. BASEBALL The Sigma C his 'look 'Phe laurel wreaih in ihe baseball scramble of ihe '37 season. Sfrong cornpeiifion was pre- 'senled by ihe Phi Delis and Kappa Sigs who played 'lighi' ball fo capfure second and fhird places respecfively. INDOOR TRACK The Phi Delis rallied? affer iheir loss by one poini' of The fall relays and came baclr 'lo fake ihe spring mee? by a decisive margin, fhe Sig Alphs dropping behind ihe Phi Gams as well 'lo falre 'third place. G INTRA MURALS xii PJ3 M'5 U Page One Hundred Forty-five SPORTS SUMMARY .Q-A 'Q1 POHddI' ace O IFA CK 37 nf. One oT The ouTsTanding achievemenTs of This year's Women's Afhlefic ssociaTion was The CommuniTy in Thsld-fashioned swing Timefwwaplegn n R rbrough, well-lcnown u nces and communiTy singing ir i ' ' aT empT a xe recreahon meT wiTh po ular appr o wh TdenTs and Tac lTy. a l kirigarw rd o anoTher io xT ea e ion wiTh . . rd o or d a recr aT' na h e, under direcTion EQ g in . . annual Carnival was a ea u .. . OTher campus organizaTions added T e aTTair in The Wigwam, held on Dad's day This year, wiTh special side booThs. The enTire evenT was a grand success and sTimulaTed The friendly Tie beTween The groups. This Tall during Freshman Weelc, W. A. A. gave Three parTies. AT These parTies The Trosh were Told abouT The organizaTion, iTs ideas and iTs ideals. The lasT of These gaTherings was climaxed by a Truclc ride To The cabin Tor supper and enTerTainmenT aTTerward by The members. The cabin now has several addiTions. A well has been drilled and There is a Tence running around The caloin. Also There have been improve- menTs made in The landscape wiTh more and beTTer shrulobery. - The annual convenTion was held aT Flora STone MaTher College, of WesTern Reserve UniversiTy, in Cleveland. EighT Denison girls wenT To represenT W. A. A. The annual reciTaI of Orchesis was held March 26+h This year. IT was one of The TinesT producTions in years, TeaTuring original and el'TecTive cosTumes. and several very original numbers. First Row: Bowman, Yoder, Shepard, Ralph, Beck, Scoif. Second Row: Coons, Klemm, Pierce, A. Goodhue, Webb, Miller, PorTer, Frazier Third Row: Morse, Gre99. Griffiih. Page One Hundred Forty seven Al L ,. 1, gl MAX FACTOR Max Faclor, dean of Hollywood's make-up arf- isls, kindly consenled 'lo choose personally 'lhe mosl beauliful women of Denison Universily. A commif- iee of men, chosen from each fraferniiy as especial connoisseurs of feminine pulchriiude, picked a bevy of 'lhir'l'y-five lovely lassies. This lisl' was narrowed 'fill a highly selecfive group of len campus beau+ies were submiH'ed +o fhe cosmefic genius, Max Faclor. As one who lives by crealing loeauly, Max Facfor is ceriainly fhe ideal judge of beaufiful Denison girls. BMX FACTOR May 5, 1938 Mr. Donald B. Smith Editor THE ADYTUM Denison University Granvi lle, 'Ohio ' Deer Mr. Smith: Thank you For your letter of April 30, and the enclosed photo- graphs of the ten queens chosen by your annual staff. Please convey my sincere best wishes and congratulations to all the young ladies and tell them that I am genuinely sorry that they all couldn't win. However, it may afford the losers some gratification in knowing that it was no easy task to make our final selections. I say Houru because I called in several members of my staff to assist me in judging the contestants. In our opinion, the three girls we selected should be tied for first place. But since you insist upon having their names listed in order, we do so as follows: BETTY BOWMAN BARBARA WATSON MARJORIE McNEILL I wish to take this opportunity of thanking you and your staff for the honor bestowed upon me, but frankly I always hesitate about acting as s judge because it's too much of a temptation to select all contestants as winners. Best regards, pig . MFgJY lax actor Through fhese porfals pass lhe mosi beauiiful siars of Max Facior beauliiies fhe already beauliful cinema sfar. lhe screen. Kalharine De Mille. Page One Hundred Forty-nine .lf ce -4381831291 I Q U ' Q X swf'-ff 2' -Lf-: ' vga' MMA A W ' :M Q0 0 O O30 Q , T h G 'll ' IIIII' 5. f QUEEN BETTY BOWMAN Kappa Kappa Gamma Page One H undrcd Fifty-one AND HER ATTENDANTS BARBARA WATSON Kappa Kappa Gamma f , f Page One Hm d z red F1 'fly-three AND HER ATTENDANTS 1 MARICDRIE MCNEILL Kappa Alpha Thefa f f V ,,.4-' L J N' I . . M V .- ,1,,,,6n '.3 iL,j5,,.f'-- L 4 , 1gLiT.5Lig:3,,12-zf. :LI ',.f 3. '2,f : V2 Af z-.jj wi ., l.W'jif.J T - ,A , . , fn.-.w .F-T 5.-E . A viii-la., - -3' A, 1... A.:-TtnfJ ,uA,', .imp A.. r. 'xiii g ,. 3 - 5:1 1 - 1 ,nw f,' -ijz'- m'.'11,4pF'f.-Trurf? -2: 1- -'- f5'2'iTv4Q':nE3'-,I :- 'HLLI 41,51 ,ai:y,.,f'-'g-IL iii. 'JL 'CT' .N ' :ff ' 14 Lf 'nu Q IEW, .r,-W, ',.,-Ajffl .nv f,,.v .,,,g7 I H 1.1.15 , -mg. ,, 1 lijf-?f1'f', Q' L v N'T25,':2k5L4 Liv? L' K' ,gd --F bf I fl.. g..m.1Q ,- .A ffl .-, ' A ' - , f ill' . , . 1 w-, ,X Z-f P age O ne Hundred ,aff F-iffy-five n f' 7 1' ' 1 A 55 1 -QF, ri fr- vs ,ea ,'1 ff 'Q' E N, :ffl I ff SENIOR CELEBS On May 2 fhis year a boisferous yef orderly band of seniors discarded fheir sophisficafion and became rebels for a day. Senior men and women, IOOVQ, refused 'ro affend classes, as envious underclassmen saw fhe ancienf May Day fradifion af Denison revived, a cusfom nearly forgoffen following a long period of disuse. PIERCE, DUNNICK, BOWMAN, TURNER Four years of friendships and sfudies puncfuafed wifh hearfaches and ioys have been broughf fo a successful close by fhose of '38 and as fhey leave we all join in a hearfy Bon Voyage. Page One Hundred Fifty-seven SENIORS CLINTON ADAIR Varsity trainer I-2, Varsity Baseball Manager 2, D Association 3-4, Franco-Callicpean 2-3, Treasurer of Franc o-Calllopean 3. EARVEN ANDERSON Cosmopolitan Club, Deputatlon Team. REID ANDERSON Phi Societp l, Phi Beta Kappa 4, Phi Mu Alp a 2, 3, 4, Vice President 4, Drum Maior I, 2, 3, 4, Band I, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra I, 2, 3, 4, Math Club I, 2, 'Engineering Society I, Z 3 D Association 3, 4, Swimrhing team 2, Student Conductor of the Band 2, 3, 4. RALPH BAKER Ka Page One Hrmdred Fifty-ciglzf ppa Sigma, President 4, Interfra nity Council, Secretary 4, Varsity Football 2, 3, 4, Freshman Footbal I, D Association , 3-4, Forum 4, Denison-Bar-Associ 4, International-Relations-Club MARY DELL BALDWIN Y. W. . . C A I, 2, W. A. Spanish Club I, 2, 3, Secretary 2, President 3. RALPH BARR Deceased March I0, I938, Swi 2, Swimming Manager 2, Denlsonran I, 2, 3, Adytum I 2 3 ALBERT BEARDSHEAR Tau Kapfaa Alpha 2, 3, 4, President 4, Pi De ta Epsilon 3, 4, F liopean 3, 4, President 4, Delta Kappa, 3, 4 Ma uers 3 . 5q Vice President 4, M. S. G. A. 3 4 M. S C A I . . . , 2, 3, 4, 2, 3, 4, Adytum I, 2, 3, Circulation Manager 3. HARRIET Delta Omicron 3, 4, Masquers 2, 3, 4' Y W C A I 2 , .... , , 3, 4, Chapel Choir I, 2, 3, 4. VIRGINIA BECK Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 3 A. A. I, 2, 3, 4, May tie 2, 3, Baseball 25 , 4 MARY BIBBY Y. W. C. A. I, 2. THOMAS BOTTOMLEY, Chemistry Society 2, Debate I, Freshman ma BETTY BOWMAN W I, 2 3, 43 Class Hellenic Council 3, May Day Comm man 3, Palette Club 4. JOHN BRAUNING appa Sigma, Vic K 4. ter- 4 D Revue ation I-2, mming ranco-CaI- Omicron Denisonian BEAM , Secretary 23 W. Day Commit- Orchesls I, 2 President 3, 4, Cross Keys 3. 3, 4, Freshman Track I, Fresh- n M. S. C. A. I. A.A.I,234gY.W.C. Otticer I, 4, Pan 2, 3, 4, Treasurer ittee 2, Co-Chair- e President, Fresh- man Debate, M. S. C. A. Chemis- try Society 2, 3, President 4, Inter- traternity Council 3. MARGARET BRIZELL W. S. G. A. 3, 4, President 4, Mortar Board 3, 4, Glee Club 2, 3, W. A. A. 2, 3, Phi Beta Kappa. CZLAYTON BROM LEY t oo ball I, Basketball I, 2, Track I, 2, 3, 4, Denisonian 3, D Association 3l, 2, Camera Club 4, Math Club P gf' 4 ROBERT Track I, 2, 3, 4, Basketball I, Club l, 3, D Association 2, , BROUGHTON Math MARY CADA Y. W. C A 25 Adytum Editor 35 Class Officer 2, . . l, 2, 3, 45 W, A, A Franco-Calliopean 3, 43 Debate I, 3 4. I, 23 Pan-Hellenic Representative. 2: Freshman Guild I: Associafe Member of Masquers 2, W. A. A. f.'::,E,,,E,Rf,jSH liJ?yli'E:T A. Jr. College lg I' 2: Y' W' C' A' I' 2' 3' ' Band 2, 3, 4, Orchestra 2, 3, 4, BETTY BRYANT Glee Club 2, 3, Varsity Quartet 2, 2RTfHgR3c:?L-:J JL' ll I JANE BRYSON Chorus 2, 31 Phi Mu Alpha Secre- O ' ' ' oo a ' . tary 3, President 4: Opera 2, 4, JACK CLEFF vVErapni:q:CalIl'ioieah.3?NAd3-un?.Stli't Manager 4: Freshman bas. St. Olaf College lg Football 2, 3, 4, Baseball 43 D Association 3, 4. WILLIAM BURRILL CORNELIA CARTTER Denisonran I, 2, 3, 4, Advertising Pi Delta Epsilon secretary 3, 4, Edi JEAN CLARKE Manager 3, Business Manager 4, Pi tor Student Directo - Delta Epsilon 3, 4, Adytum I, 2. ry 4, Who's Who In American Uni ' ' versltles 45 Adytum Middl eburg College I, 23 W. A. A. 3, 4, W. S. G. A. 4. HELEN C Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4: Freshman De- bate Team lnter-sorority Debate, Board of House Presidents, lg Prom Committee 33 Forum 4: Portfolio 4, Franco-Calliopean 3, 41 W. S. G. A. Judiciary Board 43 W. A. A. 4. EMMA COLLINS LEMENTS W. A. A. I, 23 Y. W. C. A. I, 27 Chemistry Society 3. WARDHAM COLLYER CATHERINE COONS Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4, W. A. A. I, 2, 3, 4, W. S. G. A. Council 3, Outing Board 2, 4, Crossed Keys, Mortar Board 4. Page One Hundrcd Fifty-nine efi Page One H1 d l 2 O . KN ELI CRAIG ,NAR Adyium I, 25 Fooiball manager YECQPZII ., I D Asociafion 2, 4, M. S. C. A. I 'N R EVADNE CRAGIN E e.,,,.-.Ijg Y. w. c. A. I, 2, w. A. A. 1, 2 -14 flgixyii N ' V ' We, aeciefarygf Soohomore Class, Pan M ' 7 -H I e enic ounci. ll 'l ll HARRIET CRAWFORD fx , Y. w. c. A. 1, 2, 3, w. A. A. 3, Q f'-if , I --.Uv 4' hr, Irresl:mansGuiliiJ Igeahrran Ibebge Og, '.-' I . l , Il -W, MI ' ' Q 1 nrer- orori e a e 1 X li' V In 'Why' .,I-My V III, 74 Show I, 33 Paleffe Sociefy 4. U - I y I .I I 1 JOHN canes - I I yew --'YIM 'I I -. ,I5 Foofball I, 2, 3, 4, Gee Club , , I I I , ,fy I . , , I, 3, 4, PIII Mu Alpha I, 2, 3, 4, . . I I II, Rfb, , f A ----4. ' II lm D. K. 4, D Associafion 2, 3, 4, in IM V, I YIIIW- A. Assy,-Ig 'V' - , I 'M ', gniegragerngiy Coruincil I, 2, 23 ug, . V ,I -,I II .Q P S. c.A .I ,2 45 Aasquers , 3 . .fx '2fI':'lll,vfl,. 11 ,M , I., couN crzocxm .' '. III Il 3' ' 'QI X'-A? .. ' ' 5. Denisonian Sfaff I, 2, 35 Denison Bar , Eg ,ffl ' , ' - jg ,,- I I, ,. Associalion 45 Denison Forum 4, 'I mfg, , I 1, ' ' Q 1 I ,' l I1 12 I 1? l'-V-','Eq,,. Camera Club 4, lnfernalional Rela- lhm X35 A 1 . , N, ,j.' L 'L hons Club 2. 'I' . I .H 1' 319' 'N -' . ' .. ' ' w l',,',IH RICHARD CULLEN R III, l lu! , -1-,-1-- PJ dj 1- 'I ,II , .Milli Denisonian I, 2, 3, Sporis Edifor 35 '- l -Ll' 'I 1, I Ml 'IIII ', Adyfum 25 Presiden'rI of Sophomore R N ,X 'XIII I 5 Il I IUI QQ- glass, Della EpsilonpMBagebSll 2, 4 .. . ,I . ' Q' .' , II',,IIy , 4, Associaficn, . . . A. 333-gain , JV.. ,, ,, ,MV L . ll 2- yr' ', I F I ', :Il ,I ' MEREDITH DAMSCHRODER 3 9 ' l yfl . ' ',.,'I', :Ig ' Franco-Calliopean 2, 3, 4. ' if!-4 A A DOROTHY uARRow f ,' in H1 if Il Judson College I, 23 Y. W. C. A. I . 3, 43 Paleife Club 4. I fl SARAH JO DAVIS ,, f w. A. A. I, 2, 3, 4, Ioeifa omicmn I ESA Iii Y. W. C. A, I, 2, W. S. RO3ER'I DEEIZER Denisonian I ' EDWIN COOPER RUTH COVELL Rochesler I, 25 Track 4, M. S. C. A. 4. Universify of Covell I WILLIAM CORNELL Presideni, Bela Thefa Pi 4 2 3 4 D , Blue Key , , 3 Associalio Baseball 2 3 n 2, 3, 4, , , 4, co-capfain 43 Fool- ball I, 2, 35 Inferfrafernily Council 3, 4, Vice-Presideni' 4, Adylum I, 2, 3. , 2, Adylum 31 Malh Club I, 23 Engineering Society 3, 4, Sec- reiary 3, Vice Presideni 4 , Y W C A Commiflee, M. S , .... f ' P 2, 3, 4, w. A. A. 2, 3. Y , Prom . C. A Phi hi' Befa Ka nil HEN Football I, 2, M S C Span' RY COWGILL I . . 4: 3 ngineering S ' 2, 3, 4, Swimm' ,4 ui red S'i:I:fy ., Socie- I ppa 3, 4, Inf d y Coungil 3, 4 erfraier- j , Treasurer 45 Presi- en? of Sigma Chi, O. D. K. PEWILLA DICK , Ela Sigma Phi 2, 3, 4, Y. W. C. A., ' . . . A. I 2 3 Franco-Calliopean. , ish Club I E OCIEIY I Ing 33 Maih Club l. ' I I I -I Ili ll I l l. ll l Ill I Il I.. ll 'I ,. ...x I I I I I I Y ,Mel ELI'1.ABETH DILLY Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4, W. A. A- I, 2, Pan-Hellenic Representative 4, A Capella Choir 3, 4, Chorus, 2, 3, 4. MARY DITTOE Y. W. C. A. I, 2, Freshman Guild I, Masquers. JOHN DUNNICK President Senior Class, Chairman qt Junior Prom, O. D. K. 3, 4, Dem- sonian I, Circulation Manager 2, Pi Delta Epsilon 2, Treasurer 4' Masquers 2 ' , , Business Manager, 3, M. S. C. A. 4. THORND IKE DWELLEY President Phi Delta Theta, Masquers I, 2, Engineering Society 3, 4, Den- isonian 2, 3, 4, Associate Editor 3, silon 3, 4, Omicron Delta Ka Editor 4' P' , PP5 4, , I Delta Epsilon 3, 4, Omr- cron Delta Kappa 4 Vi , ce President 4, M. S. G. A., M. S. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4, Who's Who In American Colleges and Universities 4. ELINOR ESCHMAN Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Society, Mortar Board, Crossed Keys 3, Orchesis 2, 3, Orchestra I, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4, W. 5. G. A. 2, 3, 4, Prom Committee 3, W. A A I 25 3, 4, W. C . A. I, 1, a', li., elta Ormcron. THEODORE ERLER Phi Society, Blue Key, Chemistry So- ciety 2, 3, 4, Vice President 4, Band I, 2, 3, 4, M. S. C. A., Prom C mittee, Medic I OITI' a Club. LOUIS EWING Freshman Football I, M. S. C. A., Spanish Club I, Baseball 3. BETTY FERGUS W. A. A. I, 2, 3 So ' , Franco-Calliopean clety 3, Denisonian Statt I. MARY FISCHER CARL FRAZIER Freshman Footb all, Freshman Basket- ball, Freshman Baseball, Varsity Baseball 2, 3. GORDON FROST Engineering Society I, 2, 3, 4, Fresh- man Football, Blue Key 3, 4. CHARLES GARD RAYMOND GIFFI N Band .l, 2, 3, Orchestra I, 2, Cosmo- politan Club I, 2, 3, 4, President 3, ELEANOR GOLDEN Orchestra I, Glee Club 3, 4, Deni- sonian. MIRI AM enoss Y. w. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4, w. A, I, 2, a, 4. A. SE 5 NIORS Page OHL. HH '1fl f'11' .Sm 'Ll'-mic JOAN GUTI-IRIDGE Delia Omicron, Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 43 we Presidenf of Y. W. C. A I 64. A. 2, 3, 4, Freshman Gluilfl I' ' apel Choir I 4' ee h , 2, 3, , GI Club I, 2, 3, 4, W. S. G. A. Coun- cil 4. HORACE HAMLI N Chemisiry Club 2, 3, 43 Track lg M. S. C. A. WALLACE HARD Orchesfra I, 2, 3, 4, Denison Q 'leil ' ' uar- e I, 2, 3, Phu Mu Alpha 3, 43 Treasurer 4. ZETTLE HART Pagr One Hundred Si.1:tyflwo BILL HARTMAN Spanish I, 23 Blue Key 3, 4, Vice Presidenf 45 M. S. G. A. 3, M. S C A l 2 Fre . . , g shman Baskelball, Freshman Baseball. RUTH HARTMAN University of Toledo I, 2, Y. W . C. A. 3. HAROLD HAYNES Basketball I, 2, 33 Track I, 2, Foofball I 2 3 4 D I , , , 1 Associa- 'rion Secrefa ' ry 4, Board of Con of Afhlefics 3, 4. ISABELLE HEPLER ROBERT HERRON, JR. Freshman Guild lg Adylum I' S ming 2: Engineering Clubll, 4, Math Club I, 2. PHYLLIS HERZBERG Phi Befa Kappa 3, Y. W. C. A. I, 4. ROBERT HILLIBISH R Denison Bar Associafion Pr Band I, 2, 3' Orcheslra I Varsity Debafe Team' Fo , rum lub 2, 3, 4, Vice Presidenf, M. S. C. A. MARY HOLADAY Y.W.C.A. l,Z 3 4' , , ,Cosmopoli- 'ran Club I ' , 2, W. A. Capella Choir 4. ANN HORNER Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 31 W. 3, 4. LOUIS HOVER Rio .Grande College l' Irol wim- 2, 3, esideni. .2.3i C A. 45 A A. A. 2, , Foolball Trainer 3, 43 Track Ma S. C. A. Cabinet 3, Depufafion Team 43 Iion 4. ROBERT JEFFRIES Denisonian I3 Band I Track lg Swimming ll. nager 4, M. 4, Chairman D Associa- 2g Tennis SENIORS ,-M -Q- -rf ,ff- V B-S HELEN JONES Y .W.C.A.l,2,3,4'Y.W , . C. A. Treasurer 3, Y. W. C. A. Vice Presi- denf 4' W A A , . . . l, 2, 3, 4, Sigma Delfa Pi 4, Spanish Club 3, 4, Vice Presidenl of Spanish Club 3' W S G . A. Judiciary 3, Phi sacihfyfwhi Befa Kappa, Crossed Keys, Presidenf oi Morlar Board, Freshman Guild. CLARA JORGENSEN Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4, Chemisiry Sociefy Z, 3, Spanish Club I. MARTHA JUMP W. A. A. I, Phi Society, Classical Club President, I, Eia Sigma Phi I, 2, 3, 4, Presidenl' 3, 4, Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4, Phi Bela Kappa. ROBERT KING Ohio State I, Wresfling Z, 3, 4, Foolball 3, 4. f -Q MARY KIRBY Judson College I, 2, Y. W. C. A. 3, W. A. A. 3, 4, Cosmopolitan Club 3, 4, Chemical Sociely 4. BERYL LAWRENCE Miami Universify I, 2, Y. W. C. A. 3. ANNA GERALDINE LAY ROBERT LEPPER Denisonian I3 Foofball I, Mafh Club 2. BETTY LINDSTROM Masquers 2, 3, 4, Paleife Club Vice Presideril' 4, Freshman Guild. DOROTHY LINVILLE Phi Sociefy 2, Y. W. C. A. I, 2, W. A. A. I, 2, 3, Malh Club I. VERNE LOGERQUIST Vice President Engineering Socieiy 4 MILDRED MCCOLLUM Y. W. C. A. l, 2, Franco-Calliopean 3, 4. ESTHER MARNER Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 3, 41 W. A. A. I, 2, Paleffe Club 4, Pan-Hellenic Represenlalive 2, 3, 4. FRANK MARTIN Baylor Universify I, Leland Sfeniord Universify 2, Denisonian 3, Adyium 3, 4, Herrick Geological Socieiy 3, 4. SHIRLEY MASCH Y. W. C. A. I, W. A. A. I, 2, 3, Orchesis 2, 3, 4, Efa Sigma Phi I, Pan-Hellenic Council 3, 4. Page' 0110 lalznzdrcd Si.: 'Li'-tlzrcc' P age On I 0 Ilzmdrrd r,f- 1 cj' , P. ,I gzfnr . ,A fra Q- I' A- f- CA if---e Aflg Qf,g4,l?jig.E: ggi? Q EVELYN Munrou JAMES OVERHULS gy 'E' Y-' T' ,715,NM.'1',3ff N, Kappa Alpha Thefa President 43 Y. Masquers 2, 3, 43 Associate Edifor o cb----g ,4 If ' ,fi-9 V, W. C. A. I, 2, 3, 43 Y. W. C. A. Denisonian 3, 45 Pi Delta Epsrlo jfimy ,Y l Q A Q3 Treasurer I, 43 Class Vice Presi- 33 Presidenf 4, Board of Publlca 5,57 ,fxhx ,lI,..l Ill Q34 N, dent 2, Phi Society, Phi Bela Kappa, rions .for M. S. G. A..4g Prorr Kaz, If If I as, fi 3 Qlfi '23, 5, Crossed Keys, Presrdenf, Morfar Commlflee 31 Franco-Callnopean 3 hifi? XX l 5n,?53,'9-I.' Eduard: Hgmegiming Algendank-15 45 O. D. K. 4: Portfolio, Edifor 4 'QL J N A -' 'X a- ff .E ,A .ay Day o- airmang ranco- a- lgal mv ik R Jay' -xx lropean 33 Adylum Slaff 2. KATHRYN OXLEY II me x ,ee-1497! 5. NORMAN NADH Tal' 'Sap'-if' 'Ql5l'.fufiC'ilZ2ii.fTf'5?ue' gflll lg, Xl ' fQ,N5 A-Qifkw'-'Cf 'Rx PM Mu Alpha 2-. 3- 4- 5ec!ela Y 42 Crossed'Keysg Y. W. C. A. Calfin I IM- ff, I X , '-:q?'b N'af-a-e,l ,K Phu SOCIQTY Ig Pl Della Epsilon 3, 4, 2' 3. 4: Wt A. A. It 2' 3' 4: pre, ':.9 ,fx -, 9,9 7' 47 xx 'Ex Band I, 2, 3. 4, Manager 2, Or- man Debafe Coach. 5? X ff' :-.X N, ,N chesfra I, 2, 3, 47 Brass quarfef I, U9 'LX N H- X, 2 gg., 23 Denisonian I, 2, 3, 4, Cosmopoli- if Mfg,-,IX H., 'aJN,, fan Club 4, nn show, Musical oi- RICHARD PEARSE il, il 'Ili K CHX 'R XS HM redo' 4- Frgg-Ingan Tri-:ckg Pllsi Socielyg 'Gly' I f I. ' ' . 2, 2. . 4: 's i . XX N ,.Y,lNN 52,9 NPV., . xg, DAVID OATMAN Adlyrum 2, 33 Francoligallllloapllaan Z, 521, I R ,ffiiif ff' X f ' X, IW., Foofball I, 2, 3, 43 D Associarion N15 X, f,..-.E-ff ,ff Nsb, ' xg '5 gf 3, 41 Deniscnian I, 2, 33 M. S. ANNA PIERCE YQ, In L ,A-fgl If WT? . A. 4. 'T 4' ax. GQ 'fa-1' Y. w. c. A. I, 2, 3, 4, w. A. Ajeeqh, Xmaea, I ,aff JAMES o'nouRKE, Jn. I. 2. 2. 4: Man, club I. ,,,'.5 3P'jf39l itllqilx if-H., Il Nlu I N PQ Tennis I, 2, 3, 45 Swimming I, 23 QTZJIW, +ea,Lbi4b.f,f X' C. A. 25 Chairman of Senior EUZABE1-H PIERCE Efgj ,I WI , I, se, ance' w. A. A. 1, 2, a, 4, Y. w. c. fkiffy' 06' MS C' LESLIE ORR I, 23 Paleffe Club Secrefary 4. L' I 2' N II f I 's c als. NIU n er ra em' Y mm ' ELIZABETH PLUM fjy 'J ELEANOR OSBORNE Denisonian lg Phi Bela Kappa, Phi S gi El, Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4, W. A. A. I, cielyg Glee Club 2, 3. Secrefar ,,f9f',5 2, 3, Franco-Calliopean 3, 43 Treasurer 31 Chapel Choir 2, f7'f,',5v Adylum Sfaff I, 2, 3, Phi Bela Kap- Head of Judiciary 43 Delia Om ff pa. cron 4. lf' I BENTON MELLINGER JAMES MORGAN l M. S. C. A., Spanish I, 2, 3, 4, Treas- President Phi Delfa Thefa 4, Pan-HeI- ly ' '-'ffl' 31 F 1nJ0'Callll0P95n 3- 4, Sec' lenic Council 3, 4, Blue Key 3, 45 Q, re ary 4' ylum ' 2' Treasurer 4, M. 5. C. A., Presideni l ROBERT MOOREHEAD Freshman Y. M. C. A., Track 25 I ll Spanish Club I, 3, 4, M. S. C. A. lnframurals I. 2. 3. 4: Tennis 4: I I. 3, 4. Denisonian 21 Spanish Club I. I j I I M . I , , T I ,jx ly , I '15 w JI! .S'i.1'fy -fmu' f I I RUTH PO RTER Y. W . C. A. I, 2, 3, 41 W. A. A. 3, 43 Paleile Club 4: Maih Club I: Adyfum Slaff 3: Denisonian Sfaff 2, 3. FRANCES PORTMANN Cross Keys 3, 41 Member of Judi- ciary 3, W. S. G. A. 2, 3, 43 Mas- quers 3, 4, Freshman Class Vice Presidenrg Debaie I, 2, Y. W. C. A. I, 4. JEANETTE POST Efa Sigma Phi I, 25 W. A. A. I, Z1 Cross Keys 3, Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 3, 43 W. S. L-1. A. Treasurer 3, Presidenf Y. W. C. A. 4: Morlar Board 4. NORTON POTTER Denisoniang M. S. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT RADEBAUGH M. S. C. A. I 2 3 . . . 4- JACK RADER President, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Fool- ball I, 2, Swimming I, 2, Coach 2' M. S. G. A. 3, 4, President 4' Association 3 4' G O D Y lIDu'1 , , lee Club l, 2, 3, . .K.3,4,M.S.C.A.I,Z,3, 4, Presidenf Junior Class. MARY REITER W. A. A. I, 2, W. A. A. Treasurer 3, Vice Presiden? 4, Y. W. C. A. I, Z, Orchesis 2, 3, Mafh Club Ig Crossed Keys. KATHERINE RHODES Sfephens College I, 2. JANE ROBERTS Monficello College I, 2, Y. W. C. A. 4. ROBERT ROBESON M. S. C. A. lp Denisonian I, 23 Foofball I, Z, 3, Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4. JULIUS ROMEI M. S. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4. JAMES ROOT Football lg Track Ig Golf Inferfrafernify C ' social' 2, 3, 4, ouncil 3, D As- lon 3, 4, Adyfum 4. JANE SANDERSON Union Counfy Junior College Ig Y. W. C. A. 2, 3, 43 W. A. A. 2, 33 Or- chesis 2, 3, 4. JAMES SCOTT Glen Club 2, 3, 43 Cheer Leader 2, 3, 1, JD Associarion 4, Engineering WILLIAM SHEETS Universiiyu of Michigan I, Z, Wresrling Champion 33 Geology Society 2, 3, s V ,' F, lr I I E l NI il s Pngv Om' Hzznflrcd .Q1'.l'l'j' -fire SUSIE SHELTON Math Club I, 2, 3, 43 Math Club Sec- retary 33 Math Club Vice President 43 Y. W. C. A. I3 Phi Society3 W. A. A. I, 2, 33 Phi Beta Kappa. BOOTH SHEPARD Adytum I' , Denisonian3 Football I5 Debate I3 M. S. C. A. I, 23 Unl- versity College Exedor, England 3. JANET SHEPARD Glee Cl ub I, 2, 33 Orchesis 2, 33 Delta Omicron 3, 43 W. A. A. I, 2, 3, 43 W. A. A. President 43 Y. W. C. A. I3 Freshman Camp Chairman 43 Den- isonian Staff 3. ELIZABETH SHOEMAKER Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 3, 43 Phi Society3 Pan-Hellenic Council 3, 43 Pan-Hele lenic President 43 Freshman Guild3 Masquess 2, 3, 4, Secretary 43 Mor- tar Board: Franco-Calliopean 33 Inter-sorority Debate I3 Glee Club 3. JOHN SHRONTZ Ohio State University I, 2. WARREN SIVERTSEN Band I, 2, Business Manager 3 43 De isonian I, 2, 33 Deb Cgrchestra I ' n. ate I, 2. 33 ,2, M. S. C. A. I, 2, 33 ablnet 43 Glee Club 43 Math Club I, 2, 3, 43 Engineering Society 3, 4. JESSE SKRILETZ F shma re n Guild Masquers 2, 3, 43 Vice President 33 Technical Director 43 Freshman Debate3 Varsity Debate 2, 3, 43 T. K. A. 2, 3, 43 Freshman Hop Chairman: President of Lamb- da Chi Alpha 2, 33 Inter-fraternity Council 3, 43 Treasurer of Junior CIass3 Blue Key 3, 4, President 4' D. K. 3, 4, Treasurer 4' in America ' e , O. , Who's Who n Universities and Col- ge 4. MARY SLACK Kanawha College I3 Y. W. C. A. 2. JANE SLOAN W. A. A. I W ,2,3,4'W .C.AI , . A. A. 23 Y. . , 2, 3, 43 Palette Club 4. BETTY SMELTZ Freshman Guild3 W. A. A. I, 2, 33 Social Chairman of Delta Ornicron 4. ESTHER SMITH Y. W. C. A. I Vi , 2, 33 Classical Club ce President I3 Eta Siam 2, 33 Eta Sigma Ph' 43 Phi Soc' , a Phi I Vice President 1ety3 Phi Beta Kappa 3, 4. HAROLD SMITH M. S. C. A . I, 2, 3, 4. MARTHA SMITH Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 33 W. A. A. I, 2, 33 Cosmopolitan Club 3, 43 Cosmo- politan Club Secretary 4' C U. 3, 4, Vice Pres' C'ub 3 4 , . Y. P. ldent 43 Spanish , 3 Masquers 3, 43 Adyturn Staft 3. PHILIP SMITH M. S. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4, Vice President 43 Cosmopolitan Club I, 2, 3. WILLIAM SMI Phi ' TH SOCIETY: Masquers 2, 3, President 43 Franco-Calliopean 2, 3, 4, Presi- dent 33 Palette Society, Pres 'T' willllligg, :dent 4' fig ,fn li' Rf'-F. ff, All .- f I 'lit ,fl liN-Axh' X ll Ifli , .fr I ,sell ,fl fl -,rf I 'tfglfff ff lr I lf: S lwfy l I I I f I I Page One IJ1l1Ifi'7'ClT' Slllify-.S'I.l' I. ., Ill Ill ,I ,......:4 is 'I 'I rl . N 2, ffifu ' .2 f-glesl. l ef I ,,w,,x- :suv ...- get J? ref 2 CATHERINE SPARKS Eta sigma Phi I, Y. w c 3, 4, w. A. A. I Club 2 . . A. I, 2, , 2, Cosmopolitan , 3, 4, Secretary 3, Vice Presi- dent 4, Denisonian I, C. Y. P. U. 2, 3, 4, Pan-Hellenic Council 3, 4, Cross Keys. MARY SPRING Y. W. C. A. I, 3, W. A. A. 3, W. S. G. A. 2, 3, 4, Cross Keys, Glee Club ' I, 2, 3, 4, Cosmopolitan I, 2. JOHN STEW Phi ART Mu Alpha 2, 3, 4, Band I, 2' stra 2, 4, Phi Societ ' . . A., Treasurer 4' ' an 3, 4, Port- ' folio , ssociate Editor 4' Prize 3, Track 3' Show 4. , Or- che y, M. S C , Denlsoni 4' A , Stout , Co-author D NICHOLAS TITUS A. C. C. President 4, M. S. C. A I 2, 3, 4, President 4, O. Masquers 3 4' Club 3' D. K. af 42 , , T. K. A. 4, Glee , Band I, 2, 3, 4, Cosmopoli- tan Club I 2, 3, 4, Franco-Ca pean 3, 4, lireshman Football I, bate I, 2, 3, 4, Inter-fraternity C cil 3, 4, Student Pastor 3 ' Society I, Who's W ' College ou A , 4, Phi ho In A ' s and Un' menca iversities. ELLEN THOMAS WILLIA M TRACY Rio Grande Junior College I, 2' M S. C. A. 3, 4, Deputatio C. Y. P. U 3 n Team 3, 4, . , 4, Eta Sigma Phi 3, 4. JOHN TURNBULL President, Beta Kappa, Phi Society I, Blue Keys 3, 4, Vice President 4, M. S. G. A. 3, 4, Secretary, Phi Beta Kappa 4. DAVID TURNER President Beta Kappa 4, Phi Beta Kappa 4, Phi Society I, Blue Key 3, 4, Inter-fraternity Council 3, 4, Wrestling I, 2, 3, 4 Track I, 2, 3, M. S. G. A. 3, 4. llio ROBERT VAN WAGONER Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4, Denisonian Staff I, 2, Adytum Staff I, 2, 3, Business Manager 3, Freshman Guild I, Mas- quers I, 2, 3, 4, Pi Delta Epsilon 3, 4, Blue Key 3, M. S. G. A. 3, O. D. K. 3, 4, President 4, Who's Who in American Colleges and Uni- versities, President Ohio Int iate Convention f ercolleq- o Public Affairs 3. CHARLES V Fc INCENT otball I, 2, 3, 4, Co-Captain 4, Track I, 2, 4, D Association 2, 3, President 4, O. D. K. 4, M. S. G. A., Vice President 4, Swimming Z, Who's Who in American Colleges a versities. nd Uni- E A GENE V U ODEV . C. C., Cosmo M. S. C reasur politan Club 3, 4, . A. 3, 4, Forum Club 3, 4, er 4. VALERIA WELLS Phi Beta Kappa 4, W. S. G. A. 3, Y. W. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4. WILLIAM WILSON Chemistry Club 3, 4, Baseball 3, 4. WILLIAM WHITEHEAD M. S. C. A. I, 2, 3, 4, Engineering and Physics Society I, 2, 3, 4, Presi- dent 4, Math Club I, 2, 3, 4. FRANKLIN WOOD Phi Bet a Kappa 3, 4, O. D. K. 3, 4, Phi Mu Alpha 2, 3, 4, Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4, Student Leader 4, M. S. C. A., Treasurer 4, lnterfraternit Council 4, Band I, 2 3 tra I, 2, 3 4 , , 4, Orchesl: , , Quartet 4. JEANNE WOODS Lassell College I, Y. W. C. A. 2, 3, Spanish Club 2, 3, President 4. MARY WOOD Phi Society' ish , Delta Omicron 4, Span- Club I, 2, 3, 4, Spanish Club President 4, Adytum Staff 3, Orches- is l, 2, 3, 4, Y. W. C. A. 2, Organ Recital 4, Classical Club I. l'ugc Our' H und: BARBARA WALTHOUR Y.W.C.A.l,2,W A Math Club I' 4 . . A. I, 2, 3, , Member of Judiciary NANCY WARNER W. A. A . I, 2, 3, 4, Y. W. C. A. I, 2, W. S. G. A. Council 2. HAMILTON WEBSTER Men's Glee Club, I, 2, 3, 4, Manager 4, Denisonian I, 4, Math Club I, 2, Franco-Calliopean Society 2 3 Varsity Trainer I 2 Manager 2 . . 41 , , Cross Country , D Association 2, 3 4 LEONARD WELLES President Phi G Beta K arnma Delta 4, Phi appa 4, O. D. K. 3, 4, Tau Kappa Alpha 3, 4, Phi Society, Pres- ident of Interfraternity Council 4, Member 3, M. S. G. A. 4, Math Club I, 2, 3, 4, President 4, Debate I, 2, 3, 4, Track I, 2, Who's Who in American Colleges and Univer- sities. 4: 'ed Si.1'1y-seven Q'- The purpose oT The Women's STudenT Govern- menT associaTion, To which all women belong. is To conducT The selT-governmenT oT Denison women. BuT in addiTion To iTs governing duTies, The associa- Tion wiTh iTs council has been responsible Tor many ouTsTanding acTiviTies on The campus. LasT March, Lois Baird. The ouTgoing presidenT, and Peg Brizell, The new presidenT, aTTended The naTional convenTion in Los Angeles, CaliTornia and broughT back many new ideas which have been carried ouT eTTecTively. The May day celeb-raTion, in honor oT The seniors and The moThers. The Big SisTer organizaTion, The Tradifional scrap day, a Treshman camp, sponsored in cooperaTion wiTh Y. W. C. A., have been some of The inTeresTs oT W, S. G. A. This year. One oT The season's social highlighTs is The Gen- eral Jam, held in STone l-lall and followed by a dance in The Wigwam. The inTer-sororiTy Treshman debaTes are always anTicipaTed wiTh enThusiasm on The campus. This year The Tri DelT pledges were vicTorious. Women's STudenT GovernmenT' also had charge of dormiTory dances and Teas. This year The council has meT in The new W. S. G. A. room in Marsh Hall. Special proiecTs have been carried on: Programs Tor chapel, reclassifica- Tion oT all duTies oT oTTicers and survey OT women sTudenTs' acTiviTies. Page One Hmzdzrd Si.riy-f1'yl1f Brizell Eschman Dagger Ralph Barfholomew Clarke Davey Galloway, R Gufhridge Palmer Plumb Way Wells Yoder ClemenTs Osmond Spring WalThour Winchesfer MEN' STUDENT GOVERNMENT The Men's STudenT GovernmenT AssociaTion senT Jack Rader and Tom Orme To Albuquerque, New Mexico, as represenTaTives oT Denison aT The N. S. F. A. convenTion, There They received many valu- able suggesTions, several OT which The presidenT, Jack Rader, has been inauguraTing upon his reTurn. They Tound ThaT The naTional body OT sTudenT gov- ernmenTs is in Tavor OT a period OT house-cleaning in American college educaTion and are demanding Their righTs To express Their views upon The changes required. IT is ThaT group's Task To discover ways in which They may be expressed, boTh inTelligenTly and represenTaTively. ForemosT among The changes broughT abouT un- der The pasT adminisTraTion was The aboliTion oT Three chapel periods a monTh. This was shorTly Tollowed by a like move oT The women's group. A beginning was made inTo The problem OT over- organizaTion. AcTion was begun by This group in The inTeresT of a STudenT Union building on campus. The marked improve-menT in chapel speakers was due in a greaT parT To This group. M. S. G. A. cooperaTed wiTh The women in The arrangemenTs for May day, and similarly aided various oTher organizaTions on The campus. The True purpose of such an organizaTion was accom- plished as The sTudenT body was drawn more closely To The TaculTy group. Close harmony wiTh The Dean's oTTice and Mr. Richards also aided consid- erably in sTudenT-TaculTy rapporT. 4 I Rader Vincenf Turnbull Woocl Beardshear CriTes Dunnick Dwelley Haynes LenTz Orme Overhuls SmiTh Van Wagoner Welles Page Our Hmzdrrd 5'i.1'fy-:zinc OMICRCN DELTA KAPPA Page One Himdwd Seventy Van Wagoner Dwelley DeTweiler Skrileh Beardshear CriTes DeeTer Dunniclt Overhuls Rader TiTus Vincenf Welles Wood Eschman Mahood Omicron DelTa Kappa is The men's naTional honorary TraTerniTy Tor leadership. Membership is awarded aTTer a cerTain number oT poinTs have been earned Through Three or Tour years of college. PoinTs are given in every Tield OT college endeavor including aThleTics, iournalism, scholarship, debaTe. music, dramaTics, and sTudenT governmenT. ThroughouT The year meeTings are held, bringing TogeTher leaders in all Tields, Tor discussion oT uni- versiTy problems. This Tall six sTudenTs and one TaculTy member were elecTed. The TaculTy member was Mr. Karl l-l. Eschman, head OT The conservaTory OT music, and an ouTsTanding leader and worker in his Tield boTh on our campus and ThroughouT The counTry. The six sTudenTs. all seniors, were: John CriTes. RoberT DeeTer, John Dunnick, James Overhuls, Charles VincenT, and Franklin Wood. This pasT year ODK gave a picnic Tor The new sTudenTs aT The beginning of The year, encouraged and promoTed The revival of old Denison songs. and in coniuncTion wiTh lviorTar Board sponsored a dance Tor The alumni aT Homecoming. FurThering iTs drive Tor a sTudenT union building To be cre- aTed Trom Cleveland l-lall upon The compleTion oT a new gymnasium in The Denison DesTiny Program, ODK sponsored a lecTure To raise Tunds. ln so doing Omicron DelTa Kappa broughT To The campus Commander Donald B. Maclvlillan, Tarned ArcTic explorer, who gave a mosT educaTing, illusTraTed lecTure on his advenTures. Several members aT- Tended The Province ConvenTion aT Miami univer- siTy which was presided over by our own Danner L. Mahood. Province DepuTy. Here ideas were ex- changed which have broughT To The aTTenTion OT This circle The need Tor reTorm in iTs poinT sysTem wiTh The consequenT inculcaTion oT secrecy in The sysTem. The Tollowing oTTicers have led The group Through The year: President RoberT Van Wagoner: vice- president 6. Thorndike Dwelleyg secreTary, Dr. F. G. DeTweiler, and Treasurer. Jesse SkrileTz. Dr. L. G. Crocker was The TaculTy advisor. GRTAR BCA To senior women oulslanding in scholarship, leads ership, and service goes The highesi award possible lo a coed al Denison, Morlar Board. This chapier has been a member of rhe Nalional Moriar Board since ihe spring of I936 when The old Cap and Gown ioined wirh The nalional organizalion. This is a nalional order of some 65 chaplers in The leading colleges and universilies rhroughoul The counlry. Among The acriviries sponsored by Morlar Board This year was The Homecoming Dance in which en- 'rerprise Omicron Della Kappa was half responsible. The Falher-Daughier banquel' in Jrhe fall was han- dled by lhis group. Morlar Board also helped in sponsoring beirer chapel programs ihroughoul' 'The year. The brillianr iuniors and sophomores were re- warded for lheir scholasric marks by a banquei in Colwell house. Wi+h The profiis accruing from 'rheir several endeavors, ivlorrar Board will send io The naiional conveniion 'rhis summer one delegale from lhe class of '39. This senior honorary has been guided by Helen Jones and assisfed by Mrs. Shaw. Mrs. Horace King, Virginia English, and Dean Olney. RD Jones Posl' Shoemaker Brizeli Coons Murfon Eschman Page One Hundrcfl Seventy-one KA PHI BETA The following lisl represenis The membership oi Jrhe Thefa Chapfer oi Phi Bela Kappa. as regards Those, only, who are in ai- 'rendance af or employed by The Universiiy. F. Dewey Amner Millard Brelsford Willis A. Chamberlain L. Richard Dean Frederick G. Defweiler Karl H. Eschman W. Alfred Everhari Donald R. Fifch Burl' T. Hodges Richard H. Howe Alfred J. Johnson Marie E. Lein Thomas A. Lewis Joseph L. King Freeman D. Miller The following Mrs. F. Dewey Amner Mrs. Karl H. Eschman Mrs. Sam Gelfer Mrs. George D. Morgan Reid Anderson Margarei' Brizell Roberi' Deefer' Elinor Eschman Phyllis Herzberg Helen Jones Marfha Jump William Lewis' Evelyn Murfon Eleanor Osborn Harry Clemenf Ida Jeanne Dagger FACULTY MEMBERS Augusi Odebrechf Helen Olney Anna B. Peckham Charlo'He Rice Alberf A. Rcden Avery A. Shaw Eri J. Shumaker Alma B. Skinner Malcolm E. Sfickney Frank J. Wrighf Elizabeih Thomas A. Elwood Wells Erie Loughridge Priscilla Fowle Siark PPA Faculiy Wives are members, or afiiliaied members: STUDENT MEMBERS CLASS OF i938 CLASS OF I'-739 OFFICERS FOR l937-38 Mrs. Thomas Rogers Mrs. Henry J Skipp Mrs. Horace King Gail Oxley Elizabefh Plum Susie Lee Shelfon Esfher G. Smiih' John Turnbull David Turner Leonard Welles Valeria Wells Franklin Wood Donald Everhari' Esfher Price Presiden+ ........ ....,.............. ,..., ..... F r a nk J. Wrighf Vice-Presidenf ...,. ........ H eien Olney Secrefary-Treasurer ..... .... W . Alfred Everhari' ' Elecfed in I 937 Page One Hzmdrvd Seventy-two FINI And now fhe s1'ory ends. The young, callow youfh of high school days has fraveled his collegiaie road and hoed his scholasiic row. Per- haps he derived his mos? good from boolcs and classesg maybe he re- ceived more benefiis from his social confaclsg or perchance he simply learned how +o reason and fhinlc clearly. No maHer which, he could noi' receive his diploma wi'I'hou+ accomplishing one of ihese feais. So we close our book of nineieen-fhirfy-eighf wiih ihe senior as he leaves his Alma Maier prepared fo meer whai' is ahead waifing for him. 'A 1 'f -nf -., i v Page One Humlrvd Sc1,'cnfy'-tlzrfe 0 Om: Himdrcd .S'c'zfen FINANCIAL STATEMENT During Ihe enI'ire year, Ihe ecIi'ror and business manager have been boI'herecI Io a palheric exI'reme by I'he unnecessary remarks from Ihe siudenl body concerning 'rhe 'Financial s'raIus of Ihe Aclylum. II' is wi'Ih pleasure Ihal we publish Ihe following accura'I'e sI'aI'emen'I covering 'I'he Iolal expendifures 'For Ihis pubIica+ion: GRAFT .,...................... Business I'rips: New York - Iwice .... Chicago - four Iimes ..... Newark - several Iimes ..,. TwoBuicks ......... IncicIenI'aIs ...........,.... S'I'aFf banqueI's and parI'ies .,.,. Liquid refreshmenis ......A. Pencils, pens, ink, e'Ic. .s..... . Clofhing - Don Smi'I'h, EcIiI'or ...... - Wally Smilh, Bus. Mgr. . . . Engraving .,...................., Priniing .,.. Pho+ography .... Covers Igifll Salaries Idonaied 'ro sinking 'funcll .... ToI'aI Expense . , Balance ........., VRRTQEE SMITH ly-four 587,000.00 387.00 2I4.29 3.50 2,500.00 4,000.00 760.00 4I 5.00 I50,00 4.99 350.20 I4.23 2 I . I 9 2.2I 20.00 S 3,500.00 S 0.I9 THANK YOU SiTTing here in The cenTer of a composing room: wiTh 87,000 workers yelling and running abouTg wiTh The IinoTypes clicking oTf copy: wiTh The sporadic hum oT a buzz saw: wiTh The sTeady roar oT The greaT presses in The adioining rooms, I Think in reTrospecT. As The book is being compIeTed, I look back over The hisTory OT The book and Thank hearTiIy Those who have made possible iTs producTion. ForemosT among recipienTs oT our Thank You's musT be Neil CarTTer and Bob Van Wagoner oT The '37 sTaTf Tor They IeTT us a Tine model To shooT Tor. Wifh Them I musT include Mr. Whidden because his Time and advice helped us no end. Indeed, he musT have become ra+her Tired oT seeing us around his oTFice so much. To Jahn and Ollier, engravers, we musT exTend our sincere appreciaTion Tor Their Tine quaIiTy pIaTes, service, and arT work. To I-Iarold Mann and Mr. IvIcCorquodaIe we owe much Tor Their originaIiTy and Tine sense of IayouT. To Mr. Edwin W. I-Iill, vice presidenT, Mr. AI Gage, and Mr. McGuire, we send along our Thanks Tor especial service. ConTracTing wiTh The Molloy Cover Co., we were TorTunaTe in associaTing wiTh Mr. W. C. Sims oT SpringTieId. Our associaTion wiTh The Baker ArT Gallery has been one oT The mosT advan- Tageous connecTions. Their phoTography, oT ouTsTanding quaIiTy, will compare well wiTh any in The counTry. CooperaTion seems To be The apoThegm OT The I-Ieer PrinTing Co as Mr. M. C. Scheible and Mr. Joe OTTO have been responsible Tor geTTing The book ouT on pubIicaTion daTe. To Jim RooT's TaTher, Mr. Harry RooT, we are indebTed Tor The phoTography oT The color inserT in The TronT. We Thank Dave ivIiTcheII Tor his colIegiaTe caricaTures Tor his drawings have aided immeasurably in The page layouTs. I Take This chance To Thank Peggy Tor The evenings she spenT alone while I worked on This book. Yes, I did work, Peg. We Thank The sTaTT again Tor iTs whole-hearTed cooperalrion, and realize ThaT, were iT noT Tor Them, we would never have seen The book come OTT The press. Page One Hundred Sezcnh five ADYTUM PATRCDNS The 1938 Adylum deeply appreciaies The cooperaiion of The following palrons for +he addirional beaury and charm made possible by 'iheir generous conlrribulrions. Mr. James D. Adair Mr. a nd Mrs. G. C. Ammon Mr. and Mrs. Waller Anderson Mr. Alfred R. Bales Mrs. Ernesi W. Beck Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Benneii Mr. a nd Mrs. Edwin S. Bonnerlr Mrs. Irene B. Scamahorn Mr. a Mrs. nd Mrs. William G. Braun L. L. Burnham Mr. W. C. McCar+ney Mr. a nd Mrs. Allan M. Carlier Mr. Ralph P. Champney Dr. and Mrs. Corwin S. Clarke Mr. and Mrs. V. I-I. Criies Mrs. Alva L. Deal Mr. and Mrs. W. I-I. Ellor Mr. I-larry Epslein Dr. and Mrs. William J. Fishell Mr. Frank Gales Mr. and Mrs. George J. Budelman Mr. a nd Mrs. C. R. Gibson Dr. V. I-I. Gregg Mr. a nd Mrs. C. R. Grimm Mr. and Mrs. Chares R. I-Iall Mr. Earl I-Iammerle Mr. and Mrs. O. J. I-Iillibish Mr. and Mrs. Glen M. Irish Mr. and Mrs. I-I. S. Irwin Mr. and Mrs. Forresi Jeffries Mrs. Roberl I-I. Jeffrey Mr. Charles G. Kulhanek Mr. I-larley Klepier Mr. and Mrs. W. I-I. Logan Mr. and Mrs. R. I-l. McCarroII Mr. and Mrs. E. I-I. McNeill Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Menendian Mr. O. Menk Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Lesier F. Miichell and Mrs. Lawrence N. Moore and Mrs. Joseph C. Nelms and Mrs. Ernesi I-I. Nichols and Mrs. E. T. Oaiman Mrs. J. M. Overhuls Mr. and Mrs. William Pickrel Mrs. Allan F. Pifher Mr. and Mrs. E. I-I. Prirchard Mrs. G. S. Ralph Mr. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Randolph Vicior F. Rea Mrs. Alberl F. Rehn Mr. Mr. F. Sergardi Paul P. Sherwood Mrs. Lowie B. Sibley Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Francis E. Skipp Carl D. Smiih Mrs. Auguslr G. Sperl Mr. John W. Sladdon Mr. E. J. Sleinberg Dr. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Slrailh ancl Mrs. L. T. Slephens Mr. and Mrs. William D. Slrarron Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr Ralph W. Sanborn and Mrs. Frank L. Venning and Mrs. W. D. Vorhis and Mrs. I-I. I-I. Yoder and Mrs. B. I-I. Walrkins James W. Wolfe Mr. S. R. Van I-Iorne Page One Ilrlllldlfli .S'f'7,fr11fy-.ri.r ADYTUM ADVERTISERS Ankele Floral Anller Grill L. C. Balfour The Bazaar Carlile Furnilure John Carroll Deparlmenl Caseys The Drag Wm. M. Fisher Fuller Grocery Furnas Ice Cream Edmislon's Book Slore Roe Emerson i Granvilla Granville co-op A Granville Feed and Supply Granville lnn Granville Pharmacy Granville Times Grill Moderne William Gehron Haynes Brolhers George Hermann G. B. Hunler Hall's Drug Slore Slore The Hul Horner Hardware King's Deparlmenl Slore Krogers Newark Telephone Newark Fashion Nobil's Shoe Slore Ohio Fuel Ohio Power Piper's Meal Markel People's Slale Bank Perry Grocery Qualily Meal Red and While Railroad Express Sears Roebuck Swingles Music George Sluarl Jewelry Sharon View Farm Taylor's Drug Slore Thomas Flower Universily Slore Valel Shop Warden Holel Waller English Granville Molor Slages, lnc. Inge One Hundred Scumztx sez ru I TILLTI I The Proposed New I BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES BUILDING DENISON UNIVERSITY GRANVILLE, OHIO WILLIAM GEHRON ARCHITECT ConsuI'ring ArcI1II'ecI for Denison UniversiI'y IOI Park Avenue New York One 1'I1lIllI7'f'd Sf't'enlv-r fl! In recognition of the fine support and loyal patronage of the students and faculty The Grill Moderne H B co-ED AUTO DRIVERS The fellows in school have agreed that a feminine arm protruding from the car ahead means the driver is- 1 Knocking ashes of? a cigarette. Newark's Olclesi' Jewelers and Opfometrisis known for RELIABILITY Since 1894 I I I -J . Going to turn left. Going to turn right. . Going to back up. . Going to stop. Feeling for rain. . Saluting a passing motori . Pointing out a scenic spot. 3. 4 5 G T St. S 7, H The old and The new Page One Hundred Sczfeaz-fy-rziizc World's Greatest Bargain ARGAINS, ceriainly-The adverrising columns of your daily news- papers are full of rhem. Silk srockings al' 59c-Men's suiis ai' 522.50 -BeHer auiomobiles 'For S500 fhan iweniy fimes ihai' sum could have boughi' in I9l6. Bur 'rhe grearesr bargain of all is none of 'rhis. l'r is The sighl'-saving, lime-saving, labor-saving commodify we call eleclriciiy. Despiie con- s+an+ly increasing cosrs and +he imporiance of higher and higher raxes our raies have sreadily declined. The ligh+ bill of The average home on our lines is no longer +ha+. H' is an eleciric service bill for Iigh+, for washing and ironing, 'For radio enierrainmeni, for house cleaning. In hundreds of homes ii' also includes auiomafic cooking and auiomafic hor waier. Today 'I'he average cusiomer pays 4870 less per unii' lfhe lcilowaff- hourl 'rhan he paid ren years ago. Ten years ago his bill was mainly 'For lighr-foclay he receives all ihese addifional services and ye'l his ioial bill has no'r increased appreciably. Truly, Elecfriciry is 'rhe World's Greafesf Bargain. T.. -Fw GHIO POW-ER CL rz Ill srl lfiglzly NEWARK'S HOME OWNED DEPARTMENT STORE ' X ,-L ,fi l - NX' Q4- .il-4t ' --.1 ' l, S, ,A ff, ,., y' -- , .-.H l .J , L 'N H , .q'1'f'f 1 -- ----.. ...,., ' T '. - TTTTT will 'A ' 'H 1'1A11 --1f-1-T f -1-T,.! , M, .., , X ' 'i'T+li'11!i'l 'ml X f,..,.,.. ,. iif llll ll it ii ' L ' i rv fl ' or fre- f-irrofereawe n Elma W il all L l' ' E li li lll uj , -- fffi, l ' Iliff! V 1 , lMM WMfEimwf? M y,,f,,,l il l ll ll 1 f , 5, N Q. ,,fIQ,,l ,,,,, M IV, Hefjyglt , l li li E lille f2gll.i vh :llf nu T-VM' l mild T will ll ' , als. - Q: all --- -fuwlwdm ill',llll,, f.ll'l W 1 ,li ' Yillge. .J '. ' l if li v wijfiiii' , Qi lim ii if Hllill illfilii' 'HW-l',lll ,ll Hu I I . 7 , ll L ' - lg ulllllllll ll - X f , 2,6 -f- -' 4 ms mm oumw. mc.l.o, f ---, ' , -3 - - Y THE QOHN J. CARROLL STORE EXAMS ANTLER GRILL Vlfhy worry over exams? You have two alternatives- your teacher is either easy or hard. If he is easy, you H H have nothing to worry about. If he is hard, you have two A Good Place To Eel' alternatives-either you study hard or you bluff. If you study hard, you don't have to worry. If you bluff, you ' have two alternatives-either your bluff works, or it cloesn't. If it works, you have nothing to wory about. If it doesn't you have two alternatives-either you are STEAKS 1 Q CHOPS 1 1 LUNCH conditioned, or you Hunk. If you are conditioned, you l1CCCl117l1 worry. If you Hunk, you won't have to worry any longer. Why worry? NEWARK OHIO G. B. HUNTER ROYAL TYPEWRITERS Service All Makes ' 29 Wesl' Main Sfreei' . NEWARK OHIO f Tri Deli' W.P.A. proiecl' Page Om: Hundred Eighfy-one T rem' Yourself - - - - - - To the Best If It's F urnas - -It Must Be Good. Buy FURNAS ICE CREAM NEWARK, OHIO WALTER ENGLISH COLUMBUS, OHIO O Fine Foods For FraI'erniI'Ies I BILL WOODRUFF Salesman EMERSON fi- 2. i f ' , , C , Appearance is a complimenf or a defrimenf O See I'I1e newesf in CLOTHING HATS FURNISHINGS SHOES aI The ROE EMERSON Siore S. J. BAGGS, Mgr. II S. WEST SIDE SQUARE NEWARK Six symbols of scI1oIas'I'ic sincerify Page One Hundrcd Eighiy-lh -- .lf Tappan Divided-Top Gas Range, Ufopia Model USE GAS FOR CLEAN, ECONOMICAL, CAREFREE COOK ING WITH MOST ACCURATE RESULTS l+'s a real joy To cook on a modern gas range. So much of Jrhe work is done for you and appefizing resulfs are more cerrain 'rhan ever before. Presenf day melrhods enable you 'ro cook in a cool, clean lcirchen, enhanced by The beaufy of a new gas range. Among rhe more affracrive gas range values offered 'roday are The Tappan divided-Top ranges, awairing your inspecrion af Pagr Our llzzudrvd Eiglzly-four THB 2 2.22212..2222.2.2-Z-QLQQQ4:25Q.Ei,QE1E:E.3i:l:5Ei:52ii:EfQ-lilSf-f 'ZRZSEEQEEQQQQE2532:2::EEEQQEZSQZZZZQZFZEZQEEQ3222EQQQSQQQEQEQEQEQEQZQ:EQZQQQZQEQZQEQEQEQQQQQi - ..,.,:QEQEQEQEQEQEQEQEQEQEEE533E5E5EE5EgE3E5E5E2E5E35555E5235:E:5:E:E:E:5:5335151522151E1E2EIE2E2EE13E1Ef 5 E f 25552iti15232sSfIf921?1Ei?1i1?fE:f1f55552529515553511ffsif211513555iz525555isQ5525555255522555222512255552252532fsiageisifiieisisizii 3 2 2 ff sfifi 2 2252252 22 E 2252525 55235551 2E22252i25fE2i252i2zfE2i22?3 5 :3E53E:E:E:E:2:QEQE5E:5:3f5Ef:552z3:fgQ55:f:i:2:2555:5:3211533.21517'I:2i:2zE:2:2:f:5:5:fzf:g2E1:':-.251.g:g,1:E1-':1:?:1gg:fr::f:1:':P55:x-: '-:-:g:-1g:-:9:-:-za:-:-1-:-:sz-: V: ............. ......... ..,..,,.,v.............................,,,.....- ., ..,.. ..... NEWARK OHIO Compliments of THE William M. Fisher 81 Sons Co. COLUMBUS, OHIO The difference between most men is little enough-but that little makes the difference.-BETTY FERGUS. An optimist is a person who thinks he knows where he can borrow money. A pessimist is a person who has tried.-CHUCK VINCENT. It's all right to pat a man's back to his face, but all wrong to laugh in his face behind his back.-BILL HARTMAN. An automobile is always as drunk as the driver.-BOB RO-BESON. The best committee for work is a committee of three, with one of them sick and the other one resigned.- JOIHN DUNNICK. High-powered tourist, to a guest rider, approaching Granville, That's an attractive village we're coming to, wasu't it? lt's no sign that a mianis polished just because he casts reflections.-BARB NICHOLS. Conceit is the best armor man can wear.-AL HAGE. It adds nothing to your own credit to say that all men are liars.-BO-B DEETER. Of the live most beautiful words in the English language- Enclosed find check are three of them.- BILLIE CRAGIN. The sciuroid rodent, of the Marmota family, known to the erudite as the Arctomis Monax, emerging from his condition of seasonal tortipidity, and, preceiving his adum- brative prejection, resumes his wintry seclusion, thereby prognosticating an additional sextuple hibernarcular period.-BILL WEST. How this nation has progressed-George Washingtoxi could not -tell a lie, but a lot of people can nowadays.- KEN SPERL. I call my girl Impromptu because she makes up as she goes along.-JOHN CRITES. .The rumble seat must be a recent invention, else how did the duck learn to walk the way he does.-VVINNIE SACKETT. Symphony in D Miner DRUGS Student Rendezvous since I 898 0 Magazines 0 Gilbert Box Candy O Tellings lce Cream GRANVILLE PHARMACY Page Om' Hzuzdr:-:I Eighty-fi c' THE VALET SHOP CLEANING AND PRESSING All Work Done Promplly DON JOHNSON. Mgr. Granville, Ohio Phone 85472 Scienlific Denison Complimenls of -Wh THE GRANVILLE FEED AND SUPPLY P Je 0110 Hundred Eiglzty-sin' Thai heavy-honey dew ol slumber l ' EDMISTONS Book Store Books Slafionery Wall Paper NEWARK PERRY'S GROCERIES The STORE OF QUALITY and REASONABLE PRICES CARL WELSH, Prop. Granville. Ohio Phone 8230 , ese happy scenes among lv if Jw, , 1. ,si r I Q 'ai QL- v I - . 'I I f 5l4l ?A I' A. '5f,., r 1512- M' iw, l'I trees and sfones h fi , 452111 niIfPI'jgrpI'J-I pud w .ii .I Q 53? 3, could only fall: iw-F MEI f 4 mf llllqf'If1f'1'9I2i' ,. 'P M W WJ 1'i1f:w fM -' . A A + ll +h 1 4113 e e Pas ,j x aboul Ihis wall: -1 1 ' ' ' '9' ffn'laiIQi fig lI-IIi L , ,,.., E., FW -sl Mk I., Dbl jf Ki? ,C v4,,!AIf3'Emmmr! dsl ' ll . - ,inn u . 7,535 .1.-- ME' ' ul -gg ull' 'F' ' ,Z Y ng . x.-,,.4c' In going through the auto factory we discover that it takes liflteen hundred nuts to put a machine together, but it takes only one to spread it all over thc road.-TOM BOTTOM LEY. If you would have friends, ask people for their advice -and then don't use it.-KAY RHODES. I admire the man who stands for his Convictions, especially if I agree with him.--FRANK SH.-XNABERG. There are many who advocate a live-day week, but I advocate a five-day week-end.-CHUCK EDDY. Take a good look at almost any woman, and you will know what is wrong with the Cotton market.-DR. GORDON. THE CLASSY PLACE TO EAT T E TTS Granville O TED AT HIS BEST Say II WiI'h Flowers We have served 'Ihe Sfudenls of Denison with Flowers since I922 ANKELE FLORAL I I7 Thresher S'l'ree+ Phone 82IB One Bloclz Wesf Stone Hall TAYLOR'S DRUG STORE The RexaII Sfore TOILET ARTICLES FOUNTAIN SERVICE DRUG SUNDRIES Granville, Ohio Phone 8229 The cool spot of Beaver and Sawyer Page One Hundred Eighty-scrlczz To lhe sfudenls of Denison Universily- Besf Wishes from Your Phofographer BAKER ART GALLERY Rich and High S+ree+s andl May 'rhe fulure hold in slore for you a like measure of s helped make possible for us. COLUMBUS, OHIO uccess which you have From Pickup to Delivery B Before the Show Swift - Safe -- Dependable Q After the Show ship your laundry fa and fram home by A LETS G0 Railway Expfaaa. A . asf35.553ee25522212?3i25aiff3g5522,22if1f122122 R NEWARK O off fo cauaaa - -- Hama from College Remember Railway Express for Handling Your Baggage Phone Granville 8226 R. H. Willis, Agenl' Page Ona' Hxmdrvd Ifiglzfy-vfglzl Three's a crowd DELIGHTFUL ATMOSPHERE YEAR 'ROUND GUESTS find enioymenr in our delighiful a'ImospI1ere, and our luxurious accommodafions. SUMMER GUESTS delighl' in 'Ihe refreshing cIima'I'e, counrry walks, eighfeen-hole golf course, and our inimi'rabIe cuisine. Excellenf 'I'I1ree-course dinner-one dollar per plaie S'I'uden+ ra'res prevail for dinners THE GRANVILLE INN OI'1io's Mosf Beaufiful Inn and GOLF COURSE Inc. GRANVILLE OHIO HALIQS DRUG STORE REXALL srone Sodas, Candies, Kodalrs, Films Sfafionery, Cosmerics N. W. Corner-Square I NEWARK OHIO . Complimenfs Swinglefs Music Store 3I Arcade Newark Eai and Sleep Page Ona Hmzdred E1 For Better Things To Eat THE RED AND WHITE G ro c e ry Proprietors JULIUS ROMEI D. U. '38 JOHN ROMEI D. U. '40 Granville, Ohio Phone 8l55 Home-Coolcecl Meals THE HUT O Eat the way you like Observatory Hill PIPER'S MEAT MARKET Everything Tha+'s Good in Meats O GRANVILLE, OHIO PHONE 82I5 FLASH A man decided to commit suicide. He armed himself with a rope, a revolver, a bottle of gasoline, and another bottle of arsenic. He climbed out on a tree overhanging a long drop into the sea, and tied one end of the rope to the tree and the other to his neck. Then he swallowed the arsenic, sprinkled the gasoline over himself and set it alight, and finally shot himself. However, the bullet glanced off his skull and severed the rope. He plunged down into the sea, which ex- tinguished the flames and incidentally acted as an emetic to the poison. And, what's more, if he hadn't been a good swimmer, he'd have drowned. Page One Hundred Ninety Some psychologists now say that man is the weaker sex. I have always been afraid someone would tell it.- BEN MELLINGER. Don't forget that when you're repeating gossip, you're giving it your O.K.-GABBY HAHN, or any woman past 30. Some insane people are confined in asylums, and there are some who drive automobiles.-BILL SHELDON, Government doubtless had its beginning when some monkey found an extra line coconut tree, and needed help to keep the others out of it.-SPENCE MEIL- STRUP. A jazz orchestra is a group of citizens paid for play- ing static.-JOHN STEWART. A committee is a group of persons who keep minutes and waste hours.-TOM ORME. Compliments of THE GRANVILLE CO-OP Many the feet that trod these steps GOOD TRANSPORTATION SERVICE FREOUENT SAFE ECONOMICAL Every half hour befween Granville and Newark Twice Daily a+ Convenieni' Hours To and From Delaware Connecfions af Delaware for CLEVELAND-TOLEDO-DETROIT-MANSFIELD-SANDUSKY-WOOSTER Tickefs and Informafion ai' Taylor's Drug Sfore, Phone 8229 GRANVILLE MOTOR STAGES, INC. Good Foods DENISON DEFINITIONS A+ Popular Prices .'IIlIIltIXN1IIfUI'-0119 who is given an office on condition that he gets out of the count y. Q lj.rfvc1'1'v11rv-wlmt yo get when you are e iccti sonlctliing else. ,Al Lim'-one who has no I rtition between his im ation and his information. . Huy-a noise with dirt on it Granville, Ohio Phone 82I2 RESTAURANT SODA FOUNTAIN CANDIES MAGAZINES I TT T The Grand March ' WOOLARD'S Quahty Meats O FRESH MEATS wifh prompf delivery Page Om' Hzmdred Ninety-0 07' SCDUND VALUE -in printing TO SUCCEED ll d p 'f I d h d b ppl cl b h y FF d d d D I1 d h cl d p - H' V the GRANVILLE TIMES and PUBLISHING CCD. I4O Easi Broadway GranviIIe, Ohio ' ' . ' E E O ,, 'PJ I PJ iz,- A queen anywhere-everywhere STUARTS GIFT SHOP I Denison's Gift Store since I9II GEORGE STUART - - OPTOMETRIST a. JEWELER O GRANVILLE OHIO THEDRAG we cater to undergraduates C MEN'S TOGS HABERDASHERY DRY CLEANING PRESSING LAUNDRY O Delivery Service DENISON DEFINITIONS Some of the following have been rather accurately and seriously put into practice during the last few years: SIICCCJS-d0Iflg what you want to do and making money. Courtesy-the eye which overlooks a friend's broken gate and sees roses blooming in his garden. Practicing Physicianv-a doctor who says, If this cloesn't cure you, I'll give you something that will. Oralo-r-a mall who can take a 300-word idea and blow it up to hold six thousand more. A Garden Plat-the bugs and worms planning to eat up your garden stuff. Tuneful Lyra-a music teacher who does not keep his engagements. Page One Hundred Nrinety-three THE THRIET STORE OF THE NATION SEARS, ROEBUCK8. CO. NEWARK, OHIO ls BOB GOWDY-IN FRESHMAN ENGLISH CLASS COLUMBUS Columbus was :I man who could make an egg stand on end without crushing it. One day the King of Spain sent for him and asked point blank: Can you discover America F Yes, Columbus answered, if you will give me a boat. He got the boat and sailed in the direction where he knew America was. The sailors mutiuied and swore there was IIO such place as America, but finally the pilot came to Columbus and said: -Captain, land is i1I sight. XfVhen the boat neared the shore, Columbus saw a group of natives. Is this America? he asked them. Yes, they replied. I suppose you are Indians ? Columbus went on. Yes, replied the chief, and you are Christopher Columbus, I take it? I amf' The Indian chief then turned to his fellow-savages and said: The jig is up. We are discovered at last. HIGHEST QUALITY PASTEURIZED MILK SHARON VIEW FARM Y' I Our product is milked, pasteurized, and delivered 'II1e same day ELLIS EVANS PHONE 4I 220 Page Ona Hun-d1'ed Nirwty-four THE NEWARK TELEPHONE COMPANY I A HOME OWNED COMPANY Unlimi+ed Telephone Service fo' 'ess HW' The Clothier SEVEN CENTS A DAY 5 S. Third Sf. Newark, Ohio for dependable quality FURNITURE RUSS CARPETS STOVES and Fairbanks-Morse APPLIANCES I CARLILE'S Wesi Main ai Arcade Annex Newark HORN ER HARDWARE Fraferniiy Needs Sfudenr Supplies Painis-General Hardwa re Sporfirig Equipmenf O Mike Gregory, '29, Propriefor Presidenfs Home Page One Hzmdrrrl 1VTlIl'f'V'f TI-IE KROGER WAY is the MODERN WAY to shop for food AI' Kroger's you'II find Ihe Finer Counfry Club Foods +oge'Iher wi'Ih 'Ihe Famous CQ Iconfrolled quaIi'I'yI beef and garden fresh FruiI's and Vegetables +ha+ are Posi- 'Iive Values. Also you are pro+ec'I'ed by Ihe Kroger Food Foundalion which carefully checks all foods sold in Kroger Markers. Shop Safely at TO SERVE YOU TI-IE PECDPLES STATE BANK Member of Ihe F. D. I. C. A sound banking ins'Ii+uIion providing proI'ec'rion and experienced handling of your personal accounf. GRANVILLE OHIO Page One Hrmdrrd Nindy-sifr 5 , DENISON DEFINITIONS flfflll II' 1110 Hmn'-one who keens ua to the minute. I LIIUIIIUIIIJ Tears-tlme worlcI's greatest water power. Taxafialz-tlle art of so picking the goose as to secure the greatest amount of feathers with the least amount of squawkiug. Need we say more? zssifafffafff 11f11 4' E oi YOU, ABOVE ALL MUST BE SATISFIED The Art in Chemistry DENISON DEFINITIONS Fflifflfliff' Pa.vt1'u1v.r-tlxose thinqs that are either im- , I moral, illegal, or fattening. ill Department Store NEWARK OHIO Jack--and friends ,IYr1rlt'nrft'r-tx person who brinpys you in contact with the spirits world. lijliviclzcy E:l'f7t'l'l-Il cow that gets the lliccoughs and clmrns her own butter. Student Supplies Rytex Personal Stationery Loose-Leaf Notebooks Greeting Cards Fountain Pens Stationery Quality Books RentaI Library O THE UNIVERSITY STORE y Granvilie Chic Page Our' lI'lIlll'l'I'Pfl Nf11r'fy-.w'f'r11 i :QQH7 V X 'i1 ' il' ?i'.r3-xx! AHN AND OLLIER AGAIN X-l .- T X F V . ixrgvii I .V 'XV .i.Ll Repeated acceptance by discriminating Year Book Boards has inspired and sustained the Jahn 8. Ollier slogan that gathers increas- ing significance with each succeeding year. 4 L1 Prigc One Hll!l!71I'L'fi Ninnly-f'1'g1l1l - I P I Best ot friends Nobil's Shoe Store THE NEWEST IN FOOTWEAR I4-I6 N. Park NEWARK OHIO DENISON DEFINITIONS L-item:-y .'I.S'f'l'l'Llllf-XVITZIII an author takes when he has a headache. Crmpcwzlian-a word consisting of eleven letters that can be spelled with two-W-ic. P0l1'l1'r'ir1rz-a xnan who stands for what he thinks other people will fall lor. F RATERN ITY JEWELRY Otficial Badges Trophies Keys and Charms Medals Dance Programs Stationery Party Favors Invitations Crested Gifts Write tor FREE Catalog L. G. BALF OUR Company Attleboro Massachusetts Flowers at THOMAS, the Florist for Proms Parties Banquets Member of the Florisi Telegraph Association 425 N. Granger St. Phone 822 DENISON DEFINITIONS C0urt1'n0m-a place where justice is often dispensed- with. C0ulifcz'-irrilauf-a fashionable woman out shopping. ll-f0dC'l'Il Music-the kind that puts the din in dinner and takes the rest out of restaurant. HOTEL WARDEN C. D. GARDNER, Mgr. Special Rates to Denison Students PARTIES - BANOUETS - ROOMS Our never-tiring Rags Page One Hundred Nilzely-nin-e Page Tum Hrzizdrcd E742 . EJQIZQW Qinfing 372-386 Soufh Fourih Sireef COLUMBUS, OHIO SCHOOL ANNUALS, PAPERS, ETC. OFFICE SUPPLIES and FURNITURE Book Binding Blank Book Manufacfuring Loose Leaf Devices Sfaiioner The Larqesi Priniinq and Binding Plan? in Cenfrai Ohio I7 Z AW I . ,Z-.,:..,,-H . ,V -.- -K , W.. YI, ,.,- 7 , , F Y -.Q....,, 1,7 -,..--.....-, ..--.QY,, , .LFNWY
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