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THE REVEILLE The story of our college days and the friends we have known on the Middle Path Published by the Class of 1912 MVCCCCX1 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 of Kenyon, our mother. Thy beauty strikes a chord of harmony That bends us to a high endeavor Thy glorious name— Thy spotless fame— We’ll cherish in our hearts forever. Then let our songs ascend in unison! Our loyal hearts avow no other; It unifies. It never dies, The love of Kenyon, our mother. five (To our PrrBt fnt. Hilltam 3faafrr |Ipirre, lutjoBP omtxtttn grara of bruoteb aenrtrr to tljr tnt r rtB of our CGollrgr liaor pnbrarrb Ijtm to llfp Ijrarto of mrg Krngon man. tl|ta book la brbiratrb. seven EJiitur-ht-Qlliiff Ralph McKinley Watson AfiBDrlalf EMtura Walter Hatheral Coolidgc Ernest G ok Dempsey Alan Gustavus Goldsmith Frederick George Harkness William Archibald Thomas Art Editor John Walter Clements SuBinraa fflamtgrr Robert A. Weaver Anaiatant flanaijrr Laurence Kinsman McCafferty Greeting HE REVEILLE for 191 1 greets you. We have tried to give the story of another year; to picture the life in Gambier as it is; to increase the spirit so charac- teristic of our college; to add our interests and successes; to leave within these pages something, if only a little, of the beauty and the pleasant atmosphere of the Hill; and so recall to those who have been here before us, the delightful days of college. If this book but suggests the pleasures and the duties we have enjoyed, our purpose has been attained. Arthur Cleveland Hall Died June 23, J9J0 RTHUR Cleveland Hall, the Edwin M. Stanton Pro- fessor of Economics at Kenyon College, died in Gambier on the twenty-third of June, 1910. His passing was so unforeseen, and came so unexpectedly after the exercises of Commencement, during which he appeared in his usual robust health, that the college scarcely credited the report when it reached us that day; both his associates and friends here and his relatives in Con- necticut were shocked beyond measure upon hearing the death of one so able, so accomplished, and such a lover of out-door sports, and the news of his sad departure was scarcely able to be believed. His death resulted from a sudden attack of acute indigestion and came at a time when his work was most valuable to our college. Dr. Hall was born in 1865 in Middletown, Connecticut, of an old and distinguished family. His mother was the daughter of Bishop Jarvis of Connecticut, and his father a prosperous merchant and at one time a partner of A. T. Steward; another relative was a Com- modore in the United States Navy and his ancestors fought in the Revolutionary War. From them he inherited valuable books, paintings and furniture which adorned his home here in Gambier where so many times the college enjoyed his delightful hospitality. He graduated from Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, in the class of 1888, where he was a member of the Delta Psi Fraternity, and he was afterwards elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He devoted several years to journalism and business; was Assistant Superintendent of the exhibit of the Bureau of Charities and Corrections at the World’s Fair in 1893, and in 1894 he served as Lecturer in Criminology at Johns Hopkins University. His next appointment was to the fellow- ship in Sociology at Columbia, which he held for three years, engaged at the same time in settlement work in New York City. In 1901 he was granted the degree of Ph. D by Columbia; he then taught for a year at Princeton, and was called to Kenyon in 1904 as the Edwin M. Stanton Professor of Economics. While here. Dr. Hall spent one summer near Buffalo as special agent of the U. S. Bureau of Corporations, to investigate the great industries of that city, and another summer he was a delegate to the National Conference of Charities. At another time, he visited the eleven scene of the operations of the Rough Riders in order to report on the sociological aspect of the case. In all these activities, he was an earnest and thorough worker and in his daily duty of teaching equally devoted and conscientious. Because of his conspicuous ability as an orator he was chosen to make the principal address on Stanton Day, when Mr. Carnegie visited the college, and to present several distin- guished candidates for honorary degrees, such as Ambassador Dudley. Mr. Carnegie, and others. Only the day before his death he pre- sented Colonel Kilbourne for the degree of LL. D. and delivered an eloquent and polished address. •I Literary work also claimed his attention, and he published an im- portant work on “Crime and Social Progress,” which has been used as a text book in colleges and is recognized as an authoritative treat- ment on the subject. Dr. Hall was a deeply religious man, and took an active interest in the work of his church; he served on the vestry of Harcourt Parish and as a member of the County Committee of the Layman’s Forward Movement. In athletics, too, his interest was keen and not only was he a proficient tennis player, but he organized cross country runs, and one year trained the college track team. Q Whether in athletics or sociological investigation, in religious work or college instruction, the same enthusiastic devotion, the same deter- mined endeavor to help and benefit his fellow men, the same thorough- ness and perseverance characterized all his work, and his agreeable personality left a lasting impression upon colleagues and pupils. twelve Table of Contents Editor’s Greeting - -........................ Arthur Cleveland Hall - College Calendar ------- Boara of Trustees - Alumni Associations - Faculty - -- -- -- - Bexley......................................... The Student Body - Seniors.................................- Juniors ------- Sophomores............................... Freshmen -------- Who’s Who—A Poem............................... Fraternities - .................... Delta Kappa Epsilon - Alpha Delta Phi.......................... Psi Upsilon ------ Beta Theta Pi............................ Delta Tau Delta ------ Other Fraternities ------ Phi Beta Kappa ------ Theta Nu Epsilon - Conventions................................ College Activities............................. Athletics -------- The Graduate Manager - - - - The New Coach - - - - - Football............................... Baseball ------ Basketball ------ Track.................................. Tennis ------- Wearers of the K” - - - - Kenyon Records - Literary ------- The Reveille......................... The Collegian ------ Philomathesian - - - - - Nu Pi Kappa - - The Kenyon Oratorical and Debating Association Dramatics................................ Puff and Powder Club - - - The Mikado........................... The King of the Philippines - Sophomore Vaudeville - Iolanthe ------ Page 9 11-12 16-17 19-20 22-25 27-30 31 33-71 33-42 45-54 57-62 65-71 72 73-100 75-78 79-82 83-86 87-90 91-94 95 96-97 98-99 - 100 101-174 101-130 102 - 103 105-110 111-115 117-120 121-123 124-128 129 130 133-140 133 135 136-137 138-139 140 141-148 143 144-145 146 147 148 thirteen TABLE OF CONTENTS—Continued Page Music................................................ 149-150 Glee Club.........................................151-153 Mandolin Club................................- 154 Concert - -- -- -- - 155 College Choir - 156 Other Activities - 158-174 The Kenyon Assembly - 158 The Executive Committee...............................159 The Honor System - - - - - - 161 The Dormitory Committee - 163 Chess Club........................................ 164 Civic Club ------- 165 Kokosing Canoe Club 166 Science Club - 167 Minnesota Club..................................169 Brotherhood of St. Andrew - - - . j 71 Indianapolis Club ........................ 172 Ei Reprehensi....................................173 Banquets ................................ I74 Alumni Library - - - - . . _ _ _ j 77 1 he New House for Professors............................180 The Eighty-Second Annual Commencement - - - 181-185 Senior Dramatics ------- . J86 Senior Reception - - - , . „ _ _ _ 107 Stires Debate................................... j gg Junior Promenade - - - . _ _ _ _ j j Sophomore Hop............................................. 1 2 Advertising and College Diary ----- 195-211 fourteen List of Illustrations Page Frontispiece—The Bulletin Tree......................... William Foster Peirce 6 Arthur Cleveland Hall - - - - - - - - 10 Dr. Peirce in Chapel Doorway - - - - - - 18 Old Kenyon - - - - - - - - - 21 Faculty - - --------- 26 Senior Class - -- -- -- --32 Hanna Hall................................................ 43 Junior Class - -- -- -- -- 44| Ascension.................................................55 Sophomore Class - -- -- -- - 56 Views - -- -- -- -- -63 Freshmen Class - -- -- -- - 64 Freshmen in Line - -- -- -- --70 Fraternities - -- -- -- -73 Athletics.................................................101 Dr. Walton................................................102 Clyde Water.............................................. 103 Bemis Pierce - -- -- -- -- - 104 Football l earn...........................................108 Baseball Team................................... Views Faculty Game........................................118 Basketball Team............................. Track Team - -- -- -- -- 122 Tennis Courts........................................125 Tennis Team --------- 126 Literary............................................. Reveille Board - -- -- -- -- 132 Collegian Board......................................154 Dramatics - -- -- -- -- - Puff and Powder Club................................. Music........................................... J49 Glee Club.................................................50 Kodaks - -- -- - -- - 157 Executive Committee...................................... 159 Honor Committee - -- -- -- - 160 Dormitory Committee - - - - - '182 Minnesota Club - -- -- -- -- 168 Brotherhood - -- -- -- -- - 170 Indianapolis Club...................................J '2 View of Library..........................................[25 Alumni Library - -- - -----176 President’s House........................................j'8 Registrar's House - -- -- -- -- l V Junior Promenade.................................... Kodak!...................................................193 fifteen 1910-1911 FIRST SEMESTER Sept. 21—Wednesday—Registration of new students. Ascension Hall, 3:30 p. m. College opens with Evening Prayer at 5. Oct. 4—Tuesday—Bexley Hall opens with Evening Prayer. Nov. I—Tuesday—All Saints’ Day. Founders’ Day. Nov. 21-23—Mid-Semester Examinations for new students. Nov. 24—Thursday—Thanksgiving Day. Dec. 16—Friday—Christmas Recess begins. Jan. 3—Tuesday—College opens with Morning Prayer at 7:45. Feb. 6—Monday—Semester Examinations begin. Feb. 10—Friday—First Semester ends. «ixteen SECOND SEMESTER Feb. 15—Wednesday—Second Semester begins. Mar. I—Wednesday—Ash-Wednesday. April 13—Thursday—Easter Recess begins. April 20—Thursday—College opens with Morning Prayer at 7:45. May 25—Thursday—Ascension Day. June 19—Monday—Semester Examinations begin. June 25—Sunday—Baccalaureate Sunday. June 26—Monday—Annual Meeting of the Board of 1 rustees, 2:30 p. m. June 28—Wednesday—Eighty-third Annual Commencement. 1911-1912 FIRST SEMESTER Sept. 20—Wednesday—Registration of new students, Ascension Hall, 3:30 p. m. College opens with Evening Prayer at 5. Oct. 3—Tuesday—Bexley Hall opens with Evening Prayer at 5. Nov. 1—Wednesday—All Saints’ Day. Founders’ Day. Nov. 20-22—Mid-Semester Examinations for new students. Nov. 30—Thursday—Thanksgiving Day. Dec. 16—Saturday—Christmas Recess begins. Jan. 3—Wednesday—College opens with Morning Prayer at 7:45. Feb. 5—Monday—Semester Examinations begin. Feb. 9—Friday—First Semester ends. Feb. 14—Wednesday—Second Semester begins with Morning Prayer at 7:45. seventeen Board of Trustees EX-OFFICIO The Rt. Rev. William A. Leonard, D. D., Bishop of Ohio President for the Year The Rt. Rev. Boyd Vincent, D. D., Bishop of Southern Ohio The Rev. William Foster Peirce, L. H. D., D. 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 The Rt. Rev. George W. Peterkin, 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 The Rt. Rev. John N. McCormick, D. D., Bishop of Western Michigan ELECTED BY THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES. UNDER ARTICLE IV Term Expires The Rev. Cleveland K. Benedict, Glendale................... 1911 Mr. D. B. Kirk, Mt. Vernon............................... 1911 The Rev. W. R. Steady, Cleveland........................... 1915 Florien Giauque, Esq., Cincinnati.......................... 1915 The Rev. Henry E. Cooke, Warren............................ 1917 The Hon. Albert Douglas, Chillicothe....................... 1917 The Rev. Theodore I. Reese, Columbus....................... 1919 Mr. Samuel Mather, Cleveland............................... 1919 nineteen ELECTED BY THE DIOCESES OF OHIO AND SOUTHERN OHIO. UNDER ARTICLE V Term Expires The Rev. Frank H. Nelson, Cincinnati....................... 1911 Judge U. L. Marvin, Akron.................................. 1911 The Rev. George Davidson, Marietta......................... 1912 Mr. David Z. Norton, Cleveland............................. 1912 The Rev. A. L. Frazer, Youngstown.......................... 1913 Mr. William Cooper Proctor, Glendale....................... 1913 ELECTED BY THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES. UNDER ARTICLE VII Term Expires Col. John J. McCook, New York.............................. 1911 Mr. William G. Mather, Cleveland........................... 1911 The Hon. James Denton Hancock, Franklin, Pa................ 1913 Dr. Nathaniel Pendleton Dandridge, Cincinnati............. 1916 ELECTED BY THE ALUMNI. UNDER ARTICLE VIII Term Expire The Hon. T. P. Linn, Columbus.............................. 1911 Dr. Francis W. Blake, Columbus............................. 1911 The Rev. James Townsend Russell, Brooklyn, N. Y.......... 1912 Mr. Charles R. Ganter, New York............................ 1912 The Rev. William Thompson, Pittsburg, Pa................... 1913 Mr. James H. Dempsey, Cleveland............................ 1913 ELECTED BY THE CONVENTIONS OF OTHER DIOCESES. UNDER ARTICLE IX Dioccic of Lexington, Judge A. D. Cole, Maysville, Ky. Diocese of Pittsburg, The Rev. William E. Rambo, Brownsville, Pa. Diocese of Indianapolii, Mr. H. W. Buttolph, Indianapolis, Ind. Diocese of Michigan. The Rev. William Gardam, Ypsilanti, Mich. Diocese of Chicago, Mr. Frederick William Harnwell, Chicago, 111. twenty •Died, November 6. 1910. Alumni Associations THE GENERAL ASSOCIATION President Grove D. Curtis, 80 . . 120 Liberty Street, New York, N. Y. Vice Presidents The Rt. Rev. John H. White, '72 . . Michigan City, Ind. William Peebles Elliott, 70 . . . Chicago, 111. James Kilbourne Jones, 58 . . . Columbus Secretary Arthur L. Brown, 06 . . Whitaker Paper Co., Cincinnati, Ohio Treasurer The Very Rev. H. W. Jones, D. D., '70 . . Gambier, Ohio 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 ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN OHIO President Frank H. Ginn, 90 .... Cleveland, Ohio Vice President The Hon. James Lawrence, 71 . . Cleveland, Ohio Secretary and Treasurer Roy H. Hunter, 03 . . 929 Garfield Building, Cleveland, Ohio Historian Frank H. Ginn, 90 .... Cleveland, Ohio Executive Committee James H. Dempsey, 82 The Rev. Charles C. Bubb, 99 Ernest S. Cook, 82 The Hon. James Lawrence, 71 _______ Charles A. Ricks, 91 ♦Deceased twenty-two THE ASSOCIATION OF CENTRAL OHIO John G. Dun, ’75 President . . . . Columbus, Ohio Secretary and Treasurer Frederick Hess Hamm,’06 . 213 Oak Street, Columbus, Ohio THE ASSOCIATION OF CINCINNATI AND VICINITY President Constant Southworth, ’98 ... Cincinnati, Ohio James G. Stewart, ’02 Vice President . . . . Cincinnati, Ohio Arthur L. Brown, ’06 Secretary and Treasurer . Whitaker Paper Co., Cincinnati, Ohio N. L. Pierson. ’80 Floricn Giauque, ’69 Walter H. Brown, ’06 Executive Committee Clay V. Sanford, ’94 Dr. Henry Stanbcry, ’96 THE ASSOCIATION IN THE EAST President Colonel John J. McCook. ’66 . . New York. N. Y. Vice Presidents Grove D. Curtis, ’80 . . . New York, N. Y. William W. Heame, ’83 ... Philadelphia, Pa. John Brooks Leavitt, ’68 . . • New York, N. Y. Secretary and Treasurer Charles R. Ganter, '99 . 49 Wall Street, New York, N. Y. Executive Committee The President The Vice Presidents The Secretary Leo. W. Wertheimer, ’99 Dr. Charles P. Peterman, ’80 twenty-three THE ASSOCIATION OF CHICAGO President Frederick W. Harnwell, '59 ... Chicago. III. Vice President Conners Goddard, ’02 . . Chicago. III. Secretary and Treasurer Arthur S. Morrison, ’09 Western Theological Seminary, Chicago, III. Historian W. H. Strong, 72 .... Chicago, 111. Executive Committee The President The Vice President The Rev. George B. Pratt, ’62 William P. Elliott, ’70 Chairman D. H. Crosser, 99 L. M. Pease, ’04 The Secretary THE ASSOCIATION OF PITTSBURG President John A. Harper, ’60.................................Pittsburg. Pa. Vice President Levi H. Burnett, 96................................Pittsburg, Pa. Secretary and Treasurer Charles C. Hammond, ’03 . 232 Fourth Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. THE ASSOCIATION OF TOLEDO President Gen. J. Kent Hamilton, ’59 . • • Toledo, Ohio Vice President The Rev. Louis E. Daniels, ‘02 Toledo. Ohio Secretary and Treasurer Jay C. Lockwood, ’04 2419 Robinwood Avenue, Toledo, Ohio twenty-four THE ASSOCIATION OF PHILADELPHIA President The Rev. I. N. Stanger, ‘67 • Vice President George F. Klock, 78 Philadelphia, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Secretary and Treasurer Matthew F Maury, ’04 900 Land Title Building. Philadelphia, Pa THE ASSOCIATION OF WASHINGTON. D. C. Washington, D. C. President The Hon. Matthew Trimble, ’60 Secretary and Treasurer Arthur T. Bagley, '02 . 1420 Q St., N. W.. Washington. D. C. THE ASSOCIATION OF PUGET SOUND President Horace McC. Billingsley, ’04 Seattle, Washington Vice President Dayton A. Williams, 99 Tacoma, Washington Secretary T. T. Van Swearingen, ’89 . 1722 Summit Ave., Seattle, Wash. r rcasurer C. Holman Dun, 09 . .1722 Summit Ave. Seattle, Wash. I HE ASSOCIATION OF MINNESOTA _ President The Rev. James Trimble.’52 . . Minneapolis. Minn. t i 0 _ Vic® President H«,„ S. C,„,.-81 . . Minneapolis Minn. E TO 2419SXn Ave S, Minneapolis Minn. twenty-five Kenyon College The Rev. William Foster Peirce, B. A., M. A., L. H. D., D. 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, Ml. 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, 1896—. D. D., Western Reserve Uni- versity, 1908. I B K. Theodore Sterling, B. A., M. A., M. D., LL. D. Professor Emeritus of Mathematics and Civil Engineering. Dean of 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 College. 1867. Professor in Columbus Medical College, 1873. Professor of Physics and Chemistry. Kenyon College, 1872-1896. President of Kenyon College. 1891-1896. Professor of Mathematics and Civil En- ginecnng. Professor of Botany and Physiology, Dean of the College, 1896. 4 BK. twenty-seven Henry Titus West, B. A., M. A. Professor of German. B. A., Oberlin, 1891. Instructor in German. Obcrlin, 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. BK. Barker Newhall, B. A., M. A., Ph. D. Professor of Greek. B. A., Haverford College, 1887. M. A., Haverford College, 1890. Fellow in Greek and Ph. D., Johns Hopkins, 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. 4 BK. 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, Williamstown. Mass., 1880-84. Ordered Deacon, 1885. 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, Bridge- water, Mass., 1899-1900. D. D., Kenyon, 1899. Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, Kenyon College, 1900-1903. Chaplain of the College, 1902—. A A I , t B K. 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. Instructor in Union College, 1895-97. Professor of English in the State University of Iowa. 1898-1900. Mcllvaine Professor of the English Language and Literature, Kenyon College, 1900—. A A 4 , $ B K. 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. 1902-1903. Professor of Biology, Kenyon College, 1902—. A TO, 2 H. twenty-eight Russell Sedgwick Devol, B. A.. M. A. Pr0BfaA°' Oh-L-mv.ni.y, 1870. M. A.. Ohio Univmi.y. '873. Pro- fessor of Mathematics. Ohio University, 1873-83. Professor of Mathe- matics, Kenyon College. 1883-96. Graduate StudenL jo ns Hopk.ns. 1896-97. With Westinghouse Electric Company. 1 rro- fessor of History. Kenyon College. 1903—. B © n. «I B K. Edwin Bryant Nichols, B. A., M. A. Mather Professor of Romance Languages. B. A.. Wesleyan. 1894. M. A.. Harvard. 1901. Instructor in Mod- ern Languages. University of Maine. 1898-1901. Assistant Professor of Romance Languages. University of Cincinnati, 1901-03. Professor of Romance Languages, Kenyon College, 1903—. B 0 IT, 0 N E, 4 K I . 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 Professor of Latin and Greek, Hobart College, 1899-1903. Professor of Latin. Kenyon College, 1903—. BK. Reginald Bryant Allen, B. Sc., M. Sc., Ph. D. Professor of Mathematics. B. Sc., M. Sc., Rutgers College, 1893-97. Ph. D., Clark Uni%ersity, 1905. Engineer on County Surveys in New Jersey, 1893-94. Acting Professor of Mathematics and Physics, Massachusetts Agricultural Col- lege, 1894-95. Head of the Department of Mathematics. Patterson, N. J., Classical and Scientific School, 1895-97. Instructor and Assistant Professor of Mathematics, in charge of the Department of Engineering, Adelphi College. Brooklyn, N. Y.. 1897-1901. Lecturer and Instruc- tor in Mathematics. Clark University. 1905-06. Professor of Mathe- matics, Kenyon College, 1906—. Member of American Mathematical Society. X , 1 B K. John Smith Harrison, B. A., M. A., Ph. D. Assistant Professor in English. B. A.. Columbia University, 1899. M. A., Columbia University, 1900. bellow in Comparative Literature, Columbia University, 1901-02 Ph D.. Columbia University. 1903. Leeturer in English Literature before Brooklyn Teaeber, Association, 1901, Substitute Teacher in Engli.h, 1903 °a H|8h pT' l9?3' In!t™c,or in English. Kenyon College. 1903. Assistant Professor of English, 1907—. PBK. twenty-nine George Francis Weida, B. S., Ph. D. Bowler Professor of Physics and Chemistry. B. S.. University of Kansas. 1890. Fellow, Johns Hopkins. 1893-94. Ph. D., Johns Hopkins, 1894. Assistant Pharmacent Chemist, Uni- versity of Kansas, 1888-90. Professor of Chemistry, Blackburn, 1894- 96. Baker, 1896-97. Professor of Chemistry, Kansas State Agri- cultural College, 1897-1903. Professor of Organic Chemistry at Ripon College. 1903-06. Professor of Chemistry at Kenyon College, 1907—. 2H. Claude Russell Fountain, A. B., Ph. D. Assistant Professor of Physics. A. B., University of Oregon, 1901. University Scholar in Mathematics, Columbia University, 1901-1902. Assistant in Physics, Columbia Uni- versity, 1902-05. Instructor, Columbia Summer School of Geodesy, 1902-05. Associate Professor of Physics, University of Idaho, 1905- 06. Instructor in Physics, Williams College, 1906-09. Ph. D., Co- lumbia University, 1908. Assistant Professor of Physics, Kenyon College, 1909—. Ezekiel Henry Downey, A. B„ M. A. Edwin M. Stanton Professor of Economics and Sociology. A. B., Iowa, 1907. Research Assistant, State Historical Society of Iowa, 1907-08. A. M., Iowa, 1908. Fellow in Political Economy, University of Chicago, 1908. Assistant Instructor in Political Economy, University of Chicago. 1909. Acting Assistant Professor of Economics, State University of Missouri, 1909-10. Professor of Economics, Ken- yon College, 1910—. 0 N E, 4 BK. thirty The Rev. William Foster Peirce, B. A., M. A., L. H. D., D. D. President of the Seminary. The Rev. Hosea Williams Jones, D. D. Dean of the Seminary. Elentheros Cooke Professor of Ecclesiastical His- tory. Church Polity, and Canon Law. Graduated from Bexley Hall, 1870. Held parochial charges at Ports- mouth, Ironton, Cincinnati, and Brooklyn. King’s College, Oxford Uni- versity. D. D., Kenyon, 1884. B K. The Rev. Jacob Streibert, B. A., M. A., Ph. D. Griswold Professor of Old Testament Instruction. B. A., Hamilton College, 1877. M. A., and Ph. D., Hamilton Col- lege. Instructor in the Classics and German, Lowville Academy, N. Y. Berkeley Divinity School, Middletown, Conn. Ordered Deacon. Or- dained Priest, 1881. Studied at Leipzig and Turbingen, 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—. 4 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 The- ology, Bexley Hall, 1896—. A 2 4 , B K. The Rev. Orville Ernest Watson, B. A., B. D. Professor of New Testament Instruction and Liturgies. B. A., Ohio Wesleyan, 1882. Bexley Hall, 1892. B. D., Bexley Hall. Minor Canon at Trinity Cathedral, Cleveland, 1892-1903. Act- ing Professor of New Testament Instruction, Bexley Hall. 1903—. J K I B K. thirty-one thirty-two Senior Editorial OW you are to leave us, 1911! You are to leave behind your dream days on the Hill and enter the busy life and acti- vities of the real world outside. It would be fitting for the 1911 Reveille to bid you a sad farewell and so make the breaking off of your sojourn here more grievous to bear. Rather let us give you a hearty send off; let us urge you forward and grant you God speed to enter with earnestness your future work and study. The god of Kenyon, the spirit of youth has been with you, and may he be yours until the last strain of the Senior reception dies away with the rising sun creeping out of the Kokosing off to the eastward. Between the time this last Reveille greets you and Commence- ment, you will have a Senior vacation. During those pleasant days in June you are to while away your time here on the Hill and to take long rambles down the valley, after arbutus, perhaps. When you roam the woods across the river along Hazel Dell you will have ample opportunity before the speechifying and exercises of Commencement to collect your thoughts, and looking back to Old Kenyon, to consider the meaning of the spirit of the Hill. You will know your college days have been a dream, but rather than awaken with a start, keep on dreaming. Let Kenyon and Gambier and the Kokosing keep them- selves a fresh and lovely picture in your mind. The Hill has been your realm, and remember, if ever the whole world turn you down, you can return to Gambier and be a king. thirty-three Nineteen Hundred and Eleven CLASS OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary T reasurer Historian Toastmaster CLASS COLORS Blue and White CLASS YELL (Locomotive) I—9—I—I Kenyon, Kenyon 1—9—I—I Kenyon, Kenyon I—9—1—1 Kenyon, Kenyon Eleven! Robert Clarkson Millspaugh Bartelle Hilen Reinheimer Allan Crawford Hall Charles Benton Scnft John Dean South worth Kingdon Thornton Siddall thirty-four Gbe Senior Glass 19U CHESTER MORSE CABLE. Literary. A T A, N II K; Freshman Football; Freshman Basket- ball; Assistant Business Manager Collegian (1) (2); Business Manager Collegian (3); Class Banquet Commit- tee (2) ; Vice President N IT K (3) ; Chess Club (1) (2) (3) (4) ; Football (2) (3) (4) ; Captain Football Team, resigned (4) ; Sophomore Hop Committee; Business Mana- ger 1910 Reveille; Executive Committee, resigned (4); Dormitory Committee, resigned (4). Tool kicked off the ball in the great game of life in 1890 at Lima, (a hoi name for a birthplace)). He began football on a corner lot and ended as Kenyon's Captain. “Toot is no less a hearty, good fellow than a football star, and his popularity among his classmates has been surpassed by no one in our glorious midst. His long suit in college has been managing publications, and the Collegian and Reveille have profiled financially by his directing hand. En- thusiastic Alumnus will be Toot’s course in life after college. JAMES HOAG CABLE. Literary. ATA.NIIK; Choir (I ) (2) (3) (4) ; Choir Leader (4) ; Glee Club (I) (2) (3) (4); Football (2) (3) (4); Football Captain (4) ; Freshman Football; Freshman Basketball; Basketball (3); Junior Play Committee (3); Class Dramatics (1) ; Chess Club (3) (4); Executive Committee (4); Senior Play Committee. See that nice round looking man walking up the path—oh, so slowly, with the big K on his front) Ain't he grand. Flora) That’s New Philadelphia Cable. Jim Cable, but Jim isn’t so slow like that when it comes to football, and all that put-on sluggishness of his is simply a philosophical attitude toward life. Jim can sing and write literature, also, if he wants to, but he says he has never seen the real necessity for exertion. When he leaves college, he claims he is going to start something, and he ought to make good. thirty-five ALLAN CRAWFORD HALL. Literary. A Y, 0 N E; Philomathesian; Marietta (1) ; Cross Coun- try Team (3) ; Chess Club (3) (4) ; Class Secretary (4) ; Executive Committee (4); Class Banquet Committee (4). “Buck Hall first lit a cigarette and kicked hi tiny tootsies in Parkersburg. W. Va. Since then he hat been busv calling up Curly and “Satan and “Steve” to congregate in the Hall Room tor the after- noon. His active participation in college affairs has been confined to spectre-like glides down the path for meals and chapel; all other times he has been “busy.” “Buck is one of our best friends and is a good addition to us, the remnant of the original 1911. BRUCE PIERCE HALL. Literary. A K E, 0NE, Philomathesian; University of Minne- sota (I) (2). Bruce, with the matted hair, a son of Norway, was a Valentine's present in 1889. His favorite amusement is to sit up with three or four lights burning to keep his roommates awake when thev want to sleep, and his favorite occupation is lying in bed except when he ought to be doing it. IJke Knute Nelson. Bruce says he would rather be a doughnut in Minneapolis than a cream-puff in any other city in the world, and on leaving college he expects to live and die there. RICHARD ROBERTS HARTER. Philosophical. A K E, 0 N E; Philomathesian; Mandolin Club (1 ) (2) (3) (4); Sophomore Hop Committee (2); Executive Committee (3) ; Dormitory Committee (4); Secretary of the Assembly (4). Well, Well, here is Harter, ha I ha!! “Dick happened in Canton on May 31. 1887. No man on earth has ever been more persistent in going to college than Dick, and he turns up in Gambier each fall like an old alumnus; but the way seems clearer now. and he expects to get •hat diploma if he has to purchase the colleoe and make it a backyard playground to Canton.‘Dick has friends all over the world, but none quite so strong as those at Gambier; we have found him always con- genial and never too busy to talk things over. Dick’s life work will be banking, interrupted, of course, like his college years, by frequent flyers to Flint. WALTER TUPPER KINDER. Philosophical. AKE.0NE; Philomathesian; Freshman Football (1 ) ; Sophomore Play Committee (2); Manager Track Team (2); Interscholastic Track Meet Committee (2) (3); Chairman (2); Class Historian (3); Junior Prom Com- mittee (3); 1910 Reveille Board; Collegian Board (3) (4); Editor-in-Chief Collegian (3); Ohio State Univer- sity Law School (4); Senior Committee (4); Baseball (2) (3) (4); Captain (4). Tup came to Kenyon to get away from Findlay. Loafing around has not been this classmate's strong card and he has taken a shot at and has received the prizes in not a few of the real worth- while activities of college life, as well as ringing in a semester of law at the Central Ohio Seminary. We have forgiven him for that, however, and there is mutual congratulation that he is with us in the fold again, laboring for a sheepskin. With cold blooded foresight he has determined on law as a vocation. 1 i WILLIAM OLIVER LESLIE. JR. Classical. N IT K ; Cornell University ( 1) (2) ; Choir (2) ; Canoe Club (3) (4): Assistant Business Manager 1910 Reveille (3) ; Bexley (4). William Oliver Cromwell Leslie, Junior, came to ua from Cor- nell. During his sojourn here, however, he succeeded in pulling ihe 1910 Reveille through without a debt—the first time our annual has accomplished that since 1855. Leslie forsook the class this year to get in a year at Bexley, but he is loyal to the last guards and will receive a sheepskin when we do. CLITUS HARRY MARVIN. JR.. Scientific. ♦ Y, © N E, NII K; Sophomore Play Committee; Honor Committee (3) (4); Junior Prom Committee (3); 1910 Reveille Board; Chairman Dormitory Committee (4); Senior Committee; Executive Committee; Glee Club (3) (4) -.Choir (4). ’'Curly began curing currants in Urbana. Ohio, and came to Ken- yon to get cultured. He was a gentleman to begin with and didn’t need the grindstone to trim him off. Curly says he has no aim in life; he found a deuce of a fine set of young chaps at Kenyon, so here he is—Senior year, and we have found him a mighty congenial sort of classmate. I fe attends eleven o’clock classes on Wednesdays. EARL MAHAFFEE MASON. Scientific. NITK; Critic NIIK (3) ; Vice President N II K (4) ; Freshman Track; Track Team (2) (3) (4) ; Track Cap- tain (3) (4); Interscholastic Track Meet Committee (3); Freshman Football; Football Team (2) (3) (4); Dormi- tory Committee (4); Physical Director and Gymnasium Instructor (4). Earl Mahaffee—yes, he’s that enterprising fellow who's now lead- ing the gym class. Mase is an attractive, enterprising sort of a chap, who undertakes with an indomitable determination to carry through to a successful conclusion, every project into which he enters. Earl M. has justly earned the unqualified respect of every man in college. Dependable, conscientious, eminently fair and cheerful al- ways,—are not these attributes he possesses to be envied by the less fortunate? ROBERT CLARKSON MILLSPAUGH, Philosophical. AA4 ; Philomathesian; Sophomore Play Committee (2) ; Class Banquet Committee (2); Class Toastmaster (3) ; Judge of Cane Rush (3) ; Glee Club (3) ; Assistant Baseball Manager (3); Executive Committee (3); Dormi- tory Committee (4) ; Baseball Manager (4) ; Coach Com- mittee (4); Class President (4). Bish was born with a megaphone in his mouth, in Minneapolis. December 4, 1888. but went to Kansas soon after to help his father run the church. St. John's at Salina gave him preparatory work and Carrie Nation of his native state furnished him with ideals which he has vigorously adhered to through college. Too bad Clarkson isn’t going into the ministry. is the old story.but Bi b” intends next year to chase the sordid dollars up Fifth Avenue or down Nicollet, instead of acting the Sky Pilot to his erring classmates at Kenyon. The Presi- dent of the Senior class—too bad! BARTELLE HILEN REINHEIMER, Scientific. Z A; Philomathesian; Freshman Football Team (1); Football Team (2) (3) (4); Assistant Baseball Manager (2); Baseball Manager (3); Choir (2) (3); Glee Club (2) (3); Brotherhood of St. Andrew; Class Treasurer (3) ; Junior Prom Committee (3); Chairman Honor Committee (4): Dormitory Committee (4); Medical Society; Chairman Student Lecture Course C ommittee (4) ; Executive Committee (4); Chairman Alumni Library Committee (4). Coming now to a man from Sandusky, whose name reminds one of a Turkish rug. hut whom we call Rciny, lei us tell what we can on him. Reinjr. —well. look at his college honors and let it go at that. Sulfice it to say. he is about as popular a man as we have in 1911. and the only thing we can say against him is that upon graduation he will forsake our kind and become a broad minded postulant at Bexley. LECKY HARPER RUSSELL, Literary. AKE; 0NE; Philomathesian; Glee Club (1) (2) (3) (4) ; Choir (3) ; Sophomore Banquet Committee (2) ; Track Team (2); Civic Club (2) (3): Class Treasurer (2) ; Class President (3); Basketball Manager (3); Art Editor 1910 Reveille; College Marshal (3); President Medical Club (4); Executive Committee (4). Russell never had any intention of entering the ministry, he came to Kenyon because the college offered an education with home surroundings. He was born July 8. 1889, in Mt. Vernon. He is a quiet fellow and his apparition-like figure haunts the Path of Gam- bier like the ghost of Hill Weaver. Lecky has held the college honors awarded him with dignity, and the friendships he haa made with constancy. Some community will gain a good physician when Leek finally gets educated. EVERETT SANDERSON. Literary. A A 1 ; Philomathesian; Freshman Basketball Team (I); Basketball Team (2) (3); Chairman Sophomore Hop Committee (2); Tennis Team (3); Mandolin Club (3) (4); Assistant Football Manager (3); Chess Club (3) (4); Coach Committee (4); Vice President of Assembly (4); Chairman Constitution Committee (4); College Marshal (3) (4) ; Football Manager (4). Everett is a pretty name but give the devil his due. Satan was bom in that Avernian hole of Joliet. III.. August 10, 1888. He acquired his front name on coming to Kenyon but inherited the latter one, by which he now claims cousinship with Julia. Hi. college work has been added to by membership in the country club and a twenty-five hour course in human nature. He has a slender and graceful figure and surprisingly we learn he holds three K’s. one of ihern perhaps for giving the college so excellent a football schedule. When “Satan leaves college on graduation he will work. CHARLES BENTON SENFT. Classical. N II K; Cross Country Team (2) (3); Dormitory Committee (4) ; Chess Club (3) (4) ; Science Club (4) ; Freshman Basketball Team; College Monitor (4); Broth- erhood of St. Andrew (4) ; Senior Committee. Seneft -—why. yea-sure, he comes from Danville up the line here a few stations on the C. A. C. His hair grew blond worrying about monitoring some one out of college, but somehow he's managed so far to keep Harter and Marvin from overcutting this semester, so award him victory! A conscientious student and a loyal classman will enter the world after June. KINGDON THORNTON SIDDALL. Philosophical. AA J ; Philomalhesian; President Philomathcsian (4); Secretary Philomathesian (3) ; Chairman Junior Prom Com- mittee (3); Puff and Powder Club (3) (4); President Puff and Powder Club (4); Civic Club (3) (4); Presi- dent Civic Club (4) ; Track Manager (3) ; Judge of Cane Rush (3): Secretary Executive Committee (4); Chair- man Class Banquet Committee (3) ; Class Toastmaster (4); Chairman Intcrscholastic Track Meet Committee (3) ; Class Dramatics (3); Glee Club (2) (3) (4); Mandolin Club (2) (3) (4); Choir (2) (3); Cheer Leader (4); 1910 Reveille Board (3); Collegian Board (4); Senior Committee (4) ; Alumni Library Committee (4). The great hope of the Democratic party first saw the light of this Republican-ridden land at Ravenna. Ohio, September 2, 1890. Cub became a Democrat because his father was, and ever since he learned to talk, he has been a leading argufier wherever there is a minority issue at slake, or the Erie R. R. is to be defended. Sid loves to settle down into his shoes and bury his chin in his collar and utter solemn truths, and, with great gusto of Latinized words, solve economic problems in a to-be-prescrvcd-for-posterity-Danicl-Webster- likc manner. Harvard Law will keep Siddall busy after graduation. JOHN DEAN SOUTHWORTH. Classical. A T A; N II K; Freshman Football; Freshman Basket- ball; Chess Club (1) (2) (3) (4); Treasurer NIIK (2) ; Treasurer Chess Club (2) (3) ; Cross Country (2) : Junior Prom Committee; Critic X IT K (4); Football (3) (4) ; President Chess Club (4) ; President Science Club (4); Medical Society (4); Dormitory Committee (4); Brotherhood of St. Andrew (4). John is the last of the fair haired Southworth tribe. He began thinking about football and chess as soon as he was bora on July 27, 1890. and so at seventeen years of age entered Kenyon, a rosy checked stripling of a youth. He still has the yellow hair and the apple cheeks, but conscientious, faithful work on the football field has rewarded him with a fine big physique and a coveted K HORACE WYNDOME WOOD. Classical. 2AE;0NE;NnK;St Stephens College ( I ) ; Presi- dent Oratorical and Debating Association (3); Treasurer Junior Prom Committee (3); Collegian Board (3) (4); Civic Club; Vice President Civic Club (4) ; Editor-in- chicf 1910 Reveille; President of Assembly (4). Genius seems to have a way of springing up in Indiana. Needless to say, therefore, Woody” is a Hoosier, from Terre Haute. He came to Kenyon because he had tried the colleges on the Hudson and wanted a real education. Woody became the great, deep thinking, serious minded man of 1911, and no honors could find a shoulder half so strong to bear them. Last year he ably edited the 1910 Reveille and now is our Assembly President. His aim in life is to smoke a K'pe, to teach Greek, Hebrew and Philosophy in some Theo- gical Seminary, and be a kind of a twentieth-century monk. thirty-nine Class Song (Tune: “Lord Jeffrey Amher ) One fine summer morning, when the world had just begun. Father Sol looked across the sea; And he saw the years made ready that through endless time should run, And he laughed writh content and glee. And he laughed with content and glee! He said: “I’m proud I made them, they are swift and they are strong. They are all as bright as bright can be; But if I must choose among them, why, it will not take me long. Nineteen ’leven is the year for me!” Chorus. Oh, Nineteen Eleven! ’Tis the class of the heart and hand so true, Mother Kenyon, dear Kenyon, we are loyal to our class and you! forty Shadows of the Path 1911 William Hyland Adams, AT A, Scientific Gordon Granger Agneu, Classical Randall Anderson, ¥T, Scientific Chester Everett Bates, Special Henry Alfred Bceman, A K E, Literary Nathaniel John Belknap, 'PT, Literary Sidney Guthrie Brady, AKE, Classical Richard William Brousc, B B IT, Scientific Robert Bowen Brown, BBIT, Philosophical Albert Robert Childs, BBIT, Literary Earle Henry Crippen, B0 n, Scientific Alfred Benton Crossley, AKE, Literary William Goodwin Curtis, AKE, Literary Jenkins Morris Daniels, AKE, Scientific Walter Clark Darling, B( )n, Literary Charles Barr Field, Y, Literary Frederick James Finlay, AKE, Literary George Esler Fullerton, AKE, Literary Douglas Latimer Gardiner, AA I , Philosophical Raymond Coles Gillette, AA I , Scientific James B. Golden, Special William Ellsworth Gorsuch, Scientific Robert Aaron Gulick, Philosophical James Donald Henry, AA«I , Literary Alfred Armstrong Murfey, AA I , Philosophical Edward Milton Peake, aa I , Literary Charles Donald Rarey. Y, Literary Walter Emlin Ridenour, Literary Theodore Cahoon Schneerer, ATA, Philosophical John Brown Schoemaker, Scientific . Elyria . Cincinnati . Chicago, III. . Blanchcstcr . Cleveland . Napoleon . Toledo . . Akron . . Glendale Syracuse, N. Y. Corry, Pa. Topeka, Kan. . .Cleveland Leavenworth, Kan. . Coshocton Chicago, 111. . Toledo Columbus Norwalk Chicago, 111. . Athens . Gambier . . Akron Circleville Cleveland Norwalk Columbus . Lima Norwalk Buffalo, Wyo. forty-one Hugh Leighton Simpson, ATA, Scientific Theodore Eugene Smith, Jr., Classical William Henry Theobald, Jr., Special Harold Alvin Tillinghast, AKE, Literary Lloyd Lambert Townsend, AKE, Philosophical William Percy Van Tuyle, Literary Earle Clifton Vogelsong, ATA, Special Stephen Marvin Young, Jr., AKE, Philosophical . Lima . Akron Cincinnati T oledo Columbus Clinton, Mich. . Elyria . Norwalk UMcari a forty-two Junior Editorial ELL, here we are—Juniors! Three years ago when we entered college the Junior year seemed an infinite distance away, and the third year man had attained at once our idea of the finished scholar, the attractive young man and the jolly care- free fellow. He was the life, spirit and the exemplification of a college course, and we resolved if ever we lasted long enough in the pleasant collegiate atmosphere of Gambier to become a Junior, future years would be a mere nothing and later success an assured thing. So, here we are—Juniors; but how about that ideal? True enough, we indeed have attained a store of valuable classical learn- ing, together with no less an amount of worldly experience. The Registrar has credited a few of us with hours enough to have seats in the chapel on the organ side, and yet the whole world of thought is not ours. As a class we have been given to self disparagement, and it is not our determination now to be inconsistent. An impartial and critical estimation of us must be made by others than ourselves; preferably, the Freshmen. Truthfully, we do feel the distinction of being upper classmen and perhaps we have become a little aristocratic upon finding ourselves out of the class of those who haze and are hazed, and among those who are. As Juniors we are enjoying our college courses immensely. Duties are increasing, and responsibilities grow heavier as we near the last. Our advice to those in college below us is to live intensely. We in our time have tried to captain the college teams and to win the Latin prizes, and it has been a world of fun. The days have not been half long enough and some things we have had to leave undone. We deliver the charge to you, 1913; do your best and tell us in your Reveille another year that you as Juniors have finished the task. forty-five Nineteen Hundred and Twelve CLASS OFFICERS William Archibald Thomas Harlow Henry Gaines James Dempsey Cook Russell Twiggs Young Philip Porter Harold King Downe President Vice President Secretary T reasurer Historian Toastmaster CLASS COLORS Red and Blue. forty-six CLASS YELL Hika Kenyon, Red and Blue. 1—9—I—2! Zhc junior Claes 1312 KENNETH TRESS ADAMS. Scientific. Philomathcsian; Second Prize Intercollegiate Math. Ex- aminations (2); Science Club (2) (3). “Kay hails from Gambier and attended Kenyon probably bo- cause it was handy and the natural thing to do. He couldn't have done better if he had crossed the continent. He is one of those quiet unassuming sort of fellows whose worth cannot be appreciated until one knows him. yet in those quiet moments of his the Intercollegiate Math Exams, fall before him. and Trinity, Hobart and the rest ac- knowledge Adams, '12, of Kenyon, is O. K. in the science line. HOWARD ASHLEY AXTELL, Philosophical. A T A; N II K; Freshman Football; Freshman Baseball: Sophomore Rush Captain; Chairman S. C. I. Committee (2) ; Glee Club (2) (3) ; Football Team (2) (3) ; Base- ball Team (2); Assistant Manager Basketball (2); Bas- ketball Manager (3); Captain-elect Football (3); Coach Committee (3); All State Football Team (2) (3). Dummy is by no means all that his name implies. Excepting that he came from Perry, O., no one in the world can say a word against him, and despite the fact that he is an All-State end. Cy it enough of the student to keep up with the rapid pace in scholarship set by his class. He is an athlete and the ozone of the Hill has kept his color fresh and his disposition a blues dispenser—the college could use more just like him. BENTON ALMON BEATTY. Scientific. N II K; Marietta (I ) ; Freshman Basketball; Basketball (3); Cross Country (2); Tennis (2) (3); Junior Prom Committee (3); Chess Club (2) (3); Science Club (3); College Marshal (3). This man saw the error of his ways and hastily changed his college and claw to enter the glorious Kenyon delegation of 1912. He left the Blennerhasset region of Marietta to come to Bishop Chase's Knox county institution, and he has proved himself an athletic sort of care-free fellow, and is known for his basketball and tennis abilities. JOHN DEAN BOYLAN, Classical. Ohio Wesleyan University (1). John Dean taw the Kenyon-Stale game of 1908 at Columbus and was so impressed with Kenyon spirit, that he had to forsake Wesleyan for Gambier. He still follows the teams back to Delaware, however, shocks the Wesleyan men. and carries his camera constantly and talks nothing but automobiles and girls. John's home is in Milford Center. JOHN WALTER CLEMENTS. Literary. A A4 ; Philomathesian; Chairman Jersey Committee (1) ; Freshman Track Team; Sophomore Hop Committee; Collegian Reporter (2); Stanton Civic Club (2); Glee Club (2); College Choir (3); Canoe Club; Junior Prom Committee (3); Manager Puff and Powder Club (3); Art Editor 1911 Reveille. John Walter is a Hoosier from Richmond, Indiana, from whence also hails our English professor. Clem is odd—would rather call a necktie a cravat and dinner time half after six than use our own good college English. He avows an artistic bent, and so for two years has arranged all his classes for the mornings of the week so that he could go coon-hunting at night and canoeing in the day-time. On leaving college, the Richmond automobile is expected to be materially improved by his original inventive and artistic genius; a possibility—but vague! I JAMES DEMPSEY COOK. Classical. AKE; Philomathesian (1) (2) (3); Sophomore Hop Committee; Junior Prom Committee; Class Secretary (3). J.D.”came to college to work and so elected none but the hardest courses. He was so ardent a student, that he was rewarded with high grades, even gaining “I’a” in Greek 8 and Philosophy 3. He has had lime, however, to learn a few of the college bad habits and frequently has had to have his mouth rinsed with the Ivory, to keep pure the ecclesiastical atmosphere of our college dormitory. “Jim will be an honor man easily, and after that—law, perhaps. WARNER DAYLE COOK. Philosophical. B ©II; N II K; Freshman Football; Freshman Baseball; Freshman Track; Glee Club (1) (2) (3); Science Club; Class Dramatics (2). From Chardon. O., through Howe to Kenyon, was Babe Cook's itinerary for erudition. He is the largest man in the Junior class, physically.hence his metaphorical cognomen; an athlete in his Fresh- man year, Warner didn't get time enough to keep the college—and Harcourt—good natured, so quit. Cookie has the proverbial dis- position of the well fed man, the same being a most desirable element in the rolls of 1912. n WALTER HATHERAL COOLIDGE. Philosophical. Philomathcsian; College Organist (1) (2) (3); Glee Club (2); Assistant in Chemistry (2) (3); Science Club (3); Vice President Science Club (3); Chess Club (1) (2) (3); Secretary (2); Treasurer (3); 1911 Reveille Board; Assistant Baseball Manager (3). Here i Coolidge, college organist and Chemistry shark. Hasn't missed chapel but once in three years, and had an understudy in his place then, gaining thereby the Harcourt Parish prize for Chapel attendance, in the shape of a huge hymnal from Doc Smythe. Assuredly an honor but not comparable to the P. B. K. Key that should be his in June. RUSSELL EUGENE COPELAND. Literary. Philomathesian. Mansfield, Ohio, the nearest wet town, brought us Copeland. Con- trary to the inference one would naturally draw, Russ is abstemi- ously temperate and utterly unassuming. He makes no noise until h« strikes an examination paper, then—Bang!—all over! The blue-book is returned marked I.” ERNEST COOK DEMPSEY. Classical. A K E; N n K; Chairman Freshman Banquet Commit- tee; Class President (2); Honor Committee (3); Alumni Library Committee (3); 1911 Reveille Board; Collegian Board; Civics Club; Chess Club. In 1890 the gossips of Cleveland got busy and circulated the report as far as Garabier that a truly aristocratic son of Kenyon, with all the ear marks of a really cultured” gentleman, would be ready for college eighteen years hence. When the University School finished with Ernest he came to us so well prepared that he found he could easily complete the whirl on our academic faro in less than the allotted time. The Sophomore Presidency and Collegian and Reveille work have kept him worried but nevertheless he always kept un- ruffled and spotless in elegance and countenance. He will take law at Harvard and continue the Dempsey loyally to Kenyon. May their line continue. HAROLD KING DOWNE, Literary. ♦ Y;NIIK; Freshman Baseball Team; Freshman Track l earn; Chairman Class Song Committee; Glee Club (1 ) (2) (3) ; Class Secretary (2) ; Baseball Team (2) (3) ; Football Squad (3); Track Team (2) (3); Chairman Junior Prom Committee (3) ; Class Toastmaster (2) (3) ; Judge Cane Rush (3) ; Dramatics (2) ; College Marshal (3) . A positive answer to the useless question, “Can a Chicago man graduated’ Coming from the Hyde Park High School, one w'ould think Fuzzy to be inseparably enamoured with the gay Chicago life. Despite this allurement, he sought the lamp of academic learning and is broadening his knowledge of life with scholarship. He is a rattling good fellow, yet serious enough to pass off his hours, and energetic enough to make the baseball, football and track teams. Twice Toastmaster of 1912 is a good enough guarantee of personal popularity, and the qualifications that go with the honor, so, Here’s to Fuzzy. Drink it Downe. ■ HARRY MALCOLM KELLAM, Classical. Hanover (I) (2); Ringer of the College Chimes (3). Who is that little fellow? Why, that's Kellam. the Ringer of the College Chimes. He is a new acquisition to 1912. and came to Kenyon to be within the classical atmosphere of so ancient a seat of learning as Gambier. Another year he will enter Bexley, and so the Sunday call to morning hymns and evening vespers will not be de- nied us. His home is Madison, Indiana. HARLOW HENRY GAINES. Scientific. AT A; Philomathcsian; Brotherhood of St. Andrew; Class Vice President ( 1) (3) ; Choir ( I ) ; Glee Club ( I ) (2) (3) ; Assistant Manager Musical Clubs (2) ; Manager Musical Clubs (3); Assistant Manager Collegian (3); Freshman Basketball; Basketball (2) (3); Sophomore Hop Committee; Junior Prom Committee; President-elect of Assembly. Harlow came to Kenyon from Kenton to kill time, to play basket- ball and to manage the business end of our Musical Clubs. Aside from doing these things and making himself generally popular with his classmates, he has been idle and has taken life as a song. Posses- sing a genial and social nature, and a keen interest in collecting the 25c. banquet fee for Philo’s Commencement Reunion. Harlow has made his presence among the elite of our class a welcome one. ALAN GUSTAVUS GOLDSMITH. Scientific. AT A; Philomathcsian; Freshman Track; College De- bating Team ( 1) ; Curator Philomathesian (1) (2) ; Class Dramatics (2); Vice President Philomathesian (3) Civic Club; Science Club; Collegian Board (2) (3); Secretary Collegian Board (3); 1911 Reveille Board (3); Cross Country (1) (2); Brotherhood of St. Andrew. Berlin, Germany, is responsible for Kaiser, alias Oliver Gold- smith, although he is by birth an American. What’s in a name? Kaiser heard the minnesingers on the Rhine singing Kenyon’s praises and came to us, only to beat his classmates out by a year and become first honor man in the class ahead. Wherever there is debating, ora- tory. science, civics, and cross country, there is Goldie.” and we are glad he is among us. Berlin, Germany, adds a cosmopolitan tinge to the class roll of 1912. FREDERICK GEORGE HARKNESS, Classical. B © II; N n K; Glee Club (1) (2) (3); Glee Club Accompanist (1) (2) (3) ; Choir (1) (2) (3); Mando- lin Club (2); Collegian Board (2) (3); Reveille Board (3); Freshman Basketball (1); Brotherhood of St. An- drew (2) (3); Class Song Committee (2); Editor-in- Chief Collegian (elect). Harkness of Norwalk! no, he didn't write the Latin Grammar, but I dare say he knows more of that confounded language than any man in college. Perhaps his rythmic nature has made latin metre a pastime. Fred doesn’t make a noisy splash in the quiet waters of Gambier, but he dives low and drinks deep of the Pierian Spring. He is a con- sistent student, but a better pianist, and the musical clubs owe much to him. LAWRENCE KINSMAN McCAFFERTY. Classical. B 0 IT; N II K; Freshman Baseball Team; Freshman Track Team; Assistant Manager Glee Club (1); Glee Club (2) (3); Medical Society (2) (3); Brotherhood of St. Andrew: Secretary NIIK; Manager of Oratorical Association (3) ; Science Club; Assistant Business Manager 191 I Reveille; Assistant Manager Track Team (3); Jun- ior Prom Committee; Dormitory Committee (3). On May 13. 1890, ''Doc” came inlo this world of toil and travail and Chillicolhe was the gainer. Came to Cambier because hi native town voted the most wide 0| en of any in the state, which boded ill for the residence of an ambitious young surgeon. In college he has had a hand in nearly everything going on,—a dabbler in the arts, as it were,—and he has had no small share of popularity. When Doc gets educated here he will continue his monkeying around with lest tubes and pills in the Johns Hopkins Medical School. PHILIP PORTER. Classical. ZA; Philomathesian; Freshman Football Team; Class Historian (2) ; Glee Club (2) (3) ; Junior Prom Commit- tee; Assistant Business Manager Collegian (2); Business Manager Collegian (3) ; Assistant Football Manager (3) ; Football Manager-elect. Doctor, don't you think all this frantic admiration and hero wor- hip of the Attic Orators is bosh and tommy-rot? Porter studies the classics with sarcastic skepticism and yet his ambition is to be a high- browed student of divinity! Phil is a dry wit and will be even drier when he has to forsake Cleveland for Bexley. He is mighty popular, for look above at his latest college honor—the biggest plum in the Athletic Department. EDMUND FRISBIE SHEDD. Literary. 2, II; Philomathesian; Ohio State University (1) ; Ban- quet Committee (2) ; Chairman Sophomore Hop Commit- tee; 1911 Reveille Board. Red Shedd has only Columbus, Ohio, to blame for being an Ohioan, and O. S. U. to thank for getting the prep work necessary to enter Kenyon. Solomon in all his glory couldn't have equalled Red when Red gels all perked up to go to Vernon of a Saturday night. Frisbie came to Kenyon to have a good time and to make friends, and we can assure you he did both. Business called him from college prematurely, but drop in to see him at Shedd Co.’s when you are in Columbus, and talk things over. WILLIAM ARCHIBALD THOMAS. Classical. ♦ Y, NIIK; President Junior Class; Collegian Board (1) (2) (3); Sophomore Hop Committee; 1911 Reveille Board; Glee Club (1) (2) (3); Mandolin Club (I) (2) (3) ; Leader Mandolin Club (2) ; Track Team (2) ; Brotherhood of St. Andrew; Chess Club (2); Delegate S. V. M. Convention, Rochester, N. Y., (2). Tommy got his education at MacKenzie’a School, Dobbs’ Ferry, N.Y., and came to Kenyon because he wanted to. The deficiencies of an eastern preparation didn’t deter him from his ambition to go through college, and when the mandolin, banjo, glee club and opera rehearsals are over each day. he climbs up into hit room on the third floor back and studies a few minutes. Tommy will enter Bexley next year and afterwards enter upon his life work of reforming John Dickinson. ralph McKinley watson. Classical. AA J ; Philomathesian; Collegian Board (I) (2) (3); Choir ( I ) ; Glee Club (2) (3) ; Mandolin Club (2) (3) ; Assistant Manager Iennis (I); Tennis Manager (2); Class Treasurer (2); Freshman Track; President Orator- ical and Debating Association (3); Cross Co'intry; Presi- dent Minnesota Club (3); Chairman Junior Banquet Committee; Editor-in-Chief 1911 Reveille (3). Ole looks the part but insists that he is English. He is the Dean of the Minnesota delegation at Kenyon and aside from his unsatiale fondness for the Classical course and his insistence on getting out his work as the summum bonum of college life, he is not much differen from the others of his flock. But he has had his share of college dishonors, and this Reveille is the last on the list. Any one who talk to”Watty for ten minutes nnd isn't convinced that Kenyon is the best place on earth has done all the talking himself. ROBERT AUGUSTUS WEAVER. Philosophical. A T A; N II K; Brotherhood of St. Andrew; Collegian Board (I) (2) (3); Secretary Collegian Board (1) (2); Editor-in-Chief Collegian (3); Freshman Basketball; Freshman Track; Sophomore Banquet Committee; Civic Club; Football (2) (3); Basketball (2) (3); Basketball Captain (3); Basketball Captain-elect; Assistant Manager Track 'Team (2); Manager Track Team (3); Honor Committee (3); Business Manager 1911 Reveille; Glee Club (2) (3). Bobbie” is one of the all-round men of the class. His athletic ability has aroused the enthusiasm of the college many times, on the football field and in track and basketball. A large portion of the past year, however, has been spent trying to lessen the errors in the Collegian and to procure ads for the Reveille. He just revels in college honors, and whenever any organization in any line needs a new officer they just elect Bobbie and he gracefully accepts. PAUL ASHLEY WEST, Classical. Philomathesian; Chess Club; Medical Society; Secretary Science Club (3). Paul wanted to gel right into the midst of things and be Kenyon bred from the start. He was reared in Gambier in Hitchie's-house-on the-campus, as we Juniors know the place, accordingly he is one of the landmarks of the Hill. He is seen cavorting up and down the Path each day with seven or eight thousand books in a big blue bag, but this is only his way of hnnging a bluff on the family. Really he doesn't need the books at all, for he was born naturally bright and gets out his work by absorption. He will enter the medical profession some day. RUSSELL TWIGGS YOUNG. Literary. B © n; N n K; I reshman Football; Freshman Baseball; Freshman Basketball; Glee Club (I ) (2) (3) ; Choir (2) (3); Sophomore Banquet Committee; Executive Committee (2) (3); Secretary Executive Committee (2); Football (2) (3) ; Basketball (2); Baseball (2); Class Treasurer (3) ; Chairman Class Banquet Committee. I came to college to be an athlete, and 1 came to Kenyon because vou have great teams here. Russ has made all the teams in col- lege except Tennis, and he certainly has been a valuable man. Zanes- ville. Ohio, produced him. and each year he threatens to go back, but college life is too enjoyable to him, and Kenyon needs him too much to let him drop. Our Class Treasurer, and a capable officer for the responsible post. Class Song Tunc of Yale Boola O come let us sing to Nineteen-Twelve, Let us sing, let us sing all merrily; For we arc the class of Nineteen Twelve, We will sing of our immortality. Last year we dug, next year we’ll delve. But neither one know we; For the only year is Nineteen-Twelve We have learned in Universal History. Chorus. While the college chimes arc ringing, And the college men are singing, Kenyon binds us ail together In the class of Nineteen-Twelve. O stop the clock on Gambier Hill, Make it one eternal evening and a day; On Gambier Hill let the sun stand still To watch the sturdy football heroes play. We’ll stop the clock on Gambier Hill, And here we’ll ever stay, While the moon stands still on Gambier Hill To hear the serenaders far away.—(Cho.) We’ll know no year but Nineteen-Twelve, So the time to come no terror for us hath; And all our calendars we will shelve,— O tell it not in Gaza nor in Gath! Our calendars we’ll neatly shelve, In spite of old Time’s wrath, And we’ll know no year but Nineteen-Twelve, And we’ll sing forever on the Middle Path.— (Cho.) fifty-three Junior Phantoms Thomas Wilkinson Attridge, Classical Rochester, N. Y. Warren Scovill Corning, AA4 , Philosophical Chicago, 111. Sidney Franklin Culver, Special . Columbus Harry Arthur Dunn, ATA, Literary . Sandusky Nelson Frasier Evans, Scientific . . Toledo Charles Morton Finney, AA4 , Literary Kenilworth; 111. Sherman Otis Hayes, Y Literary . Fremont Benjamin Neff Hayward, B0H, Literary . Columbus Ernest Stanley Hodges, Philosophical Milford Norman R. Holzacpfel, Scientific . Sandusky Clifford Frederic Kumler, ATA, Literary Dayton Francis Keith Lawrence, Classical . Cleveland Alfred Lucien Mclntire, Special Biddleford, Maine Joseph Arthur Morton, AKE, Special Mt. Vernon Donald MacMurray, Literary Chicago, 111. Irving Loveridgc Pulver, AA«I , Philosophical Chicago, 111. Roger Eugene Reilly, AKE, Literary St. Paul, Minn. Wayne Augustus Stallman, AA«I , Literary . Columbus Edmund Cyrus Underwood, BOH, Jamestown, N. Y. George Williston White, Special Minneapolis, Minn. Clifford Theodore Williams, B n . Norwalk fifty-four fifty-five tifty-nx Sophomore Editorial TRITE comment for us to make concerning your class would be that you were fated from the beginning because of an unlucky numeral, but that in your particular case the “’13 is to prove your blessing. It will be a hundred years before another class of 13” on some dark September night will gather as Freshmen against the cold stone face of Old Kenyon for their first S. C. I.,and from that class some energetic young grandson may take the notion to rummage through the dusty files of Alumni Library to find an account of the class of 13 that antedated them by a century. Therefore, it behooves the 1911 Reveille to be as charitable as possi- ble in recounting your fortunes and to paint you up as charitably as we can. As Freshmen you were a bold and energetic sort; you looked for trouble and found it, and you smilingly paid the penalty by spending the last eight weeks of the year on probation. As Sophomores, now, you arc required by tradition to act as the policemen of the college; during the fall, the cry of “Thirteen out!” inspired the usual terror in the heart of every new man. Your only real adversity was the Cane Rush, lamentable, indeed, and we shall spare you reproof for that. The Sophomore year is by nature a hard one, and from Freshman to Senior the attitude toward you is respectively one of fear and disdain. A complacent self sufficiency must be your course. The upper classman years will alleviate the imagined hardships of the Freshman period and the distressing though unavoidable position of the Sophomore year. May good fortune be yours. Be ready with a willing heart and a strong hand to assume next year the responsibili- ties of “the best year in college.’ fifty-seven Nineteen Hundred and Thirteen OFFICERS Don Carlenos Wheaton ..... President George Glen Skiles . . . . . Vice President Vernon Cockrane McMaster . . . Secretary Donald Wonders . . ... Historian Wiley Wiggins Glass . . . Toastmaster COLORS . . Orange and Black. CLASS YELL 1—9— I— 3 Hika, Kenyon Woo. Pec. fifty-eight iiplpmuir Gllass 1913 MEMBERS William Leonard Aves, AKE, Scientific Monterey, Mex. Clarence Jay Black, Scientific . Danville Harold Daub Bowlus, BOnt Scientific . Helena Fred George Clark, Yf Literary Cleveland Clan Crawford, Classical Franklin, Pa. John Alexander Dickinson, Y, Special . Mt. Victory Wiley Wiggins Glass, AA t , Literary Richmond, Ind. John Edward Harris, Jr., AA t , Literary Cleveland Franklin Edgar Hauck, Classical . Fremont Karl Elmo Howser, Special Marion Harold Stanley Johnson, Y Literary St. Paul, Minn. Irvin John Koehnlinc, Philosophical Bridgeport William Frederick Koehnline, Philosophical . Bridgeport Cecil Perry Krieg, B0II, Special Minneapolis, Minn. Milner Fuller Little, BOII, Classical . Cincinnati Frank Curry Marty, ATA, Special Ft. Thomas, Ky. Fitch-James Matthews, Yf Literary . Dayton Vernon Cockrane McMaster, ATA, Classical Pittsburg, Pa. fifty-nine Howard Hoffcr Nusbaum, AKE, Special Stephan Geiger Rockwell, KE, Scientific George Glen Skiles, 8017, Literary Maurice Cecil Snyder, Literary William Thurman Sprague, Philosophical Don Carlenos Wheaton, ATA, Literary John Adams Wickham, AKE, Philosophical Robert Cummings Wiseman, AA«t , Literary Donald Wonders, Classical . Toledo Cleveland . Shelby Bowling Green Youngstown Cleveland Norwalk Springfield Bellefontaine The Song of Thirteen I Say, have you seen how the Class of Thirteen Is a tragical sight to view? For its ill-omened name, in the annals of fame. Will attest a plain case of hoodoo-- Hoodoo! It’s a dreadful state, to be frowned on by fate, But it’s all of it legally due To the working unseen of the number Thirteen, As of course is well known to you. REFRAIN Good signs or bad signs are all the same to us! Hearts without fear make hearts victorious! This is our watch-word, against the unforeseen,— We’re the unconquerable Class of Thirteen! II Some will be rich, it’s a destiny which Is enough to make anyone sad! And misfortune, perhaps, for a few of us chaps, To our miseries marriage may add— Too bad! Till the mid-night’s ridge we shall have to play bridge, Or it’s whatever else is the fad! And it’s three meals a day till we’re all of us gray— And so how can a chap feel glad? REFRAIN III Some of the class will most probably pass. Although strange it may seem to be; And as likely as not ’twill be somebody’s lot To get “one” in the place of a “three!”— Whoop-ee! And you may presume ’twill be somebody’s doom To display a big Phi Beta key; So it’s clear to be seen, it’s the number Thirteen Which has made all of these things be! REFRAIN t ixty-one Sometime Sophomores Francis Blake, ATA, Philosophical . Gambier Clifford Wilmont Chance, Scientific . Gambier Evan Mai Voir Chase, Philosophical Bowling Green Marquis Chisholm, Special Homestead, Pa. Isaac Lee Davis, Literary . Cincinnati Frederick Wing Fay, Scientific Collinwood Forest Almont Field, Classical . Marion William Haldeman, B®n, Literary . Glendale Louis Stanley Hicks, Literary . Cincinnati Charles Vemcll High, Scientific Coleman, Mich. Carl Frank Jones, B©n, Special Columbus Christian Herman Kicchlcr, Literary . Cincinnati Richard Henry Kuebler, Literary Milan Frederick Hendricks Lane, Philosophical Bowling Green Leland Vance Lee, ATA, Literary Monterey, Mexico Harry Levinson, Literary Petosky, Mich. Clarence Vincent Metcalf, Classical Gambier Roy James Moorehouse,B0n, Philosophical . Mt. Vernon Paul Pennington Oven, Literary Ann Arbor, Mich. Miller Hall Pontius, AA«I , Literary . Circleville Elmer Dean Rinehart, Philosophical . Centerburg Ivan Ingebright Andrew Ringheim, Literary Long Beach, Cal. Irvin Salzer, Literary .... Minneapolis, Minn. Harold Arthur Sparks, ♦Y, Literary . T oledo John Mattison Squires, AA«I t Literary Evanston, III. Marion Edward Sykes, AKEt Philosophical . Springfield Roy Le Grande Underhill, B0II, Scientific . Norwalk George Sperry Weaver, B0II( Literary Moundsville.W. Va. sixty-two sixty-four Freshman Editorial RESHMEN! You came to us under the misrepresentation that your class roll was the largest ever to enter. We feared a mob rule. The third day after your arrival your numbers became truly apparent, and the delusion having been cleared away, we found you the smallest class in some years. Disap- pointed in our first hope of great numbers, we tried to be contented with the thought that you would excel in quality. So you were handicapped, but later proved yourselves superior by not losing out by a faculty proscription at matriculation or mid-semesters; your minstrel show was most irksome. In the cane rush you let the Sophomores capture your classmates to the number of twelve, later surprising us, however, by winning, and so rescuing the Freshmen- Sophomore contest from the necessary monotony of an annual gruel, to an affair of adventurous strategy; you painted no numerals on Scott’s store; you made a break in the venerable tradition that Ascension had to be house cleaned, thus pocketing your damage deposit. Now, you are turning out well and we have hopes. Some alumnus has said he never received such criticism in his life as during his Freshman year, and also added he was thankful for it. We do not mean to spoil you. We are glad that you were fresh and irrepressible, otherwise you would have been uninteresting and life here would have been a bore. Personal attention was possible because you were few. We have administered our training to you now for nearly a year, but we shall codify our rule of conduct for a final impression, to preserve Kenyon spirit. Be enthusiastic; do not get ennui or we shall have to lift our eyes and point heavenward as Job Hedges did. Enter into things with a spirit manifesting eagerness to learn, to do something, to make something of yourselves. Have a purpose, don’t feel sorry for yourselves; don’t believe you are aisty-five downtrodden; because you have worn the green hat with the pink letters is no sign you arc the goat. If you only knew, the Freshman is the most interesting classman in college, and there is no greater proof of a man’s latent possibilities than to be criticized during his first year. Criticism is a thing every man but the Freshman feels he is perfectly able to bestow, and if you arc not a recipient of a certain amount of it, the fact will be maintained that you $re not worth the thoughtful consideration of the classmen above you. Rather be a Freshman than a first year Senior. Make friends and live the life thoroughly; then you will have had experiences enough to last you for reflection for the remaining years of your college course. Do the work well and look forward with earnestness and vigor to 1914. We are glad you are among us. See to it that enough of you survive the sixteen hour rule to make a respectable group on the chapel steps when your gowns arrive in the Senior year. This is a Junior’s advice. sixty six Nineteen Hundred and Fourteen CLASS OFFICERS Eugene Malcom Anderson Donald Hanby Harper Paul George Russell Philip Morgan Lewis Joseph Russell Walton Carter Moore Gregg William Webster Sant . President Vice President . Treasurer Secretary . Toastmaster Scrgeant-at-Arms . Historian CLASS COLORS Maroon and White. CLASS YELL Boola, Boola, Cockalungai. 1—9—1—41 Stye Stosfymatt (Elaas 1914 LIST OF MEMBERS Eugene Malcolm Anderson, ♦Y, Literary . Chicago, 111. David Weller Bowman, Jr., Literary . . Greenville George Tyler Brister, Ben, Literary . . Canal Dover Claude Andrew Carr, AKE, Scientific . . Cleveland Ralph Waldo Cary, Classical . . Monte Vista, Col. Louis Boyd Dobie, Philosophical . . . Gambier Ralph Clarence Goode, Scientific . . . Port Clinton Carter Moore Gregg. AA«I t Philosophical . Minneapolis, Minn. Jesse Ashton Gregg, AA J , Philosophical Minneapolis, Minn. Donald Hanby Harper, AA4 , Philosophical . Mt. Vernon George Thomas Harris, AA J , Literary . . Cleveland Richard Baxter Hart, B©n, Special . . Sandusky Warren Jackson Hopwood, Y, Special . Minneapolis, Minn. Roger Arbogast Houston, AKE, Literary . South Charleston William Smith Jenkins, Jr., ♦Y, Literary . Minneapolis, Minn. Homer Moore Jewitt, Y, Literary . . Cleveland sixty-eight Roy Loren Langmade, ATAf Scientific Philip Morgan Lewis, +Yf Literary Sherman Amos Manchester, ♦Y, Literary Ralph Stewart Merriam, AA J f Special John Dwight O’Ferrall, ATAf Literary Benjamin Mosher Paris, Yt Special Carlton Benton Rettig, Scientific Karl Lewis Ritter, B©n Special Paul George Russell, B0n, Philosophical William Webster Sant, B0IIt Classical Eric Moncll Tasman, Scientific Matthew Bannon Taylor. Jr., Special Joseph Russell Walton, Scientific Frederick James Wonders, ATA, Scientific James McDonald Young, B0II, Classical North Baltimore Minneapolis, Minn. , Cleveland Detroit, Mich. Piqua Minneapolis, Minn. Chicago Junction . Sandusky . . Newark East Liverpool . Elyria . Warren Cuyahoga Falls . Bellefontaine East Liverpool FORMER MEMBERS Howard Robert Clarke, Literary Charles Olen Dunn, ATA, Literary Alonzo Emerine, Jr., Scientific N. R. High Moor, ATA, Scientific Warren Bart Palmer, Literary Charles Sumner Sapp, Jr., Literary Earl Ogden Spangler, Literary Alfred Leigh Stuckenberg, AA f Literary Roscoe Conkling Theis, Literary Port Huron, Mich. . Sandusky . Fostoria . . Toledo . Cleveland . Mt. Vernon Richmond, Ind. . Chicago, 111. Spokane, Wash. bixfy-nine Class Song (Tune: “Webb”) 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 for 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 there they all must go; There to repent their many sins. And lead a life of woe. seventy-one Who's Who The rooster roosts on the belfry-vane, The hoot-owl hoots in the wood. One holds his own, one sings her strain. As nature designed they should. The hoot-owl spies the bird on the vane. And love doth pierce her through. She lifts her voice and calls amain, “O who, O who, arc ijou? Who—who—who? who—who—arc you? The rooster turns a point to the west. The better the owl to see: Though two dimensions must be best, 1 believe that bird has three! She certainly does have three! The owl surveys the bird on the vane. And winks a solemn wink: “Though his attainments are so plain. He's a trifle tight, I think!— A trifle light and a trifle fast, Coes round too much at night! Yet I will no aspersions cast At a gay young Kenyonite! The bird turns south on the belfry-vane, A thin perspective view. The hoot-owl doth to the moon complain, What a difficult bird to woo!— Woo—woo—woo! woo—woo—to woo! The rooster turns a point to the east. And then to the north turns two. Though impolite to the owl, at least ’Tis understood by you. So the hoot-owl calls to the bird on the vane With a different tone and new: I'll teach you who is who!— In spile of your air of high disdain. Who—who—who! who—who—is who! K. T. L. seventy-two seveuty-thrcc Fraternities In the order of their establishment at Kenyon College Delta Kappa Epsilon Alpha Delta Phi Psi Upsilon Beta Theta Pi Delta Tau Delta seventy-four Lambda Chapter Established in 1852 SENIORS Bruce Pierce Hall Richard Roberts Harter Walter Tupper Kinder Lecky Harper Russell JUNIORS James Dempsey Cook Ernest Cook Dempsey SOPHOMORES William Leonard Aves Howard Hoffer Nusbaum Stephen Geiger Rockwell Philip Holland Starr John Adams Wickham FRESHMEN Claude Andrew Carr Roger Arbogast Houston Beventy-sevea Delta Kappa Epsilon Founded in 1844 at Yale Univer ity ROLL OF CHAPTERS Phi. Theta Xi Sigma Gamma Psi Upsilon Chi . Beta Eta Kappa Lambda Pi Iota Alpha Alpha Omicron Epsilon Rho . Tau Mu . Nu Beta Phi Phi Chi Psi Phi Gamma Phi Psi Omega Beta Chi . Delta Chi Delta Delta Phi Gamma Gamma Beta Theta Zeta Alpha Chi Phi Epsilon Sigma Tau Tau Lambda Alpha Phi Delta Kappa Tau Alpha Sigma Rho Delta Pi . Rho Delta Kappa Epsilon Yale College . . . 1844 . Bowdoin College . . . 1844 Colby University . . 1844 . Amherst College . . . 1846 Vanderbilt University . . 1847 . University of Alabama . . 1847 Brown University . . 1850 . University of Mississippi . . 1850 University of North Carolina . 1851 . University of Virginia . . 1852 Miami University . . 1852 . Kenyon College . . . 1852 Dartmouth College . . 1853 . Central University . . .1853 Middlebury College . . 1854 . University of Michigan . . 1855 Williams College . . 1855 . Lafayette College . . .1855 Hamilton College . . 1856 . Colgate University . . .1856 College of the City of New York . 1856 . University of Rochester . . 1856 Rutgers College . . . 1861 . De Pauw University . . 1866 Wesleyan University . . 1867 . Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute . 1867 Adclbcrt College . . 1868 . Cornell University . . . 1870 Chicago University . . 1871 . Syracuse University . . .1871 Columbia College . . 1874 . University of California . . 1876 Trinity College . . . 1879 . University of Minnesota . . 1889 Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1890 . Tulanc University . . . 1898 Toronto University . . 1898 . University of Pennsylvania . . 1899 McGill University . . 1901 . Leland Stanford Jr. University . 1902 University of Illinois . . 1904 . University of Wisconsin . . 1907 University of Washington . 1911 seventy-eight — Kenyon Chapter Established in 1858 IN FACULTATE The Rev. George Franklin Smythe William Peters Reeves SENIORS Robert Clarkson Millspaugh Everett Sanderson Kingdon Thornton Siddall JUNIORS John Walter Clements Ralph McKinley Watson SOPHOMORES Wiley Wiggins Glass John Edward Harris, Jr. Robert Cummings Wiseman FRESHMEN Carter Moore Gregg Jesse Ashton Gregg Donald Hanby Harper George Thomas Harris Ralph Stewart Merriam Alfred Leigh Stuckenberg eighty-one Alpha Delta Phi Founded at Hamilton College in 1832 ROLL OF CHAPTERS Hamilton . . Hamilton College 1832 Columbia . Columbia College 1836 Yale . Yale College 1837 Amherst Amherst College 1837 Brunonian . . Brown University 1837 Hudson . Adelbert College 1841 Bowdoin Bowdoin College 1841 Dartmouth Dartmouth College . 1845 Peninsular . . University of Michigan 1846 Rochester . University of Rochester 1851 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 . 1891 Toronto . University of Toronto 1893 Chicago . University of Chicago 1895 McGill . McGill University 1897 Wisconsin . . University of Wisconsin . 1902 California . University of California 1908 eighty-two — — Iota Elttabliihed in I860 IN BEXLEY Walter Robson McCowatt SENIOR Clitus Harry Marvin. Jr. JUNIORS William Archibald Thomas Harold King Downe SOPHOMORES William Thompson Allen Fred George Clark John Alexander Dickinson Harold Stanley Johnson Fitch James Matthews Wilbur William Shuey FRESHMEN Malcolm Eugene Anderson Warren Jackson Hop wood William Smith Jenkins Homer Moore Jewitt Philip Morgan Lewis Sherman Amos Manchester Benjamin Mosher Paris Psi Upsilon Founded in 1833 at Union College ROLL OF CHAPTERS 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 Phi . . 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 Rho . University of Wisconsin 1896 Omega . Chicago University 1897 Epsilon . University of California 1902 Omicron . University of Illinois 1910 eighty-six IN FACULTATE Russell Sedgwick Devol Edward Bryant Nichols JUNIORS Warner Dayle Cook Fred George Harkness Lawrence Kinsman McCaffcrty Russell Twiggs Young SOPHOMORES John Herman Baird Herald Daub Bowlus Cecil Perry Krieg Milner Fuller Little George Glen Skiles FRESHMEN George Tyler Brister Richard Baxter Hart Karl Lewis Ritter Paul George Russell William Webster Sant James McDowell Young eighty-nine Beta Theta Pi Founded in 1839 at Miami University ROLL OF CHAPTERS Miami University 1839 Rutgers College 1879 Ohio University 1841 Cornell University 1879 University of Cincinnati 1841 Stevens Institute 1879 Western Reserve University 1841 St. Lawrence University 1879 Washington and Jefferson Univ. 1842 University of Maine 1879 DePauw University 1845 University of Pennsylvania . 1880 Indiana University 1845 Colgate University 1880 University of Michigan 1845 Union College 1881 Wabash College 1845 Columbia University 1881 Central University . 1847 Amherst College . 1883 Brown University 1847 Vanderbilt University . 1884 Hampton-Sidney College 1850 University of Texas 1885 University of North Carolina 1852 Ohio State University . 1885 Ohio Wesleyan University . 1853 University of Nebraska 1888 Hanover College 1853 Pennsylvania State College 1888 Knox College 1855 University of Denver 1888 University of Virginia . 1856 Syracuse University 1889 Davidson College . 1858 Dartmouth College 1889 Beloit College I860 University of Minnesota 1890 Bethany College . 1861 Wesleyan University 1890 Iowa State University . 1866 University of Missouri . 1890 Wittenberg College 1867 Lehigh University 1891 Westminster College 1867 Yale University 1892 Iowa Wesleyan University . 1868 Leland Stanford University 1894 University of Chicago . 1868 Bowdoin College 1900 Denison University 1868 University of West Virginia 1900 Washington University 1869 University of Colorado 1900 University of Wooster 1872 Washington State University 1901 University of Kansas 1872 Illinois State University 1902 University of Wisconsin 1873 Purdue University 1903 Northwestern University 1873 Case School Applied Science 1905 Dickinson College 1874 Iowa University 1905 Boston University 1876 Toronto University 1906 Johns Hopkins University . 1878 Oklahoma University 1907 University of California 1879 Colorado School of Mines 1908 Kenyon College 1879 Tulane University 1908 ninety Chi Chapter fcstabliihed in 1881 IN BEXLEY Kirk Bassett O’Ferrall SENIORS Chester Morse Cable James Hoag Cable John Dean Southworth JUNIORS Howard Ashley Axtell Alan Gustavus Goldsmith Harlow Henry Gaines Robert Augustus Weaver SOPHOMORES Vernon Cockrane McMaster Don Carlenos Wheaton Frank Curry Marty FRESHMEN Roy Loren Langmade John Dwight O’Ferrall Fred James Wonders ninety-three Delta Tau Delta Founded ROLL Washington and Jefferson Coi. Ohio University Allegheny College Ohio Wesleyan University . Hillsdale College Indiana University DePauw University University of Illinois Wabash College Stevens Inst, of Technology Lehigh University University of Michigan Butler College Albion College Rennselaer Polytechnic Inst. University of Iowa Kenyon College Emory College Adelbert College University of the South University of Minnesota University of Colorado University of Mississippi Vanderbilt University University of Wisconsin Bethany College HAPTERS Tufts College . . 1889 Mass. Inst, of Technology 1889 Tulane University . 1889 Cornell University . 1890 Northwestern University . 1893 Leland Stanford, Jr., University 1893 University of Nebraska . 1894 Ohio State University . 1894 Brown University . . 1896 Washington and Lee University 1896 University of Pennsylvania . 1897 University of California 1898 University of Virginia . 1898 University of Chicago . 1898 University of West Virginia 1900 Armour Inst. Technology 1901 Dartmouth College . 1901 Columbia University . 1902 Wesleyan University . 1902 George Washington University 1903 Baker University . . 1903 Purdue University . 1907 University of Maine . 1908 University of Washington 1908 University of Cincinnati . 1909 in 1859 at OF C I860 1862 1863 1866 1867 1870 1871 1872 1872 1874 1874 1875 1875 1876 1879 1880 1881 1882 1882 1883 1883 1883 1886 1886 1888 ninety-four Other Fraternities DELTA UPSILON Allan Crawford Hall, 1911 SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Horace Wyndomc Wood, 1911 SIGMA PI Edmund Frisbie Shedd, 1912 ZETA ALPHA Clan Crawford Philip Porter Bartelle Hilen Reinhcimcr ninety-five Phi Beta Kappa Honorary Society founded at William and Mary College, 1776 ROLL OF CHAPTERS William and Mary Colleg 5 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 Adclbert College, W. R. Univ. 1848 Brown University . 1898 University of Vermont . 1848 University of California 1898 Amherst College . . 1853 University of Chicago 1898 Univ. of the City of New York 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 New York 1867 Vassar College 1898 Middlcbury 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 1871 University of Colorado 1904 Colgate University . 1875 Leland Stanford, Jr., University 1904 Cornell University 1882 Middlebury College 1904 University of Rochester . 1886 Mt. Holyoke College 1904 Dickinson College 1886 University of North Carolina 1904 Lehigh College . 1886 Ohio State University . 1904 Lafayette College 1889 Smith College 1904 DePauw University . 1889 University of Texas 1904 University of Kansas 1889 Wellesley 1904 Northwestern University • 1889 Woman’s College, Baltimore 1905 ninety-six Beta of Ohio Eslablishcd in 1858 The Rev. William Foster Peirce, L. H. D. The Rev. Hosca William Jones, D. D. John Smith Harrison, A. M., Ph. D. . President . Vice President Secretary and Treasurer RESIDENT MEMBERS Theodore Sterling, A. M., M. D., LL. D. The Rev. Jacob Streibert, A. M., Ph. D. The Rev. George Franklin Smythe, A. M., D. D. The Rev. David Felix Davies, A. M., D. D. The Rev. Orville Ernest Watson, B. A., D. D. Barker Newhall, Ph. D. Henry Titus West, A. M. William Peters Reeves, B. A., Ph. D . Russell Sedgwick Devol, A. M. Richard Clark Manning, B. A., Ph. D. Reginald Bryant Allen, M. S., Ph. D. Ezekiel Henry Downey, B. A., M. A. ninety-seven Theta Nu Epsilon Society Founded in 1870, Wesleyan University ROLL OF CHAPTERS Beta Gamma Zeta Eta Theta Lambda Mu Nu Tau Upsilon Phi Psi Alpha-Alpha Alpha-Zeta Alpha-Iota Beta-Beta Beta-Omicron Gamma-Beta Delta-Delta Delta Kappa Delta-Sigma Epsilon-Epsilon Zeta-Phi Kappa-Rho Lambda-Sigma Omicron-Omicron Omicron-Omega Pi-Phi Sigma-Tau Omega-Kappa Zeta-Zeta Eta Eta Syracuse University . . Union College University of California . . Colgate University . . Kenyon College Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute Stevens Institute Technology . . Lafayette College . Wooster University University of Michigan . . Rutgers College . . Ohio State College Purdue University . University of Vermont . Harvard University . Ohio Wesleyan University . . Colby University Jefferson Medical College . University of Maine . . Bowdoin College . University of Kansas Case School of Applied Science Massachusetts Inst, of Technology Baltimore College of Dental Surgery • . Yale University - Ohio Northern University St. Lawrence University . University of Virginia • University of Maryland • Baltimore Medical College University of Wyoming Massachusetts Agricultural College ninety-eight Theta Chapter HONORARY MEMBERS FRATRES IN URBE John Claypool FRATRES IN FACULTATE Edward Bryant Nichols Ezekiel Henry Downey SENIORS Allen Crawford Hall Bruce Pierce Hall Richard Roberts Harter Walter Tupper Kinder Clitus Harry Marvin Walter Robson McCowatt Lecky Harper Russell Horace Wyndomc Wood JUNIORS Harold King Downe Russell Twiggs Young ACTIVE MEMBERS ? ! !------! ! ? ? ! !------! ! ? ? ! !------! ! ? ! !------! ! ? ? ! !------1 ! ? ninety-nine Fraternity Conventions DELTA KAPPA EPSILON Detroit, Michigan. November 16, 17. 18, 1910. DELEGATES L H. Russell. 19! I B. P. Hall. 1911 ALPHA DELTA PHI New York City. February 22. 23. 24. 1911. DELEGATES R. C. Millspaugh. 1911 R. M. Watson. 1912 J. EL Harm, Jr.. 1913 PSI UPSILON Brunswick, Maine. May 10, 1911. DELEGATES C. H. Marvin. 1911 J. A. Dickenson. 1913 BETA THETA PI Niagara Falls, New York. July 4. 5, 6. 7, 1911 DELEGATES R. T. Young. 1912 G. G. Skile . 1913 DELTA TAU DELTA Cleveland. Ohio, February 22, 23. 1911. DELEGATE Howard A. Axtcll, 1912 one hundred The Graduate Manager After several very unhappy experi- ences with managers of other col- leges, the Assembly, by an unani- mous vote, decided to institute the system of Graduate Manager at Kenyon. Accordingly, the May election of last year witnessed the selection of Dr. L. B. Walton as Graduate Manager of all activities under the supervision of the Kenyon Assembly. Q While the system is in its infancy and any remarks which may be made about it must be in the form of prophecy, it is, nevertheless, safe to predict that its institution has been one of the best moves made since the Assembly was reorganized and student government introduced. Even in this, the initial year of the system, the results can be witnessed in the increased good feeling which exists between our own Athletic Department and the corres- ponding departments of other Ohio colleges. Under the system, as in operation the past year, general expenses have been decreased and in several instances, larger guarantees have been secured. The Graduate Manager has entered into the work of the department with his whole heart and soul, and it is clearly evident that he has the best interests of the Assembly at heart. 3 Taken as a whole, the system has proved itself to be a beneficial one and every Kenyon man is proud of the manager who is doing so much for Kenyon and Kenyon’s Assembly. one hundred and two The New Coach OLLOWING the adoption of the graduate manager sys- tem, the Athletic Association set about to procure a director of athletics, who should serve as an all-year round coach for all the teams. This was a difficult task, as it is seldom a man is found proficient enough in the different branches of college sports to act as coach for all of them. Heretofore the football team alone has received the benefit of an experienced director, and this man has been un- able to give his greatest service, be- cause of the short length of time for which he was engaged. The captains of the baseball, basketball and track teams have had to train and develop their own respective teams, and these highly popular branches of athletics have been sacrificed for football successes. In order to restore all our sports to the same high permanent place, Mr. Clyde Merletors Waters has been engaged as Athletic Director and coach for the year of 1911- 1912. Mr. Waters was a member of the class of 1900 at Williams Col- lege and he comes to us with an enviable reputation as a college athlete and a successful coach. In college he played on the baseball, foot- ball and basketball teams and he was assistant coach (at Williams) on leaving college. Since then he has acted as coach for the Obcrlin team. In baseball he caught for Montreal in the Eastern League and later for New Haven, and in this branch he should make an admirable coach. Q Mr. Waters’ experience at Williams College makes him especially fitted for the conditions at Kenyon. The athletic spirit of the two colleges is very similar, and the teams of both institutions play colleges and universities many times larger than themselves. The pleasing personality of the new coach and the fact that he already has the esteem and good will of the college men, will go a long way toward making far better athletics. Mr. Waters will assume his duties in September and the prospect for the succeeding year in athletics is more than bright. one hundred and three Coach Bemis Fierce one hundred and four Football O one thoroughly conversant with conditions here last fall, the outcome of the football season for nineteen ten was evi- dent. Concealing fears and freely voicing hopes, everyone worked hopefully to overcome the seemingly inevitable. Despite the hard work of Coach Bemis Pierce and his squad and the united support of the student body, the season, from the standpoint of victories, was not as successful as is customary. Freshmen Pontius and Marty promised, last year, to be two of the best football men ever playing on a Kenyon team, and around them splendid hopes and promises for a winning team grew steadily. All the veterans being expected back, the outlook was very bright, which is characteristic of Kenyon. But all the hopes were collapsed when it was announced that neither Pontius nor captain-elect Cable would return. The psychological effect of this announcement on the squad and student body was very depressing, a pessimistic atmos- phere pervaded the entire college; all the optimistic hopes of the pre- ceding spring being replaced by the gloomiest forebodings. A schedule of nine games had been arranged; a combination of easy and hard ones, which would best suit the condition of the team. To everyone’s surprise, as the season progressed it was found impos- sible to distinguish the games scheduled as easy and the harder and one hundred and five more important ones. The minor teams throughout the state were surprisingly stronger than usual, Kenyon suffering several unpleasant defeats at their hands. The team deserves great credit for the sturdy battles it fought. Although after the first two games of the season, the eleven knew that its opponents in each game outweighed and outclassed it, spirit and pluck kept the scores down to a minimum, but could not completely overcome the various deficiencies. Each man played a good indi- vidual game; every Sunday the papers announcing the starring of individuals on the Kenyon team, Skiles, Marty and Axtell being those most frequently mentioned. On the whole, the material which Coach Pierce had to work with was unusually weak, an utter lack of material for several vital positions being apparent. The men playing the various positions deserve credit for doing their best but being inex- perienced and not eminently suitable for the positions necessity forced them to fill, under such conditions it is obvious that a winning team could not be developed. Aside from the actual discourage- ments in the material available, the team had various other obstacles in the way of meeting elevens picked in colleges and universities where the ratio of men available was, in many cases, thirty times as large as in Kenyon. Despite adverse circumstances not within our province to rectify, it can be truly said that no spectator ever viewed the Kenyon team as it left the gridiron at the end of the game, without commending the work of the men, the spirit they displayed and the game fight they put up against heavy odds; and commendatory public opinion is the best reward. • : ' 1 one hundred and six TBALL C. M. Cable . . . Captain Everett Sanderson . . Manager Bemis Pierce . . . Coach TEAM H. A. Axtell F. C. Marty C. M. Cable M. C. Snyder E- M. Mason I J. D. South worth j I H. Cable B. H. Reinheimer R. A. Weaver J. A. Wickham G. G. Skiles P« Krieg T. Young 1-eft End Left Tackle Left Guard . Center Right Guard Right Tackle Right End Quarter Back Left Half Right Half Full Back w. L A F. H. L H. K. L H A. Philip F Clyde V 0 SUBSTITUTES • ••••• • ••••• SEASON OF 191! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Right End Right Tackle Left Half Captain Manager Coach one hundred and eight FOOTBALL RECORD OF 1910 Kenyon, 0 Otterbein, 0 Kenyon, 5 Denison, 0 Kenyon, 0 Mt. Union, 19 Kenyon, 0 Reserve, 18 Kenyon, 0 Wooster, 21 Kenyon, 2 Wesleyan, 11 Kenyon, 0 Case, 20 Kenyon, 11 Freshmen, 5 Kenyon, 0 Ohio State, 53 Kenyon, 18 Opponents 147 one hundred and nine FOOTBALL SCHEDULE FOR 1911 Mt. Vernon High School at Caminer September 23 Ohio Wesleyan at Cambier September 30 Western Reserve at Cleveland October 7 Allegheny at Meadville. Pa. October 14 Case at Cleveland October 21 Mt. Union at Cleveland .... October 28 Ohio University at Athens November 4 Ohio State at Columbus .... November 11 Denison at Granville ... November 18 Wooster at Cambier ..... November 25 Carnegie Tech, at Columbus .... November 28 one hundred and ten W. T. Kinder, Captain R. C. MilUpaugh, Manager Baseball ASEBALL t, occupies a unique position in inter- collegiate athletics at present. Football, basketball and track have all come in for their share of criticism from the outside world, and some of this has not been unfounded. Especially is this true when the criticism is directed toward the fact that the three above named sports do not admit of participation by the majority of the students in any particular college or university. Baseball is logically the only major college sport, in which the entire college may take part, and out of which the most good for the greatest number is derived. This statement is especially applicable here at Kenyon. With the coming of pleasant days appear gloves, bats and balls, and not an afternoon passes when the campus in front of Old Kenyon is not dotted with ball players. Nearly everyone, from the “greasy grind” to the hopeful candidate for the college team, may be found in the shouting, happy throng who, with ball and bat, celebrate the waning of winter. Kenyon College has, so far, struggled along without a coach and each year the captain-elect confronts the problem of developing, in adequate space of a month, material to fill the positions vacated by one hundred and eleven graduation and withdrawal from college. When these conditions are borne in mind, the record of the past seasons appear highly creditable to the initiative and spirit of the men to whom this branch of our athletics has been entrusted. In fact, most of the games lost last season were lost by close scores, and the defeat can be attributed to the lack of finished play, due principally to the absence of a coach. A prognostication of the 1911 season would be highly prob- lematic. Suffice it to say, that at present, the prospect for a success- ful season in baseball is excellent. The team promises to be a hard hitting and good fielding one, the most serious problem being the pitching department. With this successfully solved, the team should give a good accounting throughout the state. Assured of the solid support of the college, with good material to be developed and un- bounding enthusiasm everywhere prevalent, the opening of the base- ball season at Kenyon is eagerly anticipated. one hundred and twelve SEASON OF 19 10 R. A. Bentley .... Captain B. H. Reinheimer . . Manager TEAM A. J. Hardy R. T. Young A. L. Cardillo S. O. Hayea H. A. Axtell W. T. Kinder R A. Bentley Id. K. Downc E. H. Crippcn C. K. Lord T. Williams Catcher Pitcher Firat Bate Second Base Third Base Short Stop Left Field Center Field Right Field T. Kinder R C Milltpaugh SEASON OF I 9 I! Captain Manager one hundred nd thirteen one hundred and fourteen SEASON OF 1910 KeBjron. 5 Cambier. 6 Kenyon. 8 Dr niton. 3 Kenyon. 3 duo Wealeyan 8 Kenyon. 3 Wooater. 7 Kenyon. 3 Olterbean. 7 Kenyon. 7 Univertily of Cincinnali. 2 Kenyon. Muakingum. 7 Kenyon. 5 Denuon. 4 Kenyon. I duo Wealeyan 3 Kenyon. 6 Ohio Wealeyan I SCHEDULE FOR 1911 Freahmen at Cambier.................................Apnl 8 Weatern Reaervr al Gambter .... Apnl 21 Oberlm at Gambler...................................Apnl 29 Wooater al Wooaler...................................May 3 Wealem Reaeree al Clereland .... May 6 Denuon al Gambter....................................May 12 Wooater al Gambter...................................May 20 Ohio Wealeyan al Delaware .... May 27 Oberlm al Oberlm....................................June 3 Ohio Unnreroty at Albent . . . . June 10 Ohm Umreratty al Gambter............................June 11 Alumni at Gambter...................................June 24 ana hundred and ifWu Basketball HE basketball season for 1911 gained for the team the loyal support and the sincere appreciation on the part of the student body. Previous years proved basketball a doubt- ful branch of our athletics and several times the Assembly was at the point of discontinuing it. In the fall af 1910 a committee was appointed to further investigate the advisability of dropping basketball altogether. The report urged a trial for another season and basketball was consequently put on probation. As in the other minor sports, our team lacked a competent coach. The student body, however, simply wanted evidence that under fair conditions basketball in our college could make a creditable showing among the other colleges in the state, and that the men directly interested would make an earnest and conscientious effort to train well and to practice consistently. The season just finished proved beyond the shadow of a doubt that basketball can exist, and that the further continuance of the sport would be a positive good. Six games were played, and three of them were lost only after a hard and close con- test. Graduate Manager Walton expressed gratification that the team made so earnest an effort, and satisfaction that the student body supported the home games even when the men were playing under the handicap of no coach and adverse circumstances. With the coming of Mr. Clyde Waters as Athletic Director, basketball will have a better chance, and there is every reason now for continuing the sport, as the prospects for 1912 are particularly bright. one hundred and seventeen - —— one hundred and eighteen Team B. A. Beatty Left Forward W. L. Aves Right Forward H. H. Gaines F. C. Marty Left Guard R. A. Weaver Right Guard SUBSTITUTES G. G. Skiles M. C. Snyder one hundred and nineteen BASKETBALL SCHEDULE FOR 1911 Otterbein at Gambier ..... January 28 Heidelberg at Gambier February 11 Allegheny at Gambier .... February 23 Oberlin at Oberlin February 23 Otterbein at Westerville ..... March 4 Wesleyan at Delaware .... March 8 Wooster at Gambier .... March 11 Denison at Gambier ..... March 18 Edinboro Normal School at F.dinboro, Pa. March 23 Allegheny at Meadville, Pa. . • • March 24 Buchtel at Akron March 23 one hundred and twenty Track HE1 track team that will represent Kenyon this year promises to equal any that the college has offered for some time. For several seasons past, eligible track men have been scarce and the team has been handicapped by no coach. The undi- vided support of the student body has always attended all track events held on Benson Field, and the enthusiasm shown in the Interclass Meets is proof of the interest felt in the track affairs. The good influence of the Graduate Manager system is just be- ginning to show itself in the management of the track team, more than in any other branch of athletics, and with Captain Mason as a con- scientious leader, and the new material eligible from the Sophomore class, the three forces arc bound to raise this department to as high a position as any team in the state. Several records should be broken this year. Extensive improve- ments on the track have made it excellent, and have added a stimulus to encourage daily work-outs. As for the team itself, the dashes and the weights will be especially well represented, and, while not such postivc assurance is at hand for the middle distance events and the pole vault, there will be time for developing men that promise well. Kenyon should return its share of the medals and honors from the Big Six Meet at Columbus in May. E. M. Mason . . . Captain K. T. Siddall . . . Manager one hundred and twenty-one SEASON OF 1910 SQUAD H. A. Axtell E. M. Mason C. M. Cable C. B. Senft R. A. Fultz R. A. Thurston A. G. Goldsmith R. M. Watson A. C. Hall R. A. Weaver C. T. Williams SEASON OF 19 11 E. M. Mason . ... . Captain R. A. Weaver . Manager SCHEDULE FOR 1 9 1 1 Wooster at Gambier .... May 20 Inter-Collegiate at Columbus . May 26 Ohio at Athens .... June 9 Denison at Granville • . June 17 one hundred and twenty-three Marty winning State Championship of Ohio, Cleveland Tennis HE Second Annual Inler-Collegiate Tennis Meet of Ohio Colleges was held under the auspices of Case, in Cleveland, May 26, 27, 28, 1910. Seven colleges, Kenyon, Case, Re- serve, Oberlin, Ohio Wesleyan, Denison and Wooster were represented by teams. These annual tournaments, it w ll be remember- ed, began with the meet at Kenyon in 1909, when but three colleges, Kenyon, Wesleyan and Case were entered. Accordingly, it is with the greatest pleasure that the enthusiastic tennis men at Kenyon are watching the growth and the increase in strength of an institution which they feel had its origin here. The tournament for 1911 will be held at Delaware, with Wesleyan. The team which Kenyon expects to send should find no difficulty in winning the state championship, as it did in 1909. The work of Frank C. Marty on the courts last summer is especially interesting and gratifying to the supporters of Kenyon tennis. Accompanied by Graduate Manager Walton and playing under Kenyon colors, Marty made a round of the tennis tournaments in Ohio and Indiana during the summer. He entered the state Tournament at Cleveland, the Tri-State Tournament at Cincinnati, the Indiana State Tournament at Indianapolis and the Southern Ohio Tournament at Hamilton, Ohio. At Cleveland Marty won the championship of Ohio in singles, and with Phil Collins of Cleveland, reached the finals in doubles. His playing was of the most brilliant and consistently vigorous style seen in Ohio for some time. His forceful smashes put his opponent on the defensive at the outset of each match, and his physical endur- one hundred and twenty-four ance enabled him to battle his way up to the finals, which, in singles, he won with no difficulty. The Ohio State Tournament at Cleve- land will be remembered as the one in which Carr made so excellent a showing a year ago. Carr fought to the final match, where his endurance failed him, losing out to Beard for the state title. The showing of the two Kenyon stars, Carr and Marty, in successive years at Cleveland, speaks remarkably well for Kenyon’s position in tennis. At the Indiana State Tournament, Marty, playing with Thorn- ton, for six years the state champion, won the Indiana title in doubles. At the Tri-State Tournament, which, in national standing, is second in importance only to the Newport matches, Marty went to the semi- finals in the doubles. He and his partner lost to the winners only when five cIo ' 1 contested sets had been played. In the singles he was defeated by Merrill Hall, clay court champion of the United States. Marty’s style of playing is typefied by the word strength.” He has proved himself to possess three very effective services, and a fore hand drive that is wonderful for its lightning-like speed. His accuracy of placing is due evidently to the fact that he hits the ball at the top of the bound. His play is confined mostly to the back court, where he smashes the ball, sending it like a rifle shot, out of his opponent’s reach. Marty is another of the line of tennis men who have kept Kenyon in the lead in tennis, and the enthusiasm for the game which the college displays is perhaps the reason for drawing so many excellent tennis stars to Kenyon. one hundred and twenty-five one hundred and twenty-six , „ ■ - A. B. White SEASON OF 1910 . Captain R. M. Watson • • • • • . Manager F. C. Marty SEASON OF 1911 . Captain H. S. Johnson ... . . . Manager E. Sanderson TEAM B. A. Beatty F. C. Marty Kenyon vs. Wesleyan MATCHES at Gambier June 14. 1910 Inter-Collegiate Tournament Cleveland, May 27, 1910 COLLEGES REPRESENTED Case Oberlin Denison Reserve Kenyon Wesleyan Wooster Singles won by Oberlin Doubles won by Wooster SCHEDULE FOR 19 11 Oberlin at Gambier April 29 Michigan at Gambier ..... May 13 Minnesota at Gambier ...... May 18 Wooster at Gambier May 19 Denison at Granville ..... May 26 Oberlin at Oberlin June 3 Otterbein at Otterbein ...... June 8 Ohio at Athens June 9 O. S. U. at Gambier June 17 Miami at Gambier June 24 one hundred and twenty-seven Tennis Association W. J. Bland MEMBERS Dr. L. B. Walton Dr. W. F. Peirce 19 10 A. L. Sackett A. J. Hardy A. B. White H. G. C. Martin M. H. Wiseman W. O. Leslie 19 11 E. Sanderson J. Southworth A. D. Farquhar K. T. Adams 19 12 W. H. Coolidge B. A. Beatty J. A. Dickinson J. D. Boylan H. H. Gaines E. F. Shedd R. M. Watson F. Blake 19 13 H. H. Nusbaum R. C. Wiseman one hundred and twenty-eight Wearers of the UK” W. L. Aves . . . . Football, Basketball H. A. Axtell . . . . Football, Baseball B. A. Beatty . . . . . Basketball H. K. Downe . . . . . Baseball H. H. Gaines Basketball W. T. Kinder . . . . . Baseball C. P. Krieg . . . . . . Football F. C. Marty . . . . Football, Basketball E. M. Mason . . . . Football, Track B. H. Reinheimcr . . . . . . Football E. Sanderson . . . . Basketball, Tennis G. G. Skiles . . . . Football, Basketball M. C. Snyder Football, Basketball J. D. Southworth . . . . . . Football R. A. Weaver . . . . Football, Basketball, Track J. A. Wickham . . . . . . Football R. T. Young . . . . Football, Baseball MANAGERS H. H. Axtell . . . . . Basketball 1911 W. T. Kinder Track 1909 B. H. Reinheimer . . . . . Baseball 1910 L. H. Russell . . . . Basketball 1910 E. Sanderson Football 1911 K. T. Siddall Track 1910 one hundred and twenty-nine Kenyon Records Events Record Holdsr 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 lb. 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 3:40 1 A. L. Brown, 06 ) W. H. Brown, 06 ) S. W. Goldsborough, ’07 F. E. Hall, 06 one hundred and thirty one hundred and thirty-one The Reveille Founded December, 1855 Published by the Junior Class EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Ralph McKinley Watson ASSOCIATE EDITORS Walter Hatheral Coolidge Ernest Cook Dempsey Alan Gustavus Goldsmith Frederick George Harkness Edmund Frisbie Shedd William Archibald Thomas ART EDITOR John Walter Clements ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER Laurence Kinsman McCafferty BUSINESS MANAGER Robert A. Weaver one hundred and thirty-three jiioj-jCmw pu« pojpunq juu The Collegian Founded in 1855 Published fortnightly during the collegiate year by the student body EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Robert A. Weaver, '12 ASSOCIATE EDITORS Walter Tupper Kinder, ’ll Kingdon Thornton Siddall, ’ 11 Horace Wyndome Wood, ’11 Ernest Cook Dempsey, ’12 Alan Gustavus Goldsmith, ’12 Frederick George Harkness, ’12 William Archibald Thomas, ’12 Ralph McKinley Watson, ’12 Fitch James Matthews, 13 Don Carlenos Wheaton, ’13 REPORTERS D. W. Bowman, ’14 R. A. Houston, ’14 J. D. O’Ferrall, 14 W. W. Sant, 14 ALUMNI EDITOR Frederick Whitslar Carr, ’09 ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER Harlow Henry Gaines BUSINESS MANAGER Philip Porter one hundred and thirty-five ESPITE the fact that many minor organizations of recent ! origin have seriously usurped a part of the influence which Philomathesian once enjoyed, the active members of the honored society are confident that nothing can so well supplement the class room as a purely literary society. Such experience as is gained in meetings will ever be a vigorous asset to the members, regardless of the vocations they may choose. Regular attendance at the weekly meetings is required. Al- though this restriction has somewhat diminished the roll, the spirit of the meetings has gained strength and has been much increased. The program consists of five members chosen from historical, political and literary subjects, and is concluded by a general round of criticism. The liberal enthusiasm and interest displayed in meetings is an attest of the permanence and worth of this historic society. K. T. S., Ml. one hundred and thirty-six Philomathesian President Vice President Secretary Curator A. C. Hall K. T. Adams R. E. Copeland E. F. Shedd W. L Avet P. W. Hull D. W. Bowman W. W. Sant R. W. Cary C. M. Gregg OFFICERS MEMBERS 19 11 B. H. Reinhrimer 19 12 J. D. Cook H. H. Gaines R. M. Watson P. Porter 19 13 R. C. Wiseman C Crawford W. F. Koehnline 1914 A. L. Stuckenberg L B. Dobie J. A. Gregg F. J. Wonders K. T. Ssddall A. G. Goldsmith D. Wonders R. C. Wiseman K. T. Siddall W. 11. Coolidge A. G. Goldsmith P. A. West I. J. Koehnline D. Wonders R. C Goode D. H. Harper J. D. Young G. T. Hams hundred and year has seen a rewakening of the activities of Nu Pi pa. The membership of the society numbers almost men, all of whom are actively engaged in its work. We feel that we have derived much benefit from the literary work which we have enjoyed at our weekly meetings. The programs this year have consisted chiefly of debates on sub- jects of local interest, as well as various talks and essays. At one meeting a mock trial was held, which proved to be both interesting and successful. These exercises have not only developed our ability to speak in public, but have also been a source of pleasure and a diver- sion during the winter months. Competition with Philo has not been as keen as it might have been, considering the political questions of interest that have stirred Ohio this year and that might have been debated, but there has been, nevertheless, a healthy and beneficial rivalry between the two societies. The literary societies at Kenyon can not be said to have regained their old time position of importance, but they have, on the other hand, revived from their recent period of inactivity. The active members of Nu Pi Kappa have something of the same love and loyalty that is so evident among its alurr n and for that reason the present condition of the society is flourishes and its future is bright. one hundred and thirty-eight President Vice President Secretary T reasurer Critic Nu Pi Kappa OFFICERS W. O. Leslie . . . . . E. M. Mason one hundred and thirty-nine The Kenyon Oratorical and Debating Association COMPOSED OF THE MEMBERS OF THE PHILOMATHESIAN AND NU PI KAPPA LITERARY SOCIETIES Ralph M. Watson • • • . . President Earl M. Mason • • • • . Vice President Charles B. Senft • • • • . Secretary-Treasurer Laurence K. McCafferty MEMBERS 19 11 . . Manager K. T. Siddall E. B. Senft C. H. Marvin W. R. McCowatt K. B. O’Ferrall H. W. Wood W. O. Leslie J. D. Southworth 19 12 E. M. Mason H. A. Axtell L. K. McCafferty J. A. Dickinson H. K. Downe E. C. Dempsey R. A. Weaver B. A. Beatty W. A. Thomas 19 13 J. H. Baird H. H. Nusbaum F. J. Matthews V. C. McMasters F. C. Marty D. C. Wheaton C. P. Krieg P. H. Starr 19 14 R. A. Houston E. M. Tasman J. R. Walton P. G. Russell R. L. Langmade C. B. Rettig DEBATE K. L. Ritter The purpose of the Debating Association is to encourage Inter- Collegiate contests between Kenyon and other colleges or universities. The men who represent Kenyon in the forum must necessarily be members of one or the other of the two literary societies, Philomathe- sian or Nu Pi Kappa, and the same requirement is demanded for eligibility to the Stircs Prize Debates. The present year has seen no inter-collegiate activities, but the men of Philo and Nu Pi Kappa are at present working up a subject, and the Juniors and Seniors are preparing their briefs for the Stires Prize in June, on the subject. Resolved:—That the conservation of forests should be left to the States. one hundred and forty one hundred and forty-one one hundred and forty-two Puff and Powder Club Organized January 9, 1904 T the opening of the college term, but one member of this organization remained from the club of last year. There was, however, some available material in college and an election swelled the membership of the club to four. This small group undertook the task of presenting a two hour play during the Junior Prom week. Whatever success the “King of the Philippines” met with is due to the hearty support given by all the members of the cast who were not members of the club. The men who at present make up the Puff and Powder Club are unanimous in their desire to make their organization an honorary Junior-Senior society, in order that Sophomore class plays may be en- couraged. At present the club is in excellent shape and its continued prosperity is assured. OFFICERS Kingdon T. Siddall . ... President John Walter Clements ..... Manager Dr. William Peters Reeves .... Supervisor MEMBERS F G. Clark K. T. Siddall W. R. McCowatt D. C. Wheaton one hundred and forty-three Presented by llic Kenyon College Glee Club a Rosse Hall, June 21, 1910 CAST The Mikado of Japan . . . Mr. Charles K. Lord Nanki-Poo, his son, disguised as Wandering Minstrel Mr. J. H. Cable Ko-Ko, Lord High Executioner of Titipu Mr. Walter F. Tunks Pooh-Bah, Lord High Everything Else . Mr. Fred G. Clark Pish-Tush, a Noble Lord . . Mr. Mark H. Wiseman Yum-Yum ) Mr. Harry A. Sparks Pitti-Sing Three Sisters, Wards of Ko-Ko Mr. Kingdon T. Siddall Peep-Boo Mr. Don C. Wheaton Katisha, An Elderly Lady in Pursuit of Nanki-Poo Mr. E. W. Todd Choru of Peach Blossoms H. Stanley Johnson Ralph M. Watson Wiley W. Glass Roy L. Underhill Marion E. Sykes Robert A. Weaver Philip Porter Robert C. Millspaugh Chorus of Noble I-X rds Miller H. Pontius Howard A. Axtell Robert C. Wiseman Louis L. Hicks Mr. Walter Robson McCowatt Mr. Frederick George Harkness William A. Thomas Alfred L. Maclntire Sherman O. Hayes Clitus H. Marvin . . Director . Accompanist one hundred and forty-four “The Mikado HE Kenyon College Glee Club has long occupied one of the most prominent positions in the list of college organiza- tions, but never in its history has this department heaped glory upon itself and the college as it did on the night of June 21, 1910, when it presented Gilbert and Sullivan’s famous production, “The Mikado.” The success of the comic opera is due to the competent leader, Mr. Walter R. McCowatt, who through long and careful drilling, was able to change a gawky lot of amorphous beings into a shapely and graceful bevy of girls and dapper lords. The curtain rose before a crowded hall, and from that moment to the finale, the hall resounded with laughter and applause. Mr. Walter F. Tunks, in the roll of “Ko-Ko,” was the hit of the evening, and together with Mr. Fred G. Clark, as “Poo-Bah,” succeeded in bringing rounds of laughter from even the chorus, to whom the jokes were vita defuncta. Mr. H. A. Sparks, as “Yum Yum,” the pretty little Japanese maiden, gained, with his winsome smile, the approval of the commencement guests. “Nanki Poo,” excellently portrayed by Mr. J. H. Cable, was an ardent lover in the guise of a wandering minstrel. Mr. K. T. Siddall, as “Pitti Sing,” and Mr. D. C. Wheaton, as “Peep Boo,” merit praise for their clever work, while “Katisha,” the enamored but unloved, was an exceptionally pleasing role, taken by Mr. E. W. Todd. Mr. C. K. Lord, as the “Mikado,” was a brilliant performer and deserved the tremendous applause he gained. Too much cannot be said of the various choruses. What! Ambiguous? Mr. Frederick G. Harkness deserves unstinted praise for his painstaking and patient work as accompanist, and to his efforts the success of the opera is largely due. one hundred and forty-five t 3 JUNIOR a Z2 FEBRUARYH S 1311 irU—_ ILIONE Junior Play Rosse Hall, Saturday Evening, February II, 1911 THE ACTORS’ John Graham, a gay old boy Stanley Graham, his son Dick Jordan, Stanley’s chum Rev. Ambrose Meekham, a clergyman Toddy Lane, John’s valet Marie Graham, John’s daughter Carrie Gilman, Marie’s friend Priscilla Williams, a burlesque queen Jerusha Graham, John’s sister NAMES Mr. Kingdon T. Siddall Mr. Malcom E. Anderson . Mr. Fred G. Clark . Mr. Don C. Wheaton Mr. Kirk B. O’Ferrall Mr. Walter R. McCowatt Mr. H. Stanley Johnson Mr. John E. Harris, Jr. Mr. Franklin E. Hauck SCENE—The Home of John Graham TIME—Summer of 1910 SYNOPSIS Act I—Morning. Back from the Philippines. Act II—Noon. The King cuts loose. Act III—Night. The King’s reign closes. Mr. Kingdon T. Siddall Mr. John W. Clements one hundred and forty-six Sophomore Vaudeville Rosse Hall, Saturday Night, May 28, 1910. Produced under ihe direction of Mr. A. L. Cardillo A THE SLIDEWELL QUARTETTE Mr. Ellsworth Eugene Lord . Mr. Bonad Louis Axtell Mr. Freely Gracechurch Tunks . Mr. Ostermoor Onoui Cable NOTE—The management solicit the kind indulgence of the audience during this number. B HAMLET. THE MELANCHOLY DANE Julius Caesar.............................Mr. J. S. Haight Hamlet....................................Mr. J. S. Wicks First Player . . . . . . Mr. C. Soares Titinius..................................Mr. A. Goldsmith Roman Army................................Mr. Chas. Staunton C THE BITUMINOUS TRIO In Oscar Hammerstein’s Stupendous Production IN-DEL-DEE-UNG Ran 700 nights (from) Madison Square Garden. Still Running D . “BOX AND COX” A COMEDY CAST Box ...... Mr. G. Weaver Cox....................Mr. W. Haldeman E THE KENYON COLLEGE GLEE CLUB Mr. W. R. McCowatt, Leader one hundred and forty-seven Sophomore Week Attraction THE CLASS OF 1913 Assisted by the KENYON COLLEGE GLEE CLUB Presented IOLANTHE A Comic Opera by W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan At Rossc Hall Saturday Evening, May 20, 1911 CAST OF CHARACTERS The Lord Chancellor Earl of Mountararat Earl of Tolloller . Private Willis Strcphon Queen of the Fairies Iolanthc Celia . Leila F. G. Clark, 13 G. G. Skiles, 13 • • • . J. W. Clements, 12 . . . W. D. Cook, 12 Of the Grenadier Guards ■ . W. T. Allen, ’13 An Arcadian Shepherd • • . • H. M. Jewitt, 14 . . W. W. Glass, 13 A Fairy. Strephon’s Mother • • • . D. C. Wheaton, 13 • • • . H. S. Johnson, 13 Fairies Fleta Phyllis ........................................ P. H. Starr, 13 ...................................J. E. Harris, Jr., 13 An Arcadian Shepherdess and Ward in Chancery Act I—An Arcadian Landscape. Act II—Palace Yard, Westminster DATE—Between I 700 and 1911 Mr. W. R. McCowatt, ’ll . . . . Director Mr. F. G. Harkness, 12 . . . Accompanist one hundred and forty-eight 1 Leader Business Manager Assistant Manager OFFICERS . Walter Robson McCowatt, ’11 . Harlow Henry Gaines, ‘12 . Harold Stanley Johnson, 13 First Tenors James Hoag Cable, ’11 Harold King Downe, 12 Fred George Clark, '13 Cecil Perry Krieg, ’13 Walter Robson McCowatt, ’11 Homer Moore Jewitt, T4 John Edward Harris, Jr., ’13 Second Tenors Lecky Harper Russell, ’11 Robert Augustus Weaver, ’12 Kingdon Thornton Siddall, ’I 1 Harold Stanley Johnson, 13 Edwin Todd, ’11 Don Carlenos Wheaton, ’ 13 Howard Ashley Axtell, ’12 John Dwight O’Ferrall, ’14 Laurence K. McCafferty, ’12 Alfred Leigh Stuckenberg, ’14 First Bassos Clitus Harry Marvin, Jr., ’I I Kirk Bassett O’Ferrall, 13 Frederick George Harkness, ’12 Donald Wonders, 13 Philip Porter, ’12 Donald Hanby Harper, ’14 Wiley Wiggins Glass, ’13 Joseph Russell Walton, ’14 Second Bassos Bartelle Hilen Reinheimer, ’ll William Thompson Allen, T3 Warner Dayle Cook, ’12 George Glen Skiles, '13 Harlow Henry Gaines, ’12 Eugene Malcom Anderson, '14 William Archibald Thomas, 12 William Smith Jenkins, Jr., '14 one hundred and fifty-one The Glee Club OR the past two seasons, no trips have been undertaken by the Kenyon Glee Club; not because each member of the club was unwilling, nor because the club, as a whole, was unprepared to do its very best in upholding Kenyon’s glory in matters musical. Various complications arose, which were not to be ac- counted for by the management or the club members. All of the men deeply regretted the loss of a trip, for it is an event toward which they looked forward eagerly and with great expectation, as has been the custom in years past. No future college year should pass, in which a Glee Club trip should not be an event. The men earn it, the college needs it, and surely the alumni look forward to it. Notwithstanding the fact that no trip was taken, the men worked untiringly, and the true Kenyon spirit has been shown by each indivi- dual who was an integral part of the organization. After they had been informed that a trip was not in store for them, the men continued to answer the call to rehearsals and aided in keeping the Kenyon Glee Club a live member of the college organizations. Hie life of the average college man is so occupied with various activities that it is not natural for him to cling to anything that does not yield a decidedly obvious result, and the persistency of the members of the Glee Club is worthy of honorable mention. The work done by the men in preparation for the 1910 com- mencement concert was of a tiresome nature. Gilbert and Sullivan’s opera, “Hie Mikado,” was produced with great success. The interest of the men was evinced by finished character of the work of one hundred and fifty-two both principals and choruses. The opera was so well received that another is now being prepared by practically the same club. The “Prom” concert this year was enthusiastically welcomed, and the club added its full share toward the entertainment of the Junior week guests. It may be said, in conclusion, that the Glee Club of 1910 and 1911 has been kept up to the standard, although it was not heard off the Hill, and that a concert tour in 1912 must be a certainty. one hundred and fifty-three Leader First Mandolins Richard Roberts Harter, ’11 Jesse Ashton Gregg, 14 Fred George Clark, ’13 Ralph McKinley Watson, 12 Everett Sanderson, ’ll William Smith Jenkins, Jr., 14 Second Mandolins Kingdon Thornton Siddall, 1 1 Homer Moore Jewitt, 14 Donald Hanby Harper, ’14 Sherman Amos Manchester, ’14 William Archibald Thomas, ’12 Accompanist Frederick George Harkness. ’12 . . . Accompanist Rosse Hall, February 14, 1911 one hundred and fifty-four Concert of the Glee and Mandolin Clubs 1. Sonora FIRST PART 2. Good Bye Glee and Mandolin Clubs 3. De Coppah Moon Mr. Cable 4. Glee Club Take Me Back to Babyland 5. (a) The Rosary Mandolin Club (b) Lullaby . • 6. Medley Glee Club • • • 7. Mandolin Club 0 Lovely Night (Barcarolle) ■1 Glee Club Intermission PART TWO 8. Four Indian Love Songs (a) From the Land of the Sky Blue Water (b) Far Off I Hear a Lover’s Flute (c) The Grey Dawn is Stealing (d) The Moon Drops Low Mr. McCowatt 9. Selections Quartette 10. Kenyon Songs (a) Old Kenyon in the Days to Be (b) Philander Chase 11. Whistling Solo Mr. Rood 12. Schnitezlebank Glee Club 13. Specialty Mr. Clark and Mr. Wheaton 14. Songs of Kenyon Glee Club 15. Alma Mater Glee and Mandolin Clubs Tosti Shelly Nevin Brahm Offenbach Cadman one hundred and fifty-five College Choir Leaders j Organist . James Hoag Cable, ’11 Walter Robson McCowatt, ’11 Walter Hatheral Coolidge, ’12 Airs Russell Twiggs Young, ’12 Maurice Cecil Snyder, ’13 Cecil Perry Krieg, ’13 Harold Stanley Johnson, ’13 Fred George Clark, 13 Louis Boyd Dobie, ’14 Benjamin Mosher Paris, ’14 Tenors John Edward Harris, Jr.t ’13 Vernon Cochrane McMaster, ’13 First Bassos Frederick George Harkness, ’12 David Weller Bowman, 14 Donald Hanby Harper, ’14 Second Bassos William Thompson Allen. ’13 George Glen Skilcs, ’13 Donald Wonders, ’13 William Smith Jenkins, Jr., ’14 one hundred and fifty-six E Kodaks one hundred and fifty-seven The Kenyon Assembly HE student confederation known as the Kenyon Assembly, is an institution which typifies the Democratic spirit pre- valent on the Hill.” At matriculation, each student be- comes a member of the Assembly and a part of the corporate body which governs and directs the policy and life of our small community. All questions relative to student life and activity arc brought before the Assembly for discussion and final determination according to the will of the majority. At the monthly meetings of the assembly, students find a willing audience for the play of their opinions, and the expression of conviction is thus encouraged. The general dignity of the meetings is a good indication of the esteem with which Kenyon men regard their privilege of self-government, and the concluding “Thrill and Hika” arc fitting symbols of the Kenyon Spirit” which the Assembly generates. President Vice President Secretary T reasurer OFFICERS . . Horace Wyndome Wood . . . . Everett Sanderson . . . Richard Roberts Harter . . . Dr. Lee Barker Walton one hundred and fifty-eight The Executive Committee Dr. R. B. Allen • • • • • • Chairman Dr. L. B. Walton • • • • • T reasurer K. T. Siddall J. H. able A. C. Hall C. H. Marvin B. H. Reinheimer L. H. Russell K. T. Siddall R. T. Young Secretary one hundred and fifty-nine one hundred and sixty The Honor System ENYON College is particularly distinctive among the col- leges in the country as being one of the few in which the honor system prevails in all examinations. In several institu- tions the plan has not succeeded, but where it has taken root, it is con- sidered one of the best moves in college discipline. The new student is given the privilege of signing the honor pledge by which he is allowed to take all examinations, from one to four hours in length, absolutely without any surveilance on the part of the faculty, and with no restric- tions as to freedom of speech, except in reference to the examination itself and the spelling of words, but he is under the further obligation of reporting any violation seen or suspected. The members of the college appreciate the trust put in them, and since the present Junior class entered there has been no violation of the pledge, and but two or three instances during the eleven years the system has existed. COMMITTEE Bartclle H. Reinheimer, Chairman Robert C. Millspaugh Clitus H. Marvin Ernest C. Dempsey Robert A. Weaver Vernon C. McMaster Warren B. Palmer one hundred and sixty-one The Dormitory Committee NOTHER year has proved the Dormitory Committee to be the most expedient method of regulating student life in the college buildings. The peculiar situation at Kenyon of the quasi-private residence and the college dormitory has made the problem of a satisfactory and democratic supervision of the buildings a difficult one, and the faculty, as well as the student body, are anxious to have, so far as possible, the management of order and discipline continue under the regulation of the students themselves. The com- mittee is composed of one Senior from each division, and its duties are to enforce the rules of the trustees and the faculty, forbidding liquor on the college grounds, and to look after the general up-keep and janitor service of the dormitory buildings. A number of rules have been formulated conforming as far as possible to the wishes of the faculty and to the personal responsibility which the committee- man must assume and enforce. COMMITTEE Clitus H. Marvin, Chairman Richard R. Harter R. Clarkson Millspaugh Russell T. Young John D. South worth Earl M. Mason Charles B. Senft one hundred and sixty-three President OFFICERS Secretary • C. Crawford T reasurer . W. H. Coolidge Prof. Weida MEMBERS In Faculty Prof. Watson P. A. West Prof. Walton In College F. M. Weida E. C. Dempsey J. D. Southworth W. H. Coolidge E. Sanderson W. S. Jenkins I. J. Kochnlinc P. Porter C. Crawford J. R. Walton W. W. Sant one hundred and sixty-four Intercollegiate Civic Club EDWARD M. STANTON CLUB OF KENYON COLLEGE OFFICERS President.....................Kingdon Thornton Siddall Vice President .... Horace Wyndome Wood Secretary-Treasurer .... Don Carlenos Wheaton EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Kingdon Thornton Siddall Edmund Frisbie Shedd Alan Gustavus Goldsmith K. T. Siddall E. F. Shedd H. W. Wood R. A. Weaver MEMBERS E. C. Dempsey D. C. Wheaton A. G. Goldsmith D. W. Bowman I. J. Koehnline D. H. Harper Prof. E. H. Downey one hundred and sixty-five Kokosing Canoe Club OFFICERS 1910-1911 Commodore W. P. Reeves Secreta ry-T reasurer • t • • • L. B. Walton MEMBERS R. B. Allen E. B. Nichols J. W. Clements W. P. Reeves L. B. Walton W. O. Leslie L H. Russell H. Jewitt one hundred and sixty-six SCIENCE CLUB HE Science Club was founded last January, for the purpose of increasing the interest in the advancement of natural I sciences in Kenyon College. Considering the shortness of its life, the society has made remarkable progress and has proved a great benefit to its members. As the organization is limited to approved upper classmen who have pursued science courses, the work done is of an advanced character. The members have opportunity to present abstracts of original research before the club, or reports of scientific papers. Meetings are held every two weeks in the Sterling Room. The first part of the evening is devoted to the reading of papers, by some of the members of the club or a visiting scientist, which is followed by informal discussions. The society is to be congratulated upon the enthusiasm shown by the members, both students and professors. The interest shown at meetings and the regular attendance indicate future success for the club. W. H. C. OFFICERS President.....................John D. South worth Vice President..................Walter H. Coolidge Secretary............................. Paul A. West HONORARY MEMBERS Dr. G. F. Weida E. M. Mason C. B. Senft B. A. Beatty J. H. Baird Dr. L. B. Walton MEMBERS J. D. Southworth K. T. Adams P. A. West L. K. McCafferty Dr. C. R. Fountain W. D. Cook W. H. Coolidge A. G. Goldsmith one hundred and sixty-seven one hundred and sixty-eight Minnesota Club President Sccretary-T reasurer OFFICERS R. M. Watson B. P. Hall Dinner. Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, Dec. 22, 1910 Rejuvenation. Gambier, Ohio, May 17, 1911. MEMBERS 19 11 Robert Clarkson Millspaugh Bruce Pierce Hall 19 12 Ralph McKinley Watson Cecil Perry Krieg 19 13 Harold Stanley Johnson Carter Moore Gregg Jesse Ashton Gregg 19 14 William Smith Jenkins Philip Morgan Lewis Warren Jackson Hopwood Benjamin Mosher Paris one hundred and sixty-nine Brotherhood of St. Andrew Founded 1883 Kenyon Chapter, No. 71, 1887 W. A. Thomas F. G. Harkness D. J. Wonders V. C. McMaster W. A. Thomas D. J. Wonders V. C. McMaster C. B. Senft H. H. Gaines R. A. Weaver H. S. Johnson W. F. Koehnline W. T. Allen W. S. Jenkins P. M. Lewis W. W. Sant OFFICERS MEMBERS t X . Director Vice Director . Secretary . Treasurer F. G. Harkness B. H. Reinheimer L. K. McCaflerty J. D. Southworth P. W. Hull J. H. Baird I. J. Koehnline D. C. Wheaton L. B. Dobie H. M. Jewitt P. G. Russell J. D. O’Ferrall one hundred and seventy-one Indianapolis Club “A Slammed Door Covers a Multitude of Hints.” DRAMATIS PERSONAE “The Yankee Tourist” “The Music Master” “The Slim Princess” “The Devil” .... The Chocolate Soldier” Et Ceterae J. E. Harris, Jr. F. G. Clark J. W. Clements E. Sanderson R. C. Millspaugh ANTHEM Two Little Love Bees” COLORS Benedictine Pudding FLOWER Forget-Me-Not one hundred and seventy-two Ei Reprehensi MVCCCCXI DICTUM “Sume, Seniores, cyathos amici Sospitis centum et vigiles lucernas Perfer in lucem.” REX Mons Libertas Dickens SOCII IN ABSENTIA Fredericus Geo. Clark Jacobus Edwardius Harris H. Parsonius Johnsus SEN Brutus Petronius Hali Bartello Hellius Reinheimer Gulielmus Tuppius Kinder Cicero Thomtius Siddall JUN Johannus Denarius Boylan Ph. Portercus Hercules Regius Downe Archibaldus Thomasso SEC Petronius Bowlus C. Publius Krieg Wilo Wiggins Glass Happius Nusbum NO V Maleus Eugius Anderson Gorgianus Terentius Harris Buckus Carr Gulielmus Servius Jenkins Duo Greges Philippus Manius Lewis IORES Clitus Hadrian Marvin Julius Southworth Roscius Cn. Millspaugh Horatius Woodo IORES Doctus Lawrentius McCaffcrtatus Ralphus Manilus Watson Rustius Titus Youngo UNDI Francescus Hauchka Philip Spurius Starr Karleolum Elmo Howser Francescus Mamercus Weida ISSIMI Tanais Brazius Harpy Josephus Rameses Walton Dido Merriam Gorgianus Terentius Harris Francescus Marius Weida Verbum pro verbo reddere: Take up. O Seniors, a hundred cups for the preservation of your friend, and stay with the party until daybreak.” Hor. C. III. 8. 1 3 sqq. one hundred and seventy-three Banquets ANNUAL BANQUET OF THE CLASS OF 1911 Gambier, Ohio, May 21, 1910 Robert Clarkson Millspaugh .... Toastmaster TOASTS “The Class’ .................................L. H. Russell “Harcourt ...............................B. H. Remheimer “Our Endeavors . . . • • H. W. Wood “Kenyon Spirit ..... C. H. Marvin “Absent Members .............................E. H. Crippen “Memories of the Gravel Pit . . . C. M. Cable ANNUAL BANQUET OF THE CLASS OF 1912 Gambier, Ohio, June 8, 1910. Harold King Downe ..... Toastmaster TOASTS “Spirit of Our Men” . . . Phil Porter “The Ensuing Year” .... L. K. McCaffcrty “The Class”..................................J. W. Clements Our Regard for Kenyon . . . . H. H. Gaines “1912 as Upper Classmen .... J. D. Cook “The Best and the Rest . . . J. D. Boylan ANNUAL BANQUET OF THE CLASS OF 1913 Gambier, Ohio, June 4, 1910. Marion Edward Sykes ..... ToastmaMer TOASTS “The First Tap ..... H. A. Sparks Harcourt ... ... G. S. Weaver Skeletons in Our Closet . . R. C. Wiseman “The Future ..... D. C. Wheaton “Our Church School for Boys . . . W. J. Sprague “The Thrill” ... ... Louis Hicks one hundred and seventy-four The Alumni Library HE Alumni Library has been under construction since last j Commencement. This building replaces Hubbard Hall which was destroyed by fire on New Year’s morning, 1910. ! It is being built solely as a library administration building, and will be far more commodious than Hubbard Hall. The ground floor will contain a cataloguer’s room, a reference reading room, a mag- azine reading room, coat rooms and dressing rooms. The reference reading room, which is to be known as Norton Hall in honor of the donor, Mr. D. Z. Norton, of Cleveland, is to be two stories in height and with stone mullioned cathedral windows at either end and Tudor beams and trusses, and will in architectural effect, resemble some of the fine halls of Oxford and Cambridge. This room will contain the dictionary catalogue now under preparation, a working reference library and desks for work. In another read- ing room entirely separate from Norton Hall, the magazines will be kept. The furnishings of the latter room will be the gift of the students now in college. From one end of Norton Hall a short corridor leads to the Stephens Stack Room. The second floor of the library is occupied by seminar rooms and a large room for faculty and trustees’ meetings. The funds for the erection of the building have been provided by the Alumni of Kenyon College, Mr. D. Z. Norton and the Hub- bard family, who have generously allowed the use of the insurance money from Hubbard Hall. The architect is Mr. Charles F. Schweinfurth of Cleveland, to whose skill and taste Kenyon already owes Hanna Hall and the interior of Old Kenyon. With the completion of the Alumni Library, Kenyon will have a library building, which like its dormitories, will have no superiors in beauty or convenience. one hundred and seventy-seven one hundred and seventy-eight The New Houses for the Professors H ROUGH the generosity of Mr. William Nelson Cromwell, I of New York, two of the three professors’ houses facing the i Middle Path inside the Park are to be replaced by hand- some English cottages. This will be welcome news to the Kenyon men who for many years past have been called upon to apologize to every visitor for the shabby and dilapidated appearance of the college houses, particularly of the three, which by their conspicuous position at the en- trance to the park, could not escape observation. Struck by the incon- gruity of these houses with the college buildings, Mr. Cromwell last June upon his first visit to Gambicr placed $125,000 in the hands of the trustees as a step toward remedying this one blot upon the beauty of the College Park. At Mr. Cromwell’s request, Mr. A. H. Granger, Ken- yon, ’87, of Hewitt, Granger, and Paist, of Philadelphia, was asked to draw plans for two houses to be erected immediately. Mr. Granger’s drawings which have been approved by Mr. Schweinfurth, the consult- ing architect of the college, call for English beams and plastered dwell- ings with half timbered gables. The architectural harmony of these structures with the college buildings is immediately apparent. The larger of the two houses, which is to be named Cromwell Cottage, will be the President’s house. The other will be occupied by Professor Newhall, as Professor West, who is Professor Newhall’s only senior in academic service, prefers to live nearer Bexley. one hundred and eighty The Eighty-second Annual Commencement PROGRAMME SATURDAY. JUNE 16th. 2:00 p. m.—Baseball Came: Kenyon vs. Miami Athletic Club. Benson Athletic Field. 8:00 p. m.—Senior Informal . . . Rosse Hall SUNDAY. JUNE 19th. 7:30 a. m.—Celebration of the Holy Communion . Church of the Holy Spirit 10:30 a. m.—Ordination Service: Sermon by the Rev. Orville I.. Watson, D. D., Bedell Professor of New Testament Instruction. Bexley Hall. Ordination to the Diacon- ate by the Bishop of Ohio. 7:30 p. m.—College Baccalaureate Service: Sermon by the Rt. Rev. Charles D. Williams. D. D.. L. H. D.. 80. Bithop of Michigan 9:00 p. m.—College Singing by the Glee Club, near Rosse Hall MONDAY. JUNE 20th. 10:00 a. m.—Stires Prize Debate . . . Philo Hall 2:00 p. m.—Baseball Game: Kenyon vs. Ohio Wesleyan Univer- sity, Benson Athletic Field. 2:30 p. m.—Annual Meetings of the Board of Trustees, Hubbard Hall. 5:30 p. m.—Initiation and Supper of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, Ascension Hall 7:30 p. m.—Senior Play—Rosse Hall. The Class of 1910 in “A Pair of Spectacles, adapted from the French by Sydney Grundy. 10:30 p. m.—Fraternity Banquets one hundred and eighty-one TUESDAY. JUNE 21st. 9:00 a. m.—Russell Prize Speaking . . Colburn Hall 10:00 a. m.—Adjourned Session of the Annual Meeting of the Board of Trustees, Hubbard Hall. 12:00 noon—Reunion and Luncheon of the Alumni of the Philo- mathesian and Nu Pi Kappa Societies, Ascension Hall. 2:00 p. m.—Baseball Game: Kenyon vs. Ohio Wesleyan Univer- sity, Benson Athletic Field. 4:00 to President Peirce at home to Alumni and Commence- ment 6:00 p. m.—Visitors. 6:30 p. m.—Reunion and Supper of the Bexley Alumni, Colburn Hall. 7:00 to Reception by the Class of ’80 at the Kenyon 8:00 p. m.—House. 8:00 p. m.—Concert: Rosse Hall. The Kenyon Glee Club pre- senting “The Mikado.” 10:00 p. m.—Promenade Concert, College Campus: Alumni Class Reunions as arranged. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 22d. 9:00 a. m.—Morning Prayer . Church of the Holy Spirit 9:30 a. m.—Eighty-second Annual Commencement, Rosse Hall: Class Orator, William John Bland, TO, Alumni Orator. 12:00 m. —Alumni Business Meeting . Ascension Hall 1:00 p. m.—Alumni Luncheon, Rosse Hall. Toastmaster, Judge John Jay Adams, A. B., ’79, A. M., ’89, Columbus. Rosse Hall 8:00 p. m.—Senior Reception one hundred and eighty-two THE EIGHTY-SECOND ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT of KENYON COLLEGE AND BEXLEY HALL Wednesday, June 22d, 1910 PROGRAMME Music Invocation The Right Reverend Boyd Vincent Bishop of Southern Ohio Class Address Mr. William John Bland Music Conferring of Degrees Announcements Benediction The Right Reverend William Andrew Leonard, D. D. Bishop of Ohio hundred and eighty-three DEGREES IN COURSE B«I W of Aim Lyle Fox Kmerine Alva Irwin Hardy. Second Honor Man Theodore Kraft. Jr. I larry Swayne Lybargrr, Fourth Honor Man Harold George Collins Martin DmIwIm of Ptfllttplg William John Bland. Third Honor Man Walter Fuller Timka Mark Huntington Wiseman of VW Arthur Douglas Farquhar. First Honor Man Royal Alfred Fuit . Robert Allan Thurslin DmUm • I Robert Aholiab Bentley Antonio Louis Cardillo Arthur I jsenby Sackett Charles Dale Siegchrist Albert Blakeslee White, Jr. BerkoW of Dmaitf The Rev. Henry Oscar Bowles William Barney Kinkaid Roy Johnson Riblet. B. S. George John Sturgis, A. B. one hundred and eighty-four Mm m 1 Am William John Bland The Rev. Harry St. Clair Hathaway. A. B. 03 Clarence Cecil Underwood. Ph. B. 07 Certificate of Graduation from Bexley I fall Raeder Paul F.mat Claude Scare Honorary Degree DmIm of Law Judge John J. Adam . A. B. '79, A. M. '09 Columini . Ohio I’lNMlwJ by PnlNtar AIU« Col. Jame Kilboume, A. B. 62, A. M. Columbu , Ohio Praaaarfad by Praia IUII President Charles F. Thwing, We lem Reserve University Cleveland. Ohio Pn— d by Prafaaaat 9my4 hundred and eighty Are The Senior Class of Kenyon College preaent “A PAIR OF SPECTACLES ’ CAST Mr. Benjamin Goldfinch Uncle George (hit brother) Percy (hii ton) Dick (hit nephew) Lonmer (hit friend) Bartholomew (hit thoemaker) Joyce (hu brother) Another Shoemaker , Mr Goldfinch (hit wife) Lucy Lonmer Charlotte (maid) Major Blood. V. G Mr. Whiteheadbar. F. R. S. Mr. Smith • . Mr Thittledhaide . Mr. Tunki Mr. Hardy Mr. W.trmaa . Mr. Lord Mr. Thuntin Mr. Cardillo . Mr. Lyharger . Mr. Kraft Mr. Martin . Mr. Fulta Mr. Bentley Mr. Swfthrwt Mr. White Mr. Farquhar Mr Emtnoe and eicfctyoil Senior Reception IW lull. 8 00 P. M . June 24. 1910 COMMITTEE Mr. Arthur Lirenby Sacked Mr. Royal Alfred Fuit Mr. William John Bland Mr. Alva Irwin I lardy Mr. Lyle Fox Fmenne Mr. Charta Dale Siegchnrt Mr. Albert Blakedee White. Jr. PATRON ESSES Mr . Theodore Sterling Mr . Iloaea W. Jonet Mr . Menry T. Wert Mr . David F. Davie Mr . Barker Newhall Mr . George F. Smythe Mr . Lee B. Walton Mr . lUhvin B. Nicholi Mr . Arthur C. Hall Mr . John S. Harmon Mr . Reginald B. Allen Mr . George F. Weida Mire Hamette Mervm hundred and eighty Stires Prize Debate Philo Hall, Monday. June 20, 1910 R e • o I v e d—Thai the Playi of Shakripeare are true lo Human Nature. Harry Swayne Lybarger. ‘10 Harold Geo. Collini Martin. 10 Judgei The Rev. William Thompson. ‘58. Pittsburg Grove D. Curt it. 80. New York C harles R. Gantrr. 99. New York Fint Prire . . . Mr. W. J. Bland. 10 Second Priie . Mr. H. S. Lybarger. 10 Affirmative Theodore Kraft. Jr., ‘10 Negative William John Bland. ‘10 one hundred and eighty-eight The Junior Promenade Rome Hall. Monday Evening. February 13. 1911 COMMITTEE Mr. Harold King Downe Mr. Jame Demp ey Cook Mr. Philip Porter Mr. Benton Almon Beatty Mr. Lawrence Kiniman McCaferty Mr. John Walter Clement Mr. Harlow Henry Caine PATRONESSES Mr . William F. Peirce Mr . Theoelore Sterling Mr . Ho ea W. Jone Mr . Henry T. Wert Mr . David F. Davie Mr . Barker Newhall Mr William P. Reeve Mr . George F. Smythe Mr . Lee B. Walton Mr . Edwin B. Nichol Mr . JohnS. Harr non Mr . Reginald B. Allen Mr . George F. Weida Mim Hamette Merwin handm) end ninety Sophomore Hop Nineteen Twelve KoMr Hall. M y 27. 1910 COMMITTEE Mr. I dmund hitlwe Shedd. Chr. Mr. Harlow Henry Gaines Mr. John Waller Clement Mr. Alfred l.ucten Mac Intire Mr. James Dempsey Cook Mr, William Archibald Thomas Mr. Clifford Theodore William PATRONESSES Mr . William F. Peirce Mr . Ilieodore Sterling Mr . Hoaea W. Jones Mr . Henry T. We t Mr . David F. Davie Mr . Ldwm B. Nichols Mr . Barker Newhall Mr . Georgr F. Smythe Mr . Lee B. Wallon Mr . John S. Harnson Mr . Reginald B. Allen Mr . George F. Weida Mi« Harriette Me ruin hnndrwl and ninety fsra ADVERTISING ■ ■■■■■—■ AND COLLEGE DIARY boodmi and msetj-firt Attention! Sav, Fellow , Have you wen our new tore It i a Peach, anti the goods in it are the canJy. When you are in need of Claea Pin . Purr ('ups. or in fact, an ything in our line it will he to your advantage to give u a call, THE WETHi C. TiALL CO. 1114 rmttld A e. CLt yELAND. OHIO THE YEAR Continued V M)—Kenyon 0. Ottarbem 0. Glee ( tub election . Oct. I—The President entertains the New Men. I ater. the Freshmen ente . tain the Old Men. Bowman get dt coverrd. Oct. 2—‘l he Choir Mill hunting the lo t chord. No chant .” Oct. 5—Pint Rmir Board meeting. The Rmnlle is pr« g e « ng. Oct. 5—Fredimen I larti and Harper take Mi Merwin mnik candy. Oct. 6 -Dedication ol Library. Boylan and hu camera again. Oct. 7— Barker goe to convention in Cincinnati, mine Chapel and give htl cut in Greek 7 unce 1697. Oct. 6- Kenyon 5. Deru on 0. Wirkham make 60 yard . Oct. II-AGI. I hil Uwh accuwd of taking anti fat. Oct. 12—Bruce Hall get in from the Northwest. Oct. I )—Dull day. The Colle fit n appear . Oct. 14—-Brotherhood of St. Andrew. John Drrkmton blackballed. Oct. I 7—Mr. J. P. Morgan and a lot of bithop . Beaiey overlooked. Fat unutually astute, urbane, wave, ingratiating. Oct 19—Football rally - Billy Colt married in Kertucky. All the amr -. mutual celebrationi The Republican Publishing Company MOUNT VERNON. OHIO Printer! for Kenyon Fraternities Societies and Gubs. otw hundred and ninetr-arrm THE YEAR—Continued Oct. 20— Stand up and Cheer. from Chapel to College. Football enthu aim lead to a ceneral and sympathetic strike on recitation lor the day. Colooel Reiny and Marty «rouse Hunt and the leaai leave lor Cleveland. Oct. 23—Gloom and ladnem. How it happened. Oct. 24—The Collegion Board find di culty m devising enough typographical error lor the neat iuue. Oct. 25—Sddall and Bowman orgamit the Democratic Non-Voter ' Long BOOKS STATIONERY PICTURES PICTURE FRAMING The Korncr Wood Company 737 EoM Avenue CLEVELAND. OHIO THE YEAR Continued Oct 26—Snow today. The drvmont are full of mouth-organ . Furry Downe buy a Jew' Harp. Oct. 30— Mr. Matthew , when you try to read German you tmply melt mto vapor and float away into apace. Nov. I—Dickinson «lay on the Hill over Sunday. Nov. 3—Job Hedge , of New York, addressee the Republican Club. Nov. 4—Freshman hat arrive. Ireland green and ralmon pink. Nov. 3 Dickm oa leave lor Cmcmnati. Nov. 6— Flection. Harmon chosen. Bowman say . I told you 0. The Euclid Hotel of Cleveland Caters to the Best Class of Trade + + + Headquarters for Kenyon Men in Cleveland ooe hundred nod ninety-eight Bourne-Fuller Co. Walk - Over Shoes IRON STEEL Same People Have Trouble -ek Their fee . Other Wear PIG IRON WALKOVER SHOES COKE Whan They Go On. Shea Tnmb lea Go OE. SI Ml MAO. MX Cleveland Pittaburf Cincinnati L. H. Jacobs, Gambler, Ohio THE YEAR -Continued Nov. 10—Baker lake, the Rev tilt pacture . ('Ivan collars and iknuni face . Nov. 1I— Dunny” tomamliulalr Nov. 12—Kenyon 0, Com 20. Gloom. Nov. 14 -Matriculation Foam . Marl ft leave for FI ml and Dempsey geti back from Princeton. Toil on tbe History of North America. Nov. 16—Iniiif RatheIlor, for the l-arwill lecture, «aid. A live man cannot compete with a dead one • keepmt the Ten Commandment .“ Developing ‘Printing Enlarging Hr MHrrn MtiSifr Alweyr • Cimpbaa Wk 1 KODAKS m fUPKUU Sperial Anentoen Cavan to M«l Order Columbus Photo Supply Co. %2 L Spnnt Street. Colemhu . Ohm S. R. Doolittle General Merchandise Kenyon V wi and Pa l Coed ■tpiiilhia fancy Grace rie IBM r «•fnvrlfP CHASE A WML GAMMER. OHIO one hundred and ninety nine THE YEAR—Continued Nov. 17—Tody ulks to the boy m a new capacity. Nov. 19—Matnrnlaboa. Yale 16. Harvard 0. (No, Ml the real Yafo- I Itnaid Kimf No. - IW . ufc «. bJi . Sun horn mm to m . Nov. 22—Van Coobdgr and Jua (uAAtfkgham irlurn to coack Nov. 23—The tram and the college leave for ( olunloi at 6:45 A M , w h bop high. Nov. 24— «Suit gamr. Kata, drfrat. and everybody tad. Nov. 23—Dwknwoa Io ( focago by gmlake Nov. 26—Hemu leave . Wild mao chate Hy Moore to Davtee for refuge Robert Casteel Kenyon House M H II Wrfom IW BARBER t Wall FnnMUd and Santtarp IU«i Ligfo and Claan. , )n| Mada GAM BIRR. OHIO Rato $2 per Day Gambkr, O. C. G. Scott Son Gcnerel Merchandise Speafclai Far Candle Com GAMMER OHIO PVana 12 P.OBn« Geo. Ransom Dm be ta FRESH AND SALTED MEATS CAMBIER OHIO THE YEAR —Continued Nov. 31—Crawford' telegram to Porter. A pair of King and a Queen Kicker.” Dec. I— 'Hy” Moore disappear . Dor. 2— Hy” Hill gone Dec. 3-Gum. Hy” «bed. Dec 5 -Amembly ”K ” awarded for footbalL Dec. 6-Dr. Downey'• clatart «till • -m l . Dec. 7 — Mwmeerla ( fob organum. Dec. ft - Ibe gboH of Hy” Moore reform. Dent” Hancock. 59. lectured on ” Die Tani and the High Coat of Living.” and Stoyle and Jack on «link amI. two hundred SOL YEN TEN K BOILER CLEANER AND WATER PURIFIER A combination of pure chemical re- agent that will neutralize the scale form- ing material in boiler feed water . —madk av--- THE HARRIS OIL COMPANY. Cleveland. O. THE YEAR -Continued D c. 9—Mimk«I at Harcourt. Wnw and Goldanulh ban around Dec. 10—Mmnrtota Club leave for borne. Charley Staunton l «im to Kang around. Dec. I3—All tbe boy get «tuck for Red Cro damp at the Pariah I lour . Dec. 16—Col leg clo e for Chrwtmai race . Jan. 3—CoUr« opru and tb C. A. ft G 2:30 A. M M on lime. Jan. 3—Mod of lb men back and tbe rtar boarder at tbe bib brgim to tell aliout tbe meal that mother gave bun Jan. 7— Twenty-fce hour courw n human nature. Jan. 9—Doc. Werda trie to com the Anenlily about tbe Honor Syrtem and Self Government. Jan. 12—Frey (peak for tbe labor umoru. Gumnne g ti earned and Downey ttmply beam . Jan. IS—“Pareon Jobnaon in tbe Rrolberbood meeting, l-ord. protert ua from tbe perila of tbaa nrgbt. We will now bear from Mr. Downey. Jan. 18—’Three Ml. crO rf. —Bet you can't gueta where you read a bate like that I Jan. 22—Fat preache . Some of the boya among tbe apanak put aaade I bear paper and take notice at tbe Preaadent'a admonition on Chapel behavior. FLO WERS For Evory Occasion Our long distance nervier enable you to buy flower m nat inf acton ly by mail or wire an tbo you were in our atore. Prompt, painstaking attention given to out-of-town order , aaauring arrival of flower in fine, freah condition. THE JO ES-RUSSEL CO. ler iS el Nirra FLOWERS CLEVELAND two hundred and one Representing all European Steamship Lines, Coast Lines and I ran Pacific Steamers Person ally conducted Tours. Guises to the Orient and l ours around the world. T9AVEUITS CHEQUES -----ESTABLISHED 1HD0------- THE YEAR -Continued J 25—Trials for parts w The Kmc of the Phihppmr .M Jan. 20—Devil prtsusdr the class to star • few nunules longer. Jan. 30— Rrmy dsoion eatrsvsgsace Phd. 5. Feb. | —Nothing doing. Feb 5—John L. Ruhr for the Manufsctum Aasc. Doc Smyths hangs •t on m argument. Downey beams. Feb. 6—Black week Feb. 7—Coobdge flunks Ownmtry 29. Feb. 0—Card playing pom popular— to reel the nund. THE BAKERY LUNCH COUNTER Cigars Cigarettes Pipes Stoylc and Jacobs THE YEAR—Continued 9—Getting antiout over Prom. 10— Harter attends the last C hapel Junior Informal. 11— The Km of the Philippine . 12— We take our ladies to church. | The Junior Prom. 14— Glee Club Concert. 15— The gtrli leave. College opens. J. D. Cook attendi four classes well prepared Bermsr nutes hss date and thinks it A Wed nesday. Cuts hss clsaset (by imtlake). See March I. Feb. Feb Feb. Feb Feb Feb. Feb two hundred and two THE YEAR Continued Feb. 17—Phil 3 getting ptrCty deep. Somebody drops iL Feb 20—Ssddall dmu.K. th. fundamental Urn. Feb. 22—Washington's Birthday. Sleep Feb 24—Dickinson goet to Cmcinnati. Feb. 25—Ssddall take • personally conducted tout to ('ohimbns for grand opera. Feb. 26— Dempsey drop l Kil. 3. We thank Kenyon College Students for the liberal patronage of the past year. We hope our efforts to please you have been successful, and that your future may l e as successful and pleasing as photos from THE YEAR Continued Feb. 26—Harcourt informal Loti cigarette foe forty day . Mch. I—Aab Wednesday 'Pete forgets tbe day and wati two hour for has claim to show up Mch. 4—Indoor baseball. North Hanna defeats West Wing. Arrangement! with J. and G. B. Mch. 6 -Ml Vielory nati Toledo. Mch. 6—Two new stone, on the AJomn, library I two hundred nnd three The Champion Dya Works fm FM DRY CLEANING DYFJNC mnA PRESSING Prt . Klfhi. f a UlUito smd «a Tmtdtr ritftr A. A. PAUL. IIB. U«Kn K T i 744 ppy 9 i «-. 9 WTiAmI 4 G. L. Singer Son TAILORS Dry Cleaning I’rtoDa StrW . Sufn Mi V With a G TrL 2S CAMKIR. OHIO The Kenyon Barber Ship -ImMnOn M-to F1RST CLAM POOL Mi BILLIARD ROOM Omhr P W to tot -HUNT The J. G. Butl er Co. WKoUwlr De ln. in IMPORTED GROCERIES WINES AND LIQUORS BUDWEISER BEER Columbus : : : Ohio HOME SAFETY HOME COMFORTS — Chittenden Hotel Columbus, Ohio Especially for ladies shopping or visiting. Phones, running water and every modem convenience to be found in a first-class, fire-proof hotel. Sunday and Holi- day Dinners a special feature for small parties. Music. N. A. COURT. Mgr THE YEAR—Continued Mch. 11—Har court («11rr on the return find their bed on the campu And middle path -liftern atrong in line like A ho patal Marty re- apoauable. Boylan |«i A flashlight. Mch. 11—The Kevtillt pcogr r c . Mch. 14—The 'Amen ' Senior I Mch. 16—Faculty rule . No man can graduate—ualea ---------etc. M« h. 17—Green carnation . Mch. 16— Huge quant it ie of cooling potion and other potent beverage . Mch. 19— Something brewing. Mch. 20—Dor. Com. meet . A embly meet . Ei Rtprehctui. Harcourt Place SCHOOL FOR GIRLS OPENS SEPTEMBER 26th, 19 JI Poe particular add re a MISS HARRIETT MERWIN, Principal - Gambler, O. LIVINGSTONS FLOWER STORE Freah Cut Flower . Artietic Arrangement Original De- igning. Coyrteoue Treatment. Prompt and Careful Delivery, are the Principal Keaton why our Store ha the Distinction oi he mg THE RELIABLE FLOWER STORK At Otini G m V l AiwtiM THE LIVINGSTON SEED COMPANY IM North High Street COl.UMBUS. OHIO THE YEAR-Continucd Mch. 21—Very quet. Mch 25— B hV Mutfache! Mch. 25—Saturday aught Quart Mch. 27—The Hon. W illiam G. Sharp, the Representative from this dntmt Downey beam . Mch. 29— lolanthe rehear k Mch 50— Woodie drop Phil 5. Mch. II— The Reveille) It n commg along nkely. thank youl Aped I—We play a yoke on Devil and he drannar the clat to pay ui back. Aped 2—St ware an on the Library nke. two hundred nnd G. W. McNabb GROCER Mt. Vernon and Gambler, O. D Ue in SUpU and Fancy Grocarto Frwiti and V f abU IWraJ and Cakw DAILY Phot tO LLOYD S STUDIO The Arnold Mdic. Co. OwoowrowATiir tan Mowa FomlaMnf . Rof and For all tK Lntaat Corrfrt Mattlnf . Window Sh d . PVWh Sly! in PKotofrapKy and Mnoldhif . Book . SUHnnaay C«t. Hm i i V,«. Si m and ColWf • the wank of h (Canyon Stodmt - Mt. Varaon. Oliio. IIMI3S. Main St. MT. VERNON - OHIO MARDIS MUSIC STORE 108 W M... S MOUWT VKINON. OHIO two hundred and aeren COMPLIMENTS OF New Method Laundry 73-77 NORTH FOURTH ST. COLUMBUS. OHIO Our Motto - VK MM TO PLEASE Gtr in i TrUl fry Phootng you 0 4 to On MEAT S I OHIL CITY ICE DELIVERY. pmonb ii LC SMITH Gents I umishings and Undertaking S. R. MARTIN PHONE 10 GAMMER OHIO THE DRUG STORE C H. JACKSON. GAMBIER. OHIO TrWphoo Main 3037 GOLLART HARMACEK bailors 303 304 Mkkoi Butting Bndtf A . Cor. B ftli St. MfIHn C Collari CWerland. OWo John R. (.laypool, M. D. PHYSICIAN .nJ SURGEON Gambit . Ohio GAMBIER BANKIII6 CO. GAMMER. OHIO Doe a General Banking Burin Ix4iiH Monry oo Aypiorft Security n4 Pay Utrem mi Tin Deyonu two hundred and eight Executed in their own building by the College Department of Champlin Printing Co. Columbus, Ohio two hundred and Purdy Strieker Robert A. Kummcr Dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries. TAILOR Hardware. Fruit. nnd Produco 209-210-211-212 SwetUni BUg PHONF. 149 BOX 299 EecWAva. CLEVELAND. O. THE YEAR -Concluded April 3—Assembly tonight I Dick ' seconds the Dor. Com.' recommend attont, April 3—( hiprl cuta running low. April 6—( lements. Beatty, Bock end Marvin make the choir. Oh Lord I April 7- rreehom do garden work on the track and diamond. Spring's April 11 Hruce°H°and Kusaell go to Columbus on the 12:30 A. M to gel a clean collar. April 12—Latter vacation Iwgina. The Editor on the job. Dickinson entertains. April I 3—Dick goes to Pittaburg. April 15—'Ilie eve e goe to prcaa. THIS IS WHERE YOU BUY Smart, Snappy, Stuff At Popular Prices two hundrod and
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