Kenyon College - Reveille Yearbook (Gambier, OH) - Class of 1907 Page 1 of 232
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r THE REVEILLE THE YEAR BOOK OF KENYON COLLEGE. WHEREIN IS GLEANED FACT AND FICTION OF INTEREST TO A KEN- YON WORLD L — PUBLISHED BY THE JUNIOR CLASS M VCCCCVIII THERE IS A THRILL There is a thrill of spirit which love imparts; When turn our thoughts to Kenyon s glory, Both old and young With single tongue Unite to sing our Alma Mater s story: Then let our song ascend in unison ! Our loyal hearts avow no other; It unifies. It never dies. The love ol Kenyon, our mother. Thy beauty strikes a chord of harmony And bends us to a high endeavor; Thy glorious name— Thy spotless fame— We ll cherish in our hearts forever: Then let our song ascend in unison! Our loyal hearts avow no other; It unifies. It never dies. The love of Kenyon, our mother. BOARD OF EDITO R S E d i t or -i n-C h i e f Louis Phelps L Hommedieu Associate Editors Raymond Du Bois Cahall Ralph Clewell Sykes Charles Lewis Wuebker ArtEditor Kenneth Frederic Luthy Business Manager Henry Greer Beam Assistant Manager George Elliott Clarke R E F A C E KNOW of no one thing more certainly characteristic of Kenyon’s progress, than her “Reveille . Let him who would doubt this statement compare the publica- tions got out by the Class of 1874 to the books put out by late classes. What a contrast is the page sheet to the beautifully bound vol- umes of today! But the earlier issues were complete; Kenyon s activities had not reached the wide scope that they now assume and two pages were wholly sufficient to chronicle the year’s events. Today two hundred odd pages are required to set forth the organizations and their activi- ties for one year. Holding ever before us this index of progress, we have bent our efforts toward publishing a hook that would keep apace with changed conditions; and the task has tried us sorely at times. To review the contents of this volume, were not only unnecessary, but even presumptuous. But it is in the province of the Editors to set forth the principles that have guided them in their labors. At the first meeting of the Board, some one was heard to use the word “mellow ’ —a word which has clung tenaciously in the mind of the editors. Could we hut in some small degree make the book reflect the mellowness of Kenyon and her sacred traditions, our purpose were achieved. The creamed tinted-paper and the parchment cover we hoped might go far toward secur- ing this effect. We have been at pains to see that nothing striking or gaudy entered within the covers of the 1908 Reveille.” How far our efforts have been successful the reader may shortly determine. C| Each year the term “representative is applied to the Reveille”—for us to omit the claim is to overlook an op- portunity. Truly this is a representative hook; not the Edi- tor alone, but the whole Board, have contributed; not the whole Board alone, but the whole college has been instru- mental in compiling the book. Not the least pleasing fea- ture of the Reveille” we believe to be the art work. We were especially fortunate in being able to have this done in college; Mr. Hann, by reason of his talent and hard work, will be largely responsible for whatever approval the book may meet with. Kenyon faced a hard year. Not only bravely, but also successfully has she coped with conditions anything but fa- vorable. In her darkest hour, the sons of Old Kenyon have rallied magnificently to her side; from the depths of misfortune and distress, has she risen truer, stronger and nobler than before. The completion of Old Kenyon and the re-opening of Harcourt next fall, argue strongly for an uninterrupted march of progress. Surely we are fortunate to be old sons of thine.” fl'We quit this task with genuine regret; many and discour- aging have been the obstacles that have beset our pathway, but now that all is done we are permeated by a feeling akin to remorse; we are at once sorry that the work has not been done better and that it is all done so soon. Many, many, are the stones that could be thrown, and many, many are the people that could throw them, yet an unlimited confidence, born of hope and trust, tells us that criticisms will be kindly. P e «en TABLE OF CONTENTS Page College Calendar 15 T rustees 16-17 Alumni Associations 18-19-20 The Chimes 21 Faculty . 23-26 Bexley Hall 27 Senior Oracle . 29-31 Seniors 32-36 Senior Class Song 37 Former Members 38 Junior Judgments 40-41 1908 Class Song 42 Juniors 43-46 Former Members . 47 A Sophomore Fantasy 49-51 Sophomores 52-54 Former Members 55 Heredity 58-59 Freshman Annual 61-62 Freshmen 63-65 Class Song Fraternities 66 Delta Kappa Epsilon 73-74 Alpha Delta Phi 77-78 Psi Upsilon 81-82 Beta Theta Pi 85-86 Delta Tau Delta 89-90 Phi Beta Kappa 91-92 Zeta Alpha 93 Fraternity Conventions College Organizations . 94 Athletics page eleven . 98-118 n Foot Ball Base Ball Basket Ball Track Track Meets Tennis Kenyon Records Wearers of the K Literary The Reveille The Collegian Philomathesian Nu Pi Kappa Dramatics Puff and Powder Club 1907 Dramatic Club 1908 Dramatic Club K. 0. K. M. Musical Glee Club Mandolin Club Concerts College Choir Vocal Quartet College Orchestra Miscellaneous Executive Committee Kenyon Assembly Chess Club Canoe Club Class Banquets Junior Prom 78th Commencement Senior Play Senior Reception College Preachers Bedell Lectures 99-102 103-106 107-110 111-113 114 116 117 118 121 123 124-126 127-128 133 134 136 139 143 144 145 146 147 149 151 152 153 154 155-159 161 162-165 165-167 168 169 170 pafc twelve LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Page Frontispiece .... 2 William Andrew Leonard . . .6 Faculty .... 22 Senior Class . . . . .28 Junior Class .... 39 Sophomore Class . . . .48 Frank Hadley Burdick ... 56 Freshman Class . . . .58 Gates ..... 96 Athletic Cut . . . . .97 Foot Ball Team .... 101 Base Ball Team . . • 104 Basket Ball Team . . . 108 Track Team . . . .112 Hanna Hall . . . • H5 Literary Cut . . • .119 Reveille Board .... 120 Collegian Board .... 122 Rosse Hall .... 129 Puff and Powder Club .... 132 Glee Cluh . • • 142 Orchestra ..... 148 Executive Committee . • • 150 Junior Prom .... 100 Ascension Hall .... 175 p fe thirteen 5 COLLEGE CALENDAR 1906—1907 First Semester September 18, Tuesday. College opens with Evening Prayer at 5 p. m. October 2, Tuesday . Bexley Hall opens with Evening Prayer November 1, Thursday . All Saints’ Day, Founders Day November 29, Thursday .... Thanksgiving Day December 18, Tuesday .... College closes 1907 Second Semester February 14, Wednesday . . . Second Semester opens March 27, Wednesday . . College closes lor Easter recess Ap ril 4, Thursday . College opens with Morning Prayer at 7:45 May 9, Thursday ..... Ascension Day June 23. Sunday .... Baccalaureate Sunday June 24, Monday Annual meeting of the Board ol Trustees 2:30 p. m. June 26, Wednesday . Seventy-ninth Annual Commencement pa e fifteen BOARD OF TRUSTEES The Rt. Rev. Wm. A. Leonard, D. D. Bishop of Ohio President for the year Ex-Officio The Rt. Rev. Boyd Vincent, D. D. Bishop of Southern Ohio The Rev. William Foster Peirce, A. M., L. H. D. President of Kenyon College Elected for Life Under Constitution, Article IX The Rt. Rev. Cortlandt Whitehead, D. D. Bishop of Pittsburg The Rt. Rev. John Hazen White, D. D. Bishop of Michigan City The Rt. Rev. Lewis W. Burton, D. D. Bishop of Lexington 1 he Rt. Rev. George W. Petcrhin, D. D. Bishop of West Virginia The Rt. Rev. Theodore N. Morrison, D. D. Bishop of Iowa The Rt. Rev. Joseph M. Francis, D. D. Bishop of Indianapolis The Rt. Rev. Charles P. Anderson, D. D. Bishop of Chicago The Rt. Rev. William L. Gravatt, D. D. Bishop-Coadjutor of West Virginia The Rt. Rev. Charles D. Williams, D. D. Bishop of Michigan page tixlrrn Elected by the Board of Trustees, under Article IV Term expire The Honorable Albert Douglas, Cbillicothe . . 1907 Mr. Samuel Matber, Cleveland . . 1909 1 he Rev. Cleveland K. Benedict, Glendale . , 1911 Mr. Desault B. Kirk. Mount Vernon . . 1911 The Rev. Wilson R. Stearly, Cleveland . . 1915 ’’The Hon. Harlan Cleveland, Glendale . . 1915 Elected by Convention of tbe Dioceses of Ohio and South- ern Ohio, under Article V Tbe Rev. Abner L. Frazer, Youngstown . . 1907 Dr. Nathaniel P. Dandridgc, Cincinnati . . . 1907 Tbe Rev. John Hewitt, Columbus . . . 1908 Tbe Hon. Ulysses L. Marvin, Akron . . 1908 Tbe Rev. R. L. Harris. Cincinnati . . . 1909 Mr. David Z. Norton, Cleveland . . . 1909 Elected by tbe Board of Trustees, under Article VII Col. John J. McCook, New York City . . 1911 Mr. William G. Matber, Cleveland . . 1911 Elected by tbe Alumni, Under Article VIII Tbe Rev. William Thompson, Pittsburg . . 1907 Mr. James H. Dempsey, Cleveland . . . 1907 Tbe Hon. Talfourd P. Linn, Columbus . . 1908 Dr. Francis W. Blake, Columbus . . . 1908 Tbe Rt. Rev. David H. Greer, D. D., New York . 1909 Mr. Charles R. Ganter, New York . . . 1909 Elected by Conventions of other Dioceses, under Article IX Diocese of Lexington Judge A. D. Cole . . . Maysville, Ky. Diocese of West Virginia Mr. Joseph D. Dubois . . . Wheeling, W. Va. Diocese of Pittsburg Tbe Rev. William E. Rambo . . Brownsville, Pa. Diocese of Indianapolis Mr. Henry W. Buttolpb . . . Indianapolis, Ind. Diocese of Chicago Tbe Rev. George B. Pratt . . Chicago, III. Deceased Alumni Associations The General Association President Grove D. Curti . 80 . 120 Liberty St., New York. N. Y. Vice-Presidents The Rt. Rev. John H. White. 72 . . Michigan City. Ind. William P. Elliott. 70 ... Chicago. 111. James Kilbourne Jones, 58 . . Columbus, Ohio Secretary Carl R. Ganter. '99 . 49 Wall St.. New York. N. Y. Treasurer The Very Rev. H. W. Jones, D. D., Bexley. 70 . Gamhier Necrologist Francis W. Blake. M. D., 80 . . Columbus. Ohio Executive Committee The President The First Vice-President The Secretary The Second Vice-President The Treasurer The Associations of Northern Ohio President William M. Raynolds, 73 . . . Cleveland Vice-Presidents Alonzo M. Snyder. 85 ... Cleveland The Rt. Rev. Chas. D. Williams, 80 . . Detroit. Mich. Secretary and Treasurer Raymond T. Sawyer, '00 . 54 Streator Ave.. Cleveland Historian Frank H. Ginn. '90 ... Cleveland page eighteen Executive Committee James H. Dempsey, 82 The Rev. Charles C. Buhh, '99 Ernest S. Cook, 82 The Hon. James Lawrence, 71 Charles A. Ricks, 91 The Association of Central Ohio President Willis M. Townsend, 79 Columbus Secretary and Treasurer Francis W. Blake, M. D., 80 187 E. State St., Columbus The Association of Cincinnati and Vicinity President Newbold L. Pierson, 80 . . . Cincinnati Vice-Presidents Andrew L. Herlinger, 83 .... Cincinnati Henry Stanberry, M. D., 96 . . Cincinnati Secretary and Treasurer Philemon B. Stanberry, Jr., 98 ... 1510 First National Bank Building, Cincinnati Recording Secretary L. A. Sanford, 95 ... Cincinnati Executive Committee Dr. N. P. Dandndge, 66 Edwin J. Franks, 81 Florien Giauque, 68 Clay V. Sanford, 94 Dr. Rufus Southworth, 00 The Association in the East President Col. John J. McCook. 66 Grove D. Curtis, 80 William W. Heame, 83 John Brooks Leavitt, 68 Vice-Presidents New York New York Philadelphia New York Secretary and Treasurer Carl R. Ganter, '99 .49 Wall St.. New York City page nineteen Executive Committee The President Leo W. Wertheimer. '99 The Vice-Presidents Dr. Charles P. Peterman. '80 The Secretary The Association of Chicago President The Rev. George B. Pratt, 62 Vice-President Alfred H. Granger. 87 Secretary and Treasurer George F. Russell. 01. 7 Monroe St., Chicago Wm. P. Elliott. '70 Executive Committee Fred W. Harnwell, 89 Wm. N. Wyant, 03 The Association of Pittsburg John A. Harper, '60 President Pittsburg Levi H. Burnett, 96 Vice-President Pittsburg David H. Crosser. 99 Secretary and Treasurer Pittsburg page twenty THE CHIMES Through the morning hells are ringing,— Kenyon s chimes lor me are singing Carols to the blushing dawn; Time to music dances on; Youth with all its golden store Wakes at Kenyon as of yore. Wakes at Kenyon evermore. Through the noon-tide bells are sounding,— Kenyon s chimes for me are rounding All the world s discordant keys Into buoyant harmonies; Life becomes a great encore. Breathing Kenyon as of yore, Breathing Kenyon evermore. Through the evening hells are tolling,— Kenyon s chimes for me are rolling,— Out upon the great unknown. Calling whither they have flown; And their music from that shore Echoes Kenyon as of yore, Echoes Kenyon evermore. Maxwell B. Long p (r twenty-on The Rev. William Foster Peirce, B. A., M. A., L. H. D. President of Kenyon College, and Spencer and Wolfe Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy. B. A.. Amherst College, 1888. Post-Graduate Department of Cornell, 1889- 90. Instructor in Mental and Moral Philosophy, Mt. Hermon, 1890- 91. Acting Professor of Pedagogy and Psychology, Ohio Uni- versity, 1891-92. M. A., Amherst, 1892. Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy, Kenyon College. 1892—. L. H. D., Hobart, 1896. President of Kenyon College, 18w—. H h Theodore Sterling, B. A., M. A., M. D., LL. D. Professor Emeritus of Mathematics and Civil Engineering, Dean of the College. Sometime President of the Institutions. B. A.. Hobart, 1848. M. A., Hobart. M. D., Medical Department of Western Reserve University, 1851. LL. D.. Hobart. Principal of Central High School, Cleveland. 1859-67. Professor in Kenyon Col- lege, 1867. Professor in Columbus Medical College, 1873. Professor of Physics and Chemistry, Kenyon College, 1872-96. President of Kenyon College, 1891-96. Professor of Mathematics and Civil Engin- eering. Professor of Botany and Physiology. Dean of the College. 1896. Leslie Howard Ingham, B. A., M. A., Ph. D. Bowler Professor ol Physics and Chemistry. B. A.. Dartmouth. 1889. M. A.. Dartmouth. 1892. Honors cum laude in Physics. Instructor in Greek. 1891 96. Assistant in Chem- istry. 1892. Professor of Physics and Chemisfry. 185 1903. j$ ” low in Chemistry. University of Pennsylvania. 1903-04. Pn. D., Pennsylvania. 1904. t J X, $ l A Henry Titus West, B. A.. M. A. Professor of German. B. A.. Oherlin. 1891. Instructor in German. Oberlin, 1891-92. Uni- versity of Leipzig, Germany. 1892-94. Instructor in German. Oberlin. - 1894-95. M. A.. Oberlin. 1895. Assistant Professor of French and German. Kenyon College. 1895-97. Professor of Modem Languages, Kenyon College. 1897-1903. Professor of German. Kenyon College, 1903. + x Barker Newhall, B. A.. M. A., Ph. D. Professor of Greek. B. A.. Haverford College, 1887. M. A., Havcrford College, 1890. Fellow in Greek and Ph. D.. Johns Hopk ins, 1891. Student in Berlin, Munich and Athens. 1891-92. Instructor in Greek. Brown University, 1892-95. Classical Master. Monson Academy. 1896-97. Haverford Alumni Orator. 1899. Professor of Greek, Kenyon College, 1897. ■P K A The Rev. George Franklin Smythe. B. A.. M. A.. D. D. Chaplain of the College. B. A., Western Reserve. 1874. M. A.. Western Reserve. 1877. In- structor, Hudson Grammar School. 1874-75; Cleveland Academy. 1876; Cleveland Central High School. 1877-80; Greylock Institute, Williams- town. Mass., 1880-84. Ordered Deacon, 188o. Ordained Priest, 1886. In charge of Christ s Church, Oberlin, 1885-90. Rector St. Andrew's. Elyria. Ohio. 1888-90. Rector of St. Paul's. Toledo. 1890- 92. Rector of St. Paul s. Mt. Vernon, 1892-99. Instructor in Latin, Kenyon College. 1898-99. Rector of Trinity Church, Bridgewater, Mass., 1899-1900. D. D.. Kenyon. 1899. Professor of the Latin Language and Literature. Kenyon College. 1900-03. Chaplain of the College. 1902. A A P It h piff twenty-four William Peters Reeves. B. A., Ph. D. Mcllvaine Professor of the English Language and Literature. B. A.. Johns Hopkins. 1889. Ph. D.. Johns Hopkins, 1893. In- structor in Union College, 1895-97. Professor of English in the State University of Iowa. 1 98-1900. Mcllvaine Professor of the English Language and Literature. Kenyon College, 1900. d -J H A Lee Barker Walton. Ph. B.. M. A., Ph. D. Professor of Biology. Ph. B., Cornell University. 1897. M. A.. Brown University, 1900. Ph. D.. Cornell University. 1902. Post-Graduate Work, University of Bonn. Germany. 1897-99. Assistant, Brown University, 1899-1900. Assistant. American Museum of Natural History. New York. 1901-02. Goldman Smith Fellowship in Biology. Cornell University. 1902-03. Proiessor of Biology, Kenyon College. 1902. d 1 - Russell Sedgwick Devol, B. A., M. A. Professor of History. B. A.. Ohio University, 1870. M. A., Ohio University, 1873. Prolessor of Mathematics. Ohio University. 1873-83. Professor of Mathematics. Kenyon College. 1883-96. Graduate Student. Johns Hopkins. 1896-97. With Westinghouse Electric Company. 1898-1903. Professor of History. Kenyon College. 1903. M W, $ ’ A Edwin Bryant Nichols, B. A.. M. A. Mather Professor of Romance Language. B. A.. Wesleyan. 1894. M. A.. Harvard. 1901. Instructor in Mod- ern Languages. University of Maine. 1898-1901. Assistant Professor ol Romance Languages. University of Cincinnati. 1901-03. Professor of Romance Languages. Kenyon College. 1903—. A V W, A' A’t i h 4 Richard Clarke Manning, B. A.. M. A., Ph. D. Benson Memorial Professor of Latin. B. A.. Harvard. 1888. M. A.. Harvard. 1892. Student at the Uni- versities of Bonn and Leipzig, Germany. 1892-94. Ph. D.. Harvard. 1896. Tutor in Latin. Harvard College. 1896-99. Assistant Profess- or of Latin and Greek. Hobart College. 1899-1903. Professor of Latin. Kenyon College, 1903. P H h twenty-five Arthur Cleveland Hall, B. A., M. A., Ph. D. Edwin M. Stanton Professor of Economics and Sociology. B. A.. Trinity. 1888. M. A.. Trinity. 1893. Ph. D., Columbia. 1901. Fellow in Sociology, Columbia. Lecturer in Criminology, Johns Hopkins. 1894. In Publishing and Printing Business and News- paper Work in New York City and Massachusetts. Head-Worker, Orange Valley Social Settlement, N. J.. 1901-03. Instructor in Eco- nomics and Sociology, Princeton. 1903-04. Professor of Economics and Sociology, Kenyon College, 1904. A V Reginald Bryant Allen, B. Sc., M. Sc., Ph. D. B. Sc., M. Sc., Rutgers College, 1893. 1897. Ph. D., Clark University. 1905. Engineer on County Surveys in New Jersey, 1893-94. Acting Professor of Mathematics and Physics, Massac husetts Agri- cultural College, 1894-95. Head of the Department of Mathematics. Patterson, N. J. Classical and Scientific School, 1895-97. Instruc- tor and Assistant Professor of Mathematics, in charge of the Depart- ment of Engineering. Adelphi College, Brooklyn, N. Y., 1897-1901. Lecturer and Instructor in Mathematics, Clark University, 1905-06. Professor of Mathematics, Kenyon College, 1906—. Member of the American Mathematical Society. X t H A John Smith Harrison, B. A., M. A.. Ph. D. Instructor in English. B. A., Columbia University, 1899. M. A., Columbia University, 1900. Fellow in Comparative Literature, Columbia University, 1901- 02. Ph. D., Columbia University. 1903. Lecturer in English Litera- ture before Brooklyn Teachers’ Association, 1901. Substitute Teach- er in English, New York High Schools, 1903. Instructor in English, Kenyon College, 1903. 0 If K David Lewis Dunlap, B. Sc., M. D. B. Sc., Lenox College. 1901. M. D., University of Michigan, 1906. Athletic Director and Lecturer on Hygiene. Kenyon College. 1906. It II patfe twenty-Mx BEXLEY HALL The Rev. William Foster Peirce. B. A., M. A.. L. H. D. President of the Seminary. The Rev. Hosea Williams Jones. D. D. Dean of the Seminary. Eleutheros Cooke Professor of Ecclesiastical History, Church Polity and Canon Law. Graduated from Bexley Hall. 1870. Held Parochial Charges at Ports- mouth. Ironton. Cincinnati and Brooklyn. King's College. Oxford University. D. D., Kenyon. 1884. B A' The Rev. Jacob Streihert, B. A., M. A., Ph. D. Griswold Professor of Old Testament Instruction. B. A.. Hamilton College. 1877. M. A. and Ph. D.. Hamilton College. Instructor in the Classics and German. Lowville Academy. N. Y. Berkley Divinity School. Middletown. Conn. Ordered Deacon. Or- dained Priest. 1881. Studied at Leipzig and Tuebingen. Germany. 1881. Rector of Zion Church. Fonda, and Christ’s Church. Glovers- ville. N. Y., 1882. Christ’s Church. West Haven. Conn.. 1882-85. Acting Professor of Greek. Kenyon College, 1885-90. Professor of Old Testament Instruction. Bexley Hall, 1885—. t B K The Rev. David Felix Davies. B. A., M. A.. D. D. Milnor and Lewis Professor of Dogmatic Theology. Moral Theology, and Christian Evidences. B. A. Marietta College. 1874. Lane Seminary of Cincinnati. 1876. Rector of Parish at Fostoria, Ohio. 1891-93; at Mansfield. 1893-96. M. A.. Marietta, 1894. D. D., Marietta. 1898. Instructor in Dog- matic Theology, Bexley Hall, 1895-96. Professor of Dogmatic Theol- ogy. Bexley Hall. 1896-. A 2’ H h The Rev. Orville Ernest Watson. B. A.. B. D.. D. D. Professor of New Testament Instruction and Liturgies. B. A. Ohio Wesleyan. 1882. Bexley Hall. 1892. B. D.. Bexley Hall. D. D., Ohio Wesleyan. 1906. Minor Canon at Trinity Cathe- dral. Cleveland. 1892-1903. Professor of New Testament Instruction. Bexley Hall. 1903. K H K pife tweoty-aevrn THE SENIOR ORACLE SCRIBE of 1907 finds himself alone upon the mountain top—a rapt seer, deep in meditation, gathering sweet memories of the past, reveling in the present, and planning the sumptuous castles of the future in far away Spain. In all this his soul delights. He is the one in a great theater, who sees or knows none around him and only half dreamily hears the drowsy music of the orchestra sounding in his ears as though it were the quiet gurgling and splashing of a stream upon its rocky bed in the solitude of the forest on a summer s day. He is waiting for the curtain to rise upon the great drama shortly to be presented—the drama of the Life that is to be! And out of this indistinct harmony, he hears the words of the song:— “Kenyon, we linger ’Neath thy gray old walls and see Life’s ardent finger Beckoning us from thee. Then through tear drops starting Comes a thought which gives alloy To this sign of parting. Turning it to joy.' CJ It is a solemn, serious thought—a thought of all that Kenyon has meant to the class of 1907—the influences of our quiet, free, in- dependent life in this environment or the love ot the great world out- doors so near to Kenyon s heart and so intrinsically a part of our college life. No! We shall not begin to realize this until the curtain p g« twenty-nine is raised and we Have taken up our cue, and plunged into the action of the play in real earnest. But Here, indeed. Have we proved our prow- ess in tHe skirmisH line. We Have met tHe enemy and they are ours. We come forward now to be dubbed Sir Knigbt and to go forth as sons of Kenyon, tried and true. CjJ There are some in these days who talk loudly of a certain Univer- sity of Hard Knocks and boast the superiority of its curriculum over such as that outlined in the catalog of Kenyon College. To those noble men who have climbed the mountain heights, have been tried by the fire, and are now the distinguished representatives of this well- known university, there is naught but the highest praise and apprecia- tion. They have fought a good fight, a hard fight, lured to the rocks by the Lorelei and all but escaping the bitterness of shipwreck and de- struction. Indeed it is a stern discipline; it strengthens the sinews and summons up the blood, but after all, it hardens the heart—it breaks the heart! No doubt we shall be spared many of these bitter hours, but we too shall pass through our Slough of Despond and climb the mount of Difficulty and if we have learned here our lesson well, pass through them triumphant, and bring our honors to the feet of our Alma Mater. A burst of glorious music and the scribe finds himself recounting successes here and there, not with the old leaven of selfish pride, but with the new leaven of humility and satisfaction in striving and doing. We have had our failures, too. But, greatest of all, we have learned to know and love each other as only Kenyon men do, and we know, too. that when we hear the call, Surge, Baccalaurei! ” it shall mean more to us than the completion of certain study books. We have learned, as the Autocrat learned, to believe in life rather than in books, and that humanity is found after all, in deaths and births, in loves and hates, triumphs and defeats, and sorrows and joys. With P S thirty such a heritage bequeathed to us. why should not the men of 1907 take up their work and plunge boldly forward to the task. We hear the call of the Future:— “ No man is born into this world whose work Is not born with him; there is always work. And tools to work withal, for those who will; And blessed are the horny hands of toil! ’’ CJ The Oracle has spoken and the scribe received the same. It is for us to give our hit of answer to that call. €| In the great theatre, again the scribe sits—alone. The lights are out and the quiet of the darkness is broken only by the soft subdued music of the orchestra. Suddenly there is a thrill of sound and the music pours out its soul in a wild ecstasy. The stage is illumined in a blaze of light. The curtain rises ! R. one Nineteen Hundred and Seven Cl ass Off! cers Lester Leake Riley Jacob Hyde Ewalt, Jr. Charles Chauncey Winsor Judd Clarence Cecil Underwood Harold Mansfield Eddy Hugh Wilson Patterson President Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer Historian Toastmaster Cl ass Colors Blue and Old Gold Cl ass Yell P« e thirty-two Purgatory, Hell, Heaven ! One Nine Nought Seven! SENIOR John Thomson Brooke, Guthrie, Oklahoma; Classi- cal. A J 0, Philomathesian; Choir (1) (2) (3) (4), Leader of Choir (4); Glee Club (1) (2) (3) (4), Manager Track Team (2); Honor Committee (3); Chairman of Honor Committee (4); Soph- omore Hop Committee (2); 1907 Reveille Board (3); Chairman Junior Prom Committee (3); Executive Committee (4); Chairman Senior Committee (4); Foot Ball (2); Basket Ball (2). Rolla Eugene Dyer, Galena; Classical. N U A; Secretary N N A (1) (3); Collegian Board, resigned (1); Execu- tive Committee (4); Senior Committee (4); Library Assistant (4); Track Team (3) (4). Harold Mansfield Eddy, East Cleveland: Scientific. A r A- Eagle s Head; Collegian Board (1); Base Ball (1) (2)(3)(4); Puff and Powder Club (1)(2)(3) (4); President Puff and Powder Club (4); 1907 Dramatic Club (2)(3); Class Historian (1) (2) (3); Sophomore Hop Committee (2); Class President (3); Foot Ball (4). Jacob Hyde Ewalt, Jr., Warren; Philosophical. J A Et Z A; Philomathesian; Mandolin Club (2)(3)(4); Junior Prom Committee (3); Senior Committee (4); Tennis Team (3); Business Manager Collegian (3); resigned (4); Class Vice-President (4). p tt tLlrty-tkre Harry Lee Foltz, Lima; Literary. Nil h'i Orchestra (1) (2) (3) (4); Manager Orchestra (2) (3): Acting Manager Orchestra (4); 1907 Dramatic Club (2)(3(; Assistam Mana- ger Foot Ball (3); Puff and Powder Club (3) (4); Mandolin Club (3) (4); Executive Committee (4); Biological Society (3) (4); Assistant Biological Laboratory (3) (4); Senior Committee (4); Ohio State Academy of Science (4). Lamont Hart Gilder, Warren; Special. B 9 ; Masque and Feather; Class Treasurer (1); Collegian Board (2) (3); Class £ moker Committee (1); Base Ball (2) (3) (4). Stuart Wilson Goldsborough, Pittsburg, Pa.; Classical. r GIee Club (1) (2) (3) (4); Choir (1) (2) (3) (4); Honor Committee (3); Puff and Powder Club ( 1) (2) (3) (4); Secretary Puff and Powder Club (2); Treasurer Puff and Powder Club (3); Track Team (1)(2) (3); Captain Track Team (4): Assistant Manager Collegian (2); Coach Committee (2); Class Banquet Committee (2); Class Treasurer (3); 1907 Reveille Board (3); Junior Prom Committee (3); Senior Com- mittee: 1907 Dramatic Club (2) (3); Manager Foot Ball (4). Charles Winsor Judd. Pittsburg, Pa.; Classical. A J P- Philomathesian (1) (2) (3) (4); Secretary and Treasurer Philo- mathesian (2); Vice-President of Philomathesian (4); Glee Club (2) (3) (4); Choir (2) (3) (4); Class Dramatics (2) (3); Class Treasurer (2): Class Secretary (4); Cheer Leader (4); Track Manager (4); Puff and Powder Club (4). Lindus Cody Marsh, Cleveland; Classical. Philomathesian; Choir (1)(2)(3); Glee Club (1) (2) (3) (4); Puff and Powder Club (3) (4); Orchestra (1) (2) (3): 1907 Dramatic Club (2) (3); Junior Prom Committee (3); Senior Committee (4); Player of College Chimes. George Wesley Mcllwain, Peninsula; Scientific. 11 (2) (3) (4); Secretary Oratorical and Debating Society (3); President N H A (4); Debating Team (4). John Frederick Mullin, Warren; Scientific. B 9 ; Senior Committee (4). pife thirty-four John Lorraine Oldham, Cleveland; Classical. Philomathesian; Philo Debating Team (2). Hugh Wilson Patterson, Buffalo, N. Y.; Literary. Ah Et Z A; Philomathesian; President Philomathesian (4); Secretary Assembly (3); President Assembly (4); Collegian Board (2) (3) (4) Editor-in-Chicf Collegian (4); Editor-in-Chief 1907 Reveille; Class. Toastmaster (2) (3) (4); Philo Debating Team (2); Wooster Debate (3); Ohio Wesleyan Debate (4); second prize Stires Debate (3). Lester Leake Riley, Dayton; Classical. A; Philomathesian; Choir (1)(2)(3); Glee Club (1) (2) (3) (4); Puff and Powder Club (1) (2) (3) (4); Stage Manager Puff and Powder Club (3) (4); 1907 Dramatic Club (2) (3); Stage Manager 1907 Dra- matic Club(2)(3); Class President (1) (4); Wooster Debate (3); Ohio Wesleyan Debate (4); First Prize Stires Debate (3); Vice-President Assembly (4). George Abel Sanford, Fay, Oklahoma; Classical. H A'; A' II A- Foot Ball (4); Track Team (2) (3) (4); Business Mana- ger Collegian (2) (3); Assistant Librarian (4); Honor Committee (4). George Walter Sapp, Gamhier; Scientific. Foot Ball (4). Melvin Deane Southworth, Gambier; Philosophical. A T J; Eagle s Head; Honor Committee (1); Assistant Chemical Lab- oratory (1); Collegian Board (2); Puff and Powder Club (1)(2)(3) (4); Business Manager Puff and Powder Club (2): Assistant Business Manager Co-op (3); Sergeant-at-Arms N II A (1); Secretary N II A (2) ; Class President (2); Business Manager 1907 Dramatic Club (2) (3) ; Business Manager 1907 Reveille (3); Assistant Manager Base Ball (3); Manager Base Ball (4). George John Sturgis, Ashtabula; Classical. N II Puff and Powder Club (3) (4); Mandolin Club (2) (3); 1907 Dramatic Club (2) (3); Secretary Puff and Powder Club (4). Clarence Cecil Underwood. Gamhier; Philosophical. Philomathesian; Assistant Physical Laboratory; President Republican Club (3). Vice-President State Inter-Collegiate Republican Club (3); Class Treasurer (4). Entered 3d year from Ohio. pafe thirty-live Frederick Louis White. Gambier; Scientific. N II A'; Ohio State University (1): Assistant in Chemistry (2) (3) (4); Junior Prom Committee (3): Manager Debating Team (4); Puff and Powder Club (2) (3) (4): Basket Ball (4); Base Ball; American Chemical Society. George Alvin Wieland, Sandusky; Classical. II A; Kenyon Christian Union; Foot Ball (1)(4); Assistant Mana- ger Collegian (1); Manager Collegian (2); Orchestra (2) (3) (4); Gym- nasium Instructor (2) (3) (4); Critic '' U (3); 1907 Reveille Board (3); Sophomore Hop Committee (2); Class Vice-President (2). Andrew Ellis York, Akron; Philosophical. J K K: H A; Eagle’s Head: Foot Ball (1)(2)(4); Base Ball (1) (2) (3); Executive Committee (3); Chairman Constitution Committee (3); Collegian Board (2) (3); Assistant Manager Puff and Powder Club (1) (2); Manager Puff and Powder Club (3); Treasurer N II A (2); Vice- President ‘V H A (3); N II A Debating Team (2); Class Treasurer (2); Sophomore Hop Committee (2); Junior Prom Committee (3); 1907 Reveille Board (3); Manager Co-op (3). Harold Cameron Forster, Middletown, Ohio; Philosophical. Mandolin Club (1) (2) (3) (4) (5); Leader Mandolin Club (5); Secretary ol Assembly (2); Class Treasurer (3) Constitutional Com- mittee (4) (resigned); Executive Committee (5); Business Manager Reveille (3); College Orchestra (2) (3). pafe thirty-tit Class Song (Air— In Colic D.y.”) Where Kenyon lifts her ancient towers. While summer counts the golden hours. We meet beneath the laurel crown Our college wears of old renown And weave a garland bright with flowers,— Invoke the high celestial powers To bless this dear old class of ours. With torch and mask, in cap and gown, Dear Nineteen Seven! We love the mornings fresh with dew. These skies of ever changeful hue. The lustre of the evening star. The moon’s soft radiance afar. Remembrance of our friendship true More fond than lovers ever knew Shall thrill us as we say adieu. Ere life the solemn gates unbar To Nineteen Seven. Fair Class, we chant thy fadeless fame. Our mystic sign thy magic name; We seat thee on this classic throne Resplendent goddess, all our own ! Then raise the shout of loud acclaim To fan each fervent heart to flame. Through swiftly tleeting years the same. Thine ardent worshipers alone.— Fair Nineteen Seven. pc thirly- cv n Former Members George Archer Anderson, Scientific George William Blake, A Scientific John Groce Boggs. A A •P% Literary Malcolm Bronson, K Literary Merrill William Butler, B W, Scientific Clarence Burlington Colwell. Philosophical Stanley Bertram Connell, Philosophical Harvey William Craw, B H Scientific Arthur Emory David, K Classical Thomas Gawne, ¥ F, Scientific Arthur Halstead, Scientific Howard Lincoln Hassler, % A% Philosophical John Grove Hcyman, Philosophical Howard John Hogle, B 8 t Philosophical Horace Handy Jackson, Special Walter DeKoven Jones. - Philosophical Louis Weldon Laudick, A T Jt Scientific Herman David McCave, Classical John Burton Morton, A A' £ Literary Karl Sturgeon Rising, A A Literary Samuel Rockwell, Jr., A K E% Scientific Charles Edward Upson, A A Pt Special Frederick Iago Walker. At Philosophical Samuel Harrison Waughtel. Classical Dayton Ogden Williams. V £, Special Frank Paul Zoch. A T At Scientific East Liverpool Moundsville, W, Va. Circleville . Hamilton . Akron . Gambier . Newark So. Norwalk, Conn. . Findlay Sandusky . Cleveland . Akron Monroeville . Youngstown Clinton. Canada . Indianapolis, Ind. . Lima . . Salem . Mt. Vernon . Lancaster Cleveland . Mansfield Salina. Kansas . Danville Marquette. Mich. . Pittsburg. Pa. paje tHirty-fifbt (l • r « n «V • i JUNIOR JUDGMENTS unassumed modesty we shall now attempt to say a few words about ourselves. Already we are well advanced into our course as upper classmen. When we stop and remember with what reverence we, as Freshmen, looked up to the Juniors, it seems scarcely creditable that we have thus soon reached that exalted position. While plodding along the verdant, hut stony Freshmen path, although we won our rush and unmolested held our smoker, we were discontented. Ambi- tion had a desire for greater things. If only we were Sophomores! —we dared not think of being Juniors. But during our second year we found out that it is not such a great thing after all to be Sophs, for with that stage comes the disagreeable duty of entertaining and train- ing the new bunch. This duty, however, we faithfully performed even to the extent of presiding at their smoker and helping empty their peace pipe. Then came the transition. With satisfaction we entered our crown- ing period; willingly we maintain it. and it will be with regret that we leave it. When a Junior, the humiliations and cares are past, and the time seems still distant when we must go out to meet the world. So we can rest in peace. Q Great changes have taken place since our first arrival here. Old Ken- yon has blossomed out anew; K. M. A. has disappeared; Harcourt was not here to grace our Prom; and now silence follows the calling of pair forty a majority of the names which originally made up our class roll. Once we numbered over half a hundred, now we are less than twenty. But it is not pleasant to dwell on those regretable facts, so let us hasten on. Like all the classes that went before us, we can say truthfully, not boastfully, that ours was the best Prom yet. Not that we count theirs the less, but ours the greater. tj In athletics we have always held our own. The varsity teams are without exception well stocked with 08 men, and the positions of honor and responsibility are being held by them. As to our literary activity, suffice it to say that over two-thirds of our members are en- rolled in the literary societies and take active and leading parts in the same. Our dramatic talents are great. Ask those who were present at the production of “ Charley s Aunt.’ Nor are we asleep in the class room. Probably the professors very often wished we had been, but that is for them to say. Our evidence that we are beloved by our teachers is that they have even gone to the extent of encoring a few of us to be leaders of our successors. But the Sophomores are anxious to have the floor, so I will become silent until next year when you will have received the last chapter from the Historian of the Class of 1908. forty-one 1908 Class Song (Tbm: Drink to t only with thine eye '') I Kenyon, the time will soon be here. When we must say adieu. And enter on life's stern career As thine own sons so true. Then time fly not so swiftly hy. We fain would linger late. Mother, how can we break away In Nineteen Hundred Eight? II Though we travel distant climes, Yet through the lowering haze. We 11 hear thy Canterbury chimes. Peal as in former days. We 11 often meet in memory Within thy campus gate. And greet our old time friends. Of the Class of Nineteen Eight. Ill Regret our loyal hearts shall fill. When that time comes to pass, That we must leave this sacred Hill, Our happy, jovial class. So here is to our safe return At some appointed date. And here s to the orange and the black Of Kenyon’s Nineteen Eight. p (t forty-two Nineteen Hundred an d Eight ass Officers Malcolm Cyrus Platt Ralph Clewell Sykes Louis Phelps L’Hommedieu Ralph Franklin Gordon Edwin Winfield Hughes Kenneth Frederic Luthy President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Historian Toastmaster Class Colors Orange and Black Class Yell Hoorah! Hoorah! Noughty Eight! Noughty Eight! Hoorah ! Hoorah! Kenyon. Noughty Eight! j a forty-three JVNIOR Henry Greer Beam, Mt. Vernon; Philosophical. fi 8 ; Masque and Feather; Class Treasurer (2); Sophomore Banquet Committee; Class Smoker Committee (2); Sophomore Dramatics; Junior Dra- matics; Base Ball Team (1)(2); Cane Rush Ref- eree (3); Business Manager 1908 Reveille. Raymond Du Bois Cahall, Mansfield; Philosophical. H 8 A Philomathesian (3); Choir (1) (2) (3); Glee Club (1)(2)(3); Leader of Glee Club (3): Execu- tive Committee (3); Puff and Powder Club (3); Chairman Junior Prom Committee (3); Junior Dramatics (3); 1908 Reveille Board (3). Pierre Kellogg Chase, Bowling Green; Classical. Philomathesian (1) (2) (3); Honor Committee (1); Tennis Manager (2); Vice-President Oratorical Association (2); President Oratorical Association (3); Business Manager Collegian (3); Monitor (3). George Eliot Clarke, Canton; Literary. rr.NUK (1) (2); Foot Ball (1)(2)(3); Foot Ball Captain (3); Foot Ball Captain-Elect (3); Basket Ball (1) (2) (3): Basket Ball Cap- tain (2); I rack (1) (2); Sophomore Dramatics; Junior Dramatics; Junior Prom Committee (3); Assistant Business Manager 1908 Reveille (3); Cane Rush Captain (2). Henry Kelley Davies, Gambier; Philosophical. • 8 If- Glee Club (3); Mandolin Club (3); Orchestra (1))2)(3); Junior Dramatics (3). Samuel Cochran Finnel, Covington, Kentucky; Philosophical. fj}. Masque and Feather; University of Cincinnati (1); Base Ball (2) (3); Honor Committee (3); Winner of Tennis Tournament (2). forty-four Robert Miller Fulwider. West Liberty; Special. Philomathesian (1)(2); Orchestra (1) (2) (3). Ralph Franklin Gordon, Greenville; Philosophical. H 8 II- Masque and Feather; Class Treasurer (3); Sophomore Dra- matics (2(; Junior Dramatics (3); Sophomore Hop Committee: Fresh- man Smoker Committee (1). Edward Winfield Hughes, Kalamazoo, Mich.; Classical. i II A; Choir (1); Glee Club (1); Treasurer A' 7 A (2); Class Histor- ian (1) (2) (3); Junior Dramatics (3). Bernard Levi Jefferson, Danville; Classical. •V A; (1)(2)(3). Louis Phelps L’Hommedieu, Cincinnati; Classical. % Philomathesian (1) (2) (3); Sophomore Hop Committee (2); Honor Committee (3); Class Secretary (3); Historian of Philo- mathesian (3);Editor-in-Chief 1908 Reveille (3); Collegian Board (3). Kenneth Frederic Luthy, Columbus; Literary. A A : Philomathesian (3); Foot Ball (1)(2); Base Ball (1)(2)(3); Base Ball Captain (3): Basket Ball (3); Mandolin Club (3); Orchestra (2); Art Editor 1908 Reveille (3); Class Toastmaster (1) (2) (3): Junior Prom Committee (3); Sophomore Dramatics; Junior Dramatics; 1908 Play Committee (2) (3); Stage Manager 1908 Dramatics; Fresh- man Smoker Committee. Frederick Dye McGlashan. Zanesville: Classical. H 8 ; Philomathesian; Secretaiy of Philomathesian (2); Secretary of Assembly (3): Base Ball (1) (2) (3); Manager Basket Ball (2); Choir (2) (3); Glee Club (1) (2) (3); Mandolin Club (3); Honor Committee • (2); Junior Prom Committee (3). Winston Vaughan Morrow, Cincinnati; Classical. X A-, i II A; Junior Dramatics (3). pifc forty-five Malcolm Cyrus Platt, Mansfield; Scientific. J TA-N H K,G lccClub (1) (2) (3); Choir (1)(2)(3); Foot Ball (1) (2) (3); Class Secretary (1) (2(; Class President (3); Censor Nu Pi Kappa (3); Executive Committee (3); Sophomore Hop Committee (2); Junior Prom Committee (3); President Kenyon Christian Union (2); Class Banquet Committee (2): Property Manager of Sophomore Dra- matics; Business Manager of Junior Dramatics. William Raymond Seth, Oxford, Md.; Classical. N II K- Track (1) (2) (3); Assistant Base Ball Manager (3); Assistant Librarian (3). Ralph Clewell Sykes, Springfield; Classical. Philomathesian; Assistant Manager of Foot Ball (3); Foot Ball Mana- ger-Elect (3); Debating Team (3); Class Vice-President (3); Junior Prom Committee (3); 1908 Reveille Board (3); Sophomore Dramatics (2); Junior Dramatics (3); 1908 Play Committee (2) (3); Curator of Philomathesian (3). Joseph Edmund Thompson, Newport, Ky.; Classical. Philomathesian; Mandolin Club (1) (2); Orchestra (1) (2) (3); Leader of Orchestra (3); Junior Dramatics (3). Frank Hawn Weatherwax, Howard; Scientific. 0. S. U. (2). Charles Lewis Wucbker, West Dover; Scientific. N 11 h) Collegian Board (1)(2)(3); 1908 Reveille Board (3); Critic of N II h (3). P t forty- i Former Members David Wendell Beggs, A J Literary . Columbus Charles Edward Bcrghaus. Classical Harrisburg. Pa. Nelson Welker Burris, Philosophical . Danville Frederick Washburn Butler, BH W, Special . Akron Elisha Hughes Chapin, Classical . Sandusky Gilbert Kenyon Cooper, E T Scientific Chicago. III. Guy Conover, A A Et Special . . Utica Albert Hull Daly, A A Et Literary . Toledo William Joseph Finlay, A A Et Literary . Toledo William Nelson Foos. Literary Newark Robert Cairns Garlick, B H Scientific . Cincinnati Paul Joseph Goldthope, % A, Literary Chardon Henry Lang Grand. A J Philosophical . . Fremont Leroy Scott Isham, Philosophical . Cleveland Frederick Sevems Henry, Literary . Norwalk Wiley Corwin IlifF, B H t Literary Denver, Colo. Lawrence Craddock Jackson, A T J, Literary Springville, N. Y Chilton Leitch Johnson, A T J, Special Indianapolis, Ind. Benjamin Franklin Jones. Literary Mt. Vernon Carey Russell Kinney. '1 1 , Philosophical . Toledo Joseph Vance Park, X Af Literary Mt. Vernon John Cook Latta Pugh. Literary . Columbus Elliott Hudson Reynolds, A A Pt Classical Mt. Vernon William Cooper Russell, A A E% Literary . Mt. Vernon Luther Earl Stambaugh, % A, Literary . Shelby Medary Wilson Stark, Scientific . Mansfield John Grubbs Starr, A K Et Philosophical Richmond. Ind. William Cassel Stewart, B , Literary Zanesville Walter Fuller Tunks, A T J, Classical Toledo Frederick Sanders Upson, A J 0, Philosophical Mansfield Carl Maynard Wolcott, A T Jt Scientific . Conover paj« forty- ven A SOPHOMORE FANTASY W AS idly gazing at an old deserted castle in northern England. There was something familiar in the desolate scene before me, and I was trying to recall where I had ever heheld anything like it. There was an air of enchantment about it all. I stretched myself on the long grass and dreamily gazed. The afternoon sun gilded the moss covered towers and battlements. Was it just my fancy, and this a wholly unfamiliar picture? Ah, no ! The elves of my mind had gently brushed away the dust and set before me the picture I wanted. I saw Ascension Hall as once I had seen it by moonlight, when the frameless windows blinked like startled eyes and contained no glass to reflect the rays of the moon. Dear old Kenyon and the class of 1909! The long intervening years seemed hut days. Every incident of the two well remembered years I spent at Kenyon came hack to me. As a freshman I lived again that night in the loft of an old barn, where the hare hoards were harder than flag stones, and where the class of 1909 repulsed the midnight attack of Sopho- mores: our victorious rush, too, in which we made our opponents swallow a hit of their arrogance with a flavor of flour and egg. I re- membered also another night when we all waited many hours in a de- serted house across the river. How we waited and waited—and fin- ally it came, hut in the hands of the magnanimous Sophomores, with the rest of the college trailing along behind ! Then I recalled how a few of us shaved half the fiery whiskers from the chin of one of our would-be-sovereigns and then paraded him through the village. ptfc forty-nine My reverie was interrupted by a footfall close at Hand. I glanced up and saw. standing with His back to me, a stranger wHo was staring at tbe castle, much as I Had stared a little wHile before. I Heard a low ejaculation and my ears seemed to Hear tHe word Ascension. Wbat! Did my eyes deceive me? I was willing to swear tHat He was one of my classmates. His attitude was exactly as I Had seen Him standing before His company at K. M. A. Fearing lest I should address a total stranger, I murmered Half aloud, as if talking to tHe wind: “Hika Kenyon all tHe time, one-nine— €J I II be d—, how the deuce are you? He exclaimed coming over and shaking Hands, “you’re the last person in the world I ever expect- ed to find Here. D— it, but you nearly startled me out of my boots when you began to give our class yell. You know I was just think- ing about that night we stripped Ascension and then like some ghost in this God forsaken place I Hear you repeating my class yell just be- hind my back. Gee! But I m glad to see you though !” fj We sauntered up through the ruins. We talked over old times and discussed many things: How wc won both our cane rushes and routed the Freshmen out of the K. M. A. gymnasium. “That was a warm scrap, all right.’ my friend was saying, “d— it, but for a few moments I thought we were going to get it Hung on us there. Some of those Freshmen surely put up a good fight. Say! But afterwards, we bluffed that poor class of 1910 right, didn’t we though? ” 1 “Right you are, and we were the first ones to start that green cap stunt at Kenyon, too, 1 answered, and do you remember how we would get them coming out of English and make them ‘islam’ ? I don’t believe Kenyon ever had a better trained class than that one. They obeyed us most of the time like lambs. I tell you we did things up pretty fair.’’ fifty ‘‘Our Hop wasn’t half bad. cither, he added, tj “ I should say not! And so we talked on. Happening on a place where at one time some repairing had been commenced, I saw an old mallet and chisel, and a thought came into my head. Let s show these cool headed English,’ I suggested, “a little of our Kenyon spirit and cut our class yell over there beside that front entrance ! Agreed ! my companion exclaimed. The stone was luckily soft. So by turns we chiseled these words of that most glorious class, and if that castle still stands they may yet he read: Hika. Kenyon all the time, 1—0—9.” Nineteen Hundred and Nine Class Frederick Worley Aves Anton Weller Coldewey Charles Holman Dun William Eberly Shaw James Louis Cunningham Clarence Chester Childs Officers . . President . . Vice-President . . . Secretary Treasurer Historian T oastmaster Class Colors Maroon and White Class Yell Hik-a, Kenyon All the time One Nine Nought Nine p fifty-two Ray Dudley Avery, Literary Bowling Green Frederick Worley Aves, A K E, Philosophical Galveston, Tex. Louis Adolph Bacon, A A P, Philosophical . Findlay Malcolm Hogle Baker, If 9 , Literary Coshocton Francis Henry Ball, Classical Pelee Island, Ontario Paul Brown Barber, X A, Philosophical Mount Vernon Lemuel Ruevell Brigman, A T A, Philosophical . Newport, Ky. James Robert Cassil, Classical . (Howard Clarence Chester Childs, A A 4 , Literary . Fremont Warren Alan Clements, A A P, Philosophical . Richmond, Ind. Roscoe Colman Cloe, Literary . Howard Anton Weller Coldewey, A A P, Literary . Cincinnati Henry Wadsworth Cole, A A E, Literary Maysville, Ky. Van Allen Coolidge, V Y, Classical . Cincinnati William Woodrow Cott, A A P, Scientific . Columbus paje fi(ty-tkr e James Louis Cunningham. Philosophical . Cambier Samuel Cureton, J K E, Philosophical Mount Vernon Philip Louis Day, J E E, Literary . Mount Vernon Paul Augustine Dooman, Philosophical Kobe, Japan Leonard Sherburne Downe, V' Y, Literary Chicago, 111. Wres Weldon Dudgeon, Philosophical Gambier Charles Holman Dun, V Y, Literary Columbus Lloyd Lionel Heald, Philosophical Dunkirk. N. Y. Emmett Jay Jackson, J T J, Philosophical . Lima George Cole Jones, J E E, Literary . Waverly Frank Albert Kapp, H II, Literary Toledo Charles Kilbourne Lord, J T J, Scientific . Columbus Ralph Delmer Metzger, Philosophical Sunbury Arthur Swazey Morrison, Classical Davenport, la. Harold Wilfred Neeves, E E II, Literary Madison, Wis. William Eberly Shaw, II 6 II, Literary . Cincinnati George Shepard Southworth, J 7' J, Classical . Gambier Edward Southworth, J T J, Special . Gambier Raymond Arthur Youmans, Classical Cincinnati page fifty-four Former Members Stanley Woodruff Allen, '1' 1 , Scientific . Cincinnati Delano Richard Avcs, A 0, Classical . Monterey, Mcx. James Philip Bereton, Philosophical Salem ‘Frank Hadley Burdick, R II, Philosophical . . Toledo Pierson Breaden Conkling, Literary . Greenville Frederick Sturges Cooper, A J Philosophical . Mt. Vernon John Frederick Deatrick, Philosophical . Defiance Raymond Congdon Floyd, Philosophical . Bristol. Ind. Harbeck Halsted, Scientific Gamhier Harry Stuart Haylor, Literary . . Canton Francis Jay Jennings, Philosophical . Mt. Vernon William James Kunkle, A K E% Literary . Ashtabula Frank Austin McElroy, V T Philosophical . Columbus Harvey Bancroft McElroy, '1 , Special . Columbus Roy Robert Reeves. A A E, Classical . Washington C. H. Robert Rout, Philosophical Defiance William Burton Sudlow, X A% Philosophical Indianapolis. Ind. Samuel Whiteside Bell, A T A, Literary . . Toledo Joseph Robert Eikenberry, R H, Literary . Greenville Ambrose Shaw Gallagher, 1, Literary . Steubenville ‘Stuart Lathrop Pierson, Philosophical . Cincinnati Nelson Turney Weldon, A A 4 % Literary Circleville pafe fifty-five In Memoriam Frank Hadley Burdick HEREDITY I read a book which I read once Beneath the banyan-tree. Where Ind's mysterious river runs To Ind’s mysterious sea. Nor darker deeps its floods possessed Nor fuller rolled its flow. Than swept the passion through my breast Ten thousand years ago. I read the self-same words again.— Kokosing laughs to seek the sea; The self-same letters in my brain Unite that ancient book and me. I spell the lines with utmost care. But still I cannot know The meaning which I mastered there Ten thousand years ago. It blazed above the evening dusk And lit the world with fire; And all the air was sweet with musk And faint with vast desire. And as the river finds its goal Within the ocean's flow. So sank its secret in my soul Ten thousand years ago. 0 river! river! swift and strong! I was no match for thee. And rapture could not last for long Beneath the banyan-tree. Thou tor’st my book and me apart In thy resistless flow. And in thine ooze embalmed my heart Ten thousand years ago. page fifty-eight But oh! my Heart could never cool After that Hour of fire. And in tHe lowest, coldest pool Still tHroHHed witH wild desire: THrobbed all tbc changing seasons through. While tides swung to and fro. To know again what once it knew Ten thousand years ago. So. reading as I read of old Beneath the banyan-tree. While Time s mysterious river rolled Unto the outer sea, I feed hope’s wan and flickering flame. That, twixt the dust and glow. Knowledge will come as once it came Ten thousand years ago. 0. E. W. p fcfty-aia FRESHMAN ANNUAL N THE year 1906, Theodore Roosevelt being Presi- dent, we entered the portals of Kenyon College. One hundred and thirty years before, the United Colonies in America had ireed themselves from Great Britain s oppression; one hundred and thir- teen years before, the French Revolution was raging at its height; only eight years before, the United States had liberated Cuba from the iron hand of tyranny. So the tendency of the century has been toward liberty. We have acted in strict accordance with this tendency, and today Sophomoric sovereignty stands shattered. €| Our deeds of valor done have been as countless as the stars ol heaven and as innumerable as the sands of the sea. Aye verily, we have wrought a miracle. We have turned wine into water, as those who know can bear witness. Who, that have been of our kind in by-gone years, can say half as much. But just as we have been an exception in this, we have been an exception in everything else. We lost the cane rush. We were not allowed to be the brawn of all the athletic teams. We didn't share Budweiser. But that qualities of excellence, that volcanoes ever ready to burst, do lie innate within us. we have shown in a thousand ways. Remember our battle royal in the armo- ry. Remember our victory in the lists at Newark. Remember how Martin stood hours long at the college gates. The first of these events show that we have a martial spirit, the second that we have qualities and the third that we have staying powers not half equalled by the p fe i ty-one boy that stood on the burning deck, when all but him bad fled. Yes. for years, the wild winds have been sighing on old Kenyon s woody top. the Kokosing has been slowly winding about its bill and the sun drearily pouring down upon its spires as if awaiting something. Awaiting what ? Why us. And we have come and brought deli- cious May. But really after all is said and done, our only desire is to be good loyal sons of Kenyon and to make ourselves worthy of our Alma Mater. p gt nily-lv Nineteen Hundred and Ten Class Offi cers Harold McConnell Barber Ralph Waldo Wyant Willard Denison Robison Harold Rupert Sayer Potter Dabney Garvey Gayle William Andrew Cuff President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Historian Toastmaster Class Colors Blue and Gold Class Yell Hik-a Kenyon Once again Hik-a Kenyon Nineteen Ten. ir«« page Mxtyfoar FRES Harold McConnell Barber, J T J, Scientific Wauseon Frank Black Beatty, Scientific . Ravenna Lawrence Graeme Bell, A K E, Literary . Toledo Robert Aholiab Bentley, V , Special Columbus William John Bland, A A' £, Philosophical Kansas City, Mo. Tony Louis Cardillo, Philosophical Columbus William Aldren Cuff, F r, Special Napoleon Frederick Austin Cartmell, A A t . Classical . Lancaster Lawrence Edward Colgrove, A J Literary Hastings. Mich. Philip Arthur Crosby, F T, Literary Chicago, 111. Wellington Harry Crow, A A P, Scientific Circleville Lucien Curtis Denney, Classical Elyria Lyle Fox Emerine, Classical Fostoria Dabney Garvey Gayle, H H , Literary Clifton. Cincinnati Robert Andrew Gorsuch, Scientific Gambier Alvin Irwin Hardy, Classical Mark Curtis Kinney, A J P, Literary Harold Jennings Knapp, Classical Roger Seiter Littleford, B 0 II, Scientific Harry Swayne Lybarger, Classical Harold George Collins Martin, Classical Earl Mahaffee Mason, Scientific Robert Keyes Owen, Philosophical Harold Rupert Sayer Potter, Classical Marquis Kemper Rankin, J T J, Literary Hadley King Rood, Scientific Willard Denison Robison, J A' E, Special Arthur Lisenby Sackett, A A P, Philosophical John Hiatt Scott, V T, Scientific Charles Dale Siegchrist, II 0 II, Literary Edward Southworth, J T J, Literary Robert Woods Stewart, Scientific Arcadia Mount Vernon Elyria Ft. Thomas, Ky. Warsaw Asblord, Kent, Eng. Rock Creek Mount Vernon Moncktown, Mo. South Charleston . Norwalk . Toledo . Springfield Chicago, 111. Fostoria . Gambier . Cincinnati Bowling Green Robert Allan Thurstin, Literary Albert Blakeslee White, Jr., VT, Philosophical Parkersburg, W. Va. Mark Huntington Wiseman, A J P, Philosophical . Springfield Willis Wesley Wiseman, Classical . . Fostoria Ralph Waldo Wyant, A A t . Literary . Spring Lake, N. J. Former M embers Merland G. Dildine, Literary Paul Vickers Hann A A P, Literary Richard Roberts Harter, J K E, Philosophical Howard Henry Hoyt, f T, Scientific Roscoe Conk ling Mathis, Literary p ge ixty-6ve Tiffin . Columbus Canton. Evanston, 111. Prophetstown, 111. Cl ass Song (T.o.: - WrtW ) 1. There is a Hell for Freshmen. And there they All must go; There to Repent their many Sins, And lead a Life of Woe. Chorus There is a Hell lor Freshmen. And there they All must go; There to Repent their many Sins And lead a Life of Woe. 2. There is a Hell for Freshmen. And there they All must go; There to Repent their many Sins, And lead a Life of Woe. Chorus There is a Hell for Freshmen, And they they All must go; There to Repent their many Sins. And lead a Life of Woe. page aixty-aix BEXLEY HALL Being the Theological Seminary of the Dioceses of Ohio Senior Class Roscoe Ashman Clayhorne, A. B. John Rose Stalker, A. B. Gilbert Prower Symons, A. B. Frederick Robert Tschan, A. B. George Morris Wylie, Jr. Diocese Western Michigan Ohio Ohio Ohio Ohio Middle Class Allen Percy Bissell, A. B. Maxwell Budd Long, A. B. Arthur Turner Reasoner Samuel Edward Thompson, A. B. Southern Ohio . Southern Ohio Michigan . Ohio Junior Class George Codwise Dickinson, A. B. Lindus Cody Marsh John Lorraine Oldham Lester Leake Riley George Alvin Wieland Southern Ohio Ohio Ohio Southern Ohio . Ohio Special Student S Frank Albus Raeder Paul Ernst Osec Celsus Fox Julius Walter Headington William Barney Kinkaid . Ohio Ohio . Ohio Ohio . Ohio p g ixty-«vtn I FRATERNITIES IN THE ORDER OF THEIR ESTAB- LISHMENT AT KENYON COLLEGE Delta Kappa Epsilon Alpha Delta Phi Psi Upsilon Beta Theta Pi Delta Tau Delta p |e «evenly Local Society Zeta Alpha LAMBDA CHAPTER Established in 1852 In U r b e George Shepard Chumplm Southworth Elisha Edgerton Fillmore In Bexley Leslie Ernest Sunderland Frederick Robert Tschan Seniors Charles Lowman Browne Jacob Hyde Ewalt, Jr. Hugh Wilson Patterson Andrew Ellis York Sophomo res Frederick Worley Aves Henry Wadsworth Cole Samuel Cureton Philip Lewis Day George Cole Jones Freshmen Lawrence Graeme Bell William John Bland Richard Roberts Harter Willard Denison Robison Harold Alvin Tillinghast page veoty-tkrcf DELTA KAPPA EPSILON Founded 1844 at Yale University Phi Roll of Chapters Yale College 1844 Theta Bowdoin College 1844 Xi Colby University 1844 Sigma Amherst College 1846 Gamma Vanderbilt University 1847 Psi University of Alabama 1847 Upsilon Brown University 1850 Chi University of Mississippi . 1850 Beta University of North Carolina 1851 Eta University of Virginia 1852 Kappa Miami University 1852 Lambda . Kenyon College 1852 Pi Dartmouth College 1853 Iota . Central University 1853 Alpha Alpha Middlebury College 1854 Omicron University of Michigan 1855 Epsilon . Williams College 1855 Rho Lafayette College 1855 Tau Hamilton College 1856 Mu Colgate University 1856 Nu College of the City of New York 1856 Beta Phi . University of Rochester 1856 Phi Chi Rutgers College 1861 Psi Ph.- . De Pauw University 1866 Gamma Phi Wesleyan University 1867 Psi Omega Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute 1867 Beta Chi Adelbert College 1868 Delta Chi Cornell University 1870 Delta Delta Chicago University 1871 Phi Gamma Syracuse University 1871 Gamma Beta Columbia College 1874 Theta Zeta University of California 1876 Alpha Chi . Trinity College 1879 Phi Epsilon . University of Minnesota 1889 Sigma Tau Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1890 Tau Lambda Tulane University 1898 Alpha Phi 1 oronto University 1898 Delta Kappa . University of Pennsylvania 1899 Tau Alpha McGill University 1901 Sigma Rho . Leland Stanford. Jr., University 1902 Delta Pi University of Illinois 1904 Rho Delta University of Wisconsin 1907 page aeventy-four KENYON CHAPTE Established in 1858 In Facultate The Rev. George Franklin Smytbe William Peters Reeves Seniors John Thomson Brooke Charles Chauncey Winsor Judd Junior Kenneth Frederic Luthy Sophomores Louis Adolph Bacon Clarence Chester Childs Warren Alan Clements Anton Weller Coldewey Freshmen Frederick Austin Cartmell Lawrence Edward Colgrove Wellington Harry Crow Mark Curtis Kinney Arthur Lisenby Sackett Mark Huntington Wiseman pag avr ly-a ven ALPHA DELTA PHI Founded 1832 at Hamilton College Roll of Chapters Hamilton Hamilton College 1832 Columbia Columbia College 1836 Yale Yale University 1837 Amherst . Amherst College 1837 Brunonian Brown University 1837 Harvard . Harvard University . 1837 Hudson Western Reserve University 1841 Bowdoin Bowdoin College 1841 Dartmouth Dartmouth College 1845 Peninsular . University of Michigan 1846 Rochester University of Rochester 1850 Williams . Williams College 1851 Manhattan College of the City of New York 1855 Middletown . Wesleyan University 1856 Kenyon Kenyon College 1858 Union . Union College 1859 Cornell Cornell University 1869 Phi Kappa . Trinity College 1877 Johns Hopkins Johns Hopkins University 1889 Minnesota University of Minnesota 1892 Toronto . Toronto University 1893 Chicago Chicago University 1895 McGill . . McGill University 1897 Wisconsin University of Wisconsin 1902 p gt Mventy-eigbt 1- •-------------- IOTA CHAPTER Established in 1860 In Bexley Maxwell Budd Long Senior Stuart Wilson Goldsborough Junior George Elliott Clarke Sophomores Van Allen Coolidge Philip Arthur Crosby Leonard Sherburne Downe Charles Holman Dun Freshmen Robert Ahohab Bentley William Andreu Cuff John Hiatt Scott Arthur Blakeslee White eifhty-one PSI UPSILON Founded 1833 at Union College Theta . Union College 1833 Delta New York University 1837 Beta . Yale University 1839 Sigma . Brown University 1840 Gamma . Amherst College 1841 Zeta . Dartmouth College 1842 Lambda Columbia College 1842 Kappa . Bowdoin College 1843 Psi . Hamilton College 1843 Xi Wesleyan University 1843 Upsilon . . University of Rochester 1858 Iota Kenyon College 1860 Pbi . University of Michigan 1865 Pi Syracuse University 1875 Chi . Cornell University 1876 Beta Beta . Trinity College . 1880 Eta . Lehigh University 1884 Tau University of Pennsylvania 1891 Mu University of Minnesota 1891 Rbo . University of Wisconsin 1896 Omega . University of Chicago 1897 Epsilon . University of California 1902 paf eijity-two BETA ALPHA CHAPTER Established in 1879 In Facultate Russell Sedgwick Devol Edward Bryant Nichols Seniors Lamont Hart Gilder John Frederick Mullin Juniors Henry Greer Beam Raymond Du Bois Cahall Henry Kelley Davies Samuel Cochran Finnell Ralph Franklin Gordon Fred Dye McGlashan Sophomores Malcolm Hogle Baker Frank Albert Kapp Harold Wilfred Neeves William Eberly Shaw Freshmen Dabney Garvey Gayle Roger Seiter Littleford Charles Dale Siegchrist page eighty-five BETA THETA PI Founded 1839 at Miami University Roil of Chapters Miami University . 1839 Ohio University . . 1841 University of Cincinnati 1841 Western Reserve University 184 1 Washington JeffersonUniv 1842 De Pauw University 1845 Indiana University . 1845 University of Michigan . 1845 Wabash College . 1845 Central University . 1847 Brown University . 1847 Hampden-Sidney College 1850 University of North Carolina 1852 Ohio Wesleyan University 1853 Hanover College . 1853 Knox College . . 1855 University of Virginia 1856 Davidson College . 1858 Beloit College . . 1860 Bethany College . 1861 Iowa State University . 1866 Wittenberg College . 1867 Westminster College . 1867 Iowa Wesleyan University 1868 University of Chicago . 1868 Denison University . 1868 Washington University 1869 University of Wooster . 1872 University of Kansas 1872 University of Wisconsin . 1873 Northwestern University 1873 Dickinson College . 1874 Boston University . . 1876 Johns Hopkins University 1878 University of California ;1879 Kenyon College . 1879 Rutgers College . . 1879 Cornell University . 1879 Stevens Institute . . 1879 St. Lawrence University 1879 University of Maine . 1879 University of Pennsylvania 1880 Colgate University . 1880 Union College . . 1881 Columbia University 1881 Amherst College . 1883 Vanderbilt University . 1884 University of Texas . . 1885 Ohio State University . 1885 University of Nebraska 1888 Pennsylvania State College 1888 University of Denver . 1888 Syracuse University 1889 Dartmouth College . . 1889 University of Minnesota 1890 Wesleyan University . 1890 University of Missouri 1890 Lehigh University . 1891 Yale University . . 1892 Leland Stanford. Jr.,Univ. 1894 Bowdoin College . 1900 University of West Virginia 1900 University of Colorado 1900 Washington State University 1901 Illinois State University 1902 Purdue University . 1903 Case School Appl d Sciences 1905 Iowa State University . 1905 page eighty- :: ’ '« CHI CHAPTER Established in 1881 Seniors Harold Mansfield Eddy Lindus Cody Marsh Melvin Dean Southworth Junior Malcolm Cyrus Platt Sophomores Lemuel Ruevell Brigman Emmett Jay Jackson Charles Kilbourne Lord George Shepard Southworth Edward Southworth Freshmen Harold McConnell Barber Marquis Kemper Rankin p fc etfbty-niae Founded in 1860 at Bethany College Roll of Chapters Washington Jefferson College 1861 Ohio University . 1862 Allegheny College 1863 Ohio Wesleyan University 1866 Hillsdale College . 1867 Indiana University . 1870 DePauw University . 1871 University of Illinois . 1872 Wabash College . 1872 Stevens Ir.st. of Technology 1874 Lehigh University . 1874 University of Michigan 1875 Butler College . 1875 Albion College . . 1876 Renssalaer Polytechnic Inst. 1879 University of Iowa . 1880 Kenyon College . 1881 Emory College . 1882 Adelbcrt College . . 1882 University of the South 1883 University of Minnesota 1883 University of Colorado 1883 University of Mississippi 1886 Vanderbilt University 1886 University of Wisconsin 1888 Tufts College . 1889 Massachusetts Inst, of Tech. 1889 Tulane University . 1889 Cornell University . 1890 Northwestern University 1893 Leland Stanford, Jr. Univ. 1893 University of Nebraska 1894 Ohio State University 1894 Brown University . 1896 Washington and Lee Univ. 1896 University of Pennsylvania 1897 University of California 1898 University of Virginia 1898 University of Chicago . 1898 Univ. of West Virginia 1900 Armour Inst, of Technology 1901 Dartmouth College . 1901 Columbia University . 1902 Wesleyan University 1902 Columbia Universityl . 1903 Baker University . 1903 Alu Chicago New York Cincinnati San Francisco Philadelphia mni Chapters Milwaukee Indianapolis Boston Minneapolis Cleveland Pittsburg Omaha Evansville Atlanta Toledo PHI BETA KAPPA Roll of Chapters William and Mary College 1776 Tufts College . . 1892 Yale University . 1780 University of Minnesota 1892 Harvard University 1781 University of Pennsylvania 1892 Dartmouth College . 1787 Swarthmore College . 1895 Union University 1817 University of Iowa . 1895 Bowdoin College . 1824 University of Nebraska 1895 Brown University 1830 Colby University . 1895 Trinity College . . 1845 Syracuse University . 1895 Wesleyan University 1845 Johns Hopkins University 1895 Adelbert College, W.R.Univ. 1847 Boston University . 1898 University of Vermont 1848 University of California 1898 Amherst College . 1853 University of Chicago . 1898 Univ. of the City of N. Y. 1858 University of Cincinnati 1898 Kenyon College . 1858 Haverford College . 1898 Marietta College . . 1860 Princeton University . 1898 Williams College . 1864 St. Lawrence University 1898 College of the City of N. Y. 1867 Vassar College . . 1898 Middlebury College . 1868 Wabash College . 1898 Columbia University . 1868 University of Wisconsin 1898 Rutgers College . 1869 Allegheny College . . 1901 Columbia College . 1869 University of Missouri 1901 Hamilton College . 1869 Vanderbilt University 1901 Hobart College . . 1781 University of Colorado 1904 Colgate University . 1875 Leland Stanford, Jr. Univ. 1904 Cornell University . 1882 Middlebury College . 1904 University of Rochester 1886 Mt. Holyoke College 1904 Dickinson College . . 1886 University of N. Carolina 1904 Lehigh University . 1886 Ohio State University 1904 Lafayette College . . 1889 Smith College . . 1904 De Pauw University . 1889 University of Texas . 1904 University of Kansas 1889 Wellesley . . . 1904 Northwestern University 1889 Woman s College, Baltimore 1905 pafe mnety-one PHI BETA KAPPA Beta of Ohio Officers The Rev. William Foster Peirce, L. H. D. . President The Rev. Hosea Williams Jones, D. D. . Vice-President Maxwell Budd Long . . Secretary and Treasurer Resident Members The Rev. William Foster Peirce, A. M., L. H. D. Theodore Sterling, A. M., M. D., LL. D. The Rev. Hosea Williams Jones, D. D. The Rev. Jacob Streibert, A. M., Ph. D. The Rev. David Felix Davies, A. M., D. D. The Rev. George Franklin Smythe, A. M., D. D. The Rev. Orville Earnest Watson, B. A., D. D. John Smith Harrison, A. M., Ph. D. John Rose Stalker, B. A. Frederick Robert Tschan, B. A. Barker Newhall, Ph. D. Leslie Howard Ingham. Ph. D. Henry Titus West, A. M. William Peters Reeves, B. A., Ph. D. Russell Sedgwick Devol, A. M. Edwin Bryant Nichols, A. M. Richard Clark Manning, B. A., Ph. D. Reginald Bryant Allen, M. S., Ph. D. Maxwell Budd Long, B. A. George Abel Sanford patfe ninety-two ZETA ALPHA Jacob Hyde Ewalt, Jr. Lester Leake Riley Hugh Wilson Patterson Louis Phelps L Hommedieu Winston Vaughan Morrow Philip Lewis Day Paul Brown Barber page ninety-three FRATERNITY CONVENTIONS Delta Kappa Epsilon Springfield, Massachusetts, November 14, 15, 16 Delegate Andrew Ellis York, 1907 Alpha Delta Phi New York City. April 16. 17. 18. 19 Delegates John Thomson Brooke Kenneth Frederic Luthy Psi Upsilon . New York City, April 11, 12 Delegates Harold Cameron Forster, 1906 Philip Arthur Crosby, 1909 Charles Holman Dun. 1909 Thomas Henry Sheldon, 1909 Beta Theta Pi Denver, Colorado, July 21. 22, 23. 24, 25, 1906 Delegates Henry Greer Beam Frank Hadley Burdick Delta Tau Delta University of Indiana, Bloomington. Indiana, February 22, 23 Delegate Harold Mansfield Eddy p f ninety-four COLLEGE ORGANIZATIONS THE YEAR has been a transition year in the history Kenyon athletics. Always forced to face ious athletic problems, we entered upon HBHSSjIS the year with almost one-half of our available material cut off. At little Kenyon, where every man must do his share, the barring of Freshmen from inter-col- legiate athletics was expected to work sad havoc. How gallantly and successfully we met the crisis, results show. Then again, it has been a transition year in other ways. Kenyon departed from the long-established custom of en- gaging a professional coach for the foot ball season and set an example to other Ohio colleges by inaugurating the physical director system. While other colleges have physi- cal directors, they still retain the professional coach in foot ball. Kenyon alone makes the physical director a member of the faculty and gives him sole charge of all athletics. It is but another step toward that purity in athletics for which Kenyon has become almost a synonym. P 4 n:nfty-fi|kt FOOT BALL WAS with fear and trembling that Kenyon viewed the foot ball situation this year. The new “Big Six” regulations which prohibited the playing of Freshmen, coupled with the announcement that the mighty Rising would not return to college, were enough to shake even Kenyon spirit. Then, too, an entirely new system of play must be evolved, since the game had been completely revolutionized by the new rules. Naturally much hope was placed in the new athletic director. Dr. Dunlap. Q Every Kenyon man is now satisfied that his hope was not mis- placed. A team was produced of which we all felt proud—a team which typified every Kenyon ideal of pluck and spirit. 1 We should have opened the season here with Mt. Union, but rain prevented. On the following Saturday, we met Oberlin in our first game of the season. Contrary to all newspaper “dope, we not only kept Oberlin from scoring, but had the ball in their territory most of the game. Case again downed us after a heart-rending struggle. In a game replete with spectacular incidents, we played Wesleyan to a tie on Benson Field. Who will ever forget “Babe South- worth s great place kicks from the thirty-seven yard line? C[ On November 10, came the crowning glory of the whole season, 0. s. u.. with the strongest team in years and confident that it was only a question of how many points they would have to roll up, had to be content with one lone touch-down. Time after time. Kenyon was within striking distance of the State goal. Never did a defeat bring more glory to the defeated. After defeating Otterbein easily, we wound up the season by losing to Denison on a slippery held. CJ The season, gratifying in itself, gave even more gratifying prospects for next year. With the material in the class of 1910, Kenyon should next year surprise her most ardent supporters. page ninety-nine FOOT BALL G. E. Clarke S. W. Goldsborough Dr. Dunlap The Team G. A. Sanford C. H. Dun P. A. Dooman M. C. Platt G. W. Sapp L. A. Bacon G. S. Southworth C C. Childs V. A. Coolidge J. L. Cunningham G. E. Clarke L. R. Briginan SEASON 0 F 1906 Captain Manager Coach . Center Left Guard Right Guard Left Tackle Left Tackle Right 1 ackle . Left End Right End Quarter Back Left Half Back Right Half Back Full Back H. M. Eddy G. E. Clarke R. C. Sykes Substitutes Samuel Cureton G. A. Wieland Captain-Elect for 1907 . . Manager-Elect for 1907 one hundred SCHEDULE Mt. Union at Gambier Oberlin at Oberlin Case at Cleveland Heidleberg at Tiffin Ohio Wesleyan at Gambier Ohio State at Columbus Otterbein at Gambier Denison at Granville FOR 1906 . . October 6 . . October 13 October 20 . . October 27 . . November 3 November 10 November 17 . November 24 RECORD FOR 1 906 Kenyon (rain) Mt. Union Kenyon 0 Oberlin 0 Kenyon 0 Case 17 Kenyon 0 Heidleberg 5 Kenyon 12 0. W. U. 12 Kenyon 0 0. S. U. 6 Kenyon 24 Otterbein 0 Kenyon 4 Denison 10 page obc bjndrtJ two BASE BALL IS not always safe to rely upon the robin as the har- binger of Spring, but when the ball tossers appear in front of Old Kenyon we know beyond all doubt that the season of seasons has arrived. There is an early Spring this year, and even now the college is base ball mad over the inter-class games. Last year, the college teams throughout the state were unusually strong and while Kenyon played good ball most oi the time, she suf- fered defeat far too frequently. The old ailment—inability to hit at critical moments—was the cause for most of the defeats. €J However, things look very promising for this season. Very few positions will have to be filled with new men. as most of the old standbys are again in harness. Dr. Dunlap is proving a valuable coach, since he has had experience in nearly every position. Under his regime, Kenyon base ball should undergo quite a reform. Our teams have heretofore sufiered from lack of training, but under the athletic director s discipline, there will no doubt be a great improve- ment in this respect. The schedule arranged is hard, but we think Kenyon s team will rise to the occasion. q To us at Kenyon who know the existing conditions, the year’s record came as a pleasant surprise. The score of the 0. S. U. game alone should convince any pessimist that Old Kenyon has not retro- graded, but is holding her own by the traditional nerve and pluck of her sons. tj Not only in foot ball, but in all forms of athletics, Kenyon lived up to her old standard. Prospects for the coming year are exception- ally bright and warrant a hope that Kenyon will soon come into her own again—an own which means not equality, but supremacy. page one hundred three BASE BALL SEASON OF 1907 K. F. LutHy M. D. Southworth Captain Manager The H. M. Eddy L. H. Gilder G. E. Clarke S. C. Finncll K. F. Luthy F. McGlashan Squad W. V. Morrow F. H. Weatherwax C. H.lDun P. W. Crosby J. L. Cunningham G. C. Jones patfc on hundred fiv SCHEDULE FOR SEASON OF 1907 Otterbein at Garabier . April 20 Ohio Medical University at Gambier April 27 Baldwin University at Berea May 3 Case at Cleveland . May 4 Ohio Wesleyan University at Delaware May 11 Ohio State University at Gambier . May 15 Ohio University at Athens May 17-18 Western Reserve University at Gambier . May 25 Denison at Granville May 31 Ohio State University at Columbus : June 1 Ohio Wesleyan University at Gambier . June 8 Wooster at Wooster . June 11 Oberlin at Oberhn June 15 RECORD FOR 1906 Kenyon 4 Otterbein 0 Kenyon 0 Denison 10 Kenyon 2 0. w. u. 6 Kenyon 4 0. M. u. 0 Kenyon 2 Case 15 Kenyon 2 0. w. u. 7 Kenyon 0 Wooster 3 Kenyon 4 Denison 3 Kenyon 0 0. s. u. 6 Kenyon 0 Ohio u. 7 Kenyon 4 Ohio u. 5 p ft one kunjrej ttx BASKET BALL |HILE basket ball has never gained the foot-hold at Ken- yon which it enjoys at many colleges, it serves to re- lieve somewhat the monotony of the mid-winter season. It has not been given the serious attentiou and consideration which other forms of athletics re- ceive at Kenyon. This is probably the real reason why our basket ball teams have not met with much success. Basket ball this year was largely a repetition of last year's dis- asters. While the men played as hard and consistent a game as they knew how, they were outclassed by the well coached teams of other larger institutions. There was but one redeeming feature in the season —the work of the Freshmen. The great form displayed by many of the Freshmen gave the assurance that next year Kenyon would have a much better team. page oof LunJreJ «even BASKET BALL S’EASON OF 190 7 C. H. Dun . . . Captain C. K. Lord . . . Manager The Team C. H. Dun . . . Center E. J. Jackson . . . Right Forward G. E. Clarke . . Left Forward L. R. Brigman . . . Right Guard K. F. Luthy . . . Left Guard Substitutes C. K. Lord F. L. White pafc onr knodrcj nine i SCHEDULE FOR 1907 Wooster at Wooster . . . February 2 Wooster at Gambier . . . February 9 Mt. Union at Alliance . . . February 16 Ohio State at Columbus . . February 23 Ohio Wesleyan at Delaware . . . March 2 Ohio University at Athens . . . March 9 Denison at Granville . . . March 23 RECORD FOR 1907 Kenyon 9 Wooster 44 Kenyon 13 Wooster 24 Kenyon 26 Mt. Union 37 Kenyon 15 0. S. U. 42 Kenyon 12 0. W. U. 70 Kenyon 37 Ohio U. 16 Kenyon 21 Denison 28 pap ooc tueJrcd Ira T R A C K (LONG with the crack of the bat in the early Spring, comes the soft pad-pad of the runners on the cinders. Although track athletics are never very successful except in a large school, Kenyon has always made a splendid showing in this branch. Last year’s record was not quite as good as that of' the year before, but it is by no means a record to he ashamed of. What success we did meet was largely due to the energetic work of Captain Taylor. Track work does not generally flourish without a coach, hut Captain Taylor managed to turn out a good team through his personal efforts. True, we took only fifth place at the Big Six meet, hut the Big Six meet is a big affair. q This year under Dr. Dunlap, track work is being enthusiastically pushed. He expects to develop some good weight men and these, together with the running material on hand, should constitute a very creditable team. page one hur.jrcj rlrvra S. W. Goldsborough C. C. W. Judd Captain Manager SEASON OF 1906 A. K. Taylor C. E. Berghaus .... Captain Manager 1 e a m S. B. Axtell A. S. Brown W. H. Brown R. W. Crosby A. K. Taylor A. S. Worman F. R. Aves I o r 1906 V. A. Coolidge K. S. Rising G. A. Sanford G. E. Clarke G. K. Cooper W. R. Setb S. W. Goldsborougb paf« on Hundred thirteen W. E. Sbaw TRACK MEETS SEASON OF 1906 BIG SIX MEET Columbus, Ohio, May 31. 1906 Participants Points Ohio State University • . . 75 Western Reserve University . . .29 Ohio Wesleyan University • • . 27 Oberlin . . . e .23 Kenyon 10 Case .... 1 Dual Meets Ohio Wesleyan University at Gambier. May 4 Ohio Wesleyan University 61 Kenyon • • Otterbein at Westerville. May 23 . 48 Kenyon Otterbein • } Unfinished p« c one hundred fourteen G. S. Southworth Manager for 1907 Members of Association Prof. L. B. Walton M. ft Long 1907 J- H G. A. Sanford H. L. Foltz M. D. Southworth C. C. W. Judd G. A.Wieland 1908 S C Finne11 L. P. L’Hommedieu E. A. Hughes K. F. Luthy J. E. Thompson page one hundred sixteen KENYON RECORDS Event Record Holder 100 Yard Dash 10 K. S. Rising, 07 220 Yard Dash 23 3-5 F. E. Hall, '06 440 Yard Dash 53 W. H. Brown, 06 880 Yard Dash 1:57 2-5 W. H. Brown,'06 Mile Run 5:01 W. H. Brown. 06 120 Yard Hurdle 17 R. W. Crosby 06 220 Yard Hurdle 28 2-5 W. H. Brown. 06 Running Broad Jump 20 ft. 6 in. W. J. Morris.’02 Running High Jump 5 ft. 4 in. W. H. Brown.'06 16 lb. Hammer Throw 92 ft. J. G. Boggs, 07 16 lh. Shot-Put 38 ft. 3 in. J. G. Boggs, 07 Pole Vault 9 ft. 9 in. V.A.Coolidge. 09 Discus Throw 117 ft. 5 in. J. G. Boggs, 07 1 Mile Relay 1 3:40 ( !A. S. Brown. 06 iW. H. Brown. 06 S. W. Golds- borough, 07 F. E. Hall, ’06 page one hundred aeventeen WEARERS H. M. Eddy S. W. Goldsborough G. A. Sanford A. E. York H. G. Beam G. E. Clarke S. C. Finnell K. F. LutHy F. McGlashan F. W. Aves L. A. Bacon L. R. Brigman C C. Childs V. A. Coolidge J. L. Cunningham P. W. Croshy P. A. Dooman C. H. Dun E. J. Jackson G. C. Jones G. S. Southworth OF THE K Base Ball Track Foot Ball . . Foot Ball Base Ball . Foot Ball, Basket Ball Base Ball Foot Ball, Base Ball, Basket Ball Base Ball . . Track Foot Ball . Foot Ball, Basket Ball Foot Ball . Foot Ball, Track Foot Ball, Base Ball Base Ball . Foot Ball Foot Ball, Basket Ball Basket Ball Base Ball Foot Ball on kunjrrd nfkun THE COLLEGIAN Founded in 1855 Published every other Friday in the collegiate year hy the student-body. Editor -in- Chief Hugh Wilson Patterson Associate Editors Lester Leake Riley Louis Phelps L Hommedieu Charles Lewis Wuehker George Shephard Southworth Anton Weller Coldewey Frank Albert Kapp Harold McConnell Barber William John Bland William Andreu Cuff Business Manager Pierre Kellog Chase Assistant Manager Samuel Cureton page one hundred twenty-three PHILOM ATHESIAN HAT any college organization should have the support of the alumni is a two-fold benefit—a benefit to the organization and a stimulus to the interest among the alumni. Further, it indicates that to older and wiser heads than ours there is a recognition of per- manent and efficient good in the organization, of good of such moment that they are willing to give their time, their money and their experience for the under-graduates’ benefit. Within the past year, the alumni of Kenyon College have instituted active interest in two departments of College activity. It is significant that both of these departments are devoted to the cultivation of litera- ture. The one is the inauguration of an alumnus department in the Collegian, and the other is the determination to hold annual reunions of the Philomathesian Literary Society during Commencement week. The enthusiasm engendered at the first of those meetings last year did not die, but has throughout the year borne fruit of its kind. The old men of Philo have pushed forward the work with renewed vigor pajK one hundred twenty-loar and the new men, catching the spirit of the old. have thrown them- selves with warmth into the task of perpetuating the society and its endeavors. €J Philo is not a debating society merely, but is one in which the en- deavor is first to acquaint its members with religion, science, philoso- phy. biography, history, and all the other branches of investigation, and then to cultivate a style in which to present the knowledge they already possess to others in a pleasing and attractive manner. In short, to produce well-informed men who can express themselves clear- ly and entertainingly either in writing, conversation, or public speaking. With this in view, the endeavor has been to give variety to the programs and to inculcate that indefinable, yet essential element of lit- erature, termed style. q That debating has not been neglected, however, is well attested by the fact that the debating team of the College this year has been com- posed entirely of Philo men. q With the present interest in the organization exhibited by both graduate and under-graduate members, its long established and enviable position will long endure. p S o°f tuoJreJ twenty-live Philomatliesian Literary Society Founded in 1827 Officers H. W. Patterson C. C. W. Judd R. D. Avery L. P. L’Hommedieu R. C. Sykes President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer . Historian . . Curator Programme Committee C. C. W. Judd L. L. Riley P. K. Chase Members 1907 J. T. Brooke L. C. Marsh C. L. Browne J. L. Oldham H. M. Eddy H. W. Patterson C. C W. Judd L L Riley C. C. Underwood 1908 R. D. B. Cahall F. D. McGlashan P. K. Chase R. C. Sykes L. P. L’Hommedieu J. C. L. Pugh J. E. Thompson 1909 R. D. Avery P. B. Barber F. H. Ball A. S. Morrison R. A. Youmans H. W. Neeves 1910 • W. J. Bland H. J. Knapp F. A. Cartmcll H. S. Lybarger W. H. Crow H. G. C. Martin L. C. Denny H. K. Rood L. F. Emerine A. L. Sackctt M. H. Wiseman paje one hundred twraty-MX NU PI KAPPA J THIS present time, nearly fifty years after the great struggle between the North and the South, we are not prone to associate the name of M II A' with the South. If we should inquire into this Society s his- tory before the War, we would find that she was made up almost entirely of Southern sympathizers. Her history from that time until 1903, like that of the Southern states, has been one of recuperation. In 1903 she was again set on her feet, we hope, for the last time. €J This last year’s work has been very encouraging. Although we have been unable to meet in our Hall, whose very atmosphere is con- ducive to literary production, we have had some interesting meetings in the Greek Room. A very noticeable feature of the programs has been the debating. There has been a debate of some kind every other week. The Society hopes in this way to add more interest to that part of Kenyon s life. I am sure that we are all proud to sec Kenyon taking such an active part in inter-collegiate debating, but she still needs more support from the College as a whole. Nu Pi Kappa has been fortunate in obtaining a number of good Freshmen this year. Thus far, these men have shown a great amount of enthusiasm, and will, we think, in the future, do all in their power to hold up the old reputation of .V II A'. on« hundred twenty-scvrn Nu Pi Kappa Literary Society G. W. Mcllwain Founded in 1832 Officers . President F. L. White Vice-President G. S. Southworth • • . Secretary V. A. Coolidge Treasurer M. C. Platt . Censor C. L. Wuehker Critic W. A. Cuff • • . Sergeant-at-Arms 0. E. Watson Members Resident W. P. Reeves 1907 H. L. Foltz R. E. Dyer G. W. Mcllwain G. A. Sanlord F. L. White G. W. Sapp 1908 E. W. Hughes B. L. Jefferson W. V. Morrow W. R. Seth C. L. Wuebker M. C. Platt 1909 L. A. Brigman C. K. Lord V. A. Coolidge J. W. Headington C. H. Dun L. S. Downe Frank Albus p. A. Dooman W. B. Kinkaid G. S. Southworth 1910 M. K. Rankin T. L. Cardillo A. I. Hardy D. G. Gayle A. B. White W. A. Cuff p $e one hundred twcntyetfht PUFF AND POWDER CLUB Organized January 9, 1904 H. M. Eddy G. j. Sturgis S. W. Goldsborough L. L. Riley M. D. Southworth F. L. White H. M. Eddy S. W. Goldsborough G. J. Sturgis W. E. Shaw Officers Staff Members L. C. Marsh C. C. W. Judd F. A. Cartmcll President Secretary T reasurer Stage Manager Property Manager . Electrician H. L. Foltz L. L. Riley R. D. Cahall M. K. Rankin on hundred .Lirty-lL ref 1907 DRAMATIC CLUB L. L. Riley M. D. Southworth A. E. York G. A. Sanford F. L. White Officers . . . Stage Manager Business Manager . . Assistant Business Manager . . Master of Properties . . . Electrician H. M. Eddy H. L. Foltz Mem b e r s L. C. Marsh A. L. Reynolds S. W. Goldsborough L. L. Riley C C. W. Judd G. J. Sturgi P $C oct hundred thirty-four MINSTREL ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTED BY THE PUFF AND POWDER CLUB AND THE GLEE CLUB ROSSE HALL Wednesday Evening, May 1, 1907 Mr. Eddy Ends. Bones Mr. Jackson Mr. Rood Mr. Lord Interlocutor Ends. Tambos Mr. Sheldon Mr. Rankin Mr. Beatty 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 Assisted by the Kenyon Glee Club and Orchestra Grand Opening Chorus Let Me Down Easy” ‘‘Down in the Depths Let It Alone” Bamboo Babv” The Jonah Man Grand Closing Chorus . . . Entire Troupe . . . . Mr. Lord Mr. Childs . . . . Mr. Rankin . . . Mr. Goldsborough . . . . Mr. Sheldon . . . Entire Troupe Intermission Rag Medley Cavaliera de Rusticana” . Messrs. Sheldon. Finnell. Rankin (whistling solo) . Mr. Rood PART SECOND “TRIAL BY JURY By Gilbert and Sullivan A Case of Breach of Promise Judge Plaintiff Counsel for Plaintiff Defendant Foreman of Jury Usher Bridesmaids Jurymen—Messrs. CAST . . . . Mr. Marsh . . . Mr. Cortmell . . . . Mr. Riley Mr. Cahall Mr. Childs . . . Mr. Shaw Messrs. Goldsborough, Judd. Davies. Downe. Cuff. Scott McGlashan, Platt Youmans. Crosby, Kapp, Coolidge, Beatty, Knapp. Rankin. Rood, Siegchrist, Wiseman SCENE—English Court Room pafe one hundred thirty-five 1908 DRAMATIC CLUB Officers K. F. Luthy . . - Stage Manager M. C. Platt . • Business Manager F. D. McGlashan . . - Master of Properties Members H. G. Beam E. W. Hughes R. D. B. Cahall K. F. Luthy G. E. Clarke W. V. Morrow H. K. Davies M. C. Platt R. F. Gordon R. C. Sykes J. E. Thompson Former Members R W- Butl H. L. Grund Guy Conover E H. Reynolds page one buadrrj lUrty-M FACING THE M U S I c A Farce Comedy in Three Acts The Rev. John Smith Mr. Reynolds John Smith—the other Mr. Smith Mr. Luthy Dick Desmond Mr. Gordon Col. Duncan Smith Mr. Beam Sergeant Duffell, of Vine Street Police Station Mr. Clarke Mable, the Curate s Wife Mr. Conover Madge, the other Mr. Smith’s Wife Mr. Grund Miss Fotheringay, of the Bijou Theatre Mr. Butler Mrs. Parting, the other Mr. Smith s Housekeeper Mr. Sykes Place—Room in the other Mr. Smith s Flat 15 Mona Missions, Kensington SYNOPSIS Act I—Before breakfast, 10 o’clock Act II—After breakfast, 10:14; the same morning Act III—Before luncheon, 11:30; the same day on« bunJrcJ |j irty tv n “CHARLEY’S AUNT Presented February 9. 1907 Stephen Spettigue. Solicitor. Oxford Mr. Clarke Col. Sir Francis Chesney. late India Service Mr. Beam Jack Chesney, Under-graduate Mr. Sykes Charley Wychom, St. Olde College Mr. Gordon Lord Fencourt Babberly, Oxford Mr. Luthy Brassett, College Scout . Mr. Hughes The New Footman Mr. Platt Dona Lucia D’Alvadorez, from Brazil Mr. Cahali Kitty Verdun, Spettigue s Ward . Mr. Davies Amy Spettigue. his niece Mr. Thompson Ella Delshay, an orphan Mr. Morrow SYNOPSIS Act I—Jack Chesney s rooms in College When pious frauds are dispensations’’—Hudibras Act II—Garden outside of Jack s Rooms While there s Tea there's Hope’’—Beowulf Act III—Drawing-room at Spettigue’s House Dinner lubricates business”—King Alfred Dooms Place Oxford, England Time—Last summer P g oae hundred thirty-eight K . 0 . K . M Motto Omnes Curae Parvulae Sint P. A. Crosby A. W. Coldewey C. H. Dun P. B. Barber P. L. Day G. C. Jones L. S. Downe F. W. Aves W. W. Cott H. W. Cole Yell Wbo s Them ! Who s Them ! We re Them! K 0 K M Color Dark Green i: i I paf onr tunJreJ tbirty-ninc This space is reserved, by request, for Kenneth Luthy, anticipating the return to the Hill of “Kenyon Spirit. Editor s Note—Courage! Lute. Harcourt opens in the fall. p fe one Hundred forty MUSICAL Raymond Du Bois Cahall, 08 Frederick Robert Tscban, 05, Bexley, 07 Clarence Chester Childs, 09 Robert Keyes Owens, 10 . Leader Accompanist Business Manager . Assistant Manager First Tenors L. L. Riley, 07 R. D. B. CaHall. ’08 H. J. Knapp, 10 H. K. Rood, ’10 W. A. Cuff. '10 J. H. Scott. ’10 Second Tenors S. W. Goldsborough, 07 J. T. Brooke, 07 C. C. W. Judd. ’07 M. H. Baker, 09 L. S. Downe, 09 F. A. Cartmell, 10 Fir9t Basses F. R. Tschan, 05 G. C. Lee, 06 L. C. Marsh, 07 M. C. Platt, 08 H. K. Davies. 08 M. K. Rankin.’10 Second Basses F. D. McGlashan, 08 W. E. Shaw. ’09 R. A. Youmans, 09 C. C Childs. 09 F. B. Beatty, 10 C. D. Seigchrist, 10 page one hundred forty-thri Concert of the Glee and Mandolin Clubs ROSSE HALL February 12. 1907 1 (a) Alumni Song . . Carmen Kcnyonensis (Music by the Rev. L. A. Daniels, Bexley. 1902) (b) Then We 11 Remember Tbee . Carmen Kenyonensis Glee Club 2 The Giggler Mandolin Club 3 (a) The Scout—Song of the Uhlan (b) Honey I Wants Yer Now Glee Club 4 Solo, Lanaghan's Log Mr. Marsh 5 La Sorella—March Espanola Mandolin Club 6 Schneider’s Band Mr. Marsh and Glee Club INTERMISSION Rag Medley Messrs. Sheldon, Rankin PART SECOND 7 Stop that Knocking! Messrs. Cahall. Lee. Rankin, Childs 8 Lobsters Romnad—a humoresque Mandolin Club 9 The Bells of St. Michael’s Tower Glee Club 10 A Frangeza Mandolin Club 11 Sailing . . . The Rev. Wm. J. Long Glee Club 12 Alma Mater . . . Carmina Kenyonensis Glee and Mandolin Clubs ANNUAL TRIPS 1906-1907 . . . January 4, 1907 . . January 7, 1907 . . . January 8, 1907 . . January 9. 1907 . . January 10, 1907 January 11, 1907 January 12, 1907 . . February 21, 1907 March 1. 1907 Newark. Ohio Shelby Sandusky Toledo Wauseon Defiance Marion Mt. Vernon Canton C. L. Haines F. Campana Collin Coe Lobr Gallini A. G. Mason Sheldon Steele Kuyvett Coster p gr one hundred forty-five COLLEGE CHOIR John Thompson Brooke Frederick R. Tschan Leader Organist Airs J. T. Brooke L. S. Downe C. C. W. Judd F. A. Cartmell S. W. Goldshorough J. A. Scott H. J. Knapp R. D. B. Cahall F. B. Beatty W. E. Shaw R. A. Youmans Tenors W. A. Cuff First Basses Second Basses C. C. Childs H. K. Rood F. D. McGlashan M. C. Platt M. K. Rankin page one hundred forty-six VOCAL QUARTET 3 First Tenor Raymond D. B. Cahall Second Tenor Stuart W. Goldshorough First Bass Marquis Kemper Rankin Second Bass Clarence Chester Childs page one HunireJ orty-aeven COLLEGE ORCHE J. E. Thompson H. L. Foltz First Violin J. E. Thompson H. K. Davies Second Violin G. A. Wieland Cellos W. P. Reeves. W. E. Gorsuch Bass E. B. Gorsuch Coronet R. A. Gorsuch Trombone C. C. Childs Clarinet L. H. Ingham Drums and Traps H. L. Foltz S T R A Leader Manager M. H. Wiseman page on hunirrj forty-nine Piano R. M. Fulwider EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE KENYON ASSEMBLY 3 Prof. William Peters Reeves Chairman Frederick Worley Aves John Thompson Brooke Raymond Du Bois Cahall Rolla Eugene Dyer Harry Lee Foltz Harold Cameron Forster Malcolm Cyrus Platt - 7 THE KENYON ASSEMBLY Officers Hugh Wilson Patterson Lester Leake Riley Frederick Dye McGlasHan Dr. Leslie Howard Ingham President Vice-President T reasurer Honor Committee John Thompson Brooke George Abel Sanford Andrew Ellis York Samuel Cochran Finnell Louis Phelps L Hommedicu Charles Holman Dun Harold McConnell Barber page one hundred hl'ty-two CHESS CLUB Prof. 0. E. Watson Prof. L. B. Walton Frank Albus W. G. Bland V. A. Coolidge P. A. Dooman A. I. Hardy H. S. Lybarger H. G. C. Martin H. W. Neeves H. R. S. Potter G. S. SouthwortH p ge one hundred fifty-three CANOE CLUB Officers Commodore Secretary and Treasurer Prof. W. P. Reeves Prof. L. B. Walton Members Prof. A. C. Hall Prof. L. H. Ingham Prof. E. B. Nichols Prof. W. P. Reeves Prof. L. B. Walton Prof. 0. E. Watson Prof. R. B. Allen Prof. D. L. Dunlap C. C. Childs W. A. Clements E. R. Moeser F. R. Tschan A. E. York page one hundred ifty-fonr BANQUET SENIOR SOUTHERN HOTEL Columbus, Obio, May 31, 1906 Frederick Hess Hamm • Toastmaster Toasts “Desipere in loco . Arthur J. Larmon •‘Who's Who?” • Frederick J. Hartman T The New Harcourt . Edgar R. Moeser In the Name of Alma Mater Howard P. Fischbach The Broader Outlook . Aaron S. Warman The Spirit of Kenyon • t Silas B. Axtell The New World” . Alfred K. Taylor ptfe one LundreJ Utyii JUNIOR BANQUET SOUTHERN HOTEL Columbus. Ohio, May 31. 1906 H. W. Patterson Toasts 11T •• Kenyon “The Days to Be “Memories “The Class of 1907 “Athletics “The Social Bent Toastmaster L. L. Riley C. C. W. Judd A. L. Reynolds S. W. Goldsborough K. S. Rising H. M. Eddy ptfc one tunJreJ fifty-seven SOPHOMORE BANQUET LEACHMAN’S CHOP HOUSE Columbus, Ohio, May 31, 1906 Kenneth F. Luthy Toasts Come, Let’s All be Merry Harcourt” All for Kenyon The Approaching Duties of Upper Classmanship Kenyon s New Athletic Director . Toastmaster Guy Conover Ralph F. Gordon Ralph C. Sykes Elliot H. Reynolds George E. Clarke pig one hunJreJ fifty- tgkt FRESHMAN BANQUET HARTMAN HOTEL Columbus. Ohio, May 31, 1906 Leonard Downe Toastmaster Toasts “The Class of 1909 William Shaw “Athletics . Clarence Childs Harcourt Roy Reeves Coming Out of the Woods . Charles Lord “Kenyon Spirit: What it is! Paul Barber “Match-making” Stanley Allen “The Future of 1909 Raymond Youmans page one KunJffJ fiity-nine ■ — ■ THE JUNIOR PROMENADE ROSSE HALL Monday Evening, February 11, 1907 Committee Raymond Caball Frederick McGlashan George E. Clarke Malcolm C. Platt Kenneth F. Luthy Ralph C. Sykes Patronesses Mrs. William F. Peirce Mrs. Edward C. Benson Mrs. Theodore Sterling Mrs. John Trimble Mrs. G. C. S. Southworth Mrs. Hosea W. Jones Mrs. L. H. Ingham Mrs. Henry T. West Mrs. David F. Davies Mrs. Barker Newhall Mrs. George F. Smythe Mrs. Lee B. Walton Mrs. Russell S. Devol Mrs. Claude N. Wyant Mrs. Francis K. Brooke Mrs. George C. Lee pafe one hundred sixty-one Seventy-Eighth Annual Commencement 1906 Programme 2:30 P. M. Saturday, June Twenty-third Base Ball Game . Benson Athletic Field 7:15 P. M. Stires Prize Debate Rosse Hall 8:30 P. M. Informal Reception Rosse Hall 7:30 A. M. Sunday, June Twenty-fourth Celebration of the Holy Communion Church of the Holy Spirit 10:30 A. M. Ordination Service Sermon by the Rev. R. G. Noland Rector of St. Paul’ Church. Chillicothr Ordination to the Diaconate by the Bishop of Southern Ohio 7:30 P. M. Baccalaureate Sermon By the Bishop of Michigan City, of the Class of 1872 Monday, June Twenty-fifth 9:30 A. M. Tennis Tournament Near Old Kenyon 10:30 A. M. Russell Prize Speaking Colburn Hall 2:30 P. M. Base Ball Game Benson Athletic Field Alumni vs. Undergraduates 5:00 P. M. Meeting of the Alumni of the Philo Hall Philomathesian Society page one hundred ixiy-two 7:30 P. M. Senior Play . . Rosse Hall The Class of 1906 present The Taming of the Shrew 10:30 P. M. Fraternity Banquets 8:00 A. M. Tuesday. June Twenty-sixth Bexley Alumni Breakfast . Colburn Hall 9:30 A. M. Annual Meeting of the Board of Trustees. Hubbard Hall 4:00 to 6:00 P. M. President and Mrs. Peirce at Home to Alumni and Commencement Visitors 7:30 P. M. Concert by the Glee and Mandolin Clubs Rosse Hall 9:00 P. M. Promenade Concert 9-.00P. M. Reunion of the Class of 1896 9:00 A. M. Wednesday, June Twenty-seventh Morning Prayer . Church of the Holy Spirit 9:30 A. M. Seventy-eighth Annual Commencement Rosse Hall Class Orator, Frederick Hess Hamm, 06 Alumni Orator, The Hon. Albert Douglass. 72 12:00 M. Annual Meeting and Initiation of Phi Beta Kappa Philo Hall 1:00 P. M. Alumni Luncheon . Rosse Hall Toastmaster, Francis T. A. Junkin, 84 4:00 P. M. Alumni Business Meeting . Ascension Hall 8:00 P. M. Senior Reception page one hundred ixty-three Rosse Hall The Seventy-Eighth ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT of KENYON COLLEGE AND BEXLEY HALL Wednesday, June 27 Nineteen Hundred Six Music Invocation The Rt. Rev. William A. Leonard Bishop of Ohio Announcements President Peirce Valedictory Address Frederick Hess Hamm, 06 Music Alumni Oration The Hon. Albert Douglass, 72 Music Conferring of Degrees Benediction The Rt. Rev. Boyd Vincent Bishop of Southern Ohio page one hundred aixty-four Degrees in Course Bachelor of Arts Arthur Lewis Brown. Fifth Honor M an Walter Hoyt Brown Edward Ryant Dyer Frederick Robert Graves James Wallace Hamilton Frederick Hess Hamm. Third Honor Man William Hammond Edgar Ralph Moeser. First Honor Man James Athey Stephens Alfred Kingsley Taylor Samuel Edward 1 hompson Aaron Stanley Warman Bachelor of Philosophy Ernest Allen Duncan Howard Philip Fischbach Charles McGibeny Roberts. Second Honor Man Bachelor of Letters Silas Blake Axtel Charles McElroy Ballard John Levi Cable Reginald Whitney Crosby Frederick Jacob Hartman, Fourth Honor Man Bachelor of Science Walter Allen Booth George Clinton Lee. Jr. Honorary Degrees Doctor of Laws Andrew Carnegie, New York. Conferred April 26. 1906 The Hon. Albert Douglass, 72 Chillicothe Bexley Hall Bachelor of Divinity William Ladd Torrance Harry Martin Babin Elmer Nelson Owen Certificate of Graduation Henry Jerome Simpson on hundred nixty-fivc THE SENIOR PLAY “The Taming of the Shrew” A Shakespearean Drama in Five Acts PERSONS IN THE INDUCTION CAST A Lord Christopher Sly, a tinker Hostess Page Huntsmen Mr. Lee . . Mr. Crosby . . Mr. Ballard Mr. Hammond Messrs. Booth, Cable, Underwood Servants Messrs. Nicholas, Warman and Fischbach and Players Baptista, a rich gentleman of Padua . Mr. Roberts Vincentio, an old gentleman of Pisa . Mr. A. L. Brown Lucentio, Vicentio s son, in love with Bianca Mr. W. H. Brown Petruchio, a gentleman of Verona, suitor to Katharina Mr. Moeser Gremio Hortensio Tranio Biondello Grumio Curtis A Pedant | suitors to Bianca j servants to Lucentio I servants to Petruchio Katharina, the Shrew Bianca Widow Tailor Haberdasher Servants as above Mr. Axtell Mr. Hamm I | daughters to Baptista | Mr. Hamilton Mr. Hartman Mr. Dyer Mr. Stephens Mr. Thompson Mr. Taylor Mr. Graves Mr. Forster Mr. Mcllwain Mr. Duncan p ge one hundred ixty- ix Scenel. Before an alehouse. Scene2. Bedchamber in the lord's house. ACT I Scene 1. Padua; a public place. Scene 2. Before Hortensio s house. ACTII Scene 1. Padua; room in Baptista s house. ACT III Scenel. Baptistas house. Scene 2. Before Baptistas house. ACT IV Scene 1. Petruchio s country house. Scene 2. Padua; before Bap- tista s house. Scene 3. A room in Petruchio’s house. Scene 4. Padua; before Baptista s house. Scene 5. A public road. ACT V Scene 1. Padua; before Lucentio s house. Scene 2. Padua; Lu- centio’s house. pip one hundred w‘x«y- even msssmemmsm SENIOR RECEPTION Committee Alfred K. Taylor Arthur L. Brown. Jr. James W. Hamilton George C. Lee Reginald W. Crosby Edward R. Dyer Frederick J. Hartman Patronesses Mrs. William F. Peirce Mrs. Theodore Sterling Mrs. Hosea W. Jones Mrs. Edward C. Benson Mrs. John Trimble Mrs. G. C. S. Southworth Mrs. Leslie H. Ingham Mrs. Henry T. West Mrs. George C. Mrs. David F. Davies Mrs. Barker Newhall Mrs. George F. Smythe Mrs. Lee B. Walton Mrs. Russell S. Devol Mrs. George B. Halstead Mrs. Claude N. Wyant Mrs. Francis K. Brooke Lee p g« on hundrrj jixty-tifht COLLEGE PREACHERS The Rev. R. G. Noland, Chiilicothe, Ohio June 24. 1906 The Rt. Rev. John Hazen White, D D. June 24. 1906 Bishop of Michigan City The Rt. Rev. William A. Leonard. D. D. July 25. 1906 Bishop of Ohio The Rev. H. W. Jones, D. D., Gambier, Ohio August 5, 1906 The Rt. Rev. William A. Leonard, D. D. August 12, 1906 Bishop of Ohio The Rt. Rev. William A. Leonard, D. D. November 4, 1906 Bishop of Ohio The Rev. Lewis P. Franklin, Newark, Ohio December 9. 1906 The Rt. Rev. Francis K. Brooke, D. D. January 13, 1907 Bishop of Oklahoma The Rev. 0. E. Watson, D. D., Gambier. Ohio January 27, 1907 The Rt. Rev. Boyd Vincent, D. D. March 10. 1907 Bishop of Southern Ohio The Rev. Abner L. Frazer, Youngstown, Ohio April 21. 1907 patfc one hundred •ixtyninr THE BEDELL LECTURES The Rt. Rev. John Williams. D. D., LL. D. “The World’s Witness to Christ.’ 1881 The Rt. Rev. Henry Cotterell. D. D. Revealed Religion in its Relation to the Moral Being of God. 1883 The Rt. Rev. Hugh Miller Thompson, D. D. The World and the Logos. 1885 The Rev. James MoCosh. S. T. D., LL. D. “The Religious Aspect of Evolution.” 1887 The Rt. Rev. David H. Greer, D. D. The Historical Christ, the Moral Power of History.’ 1889 The Rt. Rev. Arthur Cleveland Coxe, D. D., LL. D. ‘‘Holy Writ and Modern Thought. 1891 The Rt. Rev. William A. Leonard. D. D. The Witness of the American Church to Pure Christianity. 1893 The Rt. Rev. Boyd Vincent. D. D. “God and Prayer: The Reasonableness of Prayer.’ 1895 The Rev. William Reed Huntington, D. D. A National Church. 1897 The Rev. Morgan Dix, D. D., D. C. L. The Supernatural Character of the Christian Religion.’ 1899 The Rt. Rev. Henry C. Potter, D. D., D. C. L. Man, Men and Their Master. 1901 The Rt. Rev. William Croswell Doane, D. D. Evidence, Experience, Influence.” 1903 The Rt. Rev. Arthur C. A. Hall. D. D. I he Relations of Faith and Lile. 1905 one hundred «verity m OLD KENYON INCE its renovation. Old Kenyon is Old Kenyon just as much as it used to be. On the outside, the same spires and pinnacles, the same old English Ivy, the same archaic stonework are seen that were seen almost a century ago. Without, all to betray that there has been a change are the hospitable colonial lamps that overhang the newly hung doors of Flemish oak, and the white painted squares of the win- dow frames that have taken the place of the old weather-beaten ones. But within, what a change! In the basement everything is a model of harmony and neat mag- nificence. With the ex- ception of the arrangement of the stairways descend- ing from above, the plan of the basement on the whole is the same as of old. Notwithstanding such is the difference in the quality of the materials used that one familiar with old Old Ken- yon would scarcely recognize the place. The walls are snowy white and make a pretty contrast with the jet black pipes that pass over them. The gray marble slabs that enclose the various bath rooms P fe one hundred «cventy-two are held in position by bright metal tubes. The arched top of the long asbestos-cov- ered furnace is built below the level of the floor, and is shut off by a high screen of iron. On a winter's day, the roaring of its fire and the steam pipes that run in various directions from its top bespeak the comfort in the rooms above. These rooms above are almost palatial in appearance. They have bard wood floors, panels of Flemish oak serve as a wall for a distance of four feet above the floor. Above the panels arc the perfectly white walls and ceiling, from the center of which gas chandeliers of a quaint design bang suspended. Electric lamp conveniences are in a condition to be made available straightway, in case the gas fails at any time. Under wide window seats of the dark oak are concealed the steam ra- diators. One of the short-comings of the old Old Kenyon is done away with by the spacious closet in each room. Massive doors of the same material as the panels lead into the balls. These rooms for the most part are divided into suites. On the second floor of the east and west wings are bath rooms much resembling in all but size those in the basement. The balls are unusually fine. Here the darkness of the stained oak walls and the stair cases is relieved by the brass plating with which the walls are studded, and by the ceilings of bard pine of a yellow hue. In the wings, the first two flights of stairs occupy the same po- sition as they formerly did; but on the third floor the ball leads page one hunJrrJ aeventy-tkree straight back into a sort of lofty recess, paneled with the Flemish oak from the floor to the ceiling, a distance of twenty feet. From thence leads a short flight of stairs into the Bull s Eye, so named from the re- semblance of its two round windows to the eye of an ox. To ascend into the Bull s Eye would be the culmination of all the surprises that an old Kenyon man, a visitor here, would meet. Form- erly it was divided into two rooms, separated by a hall. Now there are no partitions and no hall; so that one long room is found with the bull s eye on the north and south facing each other; under these are long window seats. In the wall between these windows and opposite the spot where the staircase ascends, is an old-fashioned fire-place, a fire- place where real wood is burned and where tongs must be used. When the dying embers in the grate cast their glow upon the dark oak walls, one might easily imagine that time had rolled back several centuries and that he was in some feudal castle. Yes, there has been much altera- tion. But there is no need to fear, Old Kenyon still retains her identity. The men of intellect and the sturdy athletes that have come out from her walls in the past will come out from them in the future for Change Old Kenyon as you will Old Kenyon is Old Kenyon still. B. L. J. P t on hundred v oty-four — — BOLD RILEY Just as the train pulled in one morn, A maid toward it came in haste, Her cheek was flushed, her mien forlorn; But she did not one moment waste. The unrelenting whistle blew; The monster black began to heave. The engineer did little rue That he a hapless maid should leave. Bold Riley saw the maid's distress. And in his chivalry he said: “I will that fair one's wrongs redress And wreak my vengeance on your head. Then up he strode with lowering frown And pointed to the hast’ning maid; “Stop hound, he cried, Avast, slow down And wait for her that was delayed.’ The fierce light in his eye grew mild Scarce ere the train began to slow. But the maid drew near and coyly smiled And said: “Why, I didn t want to go. pafc one hundred seventy- ! THE SPIRIT OF THE HILL UT OF the riling sun. the Bishop came into the western wilderness. At the shore of the Great Lake he found that the winter cold had drawn over the face of the waters a crystal visor of ice, which at first hade fair to hinder his progress. But passage was still possible over the ice-covered surface of the Lake itself, by way of a broad glassy-floored vale, on either side of which rose great ranges of blanched ice-mountains, repeating in their curves the outlines of the shore, rough, craggy and precipitous, yet swung with a delicate fret-work of frost whose strands might have been spun by snow spiders in the land of everlasting cold. The sun filled the cracks and hollows with purple shadows and from the peaks called forth dazzling slashes of white fire. Underfoot lay great snow spangles; while in the keen, cold sky above the eagles whirled and screamed their delight in the feast of fish pro- vided for them by the freezing of the ice. With some difficulty the Bishop procured the services of a driver and his sleigh, and thus rode into the West, the sun-burnished pathway before him as bright, if not as warm, as the throbbing purpose in his heart. Q From the Great Lake he plunged into the forest and traveled many days. At length he halted. He built a house and barns; he laid off fields for grain and fields for pasture; with his own hands he broke ground and plowed; with the sweat of his own brow he sowed and reaped; with hand, heart and mind he worked, and day by day wrested from the wilderness fuller possession of a spot which he hoped to make a well-spring of knowledge for the sturdy youth of that rough country. pft on hundred tcvcnty-Mven Q In the midst of the work, however, a voice, faint and distant at first but slowly rising stronger and more distinct, sounded in his ears. His pulse quickened responsively and an indefinable desire to follow came over him. But he looked on this desire as an evil impulse toward a siren call designed to draw him from his appointed work and lead him nowhither; and hence, in the beginning he fought it stoutly. CJ He shut his ears, but still the voice floated thin and clear on the air, ever more alluring, ever wakening in him a wilder unrest. With defiant energy he plied ax and plow harder, thinking thus to drown the voice in the din of his own noisy activity, hut still it trembled on his hearing with every whisper of the breath of heaven. CJ Do what he would, he could not shut it out. And in his own breast, despite his efforts, the answer rose unceasingly. He found himself listening for the voice between the blows of his ax. or pausing in the sunset glow between the furrows to turn his ear toward the wooded fastness of the distant hills. With every passing day the call grew more insistent, and as he slowly yielded to its influence, the in- articulate cry resolved itself into the single word “Come. It reached him, clothed in the unspeakable calm of a word that has traversed in- finity and in his heart of hearts the Bishop answered fervently I Come. Over mountains and seas he traveled, alone, oftentimes discouraged, sometimes almost despairing, yet following always the call of that voice, until at last one evening saw him stop weary and worn at the foot of the height from which the summons ascended. That night he pitched his tent beneath the trees at the end of his journey. But as he sat in the dim glow of his lard lamp, a great wave of doubt swept over him: whether the voice had spoken truly, whether it had spoken to him and not to some other; whether, after all, he had not wasted his strength on a vain undertaking. In an agony of doubt he strained p«fle one KunJreJ seventy-eijlit to catch its accents again, but the throbbing oi his own heart filled his ears with such a tumult that he could hear nothing else. His spirit took fright and only by a mighty effort of will did he keep from rush- ing back through the night over the road he had come. He stood tense in the struggle. But at that instant the light wavered as though fanned by the flutter of passing robes and all the air was suddenly sweet with the warm wet perfume of the forest. Soft hands seemed to move about his brows, while at once his doubts and fears fell back, broken like spray. Confidence sprang into new life and his peace of mind returned. In a perfect calm he lay down to take his rest and fit him- self for the great beginning on the morrow. CJ With the day he rose for his second conquest of the wilderness. Again he went forth to open clearings, fell trees, hew out timbers, dig stone; to go over again all the laborious course from the beginning, that he might rear stately buildings and turn the bristly Hill into an or- dered abode of learning. But the voice was with him always, sus- taining and encouraging. It spoke to him from the eddy of the river, in the murmur of the forest, in the music of the birds, and at times he fancied he almost caught the rustle of steps in the leaves at his side or the flash of garments disappearing behind a distant oak. Thus he laid stone on stone and fixed timber after timber until all was finished. Then he sent abroad his invitation. But blending with his own voice he heard another, the voice that had come riding on the wind to him when he himself was far away: and he knew that he had not called alone. 4J His call was not unanswered. From far and near the sons of the wilderness, natural and adopted, came to learn of wisdom at the rev- erend feet of the Bishop. Like a patriarch he guided the affairs of his little community, from the grinding of their corn to the guidance of their souls. But by and by cupidity raised its fatty head and paf 00 KunJrfJ cvcnty nine questioned the right by which he exercised his authority. With wounded indignation he beheld the ingratitude of his children, scarcely believing at first that it could be true. When convinced beyond a doubt, however, he cast his lot on the side of sacrifice, preferring to re- sign all he had striven for rather than blow up a gusty conflict. He therefore mounted his horse and turned his face toward new fields of labor in the still more distant west. fj Before he passed out of sight of the Hill he turned back for one last look. His face was heavy with sadness and drawn with yearning. That glimpse of roof through the trees—had he not built it? That spiral of blue smoke—had he not kindled the fire that gave it? And the men gathered round the blaze—had he not called them? Had he not gathered them together? Had he not provided for them? Had he not taught them and loved them? And now—with difficulty the Bishop restrained his emotions. Suddenly he became aware of a figure beside him. He turned his head slowly and looked. There stood a maiden, clothed in wonderful garments of melting brown and green, her hair chapleted with flowers and her person breathing forth the same forest perfume that had greeted him on the night of his ar- rival. Her face was unutterably calm and peaceful, grave but not sad. She smiled with engaging familiarity when she perceived the Bishop saw her. fl ‘‘Pray, who are you?” he asked in blunt surprise. You know me not? she questioned in reply. He started at the sound of her voice—the same that had been echo- ing in his ears so constantly. I have been with you, went on the maiden, “simply from the be- ginning. On my wooded height I called you from afar. I gave your mind the strength to persevere, your hand the vigor for its work. And yet you know me not? I am the Spirit of the Hill.” page one hundred eighty The Spirit of the Hill!’ echoed the Bishop. I have felt your presence and have striven long to know you, hut I could not. Why so vague and so impalpable? Why have you never thus appeared? Why never met me face to face as you do now? Why have you spoken hut in signs, not openly? How much I could have done— how much, if only I had known you so! So must it ever he, answered the maiden sadly. Only those about to leave can see and know me as I am. Such shall he the ex- perience of the generations to come. Cf A cloud of remembrance crossed the Bishop s face. About to leave! he exclaimed gloomily, yes. about to leave all that I love. But the sorest cross of all, 0 Spirit of the Hill, is thus to lose you in the very instant that I find you. €|[ Nay, replied the maiden quaintly. Whither thou goest there go I. Where thou bidest there bide I. Houses of wood and stone have you built for others but in your heart you have prepared a home for me. There shall I dwell forever, and in the evening of your life I shall stand on your horizon like a rosy cloud against the deepening gloom of the approaching night. Scarcely had the words died on her lips before she was gone; and the Bishop, a new light in his face, hopefully turned his horse s head again toward the west and rode slowly forward into the setting sun. Maxwell Budd Long COLLEGE DAYS 0 Day , How with reluctant, clinging fingers We should loose you from our hold; How. as the greedy miser lingers, lingers. Loth to spend his coins of gold. We grudgingly should live your precious hours. Dropping each one with a sigh; How closely we should hoard your precious flowers Now so carelessly flung by, Could we hut know how, in the coming seasons. When Life’s ardors droop forlorn. And rapine-smoke of Time’s invading treasons Blurs the clearness of the morn, How we with sighs and thoughts of hitter leaven Working in our cup of cares. Shall learn that once we sojourned blind in heaven. And walked with angels unawares; And how we shall, with tears of stormy flowing, Throw our faces in the sands, To think we looked back to watch you going. Nor longer held your parting hands! 0. E. W. pjfe one hundred tifbty-two A CONFESSION i HEY are gone, those sweetly singing snipe whose gor- geous plumage and melodious caroling were heretofore the life of the country surrounding Gambier. No longer will the rippling waters of the silvery Koko- sing he accompanied by their warbling, for they are gone. It was with murderous intent I pursued them, and even now methinks I see their feathers clinging to my laundry bag, and their blood reeking from my fingers. Poor homeless creatures, where they are now I know not, but I do know that I drove them away, and to ease my conscience-stricken heart I must confess. It was the evening of------------- , 1906 (curse the day) when we were gazing out of the window over the dark valley to the hills be- yond. just above which the new moon was casting its feeble light toward us as if wishing a final good night before sinking. Just then we heard a dreamy Who! Who! far down the wooded hillside. “What was that? I asked. ‘‘Snipe, answered one of the upperclassmen. Then turning to another he continued: “Hey! Red, don’t you think this would be a nice night to go poaching? Just light enough to see and too dark to be seen. They’ll run nicely tonight.” Just then the call down the hillside was repeated. Evidently the leader was calling his flock together for a quiet stroll, tjj “Hear it?” shouted Red. “Martin you run to your room, bring a box of matches and a laundry bag or pillow slip, and if we don t have some snipe for breakfast it will not be your fault. pafe one hundred eighty-three Of course I complied with his request. (For shame) I knew it was wrong to poach. Father had often told me what trouble he had had to keep such outlaws from his estate in Berkshire County, but the spirit of deviltry had entered me and the thought of snipe on toast for breakfast forced me to yield. Adown the hill we slowly went. We artful poachers three; For on this cruel mission sent Were “L Homy, “Red” and me. Another Freshman followed. But, since he had no sand, I ordered him to stay at home (He turned at my command.) Near by the bridge I ordered “Halt! To hold a consultation. And then, to cheer the faithful band, I gave a declamation. “Fellows, said I, “I know not fear, I challenge any man that s here To show if possible a peer With the record of a past career Like mine. I d gladly lead you on again. But since I m not American I knowing nothing of your plan Resign. Lead on then, 0 ye sager wights I 11 not deprive you of your rights For the better or for sadder plights I m thine. p fe one hundred tighty-four Chief Red Horse who then took command Was wont to hasten on For don t you see My men, said he, Those snipe will soon be gone. We scrambled down the steep incline And crossed to yonder brush By the river bank, Twas dark and dank And filled my shoes with slush. The leader whispered in my ear, Now Martin you may stay right here And hold your laundry sack. Just hold it down close to the ground And we will try to sneak around And chase the snipe all back. What when they come up close to me? Then light a match my boy, says he, And hold it low so they can see Just where to go. The chimes struck ten just as they went T ward solid ground their course was bent. When I could hear their steps no more. I listened to the river pour Its flood toward the south. From yonder elm dead. By which the river sped, There came a very loud and weird Who! Who! By jove you crary loon. Thought I, we 11 have you soon p t one Hun Jr J And all your foolish tribe we’ll capture too. A match I struck and raised it high And then I brought it low. But methink the sky Must have held his eye For he didn’t know where to go. I tried it twice, I tried it thrice. I tried it many times. While all he d do Was that horrid Who! Who! (What’s that? Once more the chimes!) Ah! then began to dawn That all his mates were gone And that our coming here drove them away. I with his mournful cries Begun to sympathize. Who took them pray?” was what he wished to say. I gan to think upon my crime. And as I gazed down on the slime The croak of a frog From yonder bog Bade me go. So you know, I went and spent no time. While passing by my comrades door I thought I heard a gentle snore And then an exclamation. But knowing where I left the boys And wishing too to cause no noise I waived investigation. C. L. W. p gr one hundred eighty BACK IN 1906—1907 T THE sound of tlie footfall I sat up in bed, vainly peering through the gloom of the room lit hy a moon- ray from one round window. Then I saw a misty figure appear in the beam of light, a spectre, clad in ghostly sweater and corduroys. ••Well, I began. “You went to Kenyon once, did you not? reflectively began the Thing which, gradually as my eyes became accustomed to the dimness of the room, assumed the figure of an old man with a skull cap set rakishly on one side of his head. “Yes, in the year 1906-1907, I answered. “Have you ever thought of those old days spent on the Hill under the beneficent guidance of Fat and Bill Weaver? “Often, quite often. It would not he half had to live that year over again. “No? Then come with me. He hacked out of the beam of light and drifted over to the door. Snatching a bathrobe and a pair of slippers I followed him out into the night. m m m We stood by the chapel while the hell was striking the hour of eight. Out poured a throng of boys clad in nondescript fashion, jer- seys and soft shirts entirely supplanting the more conventional forms of attire. Suddenly they stopped and turned toward the path. Up the path in perfect form, with regular-distance steps, ran a bearded page oat hundred eighty-Kven man. The tails of his walking-coat flapped in the wind, making him look not unlike a beetle on a spree as, with eyes fixed on the distant hut rapidly moving postofflce, he moved, an Apollo,—with flapping coat tails, a Siegfried—with glasses and high collar. Enraptured at the exhibition of manly grace the boys stood speechless awhile, then burst into loud applause. The athlete one never turned his eyes, running with the same even tread up to his box and—his letter from his dear one. My gauzy guide murmured Excuse me,’ turned aside and gently coughed thrice in his sleeve. It was night: we stood at the end of a short archway between two tall buildings. Hearing a faint rustling and muffled voices I turned —to see a quickly-rising flame burst from the roof of a diminutive frame edifice. Fire! Fire! Fire!! rang the cry through the building on my right; and in pajamas, bathrobes and coats, out poured eighteen or twenty fellows. Fire! Fire! Sound the alarm-bell! Great conflagration!! Every- body out!! A child! Save the child!’ shouted one brave fellow and after dashing into the roaring furnace, he returned bearing aloft his rescued prize. Dropping it to the ground he turned again to the glorious work of rescue. Footsteps were heard approaching and through the archway rushed another and a larger crowd of fellows, panting and exhausted. They saw the blaze and stopped, their expressions changing from the Ah. a cold hot, one. to the Rot, its flat one. Then endeavoring to show that I can run miles and still be cool and not panting,’ he himself page one hundred eighty-eight strode, nonchalantly changing his bucket from the side visible to the holocaust and the rescuers, forth from the archway and calmly gazed at the fire. “Ah, some of the boys are enjoying themselves I see,’ he thun- dered benignly and putting on his tarpaulin he moved majestically on- ward. The night was pleasant and he was merely out for a short stroll. That was all. Stunned by the sublime coolness and the magnificent nerve the fel- lows, left weak and nerveless, looked longingly after the retreating form. Then one of them murmured the world-old query, What’s the use? To that another gave the world-old and only correct answer, “There isn’t any.’ We found ourselves in a small, raftered room. A row of battered chairs and an aged desk comprised the furniture, giving the room an effect of monastic simplicity. At the desk sat a be-spcctacled man with a red cravat. Twenty fellows dozed in the chairs. “Um. well, you may begin. Line 483, he said with an Oh, life’s a horrible bore air. Number one read slowly and with painful effort. Um, well I suppose that that s the best that you can do. Next! Number one woke No. two, handed him the book, pointed out the place and went to sleep. Number two read, woke Number three, passed him the book and retired again to slumber. Down the line went the book, temporarily awakening each in turn. “That’s all. Next time to line 625. The line awoke and straggled out. Gained twenty-five minutes on this hour. I heard one say. P t one Hundred righty-ninr It was the same room, same chairs, table and fellows—hut another man. Small, rather stooped, with fuzzy short beard and peering eyes, he stood balancing himself first on one foot and then on the other, while the erstwhile sleepy fellows cowered and shivered as the fateful spectacles turned on them. “Decline ‘Diearme Frau,’ snapped the Spectacles. I—I can’t,’ stammered the frightened student. “You can’t!! Can’t decline that!! What did you come here for then? Might just as well sit on a fence and whistle! Next man!! Die arme Frau Des arme Frau— Oh, what do you think you’re doing? Is there any sense in that? You must fe—e—el the German! Oh, well—’’ It struck twelve. Slowly the class arose, softly and slowly started for the door, then broke in a body, all squeezing through at once. Outside they mopped their streaming foreheads. One pale youth, supported down stairs by two hardier ones, whispered, “Thank God, this does not come again for two whole days. ” The ghost chuckled. “Ah, this is good,’ said he, as he placed a plank across the moat in front of South Ascension. We crawled over the bridge and tumbled into a room with desks. On rising, I saw the reason for our unusual entrance. Against the door were piled a table and a chair, propped so as to hold them against outside force. Twenty or thirty fellows stood around, chuckling silently. Suddenly footsteps were heard. “Hush. said one. on hunJrfJ niorty Three gentle raps were heard upon the door. For God’s sake, come in,' shouted one of the fellows, whom laughter had stretched limp upon a desk. Three more knocks. Then silence. Then a voice was heard soft- ly speaking. We listened carefully. Could it be—? Yes it surely was. Avery Aves—’’ The roll call was being called, in a barely audible tone, outside the door. “What is the economic value of a door when locked on the in- side? asked the one nearest the keyhole, turning around. Come on fellows, he s gone.’ Out they rushed and to the edge of the building. Towards the li- brary, with reefer buttoned tightly and his derby set at an exact right angle on his head, strode the caller of the soundless roll call. All ready, fellows, now. What’s the matter with—” m m m p fe one hundred ninety-one Log of the Voyage of the Glee Club Childs—Captain Forster—First Mate Cahall—Second Mate Owen—Cabin Boy Jan. 7. The voyage begins. Glee Club rehearse in Vernon. Mandolin Club formulate their platform of “Rehearsalsare unnecessary and injurious.” Expressman tries to find out whether Child s man- dolin will support a truck. He finds out. So does Childs. Reached Shelby, first port. Upson, 05, appears on deck. Those with money go below. Conflict between Cupid and Epicurus at Parish house. Latter wins. Jan. 8. Embark and land at the much-heralded Sandusky. Messrs. Sadler, Brewer, Slayton, et al. await us on the wharf. The fussers make a rush for the hall “to help decorate.’ Concert and dance. Um—huge time. Girl—lots of it, and “not had! not bad! Forster up at eight the next morning as a consequence. Dildine shows up and guides the clubs away from shoals. Jan. 9. Off for Toledo. Louise out on the farthest pierhead to welcome us. Finlay, 08, as host of the town. Lee gives noiseless accompaniment to Dildine s playing. Hochst interresant! Dance again. June 10. Private yacht arrives after long delay. Dildine decides not to go to Wauseon, “Sorry, important affairs detain me. Sail to Wauseon. Dinner at the Barber's. “Reel theay-ter here. pafe one hundred ninety-two Concert fair. No, only one song tonight, ’ says Dow. Another dance, with the dances between solos. The rings under the eyes begin to show. Jan. 11. Set sail for Defiance, with stop-over in Napoleon when the doctor is kept busy. Then on to Defiance. Notified that we leave at 5:45 the next morning. Those staying at the hotel vote for an all night session. Lee, Scott and Downe, hosts. Huge time. Cuff down with nervous prostration. Downe develops a taste for chewing gum. Lee, Downe, Clements and Scott walk one hundred and fifty miles through the chilly mist of 5 A. M. to the station. Jan. 12. Off to Marion, last port of this voyage. Every one dead tired and all in. In Fostoria, Downe charters a small hoy to carry him to station in hi.’ little red wagon. Clements also develops a dis- taste for walking. The reception—with no one there. Downe and Scott as advance agents of Nu Pi Kappa. Concert quite good. Shaw and Baker de- velop into Fussers-in-Chief. Back to the Hill—and glad to be there. Here ends the Log. C. 09 p e one hundred ninety-three 0 TEMPORA! 0 MORES! N a balmy spring morning-------the birdies were singing serenades to their mates, the gentle breezes whispering soft messages of love to the budding houghs--------a Kenyon professor of dignified and academic mien came slowly gliding down the Path on a bicycle. He rode majestically erect, his well trimmed and much envied Vandyke beard pointing straight ahead like the rigid finger of progress. Upon his head there sat a dainty cap of the naval type, adjusted with a preciseness that betokened the mirror; a blue sweater with a broad over-hanging collar—the pride of his under-graduate days—and a neatly buttoned jacket set off the lines of his manly chest and shoulders: bicycle trous- ers were carefully tucked in golf stockings (the only pair owned by the faculty, save one) and neat shoes were nicely tied—here indeed was a paragon of precision and primness. His steady blue eye lighted up with a merry sparkle, for upon this morning his poetic soul was adance and his thoughts, giddy like the birdies and breezes, mayhap turned to love. He moved on with ped- aled regularity, breathing in the glorious air and exhaling it. every third and a half stroke. Through the gates he rolled, past the chapel where it lay on the grass like a mailed fist bathed in sunshine, its stern finger pointing inexorably upward—an unyielding admonition to the blundering and unballasted boys of the college,—past the bone white masonry and glittering windows of the library, out into the open vista of the peaceful valley. page one hundred ninety-four AH! How good to He alive, to be admired by all, old and young— tbe Hero of tHe village—and HER Hero—aH! Lucky, lucky man! Fortune, tkou Hast not been fickle Here. Brilliant, fairly scintillating witH subtle Humor, a man of mark in society, clever in conversation, of commanding face and figure, expert witH tHe racquet and tHe paddle, equally at Home in tHe bank or tHe ball room,—wbat more, in Heavens name, could a mortal man ask? Yet under all tkis tkere lies modesty—indeed tHe predominating trait— But stop ! His thoughts Have carried Him to the door of Ascen- sion. He dismounts from His 1893-make bicycle with grace, drawing forth the plaudits of the admiring group of nearby students. He leans the machine against the Hoary walls, carefully (so as not to scratch the veneering) and, with a bright and cheery smile and a well practised salute, first to the right and then to the left. He strides on into the Hall. m m m An Hour later the professor comes out, feeling the great joy of im- parting one s immeasurable knowledge to open-mouthed and eager youths. What satisfaction to see them listen, oh, so intently, and to take down in note books His very words, no doubt to be long treasured and Handed down. Among all the trees of knowledge in the forest of the faculty, there is none more productive than this beautiful and stately chestnut. THe professor takes two long breaths to free His lungs from the rather stifling air of the classroom, and with business-like precision briskly mounts the wheel. Again the ever-present group of students signify their admiration. He moves away slowly, smiling, for HE understands boys—of course. But stop! Something is the matter. This jolting—ugh! and jing—ugh!—ling! Why, the tires are flat! Like a flash He deducts that there is no air in them. Strange! pafe one hundred ninety-five The professor dismounts, lays carefully the least unsoiled of his three handkerchiefs upon the ground and kneels upon it, manipulating a bicycle pump. Yet the tires do not fill. Minute after minute passes and the pump and the professor get hotter. He is not going, however, to let his rising wrath over-master him. No. He will bite his lip and take this thing philosophically. Yet the tires do not fill. Another painful five minutes and then, with his wonted keenness, the situation flashes upon him. The tires are punctured! He rises, his eye flashing fire. The clam- oring students, though rods away, shrink terrified into tremhlingsilence. He dabbs the beads of perspiration from his dusky brow and stands for one awful instant facing them. Then he turns, grasps the bicycle, rudely I fear, and stalks on up the Path. The students, unbound, as it were, inquire after him anxiously and even plaintively. Is there something the matter, doctor?” “Can’t we do anything, doctor? “Please, doctor, get on and ‘show ’em up.’ But the professor strides onward. The birdies sing to deaf ears and the winds wanton his beard unheeded. The bright April morning has taken on the sighing gloom of November. 0 Tempora! 0 Mores! It is indeed a cold and blackguard world. patf on LnoJred miatxyvt DREAMLAND INDEN Sie your Latin and German dictionaries, if lie wish zu lesen these dishevelled lines. Ego sum the victim von an awful affliction. So viel have I werde proficient in Latin and German ut I know them so bene as English. I can nicht help zu read and scribere in them. To sprechen is worst omnium. When I sum engaged in conversation mit some one, ich see ein puzzled look upon his Gesichte, dann I stop only zu finden dass ego bin talking in ein foreign tongue. Man denkt ut ego am disturbed in animo. Meine friends denken ut I habe the gift of tongues and implore mich zu become ein missionary. Ein Ding est strange. Ego nefer spreche in the Greek. Dafur ich bin gratus, obgluch ego sometimes volo ut das also might be so in die Greek classe. Es tut mir leid to think dass I am such ein burden zu the mehr fortunate sed less wize fellow creatures about mir. Eine time in somno I hatte ein dream. Es war ein dream aus den alten Tage. Mein purpose is zu dicere it. Henry West war da. Dick Manning erat ibi. Es est zu them that I attribute mein misfortune. The dream was strangely fantastic. It was a jumble of Rome, Germany and Gambier. Ach, alle Dinge are thus to me! Though the scene was in the city Rome, Kenyon and the Vaterland were blended with it. To the west gleamed the phosphorescent waters of the Mediterranean. To the north rolled the wild rough waves of the North Sea. (Ah! one of the blessed hours of natural speech has come back as they do come back at rare intervals. Let me hasten ere it glides away never to return again.) Southward flowed the turbid page one tiun rej ninety-seven Tiber and far off in the southeast it joined the ice-hound Rhine. Their united waters wound like a serpent off to the eastward and disap- peared in a vast stretch of plains. The view to the southwest was lost in the bluish haze covering the Black Forest. In the exact center of the whole stood the low-lying Forum. This was separated from the royal palace of Emperor William by a short passageway. The temples of Dianna and Apollo and several lofty cathedrals gleamed upon Rome s seven hills bright with the noonday sun. The Appian Way crowded with chariots and slave-borne litters passed through the center of the city and terminated in the west at the door of Old Ken- yon. Grouped about Old Kenyon on either side the Way were Hanna Hall and the other buildings so familiar to my eyes. These were half concealed in a grove of trees and were cut off from the rest of the city by a high fence and on every post was the bust of some great Roman. When I observed all these wonders, the dormant sen- sations horn of my freshman days returned again and filled my soul. When I entered the grove through the gate, however. I began to feel more at home. For the first thing that I noticed was Bug Walton s eldest throwing stones at a bust of Horace. He was clad in a little toga. A giant fair-skinned Goth, a pedagogue I suppose, was atten- tively watching his proceedings and seemed to approve rather than disapprove of his actions. Eddy Hughes was in the balneum under- going the complicated processes of a Roman hath. An even dozen swarthy Numidian slaves were dripping with sweat in their exertions to assist him in the performance of his ablutions. It was at this time that I perceived a man walking slowly to and fro between two trees. His head was bent and a half open scroll was in his hand; hut at that he did not look for his eyes were cast in the deepest meditation on the ground. Plato I hazarded, emboldened by the wonders I had al- ready seen. But just then he stopped short, observed the disaster that page on hundred ninety-eight young Bug was producing and turned to chastise him. “Fat Peirce, by Jove, I ejaculated, as I penetrated farther into the grove. It was evident that Ascension Hall was no longer in use, hut that the Platonic method of teaching out under the cool shade of the trees was being employed, for I discerned little groups all in togas scattered about here and there, always with a central figure in their midst. Off to my right a little ways, I saw Henry West. He was standing erect; his left hand clutched his toga; with his right hand he was making a gesture of animated appeal to a group of German grammar aspirants gathered about him. Elevated above his group, Pete Reeves was sit- ting on a sort of chair throne, deeply imbedded in its downy recesses. His knees were crossed and out from under his toga protruded a san- daled foot; his other foot rested on an ivory stool. At first I mistook Pete for Apollo. But when I noticed the attitude and saw that in his hand he held no scepter, I was no longer in doubt. My attention was drawn from this latter scene by two men advancing toward me. They had girded up their loins and were walking with great rapidity. All the while they conversed with the greatest animation. Straight- way I recognized one of them as Benny Harrison, but the other was an utter stranger to me. Benny kept constantly calling him Charlie; even as the sounds died away in the distance I could hear Charlie, Charlie, wafted by the breezes. I wondered who in the world it was that Benny thus familiarly addressed. I even went so far as to in- quire and found that it was the noted author Charles Lamb. At first I thought that Lamb was surely out of his proper sphere. He, I re- flected, was an eighteenth century man. Then, however, I remem- bered that I had heard somewhere that Lamb lived far behind his time. This accounted for the seeming anachronism. At length, after I had contemplated even more striking sights which I have not the space to recount, I leisurely strolled into an open space page oae hundred ninety-nine where stood an official looking building. It presented strong contrast to the pleasant coolness of all the others. About it was a platform of clay tiles, down upon which poured the rays of the burning hot sun; and although negro slaves kept constantly sprinkling water over this, the intense heat did not seem to be alleviated in the least. In the large doorway sat a figure on the floor in Turkish fashion. I 11 wager that’s one of those imported Greeks that do all the clerical work for the Romans,” said I to myself. But on closer scrutiny, I discerned above the tablet in his lap and the stylus in his hand the stern unre- lenting features of Barker Newhall. When he saw me, he arose, ap- proached and said “been initiated?” I didn’t know just what he meant, but presumed that I hadn’t been, so I answered in the negative. At this, there passed over his face a look of wrath, such as I had never seen on a man before, and ere I could think he had leaped toward me. Instinctively I dodged, turned and ran for the gate. Barker followed in hot pursuit. By the time I had gained the Appian Way, I glanced back and perceived that now not only Barker but also a consul, three quaestors, a praetor and the Prince of Bismark were madly following me. I however outdistanced them all and would have made good my escape, if I had not chanced as I dodged in among the chariots to meet Nero and his praetorian guard. I was captured and banished to a town across the Hellespont in Asia Minor. Thence I made my escape to the Euphrates river. I was just gliding out of the Euphrates into the troubled waters of the North Sea, when I awoke and found myself in Benny’s English class. B. L. J. p S two bunirfJ SUNSHINE AND SHADOW GROUP of fellows had gathered about the fire in the parlor after supper one night, and were discussing dreams. ‘‘I had a dream not long ago,” said one of the num- ber, a man not conspicuous for studiousness, “that opened my eyes a little. The rest became silent and he continued. It was this way. I was down at the room one dark afternoon, reading a story about a fellow who, while in college met a fine girl, fell in love with her, and had plans all fixed up for the year after he would graduate, when another fellow appeared and eloped with the girl. The first fellow went on through college, working hard: entered politics and became a party leader. Meanwhile fellow Number Two went to the bad, died, and fellow Number One got his old girl back again. It was a mighty interesting story. I got to thinking after fin- ishing it of the things I would do when I got out; and the shadows in the room—for by this time it had become quite dark—together with the clouds of smoke from my pipe, began to shape themselves into real things and scenes—just as the fire there, or the clouds, will, if you are in the right mood. I thought I saw a large court-room—judges, gowned in black, sit ting along behind the high, massive “bench; lobbies and galleries crowded with people. A young attorney had just made a plea, and as he sat down, different ones among the audience turned to those next to them and seemed to say: “A fine speech. Who is that young two huo Jre4 one fellow? “Mark my words we II hear of him again. And the young speaker was, of course, myself. And. of course, other scenes similar to this followed in fancy, until as an old man, I was the lead- ing statesman of the age. It was about this time that I fell asleep, and the real dream began. I was walking at night among the trees of the campus; it was in early fall, and the leaves were still out. On my right as I wandered along, some distance away, there suddenly appeared, at considerable height from the ground, a steady, white light, revealing beneath it a group of men seated around a table. Being curious. I drew nearer. On the table were large, heavily bound volumes, and other papers and docu- ments. At the head sat a dignified-looking man, with heavy, gray beard, high forehead, waving hair, and kindly, serious eyes. After regarding him for some moments, I decided, from similarity to that picture I had seen in the college library, that he was President Hayes. After this I at once recognized several of the others at the table. At his right was Stanton; at his left, a man whom I assumed, from the number of papers strewn in front of him, as if he were once more at his seat in congress, to be Henry Winter Davis. A little further down on the same side, clad in judicial robes, I recognized as Stanley Matthews, and at the lower end of the table, opposite the President, was a man you couldn’t mistake—old Bishop Philander. The rest I didn t recognize: they were doubtless the other prominent men the college has turned out, but I never was a shark in even college history. Now there was a vacant seat at the table, and. after “sizing up the group, I, confidently enough, sat down at this place. Stanton caught sight of me first. He viewed me for a moment, then spoke in a low voice across the table to Davis, and both turned and looked at me. By this time I had attracted the attention of the whole company, and Hayes, rising in his chair, asked me who I was and what I had done in the world. kaadrtd two I told him my name, my great reputation as an advocate and statesman, etc. He looked at me rather suspiciously, then said to Matthews: “Will you look for this man’s record in the Book of the College? The eyes of all turned to Matthews. After some moment s search in the great leather-bound volume, in which were written, as I as- sumed afterwards, all the deeds and accomplishments of Kenyon men, he replied: “I find no record of him, sir. Then Davis turned to another of the great books on the table, and after a moment or two rose and said: I find it here recorded that, in the administration of William F. Peirce, B. Newhall, being Registrar, and Devol, Keeper of the Seals, that one by the said name ’made such a poor showing in his semester examinations as to call forth from his parents, in unpleasant personal communications to me, expressions of dissatisfaction as to the quality of the instruction afforded at the college.’ I quote from an entry in President Peirce s diary. Whereupon Mr. Hayes, clearing his throat and looking at me sternly said: “Sir, the company into which you have thrust yourself is composed of those who have been chosen the most illustrious of Kenyon s sons, to watch over and protect their Alma Mater, and to shape her des- tiny. And you can not be fit to share in our discussions, who have not proved your worth by your deeds. I must request you, there- fore, to retire at once. At this the great fist of the Bishop came down hard on the table. pn|e Iwo hundred three I rose in anger and chagrin to vindicate myself, but—1 shall ntv«r know the painful scene which rn “ have followed, for I woke with , start. My clothes were covert with ashes. I sat up. stared a mo. ment. looked at the clock, and finally he book 00 taU'- “Three straighu tomorrow a«d none of them out.” I muttered. anJ as I came down to supper I could ' help thinking old Rutherford w„ about ri gbt. page two h„oir«J Jo 46 Kenyon College English Professor Reeves 1. Orations and Debates. First Semester, one hour a week. Required of all Seniors. Instructor does not use roll book, but is able to recall any number of cuts in a pinch without incurring the charge of any grave in- consistency. During the winter the student recites in cold, unsafe rooms, which offer advantages for colds. Recitations held once a week regardless of other recita- tions. Two cuts for each absence. Instructor does not give notice when leaving town. Dr. Harrison 1. English Composition. Themes and oral exercises. First Semester required of all Freshmen. On days when the instructor has oral exercises the students are re- quired to bring raincoats, cravenettes, sou’westers, etc. The student is given a chance to express on paper all the foolish things he did in high school. One written spasm every week some weeks, otherwise two. Greek Professor New ha 11 1. Lysias, or selections from Attic Orators. Student has •Page from Catalogue p fe two kandrtJ hvt Kenyon College 47 excellent opportunity to master the art of classic irony, as well as to take a lot of gentle sarcasm without get- ting at all ruffled. 8. Greek Art and General History of Architecture. Elec- tive for Juniors and Seniors in all courses who want to start something they cannot finish. By a motion of the Board of Trustees it was voted to give a prize of $100 to any one completing the course. The motto, “The outward shows be least themselves,” is kept before the student as long as he is in the course. Latin Professor Manning 1. Livy. Instruction in Grammar and Art of Reading Latin. Excellent opportunity to get rid of superfluous energy. Romance Languages Professor Nichols 1. Elementary French. Easier and Despair Text-book used. Three prostrations a week. Preparation not pre-requisite. two 48 Kenyon College German Professor West 1. Elementary German. Elective for Sophomores with strong constitutions, and Juniors. Exceptional prac- tice in “learning rules. Gei Dink ei doonk und Schlitz mack” is read for sight practice. Required of all Scientific Juniors, the more scientific the better. Mathematics and Astronomy Professor Allen 1. Solid Geometry and Algebra. Halsted’s Text is not used. Students who are subject to diseases resulting from insufficient ventilation are advised to take this course. Instructor likes lots of air himself. He is al- ways willing to explain difficult as well as easy parts. Student is also taught how to combine a high collar and a midget tie. Economics and Sociology Professor Hall 1. Economics. Instructor illustrates this practically by lecturing as inaudibly as possible. The work of the course is confined strictly to the text-book because it is inconvenient for the instructor to have so many books two hundred «even Kenyon College 49 open before him at once. It is earnestly desired to keep order in the room. Occasional anecdotes by the instruc- tor. President Peirce 77. International Encyclopaedia and Dictionary. A thor- ough course which widens the vocabulary of the student and trains him to appear to understand anything from pusillanimous complacency” to infinitesimal micro- cosm.” Lybarger admitted to this course. 7-8. American History. This course gives the student a clear idea of American History, to say nothing of giv- ing the library a delicate, ineffable sapphire color with a few asbestos-coated, sulphur-lined expressions, while abstracts are being prepared. Course No. 77 pre-requi- site. History of Philosophy. The instructor covers the ground thoroughly and makes every tenet perfectly obvious.” Student not required to understand any- thing. Course No. 77, extended two years, pre-requi- site. The Bible Professor Smythe 4. The Old Testament. No effort is made to make the course easy.” However an excellent opportunity is offered for an hour’s nap. part two hundred eifkt “TRIAL BY JURY” (A Farce in one act) As given by the class of 1909 in the crypt of Old Kenyon Dramatis Personae Judge, wild and wooly . Buffalo Bill Fitzgerald Prosecuting Attorney, mild and compromising Bernard Sbaw (substitute for Jerome) Defending attorney, languishing and tender Kokosing Brooke (acting for Dclmas) Clerk of Court, cruel and unrelenting Alvan Dumnorix, the Hon. Chief Gaoler . . Scblitzverein Budweiser Foreman of the Jury Senator George Elliot Silas Marner Clarke M embers of the Jury Mark Twain Clements Opera Hat Kapp Leonard Sofa Bed Cott Raymond Youwomans Yester Day Anthracite Cole Let me Downe Easy Pisces Lamellibranchiata Aves The Duke of York Easier Said Than Dunn Rt. Rev. Philander Chase The Auld Brigman (Scene discovers a tribunal in the crypt of Old Kenyon. All is not Bliss that Blisters is being softly played as the gaoler brings in the prisoner, who kneels beneath the judge’s bench. The windows are opened in respect to Pete Reeves.) Iwo hundred nine Judge—What is this lump of infinitesimal microcosm charged with, gaoler? Gaoler—Most Honorable Judge, he is charged with. Slandering Chick Foltz, Coming to college to study. (Cries of horror in court) With accusing Barker of Sarcasm. (General tumult) (Judge finally restores order) With having red hair, (Expressions of pity) Judge—Silence in Court! Prisoner do you plead guilty or not guilty to these heinous charges? Prisonei-1 plead guilty. (Sullenly) All—Sir !!!! !! Oh ! my ! (Judge raps vigorously for order) Prisoner—I plead guilty, sir! Judge—Accent the “sir on the penult!! (Vain effort to comply) Prisoner, do you desire the clemency of professional council in your behalf? Prisonei-No, sir. (Cries of disgust) Judge—You shall have it then. I shall turn you over to the ten- der care of Hon. Kokosing Brooke, acting for Delmas. who is now outside talking to “Pap Fagan. Defending Attorney—Most despicable, esoteric, globule of void reptilia, have you any right according to the law. ignorantia juris non excusat. to ask any favors from me? Prisoner—I m afraid not, sir. (Meekly) Defending Attorney—Imperiis susquet ut per se Papius Fagianus. Devolitur sunt in Schweinfurthitem, which translated from the original Sanscrip means, “I rest the case. Judge—The Prosecuting Attorney, Hon. Bernard Shaw, acting for Hon. Jerome,who is now engaged in a discussion with Oldham tonight, will now take the case. p fe Iwo KunJrcJ ten Prosecuting Attorney—Come here, you brute! (Prisoner shyly ap- proaches desk of prosecuting attorney) Where are you from? (With vigor) Prisoner—From Cincinnati, sir! (Very much frightened) Prosecuting Attorney—You’re a liar! Honorable Judge I would like to call in Redens Equus Morrow, who is ex-officio mayor of Cin- cinnati, to testify at this juncture. (Redens Equus Morrow swears by the minutes of the Board of Trustees’ last meeting to tell nothing but lies) Redens, does this nihil est come from Cincinnati? Rcdens—No sir. I have just completed the new directory and find no such person belonging to Cincinnati. (Angry expostulations against prisoner) Prosecuting Attorney—That will do. Now freshman, you have been caught, with lying openly and with impunity, with flagrant at- tempt to practice deception upon this court. Away, before I call up the shade of Brick Newby to chastise you! Judge—Prisoner you will look at me and face the jury. (Slight confusion in prisoner’s face) It does seem to me that you are in a bad fix. You plead guilty to the horrible charges of slandering Chick Foltz, coming to the college for the purpose of study, accusing Barker of sarcasm, which is a most ineffable paradox against his suave ingra- tiating personality, and, you undoubtedly have red hair. Now wor- thy jurymen, do you consider the case? (Jury goes out and returns a verdict of guilty and recommends the limit) Defending Attorney—Utque, ushatrasig netashid Shylocis et Dodo sunt in castor oilibus fui! Judge—Sihi, hut he has admitted all with the utmost pusillanimous complacency and has also shown a trait of indecision without being aware of any grave inconsistency. Fatricus Fostorius nux vomica sunt!! (Prisoner trembles) Now you mess, you of the sun-kissed p fe two hundred eleven hair, the jury have most magnanimously decided against you. Have you anything to say for yourself, or have you any reason why sen- tence should not he passed upon you? Prisoner—No sir. (Faintly) Judge—Then I will sentence you to twenty applications of the gon- kus maximus terrihilus vicissem jubet, and with a case of gains cutus non consciendam hahet, fresh from the Battle Creek Sanitarium. (Court cries for mercy, hut Judge is obdurate) Commodus Nero Coldewey will deal the first set and Armour Sulzberger Oldham will apply the second dose, shaking well before using. Freshman, do you desire music, have you any preference in flowers, and do you desire the mercy of the black cap? Prisoner—No sir. (Faintly) Judge—You will have music, the black cap and daffodils. You will also give Martin Luther, who will pronounce your masses, in- structions concerning your monies and estates which will go toward buying “Gum Shoe some low collars. You will now bend over and Eminent Jackson will apply the black cap. The executioners will advance and do their duty with mobility. Music is both elevating and refining, so let us have sweet music. (.Executioners carry out sentence while the rest of court join in the freshman Lyric led by the Auld Brig matt.) Song. There is a Hell for Freshmen, And there they all must go. And there repent their many sins. And lead a life of woe. Chorus. There is a Hell for Freshmen, etc. Judge—The executioners will cease and the prisoner will assume a vertical position. Now prisoner, stand on both trocanters with your right hand on your ocelli, the left on your spiracle and retire vice versa outermost. The court is adjourned. Curtain. P two Hundred twelve THE PASSING SHOW Sept. 17. Another “most promising class that ever entered the col- lege comes early to meet the fellows. ’ Nero Dooman per- forms dufies o{ senior warden. Sept. 18. Sophs reverse Fat s decision in regard to conduct concom- itant with the sacred edifice—closely following Ohio State Penitentiary usage. Sept. 19. The sublime and the ridiculous, “Thaddeus of Warsaw versus Waltz me around again Willie. 09 to’10 favor of the Freshmen. Sept. 20. Bulls versus Bears assist in the completion of K. M. A s destruction. Freshmen aver nothing like Mother s Oats. Sept. 21. Traditions sullied by an ignominious truce giving Freshmen the opportunity to tidy boudoirs. Tony’s Henchmen easy money for the scions of “Lyric Ode Cunningham. Sept. 22. Freshmen countermand order for canes. Business outlook discourages Potter. Sept. 23. Registrars offer hours 2-2.05. Barker gives some grate- ful tips on Math courses; Devils courses again assume their pristine popularity. Sept. 25. Influx of blood from King Eddie s isle introduces Phila- delphian serenity. Martin understands a joke who in exulta- tion explains to Ball. It is said that Ball was soon seen talk- ing to Potter. Sept. 28. Fat’s first speech in chapel; another crib from Patrick Henry thrills the unlearned Freshmen. p fe two hundred thirteen Oct. 7. Barbs missed. Oct. 12. Absence of dress goods noted on the path; Beggs not Here either. Oct. 14. Robison calls off Sophomore Bihle—Fred wasn’t feeling well. Oct. 16. Freshmen make a deplorable effort at being artists. Oct. 17. Under supervision of Sophs they take off most of the paint. Oct. 24. Pete sets on the sitting hen. Oct. 27. Last opportunity to contribute toward professor salaries. Black list published by Devil on the morrow. Oct. 30. Spurred on by sympathetic students, Buck makes a noble dash for the postoffice. Reaches class at 8:04 and finds his flock dispersed. Nov. 1. Freshmen sign up. Hardy swears most solemnly by the founders of these institutions. Nov. 3. Kenyon 12, Wesleyan 12. Nov. 10. Kenyon covers herself with glory at Columbus. Nov. 23. Martin hunts snipe. Nov. 29. Sophomores drink H2O. Dec. 1. Buck shows a ring. Dec. 2. Buck displays a ring. Dec. 3. Buck exhibits a ring. Dec. 8. Fat arrives just in the nick of time to prevent a great fire at Harcourt. Bowler knew the fire would he but slight; he was simply taking a constitutional (1:15 A. M.) Dec. 15. Ball proves beyond ail reasonable doubt that he is a great physician. Dec. 18. Valete. Jan. 3. Faculty keg party at Fat’s. Jan. 7. Avete. pafe two kunJreJ fourtwa Jan. 10 King buys a sack of Bull Durham! Jan. 19. French House burns. Bowler Jons Esquimau costume and nobly straddles the barn. Jan. 26. Barker, bawling, “Can’t you see that Mr. Morrow?’ Red, calmly, If you don’t talk so loud I can bear you better.” Jan. 28. Lights appear once again in Old Kenyon. How welcome! Feb. 2. Senior keg party at Barker’s. Feb. 4-9. Black Week. Feb. 11. Junior Prom. Feb. 14. Chick pastes on bis last year’s beard. March 6. Rowdies get in their dirty work at Rosse Hall. March 18. Choir strikes for more pay and less work. Fat remains obdurate; also the choir. Meantime Ball helps out wonderfully. March 21. Buck on the outside; Economics I on the inside; Buck departs first, cheered by lucky students. March 27. Valete. April 4.— Ap ril 10. Bowler performs and does it well. April 15. Here passeth the last show. (Childs determined at the last moment not to go.) two kuodrcd fafu n Davidson Hotel Furniture E. J. FARLEY, Proprietor COLUMBUS. OHIO THE LARGEST and BEST STOCK in Ohio t McAllister, Mohler Co. One-Half Square South of Union Station 142-146 North High Street. COLUMBUS. - - OHIO High Street Tailors L. C. Penn For Stylish Clothes Students’Clothes a Specialty We will pay x of your fare Sells and rents everything to he found in a first-class MUSIC STORE A . SMITH 166 North High Street COLUMBUS. 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VERNON. OHIO IV HARCOURT PLACE SCHOOL For Girls will re-open September 25th College Preparatory, Collegiate and Elective Courses Superior Advantages in Music, Art and the Modern Languages €J The buildings have been thoroughly repaired and newly furnished throughout 1 For circulars and information, apply to Miss Merwin, PRINCIPAL GAMBIER, OHIO SPORTSMAN’S HEADQUARTERS BASE BALL TENNIS FISHING TACKLE AND SPORTSMAN S SUPPLIES EVERYTHING FOR THE STUDENT ATHLETIC AND GYM FOOTWEAR WE SELL SPORTING GOODS ONLY COLUMBUS SPORTING GOODS COMPANY 235 NORTH HIGH STREET COLUMBUS. - - OHIO Wc fill your WANTS in the DRUG LINE BEST GOODS AT MODERATE PRICES UNION STUM DYE WORKS 7 NORTH MULBERRY STREET Mt. Vernon, Ohio Lorey’s Drug Store 115 SOUTH MAIN STREET MOUNT VERNON, OHIO Both Phones LADIES’ AND GENTS’ GAR- MENTS CLEANED and DYED French Benzole Dry Cleaning Repairing and Pressing t i i JOIN CLUB i i i Goods Called for and Delivered New Phone F-619 Bell Phone R-283 B. J. BRANDT, Prop. 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GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.