Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI)
- Class of 1924
Page 1 of 184
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 184 of the 1924 volume:
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3 5 X F I 92 First Semester ROCK FLENIING. .. ARDELL -I.-icons. . . KENNETH Osiaoizx ..... Ro1,1,1N Davis. . . . K CLUB OFFICERS . . . . Prcsidwzf . . . . . . . . Vive-P1'm'idm1t . . . . . . . . SC fl't7f!ll'j7 . . . 7 'Y I . . . I rfaslzrer ....... . . . . lXlElNlBERSl-HP THREE SPORT MEN Second Semester .l'T.-XROLD VooRHEEs IDARXYIN BIERKLEY MAYN,-rxRD SPRoL'1, fl.-XRRY HINCRLEY Harold Voorhees-Football, 33 Basketball, 35 Tennis, I Robert BlackfFootball, 25 Basketball, 23 Baseball, l TXVO SPORT MEN Kenneth Qsborn-Track, 3g Cross-Country, 2 Rock Fleming-Football, 23 Track, 2 lllarcus RIundwiler-Basketball, 25 Track, l Darwin lllerkley-Football, 2g Basketball, 2 Harry Voorhees-Basketball, 25 Baseball, 1 llerrill Peterson-Track, lg Cross-Country, 2 Robert Ludwig-Basketball, l g Baseball, l ONE SPORT MEN Ardell Jacobs-Football, 3 Gerhard Harsch-Football, l Rollin Davis-Track, 3 Fred LaCr0ne-Football, l Harold BrowngCross-Country, 2 Theodore llleeker-Football, l Peter NorgfTraek, l Ronald Garrett-Football, l George Skellinger-Track, l Oscar VVinne-Football, l Gilbert Gtto-Track, l Howard VVhitney-Football, l Allison Skeen-Football, l Harry Hinkley-Football, l Illaynard Sproul-Football, l Xbfllllillll Denison-Cross-Country, 1 CLARENCE RANISDELL .... . . .Stzlzfrnf jllllllilgfll' 93 tt www.. N my ,wwfgwkx 3 vzawuxc ,fm X .mf . , ., . x K 'xt 94- Glee Club BOARD OF DIRECT PH1L1P XYERCOE . . ........................ .. KENNETH DEAN .. LESLIE Down . . ERNEST CASLER HENRY OVERLY MEMBERSHIP Bradford lllorse .......................,...... John Rynne Leslie Dowd, Philip Vercoe, Kenneth Dean, YVillis VVillis Dunbar and Ronald Garrett .............. First Tm ors Leslie Dowd Roscoe Fortner Seronzl Tezzors Philip Vercoe XVilfred Clapp Ernest Casler If!Zl'if0IZf'5' Kenneth Dean Leonard Klefarthy lvan Bassas r Robert Stein ITINERARY Lansing, lllarch 30 7 Flint, April l Flint, April 2 Ovid, April 3 Pontiac, April -l- Detroit, April 5, 6 Yvillis Dunba Lawrence, lllarch ll Three Rivers, llflareh -1 Otsego, llflarch 26 Paw Paw, lllarch 27 lllarshall, lllarch 28 Lansing, lltlarch 29 9 05 ..................Prrsidrnf . . . . . . . .Routing fllzzmzgvr . . . . . . . . . .lJ7ll.YllIl'SS fvllllllllgff . . .jssistnlzt BllA'lIlf'53' rillflllllgfpl' ................,.Dirf'z'I01' . . . . . .. .. .1!I'l'0ll1f7llIli.l'f .....Rmdw' Dunbar. . . .... Quartet ....LOl'IIl'flSl'.Y lfrwin Hinga Lawrence Armstrong Ronald Garrett Dennis Herbert Brouwer Donald Draper Jackson, April 7 YVayland, April S Grand Rapids, April 9 Home Concert, April 15 Battle Creek, Ap1'il 23 , iffgwwjpxy fwzt ,+. t'W'-'X-, Wx, vga-3xwvN:XX.9'5 .f 'XXX -A X W.. Xsafw .... -+R - GAYN OR CLUB OFFICERS lx'IILDRED SMITH ..... ............... ....... J 1 Iannger RIARGIIERITE H.'XI,I. .... .... T rip Jllanager LOUISE RIILLHCFF .... ...... S ecretary DOROTHY C. SCOTT .......,.... Treasurer CECILE PRATT ..... .... . -11l11L'1'2'isi1zg .flfrznager ESTHER PRATT . , . ............ Librarian BIEBLBERSHIP SHIRLEY PAYNE ........ .................... ........ R e ader RIARGARET XVILLIAMSUN . . . ..... 4fL'C0l711Dl171i5f lXlRS. E. A. READ ........ ........... D irector Miss AIILDRED rli.-XNIS. .. ............ ..... I- 'mruliy Advisor SOPRANOS Rlildred Smith Cecile Pratt Donna Rankin Lucile Bullock SECOND SOPRANOS lllarguerite Hall Esther Pratt Dorothy NI. Scott Hazel Allabach ALTOS Charlotte Liberty Vicksburg, llarch 21 Greenville, llarch 26 Grand Ledge, lllarch 27 Portland, lllarch 28 Ruth Adams QHTNERARY Howell, lklarch 29 Hlason, lllarch 31 Eaton Rapids, April l Home Concert, April 25 96 Louise lN'I illhuff Ferndale, lllay l Detroit, Slay 2 Dowagiac, Slay 9 'H 4-Fr 49 Q THE COLLEGE BAND 5 5' ramQ1f1'n:5 l l. ,iii Ay,-...,, J21-sfxzw-lv-4 Q. Y I I wumwmum QU m'm'N1THFh K W if i 'Q Lf ,- r. 1'- ,fyrr y 1 .rv , 1 '1 'f, .c DRAMA CLUB Founded 1920 The past year has been the most successful year for the Drama club since the club's organization in 1920. Besides holding their regular fortnightly meetings at which they studied plays and biographies of actors and playwrights, the club members produced, under the able direction of lXIiss lilildred Tanis, two major plays, Only 38 and The Dover Road . Both of these plays received high praise from the local critics as did also the two sets of one-act plays which were produced by the class in Dramatics and sponsored by the Drama club. The club hopes to have, in a year or so, a little theatre of its own. The Stockbridge barn has been given to the club by the trustees for that purpose and the work of remodeling has already been started. OFFICERS Helen VVard . .. ............ .......... ......... P 1 widen! Louise Stein ...... ,.... .... I ' ici'-Pwsidrrzt Gladys Killam ..... .,,., . . . ....... Secretary VVells Thoms ..,..............,..... , ........................ ............. T rmsurfr Harold Blain, Thomas Cobb ,......,.....,... ......... ................ I f .Tt'l'1lfi'l'L' C0lI1lI1if1L'L' IXIICI-IIGAN BETA OF THETA ALPHA PHI li? J , OFFICERS VVaneta Acker .. Louise Stein Harold Allen ....... . . .Prf,fidf'nt .. . . .,..IYiL'i'-PI'P5idC71f . . .51'rrr'fary-Trfaszuvr IIIIQIIIBERSHIP ,,,................... ..........,.,- Tom Cobb liillllli H JAQ , up Q I VVQ-lls Thoms .,.i: I i XVaneta Acker Ruth Scott Louise Stein li H V Q gllpu Helen YVard Z Harold Allen X ii, zt' f .Iolm Rynne h :V 5 Prof. Miltori Simpson 2 , g Miss Mildred Tunis V5 I 3 ' ' ss ' ,. EII i 1 ,::. s........... ......,.... ...,.rs,.,.,.,....i.. Miss MILDRED TA NIS . , 100 ' rf A' , 5.5. I PROF. MILTON SIMPSON DRAKIA CLUB SIEBIBERS Cecile Pratt Harold Allen Pauline Kurtz Franklin Robinson Margaret Kurtz Tom Cobb Katheryn Tezlle Kenneth Crawford Mable Miller Lecllie De Bow Eloise Rickman Mnlford Shaw Dollie Honghtalingl-Ben Goldman Gladys Killani YVells Thorns Lillian XVeller Robert Stein XV:ineta Acker John Rynne Helen XVard Ilnrolcl Blaine Louise Stein Edwin Gemrich Ruth Scott HONORARY Prof, Milton Simpson Miss Mildred Tunis lOl Q b gig - F I w iv. 3 7 Yvritten lvy A. E. TIIOM,-XS Mrs. Stanley .... Nlrs. Newefnnlw .. MI'S. Peters .... Mr. Szinlwnrn .. Robert Stanley . Lucy Stanley .. Mary Hadley . Sydney jolinsnn jimmy ...... Charley .... Alice .. Stage Manager .... Business Nlnnzlger ...,..... Assistant Business M Ticket lxflilllllgfl' ..,. H Publicity lxlillllltlfl' ....... ONLY 38M Pr1'.n'11lri1 fly Ifn' DRAMA. CLVB :it the Fl,'l.l,l'fR 'VHIZIATRI Un Denjeinber 6, l923 CAST IX IANAGICMICNT lil!! Directed by NUSS NIILDRED TANIS . . . . .Hflrn Ifillftf ..,GlaJy.r Killam .....,Lillia1l lI'4'l!rr . . . .Etifwin G1'mri4'f1 ......Jol11z Rynnf .........RuIl1Sf0If ,...,,Kalf1fryn Trait' .,........1Vrll5 Tfloms . . . . ,Krrzrzrlll Crafwford ..... .Lrdlir Dr Bofw . . .illargarrl Kurlz . . . . .Il'a111'fa qlvkm' ........Il'1'll5 Tlmms . , , . .lx'r1nzftl1 Cz'aq,Ufor'J ......Bfn Goldman . . ..LF1Uil' DA' Bofw The Dover Road XVrittcn by A. A. Milne 1J1'l'.Y1'lIf4'l! by fflr' DRANIA CLVB ni flu' FL'I,l,T'iR 'THICATRTQ April 10, 1024 CAST MR. TLXTINIIIR .... ....... Doxnxic ...... I,i2nN,xRn ... ANNE .... IfL'sT,xs1,x . . . N1CHo1,,xs . . FTTHE Siixifif Ulf SITRVAYTS .,.. IXIANAGIQRIICNT Stage llanzlgei' .......... ................... . Assistant Stage llzniagei' .. Business llzinagcr ......... Assistant Business Klanager. .. 1u:3 Directed by Miss Mildred Tanis ...llzzrofzl 111611 l4'r1111Hi11 Robinson . .. .llarolil Blain: . . . . .Ce'fi!i' Pratt . .A-Ilfllt'I'j'l1 Tmli' ......John Rynm' . . . Liffirm If'f'Hf'r ...... Ruth Smit 1x'i'1111f'fl1 C'l'II'Zd'f07'Z1 . . .Lnlfiw D6 B0-zz' . . .U'1111Fl'11i1z',f'f'1' . . . .illzlflfr fllillrr . . . .lfvrffx Thoms . .EJZUII1 Gvnzrivlz BLACKSTONIAN FRATERNITY Nzzfioizzzf Burn Cllllpffl' , illirlligzzzz lifffllfl Clzrzfwfw' This fraternity, which has for its purpose the fostering of interest in pre-legal work among undergraduates, has made great strides since its organization here two years ago. Seven new members were admitted during the past year. XVith the help- ful advice and leadership of Prof. Cornell, the fraternity has conducted a seminar in judicial problems at which many prominent lawyers, both local and state, have tallied and criticized papers given by members of the organization. The big event of the year for the members of the club was the Hlaclcstonian ban- quet, given in honor of Dean Hates of the University of lllichigan, to which the Kalamazoo Bar Association members were also invited. justice Sharpe of the Blichigan Supreme Court was brought to the College through the efforts of the Blackstonians, and gave several speeches while here. It was by his invitation that late in the Spring the club visited the Supreme Court at Lansing and were given a chance to hear an important case tried. OFFICERS . , . . . , . P7't'5iLil'llf CLARENCE Rixivisneu, .. ................. . . .. HARoi,o BEADLE ...., ..........., I 'iff-Pmsiili-rzi Epwitf Gemkicu ..,........,........... ..., S rrrfvary and Trmszu'n' llwlElXlBERSl'lIP Clarence Ramsdell Dexter Brigham Edwin Gemrich john Rynne Thomas S. Cobb james Stanley Lloyd Brininger Edgar Lundy Harold Beadle Ben Goldman Gilbert Otto Harold Blaine Nicholas Bock Herbert Vogt 10-1- 'S -T i. 'lifilli Q W X T' ' A 3 A F 'A-131'T5f -- I FY' 47 Ji- RV DY l xiii v xibsi nf 4 5 ' i R - - I Z- 'ggi ..-l-- Y Ti K6 'W i V - v N ' H' nf' I? 'f L N si g g 1. 1' 1 'S f ,, ,f gg. f r f 525'-A., 3 7 f' PA ' W A x 3 0f ff' gf? A F 3 ,jj gg W ifi i 10, N, tcxfdwy, , ,pe- .. X www-Q ,.,.,.,.mc -me ,. ve., .sew 1 sw, W , .s.wW,scW. ,s 3, ss, ,W , s .. 4-.. vi N -New -r . . 1X -' 19 we as 1 . -. . .. 1 b ,- . .s - f- , , .. si A 1 ,Z 1. 5 X V. 5 QQ ...Q 5. AQ., QR , . is 3,3395 - - -'A Mmattw... 6 twist.. Q. ,-as . -. f... A s .Q .f,wNXs-X Wgs Q N ry - ' ' c.:..:..i.,....ssmw.,ss..Q-.A Q. x x a::..LL.r12':.1:.,.1:::ms-umwkwmsxwwvkfi www S N M'i' W ii' ,Sr its ii? N' QQ F 'N 1 mf is gg, gl xmscw A A . 'L ' i :KSXQ as wage? Ng 'is 55 at Y ,- , we Q. .' s. f-sfis ic' ' 15,5 .gg Q.. pgs gh, Yiiiv r c X 1. XS .Avlis 'Sli -fsfs i fs? , sg? gi ' SHIRLEY Parxe HAROLD Beams ORATORY X as Q Us llliss Shirley Payne, Sophomore, again respresented Kalamazoo College at the QQ. State Oratorical Contest which was held this year at Hope College. Her oration, T The Glory ot the Commonplaceu was a strong appeal for more interest in the teaching profession, because it is our teachers who are responsible tor the education N, X X ..y of the youth of the nation. Shirley placed in the top division, in one of the closest . . te s .P we s x contests ever held by the ll. O. L. j We his is Harold Beadle of the Junior class entered the men's contest with the oration, W, ,Wx Unto One of the Least of These . His oration was a masterful presentation of Q the reasons lor political equality for the Negro. He placed filth in the contest at Hope. He also entered the National Contest at the Pi Kappa Delta Convention and showed gf up well against the best orators of the country. N. Bliss illildred Tanis, a former winner of the state contest, is the coach of Kala- maZoo's orators. Her previous experience is shown in the high quality ot the orators X which she develops each year. Due to her work, Kalamazoo is always a dangerous A , Y Q contender in the contests of the lllichigan Oratorical League. g f Q. Vern Bunnell, the stu- Es- Q ,. mb dent manager of Qratory ,ag and Debate, has done ,X much during his four fx X years at Kalamazoo to put ya, RQQ this college in the high .tg 43 place in the Forensic QQ,it.sg world which it now en- ist, joys. He was on the : Freshman debate squad 5 and also served two years b on the varsity. ln recog- N x nition of his work as de- ff i bater and manager, the Albion college chapter ,N ummm mmm, of Delta Sigma Rho elect- ' 5 ed him into their brother- hood as a member at Miss MILDRED TAXIS VERN BUNNELL large. v X x Rx I ,W ,.x 100 ' gg f ' t' as if sg X'ti.:E.fff'fQQl1QR? e f -s V we 5 Q ay NW ,, rpis 5 Q-.r ss- NJ -is U as W WU ' c X X srfww. SVBNWQ-3 Frank Campbell James Stanley Ledlie De Bow Leroy Stinehower Kenneth Sausaman lidwin Gemrich Peter Hosker ullfrzlulf' lno picturel lXIlCN'S VARSITY DPIIEATIC The men's varsity debate squad finished another successful season. ln the lllich- igan Debate League, the teams won three out of four debates. The loss was 2-l at Albion, who won the state championship this year. Kalamazoo was a close second with nine points, to ten for Albion. ln the other three debates, Kalamazoo won unanimous decisions over Alma and Hope and a 2-l victory over Olivet. It was a close race and the showing of the Kalamazoo teams was highly satisfactory. The debaters with the exception of captains Sausaman and Campbell will return next year and should put Kalamazoo at the head of the League. Sausaman has helped to 'tl11'1l in a string of eight consecutive victories for Kalamazoo during his four years' service on the colleges debate teams and will be greatly missed. Dr. Elmer C. Griffith, the coach of Debate, deserves high praise for the great success that his teams have won since he tool: charge in the Fall of 1922. Besides coaching the varsity squad, which won lirst place last year and second place this year in the Txlichigan Debate League he has also coached the freshman and women's teams with like success. He is the head of the Department ot lfconomics and Business Administration. - --me-.......,, .. ,.. .0 7, ' .ws V 1 4 ' I--.M r ' cu , I : L e : DR. E. C. fikllfl-'I'1lH ' 107 N 4' s Beryl McLellan Alma Smith Bernice Cook Marjorie Volkers Helen Myers Margaret VaudeBunt Louise Stein Gertrude Otto VVinitred johnson XVOlXIEN'S VARSITY DEBATE The lfVomen's teams, composed largely of freshmen, and with only one veteran debater, met RI. A. C. in a dual debate. The result was a unanimous victory for the negative team, while the affirmative lost 2-l. The teams were of a high order and deserve considerable credit for their showing against one of 1Iichigan's strongest Forensic colleges. By the deciding vote of the audience the team lost 2-l to the Colorado Aggies strong team. Edgar Lundy Clair Foringer George Pardee Marion Ellis blames McLaughlin Ledlie De Bow Fred Kraushaar Vs'arren Dobson fno pieturel FRESHRIAN DEBATE The All-tresh teams containing an unusual number of experienced debaters won a double victory in their triangle with Albion and Olivet. This is a most unusual showing for freshmen debaters. IHS .ax . ...x . XR, ,W W .,.,,.xN ,X N X X X ll A i, . ,G -- --5.1 l riig l Da. HElun:R'r Ll-iii S'rE'1s Miss Mnmzun Taxis. .. Da. Emnilz C. lilill-'F1'lH VERN BUNNELI, ..... . KExxE'ru S,xL's.u1.xx .. SHIRLEY PAUSE ...... lliuzow l5EADl,li JAMES S'r,xx1.Ey ...... LEROY S'l'lXEBOXX'liR . .. FRANK CrxMPnE1,i, .. PI KAPPA DELTA 'llhe llliehigan Alpha chapter set a new standard for eo-operation ed GA with those in charge of Forensics this year. Several details of debating were taken over by the chapter. Fourteen new members were admit- ted from the debate teams, and tive members received higher degrees for their work this year. The loeal chapter was represented at the Biennial Pi Kappa Delta Convention at Peoria, Ill., by a team of four men. This team con- sisting of Harold Beadle, Vern Bunnell, Kenneth Sausaman, and james Stanley, turned in three victories out of five debates. MEMBERSHIP :X ,... ,... ...................... . .,.. . ...Umtury mm' Ill.YlVlll'1i0ll. .. ... ..... I11.vfrzu'lifnz ..... . , . . .... Dvbale .,... . . Dflzati' D1'f11llf'....... . . Uralory and Drbair . .. 4 . Uralory amz' Debate . . . Dl'11Hff1 Dfflllir' ....IIoxoRiuu' lNlEMBER . . SPEei.u. Disrixcriox . . Svseifxt DISTINCTION . . SPECIAL DIS'l'INC'l'ION .. SPEe1.u. D1s'rixe'r1Ox HONOR HONOR HONOR Hoxok HONOR XVILLIS Dexaua . .. Drbatr . .. Pkoriemxcr Iinwlx QHZNIRICII Urban' . .. PROFICIEXCY LEIJLIE DE How ...........,.. .......... D rlwair ....................... . , . PROFIQIENCY DlQGRlfl'f OF l RA'llIiRNlTY IN DlQB.fYlllQ Clair lforinger Helen Myers Gertrude Otto Raymond Ford james lNflcI,augblin Louise Stein Berenice Cook Ben Goldman Marion Ellis Beryl lWeLellan Margaret Vande Hunt Vera Hill George Pardee Marjorie Volkers julia Barber Gilbert Otto Alma Smith XVinifred Johnson Jeanette Fuller Clarence Ramsdell Robert Sodergren X 109 .. .. 5, 110 Z.-,.-It lizfmr , , His words were oaks in acornssand his thoughts, 9 Were- roots that firmly gript the granite truthf Edwin Marlihim v n -'V 1 I .-. 1 sf' T-'f'f. -, . LK.. ,'i'. A.-,. , , QV, r- .4 n 5 V 4 '.. , ,...,r rf r , . l , T. ,I ll. , i ,An- sx P A. A L. ,l- IF' I V 4 -5- , . .T I 4'- I' .I A s. : j-'I ...fi 1 l ,L L'o.icu gl. lNI.'xvx.uum Sikei-ii NVQ HI. I. A. SX. championships, in tennis and cross-country, two second places, in baseball and track, third place in baseketball, and sixth place in football is Kalamazods athletic record of the year '23-'2-l. Although this is not as high a record as Kazoo has boasted for the last two years, still it is a record that no college need be ashamed of. Other colleges, that have not been spoiled by such an unparalleled string of championships as Kalamazoo has earned in the past decade, would consider such a 1'ecord for the year good cause for celebration. XVitb the leaving of Coach Ralph Young and the advent of Kazoo's new coach, Klaynard Street, the natural mix-up occurred, which usually accompanies a change in coaches. Young left a line record which he built up by years of experience in college coaching. ll. A. C. realiz- ing his great wo1'th offered him the position of head coach at that institution and he, seeing an opportunity for greater constructive work, accepted. J. llaynard Street, a graduate of Carleton College where he was an all-round athlete, distinguished himself, previous to his coming to Kalamazoo, as coach at Shat- tuck llilitary Academy. This past year was an unfortunate one for the new coach, due to the extremely small number of veterans which returned last Fall. Next year, with a year of experience in college coaching and a large number of returning veterans to work with, he should be able to develop teams of championship calibre. The pros- pects for a championship in basketball look especially bright. 111 CAPTAIX JACOBS HE most disastrous football season in the his- tory of the school characterizes the 1923 grid- iron regime of the Orange and Black. Ten games were played and that number were lost. Kala- mazoo averaged 3 points per game to opponents' aver- age of -1722. In six of the contests Kalamazoo was unable to make a point. In spite of this amazing record of calamity the football season was declared in some quarters a most remarkable series of moral victories. ln defense of the football team and Coach lklaynard Street, entering upon his first campaign with the Baptists, it can be indisputably said that they faced the hardest football schedule ever framed for any Kalamazoo football squad. Added to this, the material was the slimmest ever. Of the expected veterans only Captain Jacobs, Casey Voorhees, Captain-elect Black, Harsch, Fleming, and Sproul answered the football summons. VVith only four K men and a disheartening number of freshmen recruits, Street opened the season at Notre Dame with a team of little more than high school calibre. The Catholicls first, second and third teams 1'3.11 up 74 points in three quarters on Kalamazoo. But in the final period the battered Streetmen braced and held the heavy and fresh lrishmen scoreless. Kalamazoo was unable to make any first downs and Notre Dame was held for downs only three times. The University of Detroit, but slightly less powerful than Notre Dame on the next Saturday walloped Captain Jacobs eleven 73-0. Black, Jacobs, Fleming, and Voorhees were badly crippled in this game. The opening 111. 1. A. A. game showed how woefully weak the college football outfit really was. For the Hrst time in twelve years the Crimson crew was able to triumph 20-7. Skeen made Kalamazoo's touchdown on a line plunge after a pass of 30 yards to Harry Voorhees had been carried to the 5-yard line. The first home game against llorningside, of Sioux City, Iowa, was a replica of the university combats. Outweighed 30 pounds to a man in this and in the succeeding game at llarietta, Ohio, the college was held scoreless while big scores were run up by the opponents. The sixth defeat was at the hands of Ypsilanti at home by a 19 to 3 score. Blackls drop-kick from the 35-yard line accounted for the Kazoo trio of points. In this game the fighting liazoo spirit displayed itself to a marked degree. Hillsdale forced the Kazooks into undisputed possession of the cellar in the NI. 1. A. A. race winning 27-13. Skeen and l1Ierkley made touchdowns while Black made a try-for-point good. Four regulars, Jacobs, Hinckley, H. O. Voorhees, and Garrett we1'e out of the Alma game on account of injuries. In spite of this the eleven made a fair showing against the ll. 1. A. A. Champions holding them 38 to 0. Kalamazods ninth defeat was in many ways more glorious than a victory would have been over a lesser team. Albion came to Kalamazoo doped to win by 50 points. 112 Back Row-Fortner, Dobson, lildred, Reed, Stone, Kraushaar, Benedict, llulett, llinga, Coach Street. Middle Row-Assistant Coach Vroeg, Sproul, Otto, NVhitney, Carson, Garrett, Nleeker. Vurtis. Front Row-Skeen, llarold Voorhees, Black, Faptain Jacobs, Merkley, Ilarseh, I,aCrone. But Kalamazoo playing a great game threatened to win the game at several stages. Had fate been kind a l-l-l-l tie might have resulted. As it was lXIerkley's touchdown was the only Kazoo score while Albion made three touchdowns. The game with Lombard on 'lihanksgiving Day was an exhibition of super- College football. Lombard outplayed the College in every department and looked the best of any team liazoo met, li0t excepting Notre Dame or Detroit. VVhile the College lost ten straight games it must 1' , , be remembered that the contests included games with Las? 5 the University of Notre Dame and Detroit and the intercollegiate leaders of Iowa, Dhio, Illinois, and Hlichigan. The team showed steady improvement as evidenced by the Hillsdale and Albion games. Con- tinuing steadfastly in the face of certain defeat, fight- ing gamely and consistently, the team deserved and was given steadfast and loyal support by the student body at all times. Captain Ardell Jacobs and Harold Voorhees won their third 'lK s in football. Second Kms were awarded to Bob Black and Darwin lllerkley. First year men are Hinckley, Lafrone, lleeker, Harseh, VVinne, XVhitney, Sproul, Garrett, and Skeen. Rus were given to Benedict, Newland, Dobson, Carson, Stone, Otto, and Curtis. Ifldred received a service sweater. CAI'lAIN'EI.lZCT BLACK 113 There were no quitters, no sobbers, no kickers, on the college team. Every man was game and depended on that gameness to carry him through four struggling quarters of each contest. Captain Jacobs, guard on the mythical all- lXI. l. A. A. team, has been a valuable asset to the Kalamazoo team and an incentive for the new men to work hard. After wearing the K for two successful seasons he returned to college last Fall with the realization that he was to lead a losing team. VVith a spirit of optimism he was determined to make the most of the least. His presence on the team was an added encouragement to the Freshmen and instilled in them the old fighting spirit of Kazoo. Jacobs certainly will be missed when the whistle blows for the kick-off next Fall. Captain-elect Bob Black was the strongest individual player on the team. He is an all-round man and well worthy of being captain. He is a fighter and a consistent ground gainer with his kicks and passes. YVith a stronger line to aid him he would have starred as one of the best ends in the lliddle VVest. Black's punting averaged 40 yards and he drop-kicked accurately when given a chance. Darwin llerkley is a hard fighting, clever quarterback. He generaled the team in an experienced fashion and proved himself to be the best returning man on the kick-offs on the team. One of the main-stays of the line was Gerard Harsch. Playing his Hrst year as regular, he displayed great defensive ability. His large, muscular frame stopped many an enemy plunge which was directed at his side of the forward wall. lXIaynard Sproul, the diminutive half back, was given a chance on the varsity this year and made good. Despite his smallness of stature, he was able to make considerable yard- age for Kazoo, due to his fleetness of foot. Allison Skeen, the human battering-ram , was the big star of the backfield. He played more quarters than any other member of the squad, only being out two in the entire season. As a line plunger he is hard to beat. He did ex- cellent defensive work and gave perfect interference on end runs. The Voorhees brothers both were valuable assets to the team. Casey was slowed up by injuries a good portion of the time but when he was at his best he proved a formidable problem for the opposition. His gameness alone kept him going in several of the affrays when he was suffering from injuries, and exhaustion. Harry showed up best at the re- ceiving end of passes. Harry Hinkley tackled more oppo- nents on kick-offs than did any other man, and on several occasions he gave the crowd a thrill by snagging long passes. lX'Iuch promising material was found in the Freshman class, from which next year several stars should develop. Ronald Garrett was the fastest open field runner on the squad. LaCrone, Whitiiey, YVinne, and lWeeker won reg- ular berths on the Varsity by merit of the fighting spirit which they displayed at all times. 114- 'X -l11 SPROUL SKEEN Q- 3 -lii .5. MERKLEY - - ll HARSCH l H. A. VOORHEES N2 sk-'fi i ii V'-ffwbksw -p I-. I' 115 x i N 1 r, .V 1 I 5 l A- .4 2 .' .PQ1 ,X - ,. z.- .. , , ,,, li mail J Despite the loss of the leadership of the 111. 1. A. A. for the first time in eleven years, the 192-1 basket- ball team has completed a season of which any small college may well be proud. Seven victories were secured out of fifteen intercollegiate contests played. The loss of the 111. 1. A. A. championship still leaves Kalamazoo with the satisfaction of holding a world's record for leadership in an intercollegiate league, a record that is not likely to be broken for some time unless Carleton maintains its present superiority in Rlinnesota. Handicapped by a lack of reserve material, the team fought hard under the able direction of Coach Street and ended the season with a third place in the 111 l A A. per cent column, having lost the final game to X psilanti in the slump that followed Caileton College of lllinnesota, by beating the lxazooks +18 opened the season in the college's xx oist defeat of the year. Then Hope College won ll r gil I 1 ' 1 . HX., fc- lt - 4 1 .0 1' . . . s t ,Q ,f W x . . . . . . Q., 1. -. defeat in the championship tilt with Alma. . U . - f . Q! 3 . , W ' Y v . 'Cy from Kazoo here and later in the season repeated on the Holland floor. Then came the Baptists most glorious event of the year. ln the first 111. 1. A. A. game of the season Kazoo won over Olivet 29-18. This was Kalamazoo's first victory under the Street regime. Kalamazoo won from Hillsdale and stood at the top of the Association percentage but Albion did the unexpected and nosed out the locals 20-19. Streets team surprised the knowing ones by beating Ypsi- lanti in impressive style in their best home game of the season. The College also won again from Hillsdale in a fast and furious contest but two nights later the team was trounced by Alma. The team got 1'evenge for their former loss to Albion by' trimming the hlethodists on the home floor to the tune of -11-29. Then came the Lom- bard game on lfVashington's birthday. The Kazoo- ans extended themselves and threatened to cop the game most of the way but lost out in the final min- utes. Returning home they annihilated Olivet but then were definitely counted out of the cham- pionship race when they were crowned by Alma for the second time. Kalamazoo slipped down into third place in the conference when Ypsilanti ran up -19 points to the locals' 25. ln the last game of the year Street's men won over Lake Forest in a nip-and-tuck game. In this game, which ended 30-28, Kalamazoo retrieved, to some extent, the glory which it had lost in past contests. 116 X SU , Capraix HAROLD Vooki-nies Q B5 Hack Row-Coach Street, Rynne, Simmons, jaeohs, Dipple, Manager Thompson Front Row-Ludwig, Harry Voorhees, Captain Harold Voorhees, Merkley, Black Une of the team's chief scorers and player most mentioned for an All-ill. l A A berth, is Captain-elect Harry Voorhees. Harry, a Sophomore, exhibited a plutkiness that time after time forced baskets directly under the noses of the towering guards who frequently opposed him. He can play forward and guard positions with equal facility although running guards is the position that he most often plays. Captain Casey Voorhees, speedy, heady, and always alert, was a mainstay of the squad at all times. Several victories are directly attributable to his headwork in calling signals. hlerkley is another man of All-RI. I. A. A. rank. He is the best and most accurate forward on the squad. Always dependable, he rendered inval- uable service through a dillicult season. Black and Ludwig, in the guarding positions, gained considerable glory by their steady blocking of enemy attacks. The tact that opponents' victories were won largely by the long shot route indicates their guard- ing ability. Tom Shepherd played a fine grade of ball in the first live games of the year and then left tor the U. of ll. -lohn Rynne got in nine games for short intervals and showed considerable promise. Simmons, Jacobs, Hinckley, and Dipple were injected for a few minutes in ll couple of games. But the first five men named bore the brunt of the entire season. Things look bright for a winning season tor next year. 117 - x lk C'.iP'1'.x1N-ELEe'r H ,num Vookmzes Captain Voorhees is the only one of the regulars who will not be with the team next year, and Ardell Jacobs is the only Senior on the subs. This leaves four regulars and four second string men upon which Coach Street should build a winning team fox 1925. THE SEASON'S RECORD Kalamazoo ............. S Carleton ..... .... -1 1 Kalamazoo .... .... 2 7 Hope . .. . . . .31 Kalamazoo. . . .28 Olivet .... . . . . 19 Kalamazoo .... .... 3 0 Hillsdale . . .... 22 Kalamazoo .... .... 1 9 Hope . . . . . . .37 Kalamazoo. . .... 19 Albion . . . . . .20 Kalamazoo .... .... 3 7 Ypsilanti ., .... 34 Kalamazoo. . .... 2-1 Hillsdale . . . . . .18 Kalamazoo .... 22 Alma . . . . . . .-l-1 Kalamazoo .... -ll Albion .... .... 2 9 Kalamazoo .... 21 Lombard .... .... 3 2 Kalamazoo .... 25 Qlivet .... .... 1 9 Kalamazoo .... 21 Alma ....... .... 2 8 Kalamazoo .... 25 Ypsilanti ..... .... -l 9 Kalamazoo .... 30 Lake Forest .... .... 2 8 Totals ... H397 Totals . .. ,...-151 A K' F 47 B ' 1' Q 2 Qs llmx lgfyll ' ff-1 U U :wg i ao 'SSW 1 S31 -1 ,A S Atexon A 2. as AQ VU' ' Strike up ye old funeral dirge, XVillie. 118 . J 'A lt .SI le....1, i 1 1 Moms, D.-wis, Duxisox, CoAcii S'l'K1iE'l', Usnniax, C'.xP'r.ux liaowx, Piariiksox. UR the second consecutive year in the history of KI. competition, Kalamazoo runners won the championship opposition. In the try-outs shortly before the opening of the season, Peterson came in first, Osborn second, Brown third, Davis fourth, Denison fifth, and Kloag sixth. 'lihis team repeated last year's performance by winning second place in the state inter-collegiate five-mile run at ll. A. C. on November 10th. In a fast field of sixty runners, Peterson placed 4th, Osborn 15th, Brown 1-lth, Davis llnd, Denison 25th, and Kloag 27th. Inasmuch as the Orange and Black was competing against the best college teams in the state, it was considered a high honor to finish so well. 'lihe KI. 1. A. A. was run off over a 3.8 mile course at Ypsilanti, on November 17. 'llhe weather and the course were ideal for a fast race, resulting in the record breaking time of 20 133. Besides Kalamazoo, teams representing Klich- igan State Normal. Hillsdale, Olivet, and Albion competed. Carpenter of Ypsilanti finished first, Yvillets of Hillsdale second, followed closely by Brown, Peterson, and Osborn of Kazoo, in the order named. Denison finished 7th, Davis 12th, and llloag 14th. Kalamazoo won over Ypsilanti, the runner- up, 51-38. Harold Brown has captained the team for two years and his loss by graduation will be greatly felt. However, the re- maining five members of the 1923 team will return next year, and with lllerrill Peterson as their captain, they should again bring back the championship to liazoo. 119 1. 1. A. cross-country last Fall against stiff iw N, ......zf .. . C.'xP'11x1N Baowx Zhi Memoriam CLARKE BENEDICT WILLIAMS, Sc. D. 9 Beaten out of first place in the RT. I. A. A. f race by Ypsilanti's veteran team in one of the 5 . l closest contests ever held between the two i schools the 1923 track team finished the season a strong second, with Alma, Albion, Hillsdale, k and Qlivet finishing far behind in the order KL? named. Three Kalamazoo College records were broken and one tied during the season. , Van Zandt threw the javelin l53.05 feet. I, Shepherd raised the broad jump record to 21 ' 'fff f feet ll inches, and tied the l20 high hurdle J record. Forman lowered the 880 mark to 700310 V- ' ..: - . The team lost a close dual meet to Ypsilan- ' ' x ti and then triumphed by large margins in due encounters over Hillsdale and Albion. At the Drake relays the College team finished in fourth place. The team also finished fourth in the State meet at Rl. A. C. In the closest meet of many years the Green and YVhite of Ypsilanti won the II. I. A. A. track and field meet from the Orange and Black, thereby wresting from liazoo the championship of the association which she held for four consecutive years. The Normal College secured 63 5-6 points to Kalamazoo's 58. The meet was not decided until the final event-the mile relay. Ypsilanti opened the meet with a bang and at the end of the first day was leading the locals by 13 l-3 points. But the Kazoo stars came back and seriously disputed Ypsi's right to the coveted banner. ln the meet Kazoo took 6 firsts, 6 seconds, 3 thirds, l fourth and second in the relay. Tom Shepherd was individual high point man, winning the broad jump, tieing with Bouwman in the high jump, and finishing third in the high hurdles. Captain Qsborn led the field in the two mile event. Davis won the -l-l0 and Forman the 880. Over 260 high school athletes took part in the eighth annual inter-scholastic track meet held on the College track on lllay 5. This was the largest and best meet ever held on the local lot. Plainwell's well-balanced team won the meet with a total of 42 points. Camp of Plainwell was high point man. Five new rec- ords were set, three being in events run off for the first time. lXIarks in the mile were shattered in both classes and the record for the javelin broke the College record when Lovette of Saginaw heaved the spear l6l.S5 ft. in class B. Records for the 100 yard and 220 yard dashes were also set. Captain Osborn, Shepherd, Forman, Vanzandt, Hamill, Flem- ing, Petschulat, Doyle, Davis, Bouwman, Norg, Lee, Chickering, . U . . . CAPTAIX OSBORN Qtto, Peterson, Skellenger, and Salters received lxysu for their 120 VY ' 'KI Y 5 ' r 1 f - ' I f ' . f f ' I 3 I ' 2 l . 1 i 1 f FF 1 l 21:1 .til-I, .gr-rf tg:-r, ,lr Ri 1 1:-rg H ff, - 1 -- -A . - H- K 4 nn, -I Q N- - 3 X x ' x ' 51 , K 2. 'fr uv ' I 3' . I ,,: , 'A ' ,1'A gl 1, ' - f , r if . .,f. 6 . , . . , - retat , Back Row-Coach Young, Kline, Fandrich, Doubleday, Olmstead, Salter, Ramsdell, student manager. Second Row-Otto, Skellenger, Peterson, Lee, Ford, Henry, Brown, Norg. Front Row-Doyle, Fleming, Petschulat, Van Zandt, Captain Osborn, Hamill, Forman, Davis, Bouwman. seasonls work. Brown, Henry, and Olmstead received R's . Zeke Osborn was re-elected to captain the 192-l team. Qsborn, Iialamazods best distance man, has won a host of races for Kazoo and well deserves the honor of being captain for two Con- secutive years. KALAMAZOO COLLEGE TRACK AND FIELD RECORDS Event 100 220 440 880 One Mile Two Mile 120 H. II. 220 L. H. Hammerih Shot Discus Broad jump High Jump Pole Vault Javelin Relay 1'Discontinued. Record 10 22 2-10 51 2-10 2200 3-10 -l-:ZS 4-10 9:57 6-10 16 S-10 26 6-10 128 ft. 3 in 38.73 ft. 133 ft. -l in 21 fu 11 in 6 ft. 11 ft. 3 in. 153.05 fr. 3:30 2-10 Holder A. C. YValker Victor Petschulat Harvard Coleman Rav Forman Ray Forman llarold YVilcox James Fleugal Charles 1.Vattles Thomas Shepherd Albert R. Schuur L. Moore Ralph Clay NVm. Praeger -Ir. Thomas Shepherd xl. Paul Yvalker Miles Casteel Fred Van Zandt Linn Kern, 532-10 Noble Travis, 53 Rollin Davis, 524- Ilarvard Coleman, 12,1 10 516-10 ki... .t , W, Meet M. I. A. A. State Mid XVest M. I. A. A. Nat. Intercollegiate State M. I. A. A. M. I. A. A. State Hillsdale M. I. A. A. State Nat. Intercollegiate Hillsdale State State Albion Mid XVest R Year 1915 1921 1922 1923 1921 1921 1915 1920 1923 1916 1905 1921 1921 1923 1919 1920 1923 1922 Ns The baseball team had a very up-and- down season in the Spring of l923. One other pitcher like Bowman or a few more hitters like Black and Chase and the college team would have gone through its difficult season undefeated. As it was Kazoo only won six games out of fifteen. After losing to Notre Dame and bl. A. C. the team won three straight NI. I. A. A. victories. Then it lost three straight NI. I. A. A. games, and also was defeated at Nlt. Pleasant. After trimming Qlivet for the second time, they lost to Alma and lX'I. A. C. Two close games were won on the home lot from Ypsi and Albion, but in the final game XJ on Field day, Albion won out again. if The season was a success from every angle. The team started the season with only three regulars-two outfielders and a second baseman-and finished the season in a tie for second place in the conference standings. Bert Bowman was undoubtedly the best pitcher in the bl. I. A. A., and with the proper kind of support would have won the pennant for Kazoo. His defeats in the BI. I. A. A. were in all cases caused by unearned runs. Captain-elect Bob Ludwig earned the title of best catcher in the conference his first year on the team. Babe Ruth Black was the long range swatter. His bee-line bullet throws across the diamond were of big league calibre. ,ss 4. Haj ' P I Q, xx? 'K' 6 M. J t -A--..' .. . yy-. Q X W ..-A .af N. . x f it 1. J-Q A i..s,.x . .x N... .i V .: .,.,. N .. ,. .W .. X .N X ' 5 Chevy Chase was the most dependable hitter, hitting .S . -Q consistently in the pinches and making several spectacular if' M Qi. i i x . 1 B . .x Q I i.: X550 if catthes in the outer gaiten. ud Hinga played his usua , steady game and was the life of the infield. blorley, Le . Y . 5 Cromer, and Y oorhees played good ball and several times de- . saggy . ti . livered timely blows. Although his hitting wasn't up to the -P tw high standard that he set in preceding years, still Captain - 'PN lfixxi X Petschulat proved to be a good leader and a handy fielder. . , .. ,. KI. I. A. A. bTAlNDINQ1b, 19-9 5... VV'on Lost Pct. xref Q WX w - - X NXNTQQ Alma . . . 9 Q .750 , - N ,s X' .t 1 lxalamazoo .356 ,Q Albion .. .556 . 'Y I ' ' Cfxprfux YI at? PETSCHUL.-XT ps1 an 1 - i 122 .. WX 'HxI3,x,v..t... . . ez: .A L L t e in i L ,gwwfwpo Q L it i Q ii' 'X'f' 'fs ' 4 for-Iti?e'seQF'fvK9fff'3591?ai w e ' tl, wr ra'f '? f?gZ 1Lifi3'i ':'Qi'i. A . v isa Q34gl'42K?y 4xMM,?rl' Ajmafcf Qiguwrx I .. - .1 'V X Q , N 3 J I . o , - , , W yy Back Row-Coaeh Young, Coates, Sodergren, Sherwood, Prior, Doyle, llollander, Manager Ramselell. lN Iiddle Row-llellenburg, Ludwig, Vereoe, Zimmerman, Lundy, Voorhees, Coughlin, XVife. Front Row-Hinga, Le Cronier, Chase, Captain Petsehulat, Black, Morley, Bowman. The 1923 team had the fewest strike-outs and the most bases-on-balls of anv team in the last four years. The team lost some high class material in Captain Petsehulat, Hinva, Couffhlin, Le Cronier Bowman and Chase, who did not return in the Fall D b Y of 1025. Even with this loss, however, the 102-l team ouvht to have enouvh mate- lb b rial left, to give the other colleges in the KI. I. A. A. a good race. Kalamazoo Kalamazoo Kalamazoo Kalamazoo Kalamazoo Kalamazoo Kalamazoo Kalamazoo THE YIfAR'S RECORD Kalamazoo .... Kalamazoo Kalamazoo Kalamazoo Kalamazoo Kalamazoo .... Kalamazoo Notre Dame M. A. C.... Olivet . . . Ypsilanti .. Hillsdale .. Albion . . . Hillsdale .. Alma ...... lit. Pleasant Olivet ..... KI. A. C.. . . Alma ..... Ypsilanti .. Albion . . . Albion . . . 123 .X X APTAIN- I.L'nw1o 'w m:c1.......:1.x . .zz.1:::.,ffmxss1s::1:x:xN9l' x ,t was na .-ss-.za x. Fiuixcn, Capivxix HALL, H. A. VOORHEES, Miss Purr, Miss Pixel.. Tczznir f:fI11'll1f7I0lI.V of lln fll. I. J. J. for the third rozzseczztitff' year. The l923 tennis team upheld the high record estab- lished by Kalamazoo teams in the past by cleaning up everything in sight in the form of state championships. Under the capable leadership of Captain Peck Hall, singles champion of Hlichigan, a title won at the KI. A. C. Inter- collegiate, the team scored an easy victory over the other RI. l. A. A. schools in the tournament at Albion. Dorothy Putt again earned the title of women's singles champion of the RI. l. A. A. and Peck Hall won the same distinc- tion in the men's division. The Kalamazoo women's doubles team, composed of Dorothy Putt and hlabel Pinel, won the doubles championship of the NI. I. A. A., while the men's doubles team, composed of Hall and Casey Voorhees, won second place in the men's contest. The season opened with a dual meet with Central Normal School, which resulted in a tie. Hall and French won their singles matches, while Alenduff and French won their doubles contest. However the Normal men also gained three matches. ln the HI. l. A. A. preliminary match played with Olivet, bliss Putt won, 6-2, 6-l. lvliss Pinel won, 6-1, 6-O. Peck Hall won from Cunningham in two love sets, while Voorhees won, 6--l-, 8-10, 6-l. In the men's doubles finals, Dillon and Kerns of Ypsi, defeated Hall and Voorhees, 6-2, -l-6, 8-6. In the wo- men's doubles finals, Dorothy Putt and Rlable Pinel beat bliss Vvonsey and Bliss Urch of Albion, 6-2, 7-5. 124 st. A ..mw:s.t,X fic .d - Mm , , X X X x .Q .. X at . x 9 f ,Qi-.lZEZ ' sg y ir :z '13 55' .:f'i-es. ---- 1 ri QIPI T, , .X :.:::g ,, , Q , 'ESQ 3 .3 X New 5 X- ,x i ' , 1 , is ' ,N R ,,, is ..,. t, :sqm 'N N 'N X X .s . 1 ' , h M... a f ' g,,f ,v' lk ,s , 9- it , X .,.l.......1i. CAPTAIN HALL xx xx x 125 WOMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION VVith the increase of enthusiasm for women's athletics in Kalamazoo College came the need of an organized group to sustain and promote sueh an interest. Con- sequently in the Spring of 1923 the VVomen's Athletic Association was formed with its object to properly develop the body, to awaken a broad and intelligent interest in women's athletics, and to acquire knowledge concerning themf, Interclass rivalry has been heightened through contests and tournaments. Em- phasis, however, has been placed on persistent training and moderate living with a more active athletic program in view for next year. Marguerite Hall Lillian Draewell Dorothy C. Scott Pauline Kurtz .. Catherine VVells Virginia Earl, Ne va Hirleman. . .. si bs ELT N i X 'X X X I .......President . . . .l icc-Prmidfrzl . . .Sfrrrtary . . . . Trmsurrr x NX . . ..,... Rl'C0l'dl'l' X X , N ...Asst Recorders X SD QE-5 1,3553 Q gxii +8 126 X Q xx I ,. .em x i I at X isae X m -va TEX in raw W wr W , U X si . X W A x XX fsNggQ3QYN X. ' Charlotte l.iherty MENIBISRSHIP 1924 . hlargaret Kurtz llelen Meyers Pauline Kurtz Irure S 1025 Marguerite Hall Grave jackson Aileen Radkey 1926 Ruth Adams Lillian Anderson Doris Bourns Bertha Briggs Lueile Bullock Dorothy Aldrich Hazel Allahach Maude 1glflCliIT11lIl Dorothea Bowman Ruth C'hadderdon Ruth Chart Carita Clark Bernice Cook Flossie Crook lNIarion De Young Ruth Cross ' Lillian Draewell Virginia Earl Helen Going Alice Gordon Dorothea Dowd Helen Folsom I.eAnna Gang Blanche Gilhznns Dorothy Ilenshaw Ruhy Herhert Neva Hirlelnan Dorothy Hohson Grace Hutchins Dorothy Johnson Velva Green Hazel Lill - Grace Loupee lileanor 1VI:1rtin XVinifred Merritt 1927 NVinifred johnson Muriel Lindsey Lulu Mathews Beryl Nlelfllan Marjorie Morse Martha Murphy Dorothy Numnierdor Gertrude Otto Margaret Palmer limily Parks 9 X 1 ix ll' fx- '1 tgfhf 127 ehmidt Dorothy C. Eieoll Shirley Payne lfvelyn Pinel lilinor Snow Margaret Vande Bunt Clara NVaid Catherine XVells Frances Peatling Gwendolyn Perkins llsther Pratt Charline Ransom Alice Starkweather hlarjorie Yolkers llildegaide XVatson l.ouise XVilson STOCKBRIDGE HALL The dormitory life of the college is an important part of the college life as a whole, and for this reason the staff thought that the Boiling Pot would not be com- plete without some mention being made of it. And so to the inmates of the college dorms this section is dedicatedg may the merry faces, here shown, recall happy memories of dormitory days to you, Gentle readers when in vears to come vou affain glance through these pages. Under the new plans of the administration, the dormitory accommodations of the college will soon be greatly improved. The first part of these plans was carried out when the ground was broken, late this Spring, for the beautiful new 5101000 women's dormitory. 2: H v . . 4 Q XVHEATON LODGE 'i I' X ,fvlfrf-,P lg 1 23 L Q7 . VK If , ,, 's -,M 2 Q 211'-L My iii if tif' ' iifggm 35.5 s. ,Egg if f?fgv,,.s f ,f J- 1..X2,. ,, Ab, . A 'f,' Qjlv? --fl: ' 'iii if - ' -l-,,...,f,J 'X v 'r A' 'awk EU- ns. 5 f '2'fv w YY I x 41 + pl : Ha. -, -N . Mya ' Q W' L, Af . : if ' I ff? 5-'FIBWI .' A ,:' - M -, .. .,b J, Jw! H1 - I V 1 Q hm if-fs siifefil H. fi 'ss im P 1 - - ' : 'list 5? I I. A Iliff T: l'i F, , my ' 79 - -Q5, M- f-m, ,lIu gm :,g..g,,1h: ' N- .,L,yix.: .,.,,,I3:-ginh zn31,: .1 .fff 1 gf?-my ' V 1 :ft-524.1 X-191 U il I-Q12 fl: FE amlsfs- , 1 ' M'-f 'Q 5 'f am?1' Qi IJ!2? IT i9 L' nf If - : f cz 1:1 . -f ,- we mn 1EEEF:f:.- sfifj. kj 4 A lg, f ff?-', jj: fi fth , K LM ' 36 p lrf - ,.,, g. ,- 5 V P'f'.'1f-ff ' f L - . Q. 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The shades of night were falling fast, VVhen through gay Greenwich village passed A poet with a languid air XVho wore a wig of tangled hair, Excelsior! lIis coat was torn, his shoes were worn And on his face a look forlorn, And to his clothes were clinging shreds Of that soft stuff they use for beds. Excelsior! This poet traveled with a bunch XVho fed themselves upon free lunch, XVho always stood in direst need, That filled their pipes with that vile weed. Excelsior! Our poet died most suddenly, And friends the body came to see, And strange to say, 'twas packed aw ay In that course stuff that looks like hay. Excelsior! XVhile digging in an old back yard ln later years they found this bard. They excavated his remains And ope'd his skull in search of brains- Lo! he had none, but in their place A fibrous substance filled the space. Excelsior! Prof. Milton Simpson, in giving out special topics, was surprised that no one took the subject, Public Baths . He couldn't blame them much though because he wouldn't like to take public baths either. No, said the farmyard hen, I'm no humming bird, but I know my eggs. GENERAL 'Twas in Freshmen Lecture, The talk ran long and slow, And soon were sleeping peacefully The students, row on row. NVE GIVE VP -lim Stanley wants to know whether a newly married deaf and dumb couple may be said to be unspeakably happy. At eight l'. M. when Ma and Pa llelped entertain with sis, john and Mary in distance seats NVQ-re - far - apart - like - this. At 10 P. M. Pa withdrew And sought his room upstairs, Ah then, ye gods! XVhat bliss! The lovers sat till nearly one, .Xboutaseloseasthis. TRY IT MEN Ilere's a sure way, fellows, to make ene' mies. Rush up to a girl you know, grab her hand as though you're tickled to death to see her, and in honeyed tones say, VVell how's my girl? Ten times out of nine she'll answer coyly, All right. Then say, How do you know she is? The dying man shook his head tearfully and maintained, l won't take it, no Ikey, it tastes awful. But mine dear fren, groaned lkey, you can't die and leave all those expensive medi- cines wasted. Ile-Hill says he could marry any girl he pleases. She-Yes, but could he ever please one. THIS ONE PI 1'S SIIERLOCK HOLMES TO S H AM E XVhile glancing through the weekly paper of a neighboring small town, the editor came across a masterful piece ot detective work which he considered worthy of the honor of being reprinted here, It seems that some heartless wretch had placed some tacks on the highway leading through said town, and as a result said tacks had done considerable damage before they were discovered and removed. Une of the rich men ltherc are at least two in the vil- lagel who had received several punctures as a result of the vile deed, posted a reward of H9100 for the capture of the guilty party. A Couple days later he received this letter: Dear Sir: I have just read account ot re- ward for the person scattering shingle nails on the road north of Holland. I think I could tind out who done it, but such things are very hard to prove, unless the person is seen and il it was done on purpose, the person would see to it that no one would catch him or her, at it. I need the money bad enough, but to gain the reward I would have to produce evi- dence enough for conviction, and that is quite the impossible thing. Even if a man tor womanl had been known to have bought nails at a store on that day and then traversed the road north, or had bought them in Grand Haven or some cross roads store. You can probably 0 .4 satisfy yourself as to who it was as well as I could. Find out, who purchased shingle nails on that date at a Holland hardware, at Grand Haven or at a country store. YVho liy es north of Holland and maybe off the cement road that owns no machine. It may be some envious person tand there are plenty of theml. Or someone who has had a dog killed or chickens, or has been run into by a motorist, or had a child hurt. Look for the man who is narrow-minded and probably drives a team, or one horse, and tmaybej too stingy to feed them prop- erly and take care of them as he should, probably beats them and overdrives them, has an ugly temper, a blulfer, tif he knows he can lick the other fellowl, but a coward in 21 pinch or showdown, My theory is, that someone is putting on a new roof, bought shingles or about to build a house, or chickencoop. Had the package of nails in his tor herl wagon and the package became broken, thus scattering the nails as they went along. Interview all car owners north and try and lind a low-down person that doesn't own any car. At the same time, look for a new roof, or anyone contemplating building. Spend a few days at this, burn a little gas, make new acquaintances and friends maybe. Then report to my uncle C. C. Bailey who was sheriff of Ottawa county about 1868 or 1870, I don't know exact date. Yours truly, C. H. B., -Ir. il X. , fi I ,K .-4' - Ji- g M l 41 '27-I.entl me two dollars anal I'll he etern- ally intlehtetl to you. 'Z-I--Yes, I'ln afraid I,.'X'I'I2S'II VERSION Mary hatl a little lanih, Someone shot it cleatl. Now Mary takes the lamh to school, Between two hunks ot hreacl. Stuclent-I wonder Madame if you will giye me four tlougluiuts. Mrs. NVheaton-lilamlly. So you like the Lodge doughnuts, do you? Stutlent-Yes, their line for playing quoits with. 'I'HI2A'I'RIi NOTICS Nliss TanisYHnye you haul any theatrical experience hefore. Letllie De Bow-Oh, yes, I usetl to play the front legs of the horse in Paul Revere's Ride. Lame-Dial you eyer kiss a girl when she ditln't expect it? Brain-I tlouht it. 50. FEMALE SARCASM Pete--I was simply crazy about Il girl once. Peg-Some girls do leave ri lasting im- pression, don't they. 'I'II5X'I S IUIFFEREYI' She-Do you think we will he ahle to get along Financially when we are married. He-XVhere there's LI will there's a way. Shew-Yes, hut father hasn't matle his will yer. LIQVY IWIPPLIZ 'I'IiI,I.S THIS ONIT Ahner-I hope this rain keeps up. Hezekialh-XVhy? Ahner-XVell it won't t-ome clown if it does, will it? TAKING XVAYS Ilerron-VVon't you have a Chair? Stranger-No sir, I'll take the yictrola. You have defaulted your eighteenth payment. IN HER LITTLE COTTAGE PUDDING BY THE SEA I NVhen the quail on toast doth sweetly sing in autumn, And the incandescent bulbs begin to sprout, There's something seems to tell me that I've got 'em, And my mother never dares to let me out. The box-calves moistly munch their popcorn plaster, The jailbird sings up in the whifile treeg The dumbell heaved a cyclone as I passed her, ln her little cottage pudding by the sea. Refrain .' In her little cottage pudding by the sea, llly Gwendolyn is waiting there for meg And she surely is a prize, lfVith her sweet witch-hazel eyes, In her little cottage pudding by the sea. II The Horlicks llalted milkmaid saw the cow hide Behind the old moss-covered bucket shopg They say the bed ticked and the sea-side, And the cellar staired to see the chocolate drop. A rum punch landed just below the wheat belt Can't kill as quick as a tomato cang They say that Cupid wears a heart-felt, And a Turkish chauffeur is an Ottoman- R efrain .' In her little cottage pudding by the sea, Bly Gwendolyn is waiting there for meg She's so blythe and debonair NVith her curly Belgian hare, ln her little cottage pudding by the sea. III The cow-slipped on her wintergreen lil1I'l0ll21 VVhen she heard the shoe horn and the lemon peelg Othello now won't speak to Desdemona Because he saw O'Sullivan rubber heel. A VVaterman's fountain pig pen for a feature XVould be extremely novel, would it not? That's all-won't some courageous creature Step bravely forth and flag my train of thought? R 1' f 1-ui zz .' ln her little cottage pudding by the sea, llly Gwendolyn is waiting there for meg And T linger in suspense Un the ruhbarb-wire fence Uf her little cottage pudding by the sea. -fllichigan Gargoyle. 134 5. . SUCK! QIIIIISICCICI-XVIlt'l'C'h Beans? Rickman-Over working in the Pliysies lah. Olmstexttl-Awgwnn! Ile never overworketl in his life. Irztte Prof.-Young inzln, do you know any thing about this Course? Denison-A little, sir. XVhnt would you like to know. N.-XI I'ICAI,I.Y SPIIAKINKS Poor-Do you know young Sayles? Fish-Yes, he :intl I are in the sznne boat. HIQARD IN 'I'lIlC DORM Osborne-XVhcre tlid you get the eigzirs? Grafton--A frientl of tnine in Culm sent them to me. Osborne-He sure tloea know the ropes down there. ADVANCE DUPII led-IIns your fortune ever been told? Kate-No. hut I tlnresuy pllpll will tell you if you really have serious intentions. LL' lor I simply e:1n't keep my son in cheek, rounetl the futher ns he tilletl in the space another htty. DONT SLAM 'I'lIli DOOR AS YOI' GU OIWI' Applieant-I henr you neetl n lwriglit, in tlustrious, gootl looking young main. l Employer-I tlo. XVhon1 tlo you suggext? 'I'III:f GLI-il-I ULIB PICKICD 'I'lIIS I'P IN OVID The train Cllllfgttl up the M. U. track, 'Iihe min it rained, you lwetg The train Cllilfgkll clown the M. U. track, It's hell wan ringing wet, 8' . 221 ww T2 gmglgrl' Qfgnvdfl I It ff! L: 17 ff . I on e '34 1 .F . 'Ib' f !F 1 135 WWE I m I A EM LE ' j 12 gli ,llf x 1 f, if I I 1 X ' f -M. W. izj mf, ...., -, ..,. X I K -1::r:.:-.:'., - gg - El WM M If ? ii - Q W -'L f-vfxs.,-.f .N .ai R Yi 4 W GENTS I-Lu.,L Q QQQQQ Q SOUTHERN EXPOSURE 136 l I v ' ,'. X .xy ,gf - ,4Z -lil. 4,144 W., wg ,. X. 2 S ' l lq ' .Q J , if f lillnflf T Km' - ll ' it 1 , f f 3 s wim: lllllllll' llll . ff .i 'll'V':',: T ll irliif .lY ,9- .l-l'l ,lip i l , , l lla-. V I. .ill I yy Q xl 'l!.5li: g' ill Jlfrs qmiigll iillllllu 1 Mail ' li ii Ji -'lllm f' -0 f 'i l .I 1, , Il' tgstg p .c g t llllmlg mm C 'QZQQ ifrfs E -Z A- in ,six Xi List of Advertisers Aldrich Auto Sales Co. Ball's Grocery C. H. Barnes S Co. The Battery Shop The Bauman Klotor Co. Bell Shoe Co. Benetlict's Drug Store Blue Parrot Broyvn's Wlest End Drug Stores Bryant Paper Co. Byers Brothers Construction Co. The Chocolate Shop The lfirst Baptist Church The First Presbyterian Church Colman Drug Co. Columbian lflectric Co. Consumers Power Co. Crescent lfngraving Co. Dold's Drug Stores Doubleday Brothers lfdxvards S Chamberlin lflite Theater Sam Folz Fuller Theater Geary Art Shop Gilmore Brothers Hi1ll's Grocery Hershfield's Henderson-Ames Co. Hinrich's ,leyvelry Home lfurnishing Co. Home Savings Bank H a rdxvare Co. 137 . X Hoover-Bond Co. bl, R. -Iones Sons X Co. Bank lialamazoo-City Savings lxalamaxoo College Kalamazoo College Index Kalamazoo College Co-operatix Kalamazoo Laundry Kalamazoo National Bank Kalamazoo Publishing Co. Kalamazoo Stove Co. Kelser and Brophy lsiridel's Lee and Cady llusic Shop Klunro and Co. New Burdick Hotel Northwestern Alutual Life Uakley and Oldfield Olmsted and lllulhall Park-American Hotel Pattisonls Auto Supply Piper lce Cream Co. H C Pitf I l . . ,, Progressive 5 exve er Shoe Repair Shop Rochester Theological Seminary Slager Brothers Grocery Slocum Brothers Studio The Sport Streng and Shop Zinn Hvorden Grocers lf. L. Yaple X. NI. C. A. 'e Store J., ,wi . ,. 2 ,N X x if ,Jaw h .1 S C 2-XTTPL S w , P Q X w ww . R. ,Mix ,NSS-iw -X 4418 e, 'v v 4, 1 -1 . 3, fgfaw, sw ff 5,9 5,.,. .--f A 'as 'TW X - A, , Q' x i S1 ,ix . ' ' 'M ' NX inipngngmzz 141 1:1 1 1 1i1n:i1n1o1o1o1n1n1v1n1o1n Ye Kalamazoo Daily A record of a few of the events that distinguished the college year '23-'Z-I-. Sept. 17- -fs-f Juv I A sa 'ix g my X TT' Sept. 18- - Pff'S, X Q 4?-S?'ai5 1 ZX KN Q 7 Sept. ae. gym, Z Vi! I 6 Sept. 20- .0 f 5 f Sept. 21- : X Sept. 'f t leg .X Sept. I z' 7? v 'T - l 4- ' ,ful I Fas., ' W . ' r-. ' l 4 4,J,?' .Q ,ik gi ll ,TiZ7i7 ff in , - x Mg ,-425159 - , ah Q ff' , ggga -4,5 ,' Z at ,lefty , xt na- it,-e fl 'I : . GI , , lf' 4 4 7' 7f ' f X WT .g, Sept. 21 26- From Timbuctoo and far Pekin, The boys commence a-rolling in. Among the crowd we note a score, XVho swore last june that never more The school would see their hand- some faces. CThey're here in their accustomed places.l More Froshl The Lpperclassmen stroll in to greet old friends and to give the Freshmen the once over . 19-Prexy gives the class of '27 its first oflicial welcome to the classic halls of old Kazoo. Ledlie De-Bow buys his season chapel ticket. Class of '27 makes its debut at the Freshmen reception. Harold Blaine meets Liz Nicholson for the first time. 25-Student Volunteers hold first Ves- per service. Main street girls serenade the Dorm. The night shirt parade. Levi Dipple makes a famous speech. Sept.23-Y. VV. C. A. hare and hound chase. Tom Seller wins the second Floor chess cham- pionship. Sept. 29-Notre Dame gives the varsity its first moral victory . Oct. 1-Prof. Ashby and Vern Hunell both come to Physics class on time! Thoms is there tool Oct. 2-The Euro skate. '24 Boiling Pot staff have a meeting and decide to make it bigger and better . Oct. 3-Kappas entertain new girls at tea. Oct. -L-Frosh initiation'ii!'f! Oct. 9-Sophomore girls initiate the freshmen gi1'ls!f!tfP Oct. 10-Memorial service for Dean YVilliams is held. Oct. 17-Alpha Sigma Delta open meeting. Oct. 20-Morningside hands liazoo another one of those consolation victories. Oct. 2-l-Kappa Pi open meeting. Sherwoods hold their annual feed at the Park American. Oct. Oct. Nov Nov. 3- Nov. Bill Denison makes some striking remarks. 25-The band appears in chapel for the lirst time under the capable tootelage of Little VVillie. 29-Centuries hold a terpsichorian fest at the Country 2-Euro open meeting. boots a beautiful field goal from the 35 yard line. Club. Kazoo varsity after outplaying Ypsi for two quarters hows by 19-3 count. Black 7-The All-Girls party is huge success. Sigma Rhos hold their seventy-second annual open meeting. ',Continne-d on page Hfl 1 3:1 1 1 1 1 1:1t1t1o1:1n1n1u1 101 138 111111101 1 ioioiuiui W'n.m.., i .. -z 2 g z: 22. :: i l 3 : -. -. E .- ... e 2 .. - E : E ..- E Illlll llll IHIII ll r msd 1111111112I1117 1111112luKI11 l1111m-Ki-T , ,F f - 1 RV 'Qu--11112I1l IQ-m-2-11 :EV 651, . 'QIQ---nl!! 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A Q r ve his S ye ,X X .Xe sill' XX-.Q . ,XXXX N SQ 'T ,Nm ' gif X 'xt' X IX' :Xi is ff? XXf rig Xe X L X X X 3 X X , L fi :S ' i X X Yi 1 SPS NX X Xrr Ei -X S9 X , 0 XXXXQSXR ,ag X, S i.,,X.' ,S 5 Ni' X :XX , . 'w S f TX CMN Xa 4 .. NX5 SX Xi X ,tg gi 'F' 29 X X f XX, X .. ka? NN NX QA. .XL 'sts xl ,Q-Tfl' Y' ,NS 1 ...LEP 15 Xe Q- ' is S 1 I ' 3' X XXX X Xiu X . X X ,.-tg XXX s X 'R is ff f sl' X Sf U, X ,gf Xi , XX as e ' 'WXKXX' N ,,wXXXX, X. b V XX at :grgx JK .rw e : c c c I: c o e c i i ! C C Q i lil . U l KALAMAZOO CGLLEGE Kalamazoo College is not a vocational school or a university, but purely a liberal arts college. It provides a first-class college course, with the max- imum of personal attention. All students are known to one another and to the faculty members. Conferences with individuals are quite as important in our method as are the class-room sessions. VVe are resorting more and more to round-table groups, especially in the junior and senior years. Hence we have a comradeship in the pursuit of knowledge which is almost unique in American colleges. U The aim of the College, therefore, is not in the direction of mass education or of bulk and impressive statistics but solely in the direction of quality. The remarkable success of our students in securing graduate scholar- ships and academic distinction confirms our faith in the ideal which the Col- lege has adopted. VVe spend our money mainly to secure and retain a good faculty in the belief that excellent teachers are more important than ornate and expensive buildings. Our courses in Chemistry, Physics, and Economics are vitalized through close co-operation with the local industries and we a1'e doing sig- nihcant research in several of these fields. The literary work of the College is enriched by the volunteer effort of the literary societies and Drama club. These as well as the glee clubs for men and for women contribute also to the social life of the student body. Physical education and athletics are included as part and parcel of the re- quired curriculum and the work of that department is maintained upon a par with any other. A physical examination is required prior to enrollment in the College. A vital Christian spirit permeates the institution, making the whole college community like one family and radiating to every place and task to which our students and graduates go. This we do not p1'opose to sacrifice either for larger numbers or for any other seeming success, and for the present the size of the student body is limited to four hundred. Those who seek entrance must qualify in scholarship, character, and health, for they are to bear our stamp, our reputation, and our mission to the world. ALL.eXN Hosax. 101111101 01111 ni signin: 1-3:11101 0: 1-1:11 ni 01411 111111 nguioiuqoznqnoioioioioioioq U U U ll : :: ! ! U U U U U U U U U U u 0:1 -X.. X 5 ,.i' S ., ,Q his sg ,' s , 'YR X UU Xy. 2 3, . , WX, as Xi -I JAWS E8 , vga. K ' f X, , Qxf s . ' N8 Ss X ei nr- Q' f fix S , ew sf E 'XXX if xv S KX Ts XY' .XxsXs.2gs Ni-is my .X Xm A S msg G X:g,y Nw. 'R' X. P .X-Xsfw X 2 SS SE: Xb X 5 3? X .ax XXNI GTX. YK F k KN' P Nusa' it l.Nu?QXvSf ggi: i' ' x Gi gs Qwwkx X X- . XX UXX - X gf .s 2 2 E , X, S fx as X ci Xia, XX c. .S its SRU WSW 140 A -Xe 5 X ive i -X wg ,. -Msxss, a .XXXXX XX ti L 'E X .X V .NWN X, X was Xp . . X .... QX X X . XfXg-XXQXQSXQNXNSQXXX blsqxf. -X .Mx A XA- X , - WN .xx XX-2 -X X XX, XX HN s 1 5 ,. U XX L51 ' X TSA X- i X s i 'll il' YY W:tiiX 55 'Sw ,PWXXXX N XXQ my A ,N X X- X- , -X 1 .. 1, U. X is ' ,xg Xgc, cg Ng 5 sg, ,gg SSXXX-X 5. X X i X sk' QNX XX' es ' ' i K' 1Q'vlQ-:P QIXQXQQAQ XfXXXl,, N515 3 1jQQXlXI.:.'rf X 'X5Tw,X::XaX- 1 ' X Ui .af XX,-,av XX as --swf XX-X . XX X 'X . X X. . . K ' M X X N J 9 :X ,o o 2Oi0D0i0i02010l 1 iD l 1 Q H ll l Tllili Q i l01ll10iD1dl0iGCOi0QOQ0- U ll U II U ll NDUYVKIFNT is the thing of greatest importance to the 5 51 -,, 1 . . ll Qollege just now. A little more than S100,000.00 must be -' X 49 . . U R91 9,0 secured by june 1, 102-1, in order to meet the requirements U gag 'N to secure an additional 5200000.00 II .s-:.:-.vrcf , . ,k 7 E Student fees lack more than 38-00.00 per year per student D of paying the cost of their education. This lack must be made up by the H interest accruing from Endowment funds. To maintain our College at its H present standing the Endowment fund must be increased by 5600000.00 H which will bring the total lfndowment fund to a sum in excess of 151,300,- N 00000. H The offer to add 5200000.00 to our lfndowment by the General lfduca- E tion Board of New York, is conditional upon our securing in cash and E pledges S-100,000.00 by -lune 1, 192-l. :Xt this date, lllarch 1, we have a H total in cash and pledges of 520l,6Jf2.27. Students, Faculty, Alumni and i Friends will surely rally to this challenge and provide the money necessary to H meet this critical situation. ! It is hoped that construction of the New Dormitory for YVomen will be U begun this Spring. Almost 580,000.00 has been pledged to this fund of g which approximately 360,000.00 has been paid. The Committee contem- G plates the erection of a 5100000.00 Dormitory. Such a building will be a ' . b E decided asset to the College in many ways. Q The future welfare of Kalamazoo College will be determined in the U next few weeks. A board of Education which has no direct connection with U the College, apart f1'om sentiment and purely on the basis of its merit as an U educational institution roposes to Give one dollar for every two the friends P is . U of the College will raise. lt is inconceivable that the students of this College, H its graduates, and the citizens of Kalamazoo will not meet fully, and gladly such a proposition. II H FRANK 13. BACHELOR, Businesx fllmzager. 1 li II II ll II i AQQQDQOQ H 20: Q im Q I Q -Ui0QOQ 2 - Q ,DQ QIOQDDDDQOQDQOQDQ 14-1 'W X . .qw ,-wwe as ,www , ,, Ns v 10.0 u u u is o a U U 1 u ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 3 4.4 v 10101 io1nia1oipn1o2n1o7 ioicxioioioisicziniolcnicnl iaiczinioinjoiw Ye Kalamazoo Daily fContinued from page 1383 Nov. 12-Armistice day services in chapel. Kazoo is represented in city peerade. 6 fr ... i fi Cflg xiii U .fir AVEXV si li i , W X XX 1 X QNLQQ ski' if if iff 1 Nov. 13-Soph party at Gobleville-a sad night for a group of daring young yearlings. Nov. 14--Century Forum open meeting. jacob tells a Hindu story with a touch of local color. Nov.17-The Cross-country team wins the M. I. A. A. championship for the second consecutive year. Nov. 19-juniors hold a party at Augusta. Harsch learns a thing or two about Mah Jong. Nov.21-Philos give the new men a rousing good time at their sixty-eighth annual open meeting. Alpha Sigs and Kappas hold formal initiation. Nov. 22-Eurodelphian initiation and banquet. Nov.23-Prof. Simpson leads the yells at the Faculty pep meeting. Nov. 24-The old grads again grace the familiar halls of Kazoo-Home Coming day. The lighting football team scores against Albion but is forced to accept a 21-7 defeat. In the immortal words of Dean Severn it was indeed a moral victory . ln the even- ing, the Sherwood dance at the Burdick ball room. Nov. 29-Thanksgiving day-the Lodge serves turkey! The team plays a hard game against I E Dec. Lombard. Men consider society bids gravely. 3-Chapel only lasts five minutesg Johnnie Rynne gets there ten minutes late. 0 u u Q u : u at E Dec. 5-Kappas have one of their famous spreads. M 155 if '-'I .Q Dec. 6-Dramatic fans turn out to see Only 38 , 1' 9 U lt proves to be a complete success. Q II Dec. 7-Tom Cobb gives over his job as president of n the Freshman class to Doc Vilhitney. Dec. 9-Harold Brown takes his turn at wearing the X P ! 1. new suit, which he and his room mate have ' ', ' ll II in partnership, and so Otto has to stay home. i Dec. 10-15 days before Christmasg Jake does his shop- I' f' ' lv 'm l 11' ? H ping ear 1 . I ti H Dec. 12-The football banquet. The boys are forced by Y .1 the inclement weather to hire taxis. 1 II . . ,W '-x53 it ' H Dec.13-Dean E. R. Johnson of Pennsylvania I . speaks U in chapel. Dr. Dunning talks to the Friday II noon luncheon club. H Dec. 1+-Euros hold a spread. ii Dec. 18-The general exodus begins. Pat McCarthy starts his vacation studyingg to use his own If words: I think that vacations are fine things, they give us students a little more time to study. w Dec. 20-Brigham gets up early and does the chores. Nothing like the country air for putting II pep into a fellow! jj Dec. 27-Harold Allen, Alma Smith, Harold Beadle, and Ray Ford leave for the National student I Volunteer convention at Indianapolis. Harold Blaine goes to the Theta Alpha Phi con- H vention at Cincinnati. Jan. 3-Studies are resumed. Doc Hoben shows off his new suit. E ll 'Continued on page l-itil ozonioioioioinioioioioiti 111 1 ininiuiogoioiuiuiv uoioioioioioioioie' 142 X 3 X A W1 ' ' ' .. ..,. .smr,ss...,.s.t.Qm. so-,.,m.:,-sts-.,:.9.-X ' ' ' ' This nnual . . . Is from tI1e press of C. H. BARNES 81 CO. Printers and Designers 216-218 North Burdick St. Kalamazoo, Michigan 111::1-111:11111-11111111-111q10l'H1110l1o1 HAT IS YOUR LIFE WORK TO BE? l'Rl'iSlDl'lN'I' t'O0I,Il5Gl'l SAYS: of insuranee to needs. The economic' UHF who Mills HH 1.HSHmHW ,MUNI WHS llllllliltl- ralnf- now sezircely more than 4 . U l l - -. -L . ont-stunth piotettecl. ra fezfijnufw of fl1nmfIf11.f111 euzfleme of goof! 1'ifi:e11sl1ip, on ilrzfnzpwrvliulife fifle IDU YUI' VL-XN'I' fn flze riylif of self Ijl1I'l'I'llIIl0lIl.n To enigage in a clignilied professiong , 'l'o help serve the social orderg The need for insurance is as old' as it To represent the greatest institution is universal and more urgent in hard in the worldg times than in prosperous periods. The 'I'o choose those with whom you deal: life insuranee agent is his own master, To iind business any time and every- eontrolling his own time, earningin exact whereg proportion to his successful etiort, and 'I'o work for yourself and earn ae- iindingr no limit to the new applieations eordingly? XVIII, YUI' I,l'l'I' VS 'I'EI,I. YUI' NURIC ,Xl3UI I' 'I'IIlS Gltl'l.X'I' ISPSINHSS AND I'ZSl'ECI,XI.I,Y t'ONL'l'lIiNING THE NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. of Milwaukee, Wisconsin The Coiupany that issues nearly 50 pei' cent of its new hnsiness on lives of memhers previously insured. UNCH .X I'lJI.ICYIIOI.DI'lIi. :Xl.IV,'XYH .X l'RUHPl'1L I' GLENN L. SHIPMAN l1'r'1m1'f1l .-ijffnf for N4lIlflIIi'e .Yff'I'll ,llirlliynri Seeond Floor, Peel: Building li,XI..XM.'XZOU, MICHIGAN :ning-.-ninini 1:1-I ning1:13:1011iol43o1o:olo ciolcinioioi 14-3 .si ,es-N, MN A .ws-X, K :Yay :xX:.sys3,51xN,4gX Xyswwwmk A .xx Qsmvwsex is X .. Q .. X A, Hz A Qs, V Ai. Q X t x X 1 n1n1 1 1- :.111..,:.,: - : : -. - : - .-... -,- - - - - - -1,-D-0-0-4.1. All group pictures and a great majority of individual pictures appearing in this hook were taken by H e o o o o o sLocU Baos. Official B OIL IN G PO T Photographers is c a ci fa , ni u We greatly appreciate the patronage of the College during the past year, and sincerely solicit your patronage in the future. u 3 11101 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1:11 1:1 1 1 1 1 1:1 icgnioioioioioinioih' g1nq1n1u1n1n1 1911 1 1 1 1:1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 o1n1n1o1n1o1n into n This ! ll space E dedicated c :n to the Amnlgnmated D Q II Q II D of Il U Society U down-trodden H ' and Q W - ll q,.A A9J'.A,,g?1. .gf-vw ,- - . '-' our-cast Nut- NVhy don't you work College P Meg- lVIy father always meddle with his affairs. taught me not to 11111111111n1o1o11:1111 Q cha el your way through P II U II gum E s chewers ! U . qc1n1c1a1c1c1c1:1q49.1 144- M. X W- mar X wmwu x X Ns use N is Wersi y so -we t. .. X XX Ns X w t N M X xr. A X X 11:111:11,101o1o1n1o1o1o1n111 1:0 U'f1111'1'r1'1' ffm' Sport UP f111'r1'lf11'Goody ffv' f'1'- y 'flzizzgf in :X'l'HLE'l'lC GOODS '!'l111r 11111 I,'11!!1-111 Sfllllllflf Ilvllllfj' IOCQ Disc flll nt to Stuclcnts OIC THE SPORT SI-IOP RI1'l'll1ll IIIIIVITII l'cl. 4550 155 So. Burdick St. Automotive Electrical and Battery Service 'DIC The CBattery Shop 420 W. Main St. 10111. 111 1 1 1 111.-14-11 111116 5 ' 1 5.0 We Have Greatly Appreciated your trzulc during past yczirs anal solicit your business wlicn you lizlyc cntcrcal tlu- lurgcr licltl. XVI' czlrry cycrytliing in officc :intl school supplics anal sincerely liopc to licar from you wlicn in nccrl of anything in our linc. DUUBLEDAY BROS. Sl CO. 22345 East Slain Street 4..- : :.:.:.: : I : : : -..: :H- ,:,i1o1 111 1 1:1 11111 1 1 1 111 BroWn's West End Drug Stores for your DRVGS - SODAS TOILET ARTICLES SCHOUL SLPPLIES DEVELOPING ll ll ff PRINTING 755 NY. Main St. l636 IV. Main St. Phone 340 ,:.,..1.-,- - -.-.- - - - - - -0. 111111111111 11 1,1 101111 11111 -9411112121: :num-p :u1u:r1n1n1 1 1 11111111-1 111-M1 1 1 1 1 1 qpa1uo:4 I Y K 1 D ' 5 e a amazoo ally . CContinued from page H21 U Jan. 7-Miss Powell gives one of her famous teas. jan. 8-Prof. Bacon tries sliding down Vllheaton Lodge hill sans sled. Jan 9-Sherwood new men present the thriller of the season, ujulius Ceas:1r . Jan.10-The delegates to the Indianapolis convention report on it before the student body. i International Relations club meets to settle world problems. E jan 11-The Freshmen debate teams win over both Olivet and Albion. Q Jan 15-The Alpha Sigs give the men a leap year dance. Dee Tourtelott's young lady friend U sends him a corsage bouquet. Q plan 16-The basketball team beats Olivet. Revenge is delicious. E -lan 17-The Dorm men have sleigh ride party. E -lan 19-The Dramatic class presents a group of one-act plays in Bowen. : Jan 21-La Conferencia Espanola is organized. Faculty gives Z1 reception to parents of ! local students. I ,lan 23-Hillsdale bows before Casefs basketeers to the tune of 32-22. H -lan 2-l-Entries in night school attain the 125 mark. ii Jan 25-Societies present new and old yells in chapel. G Jan 28-The darkness before the dawn-the final exams begin. Jan.29- U jan 30- II Jan 31- EXAMINATIONS Il Feb 1- Feb. 2- '-' Continued on page 1493 ! Q ' u Q A stranger ordered his coal Q REAL ESTATE U from us the other day because Q his neighbor was pleased with Q INSURANCE Q our coal. II . II . , 7 Q The reason we leased lllfll 2 INVEST MEN rs Q , f , P1 b 5 H was because our coa was etter H wlmgww than he had been getting. Q It cost us more, and our proht H U was less, but, We expect to sell U Olmsted 81 more tons because of the super- H Q I ior quality. Hanselman Building QI A Q h P H , Q FC VVC T10 t U Second floor ll 'b ll U If We are, perhaps a differ- lj MMQKQWG? ence in quality may affect a sav- U ing for you. ll KALAMAZOO - - MICHIGAN U 1- l! ll - ll Telephones ll26-27-28-29 Q Uakley 8 ll Phone 153 lj U U - .Q AXXAX -aggwsc X - -s'1. t swiiifiiifs '.Q,Q aabgrgt gy -sr-' lst QQ .. Q N S Qfff, f 10103 1o7a7o1u1odpn:pu1uin1ui: Consumers Power Company PREFERRED SHA RES The Savings Foundation for- You Your Family CZ? Your Home and SAFETY TAX FREE HERE ioioiuiuiuini 1:11:11 1 1 1 in-0 -u-u-u-nTu-n- 1n1nl:r1o'n-01011 j. C. BALL SELECT GROCERIES .M Phone -H0 -T25 Oak S Twill' Stzzzlrzztx Sion' 3 Blocks from College is-Diolcioloicioinluianl rio: c0,,1p1,'W,,E of The Home Savings Bank 112101 101 1 1 ininirrioluiuiu oxiaioi ri 1n-n-n-n-u1u-nm'cvc 4:0 ,:, i4114x14xi1rZ1x14:14xioioi4ri1 FOLZ CLOTHES -a Commencement favorite for forty years. SEE OUR SHOWING SAM FoLz Goocl Clothes Since '84 ll0 East Main St. W. E. GEARY PICTURES PICTURE FRAMES ARTISTS' MATERIALS Uk' lltl South Burdick Street Phone 1302 is ,,n1a,u..n-n, 1 , , 1 , io-aio-oloin-014120 . ioioioiniuiui 1011 1 W Bowen Hall 1 1A A --oT,,-Tg?3W , , j w'llQ 1Sfl14ld441mf'm:gfg1 Efg A Clfillilllg' stznr, . W, ' A hymn deep soundxng, ,111 ., Elf' 3' .na 27 A bell and laughter, ,gg , ,- SJ? JPG' plxiilsf HILL? ff5f,iNL4QJix?'22 ,Q F I F -h l- 'ua 5.11114-.l.q eairf.H1wvAL1 H1462 .ff .L O gh 2 1, 4'-k4.4g,q14e'. viii :gf - - . - - o HJ,:lilfl'it1Jlf'lPf'HN' '1l1I'OLlgll the lilllllllill' co1'1'1do1's. 1,.gf,,Z, ig ggi ,,,, , '- xgflnjgs . wg, 1 9 V ,M F ,:..g-.J,. lwhe whole a playground -.JA Ulf 1 M, W . . .T'-44' 13' P affllf , 'FFL' xVllC1'6 are found frxemls .Qf'f 'fi'5 '9l m,. I yi' lf L56-' ,iff y ,J .ni ,E l ,, V, ,J ., . ..L.L., . 4.1 -vn llf u 'lalfmlfw if ffwlfw And NVlSClOIU. Mag- -gg my ,yyl','jfWW gf 3,3 ,mLl,m. Dear Bowen, N.-15ij ' ' 1'w'H'1 +7 'W' W- 4' MM rw, if-M. ljQ,,g.M wuuuuuw '..LZl1.15'V'.Ll:.J- l 'mlw,lun,llwll1lullk,lg?4i In our hearts you leave ZllfllU'1l4dllc,T l1lLmuwwN mmf ,UW1'w,f'1wl11'L.N1llHHw lNIem'1'1es sweet and CVCI'lZlStlIlg. 'll 'MLA N 'MM' JV' 'MWMMU , j1llkm.uV 'Illllml 'UJ.4.:l.:. ' LN .. , 1 uQ1n...4lik.:Allllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllllll1lllMll'MfUflmfUQLL 12 'Tn Kalamazoo Since ,72 This is our slogan l ' C w nch you probably have seen again and again in our advertisements. It's truly a proudful thing to be able to say-- Fifty-two years of faithful store-keeping. j. R. JONES, SONS ef COMPANY r eep this faith with customers and maintain their fair reputat' ion to the people of Kalamazoo and vicinity. will eve k If We may help o ' y u ln any way at any time-in the choosing of Department Store merchandise-just come in for we will be glad to see you. 1-1-8 ,:,-1i1u1n1u1n1u1n1 11111 1 1010104 6,11,1011101111101111u1n1u1u1o1oico? ! U U U U U U U U U II C0171Pl177167lf5 0 U ll II : - Q - ll U u U 2 - Q II U U U U e U U U I I II U 1 E COMPLIMENTS E , U n U CB d le U OF U UT IC g l U U A FRIEND U II U U U U 0 e II n U : c H U U Q U II U U U U U U U U U U II I uqpu1 1 1,1 101.11 1 14.-nu-11,1 14411 2.-141101 1 1u104zn1u..01-111 111 1.024 ,1u1o1u1u1u1u1o1n-pn1n1n1u1n1n1n1u1n1n1u1u1n1n1u1i101 1 1 1 1111111103 , ! Ye Kalamazoo Dally U Cifiitirilitfil from inane l-lljb U 4 lfeh.-U-XVe lVI'lll0'0llI'llL1IT1l5lt' Qfgxpl -ja. olferingsbto Dr. Bach- 1 X M 1 - Y A - - - - ' 291 elor who accepts them Q fb ' . A graciotisly. The ln- N 5 ,f 'Uhr dex scandal s h e e t H X X 1 U reveals some shock- Q Y , ing fnrts. U f '75 Feh. S-Rex Kennedy is sent U V f . D home after his yel- H , low ticket. liuppna . f gin-nValentine X dance. H ' f- R Felw. fi-Hnrultl Bendle :1 n d D ' '4' 7 Shirley P Il y n e are - 1' ' xx-1 . ff lf Chosen to represent U ' Vi Knzon in the s t 11 t e oraturicul Contest at 2 llupe. Alhinn claimx rn victory against liztlmnnzoo when the tixnekeepefs tin whistle failed to fnnvtimi :it the Crucial moment. Ft-h. 13-An unlucky night fur Ypsi-Qhe is forced to accept the small end of n 37-3+ score. l'll'lY.l5ilWLIl71ll7 is tlefexltetl hx .Xlmnk lin-lietecrs hut our clehziters win from llupe. lfeh. 20-Again we my revenge i- not nnly for the gotlsg Albion falls hefore the powerful attack Q of C'nz1cl1 Street! men. Slmtgunx time the Contest. i elx22-'l'l1e XV:isl1inglun llzinqnet :it Bowen Ilnll :incl the hrst all-college dance in the Gym- nnkinm! Continuetion1-age!52 ,,.,-.,.........-.,-.........,-.,-.,-.,-.......-.,-.,-..:.....,-..,.,..U:..:I.-n...,:.,:.,:.,:.,..u...,:.,-wi' 111-9 ini 1110101 ioioqboinl 1 in: 1 7 l-lome Furnishing Compan 20l-Zll N. BURDICK ST. Coffee! Furnishings for Modern Homes -YF s-1mnie,m4im.Ji-1cP..ai---- This store stands for the betterment of the American home. Its organization studies the homefurnishing needs of the community and endeavors to meet them with l'he Right Furnishings at the Right Price. In rfzflrge fzcroulzf .l't'7'tl'I.l't' is fieffrfuf. 1:11 :ui 1111411111 1 111 goin 1o1u1o1n1 1 iuiuiniuiivini in Rochester Theological Seminary Rochester, New York CLARENCE A. BARBOUR. D.D. LLD., President offers its best wishes and its facilities to the Ministerial students of the classes of l92-l and V925 at lizilzunazoo College. I'lll'I'l'.VllUIHll'll1'I' fnI'1lr4l G. B. Ewell, RL'gI..YfI'!Il'. gui 1 1: ii 111010101 1101 goin iogoanig igiqnog 1 an an 1 ozoioicviiiiiniiiiiiii 150 I1 neo 1 Baumann Motor Sales Company Dim-ilfiirm' CADll,l,AC, HUDSON z iiii l ESSEX Sl?-7 South liurtliclc St. Kala iiiz izor i---- lllichignn ERS-' OTHERS nmiaza 4Ns'rRui:T S. CQMPANY 1 1 1 1 io: nanu1nzo1o1u1u1u1a1o1o:aio14-ni aio: 1 1 1 3 31:1 1 110101121 Gilmore Brothers The incentives to shop in this great store are represented in Merchandrse Gilmore Standard at Fair Prices Serwee Courteuus, HHieient, Adaptable Facrlrtres Comfort, Convenience SIX SELLING FLQQRS 171 123 S Burdick Sr. Iialamamo 171 Q 1 sfo po4zu1n101 n10101n1.vH-D-11010-'Hive -'H-DU 1011- 10101v1v10Gvo1n1u1n1o1o1o1n1w:o i s I E Ye Kalamazoo Daily H i .Continued from pane 1491 E II Feb. 23-.lust nineteen years ago little XVillie Dunbar had his curls cut off. ' 5 Feb. 26-Signs of Spring. Prof. Smith reports the first robin. ll Feb. 27-Olivet again drinks the bitter dregs of defeat. ll Feb.3l-Tom Sellers wins honorable mention with thisg as a result of his recent downfall he H conceived the idea ot' non-migrating chapel seats. U H March 1fVarsity debaters win over Alma. ll March 5-Lake Forest is defeated by the basketball team in the last game of the season by the e n close score of 50-23. U E March 10-The Kappa Yaudeville. ll E March 2-l-The band puts on its second animal concert at the Masonic Temple. i March 26-Spring,V-acation starts. The Glee Club and Gaynor Club start on their annual Spring . I trips. lbe P1 lxappa Delta Convention team starts for Peoria, Ill. U April 9-liuros are entertained by the Philos at a joint meeting. ll ' April 10-The Drama Club scores another triumph in the presentation of The Dover Road . G April 1-I-The French Club is organized. E ll April 15-'The Glee Club ends a very successful season at its home concert. ll U April2l-Century forum puts on a formal dance. The Normal girls say it was a complete ll success. E ll April 22-Founders' Day. Phil Vereoe hands the shovel to Harold Be-adle for safe keeping. ' fi Seniors hold frolic at Long l.ake. The Faculty gives them a swell feed in the evening. 2 April 23-The Kappas entertain the Philos. U April 25-The Gaynorites delight a large audience at their home Concert. Ll U April 27-The baseball team crocks llillsdale to the tune of 18-12. H ll April ZS-The class in Dramatics puts on a line program of four one-act plays. Miss Tanis and ll U llarold Blaine feature. Il May 3-f'l'he 9th State Interscholastic i -'- Track Meet is held. A record ! E number of picked athletes from G AHQH the state high schools establish ll E Yum some hne records. U ii Yin May 29 for some time afterj-The Boil- ii ing Pot comes ollt. Find your if picture? Don't blame us if it Q looks funny. E -lune 9-l-l- Q FINAL ! EXAMINATIONS n ll U ! -I one 13-Seventieth Annual Commence- ii U ment. E ! F n II S- : II II ' O ll ll 2 ll ll Q4liUi0i01 -'UiU-90101H211U10101011-1'mumbaior1-dl-I1uiucxuiuxuzi-::nu:n1ngq-ng 152 ICEIIHIHHZOO I..E1l.lHCII'y Company Q? lnilividuzil Family Vllnsliing Dry Cleaning 1 Dyeing fllltll Rug Cleaning 'BCI' Plione SOUKI 10 in 1 in 111 in in 101 in 1010 in in 110: E. L. Y PLE 'Ir IN ITS ENTIRETY AND TO THE MOST MINUTE DETAIL. OUR FURNITURE IS ENDOWED WI IH PERSONALITY ak The Store ol Surprising Values 4l7 W. IVIAIN STREET . 10104-oxupoqornquzn-N1-1101 0-N114 111:11 1111011111111 1111011114111 in 11 -1 v:11n1r1-i1 1 1 1 11 111 1:1 College Emblems Class Rings and Pins H. C. PITZ WJEWELER... I46 Soutli Burdick Street Opposite Fuller Theatre 0:11511 101 11 1 ,Fon-111 1111 11111111 1-1: v , . JI I our iS1'1'11'11'1 1:11101-11 The College Co-op Store 5? 1 Your Storej IJIIII4' 111 IIIIII fu! 115 111010 you. v:or1n1o1 11:1 101 1111 1 1-1 111101 N sa .xx N '1 Q :S Th .1 .N vt N xv , f NX., 1 , , ,.'Q A XQ . f . ,,Q iv ,,.,g Q. .4 11 , . V k,,.X 1 W xxx-5 -- is ,. , .... :Q XX... .. ..-. fwrf A.,:i.N. X xv,QX X N X..., ,v:- Q .W XYAXXXXX ,X WX qs .NQQX .13-5115,-f.. - gk X. x ying? git NE xx x'yxx 1 N'-X A '4fw 1.:mmrzmgmzzrr::':.r..u:11Xs:n::1::Rmm WWris Mxxxgikwgtel Xkiixqrgtsiix NX has yxxxl .., X ,e,.-.-. -..,.......,U,,..-..-..-..-.,-..-..-..-A.. 5,-. -..-..-..-.,...-..-.......,-..-...0.., .5 ANEMQS Q Q l I fi. Q FIJI I ER Q 1 EI ITE Q ! ! ! - ' X THEATRE THEATRE f S 1 to 5 P. M.-6:30 to 11 P. M. 2 T i ! U , ! ! DRAMATIC STOCK A F 'fy l Sat., Sun. and Holidays Continuous d ! ' I ' an I .. gy ! VAUDEVILLE 2 5 2 Q.. A II ' ' X RES l 11., 111 . i and E i MOVING PICIU i w I if 5.1 A .Q : . : - ae-k3Q 1..s 111 jf. Q IJHOTO PLAYS E E EMPRESS PLAYERS 5 v g Li FRA PURE PATURE Q g Pl l EX A COMEDY I In the Lat-it SB1ioariv3ay ays g AN ORCHESTRA Q ,l an eec e ! .S ,.-- : CEI ,,.x Q and always g E PLTAYS 5 Q.. f ,NN 151- .,1..., ,Nb y --1' N- I , -T 59555 i 3'-ACTS VAUDEVHJLE-3 Niflhts, Sat. and Sun. Mat. ' X. x'k, X.. - ' : ' F 5' 3 . 1, II Adults :soc l I Adults ssc Kiddies 10c Q :Z : -f . KT A - Q hlddws 10C ! WED. BARGAIN MAT. 2 Kiddies l0c-Adults 25c S . 1 ' AMATEUR NIGHTS I l 5 A A ' : rw m .-s ., W d. . d s 1. m .5 Monday and Friday la S un 6 rm a : SY, A G .g......-..- -......-..- .-.,-.-......-.,...,.....-.-:- .g......-..- .. - ,-..-......-..-..-..-.- -0--5 xl A..1,1 :S KX K.E'X:fNx:.X Xtt.. ,g,1n-.u1n1- 1 1.-1.1-1-.-.uno-. 1 101.-1.11 101.11 1.1.111.10-.1-101010-..t1n:num-L . XT.1 ! Q 1 Q .. 1 I -IQALAIVIAZO 0 - C51 TY SAVINGS BANK 4 A 5 KALAMAZQO, MICHIGAN , A A , -TTR i , , , Q -E ., ' The Oldest CBank zn Southwestern f9VI1ch1 an -A Q g : Ass: t l ' Charter No. I ' E .fm i i xttt Q Capital and Surplus 99800000.00 3 fx 2,3 : - vw ' 1 - DWR-R11 u M . ' I OFFICERS I .... 1 ' : A gg? ' A g Herlvert IC. Julmsun, l'1'e.vi4Ie1vt Milforcl G. Davis, C'u.vl1ier g .e'.: E 'MSN .Q Q' RT .Xlflcd IK. Connulmlv, l'ivw-Pre.-:iflelli .lulm F. '1'11hc1'ty, .flmixlalfrf Cashier i XX Q5 ' Ilerlwert XV. l'zu'k01', l'if'f'-I'1'v.wi1lm1! L'lu1'1'm'c D. l'ruH, .lS.VI'.VffllIf C'uxhif'r g Q ' N.. A I Fred G. IM,-wcy. l'if-e-l'1'exl'4Iz'11f liulzmcl J. B2ll'l1ill'll, .-lmlilur ' V 3111 V fp,-K 1101 qu-1-wg 11-1101-1101 .-5 1 qu.-1..q..-0.--1-U-1-up 1.1.1.-.png 1-.1u1n1.,. 024 W 15-1 g A A W . , , A X -- A A gi 3 3 X.t,. .J ,x tb 63 3 xx I' r ,L , Q , X . A. . ,. Q . S K' ' ...' 1' N . -A X' W ...' Wm' I 'X a 11 x' xv fp . . ..., N. N. ...X . ,iw N RWM . X ,316 NNN N 9 R:-SN X Xxx Rm. A- R f- S, N ., . A XXXxwmQ J 1 3 xioinloi :ini aging: nioioi -o-o-1?o-o-n-ofofo-o-o-Amfoiu gugoiogoioioi 1:11 ing 1111111 Bryant aper Compan Slflanufacturers of Book, Litho, Magazine and Catalogue Papers 200 TONS DAILY Enameled Book and Lithograph Paper 50 TONS DAILY NO C.-XPTION FUR THIS lt's the little things in lite that count. said the kindergarten teacher, as the three-year-old class CYan't Roer in- eludedl finished their lirst illath. lesson. .IOl'lNXllf RYNNIC XVON 'l'Hl'f l'Ulf'liRY PRIZIC lVl'l'H THIS: lVhen l was but a little lad, l thought that poets always had 'liheir hair long just to shake in parlors, But now l know-lt hides their dirty collars. lll-IRITS ANU'liHlfR ULD NIOIQIC l7lXliD Oklfli Prof. Smith-- XVho's there 7' Burgler- Lie still and keep quiet, l'ni looking for platinum. Prof. Smith- 'lihat's funny, so ani l. Some universities require one to pay a tee for taking entrance exams just like a condemned man paying for the rope whieh hangs him. -...j .-.,-I -..-.-......-..- -..- -U.. -.. 1 . 'I-1 11,1111 1,1131 initio: ni ii ii 1:1 as Conzplzinzezzlx of The Worden Grocer Company 0.4 Ji- GRAND RAPIDS LANSING BATTLIC CRICER li.-KLA MAZOO o'oi1o1,o1-ii 11'-1 rio: quo: io: iioioi in 1 ff ,H A auf on 8 .... vX0v3g . K R x,.,- yi P: i .X MA , l g., q,, i H 53,5 '- K HCM -mg? Mg. Lgymmwgymxix gy 5,46 DEEQMXNG ,,,, ' CE N ' w up o fa, . 3'fa-i5sf.:f?:,,,,.v lmz 7 'SS MXSMOGQWXGOQWQOQ Chi 19 m Q- - V 1-4,,Jw d Q E gay-W ULI1-ww.. 1 4 f-E-iff' I5-, G l bmp HRSCTIMA MA -9 Q ,paw J , f R an Th x VE ,..S.:w .n 3- Ku , rio H v2,.:,59i P go. QV... . XHNJIS woot: 1-vi' P53 O d 4-Z 55 Q v59l'3 w'.A'An RY S1 r -' ' X SSN .w9gsQ06-R' f' Q , ',CQ0pC1,.1 'NAI' All GN Iv ' 15, ,X rx Q3 ' ' 1y,,Q,.,,xgfGQQ'iNtSiXn'fST'1- S Q we fi X A WQSOQO is 11 'X '-We ep - LJ b.. , Qfvffffl-fflfdxfxffx H, rr 2: ch'xYNxm'SNJ,, Qq,?1.QfGg9'6g'Meoe,yd1Qs?geNbQ,iX 4 ',,'.n4 P . 2 , ,, M, A D X 5. .,., fig! ' Z, 503 i Qwxxwa 5 V K Unff'f'W' M -4? ' .Z f+.,.f N ,Q Ny Q, A' M, A A 1 ,.,mNii,x ,mms .XR NCQ. - ue ,Af milk, P ,hgjlna 5. x L: H ff-..,,u-'---v .1 ' F X V .71 AA., glkls K 3-' ':'.w JA,.vx 1. It X xy 56 6 ,qu 5 in ls'-ff W' 'N U Uy Q a,l'- 'X14f'vf'w- 3 ' Q9 Sag Rs gg DP 20 . 5 Q A f Ep- -0 . R' - S11 O QL: S - Oarfesxv Ygfkjb-fbiij ink: 1- I-1.-1 - O N YQ5' 5 a t I '52'f,444,O0 5 , ,QV Q iq . S P Av. 04, vjyow -Z L-4 3 lgvd.. -f gm PUt'?f4e1'Qf'0 - Q : X 3 , m xwd ow 5 1-Os Q, fn. Z L 1 Q Y 1 QQ 51 mf 'V N .S Q-vmwm fSn'CQ'Qf ww 'vi 'Q SV S S RM 'iixaqa an ' my ES t lv 4' 5 x '- -, Q. .bg Y X ,.9,a 0 SL1.,X Q? 55 is Hsin P 5767 ofdeni 1 Nxolfi -fs, , .- Gp., x . , Q X -A - .3 My , Q5 11564555 is get N ,QM affix Sin'-Z Qig- .F , ,ff -5 wi, an A fx, ,- x ,wen A x.i.g,f Q23 wwf 'izfl M Q-Om, Vx f SQ ' 1'b..,I -fX0f?f Lg N5 3 if P 1 dm- 5 e L VQNH-2 'km ? 5 'Q af, au i531 ,W gf . X 1 'ffscw 'JJ S 1-il .5.4,:,:a' bij! . . Qkbx 'gy 1 uid 1 gy LX Q J' 2 'fi 'ws If . X.,,: h,. ,. 9, 5 X 1 O Q , lj 5 . T' 3 ',:f O,0X 68. X 2. 7 -2 fx ff' ' x, J q , CYD! :Ex Q .1 : Qidxeek fi 5 4' 1 s'gV'f x L fs NA , . - QD ., 7 M Rr NQQPQ X x L 242 My 71- QQQSOQQQQQX ' 1 37? ' Iql --'- ..iX.gSa,55v- .54 P18 .. it Q55 K 'ilmv .Q I 15 ' 14 15 - , km., lx A ,A Q xi' ' WW 1- 1' .- --21,41 'WK KNAW :i W W . , Ah '-..s 4. FK -qgii ig-gifiwwmw if w 'L i ..Cg:GNXfQgS' x 0. iuguinaxngognxnug-.1 ing 11111 107 1.1.1 1:1 ipnixi 111141010701 iuigni 14,101 1114111101 1-aiu C omplimenis of Aldrich Auto Sales Co. 595' 0- STAR DURANT SALESROOM PARTS AND SERVICE 51 I West Main St. 1 linen: tn- agua: timing -1411111-1:1141 ini- 10-no-:mini--it-101 1111: 11,140.0 HALIQS uality Grocery SUI VVcst Nlllill Strcct Phone 333 , . Phone 4250 FRESH FRVITS AND VEGETABLES 910 Spt-cial Attention Given to RANQU ETS, S PR EADS, ETC. SIlfI'.Vf.fIl'fl.0ll Gzmmlzfaea' 1111111 1 1110111 in i Cor. Church and Water Sis. COJIPLIJIEZY TS of KELSER - BROPI-IY CHEVROLET CGIVIPANY 329 Portage St. q..- .- -..- -.- -0- .- iniuinini 11: 1 -ww, w. Q Q ff , AMN QQ, Q x 5 , AL? vu' X 'i liek X ' 53 N fvtam? ' w ii , .ii Qu, Wig x Rugged oaks, VVhiCh belie The nafure VVithin. 'Wl'fTv N n Wheaton Lodge X,-5 N -1 .' M r I v f ' 1 41 51' fl, ,xr ' ff . Standing round is Like mighty guardians, , Zl ai - 5- 7, X' Cast kindly shadows -35. 5 , f f ' A Lfgvyiii i film On the gaunt walls, 77' Niki nf, 755' l'5r'??a,,,g. Of the jolly college girls , fif-357'kifffffffffi---T ' 1 r -fi '- , x. 4.,-f vm 13 V 5, X W., ,Z 'sm R as-fs,s-,cg ,X L- N- Y 1 N sf:f?,s sy x , ' or New Nwigts- X XM rs .M f, so 'sets-m 'rw Q x x 1 ns A s x x 's M -is Q .,..,.i..l.l...i.T...... KALAMAZOO cou.EcE l5TUDEN'I'! REPORT ffl Senna 09356 mg Ing. Q MM Oo 9954 il wells Thou Q-,Q '41, Agglbooqebe X , i 1- GM, Qeff' i mm. -mf mmm pk ellabltws '97- 9-9 QV Q,- ,, ,hpv1:1e99s..--i, A PAQQFUQ-s v..,, QQ, Wk-,s 'uf' v' , 1 s.'l '-fad -ell qv' get . -1,-' -.. FPQF-H15 ..,.... --.,.c.-.:.., ..,., lc. .fa, -ff' tx lg ova ff v f-'kv .f Kxves,aw.vs1..3,e..,.9L A flu' f x'f'1'.F s ' X, 's 91 ,199 nfl' 10,..f Y N 1,91 ' ., -flqtxx .if X 9 K .ye 9,qg.f I, 5 -e .smvfyfolosv -. ... .A..... .s..e-,,5- ,, .e --r,1o,es.F1 'gt , . ,,g,g?:f ' ,ff ju in mnrig e-993155 lf r Q '- 'X xelxcega Q. f ' f , M , 5 x X 'sfwf' has 'fy ' ,. HHHd441s,lf-Pr-mf! 50 C , , 5-3, EQX wan, so 1,5 V.,,.. I ,.,,..- .,..., ..,.... ,,..,., - ,HN ,X Q se. 697 D, W Wa-Qing I type l 25 I' -. xx NX X 942. gi f 95.v.- ff. -'LA -'-- --,Z N ,FR ' g- xr 5' . V , ,.. T ,X an 'l' K ., .mzoo C011-ECE 'WA 'A200 course lr-x 'Server H,ff4'f NHvonf --X, giT'- 5N-T- - - To Sm .914 5 ' s ' X S vi . , ' F Rob g J ngenlemin ffofglffn fwlf'--' -- SQL Archibald Stein 'gm' fl - 4 ,,, ' , r' 'f I- ' annul- o s-rum.1'- ,,,:2j.,..u ' qu AN. Adguusing and lwlrini - w ,, ,... . .... - - ---' 3 1' mn neu of my .F--4 N B uns ' ,,.. ' ' 200 have AFYf iB, ' 2. P A1 ,Philosophy -- .-.4.,.,,..,.-.. Avo?o5'lios' ' fm? Ethics, ' 3'--L.-. axons! ig. -1, hmm comedy . ,, causthenivs ' mathematics V 4, 'A g ,. A, i 7 ,-- - 1 l ln producing the 1924 Boiling Pot the staff found out many surprising things. In the first place they found out that there are easier tasks than getting out an Annual that will please all concerned. In the second place they found out that the above mentioned task is closer to the impossible than Hercules' famous quest for the golden apples of the Hesperides. ln the third place, they found out that the small degree of success that has been attained could l10t have been accomplished if they had not had the loyal support of not only the Junior class, but the whole college. To everyone, from Freshmen to Faculty, who has kindly assisted in any way, our sincerest thanks is due. ln particular, we would mention Tom Cobb and Harold Allen, who, by virtue of the experience which they gained on the staff last year, were able to give us much valuable assistance. VVe also wish to thank the managements of the Crescent Engraving ww A xx -s ,sm is, X Co. and C. H. Barnes Printing Co. for their keen interest and co-operation in helping X to make the 192-l Boiling Pot the best that their skill could make it. VVe hope that you, our fellow students, have enjoyed this book, and will continue to enjoy it long after your departure from the classic halls of old Kazoo. For faults, we crave your indulgence, since most of us are amateurs at such effort. All the time and energy which has been devoted to this annual, the Chapel and W Lab periods missed, the classes cut, the superabundance of midnight oil burned in its behalf, are agreed to have been more than repaid in the good fun of working together toward whatever success may be claimed for the 192-l Boiling Pot . N THE EDITORS. 158 Jlisrcxiiim vw'- -'A A'S ,yr-vrif iI.wT,El,rLQQff kt 1 K .1 31 r E llll FFE 1 D .,1,QwH f 'f'f,,.: CO N, wmmi WRIGH1 CON PA LEE Sl Kalam azoo Branch DISTRIBUTORS COMPLIMEN TS Of The Henderson-Ames Company 'S-if? KALAMAZOO, lVllCl-l. v 3 1.54 in 1: use . 159i A Reliable Store Does Not Grow Big From Enormous Profits .XII lilISlllllll'lj' fair lwicl-V il full lllllllljis wurlll to llu' k'll5ll7llIl'l' zu gIlllll'JlIlll'l'1lf s:1lisf:1c'lirn1 wllll 4'x's'1'y lnl1'l'l1:m-- an prolnpl, s-H'im'is-nt :xml K'Ulll'l1'HlIH 5l'l'Yl1'l' lo vvm-ry unv who 1-ull-rs lluis slorvf-lln-sv :urv llw llxings wlliclx 1'u-viw our Ilrsl cun- Sllll'I'2lll0ll always. Wm- l'lYllHlillllly slrivl' lu Illl'l'li lllc c'rvl1lifll'm's- uf ln-olmln' who lrmlv willl us, for we' llelivve' lllzll llw gI'UWlll :rml Slll'4'l'hH ut :n alum- IS gaillw-cl lwy its mmmlwr I' nf saullsllul l'llSlHlIlK'l'5. 'l'lIf.w ix ll lflfllllllll' Nlwrr - ,I Nlnrr' For All! llw I'wnplf'. .I l'l4w1suuf l'Iur'4f lr: Shop und lflflwll lhvff ll'r' Tru IU .1l,,l.'f if' liffllwr. ' THE EDWARDS Sz CHAMBERLIN HARDWARE CO. - ,- .- 5301 71114 101 141111 111 14:10:15 . SLAGER BROS. 812 So. Vlfstrlcllgc 2-PHONES-Z 202-6252 .g.,- - ,- - - .- .-.,- -.,- -0- ,- n1nn1u1u1n.1o11-1 1,1 1011 mr 11111111 7111111 11 1 1 1111111111 M UNRO 6? CO. 1111 1111111111 only flu' fi111'.vr Qllllfffj' f:0'l'L'l'l1lI1t'1If I11.vf11'1'f1'11 flI1'111's. This g1'111l1' giwx you I1 g1'1'11t1'1' food 'z'11f111i fm' 11off111' fllflll Hllj' of fill' 1'111'1Jfv111' g1'111l1's xvffizzgf fm 11111111 lux fwfr jvoznni. Ive have no eonipetitors in qnzility. Douglas S North Phone ZSI 1 1111 111111111-1111: 1113111 1111111-g as o'a 11111111111 111111 111111111 in -.1 11 up 1 11 The CBell... ...Shoe House FINE FOOTVVIC.-XR for I,1idieS, Gentlemen and Children 'BF XV.-'l,I.IiOX'IiR z 111l l Nlf'I lIl,I'f'llON S H U If S LOUIS ISENBERG l,I'0fTI'It'f0l' I2-l E. Blain Street 1 1 11111111111111113111u1111111111 11111 1.1.1. ,f,.gp11..11..111111.-111111 1,115.1 111 ,1-1.11 -.1 Drugs, Chemicals, Stationery. Candy Colman Drug Company Iiex:1ll Shure I,I!7'1jl'A'f 111111 .lltorf C11111jHff1'1'fy E1j11ijv,'11'1f Drug Sion' 111 So11ff11'1'11 1lI11'f11111111. 'Dk' 'Ilelephone 174 Ill XV. lIzun St IiZll2llUZlZOO, IxIICl1lg21l1 5011111111111111111q::13111111 an 111 1111111111 1 1111 1 7 1 11111111 Know Us by the Company 'we Keep ....1i,g+jIilC.g4p.... CHICKERING PIANOS VICTROLAS VICTOR RECORDS CONN INS'l'RI'NIIiN'l'S SHEIST MVSIC .,..,,.gm1111g,,.. The Music Shop, Inc H6 S. Burdick St. 1.3.1- -... 1- D! 1 141101 vi xioiuirrinuiuiuioi 11111 oi 1 1 11111 1 35119119--ing 11:1v1n1n1n1n7u1n141-1 NA Kalamazoo Direct to You U Marzzafactzcrers HEATING STOVES, RANGES, FURNACES OF QUALITY o 11- in 50 ini: 7 11111711 ini 11111 111113105 1 I 1 The Chocolate Shop Klzikcrs of l FIN 1i CHOCOLA'1'1iS ,xNDBoNBoNs 1 1 , . II 1611 QRILAM 3 A ND 1C11fS II f1l'fll'1'.V for Ilwfljlljllfji' mill R1'1't'f1ff0lI5 lfifful on Short Noting 61' 1 Pllfmv 13-1 130 Su. 11ll1'111C1i St. 1iA1,AlIAZOO I 161 1-1Cl'S1lflC1d,S Thr llonn' of Ifnrl Sflllffllffl' SL :1I1l7'.Y GOOD CLOTHES Q Stctson Hats and lxlilllhilftllll Shirts Q 121-123 lf. A121111 St. Kalamazoo lulniniulsxlnlnl 1 1010111111 i17n1u1nzmiv1n1 1 1 1 1 iuinq :pol in--11 1:11 1411 1 1 1111 11111114 10 11111111111 111101101111 11 1111 1010101 11111 1111: 11110 ioioioioioioioioioiaioioiaio The Young Ellen? Christian eAssociation H ls a high grade Christian Club fo1' men Zlllil boys maintained at a low cost. fl An opportunity for invest- Illellf i11 the g1'eatest 11nde- veloped 1' e s o u 1' e e of the world-young me11. 1 A spiritual force that aims to lift me11 i11to a 1'eal brotherhood. ' U A call to service for men everywhere t h 1' o u g h the whole world. Ci0lI1f7fllI1t'l1fS of zz Frivzzd 11010 A Great Many Students of Kalamazoo College have patronized our store during the past year, and we appreciate your trade. 1 '1 ALWAYS LOOK HERE FIRST When in need of Women's Coats, Suits, or Dresses, Gloves, Hosiery, Fancy Goods, Underwear, Corsets, Dress Goods, Silks, and Domestics. THANK YOU 1 STRENG Sc ZINN CO. v 110. in' v :go : a c 1: e 1: c c U ! Il 0:03 in11:10ininiolulaiolalazaiuiai SUGGESTIONS TO CHERIISTRY STUDENTS 1. Do 11ot lock your desks, it implies distrust of you1' fellow students. 2. Never read over your manual be- fo1'e performing an experiment, it de- stroys all originality in the work. 3. Donlt clean your glassware, if it is dirty it shows that you have used it. -l. VVhen using the HZS generator, open all the doors and windowsg other students should be allowed to share yo111' blessings. 5. Don't look for platinum in an unknowng Prof. Smith has been looking fo1' some for a year and hasnlt found it yet. 6. A quick way to analyse an un- known is to drink a goodly quantity of itg if 110 unpleasant 1'esults occur then you can rest assured that it contained no RCN or other similar poisonous com- pou11ds. This test is also a sure cure fo1' long life. 511111151 11101 1 11111 111101 1 1 o 11:0in1010:ni11l:1i e c e 4..- - -.-.- -0- .- - .-.- -. 162 COJIPLIJIENTS Of JACK DOLD'S DRUG s'roREs 9,3 Cor. Blain S Rose Cor.Cedar S Davis Phone 539 Phone -H19 Opp. Courthouse Opp. Normal School 23 KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN oiniuxiiiiziiiiii Qing HINRICHS JEWELRY STORE 110 North Burdick St. WATCHES JEWELRY DIAMONDS SILVERWARE EXPERT WATCH WORK QAND ENGRAVING KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN 101 1 ni 101 3110: 111011111 ,1,,1,11,1,11,3 -.1 1 1 1 1 1 101 1010101 101014 11 101011 107: 10 1 The Blue Parrot Coffege SfIl0Jt llf.V IIVKIFOHIE Si LUNCHES, CANDIES FANCY ICE CREAMS 130 XV. Main St. 10111 ininin-1301031101 301 1011 ,v, 1--1.1,1--1.1011 1 1 14 f 7 14 30101 The Church in the Heart of the City Q has LI warm spot in its heart for all young people. Q 9 Firgt Baptist Church Dr. George I-I. Young, JIIIIZI-UBI' 3 -.4 .g..-.,-.-,-.-.-..-..-..-.- .. -0- -..- 1111111111111111111111111111111111111i11111 1111111111111 11 1: 1 11111111111111111 - 111i11111111x:1 1911111111111 11111111 111110. First Presbyterian Clmurclu lIUI'3l'I .XXI5 SUl I'lI STS. JI ffonleffkf' C,I!1lll'l'!II' ..,i-Eglllgq.. Sl l NDAY SCHOOL I0 o'eloek Class for Young Illen A. S. l3:11'ron's, 'lleuelrer Students Clzrss for Illen and Wlomen Dr. Cleo. S. Ilillzlrcl, 'lle:lel1e1' KIORNINCI XYORSHIP Il o'eloek S1'I4llI01I.S' for ffzt' ylllllllt' CHRISTIAN ICNDICAYUR 5:30 o'clock FYICNING 'XVORSIIIP 7 o'eloeIa SPTIIIOII, Chorus Clroir Ifollowetl by llest Illotion llietures Sf1llIl'1lI'A' ,-111' 1l1'fz1'l1f-1' U'1'f1'o111f'11 31111111111111111:11111111111111111i111111- 1 113 1111117 1111111111111111111 11111 K ridel's 139 S. BURDICK ST. Always the Newest in VVONIliN'S AND KIISSES' VVEARING APIJAREL 'DIC' Your f7I'l'3'l'1I1't' in our starr' Il fTI4'IINIl1'l'. C. A. Illilill P. KI. RESII rogressive Shoe Shop Fine Shoe RHf7flI.l'I'Ilfj 632 l,r1eust Street Kalzuunzoo ---- Kliehigan W Subscribe for Your Magazines Through 'Your Home Town Druggist 'bk' Ile is reliulrle, rezuly :rl ull times to llelp you :mtl give the lowest rutes t11 he luul unywlrere. '1'l1e1'e is 1 Slllilll C'tllIlllllH's10ll on u1ry s11I1se1'i11ti1111. XVIIGH you sen1l il s11l1se1'i11ti11n cllreet you send that eourruission out of the town. Xl e Illil' to sell IIIEIQPIZIIIFS Elllil we ure glsul to senrl your s11l1s1'ri11ti11ns :nt uny' time for :nur IIVIQEIZIIH' you nruy wsuut. 010 BENEDlCT'S DRUG STORE HIT-H19 Ho, xVUSIIIK'lltIt' Ave. o:o111111g111111: 1111010101111 111 1 ,',1qm1 1 1 111 111n111o:m1o1 ici 4 Furniture at the cPrice of Furniture OUR POLICY IS To give you the most value for your Furniture Dollar We can prove it. HOOVER - BOND CO. Furniture at the CPrice of Furniture 02411 111111113 11111111101 111 111 111 111111 111111 164- 1 iogmini 1 11741 101 411101010 ff'-iN Complete Sets and CPart5 PATTISON AUTO SUPPLY, Inc. 312 West Main St. 1minima:411111111-miningni ,it in 1 1 I1 1 'llhis space we thought well fill llvith 11 scliolzlrly' tliscussioii Un the ZlLlYZlIlf1lQI1'S Ot moral victories out The rc-:il thing, llut we .let-itll-tl not tn, liCCZlllSL' lr woiiltliilt lill this spxicc. 141 14113 1 1 31311 1 24111 in- ini-'ami1n1m101--1o1n1n1u:o1n1u1 The KALAMAZOO COLLEGE INDEX 'slr cyil Weekly fournal of College Nenfs and Opinion. 'ble' During the past academic year the INDEX has fearlessly maintained student-rights. It has whole-heartedly endorsed the New- Student movement and advocated pro- gressive scholastic reforms. It has given space impartially to every stu- dent activity. lt has been a students' newspaper, publishing with unprecedented timeliness college events written by students from the stu- dent point of view. HAROLD B. ALLEN, THOMAS S. COBB Managirzg Editor Business lllanager xuiuiuioiuini 311411 ni Q.,-:Lexi-1 1161 ole ri Kalamazoo, Mich. ti fini ni viug:suitliuiuinioiuinirxi fi, 1110101014:lf-1011:1-vlnlnlnlniu 1 lfl,lCC'l'RlC CONS'l'RL'CTlON lCI,liC'llRlC Sl'l'Pl,IlCS COLVNIISIAN ISLICCTRIC COMPANY llvnry Nl. lin-seiilwrg, .lljfli .lljJ'Ill'.v ful' l'llhtUl'lil Klzimlzi Lztmps, lflc-cti'ic Houselioltl :Xppli:1nces, llnilio Supplies, ll3 S. Rose St. Plionc U33 Publlcatlon Catalog Poster PRINTERS se Kalamazoo Publishing Co. 133-137 Farmers Ave. Phone 8 11110111 3 ri iuiuqpni ni: 1n1u1nin1u1n1u1will n ui ini 1:11 1 ini 1: 3 1 ini 10111110111 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 14114010 The Park American Hotel is a homey place, and when we have said that,- when we have told you that you are always welcome and that young men and women of this world have a warm place in our hearts, and that we really mean it, ewhy VVPTVIC SAID IT ALL. 101011111 ititgngnioqu 115111. 166 ,., ioioioioioioioioioioioioioioic Your oney ln the form of GUARANTEED CHECKS an obligation of the Kalamazoo National Bank will give you Safety Receipts of Expenditures Identification Record of Expenditures Convenience Saving of Your Funds Q Kalamazoo National Bank Qrganized for Service, Maintained by Servicen 50-0. - -.-0-Q-0-0-K.-U-0-U- -O.. ...,- -. -. - - - -0- E -very 12 0 11, y lflktlt' Pipervs ee Cream Some Iflllrt' E1'ery Day qu.: t- .- .- - -0- - -...U.....-.,-.,-.,- .,XX :XXX-XXX.. ,X X X XX X .NXXXXXL X ,,,,, . 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'QXTX 14 : . 1 f'Ivf' IIKNXQYXXN-I ' - X1 ' X1 XX ' lrxulnfg -f,-7' X C! Q ni, i ? 44bq1!Q17i,x3w3!y4'lX X 1 l ' 3 N-wif-Q11-L-ff,-,ff U X J 1- ,Z - ix gxi 1:-.:1,4M'Mk X ,' 'A - e,L-- 167 X Q, 1 -L X Q ,K gps . X X W'-, ,, QWTX XX .iN X X X XX XXQ,1g:XNW' 1-XQ-XX - X - I xx... Mrwv-w-N X , .t . N. X. . X .Xi X N a v X Wt tcp' , X wr IR x 5 Y 3 f - ,z X: ,QW ' 5' N, 523 X Xrrx X X X wif . K , , x X Men's Dormitory A joyous shout, A sack of XYZIICI' dcsceudilmg, Lights Till the wee small hours. lts bleak gray walls, Could they talk, lvoulcl tell tales llll'lUIl1Cl'1ll'1lC, Of games :mtl combats, Of quzlrrels and f1'lCIlClSlllDS. W hl-' f 41 1 1.-QNLL, , .H .. -L' ' ' ,,f'.L..l..1l.v1pllmyll' U,g.,,'i11llA WWI WW -ll Wu-5,4 l .f . . , X ax XX tg YEEIQITJ -5:,v..5 x was .. - ,-.fr,i-N1.rve.lm-- ,ill N 'E fl N Q 'virillllnuulun I ' eff-Vwmf' Z imm WW! ll f WH Iilllllllldk- fy. ii ?'m ' , ,, I .1 ., M., W ,M .Q in ,.... I f , WM WW4 WM WIMZAVZA V 'lytngnmtllllllllll1llllll1:u,'fQiZ2gbl5IH A , ' 'cam 1. , 21- , Nllp3xx XR ' N Qt' lx QQ Y 1 f .X x N xt x X X X XXL .J f 'UM X W I , xx 5 N lf N, f ,Kamik N , t I j I Y WU f lf 'Am ' Q l f Q l l' ll l l t' o r'f+flllhf ull wt uw R lll .. Hn w ulll X llllllll' vl llllllly llll ll . lla I, .v ll ll ull lf Q lf 'll l A ll ' 14 ,. V txt X X W ' - ww MXN my-A k x xX 5 x- Q. X tt :wx M Wrtmxiwh A in F? L.'Q gi 555 gg ss Q V I--4 va' r sf 'aim js. RJ X 199 LA I EM Q . V397 'lu ffm, J h is rw Xt. 'W 1593: U 'J Jug! 1-'Mfr-1, is? J Z4 Boxumo A U TOGRAPHS A , gun r ...rig- . , V, ,I I, . js.. NVQ . ,., ,rv 5' NT?-. A I.: - A..:1, . 4: . .,...-V., . ' uh-. ..,. 91. .,- -.g,,Q..'f!F,s rg. 3513 'ff' .1-. A ', 1.9. .., .4 4 .1- lf' AX .r fi 'Q ,Q .-.1-, . v -'t ., N, ..- 5. '- xl. ,yu up - . ,. .1 ,:,,- ' . N- .QV vw E .-.Q ,4 vm ' '-41' 'A -f. Q-.' .W - - . 95 1' 'X-.' U., .t ',,. 4.A, g:vf,- .Ju w , . 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I- .., 1 ' ,., - -NY: ,. 1 , ,K ' 1,-V -dy, f, V. M X , . ' .. .rf - 'A . 5 ' 4 , - - ,.u,,,- .. - V .wgx vg 2: V, , I . ' F nr Y ,e t qv., 92 'J -' 1' f ' if .L 1 ' .-,,1- , 55 Fr .. I c , . 5- V ,- v w. - . ,, . , ,,,. ,W rv , I . wr, . ' J 21,25 7 V x X :' .. U: 1' 'W V - ,r'-ff: f' 514 , ' . - ' 4' .. 1 . . C5 ' 3 Stockbrldge Hall , QA, , '- A rl U rig ,1,r' LX Urwws' I ' I ' -7' V--Q A D .. 5 s ope, rr ml! .,Af,l'+,'-l,v :4:,iF- 425 -llfgzuff' LT h d :pn 4 511,312 i4h,.!4..4 Y - - v- - M., 5. ', -.'.2,:-Q, Apr . pon rx le plou 5 btan 5 ,AE Mr:,: iMi. eg A remlnder ? 1jqg'fgg-Q-E' fr? .. 5 -,jj ' , Or bygone grnetres, 'vu' :Sai j'f1 'mv Lv. 5 An evidence -0 . . ' L r Ot present IHCITIIICSS, X gggdggel 'gmllijllr zfffn A prophet ' 'Sidi' L- !,,I, j....l .Q . . , l 3.-Tiiuggfgxiij-2.-is, Or future jovs and X 4yqyWEI, r 1glf.:2Ei1?SX -'- , :IZ .:jJu4. 5',?1qun,,75 ' wff-A Happllless' 34 f e t gf, ilfhfvxs xx 'Q 15 4 k! Q A I 6 1 y -3 x 4 A L . , ,K , , . , 1 1 I A I P , I . , D . iEH!MIYtlilBlllH1TEQN.12'EhEUfiiTllEi1W-lH6THlKlHl'WlHKlY' The Gymnasium A Cheer, A lively piece Our band is playing, The wliistlv :uul A rousing song of victory. 'l'1'ophies Of 1JZlSt conqueriu N Line the walls, And auger well The future. XXVIII vw? 19 as S' X M QXVKWR S ix M Qfaw 2 NRM. M 'INN Kgl' fly 2 wggllwf , f Wf 4 fi Q' sg 'i'1'?1l-' ,f-V21 VY gh' Y, ' 1.5'V:i.'-..'J'f H 2 1' ,if J., li 1 , ,La fl, Y , f C19 ,lrig vff,'?1-'E i' I . f ' x in 'K Qxhii iwt ifoms N 'X LL ifamlt ,Q Qi aff' 1 N A - Q ,- Wm s lf v !,1V2'N: A X X f f Isaak Kwik ' X X ! ' V . g I 4 ,Q 4, . I In N' ff 41, ' fx! l .gmail ,I m1 1nusuru 1 lXlIUWll ' Xff UYMUlll M ' 1 73 l lJRlii1lJliN'l' EN1l'lRI'I'L'S, HERBERT LEE S'I'E'lSON Professor of Psychology and Pedagogy li. D., Baptist Cninn Tlieolngivzll Seminary, 1373 11.11, l'niversily of Chicago, 1900 A.M., Franklin College, 1885 l5.l7., Des lNIoines College, 1839 l.l..A., Des lNIoines College, 1901 Dean :incl acting Presiflent, Kzilmnzlzoo College, 1911-1 ljrcsiclent, 1913-1922 President Emeritus, 1022 18 , is 1 Y ix -. ,W--X-W-M-X-rw., -1 mKWW,.ir.+ww,N-f-- , s A NE, r . ' .139 , ' - i ' I , Y 1 -X.. . Q 1 .. . x J. 1 ,K N . , M xv ' ' -if N f' ,M , . ., E ' ,X 1. ANN W ' W' N'Wbv.wv..,.Nix,..,f ., ..m,..W+N,:z:.,.Xf.zAQ,:m.:v.xw::xm.:.rmAmm,M.,ermlv PRESIDENT, ALLEN Homgx Professor of Sociology A. B., Vniversity of New Brunswick, 1895 A.lVI., l'l11VC'l'SlIj' of New Brunswick, 1897 Newton Theological Seminary, 1398 Fellow, l'nive1'sity of Chicago, 1899-1900 Ph. D., Vniversity of Chicago, 1901 President, Knlzlmazoo College, 1922 19 X 1 x X ,X lm X X X WE S X 1 X XX, - r: - uni' .-. ri: Jfi ':E:::? ' ' ' T 'xzf AT ': :' A2 ' sd! ' fi 83 is 4' E . '?..f. X' .P ' - Q2 Qik, fix . . 6 .2 3 . . . Q 1 . 2 , i s . ' L-IEI.....R3f 1 1 ff.. - KSN: N C e R , mf? 6 ' - 5 iv W 5 ,359 HQ 5 ul RR Rf E? 2 HEIQMON HARRISON SEVERN, A. M. VVILLIAM EMILIUS PRAEGER MfXRK BAILEY, A. M. +9 . . . . 58' Acting Dean Professor of Biology Professor of Latin, VV1llard 53 Q EMA- Professor of Greek, Broadus B. S., University of llinois, Foundation ' - Q Foundation 1900 Professor of Spanish Q X Professor of Biblical Literature M. S., University of Chicago, A. B., University of Oregon, Q it AXLQQRQS A. B., Dennison University 1903 1888 5 1896. Phi Beta Kappa A. B., Harvard University Xsmf' Graduate Student, University A. IN1., ibid., 1891 ,R of Chicago, '01, '02, '03 Student, University of Chica- . Q Resident Student, University go, 1905 QS if U of Berlin, '05, '06 Q i is Fellow, University of Chicago, X '11-'13 A. M., University of Chicago, X ' - 1922 3 N S ., .,.. xi , F 'Sf Av-flu.. ,Na+ X Q , .,,. .... ...----- - Q ,c.. .,.,,..,..... G 'A , W W: V , , '.., A i I i S ig y ,,,, Q 71 N? - . ts gs f K- , e':' ,S . ' ' 2' ' ' 1 is ,... is 1 1 1 ' g? f 5 ' . ,fp g , fs , .13 31, . f . ' N fr Q. l vvil- - N EU? X4 l iii' , X W 0 ii RP 1 Q - I . ,.. 5-1. ,. f , fx: . ..............................,.. F' ..... ............................ 1 ' 'ii - - gt X if, V he W .,........................ ...... 'E .... .................. W x , . , ' We 8 .MENS HOWLR B'lCONv A- M- ERNEST ALANSON-BALCH, Ph.D. LEMUEL FISH SMITH, M, 5, ,M of French Professor Qf Hlstorf' Professor of Chemistry kgs? A B iiBrown University 1896 Allglgg Kalamazoo College' A'B Wimam Jewel College, iff 5 b' U v 5 -, I l l 1897 1. wg Phi Beta 'kappa A. M., University of Michigan, M, S., yniversity of Chicago, A. 1 Q A. M., llilfi., 1897 1889. 1911 ,Q i Q . Student, Alliance Francaise, Ph.D.' University of Chicago, Q S , Paris' 1899 1898 8 f 3, Q. 6? Vi 20 Q? M gt! Af' 'if . . . , ,- ..., ss. Q H 'Eh -0 341, ,QB ,,. - 4, .,,, Qx X., .... ,N A L QPEQEQ . ,.,M QS 3 X . aw :T or ' w x X Ns ...t.. ,X X M 5+ v ,awk W .... R N NN film A Q QIQ, we iXi'i W ,f X. R A Rays at Qs .NA is Us Rt me ' Q S fs is: ,g S -N 1-S S 1, 5 ,. RW., WWW., 'X Q , - ,t Sw Qs 5 :Qs Ms, Wmwwf 9 ,t sw .Ss N R tk . K K sw . N' is swf N ,Q S Q . SQ ,N Y Ss. ..., as-1 . ,.,. . A ,,., J: wr' G Q J x .S s. ,raw b. k x Q 1 ZW A 43. .xgmxw ' ., . .pe ga - . 0 NW, , Mwatawtww. .M 5. ,S . ...R W-.Mw--twwwmmwwm x ....w-tw Mwtwx Mt.. Ma X - ' .. ,x,. H V- , , Xf,gXQQ. t ,vt X N QiN1faxxmws1::S,aaw+wwawtmzmtamw:naw wwwxmmmw X.mmmwwwQ.wa:11:mmmawmwvwt-lMarwwmlAm 'y A I X 5 252.13 - T10 L X .1 A .... . ...... 91, ..... .. ,,,, , ,,,, ...... , ....... , ,,,. ' . at ' ' . ' 12.155, E I 2 -5' X 3 . l r - :' - E , ' , w gr- Q W? 1 ' ' 1, 1 V xb X aj. Q' V-Ai: . :L 5 - 1 fi, L, ff!! r , ...... ...nn -...-.- Tia---.- ---I---. ?i ' - T. , . Muxrox SIMPSON, A. M. Louis T1-xoMPsox, Ph. D. ELMER Cumwxos GRIFUTH, , Professor of English Lan uage Professor of Phvsics Ph- D. and Literature lon leavey Professor of Economics and 1 'a A. B., Acadia Vniversitv, No- B. S., Kalamazoo Colle e, 1904 BUSIHCSS AdmlHlSU'11I10H , 1 - ev n 4 g ' -, va Scotia, 1905 M. S., Clark lniversity, 1915 A-B-, Belfllf COHCSE- 1395 X, A. B., Yale University, 1906 Ph. D., Clark University, 1917 A-M-, lblq-i 18.93 Fellow in English. Yale, 1906 Ph. D., University of Chlcago, 1 . ., .. A M ibid 1907 1902 ' Graduate Student, University Graduate Student, Qxford Ym- of Chicago, 1908 versityg i,Yl1lVEl'S1fj'OfBCI'l1I1 . ' Graduate Student, University . of Michigan, 1923 3 ,v AFTER- . t X X .................. ....... m 'l1n.,,,,,,, ' r ' . RNA., ., 1 E ' Q Q 4-1 ,, A 3 5 ew' 5 . a , are fl 5 1 ..................... ............ . 55, .... ......... ........... : A , mmmmmm mu g 5 W f ' . .. . . . I .' P ' A. M. . Roimzr Fxammix COR5EL1.,.A.B. A0855 B'2AGfOHIEen ?1::5LKqQNant THOMAS ORR WALTON, A.B. . ' Assistant Professor of Political elflgesgor of Etn lishr' ' Aggfl Profeggm- gf Mathematics 50191109 and ECOHOIHICS A B Kil Z 0 Cine e 1900 A. B., Kalamazoo College, 'j A.B., Cornell College, 1919 ' gqma gl 191+ ff A.B., Lniversity of Chicago, 1902 'A 'S A. M., Univers1ty of Chicago, 1908 - X qs 1 X 3 Q 21 ' ' V' ' 4 m,iK..e I 1.13 1 EQ Y is QQ- fx X it .ant ' . -. - w Mwwgw X' , Na.: l- E : E J -53.51 ' ggi? . . , ,,,,,.,., ::, . ,N ,om Q. , me vw 5 5 32X t Af f . ag v ' 1 3, t 1 3 yi Q 1 'i K 1 lx 1 j P., .3333-M14 -gf ' 5 A ,X . xl A :I ,. . . .. ..................... ...... ...... ...........,........ l V : 4 .',---..'.'..-lI.lI.- J H LEFA f1'A'f1.oR XRVORTI-I, A. M.- LEOXARD JAMES ASHBY, B. SC, NIILDRED A. T.xx1s, A. B. Assistant Professor of English Acting Professor of Physics Instructor in Public Speaking A-B-1 Pglblon College- .1931 wh. ESC11., Imam-Silt of and English A. M., I niversity of MlCl1lgHl1 Manchester, England, -1912 A, B., Kalamazoo Cgllegey 1918 1915 SCH 'Uljivergity of Mary, 1ACiV3I1C6d Stlldelll, chester, 1915 Northwestern U n iv e r s i t y, Drama L e a gg u e Institute, Columbia University 4-s.faw. , N WW RUTH MARION VERCOE, AQB. Fnuxir BRUCE BACHELOR, D. D. EUGENIA DUXSMOREY AIB' Instructor in French Bmlmiss Manlagel' Librarian A. B. Kalamazoo College, 1922 A' B Franklin College, 190+ A. B., Cniversity of California, Graduate Student, l'niversity B-,Du Rochester Theo- Sem- 1919 of Chicago, 1922 mary, 1903 D. D., Franklin College, 1921 22 u , .,... ...,. . T i , lb . - . K' 3 l V Q 1 .. Zigi t ' 4,3 1, f A .au f - 'f ' ' , ,X 1 I gi 1 f. HL, f ERNEST Bourmx II.-XRPER, Ph. D. -Ionx IvI.,xYNARo STREI-IT, A. B. FRAXCES Drrrsoro, A. IS. Assistant Professor of Sociol- Professor of Physical Ecluca- Instructor in Biology ogy and Education tion A. B., Xvisconsin I'niversity, A. B., I'nive-rsity of Virginia, A.B., Carleton College, 1921 1921 1916 Graduate Stuclent, ihid., '21, '23 A.M. Ynivcrsity of Virginia, 1916 D. B., I'niversity of Chicago, 1920 Ph. IW., Vniversity of Chicago, 1922 f ' . v ' A , ' lv' ' ' A' 1 ' mg - 3 .q.V 2 , L-QL.. 1 ....... :QQ ...... .............,.. ,,,, J H. ........., ,,,,, . , ERNEST XVILDER SPAULDTNG, A.M. AGNES IIREXELL Goss, A. B. CII.-XRITY CATHERINE CONANT Instructor in History A. B., Dartmouth College, 1922 A. M., Harvard I'niversity, 1923 S, ew., N.: -XR Instructor in German and Instructor in Phrsical Instruc- Latin tion for XVomen A.B., Kalamazoo College Graduate of Chicago Normal School of Physical Instruc- tion. Li 23 . i 1 A 9 fan- . .1-Q9-fff..r:-1' f' X 5 .. 'Am 'XX . R ex.-. N63 - xv' Y i it ,X x , .A GW ' N' Awww ' y, 1.ga:,,.:s : ' ' - 2?ZWf.,, : . W.-J . . .,.,, .tt , is-:gp 1, N, 4 - - Sm -Ra : Y-:amfllllm 13' ' - Q' - eg.:-. ':t-,:.:- fi. . .4 . . . ML'Rn21. ANNETTE Down, Ph. B. Instructor in Latin Ph. B., Kalamazoo College, 1897 Ph. B., Chicago l'niversity, 1898 FREDERICK XV. IIEYL, Ph. D., Yale Lecturer in Chemistry MRS. ARCHm.-xLD VVHEATON Matroxl, XVOmen's Dormitofies EMILY MARX' I-IARRIGAN Secretary to the President , .f .N . A V . XA Q. . Q , -xwwR X XM . .. tt P-if -R wt X,-R tug R, t - QQ 4 k! Q A I 6 1 y -3 x 4 A L . , ,K , , . , 1 1 I A I P , I . , D . iEH!MIYtlilBlllH1TEQN.12'EhEUfiiTllEi1W-lH6THlKlHl'WlHKlY' A ,,' ,f Hx Aram: 1 1.4 711 K fi' 5. , , L, 1-:I , X sql' .4 ,A Q I will A- -M' ' ' U W V .H f'l I VI. r, , , . K . fv., . ,,,. x .,, 1 , ,,,vv.', ' ' y . - ,I I, xf ,, I f ' , ,-. . -.dr ' ' , u-wr' .- ' .W 1 V l In 633. 52 iff? ' 15:-4' . I I' - I- .- , , , . A. ,'. I ff, ,V V. .ww , . .g..-1 .' -' fy' L-' . 1' Via., . 3:-Q ' - 'L 'ev.2Q.u-'J' 1 ' :f ar-., . 5 -' gg, ,F--V. . ef , , .' . Hui 4. Q, ' 4 '-it N4 ' -N .i3,-,1- 1 HM v.. j , . mfg ,-ry. Q 4 Ez? k 15.31, ff, , X. at ':: :A af , gif? f . .ff-' -,' :F : K J ff 7 Sm-'-'.xf 2' 'N 4 J 4 g wi v I .q, x,,, A I 1 , , 5 . K 1 1 q, 4 , I 4 , I , ww J 1 X' ' mo' u AZ' ' '1'l f 4. -mf' A W? X I - 75 f 1? 'Q M ix , j g .wk ff',?-', X' like ' - K I I KVi'6 qX bei f5X'f': 1 + If' gfffji? X iff A H 'lffafff' W f f NMXM Pv'3if 4 4 gy X . x x 1 ,W n l ,fx W K X H Af x X K if ., xX J , if f 'fM4,,,9wj,LL-f , ,I ,- f f ,J f' ig X W P A ' ' ' x i if n 5:-,. k '! F219 ,- ,f'ffw,1aff' f? ' 4 Q -- YE , We 'l W I 1 XX '- hz fm zu -a w w if JN W-fi K LM V - N 5 0 ff ., X--V YS-W ,, if f A. S ' L.m.q.fc.m,- .ll oo.1.fV +3i? Q 16 , ' I -4,-xt,Lmw,, .4i'.ff!fh293'I'3 s 25 CLASS OF 1924 PHILIP VERcoE .... RUTH SCOTT .... PAULINE KURTZ ..... GERALD RIGTERINK .... THOMAS COBB ...... RING AND PIN Harold Brown, Clmirnzrzlz VVilma Vandervelde Eleanor lXIcQuigg SOCIAL Royal Dressel, Clmirnzfzn llfabel Pinel Charlotte Liberty Antoinette Hutchinson OFFICERS COMMITTEES . . . .President Vive-President . . . .Secretary . . . . Treasurer . . . .Senator CAP AND GOVVN Harold Allen, Chrzirnzazz Dollie Houghtaling Ardell Jacobs FINANCE Gerald Rigterink, Clmirnmn Kenneth Sausaman YVanetz1 Aeker SENIOR PLAY Thomas Cobb, Clzzzirnmzz Harold Blaine lllargaret Kurtz Louise Stein Lois YVillianison Speaker at Football Banquet .... . . .....-.... -- FOVNDERS DAY INVOCATION .... . . . NVILL ...... ORATION . . . PROPHECY , . . IVY Poem .... HISTORY . . . Philip Vercoe . . . . . . . . . . . .Kenneth Sfllllfllllllll . Louise Stein .Helen PVard . llnillis Dunbar Iflarold Blaine I-Iarold 1111671 VVANETA ISABEL ACKER Kalamazoo J: true to lufr friendr as ilu' dial if fo ilu' Jun. French. K II, 9AfI1, K II-corresponding secre- tary Fall '21, recording secretary Spring '22, vice-president VVinter '23, president Fall '23, Dramatic club '21-'24, secretary '22-'23g Inter- national Relations club, '22-'24-g La Conferencia Espanola '2-lg Senior vice-president, Forensic board of controle '22-'23, 6A 411-vice-president '22-'24, president '24, Associate editor of The Boiling Pot '23g VVinner of freshman KII de- clamation contest '20. HAROLD BYRON .ALLEN Grand Rapids J fviyoraus, fuarious, fuersalilf mind. English Literature. E P E, 9 A KID, E P E-presi- dent Spring '2-l-g Dramatic club '20-'24, vice- president '22-'23, International Relations club '21-'24, Senate '23-'24-3 GAKIJ '22-'24, secretary- treasurer '22-'24-5 Associate editor of the Index '21-'23, managing editor '23-24, Managing edi- tor of the '23 Boiling Pot, Gospel team '22, Senior historian g Speaker at Forensic banquet '22g High honors for the year '21, honors for the year '22, '23, honors for minors in French and English Literatnreg Balch history prize, '21, Bi- ology prize '22. HAZEL M. BARCLAY Kalamazoo Tim most manifest sign of wisdom is contzzzued Cllf'z ff1ll71L'.l'J.I' Mathematics. AEA - president Spring '24, treasurer Fall '21, MILDRED ORENA Bassarr Kalamazoo On :with the dance! Lrt joy bf' unran- filed. Biology. K II-treasurer '22g Y. VV. C. A. HAROLD ARLO BLMNE Kalamazoo Thine is it, that our Drama did noi. dir, Nor fllckff do-'wn to braznless panI0m1m1'. English Literature. EPE-corresponding secre- tary Fall '22, president Fall '23, Speaker at VVashington banquet '22g Dramatic club '20-'24, vice-president '21-'22g GAQ '21-'23, president '22-'23g International Relations club '21-'24, Associate editor of the Index '21-'23, news edi- tor '23-'2-l-Q Athletic editor of the '23 Boiling Potg Class treasurer '22-'23, Blackstonian fraternity '23-'24, Co-op store board of control '23-'2-lg Senior poetg Boiling Pot poetry prize '22. waweizsse, Mwyii. i-fu, X t R Rs N ,X N X mm-ww.x'N:Av::1! XX X N X x X X N' ! R--Rm, XlQ1'.:,t 1 xx X X at Af ,X .,., frmta. ..., ,Q we .,.. 1,.te,,.t.N..e Xx.. xx RRR s .5 NN QQ WH ,X r .. qs 9 LYSCOM DEXTER BRIGHAM Decatur I often mort the lanky fellofw, in the Pifffllllg, on yonder' hill. Economics. E P 21. Advertising club '22, Black- stonian fraternity. MuRrEL LOUISE BRrr'rON Kalamazoo R .-I kind hear! is ilu' foundation of good- YQ . il Iz11f.r:. 2 Spanish. KII, La Conferencia Espanola, '24-. X f ' X X B13ATR1cE VIVIAN BROWN Kalamazoo HS.llI' is prriiy Io lwallr fwitll, fwiliy to talk fwlfll, and plrasant, too, to thznk on. English Literature. AEA-usher Spring '20, president Fall '22, Orchestra '20-'2l. HAR0l.D BROWN Muskegon 'Klmong oiflrr Ming: he lofzfed nature and luv' U'mf1n'1'.f. Chemistry. KIHA. 1 VERN VVESLEY BUNNELL Kalamazoo Yi, UlVfIllI'f'4ZlI'I' skeptic rould inquire for, for fy V1 ' rfvfry fwhy lzz' had a fwh1'refor. 41? Chemistry. IPA, II K A, AE P, fl-'A-chaplain XF Spring '21, secretary Spring '22, vice-president iz ' . X Spring '23, '24, Senate '23, '24, Manager of Oratory and Debate '23, '24, Freshman debate N team, captain '21, Varsity debate team '22, '23, HK A, treasurer '22, secretary '23, '24, confer- ence team '24, AEP, member at large of the -fu Albion College chapter, Premedics club, Inter- national Relations club '23, '24, Chemistry club, secretary-treasurer '23, Baseball '21, Speaker at the VVashingtOn banquet '22, Marjory Buck prize xx X X in Oratory '23. X l X X X X X 28 ' X X f? r -'FX XWTFTX ,R X tstx 1 l W . X , .,.. rsas X ' '- -sax: -- M ,--. W' ff-fill as X 'ei Q A R W ig Jw ,. ., X.k. .. X my 2,53 ,,,.eQ,5 pf ,MX , RN XX, Q Q iw t Y 1 .. . X , , 5 X fix re- -'fi ri-r -- .ftlixyiiflafi ,wi ' N FRAXK S. CAMPBELL St. Louis, Mo. My ofwn lfzouyhts arf my companions. Biblical Literature: H K Ag Varsity debate, cap- tain of negative team '23, 24. FkANcxs GEORGE CARTLAND Kalamazoo Graaf flI0ll-dhfi Iikr grrat drfds nvrd no tru mprf. Chemistry. Chemistry cluh '22-'24, vice-presi- dent '23, '24, Band '22-'24, Jones prize '22g Miller Mathematics prize '23q First year Physics prize '22g VVilliam S. Howard prize '23, Tied for Upjohn chemistry second prize, High honors for year '23, Honors for year '22g Honors for a minor in Chemistry and Mathematics '23. THOMAS SPENCER COBB Kalamazoo Br minf a philo.v0pl1er'.v lol in flu' quiet Lwoodland vways, Far from the long-nf'ck'd gffsi' of ilu' fwarld that are ffurr hissing disprai.tr. Mathematics. E P E, 9 A415 President of Senate '23-'2-lg Manager of Nothing But the Truth '22, International Relations club '22-'24: Black- stonian fraternity '22-'24, sec'y-treasurer '23, Associate editor of the Index '23, business man- ager '24-3 Business manager of the '23 Boiling Pot, Dramatic club '22-'24, executive committee '23-'2-lg Acting president of Freshman class Fall '23, Chairman of co-op store board of controle '23-'24-3 Second prize, Boiling Pot poetry contest '22. Rotux Drxox Davis Grand Rapids In action faithful and in honor imc. Economics. E P E-treasurer Fall '23g K club, treasurer '23-'24, K track '21, '22, '23, '2-lg R cross country '20, '23. KEXNETPI WILLIAM DEAN Kalamazoo II'hfn' fworrls fail, music speaks. History. E PE-corresponding secretary Fall '22, recording secretary Fall '23g Glee club '21, '22, '23, '24, president '23, routing manager '2-I-Q Co-op store manager '23, '24-. NXLXXX ,X, ,XXX ,MXXX .t ,Xe . N ...WXXXXX-XX. XX.,-.-, Y s W X.,, at . ,Q-XXX -. ss - X -- ., , X XX SX X X X st 6-X..XsX.sX,X.,Q ,V X 3 NX ' 'X W- 'X ' WXXXsXxXX.r::.XXXXsat..t.w-X--XXsXX,.X..X.X,XX1XXXX,X..X-:WXXAXXM X X--tX,X1ip::iX4XXX.Xs:kW1f X X ,,,, X t . MX , or -- ,. to .,L.. XXX X1 AX 2 . . syn?-s NY . XX jX,.,g15X XX f X s 'NN , X' WXNXQ .QW X -NXXQ XXXL' XXX. .Qs XX XXXXX: M, -ww ,XX .6 'WM X, ,os X. X, Q Nw X X Q .X X, XXXRQ, X X . ' Q X LESLIE VVILLARD Down Kalamazoo I can't forget that old quartet that sang, 'Smvert ,-ldelirze'. Chemistry. EPB-chaplain Spring '24g Glee club '21, '22, '23, '24, ass't business manager '23, business manager '24, quartet '22, '23, '24-g Chem- istry clubg International Relations club. ROYAL FRED Dnesser. South Haven Enjoy Ihr jwfsrzzt day, trusting -very little to the future. Economics. SPE-treasurer Spring '23, vice- president Fall '23. VVILLIS FREDERICK DUNBAR Kalamazoo He is a boon companion, if you allofw him to lla-'ue his humor. History. CIDA, IIKAg CIPA-vice-president 20- '21, president Fall '23, secretary Spring '24g Glee club quartet '20, '23, '24-g Orchestra '20, '21g International Relations club '22-'Z-l-3 President of Student Body '23-'24-3 Band '22-'24, director '23- '2-lg Varsity debate '22-'23g High honors for year '23g Honors for a minor in History '23g Howard memorial prize in Political Science '23. 1 Rocit FLEMING Boyne City 1-I rare mixture of brafwn and brain, this .von of the Northland. History. E PE- K club secretary '22, presi- dent '23g K track '22, '23g K football '21, '22g High honors for year '23g Honors for year 22, Honors for a minor in French and History '23. VERA ALMA HILL Kalamazoo Her merry hrart doeth. us all good. History. AEA, 1'IKAg AEA-house treasurer Fall '21, corresponding secretary Spring '22, vice-president Fall '22, International Relations clubg VVoman's debate '22, Forensic board of control '22-'23g Todd Sociological prize '22g Farley prize '22, Honors for year '22, .X XX X we A -A .ax , X, ,et-'wt,p X XX-f-X X LXX . XQWSXX., XXX XXX X . N V Q X N,,wWWXXX at K N Q MSX XxXtX-XXCNQ X X Q.. twexjgl XXX X XXX., X , K. ,wx ,XXXXQN XR. MSX tt., V K , t XXX. QXX. A x .WX 'X X X s XX 'Y' 1 . X it L WX NX I K' X X Q X' - 1 1 XXi X . . X - X .. X SX. .X X X -F X-XtX XX K- -XX X. Xa -xr-XX-X XX, se XXXQSN' X X he ,C is .WX sax ,Syst up X X,XX ' my 1-..?XswwN.XN NIQPSESNSXYW DOLLIE L. HOUGIITALING Charlotte A miniature of Ioevlinerrf' History. E-secretary '21g Gaynor club '22g Dramatic club '2-lg Y. VV. C. A.g Class secre- tary '23g Speaker at VVashington banquet '23g House committee VVheaton Lodge '23. Lois GEORGIA HOVVARD Lake Odessa You can no! gifve anything to a mag- nanzmous person. History. K H-corresponding secretary Spring '2+. ANTOINETTE HU'l'CHINSON Kalamazoo .'1nd fnisfresr of herself though China fall. English Literature. A E A-corresponding secre- tary Spring '23g Y. VV. C. A. ARDELL OLVEN JACOBS Hancock The fway thai man could lavkle things! Economics. Century Forum-president '23-'2-lg K football '21, '22, '23, captain '23, all-M. I. A. A. guard '22, '23g Basketball '23-'24g K club, vice-president Fall '23g Hornbeck trophy '22, REc1NALo VVATT KENNEDX' Kalamazoo I 'value sfienfe, none fould praise it more. Chemistry. Chemistry club-vice-president '22- '23, president '23-'24g Tied for Upjohn Chem- istry second prize '23. .b ,,Nssw.t..tN3 Awww, .3-X X ...,-.rl-5-ts., A, as.-QM, A A , , tx X. X x . xi. X N Q 5 X W x f was . Wit S N9 ef A ' . S, . twill' .---. Wi- f I s-253' ' at . mt 'K 5 ,. S F 'SX FRY Q N, . SSN Swv . CN x x Q-X -'gay X9 X - 5.-S, -x X ' t.. as V X . x G, X src..-ss.x:s,sw,ss s::::x.w.,',:wws:sv GLADYS IRENE KILLAM Chicago, Ill. For L-what I fwill, I fwill, and there? an md. Greek. E-chaplain '22, critic '23, vice-presi- dent Spring '24, Class vice-president '20-'21, Student Volunteer, secretary '20-'21, president '23-'Z-I-3 Dramatic club '21-'24, secretary '23-'24-3 Y. VV. C. A. cabinet '21-'24, Chemistry club '23-'24-5 International Relations club, Greek prize '23. MARGARET SUSANNAH KURTZ Chicago, Ill. Blr's.rrd fwith a lemprr fwhose unrlouded Tay Can malsr' tomorrofw cheerful as today. Chemistry. E-chaplain Fall '21, corresponding secretary Fall '22, marshal Spring '22g Dramatic club '22-'2-lfg Chemistry club '22-'2-lg Y. VV. C. A. cabinet '23, 'Z-lg NV. A. A. '23-'Z-lg President Ladies' Hall dormitory association '22-'23g Or- chestra '20-'22g Class secretary '20-'21g Senate, secretary-treasurer of Student Body and Senate '23-'2-I-5 Premedic club secretary '22, '23, Girls' basketball '22. PAUUNE FRANCESCA KURTZ Chicago, Ill. J mind to Council, a hfarl Io Jympaihize, a hand to Imp. Chemistry. E-treasurer Spring '22, president Fall '23, board of directors Spring '2-I-3 Class vice-president '21-'22, secretary '23-'2-+3 Y. VV. C. A. cabinet '22-'24, president '22-'23g Chem- istry club secretary-treasurer '23-'24-5 Dramatic club '22-'2-lg Orchestra '20-'22, Ladies' Hall dormitory association '21-'22, YV. A. A. treasurer '23-'2+g Premedic club '21-'22, Girls' basketball '22. C1-IARLOTTE LIBERTY Manistique Earth change, but thy soul and God stand surf. English Literature. K II-chaplain '22, record- ing secretary Spring '2-1-5 Gaynor club '2-H Y. VV. C. A. cabinet '21-'24, vice-president '23g VV. A. A. '2-leg President of Stockbridge Hall '2-I-. GWENDOLYN JUNE NICNEIL Augusta lVrfv4'r51'rppir1g o'rr ihf hands of modesty. French. E-vice-president Fall '23, president Spring '24-. 32 .vs 3 x Nttwwt.. xy., foxy kxgwgs X ' R X CC.. ,. .Q it e- X x' X, X X. .N ji x este. . x X XXX N gy- Qi f max fH,RyixZF,6 Sm 1.RQ:,gXXQ5 f..,Q,i.:t.:,K X? I WWN.u.s. W.--.,MatwfatawwwummwMm-W,mmv.mmRwwxWRwmmmxyaxwwwmiysgzts Q ,3.M::3f-wt,,x ,ax R X ,.M-of N , .1 ax i- Q H 1, .- + .A SX U if 3... xfggl ..:x:,t.N. gggif W Aw M1 W: .vw J,.Xxw,N.t, ,A :X -,bt ,, .XX v,,,,wW:!wxxwamw...-, X3 L V Q xx V a it .A aafgg .wits as Vw- tl-2 3 + :re .Q 3' 5 iw K qu :J X xi N , 2 f 2 1 . 'V 5 A f g - sy . 1. ,s. If sg if - ' 11 ' g I ,At .Q f Y' 'N 'ixliiapzdi-- WXY5-Smyvi Wu O'wSs:.CvW 'X ' ,,M.... S. ' ix if N .x E itm.xWasxxxm.:::a:4.maxxwz:..tww.mmRxx:xmxxxxwm..+xw.wwwamw:ww :wmmmm:mwwLtu.w::w.w..:iS59 Q . S YQ is 'S 2. 'Q x ' x at Ia x Mx 1 DOROTHY LOUISE IVIADDEN Plainwell Sha -works on quirtly but quell. Mathematics. E-sub-treasurer Spring' 22, treas- urer Fall '22. ALEXANDER FREDERICK MAHLMEORG Lawton No good man bvvonuzf .mddrnly rifl1. Biblical Literature. ELEANOR MARX' MCQUICG Kalamazoo O Maidrn. frfslzrr than ffll' first green leaf, Tfzim' is the bright .vide of my heart. French. K l'I-secretary Fall '21, La Conferen- cia Espanola '23-'2-l. HELEN lVIEYERS LaGrange, Ind. i'1TQ,UH.9 the Izffwifflzing, 54'LL'l'l'f glalzff 0' lczzzdzzrssf' English Literature. E, II K A, E-secretary Fall '20, corresponding secretary '2-lg Associate editor of '22 Boiling Potg Secretary-treasurer of VVheat- on Lodge '23g VVomen's dehate team 'Z-l-5 Y. VV. C. A. '23, '2+g YV. A. A. '23-'2-lg Girl's basket- ball '22, MABLE DOROTHY PINEL Kalamazoo 7jl'717li.l' is i11drfd.a finf gmac for dmlfl- opzrzg omfjs dzsposzfzozz, my lze-ge. French. K 1'I-treasurer Spring '22, president VVinter 'Z-lg La Conferencia Espanola '23-'24-g K tennis '23, Honors for year '23. xx 'fx as t, -- ,. , ...xx ,. . V We X.. 3 R. 4. h. fxmxj , A. NM . ,L , . , l ii We N - 'if X M w X 1, ' .x ' xi'f Fw. Rx XX MVT N, 2 x., ,Q Rf' , t Mx ' 1 ' fillf.f ' X R' ' ' X, .Q iw X 3 xp W5 A R X X ,N x .5 . X? x . Aw l X Q x :W 3 ...-eeomwmx -Z. six? ,vi I' X 1,4 is Q3 Q fs Q 'S ,ax ,Q A-we . tt. a . g we Q r N , Q F, X ,A V .. 25, v 'X if Y fa 1 is af' 3 'B i A . 5. . , xp. X . X V95 .Q XS Q RQ . xs i A AS P v X fl? is 5 fi - S x x I f it V. '-fxhy ' t m .M A ..., N ,www,WWWMRW-wmmwwtatwtatea -R . NAWQMXMS X X N X ag, Q S .W X.-3 it ,l v -rw NO i X A it 1 , X X .W .X mg Y A C , . A , ., . t t 5 R A QNX . 1 t -v-- X www- 3,863 r Q X, -f - A .vt R' , L . X, , X Y N X ., ,gt ah, . Ngtx gwk ...V we .X . - . . X -t , is X- N-Xt V A ,. - +- A U ' 1 t R. its My s V1 ' vv--- i Wi ' M -X ,awwttwx ' , RR- frm- - sw s 'sf ,fy 133 sw .' Q Q 2 R f if fats f as Na' fi M' t as N- or V'mfs.sxmmsxm-me::ww..:tuR:s:Rx mzxzzvmuzvs:::mmmg.:::wzmauuamzezzxuzzmmmznz.+:mmwmx 6 YWQWMN' W CLARENCE DANIEL RAMSDELL Kalamazoo ll'haI I must do ir all that ronffrns mc, not 1-what proplr think. V Economies. QA, H K A, KID A-president Fall '22g Senate '21-'22g Blackstonian fraternity, vice- president '22, president '23g International Rela- tions club '21-'24-5 Class president '22-'23, Stu- dent mannger of Athletics '22-'23, Athletic board of control, secretary '22-'23g IIK A,'vice-presi- dent '21-'22. Louis CLARENCE REMYNSE Kalamazoo True merit is like a rifvcr,-the deeper it 15, the less noise' ll malu'J. Economics. GERALD HARRIS RIGTERINK Kalamazoo IVrit1' me as one fwho lo-ver his fellofw mhz. English Literature. Century Forumg Chemistry club, Class treasurer '23-'2-l-. MILDRED .ELLA SAGENDORF Greenville Soflly hfr fngfrs fwandfr o'fr The yielding planks of Ihf' ifvnry floor. French. E-secretary Spring '21, board of con- trol Fall '23' Orchestra '20-'21' Gaynor club '20-'21, secretary '22-'23g Class vihe-president '2O. KENNE'I'Pl HARRIS SAUSAMAN Kalamazoo I am Sir Orarlfg 4'LUlll'7l I spfalz let no dog bark. Greek. E PE, H K A, E P E -treasurer Spring '24-1 President of TIKA '23-'24g Freshman de- bate team, captain '20, Varsity debate team '21, '22, '23, captain '22, '23g Conference debate team '2-lg Advertising manager of the '23 Boiling lr? CL or 2:5 'Y as gi gifs 5 : 25 I' NN gh ff' t GSE QR'+D'w3 Q25 NR A is 53 fm as W X ?,., '5mt NR R' Y, . Q saw! QQ. 32552 Sslilksiii S sux fx S. WW. 'flirt QQ, P X Ka ...X I X wr. .NI X. .we ts xi N . W GR .X ae s T-R-'Q X 5 ' : yt. X 3' as C' A ga ga ' els NVQ.- Q '- N . K I ',-A A . Potg International Relations club 2-1-. ., ew X ,pw 'ff - R, ,at-A .t as ' 353155: .ea .X . . Xl: me-' ,Z I 3 ,Bs za X X gi ft tt. . gk ,Q , X236 R SSW' QR, If' 3 Ng. ...MQ 34' is .khbir x A Ju? -'IWW -M .. -Www t .- 1 , i MN tt -a . QRXNNNK . - t sw' - 'X 9l1:'w -Q ' ,. ' f 1.- x X 'M 'E -X' N X ' it Wx if 5 ,Sift-,QNX 'Wim QS -A 5 ' L N it Hrs, 2 v sa. ww L t-,.,..ggg aw A 1 Q - t , tw slit V-3' A we - wif mm. Ft X ff r ' r , S. D . x ,wi A. .fp ,R .wi 'Ng at -at gy r ts: Q.. li X ,L A W XX X W my M. 5 Q' 'S - ., ,W Mopwt ffx ,- X X .-.-M is-WWW,Naetewtetxmewatmmwmtsmvwwtsstttymmwggl g tg,-,.,.5um'xs,.w A ,,,--+--wevwskx . A .- e yr . . .. a 3 , . Nw 4 t Q ri fe l . . , .,., X, -tp ,z t .... , 422 gg, f - ts 'X ew.. L E 5 We 5 1 ' ll ,.., , 5 ,offs t ' y x M' Q Q, QL' jews 'S VXww 3'x l:Mts.sto, of emu.-t.tw.wweam.teswwwsmwmkmwwefsswwm wwwQw ' X X Rt E 5 1 Q Q LUCE FREDERIQUE Scnmmr Brest, France Tf1rr1 s a glinzpsv of .runny France in Q fm' .vparklzngf riffs. Chemistry. KIIQ honorary member of Euro- Y del hian and Al ha Si ma Delta societies' P P E' r Xa Chemistry cluhg International Relations club. V., RUTH MELROSE Sco'1 r Kalamazoo The pnngx of absflzu' Io rwzzofue By lftttfrs, .mfr illf!'l'f17'l'ff'l'5 of loaf. N English Literature E, A E A, 9 A sb, A E A-cor- , responding secretary Fall '22, president Fall '23, , Dramatic club '22-'2-lg Sherwood prize '2O. Y VFHELNIA ELIZABETH SIIIXVILLE Shelbyville ' Thrifty, and fllflllyflfflll of o!f1rrs. ' ' ' History. K II-treasurer Spring '2lg Y. YV. C. A. cahinet '23-'Z-I-g XVheaton Lodge house commit- , tee '23-'2-l-. fo tx r 1 s MILDRED HELEN SMITH Kalamazoo 'fSomfonf pu! a diamond on hm' flll71L1. History. K II-house treasurer Fall '20, vice- president Spring '23, Gaynor club '20-'24-3 sec- retary '21-'22, trip manager '22-'23, manager '23-'Z-L sa 31, -X GRACE ELLEN SNEDFCUR Tecumseh edgy, ,J person of sympaflfy and t'f1Ff'I', all . grave ...... ' Q Q Biology. AEAg Student Volunteer, secretary- -'ll treasurer '23-'24-g VVheaton Lodge president '23- '24-. as x as , X . E V e V v -ky, KW: . '-QT Q I .V sg - X U NZM-alL.ft:e1 '-' X 5 4 t s x 1 wc:+::s:Nr bmi,-NNY you t .-ttw.swsmw-y-o- sstwXmysoawwwmssttyxtssswsxwstv XS .gtk 'kg-yfmwtxw .Amszxgx 'Dewi X ' wif NA W- X. sn. Ng., Q .ug N.. . x N A: E! A, Mt...,m fy 5 Nwttigwlt. X - in Ui' NAWQA tifwsmwx' itsi:w:,e.swzxz.+:mWmMt:ts:zm1vs:..a::t:::zpzpzznsmsntm:tutgttzwz--ramesme-sw::::svmmwa:m.:..:s:mmswwmwsmIWNfSN is Xi' its L33 5 lv- '1 -A xy- Wy? an X- . it -1 . X,,,. f QNX l as xy , rjrfz - av.. ,fggifilf I It LOUISE MAE STEIN Kalamazoo Q- p S J D Y . Q ' .t ' Il1s xtouz and he fwfrf' znsrparable com- -, X jmnzonxf' Q X X English Literature. K II, 9 A CIP, H K A, K II- ' ,QQ . , . . s K' corresponding secretary 22g Dramatic club, vice- ' N president '23-'2-lg International Relations club '21-'Zlg Y. VV. C. A.q VVomen's Varsity debate E team '2-lg Associate editor of the Index '20-'22, .' f 1,5 news editor '22-'23g Editor of the '23 Boiling 1 it im 'P . Q Potg High honors for year '22g Honors 'Z3g Hon- A I U I ors for a minor '22, '23g VVriter of Senior VVillg 'T-0 VII rize '22. Q33 I VVILMA CiAI.E VANDERVELDE Kalamazoo .553 In mint' ryfs :hr is ilu' 5fwz'1'tz'st larly llml 5.1, 'fI55f'm mwr I looked on. V 5 Y - - it ? x'5.v5f .- French. Ix II-treasurer Spring '21g Associate X editor of the Index '23-'2-lg Honors for year '225 SARS skis f fig High honors for year '23. it W N P, Prime HENRY VERCOE Flint It w thai I -would applaud tlzfe io the furry echo, bfi. tha! would applaud again. MX ef Greek. E P E-secretary Fall '21g International I ' 9 Relations clubg Glee club, president '24-g Bandg Si of Class senator '23g Student representative on Ath- V letic board of control 'Z-lg Associate editor ot X N , . . the 23 Boiling Potg Speaker at football banquet I I '23g President of Senior classy Pres1dent of the ' dormitory board ot controlg Track '21g Base- gi .- hall '22, '23, '24g Second prize in Greek '23. HELEN ANASTASIA VVARD Schoolcraft 'Kind Io om' Ilf gafvf flilf talr11I5. p t anim. n I 1 i ' rama ic cuu resi- QS Sp 1r,ox1f,Hia,D t ll, gp dent '23-'2-l-3 Gaynor club '21-'22g La Confer- A X encia Espanolag International Relations clubg Senior oratorg YVinner of the VVOmen's State A W Oratorical Contest '22g Honors for minors' 235 9 I . . . Nm ' Marjory Buck prize in Oratory '22. g M13 Lois MARIE VVILLIAMSON St. Louis, Mo, N You kno-w I say jusf :what I llzink, nofh- is t mg more nor less. fi Spanish. E-recording secretary '23, alumni 5 secretary Fall '23g La Conferencia Espanolag X is Honors for major and minorg Honors for year i23. if t K. wpppt . tl X App N . A is X. X .s N g I N I N. . 35 . 1' X t X , . ' , I I ifri 'I ea 1 tc. It W . t tx - S i X ' Q sf M X : eX:Mnsy-f Jmfwx . X B W5 xv bw X k 1-guy -5.13. .1..: -Y -X ,,,x 1 K X 'w+1,.' X X W X X , gg.: ,. L ' I. - wmwwex, X 1 ..s5?ii?:'2f,'f 'mx Q W.. ..-'N f S R. , 37 Q3-mx mx wfwmxxx 9 f,,,,-MN ,mx my ,,.Qwm1xmNmN N W N v' XNm.hq.wx.,f + X M- . L . if x ,Rx W , X. .V NN, zum, Qw..,.A... -ww N Nwmww, Avmm x Qc .qX,,,,m,,M A15 X11111:sN,x ST xNN111111111111X1s111111111111111111 111 11111111111111.11w11111111:111 111 1 11111111111111-.111111111111111111111111s.111w.1111111.1111sew, S '+.:3?,5y4gx51111X Ewwwgyw . ,l . ,,,T1.wm WMWSMQSET i if 'X-3 1 L , ,.... - .. 11 1 1. x,x...x.., EMM-X-Wwiswx ff 5' 2' 'iw R . ,ex 1' wg .1 111Ni' 1 X X N T. Q 1. XS 11 N1 1 X EN? 1 MLNQX 135, QX1 : . 1 X, 5' gag XX- we ix, .131,g1-w , 1, ,.,11111.111:-1.1-151 1, ,. 1. ..N. X 1--- .,a11111111g K- ss ,111- sl5k1r1wN11 r.f.g,1 1 gg we A .ms11,g-19 1 1 1111 11111111111111111111111111t11111111111111111....1 T lg 'W Q S? ip if V s' . 11 51ivi'Q3',,xX VE 1152511.11 X11111f11 'wis13gXX.r :sg -1? H ' er1t-age ' .751 Nfl. From the east fled the Algonquin, 1. N111 K' Q . . . . N gf H1s nation smoked 111 1'Ll1D, 1, F55 X His heart was benumbed w1th terror. X5 1 11 . l ' 1 ,px X Soft behind him the IJLl1'SL11l1g demons ENQQ 1 . . 1. . 1 Untirmg came, the Hodencaunee, spaw11 of Atoharo. ,Q 1 Until the la11d of the 1Ill2l1lCl wate1 swiyiffex 1 fig: Offered peace a11d home and shelter. 1 11. X. -1 11 1 ws X1-Q11 3 5 x 1 11 fu' ,151 16 NN 1 Y yi .111 11.1 11 X1 g 2111 12, . X 1 5 1 11 X X1 11 2' 1 11 'X W1 . X11 1 1 -1 1 11. 1 11, 5.3910-IX - 11 N11 Q , XX 111 . Q11 X-1 11 1X 1 . X 1 X X N .111 1? if? A 6 .1 'SYN' '-X 5 WS. Q11 R NWY11111 51111 T 1 s X- AG . 13 x :- Xxx 111.1.f 1151: X XY. Se, 1 X3 K A111 11115K is MS 1 5111 SSW Q NQNNS we we . f'w 'ifS .1 . .. 1 s 5 1' 5 7 F W N N 1115 .-:1 1:1 N, A 5 S 111 'I R .,11:1N' af 'Y is X 1,1 N E 2 S 1 XA 5: if 1 1 1 1111 1 X ,x .1 N i 11 K, ,,1-11 So the Huron and the Qttawa Found refuge with the lNfIe11omi11e a11d the Objibwa, A11d the Seneca went back to guard the fires At the VVestern Gate of the Long House. To his COLl1'lCil 011 the Ecorces Pontiac called the chiefs to answer. From the blubber eating peoples of the Labrador, To the Blackfeet lodges in the mountains' purple shadows From the Black Hills, Po-to-sah-pa, of the Dacotahs, To the shadowy Seminole, hidden in the 'glades, The couriers bore the red a11d black belts, Bore the painted call to war. The sachems heard the challenge, And the scalp OIICC more hung across the moon. So fell Detroit a11d llfichillimackinac. Again from the east came a traveller, His wagons creaked a11d rumbled, His Hres flickered in the darkened forest To lllichigan, the land of fur a11d timber The land of swamps a11d fevers, Came the Pioneer. The clear flame of courage blazed high within his heart, As he sought to pierce the frontierfs dusky veil. And in a valley filled with ancient legend, VVatered by a stream rich in ancient lore, He built a fur post, then ho111es, a church, a school. And he was one who saw the dawn, The dawn of youth and things to be. Gone now are the forests, the deer, the buffalo, The tribes are scattered far and wide, The voyageur a11d fur post are but tales, The pioneer is passing with the years. They have left to us the fulfillment of their vision, A city fair and rich, Built on bloodshed, sacrifice, and toil. l i f .X +,2f11 s if wx s 19? we 111 W1 1, 1 1 me 1 , 9 11- 11 Q? Q3 5 1 Q SYN- 1x N15 1 . 1' MTN SSN N1 Ny E 1,3 11 QT ss-X 15 NSS .1--Aww-SS.-1 ask N X . -1 -1-1, 1 1 1 1. s -.1 P wx, Sgr, 111. X11 S 1 11 1112 1 is 1 Q . ,ks 11 E1 ix. 1 QR.. 1 .1 X. N. F 1 N +1 N 1 'A 1 RN 1553. 511 . - X Wi rx TIITIC now demands of us an answer, ix They d1ed believmg we would not fail, Shall we fulfill our HIISSIOII. W . 1 , -13 X 1 1. XG Are we worthy of their dreams? 1121 .. 3 as 1 ,I HAROLD ELAINE. X fx 111 . . . . fRead at the plmztzng of the ivy on Founder 1' Day, Alprzl 22, 19245 110 2 A' S 'N N4 F , .1,,.. P .N 1. 1 If 11 11 . -111 1 1 ' .5311 QM? 'F 38 1? me 1 - .,: -1- M411 gifs: A XXX by New ...xx km. N11 H 9,1 ...1 1 ,X wmv gwrkxk .1 W yr-A 11 x x g Nw 1 11.1.-H5 F l X U S11 1513 xii 11111111111 11 MQ Q .1 1 - Q . :X , X f .. X 1? 1 3 X 1 as 1 N X e? ASW ' ,www sv CLASS HISTORY C1i.Yl't'I'f7fX from flu' lX,tlfIllll11Z00 Dai!-1' Bfulz, .fjvril 21, 10241 ORTY-lfliil-lT students of lxalamazoo college, forming a group known as the Class of 1924, all of whom had been charged with conspiracy, were found guilty this morning by a jury consisting of the board of trustees of the institution. Conviction was made upon two counts, first that these students had conspired to de- fraud lialamazoo college of their valuable presence by striving toward that day when they might leave the institution, and second that they had conspired to indulge as a group in various activities in order to make the Class of 1924 pre-eminent in every respect upon the campus of the college. Sentence will be defe1'red until June 13, when judge Allan Hoben is expected to give them the maximum penalty, a lifetime spent in useful Christian service. A peculiar feature of the exciting trial was that the respondents uniformly testi- fied against themselves, apparently seeking to bring a verdict of guilty from the jury. The prosecution successfully used in its own behalf the testimony offered by the de- fense, thus requiring no witnesses for its own case other than Dean 1-1. H. Severn, whose revelations as to the high scholastic standing of members of the class and the shocking manner in which they have succeeded in winning campus honors produced much excitement among spectators in the COL1l't-l'0O11l. The room was crowded with an audience composed largely of college students. That the Class of 192-1 began its insidious conspiracy shortly after its arrival on the campus in the liall of 11120 was indicated by the testimony of Bliss G. 1. Killam, vice-president of the class at that time. Xxflfll trepidation and a feeling of greenness, she declared. its members, then known as freshmen, had come to the college. The bet- ter to remove this feeling the class proceeded to organize itself at once. Hluch of the verdant sensation was removed with the aid of generous members of the sophomore class, who furnished the freshmen with a quantity of orange paint. 1Vith the paint there were tendered various free hair-cuts, in exchange for which the men of 192-1 graciously provided entertainment for not only the sophomores but also a large share of the population of Kalamazoo. Upon this class, it was brought out, there was first perpetrated the ordeal known as freshman lecture, with such success that succeeding classes have suffered it also. Some of the class members formed a debate team that defeated Ypsilantig one placed on the varsity debate team and also won third in the state oratorical contest. Uthers earned considerable glory on the eleven in that historic year of the MINI. 1. A. A. lneligiblesf' The class defeated the sophs in a thrilling push-ball contest on Home- coming Day, and so soon began to assume an air of importance that green caps were worn for only three days. llleanwhile most of the members had endu1'ed the rigors of society initiation and were entering into the fellowship of the campus without losing class consciousness. And in the Spring they accepted sophomore hospitality at an inter- class banquet at which chop suey formed every course but the last. A great change was wrought in the class upon its return in September, 1921, declared Pauline Kurtz, vice-president during that year. Fortified with experience, the men of the class enforced all freshman rules and decorated with silver nitrate all recalcitrant newcomers. r.l1l1C1'C was held the famous trial of a frosh who so far forgot himslf that he endeavored to eat several men of the class during a pitched battle in the dormitory. After the historic battle of 1Vest Lake, the scoreless inter-class football game, and the memorable siege of Plainwell, in which the frosh were completely foiled, the class signed a truce with the freshmen. 39 EX xwsgfgesxxx ,aawx .swag m..vssvw-fvceiwx gg Llswsvmxxx .AA img 54: J.w'?f1 wg ffwbt i . - K v X . F am.: .. . .xg we ., I X -.tg,qM as ...Q . ss x X sw As juniors, according to junior president Clarence Ramsdell, the members had an opportunity to redeem themselves under the new president of the college, but they preferred to continue on the primrose path. Early in the Fall they held the unforget- able junior masque party, with a young alligator as the guest of honor and H. Arlo Blaine as first-prize winner for the best costume. Throughout the year the attention of the class was centered upon the production of the 1923 Boiling Pot, which won the praise of the campus when it appeared on the last day of lNIay. The financial success of the Boiling Pot enabled the class to keep out of the debt which in previous years proved a burden to every senior class, testified Philip Vercoe, who was elected president in October, 1923, when it was found that Don Hamill, president-elect, had left for another institution. During this Hnal year, he indicated, seniors had been active in many ways upon the campus. Some shone in athletics, others were instrumental in working on campus problems, and still others devoted themselves to group activities. lfach made the name of the Class of 192-1 a symbol for strength and endurance in the minds of the underclassmen. So busy were the seniors that social activities were nearly overlooked, yet the class is the first to plan for a dinner dance. Testimony indicated that the class was made famous in other ways. A certain faculty member, stated President Vercoe unblushingly, intimated that the class had set a record by having no less than thirteen engagements and pseudo-engage- ments as a starter for its life work. At this astounding admission the disorder in the court-room became so great that the case was sent to the jury. The Honorable Herbert C. Stetson, former judge of the Kalamazoo college cir- cuit court, in commenting upon the unusual trial and result, stated to a Blah reporter this morning that while the jury apparently acted from the best of motives, he is positive that the class has thought not only of itself during its four years at Kalamazoo college, but of the college as well. TT.-XROLD B. LALLEN, Historian. 58 :Z gl WILL YVe, the class of 102-1 to be graduated from Kalamazoo college, Kalamazoo, llichigan, United States of America, VVestern Hemisphere, YVorld, having survived four years, more or less, of mingled agony and bliss within the walls of said institution of said location, being of sound mind with the excepton of a few demented, commonly referred to by some of the faculty of said institution as practically, pseudo, or publicly engaged , and being of as sound body as could be expected after four years, more or less, of toil and turmoil, do make, publish, and declare this, our last will and testa- ment, expressing the hope that those to whom we bequeath these, our precious pos- sessions, will treasure them and make of them as much use as possible. YVe do hereby revoke any and all former wills heretofore executed by us. Part 1. All unjust debts, left over from our Sophomore year fsuch as egg- stained opery houses, etc.H and all graduation expenses shall be paid from the junior class funds. Part ll. To the faculty of said Kalamazoo College we do bequeath the follow- ing items: Z7 ltem 1. rl o Professor Praeger the quietness of the Senior eo-eds that he may spread it among the underclassmen in the halls and in the woman's rest room. ltem 2. To Dr. Balch, Dr. Bachelor, Dr. Harper, Dean Severn, and Bliss Tanis a fund of 58.73 to purchase trailers for their cars so that deserving and tardy students may catch on in time to make S o'clocks. ltem 3. To Professor Lemuel Fish Smith we leave 51.00, the accrued interest from which shall be used for robin bait. -10 Item. -I. Part requests: Item I. Item 2. Item 3. Part individual Item I. Item 2. Item 3. Item -I. Item 5. Ite1n 6. Item 7. Item 8 Item 9. 0. Item I Item I I. Item 12. Item IS. Item I-I. Item 15. Item I6. Item 17. Item IS. Item I9. Item 20. ' IiVe appoint Benjamin Goldman to be Dr. I-Iarper's new statistician in the absence of Harold Blaine who is being graduated. III. 'Ito the Student Body of Kalamazoo college we make the following See to it that the unbroken traditions of the campus, held so sacred and inviolable by us, arc maintained. This includes smoking on the campus, taking Normal girls to all social functions, carefully avoiding all and any studying of lessons, talking in chapel, and giggling during the recessional. Refrain from egg and hymn book throwing at the faculty. VVhile this is permissible in some colleges, it is l1Ot considered au fait here. Never forget that Kalamazoo college must always maintain the inferiority of the Freshmen. IV. Furthermore, we do out of the great love in our hearts bequeath ly and singly as follows: Phil Vercoe leaves his polished manner to be divided among the 250 new Freshmen next year. He leaves also :Sl-L98 to provide a uniform for the bell-ringer. IVaneta Acker leaves her curiosity to any co-ed uninformed on any subject. She especially recommends Bill IXIerritt as recipient. Lois VVilliamson leaves her low voice to Elizabeth Nicholson. I-Iarold Blaine leaves his book on Cave lXIan Ideas to lXIerrill Peterson. Helen IfVard leaves her queenly dignity to Bertha Briggs. Rollin Davis bequeaths his springy walk to Donald Doubleday that he may increase the elasticity of his step. VVilma Vandervelde leaves her graciousness to any member of the Fresh- man class who still feels ill at ease. Hazel Barclay leaves her alert manner to several members of the Freshman class who seem to be in need of same during chapel. Ruth Scott leaves her baby talk to Dean Powell who will find it a per- suasive weapon to induce wayward co-eds to turn in their date cards on time. Harold Allen gives to the administration a release from pitiless publicity . Ellen Snedecor, RIuriel Britton, and Gladys Iiillam leave their retiring manners to Babe Pinel, 1XIarguerite Hall, and Helen Bard. Vern Bunnell leaves his talking ability to Allison Skeen. KIildred Smith, Lois Howard, Beatrice Brown, and iXIildred Sagendorf leave their shining examples of what can be done in spite of the opposition of Normal co-eds. Although IXIildred Sagendorf had to take medicine to get her sparkler, they nevertheless all recommend their recipes to all co-eds, and especially to Alma Smith, Louise Iklillhuff, and I-Ielen Going. I-Iarold Brown leaves to Bob Stein his lowly and unassuming manner. lest Bob, in the enthusiasm of youth, should fail to follow the example of humility customary to Seniors. Frank Campbell and Alexander llalmborg, long married, leave Breeze Herron, Freeman Brown, and Bob Pfeil to uphold the dignity of the school's Benedicts. Francis Cartland leaves his flivver to Professor Simpson so that he will have no further trouble with the Oakland cars. Tom Cobb bequeaths his cheerful, childlike, and coniiding manner to Ernest Casler and Johnny Rynne. Leslie Dowd leaves the beaten path in the college grove to Raymond Ford. VVillie Dunbar leaves his stentorian tones to Leroy Stinebower. Ardell O. Jacobs leaves Gladys Hayes, slightly used laugh which was be- queathed to him last year, to any member of the student body who does not +1 .1 's'W:jxv, I, XX V .Q Item Item Item Item Item Item Item Item Item Item Item Item Item Item Item Item Item Item Item 21 22 23 2-I 23 26 27 78 20 30 31 ga 71 J J 3-1 ,- J D 36 37 38 39 .Q..Waw,5,,,,X,, A-f,fym's-NM .XX sfvxrt-.YN X 'XX .F ' y 5 if vl2:,Fs.sqgz--Q x ,zsneswammasxcswww km M 'l A enjoy life sufficiently. Ardell has found his own laugh quite satisfactory this year without any additions or assistance. .lune lXIcNeil leaves her youthful appearance to the oldest member of next year's Freshman class. The Kurtz twins, complacent over their ability to study only on alternate days and then bluff the faculty by answering for each other, leave an ex- pression of sympathy for those who are not blessed with a twin although in dire need of one. Doc Ramsdell is taking Dollie with him, but leaves an endowment fund to purchase dollies to make the Freshmen happy. Louis Remynse leaves his exuberance to Tommy Seller. For the benefit of the professors, Thelma Shinville has consented to leave her penmanship art to Ivells Thoms. Last year's legacy of a pull with the French department having proved in- sufficient for Bob Black, Luce Schmidt leaves to him her knowledge of French. Kenneth Dean leaves his books of statistics showing the amount of candy eaten annually by Kalamazoo college students to the Statistical Records de- partment, in care of Dr. Harper. Rock Fleming bequeaths two inches of his height to Pete Hessmer, two inches to Ronald Garrett, and two inches to Ted Fandrich, that they may better hold up their heads in the world. Kenneth Sausaman leaves his vocal gymnastics to any would-be debaters, and his luck in winning debates to next year's teams. lllabel Pinel leaves her duties of upholding the family honor to the baby of the family, formally known as Evelyn. Gerald Rigterink leaves his habits of punctuality to Beans Howlett, and hopes that they will not follow him wherever he may be next year. Vera Hill and Antoinette Hutchinson leave their decided opinions to those who lack the courage of their convictions when the profs say, Are you sure thats right ? Royal Dressel leaves his boisterous mannerisms to Don Seward. On demand Charlotte Liberty will give her frat pin recipe to any Kazoo co-ed attending the .I Hop next year. Dollie Houghtaling leaves the snap of her eyes to increase that of Frances Hill and Frances Peatling. Dorothy Illadden leaves her cook book to learle Ross and Ruth Chart. Helen lllyers bequeaths her talkative nature to Dorothy Dockham. Eleanor lXIcQuigg leaves Allison Skeen to the tender' mercies of some Kappa sister, so that Allie may not become lonesome. Dexter Brigham leaves his ability to carry 21 hours of work to Charles Collins and Albert Vant Roer. 3 VVe hereby nominate and appoint Professor Rlilton Simpson as executor of this, our last VVill and Testament, hoping that he may hnd therein enough material for a Ph. D. thesis, and requesting that he shall ll0t be required to give any security for his trust. In witness whereof, we have hereunto set our hands and affixed our seal on this twenty-second day of April in the year of our Lord. one thousand nineteen hundred and twenty-four. lSignedj The Senior Class of 192-I. Subscribed and sworn to before me, a notary public, in and for Kalamazoo County, lllichigan, this, the twenty-second day of April, A. D. 192-I. Louise M. Srsix, filly commission expires ,lune 18, 192-1.1 42 X ,ax X X mvwtxtsg fs ,,,.M5Wty.,:, ,mg X ...M seas A .X 0 x . ix A sis 1 yi. f 4 Q ' -. ,. is Wh. Q' '. XB e' ' 9 at W pf . -5 5 I A 1 mg as I ' vi? it 3 -s fi. A 7 va, A all? 'N + N x X X ,fu nw N Yrs? Si gs x X fs - E . ts sa xy . - S ,. N... X , 3 if yxy-wigs - . My sway ,N x y.sfss.SXgW'5 3: A N. y i Wsllxysy-w.z.se. s 4......:.a.,:,..'- i Prophecy The world today is originality-crazy. VVe go mad over mah jongg, prostrate ourselves before the god of fad, and worship novelty wherever it is found-in the class-room, the theatre, the pulpit. It seems that all a student must do to achieve notoriety and fame is to advance some scathing renunciation of society, learning, or art and advance some hectic theories which we imagine we originate, but which were generally cast aside by the Ancients thousands of years ago. Excellence in the old things, the old arts, no longer counts for much. A man may know all the history from Adam to Coolidge and wear a Celluloid collar or a set up four-in-hand tie, and he will be classed as an old fogey. I have done obeisance to this god of novelty and have wracked my brain for an original manner to present a class prophecy. During my experience in college I have noted several types of prophecies. First, the conversational type, in which two members of the class meet some years after graduation, and, by some miraculous event, they know exactly what each and every member of the class has accomplished and is doing. Type two is the fortune teller or seer type, in which some clairvoyant or sooth-sayer is consulted as to the destinies of the members of the class and she always has a supernatural premonition of the career of every member of the class. There are numerous other types which lack of time forbids me to mention. However, all these types have one common quality which I have noted: they are all an attempt at the ridiculous and the humorous. The idea seems always to be-the more ridiculous the prophecy, the better it is. Ah ha! Here I have found something in which I may be different. Instead of the usual stereotyped ridiculous class prophecy, I shall make a careful character analysis of each Senior, and after consulting several experts I will then pre- dict for each Senior what he may expect as a future, if he develops the best there is in him, if he keeps the same old fight 'em spirit of Kazoo, after he leaves college, and if he lives up to his best ideals. My thanks are due to the following experts. Mental capacities-Dr. Ernest B. Harper, love affairs--Phil Vercoeg business expert-Ken Sausamang legal advisor-Prof. Cornellg financial expert-Ben Goldmang form, manners, style, etiquette, etc.-Dean Powell, popularity-Dr. Bachelorg and politics-Doc. Ramsdell. A gorgeous home in Los Angeles, a husband of wealth, a great worker in society and charity, a happy family of children-this is the lot of our dear friend VVaneta Acker. Fifteen years from now Harold Allen will be editing the National College News, a daily paper expressly published for colleges. Hazel Barclay will become a line teacher and an authority in her chosen field-Mathematics. The success of Blaine is largely dependent on how much he is able to rid himself of the delusion that the best in the world is all wrong. Harold Blaine, you can become a great actor-but cease hating the world, or you can't succeed. There are things in the world besides love and chemistry, Brigham. Go after all life has to offer. You will be a great chemist. Assert yourself, Miss Britton. By so doing you will get the man for whom you can make an ideal home. Meanwhile you will teach. Beatrice Brown will make an ideal home for the owner of the greatest paper mill in the world. Try to see two sides to every question. Harold Brown. Not that there are two sides- but imagine the other one anyway. You will be head chemist of the Blank Co., of Chicago, Ill. Bunnell, if you Finally decide that, after all, you are not so good, you will make a fine physician in Kankakee, Ill. Campbell, with your keen mind, and ready wit you should preach. Francis Cartland will be professor of Chemistry in Kalamazoo College some day. Tom Cobb will be the writer of big league baseball for the Chicago Tribune, and sports writer in general for the Ladies' Home journal. Rollin Davis will be advertising manager for the National Republican Committee in 1944. Confidence, more confidence, and then more confidence, in your own ability as a singer, Ken Dean, will make you one of the finest lyric baritones in the world. Develop your voice, at all hazards, Ken. Yes, you will marry her. One of the leading physicians of Detroit, one whose Christian spirit prevails over all he does -this will be said of Leslie Dowd in a few years. Royal Dressel will move from South Haven to Detroit, and will manage the Hotel Statler, there. 43 ...-.:-wifes, wx -- tx -X ,ws ax ---X cw., . Y N Q X -. I A - 1, W- ws. ss THE BOILING CPOT 1924 YUOUT -swM..s..,... vt..wtst,s..vtvtswws?i?teX,, SS41k?,..aas'avs,Nf 2' if ,NK N -K , A v :5 N 3 f - tg ex Q1 -Q Y ,, :L . ' ,Y wk i 1' I: lux S., X.. 15, s -fy s s Ns 1,,1. .x.1::vaf.gs.: itz:.-.-.me-1.-::-memuaszrztazzvzz-:mwssgswssvssmkw MP Xi X. K . X May I humbly assert that exactly ten years from now I will be pushing a shovel.into the ground and removing thereon a quantity of dirt, thereby earning my daily bread. And I'll be just as happy as some of you fellows who are going to conquer the world. A Not the least of these world conquerors can be Rock Fleming if he learns that most folks are all right at heart and not as dumb as they seem. Vera Hill will beia critic teacher in History at VVestern State Normal School in ten years. Houghtaling and Ramsdell are going to live happily ever after some day. Doc is going to be a great financier, and Dolly is going to keep the money in circulation. A bungalow with clinging vines, a garden, flowers, books, kids, n'everything for Lois Howard. She will be happy. Could you imagine her otherwise? L. Antoinette Hutchinson will be a student in Germany, France, or Russia, then will become Q Dean of VVomen at Notre Dame. ' K, Production manager of Chevrolet in Flint is .lakey's job. Pauline Kurtz will also live in Flint. Among other things she will act as social advisor for activities of Chevrolet employees. .- Chevrolet will become noted in the economic world for its extraordinarily successful methods 6, . , in the labor problem. V' Gladys Killam will be a minister's wife, will teach a large women's Sunday School class 5 X in New Orleans. Her success will be nationally recognized. s Rex Kennedy will be a chemist, since humans cannot stand the glare of his forbidding COLIIIISHIIIICC. g xx 1. Margaret Kurtz will become assistant to professors Praeger and Diebold at Kalamazoo College in a few years. eg It's politics for Cbuc Liberty. She will become chairman of the VVomen's Democratic - s League and will help lead the donkey of Democracy to many a victory. Her stump speeches will be noted throughout the nation. She will come back to Kalamazoo College at the ripe old - age of 36 to address the 110th animal Vllashington Banquet, to be held in Stetson Hall. Ev J -lune McNeil will go to Harvard if environment means much. Then with the other Augustan stars will become famed for her modesty in reference to her home town-the birth- place of Gen. Shafter, Il. Beadle, R. Garrett, and E. Townsend. Eleanor McQuigg will dedicate Sueoyshi Hall, a great dormitory built by her husband, s A. Skeen, contractor and Dean of Men at Kalamazoo College. Picture to yourself a nurse-a beautiful, brown eyed girl tenderly watching over a man critically ill in the Plainwell hospital. The character of the nurse in this one-act play will be taken by no other than our dear friend, Dot Madden. Mrs. VVm. T. Tilden, II, has recently won the world's tennis championship from Sue Lenglen, famous French tenor. Mrs. Tilden will be remembered, perhaps, as Mable Pinel of s Prof. Bacon's French class. gli X Louise Remynse will become President of the National Association of Affiliated I'nder- Q ' X takers. His motto is better burials . If Mildred Sagendorf will become queen of Poland. fVVell, Paderewski was President, wasn't - he?l Anyway the muses tell me she is going to learn to play the piano. SX X Gerald Rigterink, with the unHinching purpose of his young manhood, will hie himself XVest. to He will replace Theo. Roberts as chief Sheik of the screen. Ruth Scott is also destined for Hollywood. On the signboards in five years to come-Allah Petrova and Russolof Rigterinko Q in the great picture, The Passing of the Elevator I'p . And when we view the pictures there f will be our heroes-Ruth and Gerald. N x X . X Ken Sausaman will become Educational Director of Methodist Churches in America. As side issues, Ken will indulge in singing, preaching, lecturing tvs. Temperancel, playing the trombone, and collecting stamps. At that he will find plenty of leisure. But remember there are Baptists as well as Methodists, Ken. Thelma Shinville will be in library work. I know Miss Shinville will succeed if she uses some confidence in her own abilities. Fight 'em Thelma. Luce Schmidt will become a cabaret singer at Monro Carlo in 1956. Ellen Snedecor is to be chief chef at Hotel Astor in New York. Her French tarts, pan- cakes, and toasts will make her famous. - - 'fM. sw . Us ...Assess A was oss . s sw Q-'Wx ,-ystwfw N 5 X X 5. -s 'F-mi' ' sllzyffiwNY'yAg,,sssSkSQWSP A 'S ,W 'ik X s . Q W -.s N ws I X X X t Q , .svsis Louise Stein will assist her husband, james Stanley, in the journalistic field. Louise should write soothing love sonnets and nice poetry in order to sooth her eccentric hnshand's frequent attacks of the palsy. Comhine Louise's quantity and .lim's quality in talking and it should he a world beater. I-Iere's to Stein and Stanley. XVhy try to predict a true future for XVilma Vandervelde? You all know it-a palatial home, soft carpets, grand pianos, lamps galore, Persian cats, incense, hooks, hooks, books, Dr. Doyle hefore a fireplace smoking Il pipe, and XVilma-oh-XVilma looking at Dr. Doyle. Y. M. C. A. work will call our worthy president Phil Vercoe. XVhen youth passes, Phil will amount to something-not hefore. I'Ie will undoubtedly not live a hz1chel0r's life. Farther than that I cannot Sfly, for I should hate to incur the wrath of every girl in the college save one -if I should he specific. A metropolitan theatre, a packed first nite house, the orchestra starting the overture. Behind the scenes-stage men rushing to and fro with last minute preparation-actors in the wings, in costumes of the courtly period of England. Managers and producers smoking long black cigars. Then a hush--and forth steps the leading lady-Ethel VVardymore-none other than our loved, our honored, our much respected classmate, Helen Anastasia VVard. VVith her heautiful black hair and her brown eyes, Lois VVilliamson might he fated to become an actress. But social work will Call her and she will teach sociology in the I'niversity of Chicago. ' There, dear listeners, you have their fates, from A to Z literally, and, praises he there aI'e no more! VVILI.Is F. DCNBAR. .25 G5 3 HBEAU BRUMMELU Directed by Miss Mildred Tanis VVritten by Clyde Fitch 1Jl'F.S'FIIft'l1 by the SENIQR CLASS at the LINCOLN AUDITORILIKI Commencement, ICJZ4 CAST BEAL' BRCAIAIEI. ............ ...... RICHARD BRINSLEY SHERIDAN . CISHE PRINCE or XV,-xLEs .... . INIORTIMER ........... REGINAID CoL'RTNEv . MR. OI.IX'ER XIINCENT .. IXIRS. ST. ACRYN ..... III,-XRI.-XNA XIINCENT ........... 'THE DL'CHESS or l,E.nIINCToN. .. KATHLEEN .................. LADY FARTHINGALE. . . MR. ABRAHAAIS .... IIRINCE'S FOOTAIAN ......... R,-XILIFFS, Ccharacters doubledl . . SIMPSON ..................... . FRENCH LoDoINo-HoL'sE KEEIDER ............... KIANAGIYIXIIINT Stage llanager . .. .............. .. .. Business llanager . 45 . , .ffrzrold Bfaifzr . .plzifijr Verfoe . . . .llviffix Dznzbfzr .......Ifm'0ld 4111571 . .fj!lU't'lZl'6' RIZIIISIIFH . . . . . .Vern Bzuznvfl . . .flelflz Uirzrd ........RLlfl1S4i0ff . . . . . .lIYfZ7lt fIl I-Ivkfrr ... Doffief Ifozzglzmlizzy .......L0uisf' Stein ......Jr11elf .fafobf . .Kenrzetlz Snusanzan fzzrobs and S!lll.S'l71lllZ7l ...... Thomas Cobb . . .Lure Sfhnziflf . . . . . . .Louise Stein . .Kenneth Sausaman 46 f' ' We I , 1 - . , - SE x W N 1.21 J A umumf. , f w ' W 1 Q fl N - , , 1 I - ' . 1 5KY?fXMI!Q5Si:i Q fm w f WL 4 AQHA! 17 :I Sli Nga,-... H.: M! '11 I 5-T-N X If i f' V A ! 159 ' . E'-N1 4- 9,2287 - Yg Ji .9 f : 'E ,. ,s- ,:f- -f E- -Wx , f' X k X Zfflyji? ik fml W, N A' ' W 'I'V g W ' ff' 1-A N X T, 4l'X'o'.'!, 'fff' 1 - W I QQSIIHWQZ -NW 7 ?-- 7 ,:12 ww hiegvslf u A 5 'l g K Y Y av f Y 'ffI:4..-:Tm 4- fSE?fIts9f'fSH7TNQf51T , ': 'K2' ' M I::::qaQ Q 1 '::bl:::'::: ff bbzb bA'A iwim tiirizzizl mmTf?ifTli A::::: Zii ll: : :: 1 Q as ',,,:. V P l E Q' .L Q -V 3 in H Ti ., ul . Q X j t i ff . - :sr aaat iii ' aft T Q' 'N J ' . S ,,,' X-,. I N 5 U . - SPE fgf CLASS OF 1925 Q? g wi N X Q OFFICERS 6? Harold Beadle .. ....................... .... ........ P r esident Helen Chapman . ............. Vice-President Q s Q , F .. wx X uri ' Q-el? ,f' tif? Mg ii X t,,-lynx? A ? I-537 s Nr X f ,- R il 2 -Q: S qw . is? A W . Se aw 1 '13 Q ,.. ' 5 . 53? ,S Qi? 1 E -we . N. Cecile Pratt ...... ..... S ecretary and Treasurer Fi-ed Des Autels .... ......... ...... S e nator COMMITTEES SOCIAL Mable Miller, Chairman - Marguerite Hall Ben Goldman Roger Thompson FINANCE Cecile Pratt Pearl Ross Wendell Herron BOILING POT STAFF Helen ,Murray Caroline Ransom Ernest Casler Robert Stein Harold Voorhees 'Wells Thoms Mable Miller ' Marguerite Hall Dorothy M. Scott Ben Goldman Marguerite Hall ..... Speaker at Football Banquet 5 eg? W it si in TX ltll Q :SQ W GY? T gli? .2 'f ' SR P, r i 'ff. X- ,wlrftg ,,-:. , 'S wb Sffiilxl '18 asia? NX., X x sa. . Sltggmll is P., ' M , f' , . S ,st x N me I .,.' 'st'Ntu .. ' X . Q, Ng? QS sw? 5 Q 2' . Q T z -N T. sa fear Q. ix ,, .lf 'N M P . ,,.,, 9, ,-:,. I 5 I xw-aNix v wifi r ife -'--i . ffl Ntrrelixflsgwlwwtiry ---xP' au f '1'- 1 W3 wb ' if if f? if JULIA MARGARET BARBER South Haven R1'I1ffm of Sunnylfroole Farm. HAROLD DUANE BEADLE Augusta Cif1'r0. Enxfx LAVERN HISS Belding 'llfilfz Illaliu' Tofwards None. FREEMAN LEE BROVVN Gohleville lf l1f'11 a .Man LWarri1'5. ANITA HELEN BYERS Kalamazoo Thr Fair Pl'il1l'1'55.H ERNEST XV.-XLTER CASLER Ovid 'hllany I,ofu1's. HELEN A. CHAPMAN VValled Lake Smiling Thraragvlf' .ADRIEXXE LOUISE CHEXEY Jackson flu 0l.iFasl1ionm' Girl. . 4-9 A X wx vA,,XsXwXXXXXXXXXN RNXXYXXXX Q3 XXXXX X X X X N X X - .5 gX:X:XX.XXXXX-XXX ' L -'XXX 355- -N A . ... . ., A X Xi? 5X.f X ' X 'X T 'X XXX XXX' 5 X X :fc ' X N . .1- . , X X X. XxA,g A AXXWRX Y XXX X ' .XXXL X X Q. X: , XXX Q X- X. XXX. X - XX XXXXX X XXX X XXX XXX X XX XX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX..X::Xmm.1XX-XX XXXXQ NN 4-K X +R XX .XXX -X X Q QXN1 X X ., XXX XX .XX ,XX NWA SX XX -. X X K X XX XX -XXXXXXXX. 'D 'X XXXX , X XX XX X XX X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X .- MX X .. X .. g XX .X -X XX, XXX. M X X .N XX -XXXX. R- X XXXXXXXX W .. . XXX X XX. X. X-XXXXX F -X, AX X X NSN., -. iN! . Aly ,-.XX 9 Xl X N QXXX VVILFRED FRANKLIN CLAPP Detroit Rip Van If'inkle. CLETUS D. CORDRY Bunceton, Mo. The Master of Sile1zre. SUE MARGARET CORY KNO Picturej Kalamazoo Xl Sister Sue 1 X ,XXX VVILLIAM DENISON Ovid XX XXX. 'X Zephaniah Doolittle. NN X X X XY FREDERICK VVOOD Das AU'fELS Detroit X Nothing Bu! the Truihf' X X XX i.fX DOROTHY GRACE DOCKHAM St. Johns Xl T X AI Lafw Unto Herself. XX ' X Xt:ggfiX Q 5 X9 CARLETON EDVVARD DOYLE Beldmg X., 1-X X The Good Natured Man. fi .Q XX, 1 X X XX X X. 1 X XXX X ' VVILMA ANN DUNWELL Kalamazoo XX .X Hi: Heroine. X X X X XXX CLAIR HAROLD EMERSQN Warervlier Little Lord Faunrleroyf' 'N' NX X X . . .XXXXX :XXSX Ni:XX.iNg- .X -X ' XX SX A X CWNA ..X WX X XXXX X Y XF X Nl' X-X .XX X R XXX X Q X, X X 51 S. Q XX XXX X -XX. XX X w ' XXQX X I X SX X. nfs XXX :Q XX .11 50 , X Q-go, X F I XR X X X 9 XX Jimi-X XXTNWNXXXX XX XX.--X 'SYNTAX WN Ns XXX:-XXXN X .WWNXX Q51 XiiW?KRfiX11XX.XfWS ,Xg'fX5X7NTXTXwXQJWQE XX NXQQX3 k X .XXXXXXX Q1 Q.X.XXXk MX XXQXXXX -XXXXX A NXXgwXxXY HXXXXKS XQ XXX XXXXW C Q N, Qs WX. W SM .Ny X :XX X .XX XX XX XX X. XX .X X 1 x W X- . X. XX X. xx XXXXXS X Q :X , Q Q .X STX XXX X QXXX X' X X XXXXX W'WX'.': ' MXXXJ X A of , XXXXXXX XX '- XX X :X X NX -XX - -XXX X MP1 'XXXXYXF .XXXFXXXS XXXQXXX X 'XXXXX XXX ,XXXXXXX -XX X .X-XXXXX X XXXX ,X ,X XO X E XX -X-XX EXTYX XQNXQX, KNXXQN XFX KN XXX- XXXXQSQXXXX- 4 Xfy- .XX XQXXXXXXXQ1 XXX ' SXXXXQEX QXSXQXWXQXIX 'KXXfNN5Q..X-X YF XXNWSXXXXX .R XXXXXNXXW -My 'XX XXXX ' NXXXXNNWXXXX XQXXXNX RXNNxwX.+X' NNXXQMXX NX. XXXXXMX- XXX XX RXXRNNN- Ni NN- X V X X ' 4 A A I um i S x XK,xk ,.., W ,a....W..W. .M R13 ' . R WX A211 -N X J., 2 xi, fi W 1 X 3 N 5,3353 5, X- A WRC' 'f X,-an 4 . ' R Y X W R , .t Mg: ix wt www XwmRt.:t.act, ,Rt,.,.R.a.t....w.. A. -1 R Q N if M, ,., Q M R t , ...t , t I . MARGARET FLEMING Constantine , ' HN Majmty Jllysrlff' Rmrmoxn H. FORD Detroit Thr Sky Pilot. Roscoe JAMES FoR1'xER Kalamazoo I Lofvr zz Lassif. cz Bonnir, Bonniz' Lasyk. BEN CQOLDMAN Kalamazoo Flaming Youth. MARY MARGUERITR HALL Kalamazoo HPll7ll'l1 and Go. BURR MARSH HATHAVVAY St. Johns Far from tlzr Ibladding Cf0fLUd.'U , Q XVEXDELL MARCH' HERRON Kalamazoo X .- For Brtter or ll or.ff. ' N X v . , LAUREBCE HECTOR HOLLANDER Kalamazoo Long Boy. .M E RQ, .spy X, wut ?Tll?i1wX ,fx w ':ffQjm. Ni:-:fix .R ' t R RX ' ' v :iw xt X A V. R R A . R . ,. X X . . XR -X R X 1 M M R , .:. .-R .Nw R R X x 'R H at f t MT xv- N' as it it W N XA wrgwx .N .AR RX.. Q . A N M- Q-A, ,.. A M 21 ' Raw. . NN, RN xx . , XX N N N ' N I jo11N D. Hos1.ER ' Otsego Thr Fidd1r'r. CIRACI- An,x1.1Ns JACKSON Birmingham Thr Silvni U'0vnan. LEONARD XVILLIAM LANG Dowagiac Lord l,r0z1ard, ffm Lll!'k1I'55.U MARY LUCRETLA LINDENTHAL Manistique II H7101 n Pnl Il'n.f ,7lIary. LEONARD McCAR'ruY Petoskey Ravi: ,TWU 10 Sll'l'f'.H GER'1'RL'm3 E. MARSHALL Kalamazoo USWIISL' and Sr1z.vil1iliiy. N MABLE JANE MILLER Kalamazoo N4'1'fr' Failing X X MARION RUTH Mmxc Muskegon R ll'ovd and II'o11. Nia, Q INR X 52 7 Q1 A M A X A N , NARR- ' of an ' -' 'N kiiwtxr 'lfgzf N A A NWN V R Nxgffiflxmsmxgks Qgvsxgx. HELEN EI,lZABE'l'll MURRAY Kalamazoo Rui P1'ppz'r. Cr-IARLOTTE El,llABE'I'l'I NICHOLSON Kalamazoo Quffn of flu' Jt'JfI'l'5.U CARL J. A. NINKE South Haven Thr Srlzolarf' lfEKNETH ZEI.o'1'.'xs OSBORX Coldwater FlrfIfooI. ORSON IVIERRILI. PE'rERs0x Smyrna Son of S LU1'lf4'll.H 4, ROBERT PFEII. Kalamazoo Tf1nzzgff1f.r 011 ffn' Edzzmiion of C:!lill'll'l'lI.n EVELYX V,-Xl.E'l I'.-K PHll,1,xPs Kalamazoo Thr Slllljflilll' of Your S111flf'. CECILE PRATT Kalamazoo UTM' .'1l'fl'1'55. 53 TI I IC All rights reserved 1924 NV. NVELLS THOMS NIANAGIXG 1 1IlI'l'0R 1'IliNES'1' YV. CASLER Bvslylzss NIANAGER Fam: 'run Pnnss OF C. H. BARNES X CO. IENGRAVI NGS BY CHl'ISCl1lN'l' ICNGRAYIN Covrms mr TI IE BURK HA RDT CO. 7 G A1LEEN DOROTHY RADKEY Chicago, Ill. The Girl from the City. CAROLINE GERTRUDE RANSOM Alamo J Ransom for a King. PEARL IRENE Ross Plainwell IVailin' for the Efvenin' Mail. DOROTHY CHRISTINE SCOTT Vicksburg 'fTl1e Lark. DOROTHY MARGARET SCOTT Kalamazoo Ci11dz'rflla af Collage. THOMAS MILTON SELLER Manistique Se'1ziimf'nt11l Tommy. MIRIAM FRANCES STKRENGA Kansas City, Mo. Shaw life. JAMES BENJAMTN STANLEY Kalamazoo Liyl1111i1z'. ROBERT EDVVARD STETN Des Moines, Iowa Thr Trafvz'lrr. 54- ROGER S. THOMPSON Detroit lI'oman'5 Holm' Colnpallionf' XVILLIAM XVELLS THOMS Kalamazoo Tiff Calijfh of Bagdadf' DEE TOLlR'l'ELLO'l l'E Fennville Thai Girl of Minn PIAROLD ALLEN VOORHEES Midland In pl4'tion. RUTH VVATEROUS Kalamazoo 1'i4'for's Tl'i1llHf?h.,' ANNE XVHEELER VVI-lEA'l' Kalamazoo Our Illulzuzl F1'if'l1J. lN1,xRcARE'1' ELEANOR XVILIJAMSON Kalamazoo Thr Lllllfjflillff Lady. HAROLD LEROY XVISE Kalamazoo Cl1ildw Iltl!'0!ai.H MARY lY1YR'l'LE XVRIGIV1' - Kalamazoo n,lI!10Ilfl flly Books. IRIENE FLORENCE YFRKI-LS - Kalamazoo LM fin' Rm! of flu' ll'orIJ Go By. 59 X x DPhDITlUl'Q 1 Q 35' if-A 1400. f1 g'2j K. ,ff V g! K J if 33 ,, ? F ia JK N t , ,V K 1f'w-nv - -lk'-'f I -1 an 'amz I VX T K, xy 1 I 4 ev - J, rvgx us-4 'i xv MA l I . . Close Shoves 3 'A' i R Tof Fmfse hmen ' 5 'Pi Ou 5 U: f , N Eg , 4 Q!h's 'x ' 25 - IU ,f + , F JI, Q V N ,, w,4 f4 ,I ,. 1-A' ' L 1 W ' J ?1? J-- ' if E M FV!! A1461 ?,a T- -.1 f 7? Y QR .. 6' 47: x , - ' fo f f' A f W f f , f 4 W ,f 1 1: if, 4 I W' f1 .f,9 ll 'V' 1 , 3 av, I y 1 13' f'f'j ' 35556 X I 4 ' 3 ' ,7 if ,4 1? 4l lm GJNE his M, M fem L 7' ,M I .ff Y ,I f 4 F! 7 X 7 ! . , a Q iq Q G Q ei D -'a Q - Vtx '- ' -N- Sgmemve ir w 'f Qxqq TT: .r x,,V t irq 'A 1 ' ffl '2'f '-'A' T ' ' 'f-A rf' 'All 1 1:1 , y ' sz Q 04-X M y, . 7' ' 3 3.Qi,f , f 9 r 1 52.93.1:3rE.,LP0T in Q . 5' 3 f 5 Y , Qin? CLASS 0F 1926 .gr ti 3 ee wg 'ig OFFICERS GU Robert Black . . . ..................... ....... P resident D' , Shirley Payne . . . ..... Vice-President 5 Helen Going .... ..... S .ecretary sis .W S T xiii. W1 iam cott . .... reasurer Q' John Rynne . ....... Senator 'Q M 5557 - COMMITTEES ' V ww, CN FRESHRIAN REGULATIGNS AND INITIATION N' 5 Robert Black Lillian Draewell George Clark V R SI, Shirley Payne Clara Waid Helen Going Q' Thomas Shepherd Evelyn Pinel 2 il? PARTY Dorothy Snow Katheryn Teale Donald Doubleday Viriginia Earl VVilliam Scott .REQ Leroy Stinebower ...Speaker at Foatball Banquet ali? -f G W 'Q 5? , Q . we Cayo Q25 i 1 Z Kl?l'l3s? . . 58 slr if Q -,,'-,x. , '-l-:-Q- i --.. .. ,. . . f ' . Vei.. i A ,, by ,V ,1-V Q. , ..., Qutb A , -.. . L . X A yb by , 5 . y 1 -'r1 ..., .l:' 'e',e '- rlliirl if ee-lll Mrrzmfel w 1 1 Q Q - Sherwood Pinel Black Tenle Gurdon Green XVnlker D. Snow Strome Hingn Vande Hunt Voorhees Harris Stone Stinehower VVaid Hnrsch Hinrichs Van Peennn Stnrkweather E. Snow Shaw XVells Sueyoshi Smith Sproul Sodergren Yveller Scott XViIhur Schuur Adams XVe-sterville Yaple Rynne 59 X X ww-X x,x,. .. X, Ponntzlin Skellenger Norg Martin Merritt Smith Piper Milllmff Olmsted Ninke Jacobs Robinson Rankin Howlett Mumlwiler Lyon lN1innr Parks Rickman Otto Maynard Kaiser Kline Remynse Payne iviorris Miller Ludwig Lill Otto Osborn Loupee Merkley Lotz Hogg GO g . -- X .K-.-1ix-., l t.:t X -X X .- M X N WWXQN x Going Peters lilclrecl .'Xmlrinm'e Bock Gilcling Cartwright Uross Bullock l71lIlClI'll'll Fuller Bosker Clark Compton Gexnricll Briggs Brouwer Earl Cheney Crawford Iinurns Gilding Draewell Burch Dennis Byrd M. IxllKlf,'l'50I1 L. Amlerson Buys Dickenson Ehle Doubleday Allen Hodges G1 SNAPSHOT CONTEST PRIZE XVINNERS 62 '1 'W' es hiefi I T? in.. - MA l' L 9 , YL N i t ' ff 'I' 5 , X l 11. S H 1 5612? J' gjlliia xx N 4 6 f x 757 V! m oz XXX N Q I ? '5 1 -N l ' f A fiwv 5 5 Wi P H 5 + K' , SSX' 3 V . 'V T Q X 344 1 Ai- 1 A 1 we f 5 , E 2 Q :V Hi' , n W f W 'uf W ' 5 f M 2 Q 4' 3 Q38 x Q 4 c JM F I 9 Q. 4 BOILING ASTOREHCUSE OF EVE AND MEMORIES OF COLLEGE DAYS IPUBHAUSHIBD my THE LIUNJGR KALAMAZOO VUL 0 IPHVIE .3 X xx x wk 1 W. I ,.,. 5,5 'A' I A Q K: . , .A.., . 12,5 Q Q- - HOWARD VVH1'rxEx' ESTHER PRATT CLASS OF 1927 OFFICERS Howard YVhitney . Esther Pratt Lucy Mersoxm Fred LaCr0ne .. James McLaughlin SOCIAL COMMITTEE Robert Howlett, C'l1ai1'n1111z Marion Ellis Eloise Rickman Lucy Merson Neva Hirleman .. ...Spfzzkw ai F 64- x . . . . .Prfsidnzl . Vifr'-Pl'e'5iJ1'llf . . . . .Srcretary . . . Tlfaszzlw' . , .Sf'r1al01' VVillet Osborne 001111111 Barzqurt X I mx , Arm. xx 9 MQ 2 3. J-fe . Q .iv- Wi 65 QNQag3!5w,v1A Y N u Ardell Jacobs Vilillis Dunbar Philip Vercoe Q , GT xi '-Q 5313? ., sf f . -1 we ,- gljg fling , ' 94 ' ,,- g . -A V sex! 2J 1 ' 1 T IS our hope that the l92-l Boiling Pot has set a D1'CCCdC'I1f for future Kalamazoo annuals by devoting this page to the pictures of the students who were elected on the basis of personality, scholarship, and participation in college activities as being - the best representatives of the ideal spirit of the school. VVe take pleasure in announcing these six students as being worthy of this distinction in the opinion of the supporters of the Boiling Pot. All of them are active in several campus activities and have shown themselves to possess qualities of leardership, character, and ability. It is interesting to note that each of the six literary societies has a representative in this group. . Marguerite Hall Pauline Kurtz Ruth Scott 66 x V eysvxk is--xxx ,. xc X X :X x xx X fs-w. A 'i X x x Xt -vu. v it.. slssmsgwt 1- V 4- f . S 1 U L JV- :V x c F -fat' jute l'lIf'past year 'has been a very active one for every branch .of student L-QQ! g L actlvlty. Besides being a prosperous year for the organizations which ks 7 XO have already become well established on the College campus, it was a 5,2055 f year in which several new clubs were formed, namely the French Club, A, ,,c,,,,Q La Conferencia Espanola, and the Republican Club. The first two clubs mentioned were organized by students specializing in French and Spanish respec- tively, for the purpose of fostering the study of these languages on the campus. The local Republican Club is one of a chain of similar organizations which spring up in colleges and universities all over the country du1'ing election year and will probably die out soon after the presidential election. The greater part of the social life of the College centers around the six literary societies, VVith the combined purpose of fostering a spirit of fellowship and culture upon the campus they have worked together this year in perfect harmony.. Joint meetings between the different societies of the same and opposit sex were common. At the beginning of the year, in accordance with tradition, the various societies held open meetings for the new students, at which the new and old students were given an excellent opportunity to become acquainted with each other. Ar least six success- ful all-college dances were put on by several of these societies during the year. Each society also took its turn at taking charge of a student pep meeting and the result was that some very humorous and original stunts were enacted. This year the Philolexian Lyceum, whose turn it was to take charge of the annual NVashington banquet, arranged a very novel feature for the occasion, in having the banquet held in Bowen Hall and an all-college dance in the Gymnasium afterwards. Two campus organizations which arouse great college pride are the Gaynor and Glee clubs, which finished their seasons with two most popular home concerts. Linder the direction of lXIr. Henry Overly and hlrs. E. A. Read, the clubs prepared new and well-balanced programs, which they gave in most of the big cities of central and eastern llichigan, during Spring vacation. No organization could be a better advertisement for Kalamazoo College than either of these two clubs has been. Interest in Dramatics has increased greatly among the students this last year as was manifested by the large crowds which attended the excellent productions of the Drama club and the class in Dramatics. The Drama club in producing two difficult major plays like Only 33M and The Dover Road showed themselves capable of doing still bigger things in the future. Next year they hope to be able to produce some one-act plays in their own little theatre. The Friday noon luncheon club, the Student Volunteer group and the Y. YV. C. A. have each had a very successful year and have done much to promote a strong religious atmosphere on the College campus. Each of the many other organizations that appear on the following pages occupy a place in the program of many or a few students and tend to broaden the scope of campus activity. Although the classroom work is of first importance to the student still it is in his work in his club or society that he gains much of the experience and training which will mean a great deal to him when he leaves these college halls X x .h ,x x W X x s ex X v QQ X x x EU RODELPHIAN Founded 1856 Installed as Grmzma Cluzjwter of National EllT0dFlJDlIiH7Z Soriety, dpril 29, 1922 First Semester PAULINE IQURTZ. .. JUNE iX'ICNEIL .... LILLIAN DRAEWELL l.VIARIE WRIGHT . .. AILEEN Ri'XDKEX' .. AIINNIE NINKE ... VVINIFRED BIERRITT ALMA SMITH ..... CEL,-XDYS IQILLAM DCDROTHX' Sco'rT . . . lVIiss Powell Dollie Houghtaling Gladys Killam Margaret Kurtz Jul ia Barber Dorothy Dockham Dorothy Allen Bertha Briggs Lucille Bullock Ruth Cross Lillian Draewell Hazel Allabach Vada Bennett Berenice Cook Marion DeYoung Dorothea Dowd Helen Folsom ,tai-iv! -.. 6, ' , 9, 5 'I ik 'f'1. .R 3. GFFICERS . ..... Pwsizlmzt .... . . . .... l'ire-Prrxvizlezzt . . . . . . . ..... Remrrling St'vretary. . . . . . . .C'07'l'l .!'fJO7ll1i7lg Secretary. . . . ..... Treasurer ...... . . . . . Sub. Treasurer . . ... ... lllarslml ... .. .. Clzaplzzin ... ... Cflfli' . .. Crifn' Second Semester ... JUNE lVlCNEIL . . CSLADYS KILLAM . . .BERTHA BRIGGS .. HELEN NIEYERS LOUISE MILLHUFF .. NIINNIE NINKE . LILLIAN WELLER . . .GRACE LOUPEE . . .XVELVA GREEN . . . ALMA SMITH SORORES IN FACULTATE lllrs. Dowd M1's. Goss lVIiss Vercoe SORORES IN COLLEGIO SENIGRS Pauline Kurtz june McNeil Helen VVard Dorothy Madden Mildred Sagendorf Lois VVilliamson Helen Nleyers JUNIORS Gertrude Marshhll Aileen Radkey Dorothy M. Scott Evelyn Phillips Caroline Ransom Marie VVright SOPHORIORES Heanette Fuller Velva Green Adelaide Kaiser Grace Loupee VVinifred Merritt Louise Millhuilf Ruth Minar Minnie Ninke Gertrude Otto Donna Rankin FRESHMEN LeAnna Gang Genevieve Gerald Blanche Gilhams Dorothy Henshaw Dorothy Hobson VVinifred johnson Muriel Lindsey Lucy Merson Helen Monningh Marjorie Morse Charline Ransom Nlargaret Rhoads 68 Alma Smith Margaret Vande Bunt Lillian VVeller Catherine VVells Alice Starkweather Gertrude Tousey Marjorie Volkers Hildegarde VVatson X 69 A XS it X L .I Nw Qt Y X .mem , ers, .Micke Seiya E' K ,aa RX X N I , Excess 't as X' 0 NN ,NQI ev' Dix N, 3 f S5 ,IZ N ,Q X. wwe Nt c NN X X f ,. 1, sw Q X N. ALPHA SIGMA DELTA First Semester RUTH SCOTT ..... IXIIARY LINDENTHAL HELEN LOTZ ...... HELEN CIOING .... FRIEDA HINRICHS.. ADRIENNE CHENEY SLE Com' ....... RUTH ADAMS . .. CLARA IVAID. . . Hazel Barclay Beatrice Brown Adrienne Cheney Sue Cory lliargaret Fleming Ruth Adams Gertrude Adriance Doris Bourns Pauline Byrd Beatrice Cheney Virginia Dickenson lllaude Blackman Flossie C1'ook Leona Culver Catherine Ehrmann Founded 1920 . , OFFICERS ...... President . .. . . . . IyIL't7-Pf6Xillt'I1f . . . . Corresjwomlizzg Secretary . .Recorzlilzg Sev1'r1'111'y. . . . . . . 7II'F0Sll7'l'I' . . . . . . .lflouxr Trensllrfv. . . .Sub. Umm' Trf'1zsurm'. .....Cl1f1jvI11i11 ...... . . Uslzrrx . Second Semester . . .FIAZEL BARCLAY .. . . . . .RIARION lV.IOAG CATHERINE EHRMANN . . . . . . .RUTH XVILBUR . . ALICE GORDON SUE CORY . . LILLIAN ANDERSON . . . . . lIIAL'DE BLACKNIAN .S Q . . DoRoTIIY JOHNSON . .M.fxRGARET PALMER SO RO RE IN FAC U LTATE lXIiss Dunsmore SORORES IN COLLEGIO SENIORS Vera Hill Antoinette Hutchinson J U N IDR S Grace Jackson lllary Lindenthal Rlarion llloag SOPHOMORES Ethel Dunham Helena Gilding Helen Going Alice Gordon Pearl Harris Frieda Hinrichs FRESHMEN Neva Hirleman Geraldine Jencks Dorothy johnson Beryl lXIcLellen Evelyn lliloulthrop 70 NS: .tt wi, U Ruth Scott Ellen Snedecor Frances Sikkenga Irene Yerkes Helen Lotz Lulu lXIaynard Lulu Illathews Clara VVaid Ruth VVilbnr Lillian Anderson lXIartha llurphy lXIargaret Palmer Lucille Richard II'ene Shapiro 71 Tfzvre are srlzoofs on e1'ery l'l'0.YXl'01ll1,, Coffrgm' are fzvre mm' ifzerv. E-1'r1'y1c'f1w'v arf ffffllld l1lIlHIllI',' E'Z'L'l X' lmnzlvl fvmzxfs fix xlznrr. Hu! !lU1E'l T'L'l' far I 1c'1111n'f'r QUvl11'1'1'c,v onfy izlrrz fo gofff. Smufz 11'-2'er1fy no Jfmfi Jfzzier Rl'-zvfffrzgf Kfzzoo of old. Orfnzgu mm' Bfrzvk in ffm .vf111do1v.v, Ormzgv una' BHITIQ ni ffm f1'zm'11,' Ivfvforzv Qu' slzoul for ilu' -wzzzqzzzfvlzufz' lgt lIfUlI 'LUKVH U-wr ffgfzf 011. fjfllllfjt' arm' Blm-lc nw' .vjmr 115, BU Quflfz Ili aff Ilzrougflz ffltf yvzzzxv lfuifzer of men in fha Hlflkfllfji Kazan, !Ic'l'c',5 fo you ivfffz our flu' s Tom Coma. 4. OFFICERS Prfsidfnz' .... . KAPPA PI Founded 1906 JW C-. FALL TERM VVaneta Acker I'ife-President ............. Helen Murray Rrfordizzg Secretary .... . . . . Dorothy Snow Correspofzdizzg Sfcrrfary .... Virginia Earl Trmsurfr ...... Home Trmsurar Usfm' ..... Usfzvr .. , Cfzaplain .. VVaneta Acker Muriel Britton Mildred Bassett Anita Byers Edna Biss Helen Chapman Virginia Earl Shirley Payne Dorothy Aldrich Grace Beebe Dorothea Bowman Ruth Chatterton Ruth Chart Carira Clark . ...Dorothy Yaple . . . .Anita Byers Katheryn Teale . . ...Luce Schmidt Shirley Payne VVINTER TERM Mable Pinel Anne VVheat Charlotte Liberty Lois Howard Evelyn Pinel Mable Miller Dorothea Bowman Eloise Rickman Virginia Earl SORORE IN FACLILTATE Miss TANIS SORORES IN 'COLLEGIO SENIORS Lois Howard Charlotte Liberty Eleanor McQuigg Mabel Pinel Mildred Smith Thelma Shinville JUNIORS VVilma Dunwell Marguerite Hall Mable Miller Q Helen Murray Elizabeth Nicholson Cecile Pratt Margaret Vililliamson SOPHOMORES Evelyn Pinel Elinor Snow Dorothy Snow Katheryn Teale FRESHMEN Gladys Cole Ruth Driver Frances Hill Ruby Herbert Grace Hutchins Alice Mathers Frances Nicholson Dorothy Nummerdor Nlarion Olmsted Emily Parks Frances Peatling Gwendolyn Perkins 72 X SPRING TERM Eleanor McQuigg Mable Miller Dorothy Scott Ruth VVater0us Helen Chapman Cecile Pratt LaVange Pearson Ruth Chart Louise Stein Louise Stein VVilma Vandervelde Luce Schmidt Dorothy C. Scott Ruth VVaterous Anne VVheat Dorothy Yaple Hazel Lill La Vange Pearson Esther Pratt Eloise Rickman Jeanetta Sagers Charlotte Yaple 73 , .. as , W. , ,- , 5 . SAWNXIN, Alix W Rim A -' XSS' N3 ' 5 N .. FXBXQV. bmi-N.wuA. 'S X X 'T' N N- ski! w 'Ws U as R RR , X R .N A , ., , . .. -1 L. ' ' 2: 3 ' G Z1 in ,..: , K 1 Nt? .M 4, , M Xi S L? M X . R I S V , M vm Yi, 'SY -S - I N 4 xx 8 X s 3? .S R I. ., M 1. ,.,, . . ...W ...fx ww ls ,ix Q 1 at . A. A L W R N. may , RQ: Ss . K A A. RWM' gs JENYQQR NOR . - X-W: mi. E , A- Wok- N ,, sc on 4 . S X 8 X A NE f' .. ' mms-,re X :. ., . , M.. .. . . , . .K A 'NN Y- MN XX Y' N. W N- N ' fkmvx-rixbi-NAYCKND' RAT 'K WAN .XRQAKANX.-lQYxLHkwQ.lKIxwfWll'NNN5SNiN ,si vw Q 3?-T? gf J , as z SIGMA RHO SIGMA Founded 1851 .Egg xg' , R-f 3,5 an Es OFFICERS First Semester Second Semester HAROLD BLAINE. . , .... President . . . . . . . . .HAROLD ALLEN fi ROYAL DRESSEL .. ..... Vice-President .... . . . ., .... TVIULFORD SHAW' ' S3 KENNETH DEAN. . . .... Recording Serretary .... ..... R OGER THOMPSON S HOWARD HOWLETT. . . . .Corresponding Secretary. . . .... EARL CARTWRIGHT ROLLIN DAVIS . .. ...... Treasurer ....... . . KENNETH SAUSAMAN RAYMOND FORD. . . .............. Clmplain . ................. LESLIE DOWD gg fs: X A hx ERATRES IN FAC ULTATE xi. sy Dr. Ernest A. Balch Dr. Ernest B. Harper FRATRES IN COLLEGIO S E N IO R S Harold Allen Rollin Davis Kenneth Dean Harold Blaine Leslie Dowd Kenneth Sausarnan Dexter Brigham Royal Dressel Philip Vercoe Thomas Cobb Rock Fleming JUNIORS VVilliam Denison Fred Des Autels Ernest Casler Ben Goldman Burr Hathaway Lawrence Hollander lVIarcus lWundwiler Wells Thoms Roger Thompson ,X xg NS? R? RSA R 'R Raymond Ford John Hosler Dee Tourtelotte SOPHOMORES Nlilburn Anderson Howard Howlett lWulford Shaw Earl Cartwright Harold Jacobs Gould Fox Donald Doubleday Kenneth Olmsted VVilliam Scott Theodore Fandrich Paul Rickman Erwin Hinga Edwin Gemrich John Rynne Herbert Brouwer if lx- tk' Burr Sherwood QQSQTSQRQ FRESHMEN Ivan Dennis Lawrence Armstrong Robert Hulett Robert Calvin Alfred Amundsen Duane Sayles if R Donald Drapper Sydney Beam Everett Hessmer Oscar Winne john Shakespeare Harold Gratton Andrew Bolenbaugh Juan Espendez Robert Howlett VVillet Osborne Eldred lVIoag James lVIcLaughlin .xx ,X ,- A44 aw. , . . .N .. . . , Q I . -CIN .X so ' Sw ,,i: I' I I-ns ww X E iw-NX ,N , ..r.f5Ss1smR, N1 ,AM WRX N GY QRRWWSSRX ,RSQWSXKQNNNSR ,xwxlxsigg xx X - I X X' -N -A . wi W N ' 'X S+- N- .. M l ' . I . M N gt Y , 'X X SY 5: 3 R M tl , -'-' w 5. Sgr 3- MQ 9 A M - . I , A - wr. West R r. ww. A N : A N N x ,aa 5 X R? ,x S . A S 3 Ass Ns p A is KR . QS. J X 75 CENTURY FORUM Founded l9O0 'SSE' '1 . OFFICERS First Semester Second Semester ARDELL JACOBS .... . . . President .... .... A RDELL JACOBS ROBERT LUDXVIG .... .... I 'iff-Prvsiflfnt .... ..... G EORGE CLARK ATAYNARD SPROUL .,.. .... R erm-flirzg Secretary .... .... IX IAYNARD SPROUL PT.-XRRY HINKLEX' . . . .... Cm-responding Sen-ffm-y. . . .... lj.-XRXYIN TYTERKLEY GEORGE CLARK ....... ..... T feature: ....... .... I QENNETH CRAWFORD TQENNETH CRAWEORD. . . ..... Chaplain . . , . . . RoscoE FORTNER GERH.-XRD H.-XRSCH ........... SF7'yF!lI1f-HI'-1J7'lIlS ,....... ...GERH.ARD PT.-XRSCH FRATRES IN FACTOTIJTTATE Dr. Thompson Prof. VValton FRATRES IN COLLEGIO SENIORS Ardell Jacobs Gerald Rigterink JUNIQRS Harold Voorhees Thomas lfldred Roscoe Fortner Robert Black Edward Buys George Clark Kenneth Crawfor Harry Hodges Harry Hinkley Jack Curtis Lewis Dipple Fred Kraushaar Fred Lacrone Theodore llleeker Stewart Newland d XVilfred Clapp Leonard lXIcCarthy Kenneth Osborn SOPHOMORES Darwin lllerkley Robert Ludwig Raymond lllorris Peter Norg Clayton Osborne llflarion Stone lllaynard Sproul FRESHMEN Allison Skeen Arthur Starkweather Clifford Starkweather Ralph Starkweather Howard VVhitney Albert Hartleb 76 t A- , .wx- M QR A R. As f 1 Irving Colef Harold VVise Reimers Peters VVard Strome Harry Voorhees Hubert Van Peenan Gerhard Harsch George Skellinger Guy Perry Earl Boodt James Pomeroy John Seary Donald Helkie X ff,- II X x PHILOLEXIAN LYCEUM First Semester NVILLIS DUNBAR. .. HAROLD BEADLE. . . ERNEST KLINE .... LEROY STINEBOWER . . . KENNETH COMPTON CLARENCE RAMSDELL. . . Harold Brown Vern Bunnell Harold Beadle Freeman Brown Carleton Doyle VV'endell Herron Nicholas Bock Loren Burch Lloyd Coates Kenneth Compton Ernest Kline Charles Collins Clair Foringer Ronald Garrett Kenny Jenks ,.- Founded 18 JJ I 3 OFFICERS .. . President . .. . . . lift?-IJl'FSidEIZ1' . . . . Serrefary . . . Second Semester HAROLD BEADLE VERN BUNNELL WILLIS DUNBAR .. Treasurer .. HAROLD NIILLER . . . . . Chaplain . . . . .ROBERT PFEII. . . .SFI'gt'Z!lIZf-llf-fI7'1I7.,9. . . .... RONALD GARRETT FRATRES IN COLLEGIO SENIORS VVillis Dunbar Clarence Ramsdell JUNIORS Leonard Lang Orson Peterson Robert Pfeil Carl Ninke SOPHOMORES Yvilliam Lehew John lNIacDonnell lllelvin lllartin Harold Rliller Gilbert Otto FRESHNIEN Philip Katzman Edgar Lundy Howard llloulthrop George Pardee Thomas Seller James Stanley Robert Stein Donald Seward Fred Robinson Robert Sodergren Leroy Stinebower Hiroshi Sueyoshi Edward Pope Franklin Robinson Eldred Townsend Albert Van't Roer 78 X R X X . X , .. X 4 RN . RR N ' Hx --N. R ,X we ,REQ bww W .- N 79 xx xx Q . SN R X X X. x. 1XwXw XMXX S NNN N xx X iw NX? N h X xwww www Aw N Q , F xx X . swf, x gk 5ww uw A WY, Q-wx www M wk I AWMQ ,C ,-55 sw-bwx Nwfymig S A WXW- -gfgw X 'XWQQS NX ms' XX xx QN NN ,X xxx x x0 :XM NXXXXXNXXXNNM QXXX :TAX 3 ,G,,X.X5XXXXXXXXXXXYXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXX XX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX X XXXXXXX X XXXXXX X XX X XXX XX XM-be . XX 'gggxmy Y, W X mg -X2 Xg .. ' ,X X .- ' X- XNXX K O QSFQXXXXXQW .-w'2iXXXXX:erf - .mmm TX T .. 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XV . is .f X X X x X X X ,. , x i X X X v Set m ,XXX X X:XXX ,X X ' -Evans :XA X5 XX X ks .X Xb 1 .Y X S iw Ki xv . MXN Rx fx NXXX.-NSI iw Q X- R X .N X-, XX M N X A rx 1 GZ Ally SW .X N X Q ,ix X -X Xy- STUDENT VOLUNTEER The Evangelization of the VVorld in this Generation has been the watchword that has kept the purpose of the Student Volunteer Band Firm, and a realization of the needs of the world before them. The Student Volunteers are a college group composed of faculty and students who have declared it their purpose to become foreign missionaries, if God permit. The Student Volunteer work was here begun in 1885, about a year after the National Student Volunteer lllovement was organized. Since that time the local band has done much to keep up the religious life of the college and promote interest in missionary work. Beside the weekly devotional meetings two vesper services have been held this year. Two conventions-one at Indianapolis and one at Hillsdale-have been the means of bringing new enthusiasm and a wider vision of service to Old Kazoo. CSLADYS TQILLAAI . FRED DES AUTELS ELLEN SNEDECOR EUGENIA DUNsAroaE . . . Dorothy Allen Julia Barber Helen Chapman Fred Des Autels X K OFFICERS MEMBERSHIP Eugenia Dunsmore Velva Green Dorothy Hobson VVinifred Johnson Gladys Killam S4- 5 x wwwsew ss xx x ,tix sv ss . . ,..... Presidmzz' . . . . . . . . . . .IViCt'-P7'PSiliFlZf . . .Sev1'c't1z1'y and TI'6'HSllI'f7I' . . .correspozzdizzg Sf'rrf1'f1ry Aileen Radlcey Ellen Snedecor XVells Thorns Ruth Vercoe N X .sy ,ees K xg in ' X it XX 'Jr ,N at ,Qs .,. gs N tw ss Y r .Q rsgsgw Q, tt, s sy.. -. N -ty. -Efxfi .J .. ,g , Q,,,, Q Y. S was f is X sc ci - . Na it X Friday Noon Luncheon Club In order to meet the need of a religious organization for the men of the college, a dozen students gathered together in the Spring of 1922, in the college kitchen, and discussed religious matters. That was the first luncheon of the new organization. That small group, led by Tom Vroeg and Fred Van Zandt, stuck together the re- mainder of the year, and with co-operation as their keynote, laid the foundation of the present Friday Noon Luncheon Club. Bradford lllorse carried on the work the following year, and the attendance grew so rapidly that the luncheons could no longer be held in the kitchen and so were moved into the larger adjoining room. The weekly luncheons have continued with like success throughout the past year, and although the attendance fell off a bit toward the end of the year, the average attend- ance was about forty. The programs which followed the meals were of varying nature. Sometimes a prominent outside speaker was obtained, while at other times discussions on college and religious problems took up the time. Sometimes faculty members attended these discussions, and the exchange of ideas between students and faculty which resulted, proved beneficial. As a grand wind-up of the year, late in the Spring, the luncheoneers invited the members of the Y. YV. C. A. to a joint luncheon to discuss the religious program for next year. Fall Term Spring Term RAYMOND FORD. . . . . .LUllfllt'0lZ Chnirllzmz. . . ..... ERNEST KLINE VVELLS THOAIS ...... . . .Program Clzairnzafz. . . . . .FRED DES iLXL'TELS KENNETH CoMPToN. . . . . . Treasurer ...... ..... P ETER NORG S5 ' Q - . ,Wm ,Q . r rs t ' ' .se e ' . .I x Q, f rf st V.. X Y. W. C. A. This organization belongs to the College branch of the larger unit that encircles the world in its power and influence. The local group is linked up to the National W organization by the undergraduate representative. X l VVeekly meetings are held throughout the year which aim to be social, inspira- X tional, and instructive. These meetings are under the leadership of students, faculty X members or visiting speakers. The oustanding social events during the year are the annual Hare and Hounds party for new girls held directly after school opens, the Senior Girls' breakfast in the Spring, and the Gingling College banquet held in honor of the Sister College in China. livery girl is welcome to the fellowship of the Y. YV. C. A. Xi A lN'llQlNlBERSHIP Q Ruth Adams Dorothy Hobson lllarjorie lVIo1'se Hazel Allabach Antoinette Hutchinson Helen lllyers Lillian Anderson Grace Jackson Gertrude Otto N Vada Bennett Dorothy Johnson lkflargaret Palmer Edna Biss VVinifred johnson Aileen Radkey .-G hlaude Blackman Adelaide Kaiser Caroline Ransom Doris Bourns Gladys Iiillam Charline Ransom Lucille Bullock hiargaret Kurtz Donna Rankin X Helen Chapman Pauline Kurtz Lucille Richard e Bernice Cook Charlotte Liberty Jeanette Sagers Flossie Crook Hazel Lill Dorothy hi. Scott A X Ruth Cross lliary Lindenthal Thelma Shinville Virginia Dickenson Beryl lXfIcLellan Alma Smith Dorothea Dowd Dorothy llfladden Alice Starkweather X Helen Folsom Gertrude llarshall lllargaret VandeBunt Velva Green Lula lllathews lllarjorie Volkers X W LeAnna Gang Lulu lllaynard Clara VVaid Pearl Harris YVinifred llferritt Hildegarde Vfatson Ruby Herbert Lucy lllerson Lillian NVeller Neva Hirleman Ruth llinar Catherine X-Vells 86 A X si ilzqig HELEN CHAPMAN . CIIARI OTTE LIBERTY CATHERINE XVELLS Hb'LEN GOING .... AILEEN RADKEY . . LELL' RIT-XYN,-XRD .. IIIARGARET KL'RTz RIARY LINDENTH,-xx, PAULINE KURTZ .... IUOROTHY SCOTT .... 'THELBIA SHINVILLE CELADYS IXIILLAM . . . . . IVIARJORIE XIOLKERS RUTH RIINAR .... A AY? THE CABINET OFFICERS . . . . . . . .Pl'f7.ViIlf Ilf . . . .IYil'lI'Pl'f'8'idf'llf W ..................b0z'1'UI1lry ...................ywl'L'IlA'llI'6I' U111lf'1'g1'11dzzf1z'c 1'e'jv1'f'sf'1ztnti'U6 . . . . .Co1'1'c'.vjv02zz1i11g Ser2'6ffz7'y ........,.............Pl'05lI'UllI COMMITTEE CI-IAIRMEN S7 .......... ...Uvorld Fvffozcslzip ..........,.60t'ltll . . .Sofizzl Scrwife .. . . .Pzlbfivify .......R0O11! . . . .Cozzfermzce ......I1Iz1sic KAZOO IN THE FRONT RANKS AT LAKE GENEVA CONVENTIONS Kalamazoo College has been brought into closer contact with the rest of the collegiate world this year by sending its representatives to a record number of inter- collegiate conferences. Early in the Summer of last year VVells Thoms represented Kazoo at the Student Y. IXI. C. A. Conference at Lake Geneva, VV'is., which was at- tended by almost three thousand students of the llliddle VVest states. During Christ- mas vacation four representatives, Alma Smith, Harold Beadle, Harold Allen, and Raymond Ford, were sent to the Quadrenial Student Volunteer Convention at Indi- anapolis, which was attended by over six thousand representatives from practically every institution of higher learning in the country. Upon their return they gave a report on this great convention before the student body. Harold Blaine was sent by the Drama Club as their representative to the National Theta Alpha Phi Convention at Cincinnati. Kalamazoo was again fully represented at the Biennial Pi Kappa Delta Convention at Peoria by a team of four men-Kenneth Sausaman, Vern Bunnell, James Stanley, debators, and Harold Beadle, college orator. The State Student Volunteer Convention, held at Hillsdale this year, was also well attended by Kala- mazoo College students. KALAMAZOO'S DELEGATES AT INDIANAPOLIS B8 ,w,a....NNY? M ax NMi:,,,wM Q9 gxwssts-..t. N..t.s.t...WaMwMmmwww-..Mw-...Wawmmsmwm-gatttmwgawk g N :X we - R- is N -sy .ara 0 5 3 +.,,.t.,,.. N K, ys wx w , www . s-Q ss W-N t , . x,,,+ ss..,sw.s , x,.M...a.,.... X ... . I vi w e 'S R t XT X ww tv is 11x X It e .. N. -. - ' Spf -its '?2X'NNlX,.-'+'f-Kwi- s ' A fe W-.el x gr 5. Q W' bmw GN ' ' wwswv:M..wsw.v,ss sw-ss----e--aavmwx ----M.memsxsrrrsmarwmwzrrrzmzzzzzzzzz.114,.,:'Xz::::x:::::::::NW' N .s M Q J ..:fs.gm S3 .3-:Q ass. . W. . at Q Q5 X Q -Q , '-5 Q05 Mi? ' .5 c x x N7 N A CORNER OF THE RADIO ROOM , RADIO CLUB . Q 3 , Re-organized in the late Fall of 1923, for the purpose of promoting an interest in radio telegraphy and radio broadcasting, the Kalamazoo College Radio Club elected its officers for the schoool year 1923-2-l: 'R FRANCIS CARTLAND . . . . ..... President , THOMAS SELLER ...... . .Vice-President Y 'A DONiixLD B. DOUBLEDAY .. ...... Secretary KX RUSSELL LYON ......... ................... A sst Sefretary fl' PROF. LEONARD ASHBY .................... Clmizwzmz of Operating Conznzittff 'A XVorlc was immediately started in the broadcasting studio and new parts and Q ,452 It apparatus were ordered. The construction of the sending outfit was completed during 5 the Christmas holidays and station XVOAP transmitted its first program of the year 'NB . . - . . A l X at the beginning ot the second semester. On each Tuesday evening thereafter, the . station broadcast from 7:00 until 8:30 on a wave length ot 283 meters. Other pro- lg grams have been broadcast at irregular intervals. ff Professor Ashby, the operator, did the announcing, and the programs were ar- . ranged and managed by lX'Ir. Paul Staake. Varied instrumental and vocal numbers and a few speeches made up most of the programs broadcast from this station. Reports indicate that the programs were very successful for many communications 'S were received from local and outside listeners inn. An enlargement of the station s for next year has been promised. X M 155 N X X N ss ,N W . my Q A-9-'r-KMA M an-X x 1-.AMX C . Q . X . M 1. mix? X X , YR. .G -S , ,V W .xwg I A, . X. . . ,Ku 'Al V K x Hs. .-Nm-.-Wu,.:X . ,N ws. , - I' is Q. i 9 W Qwmw se -qv-.A R N - .3 . X my W W N. x x '- os' s :::m.s:'g1z: nrrmmbksmwiamww lm xl N X , X asf .jX N xv x Q .A y 9... 5 S i so R E. jf 4 gs.: .ss 5 lr 5 2 S X -M x lf. N 'I -H i 2 , x,.x 5 fi as gl., gf A eggs 5 . X CHEMISTRY CLUB gill X y .g T . V Lxkx OFFICERS REGINALD IQENNEDY . .............. .... P resident FRANCIS Cxkrmxo . . . .......... lvi4'6,-PI'F5il1Fl1f PAULINE KURTZ. . . . . .Sveretfzry and Treasurer L- LESLIE DOWD . . .. ,Pubfivify illfzmzger Q l x X 1 BIEBIBERSHIIJ fy Eff.. My X 5 julia Barber YVillian1 Denison Burr Hathaway Leonard Lang swf -My ws ' ...E Harold Brown Leslie Dowd Reginald Kennedy Carlffinke iii, N 3 Vern Bunnell Harold Emerson Gladys liillaln Gerald Rigterinlc Sill! X - Francis Cartland James Fullerton 9 Rlargaret Kurtz Luce Schmidt f Helen Chapman Pauline Kurtz Dee Tourtellotte N . X HONORARY X Prof. L. F. Smith Dr. L. R. Thompson X i? 90 Q Ms ' 'fx ...W X W-X. .SW A N M X X h, ...,. . X X V5
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