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' 'X - rv: 'ru X - X, u '-i ,I ' XX ' . I X X X' - 5 - ' HX,-111 ' XI.-11 ,I X 7 5II- X 'XXXX1 ' I- -,X' X- - 'I JIIIIX,- -XXXX- - -X-' I '. -,-.-1 n'QI f G 1. Q1 ,f f., 55 '11 1..' L-III'l'I - .1 X, X Y i' j'TX 'X X' X Ig! X- - ' XI X, - X X: ,I XXX X . :-' X. X- -1 1 - I ,, X - ' XX . X XX I II . I X- I, I I. . -. 'X . '1- XJ - -. f.1 ,. :'- '.-', ,X ' . . . , . L ., .. , X - .1..:'X - .Y .- f Y- .... .f .H . 2 -,,- I XX X XX X ' 1 w he awille A resume of the life and activities of Kenyon men on the Hi fl-IE 1920 REVEILLE The Thrill There is a thrill of spirit which love imparts, VVhen turn our thoughts to Kenyon's gloryg Both old and young With single tongue Unite to sing our Alma lVIater's story. Then let our songs ascend in unison! Our loyal hearts avow no otherg It unifies, It never dies, The love of Kenyon, our mother. Thy beauty strikes a chord of harmony That hends us to our high encleavorg Thy glorious name- Thy spotless fame- We'll Cherish in our heart forever. Then let our songs ascend in unison! Our loyal hearts avow no otherg It unifies, It never dies, The love of Kenyon, our mother. THE 192U REVEILLE Hymn of the Holy Spirit 0, Kenyon, rise and praise the God who Crowned thee And set thee on thy green and pleasant hillg He who devised the woods and vales around thee, Unfolds the process of His purpose still. Chorus God of Kenyon, Spirit of Youth, Lord and Life-Giver, We praise thy living truth! A O, Kenyon, kneel and vow thy fine endeavor, To dream thy dreams and work thy work until Truth's perfect walls and towers are forever Established on its immemorial hill. , Chorus 6 THE 1920 REVEILLE M' W ,ml l' - L -7, . . Y r we' H ,g . if ii E ,ii ii L. S. DOWNE J.B.l'VANDL W. W. SANT s Dedication To Kenyon's six sons, Corp. Leonard Downe, Nlajor W'illiam John Bland,Lieut. William Webster Sant, Prvt. Richard Charles lllarsh, Sergeant Henry Endle, Ser- geant Rollo Willizun Stevens, who unstintingly gave their all that civilization might be made everlasting and who, in the very discharge of their duties, made the supreme sacrifice so magnificently, this hook is humblv dedicated as a simple monument of Kenyon respect and regret. R.. C. MARSH W. H. ENDL13 R. W. STEVENS THE 1920 REVEILLE 7 Lives of Great Men---'i At time of going to press, the Reveille received the sad news of the death ol Sgt. Ralph 1Valdo Wlyant, '10 at Coblenz, Germany on April 23, 1919. Mzrjor William John Bland, '10-President Assembly, football, baseball, winner Stires prize debate, winner Cecil Rhodes scholarship. Spent three years at Oxford University, England, being the only American ever elected President of the Oxford Union. Returned to U. S. in 1914-. 'Commissioned captain infantry August 15, 1917, later being promoted to a majority. Served in France with the 365th infantry and was killed on September 12, 1918, inthe drive on the St. 1VIihiel salient, France. tLieutenant William Webster Sant, '14-President Assembly, manager football team, track, winner Cecil Rhodes scholarship, Editor-in-Chief Reveille. Spent one year and four months at Oxford University, England. Left Oxford in December, 1915, and did Y. lVI. C. A. Work with the British troops in Egypt, being in Charge of the work at Cairo and conducting the most advanced post of the troops in the front line near Gaza. Died on June 20, 1917, after an illness of dysentery at E1 Arish, Palestine. Born, October 7, 18915 died, June 20, 1917. Private Richard Charles lVIarsh, '15-In college a little less than two years owing to the death of his mother and broken health of his father. Upon leaving college, he went to Midland, Pa., and worked in the steel business. lVIarried blarion De Leden of New York, and one child was born to them. Killed in action, October 4, 1918, in France, when a shell burst in the middle of his company. Born, Septem- ber 16, 1892, died, October 4, 1918. Sergeant Walter Henry Endle, '17-Secretary Assembly, football team, Nlanager track. Left college in May, 1917, to enlist, returning in June to receive degree. Third man enlisted in the 83rd division at Camp Sherman and was made Regimental Sup- ply Sergeant of the 329th Regiment. Died on December 8, 1917, after a long illness of pneumonia and was buried with military honors. Born, January 29, 18943 died, December 8, 1917. Sergeant Rollo William Stevens, '19-Football team, president of his class, he left college in the fall of 1917, to enlist in aviation at Columbus. Sent to Texas in the 230th aero squadron and was made a sergeant. Later, was sent to Garden City, N. Y., Where he succumbed on January 18, 1918, after but one week's illness of spinal meningitis. Born, 1VIay 10, 1895, died, january 18, 1918. Corporal Leonard Sherburne Downe, ,OQ DOWHC attended Kenyon but two years of his collegiate course. During that time, however, he was very popular among the men. Served in Nlexican border campaign and later went to France with A.E.F. 'While there, he fell ill with nervous and mental trouble and was sent back to St. Elizabetlfs hospital, WVashington, D. C. Where he died on April I, 1919. Born, December 21, 1886-Died April I, 1919. THE 1920 REVEILLE Published by the Class of 1920 Bl C Ill X V I V THE 1920 REVEILLE 9 Foreword It was the aim of the junior Class, when it gathered together early in the year, to make the REVEILLE better than ever before. The editors and managers have, throughout their Work, been guided by this hope of their class and whatever work they have done and .whatever results obtained, have been always by reason of and for, that guiding star of producing a hetter REVEILLE. The Class of 1920, through its representatives, has aimed to give to the alumni, to the faculty, and to the students a Complete and inter- esting resume of the year 1918-19. In order to do this, it has seen fit to publish more pictures, more cartoons, more pages and introduce several new features into the book with the sole idea of making the readers 100 per cent pleased. ' THE 1920 REVEILLE MGH Then We'll Remember Thee Old Kenyon, in the days to be, When we shall leave thy halls When swiftly years of youth shall flee, And age upon us falls, Qur failing eyes shall pierce through time, Thine iviecl walls to see, Once more we'll hear thine 'ancient chime, Then we'll remember thee, Then ,We'll remember thee. In the bright scenes of fancies dream, Old friends will come again, The hearty smile and eyes that beam, With love that ne'er shall wane Will tell us then, though scattered far, We'1'e close in memory, Kenyon, bind now thy ties most dear, Then we'll remember thee, Then we'll remember thee. THE 1920 REVEILLE 11 The Thrill God of Kenyon Dedication . Foreword . Table of Conienis Then We'll Remember Thee Board of Trustees . Alumni Associations Honor Roll . S. A. T. C. Faculty Bexley Seniors Juniors . Sophomores . Freshmen . Fraternities . Phi Beta Kappa Kappa Beta Phi Kappa Lambda Mu Assembly . Athletics . Publications Literary . lVIusica1 Dramatics . Clubs . Society Commons . Commencement Rogues' Gallery Advertising and Contributors . Calendar Page 4 5 7 9 10 15 16-18 20-22 25-30 33-36 39-40 43-51 55-62 65-69 73-77 80-104 105-106 107 108 111-116 117-130 131-136 137-141 143-147 149-152 153-156 157-161 163-165 167-172 173-176 177-189 190 12 lVIiddle Path . 2 To Whom Dedicated 6 Old Kenyon . . 10 Honor Roll . 19 s. A. T. C. .' 231 Faculty 31-32 Bexley 37-38 Seniors -11-42 Views 52 Juniors 53-5-1 Sophomores 63-64 Views 70 Freshmen . 71-72 Hannah Hall 78 Fraternities . '79 Kappa Beta Phi . 107 Kappa Lambda lVIu 108 Assembly . . 109 Executive Committee 112 Dormitory Committee 113 Honor Committee 114 Commons Committee 115 Senior Council . 116 Athletics . 1 17 Football Team . 118 Baslretball Team . 1.22 Tennis Team 126 Publications 131 Reveille Board 132 Collegian Board . 134 Literary 137 lwusical 143 Glee Club . 144 THE 1920 REVEILLE 13 Choir 146 Views 148 Dramatics . . 149 Puff and Powder Club 151 Clubs . . 1 53 Science 1511 Ri11e 155 Society 157 Views 162 Commons 163 Views . 166 Rogues Gallery . 173 Pictures . 174-175 14 THE 1920 REVEILLE Nlarch 21, Friday April I7, Thursday April 24, Thursday .... June 9, Nlonday . . . June 16, Nlonday . Sept. 17, Wednesday . . Sept. 30, Tuesday . . . Nov. I, Saturday ..... Nov. 24-26, Mon.-Wed. Nov. 27-30, Thurs,-Sun. ...... . Dec. 21, Sunday ....,. Jan. 5, Nlonday .... Jan. 28, Vllednesday . . Feb. 2, Monday . . . College Calendar SPRING TERM 1919 .....Term begins with Nlorning Prayer at 7:45. Nlatriculation. , . . . .Easter recess begins. . . . . .College opens with Morning Prayer at 7:45. . . . . .Term Examinations begin. . . . . .The Ninety-lirst Commencement. FIRST SEMESTER 1919-1920 Registration of new students, Ascension Hall 2 P.M. College opens with Evening Prayer at 5 . . .Bexley Hall opens with Evening Prayer at 5. All Saints' Day. Founders, Day. . . . . . .Semester examinations. Thanksgiving recess. Christmas recess begins. . . .College opens with Nlorning Prayer at 7:45. . . . .Semester examinations begin. . . . .First semester ends. THE 1920 REVEILLE 15 Board of Trustees of Kenyon College 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. YVILLIAM FOSTER PEIRCE, LI-LD., D.D. President of Kenyon College ELECTED BY THE BGARD GF TRUSTEES, UNDER ARTICLE IV THE REV. A. L. FRAZER, Youngstown . . FRANCIS T. A. JUNKIN, LL.D., Chicago, Ill. . DAVID Z. NORTON, A.M., Cleveland . . MR. CHARLES B. RAYMOND, Akron ..... THE RT. REV. FRAN-K DURTOULIN, D.D., Toledo . FLORIEN GIAQUE, LL.D., Cincinnati . . . E. MR. RALPH T. KING, Cleveland ..... MR. WILLIAM G. TVIATHER, Cleveland . . . THE RT. REV. THEODORE I. REEsE, D.D., Columbus . THE HON. ALBERT DOUGLAS, LL.D., Vlfashington, D. C. . SAMUEL TVIATHER, LL.D., Cleveland . . . . . MR. D. B. KIRK, lVIt. Vernon . . . JUDGE JOHN J. ADAMS, LL.D., Columbus JUDGE U. L. MARVIN, LL.D., Akron . MORISON R. WAITE, ESQ., Cincinnati . TERM EXPIRES A 1919 . 1919 . 1920 . 1920 . 1921 . 1921 . 1921 . 1922 . 1922 . 1923 . 1923 . 1923 . 1923 . 1924 . 1924 16 , THE 1920 REVEILLE ELECTED BY THE ALUMNI UNDER ARTICLE V JAMES H. DEIVIPSEY, LL.D., Cleveland . . . THE RT. REV. ROBERT L. HARRIS, D.D., Marquette, Michigan . THE HON. T. P. LINN, LL.D., Columbus . . DR. FRANCIS W. BLAKE, Gambier ..... THE REV. JAMES TONN'NSEND RUSSELL, Brooklyn, N. Y. . . ALONZO M. SNYDER, ESQ., Cleveland .... TERM EXPIRES 1919 1 919' 1920 . . 1920 1921 1921 SECRETARY DR. F. VV. BLAKE, Gambier TREASURER TRUST DEPT., THE GUARDIAN SAVINGS AND TRUST CO., Cleveland, Ohio Assislarzt Treaszzrm' in clzarge of Gzzmbier office , P. H. TAYLOR .CONSULTING ARCHITECT CHARLES F. SCI-IVVEINFURTH, Cleveland ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS THE GENERAL ASSOCIATION President JOSIAH KINGSLEY 0HI,, '84, New York City l7ice-Pzwsidefzts LEO WELDON VVERTHEIMER, '99, Milford, Pa. THE REV. IQIRK B. O'FERRA'I., '09, Lima, Ohio. OWEN J. IXTYERS, '17, Toledo, Ohio. S ecrvtary and T1'm.v1n'er ARTHUR L. BROVVN, '06, The Diem and XVing Paper Necro lo gist lVIATTHEXV F. IXCIAURY, '04-, Philadelphia, Peuna. ' Executive Committee THE PRESIDENT THE SECRETARY Co., Cincinnati. ALONZO M. SNYDER, '85 THE FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT ' CONSTANT SOUTHXVORTH, '98 THE SECOND VICE-PRESIDENT THE TREASURER THE 1920 REVEILLE 17 THE ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN OHIO President FRANK H. GINN, '90, Cleveland. Secretary and' Treasurer ROY H. HUNTER, '03, 929 Garfield Building, Cleveland. I'Ii.ftori11n FRANK H. GINN, '90, Cleveland. Exerutifvc Committee JAMES H. DEIXIPSIEY, '82 ERNEST S. COOK, '82 THE REV. CHARLES C. BUEB, '99 THE ASSOCIATION OF CENTRAL OHIO Presizlent JUDGE JOHN J. ADAMS, '79, Page Hall, O.S.U., Columbus. Secretary and Trfzlsurer AUSTIN ETCELROY, '09, Hartman Bldg., Columbus. THE ASSOCIATION OF CINCINNATI AND VICINITY President DR. ALBERT J. BELL, '95, Cincinnati. . Vice-P1-esizlenz ARTHUR L. BROWN, '06, The Diem and Win Pa Jer Co., Cincinnati. g l Secretary and Treasurer HARRY L. GAYER, '15, Procter and Gamble CO., Cincinnati. Executive Comnzittee FLORIEN GIAQUE, '69 CONSTANT SOUTHVVORTH, '98 DR. HENRY STANBERY, '96 ARTHUR J. LARMON, '06 THE ASSOCIATION OF THE EAST Presiflenf JOSIAH K. OHL, '84, Editor of the N. Y. Herald, Herald Square, New York City. Viee-Presidents LEO W. WERTHEIMER, '99, Milford, Pike Co., Penna. , ROY H. HOSKINS, '01, 75 Sixth St., Long Island City, N. Y. C, THOMAS J. GODDARD, '03, 7 South St., New York City. Secretary and Trezamrer THE REV. FRANK R. JONES, '01, Willarcl Parker Hospital, Foot E. 16th. St., N. Y. C. Executive C07lZ7IZiff6E THE PRESIDENT THE REV. CHARLES T. WALKLEY, 92 THE VICE-PRESIDENT C. C. PHILLIPS, '05 THE SECRETARY IVIALCOLIVI C. PLATT, 'O8 18 THE 1920 REVEILLE THE ASSOCIATION OF CHICAGO Presizlen t THE REV. GEORGE B. PRATT, '62, 1046 Lawrence Ave., Edgewate Secreiary and Treasurm' XVLILIANI N. XNYANT, '03, 234 S. La Salle St., Chicago, Ill. THE ASSOCIATION OF PITTSBURGH President JOHN A. HARPER, '60, Pittsburgh. ' Vice-Prcsizient LEVI H. BURNETT, '96, Pittsburgh. Secretary and Treasurer CHARLES C. HAMMOND, '03, Columbia National Bank Pittsbur h. i E THE ASSOCIATION OF TOLEDO President CHARLES G. WILSON, '68, Toledo, Ohio. Secretary RALPH S. HOLBROOK, '87, Toledo, Ohio. Tl'ffHSIlI'EI' HAROLD D. BOVVLUS, '13, 55.2 Ohio Bldg., Toledo, Ohio. THE ASSOCIATION OF PHILADELPHIA Presirlent THE REV. HARRY ST. CLAIR HATHAWAY, '99, Norristown, Pa. Vine-Presid1 nt VVILLIAIYI BUDD BODINE, IR., '90, Philadelphia. Secretary and Treasurer BIATTHEW F. IVIAURY, ,041-, 900 Land Title Building, Philadelpllia. THE ASSOCIATION OF WASHINGTON, D. President THE HON. ALBERT DOUGLAS, '72, Washington, D. C. Secretary and Treasurer THE REV. I. J. DINION, '98, 1736 Q St., N. VV., Washington, D. THE ASSOCIATION OF PUGET SOUND President C. HOLMAN DUN, '09, Seattle. Vice-President HAROLD E. LANGDON, '04, Edmonds. Secretary WILEUR L. CUMMINGS, '02, Hoge Bldg., Seattle. Treasurer RAYMOND C. GILI.ETTE, '11, Seattle. hlistorian THOMAS T. VAN SWEARINOEN, Seattle. r, Chicago, Ill C. C. THE 1920 REVEILLE -.PH umkmlx 20 THE 1920 REVEILLE , . . Kenyon S Complete Service List 1864 B. F. Jones Brig. Gen. Charles G. Penny Alfred K. Taylor 1877 1907 Col. Harry C. Benson Lieut. Charles G. Brown 1880 Harold lll. Eddy Abner L. Frazier Lieut. Stewart W. Goldsborough 1883 Dr. C. W. Judd llilajor Chas. S. Hamilton Capt- George A- S21Uf01'd 1884 Rev. Gilbert B. Sigmons Capt, H, B, C, Plimpton Lieut. Charles Edward Upson 1885 1908 NI. H. P. Hagans 1887 Capt. Alfred H. Granger 1888 Col. Guy D. Goff 1891 Jesse P. Reeves 1892 Lieut. Paul llflorrison 1894 Col. Richard P. Rif-inberich 1896 Oscar 8. Adams ' lVlaj. Henry Stanberry Chaplain David W. Thornberry A. L. Nl. Gottschalk ' 1898 Capt. Constant Southworth 1900 Capt. Rufus Southworth Chaplain Wallace H. VVatts 1901 Rev. Bates C. Burt Capt. Samuel J. Cole 1902 , Pvt. Howard B. VVright 1903 lylaj. YValter T. Collins Lieut. Walter Jackson Lieut. George H. lXfIacNish 1904 Nlaj. Charles lVI. Aves Pvt. H. lVlacBillir1gsley Pvt. Reuben A. Ford Chief Yeoman Nlathew F. llflaurv 1905 Lieut.-Col. Thos. G. Ferenbaugh Pvt. B. F. Jones Lieut. Carl Ricketts James lVI. Smith 1906 Pvt. Arthur G. Brown Maj. A. G. Culbertson Capt. Ernest A. Duncan Pvt. Pierce C. Chase Lieut. lvlylic C. Iliff Lieut. Bernard G. Jefferson Pvt. Kenneth F. Luthy Pvt. Wiriston V. lV.l01'1'0KV Capt. VVilliam C. Russel ' Lieut. Arthur M. Thompson Pvt. Robert hd. Fulvider 1909 Capt. Delano R. Aves Capt. Louis Bacon lylaj. Clarence C. Childs Lieut. Frederick S. Cooper Corp. Leonard S. Downe Ensign Charles K. Ford Capt. Emmett J. Jackson Lieut. H. Kite, Jr. - 1910 lVla-ior VVilliam J. Bland Sgt.-Nlaj. Anthony G. Cardill Lieut. F. A. Cartmell Pvt. Philip A. Crosby Lieut. A. D. Farquhar Sgt. Royal A. Fultz Lieut. Nl. Curtis Kinney Lieut. Arthur G. Sackett Lieut. Robert A. Thurston Lieut. A. Blakeslee VVhite Lieut. llflark Wisenian Sgt. R. VV. Wlyant 1911 Capt. Chester Nl. Cable Lieut. James H. Cable Pvt. Alfred B. Crossley Ensign Walter C. Darling Lieut. Ernest C. Dempsey Sgt. Frederick Filay Pvt. Raymond C. Gillette Nlaj. Alan G. Goldsmith Lieut. VVilliam Halderman Lieut. Clitus H. lVIarvin ' Lieut. Robert C. Nlillspaugh Capt. Edward lvl. Peake Chief Yeoinan Charles D. Rarey THE 1920 REVEILLE Lieut. Walter E. Ridenour Capt. Lecky Harper Russel Capt. Kingsdon T. Siddall Lieut. John D. Southworth Pvt. Harold Tillinghast 1912 Lieut. Kenneth T. Adams Lieut. Wa1'ner D. Cook Lieut. VVarren S. Corning Ernest C. Dempsey Lieut. Harold K. Downe Capt. Harry A. Dunn - Lieut. Richard R. Harter Lieut. Norman R. Holzaepfel Ensign Keith P. Lawrence Lieut. Lawrence VV. lWcCafferty Pvt. Roger E. Reilly 1913 Corp. William G. Aves Lieut. John H. Baird Lieut. John D. Boyler Lieut. Evan lVI. Chase Lieut. Fred G. Clark 4 Capt. Clan Crawford 4 Lieut. G. E. Crawford Lieut. Wiley W. Glass Lieut. H. Stanley Johnston Cecil P. Krieg Lieut. lrvine I. Koehnline Lieut. Fitch James lllathews Lieut. Riley I. Nloorehouse Pvt. Elmer D. Rinehart Ensign Stephen D. Rockwell Sgt. George G. Skiles Pvt. William D. Sprague Pvt. George S. Weaver Nlaj. John A. Wickham Lieut. Robert C. Wiseman 1914- . Pvt. George T. Brister Carter 114. Gregg, U. S. N. Lieut I. Ashton Gregg Sgt. Donald H. Harper Pvt. George T. Harris Capt. William S. Jenkins, Ir. Pvt. William. R. Kinder Pvt. Samuel Langmade Seaman Alfred G. Langtry Lieut. Dwight O'Ferrall Lieut. Carl B. Rettig Lieut. Paul G. Russell Lieut. William YV. Sant Chaplain Harley W. Smith Lieut. lldathew B. Taylor, Jr. Pvt. Fred G. WOl1dC1'S 1915 Lieut. lliaurice B. Adams Pvt. Emmanuel G. Brunner Pvt. Claude A. Carr Sgt. Prank A. Carr Maj. John R. Claypool Lieut. Andre B. Cook Pvt. B. Cuff Pvt. Lewis C. Gilger Lieut. Roy D. Gillon Pvt. Ralph C. Goode Lieut. Tom Laney Lieut. Richard lVIarsh Lieut. A. Perkins Roe Pvt. Robert G. Rockwell Capt. VVilliam G. Thompson 1916 Pvt. Herman D. Albright Pvt. Guy W. Baker, Ir. Lieut. Rex J. Ballard Pvt. Timothy W. Bradley Pvt. Donald Branable Lieut. Birch L. Brown Pvt. VValter C. Bruchs Sgt. Robert C. Keline Lieut. Henry Estes Ensign Edson VV. Porker Pvt. Paul Gaines Capt. G. lll. Herringshaw E Pvt. Charles E. Kinder Pvt. Arthur S. King Sgt. John Larcomb Ensign R. E. lldorton Lieut. Herbert T. Perrin Lieut. Robert L. Queisser Pvt. George W. Stober Lieut. Alfred N. Taylor Ensign J. Strafford Trottman 1917 Lieut. Clarence J. Ader Pvt. D. G. Allen Corp. Ray Collin Ensign Thomas W. Christian Lieut. J. D. Clements Lieut. Robert A. Craig Lieut. Frederick K. Cross Lieut. Elrick B. Davis Ensign Samuel I. Davies Sgt. Wilhtlr V. Dunn Lieut. Carl L. Erb . Lieut. Thomas O. Dye Sgt. YV. H. Endle Pvt. Hume L. Fraser Pvt. VVilliam C. Gilger Lieut. James A. Goodwin Pvt. Herbert S. Hamilton Lieut. Dana E. Hill Sgt. Paul A. Holt Pvt. W. Johnson 22 THE 1920 REVEILLE Ensign VVilliam Kerber Lieut. XJ. Campbell lVIeeker Pvt Pvt. Joseph E. lVIorrow Sgt Alexander R. lVlcKechnie Pvt. lVIilton G. Nicola Pvt Roy W. Pilcher Pvt W. Platt Rodney Rockwood Pvt. Harry W. Rossel - Sgt. James Atlee Schafer Lieut. Edward R. Seese Pvt. Frank Shoffstall Ensign J. Wendell Southard Pvt. Frank H. Stewart Pvt. Philip W. Timberlake Sgt. Philip E. Twigg Ensign Donald H. Wattley Lieut. Frederick S. VVeida Ensign Edwin C. Welch Ensign Charles D. Williams, Jr. Sgt. Atlee Wise Sgt. Donald Worthington 1918 Lieut. Robert C. Barron Ensign Carl R. Brick Cadet Warren H. Catt Lieut. Leland H. Danforth Pvt. Trayton H. Davis Lieut. Alfred Day, Jr. Ensign Henry S. Downe Seaman Thomas T. Ellsworth Pvt. VV. W. Faben Corp. Tod M. Frazier Sgt. VVilliarn L. Galberach Lieut. John W. Gregg Pvt. Anthony W. Helen Pvt. Lewis lVI. Hurxthal Lieut. Charles C. Gordon Sgt. Laurel J. Leake Pvt. VVilliam W. Leonard Lieut. Addison C. Lewis Seaman C. C. Lowery Lieut. Edwin P. Nlathews Lieut. Douglass G. llfleldrum Lieut. Richard W. Nlaxwell Pvt. Pierre B. NIcBride Pvt. Malcolm I. MacGregor Seaman Paul H. lVIcGormeley Lieut. James F. O'Rourke Lieut. Harold Baker Smith Pvt. Wendell Stillwell Lieut. Robert lVI. Tilden Ensign James S. Todd Pvt. Thomas W. VViseman Lieut. Earl lVI. Wood 1919 Lieut. Paul Seibold Seaman Marsliall lxnox, Lieut. Lafayette Abbott Ensign David L. Snook U. S. N. Wfilliam J. Bauer, Navy' Ensign John L. Snook Pvt. David T. lldathews Pvt. James W. Beach Pvt. Rollo VV. Stevens Pvt. William hfIcNeil Sgt. Morris Liepman Lieut. Edwin W. Thorn Loyd L. lVIacCartney, Pvt. Joseph Cater Seaman Griswold B. U. S. N. R. F. Sgt. J. J. Chester Werner Pvt. Fletcher lld. Devin Ensign Dale White Pvt. Reginald F. Emmons Ensign Thomas E. Yerxa Sgt. WVilliam K. Edwards Sgt. Frederick P. Young John F. Dudley, Lieut. Truman P. Young ' U. S. N. R. F. 1920 Lieut. VV. S. Gordon Lieut. Frank A. Allen Pvt. Herbert S. Harkness Lieut. Robert W. Blessing Ensign -George S. Harrison Ensign George L. Brain Pvt. Roy Heck Ensign Robert Brown Coxswain Harold Hohly Ensign Eugene Close Lieut. Frank H. Gunn Lieut. Bernard W. Ensign VVendell Love Coldewey U. S. N. R. F. Ensign Thomas Comstock Pvt. Robert Lowery Pvt. Max French Sgt. Charles McGuire, Jr. Pvt. BHITOII H- Graves Corp. Edward Pedlovv Pvt. Harold H. Green Ensign Wilber E. Postle Quartermaster James H. Sgt. Herbert B. Pu'ffer Gregg, U- S- N- R- F- Pvt. A. B. C. Rowe Lieut. Carl G. James Ensign Norman P. Sanborn Sgt. Carl E. Kerber Ensign VVilliam C. Presley Lieut. Edgar P. Read Lieut. Arthur Sidnell Lieut. Ernest V. Siggens Ensign William P. Smith Pvt. Joe R. Thompson Ensign Paul Wendler Lieut. Alfred B. Williams Ensign Walter Wright Sgt. Roy Zeman 1921 Pvt. James F. Branch Lieut J. Gunn Pvt. Edward E. Neale Pvt. Harold B. Steele James F. Tugman, U. S. Marines Pvt. Joseph E. Weaver, Jr App. Seaman Randolph Yerxa EHTE Y Qfnff 'gf -13 Illlllllllllllll lllllllllllllll H1 .? .M lllhn, HQ + K -1Il . . . .z-..,, . 1 Illlllllll In Ill iiiiwiliiii 5 ' THE 1920 REVEILLE Officers of the Unit First Lieut. Searle NI. Brewster Commanding Belfast, IMC. Searle was a commanding oflicer that, Without a Word or sign, com- manded and received the respect of every one of those under himg a man with a good mind, a strong character, and a strict disciplinarian, but at the same time, broad-minded and willing to play fair, he made an ideal commandant. Second Lieut. Lawrence B. lVI'1plesden Adjutant Lake Forest, Ill. Small of stature and not having as yet attained his civilian majority, NIapes, in order to appear older and maintain order, was forced to be as grave as a church yard at all times. However, he was a good scout, a hard worker with high ideals, and respected by all. Second Lieut. John I. Kindell Rifle Instructor Cleveland Sent to Gambier as rifle instructor, Hjaclcn became connected with and at the head of the ordnance department of Camp Kenyon, there being no rifles with which to instruct the men. Jack seemed to like a good time him- self every now and then and thus, the most popular officer in the unit. THE 1920 REVEILLE 25 Second Lieut. Jesse C. Williams Fort Stockton, Texas Speaking with a true southern accent, Hjessl' had a voice so pleasing that we used to think up some excuse in order to get into the ohice and listen to him talk. Hard to become acquainted with, but possessing a true, generous, and sym- pathetic heart once you know him, the officers found Jess most agreeable on all occasions while he was held in the deepest respect by the entire corps. The S. A. T. C. Smashing practically every precedent and tradition that Kenyon ever boasted, the Kenyon unit of the Students' Army Training Corps, beginning operations on lVIonday, October 1, 1918, lived through the signing of the armistice with a consider- able loss of morale and culminated upon government orders in its demobilization on Saturday, December 14, 1918, much to the extreme satisfaction of faculty, students and alumni alike. An impressive ceremony was witnessed by a large gathering of people on the second day of the unit's existence when the company was formed on the campus between the Alumni library and Ascension hall and formally inducted into the service of the United States, President William Foster Peirce and Lieut. Searle Mi. Brewster making inspiring add1'esses. I The non-commissioned ofhcers, with the exception of Sergeants Weida and Brewer, who had attended O. T. C. at Fort Sheridan, Ill., the previous summer, were picked from those having had some military experience before entering the unit and the machinery, for turning out good soldiers under the most trying conditions, that of drilling but two hours a day while the remainder of the time was taken up with academic work, was put in motion. The first few days were busy ones indeed for the commanding officer and Lieut. Lawrence B. Maplesdeii, adjutant. The company was divided into platoons of five squads each besides the detail squad, those men who were over twenty-one and more commonly known as the dirty dozen. The men were then assigned to quarters, averaging four men to one room, and physical exami- nations held. U 26 THE 1920 REVEILLE RAVAGES QF THE EPIDEMIC Shortly after the unit was mobilized an epidemic of the wide-spread Spanish iniiuenza gained a foothold and remained for six weeks. Because of the fact that there were four, and sometimes five men in one small room and as the men were crowded into the Philomathesian and Nu Pi Kappa literary society rooms each even- ing for two hours' study, the epidemic spread with amazing rapidity. Every day for almost a week, men would be seized with the disease and faint while standing in ranks. Ultimately, the West Wing was converted into a hospital and the Hu victims were there isolated, but not until they had had time to pass the germs on to others. Finally, when all patients were removed to the hospital, conditions were bet- tered. Eight men in the company acted as nurses and two professional nurses were secured. Soon, the wave had reached and passed its crest under the careful guidance of the graduate nurses. During the epidemic, two of the unit, Verner Lee Hulse and Neal Jones suc- cumbed to the dreaded disease. About the middle of October, another officer, Lieut. John J, Kindel, was assigned to the unit as rifle instructor. Of course, it was a small matter and VVashington was a busy little town about that time, but, nevertheless, it may be imagined that it was a trifle diliicult to instruct the men in the manual of arms and in shooting when there were no rifles. However, that was but one of the multitudinous slightly dis- concerting arrangements in the fall campaign of the Hill. Wlieri the unit had been operating but one month, orders were received to send five men to the O. T. C. at Camp Grant, Ill. Sergeants Weida, Snow, Corporal Branch, and Privates MacAdie and VValter were the men chosen. Second Lieut. Jesse C. Williams of Fort Stockton, Texas, was assigned to the unit in October and took up his duties immediately as drill instructor in which capacity he was an adept. - November 11-It is superliuous to mention what happened on that day. When the news first reached Gambier, recall was blown and the men raced to the front of Old Kenyon where pandemonium reigned for half an hour. At the end of the first period of rejoicing, the company was formed and marched through the streets of the village, singing. In the afternoon, the unit joined with the entire town in a big parade. Later the men were taken to lVIt. Vernon and there paraded in the main streets. Had .it not been known and whispered around, that the Kenyon unit was coming to lVIt. Vernon, the residents of that place might easily have mistaken the heterogeneous lot of marching men for a parade of factory employes as the government, evidently not caring t-o have the men in the Kenyon -unit divested of their individuality and foreseeing the end of the war shortly after the establishment of the S. A. T. C. units, had carefully not provided the men with any of their equipment. f Just before supper on that day of days, Lieut. Brewster announced that study hall would be dispensed with for that evening and, according to the usual Kenyon custom of celebrating any big event, a bonfire should be had. Immediately after 'THE 1920 REVEILLE 27 evening mess, the majority of men went in quest of wood while others busied them- selves in making a dummy Kaiser. The army was then called together and 13 men chosen to hold a general court martial for the trial of that notorious figure in world history. Needless to say, he was convicted and sentenced to be -burned in effigy. Carrying out the sentence, the beast of Berlinl' was tied to a stake on top the enormous pile of wood and the blaze started while the men indulged in the usual snake dance around the fire. Following this, and to close the evening speeches were made by President Peirce and Lieut. Brewster. With the lifting of the quarantine, which was prevalent during the influenza epidemic, a company dance was agitated, a committee was appointed and worked tirelessly for the next few days to give the company the pleasure of attending a dance as nearly like a Kenyon dance as one could be under the circumstances. On Friday, December 6, Rosse hall was a veritable fairyland for the men who had been kept under the quarantine for so long and they tripped the light fantastic until the wee, sma, hours to music furnished by Parker's orchestra. Shortly before the unit was disbanded, President Peirce presented medals to five men for excellence in military and academic work, their standing being compiled from a list tendered him by the commanding officer and from faculty reports. The medals were struck by the municipality of Verdun in commemoration of the defense of that city in 1916, and were secured by Dr. Peirce in a tunnel underneath the City. The following were the awards: For excellence in both military and academic work, standard medal, Sergeant Henry C. Wolfe of Coshocton, souvenir medals for the same work, Sergeant Robert C. Heinbuch and Corporal Kenneth C. Kastor, both of Cleveland. For excellence in military work, First Sergeant Isaac C. Brewer. For excellence in scholarship, Corporal William P. Wiseman of Lancaster. During the afternoon of Friday, December 13, physical examinations prepara- tory to demobilization were given and on the next day the unit was demobilized. ' Imagine, Mr. Alumnus, the Commons being turned into a mess hall on the cafeteria plan with no table cloths and no napkins, the divisions being divested of all furniture and made barracks, the Alumni library being a study hall Where all men marched to study when they had no classes and no one being allowed in said barracks except for a few minutes at noon, just before and after supper. Imagine Kenyon men tumbling out of bed at 5 245 in the morning to the call of a bugle and standing reveille a full half hour before breakfast, making their beds, sweeping out their rooms before breakfast, and the rising bell being rung only in case of a fire or fire drill! Truly, the government turned things topsy-turvy. To First Lieut. Brewster, commanding, is given the honor of making the unit what it grew to be-the best unit for its size, in the whole of the S. A. T. C. Kenyon may well feel exceedingly fortunate in having the service of such a man to command its first army corps. ZS THE 1920 REVEILLE As-to the real success or failure of the S. A. T. C., one should be wary in pronouncing judgment because of the fact that the armistice was signed and the men demobilized before it had been given a fair trial. However, Dr. Charles F. Thw-ing,president of Wiestern Reserve university, approaches a complete surnmaryof the training in the following words: The college man has acquired formal courtesy, health, industry and a thorough democratic spirit, but-higher education, culture, intellectual breadth and liberal learning have been retarded. As far as the success of the S. A. T. C. in Ohio is concerned, taking Kenyon as representative Cand Kenyon had the best unit in the statej, the S. A. T. C. was not a success. Academic work was practically useless as it was being constantly inter- rupted when the military establishment ranked the college authorities and what- ever academic work was done, was of a neglible quantity. Again, because of the fact that the men were supposed to attend classes and study most of the day and in the evening, a minimum of actual d1'ill and military science and tactics Could be taught them. ' , Apropos of its being a target of ridicule in its characterization by people as a Sad and Terrible Calamity, Saturday Afternoon Tea Clubf' Safe at the College, Sit a Trifle Closer, Stick Around Till Christmasf' etc., the rule of the Students' Army Training Corps certainly was the best evidence that can be obtained that a military establishment and academic learning must each separately maintain its integrity and that the two must not be immersed in any shape or form if one desires toisee the prosperity of them both, or, in other words the two are con- clusively and completely incompatible! The following is a list of those in the Kenyon unit: Ackerman Black Chamberlain Adams Bliss Chase, P. T Andrews' Bogardus Chase, S. K. Anger Bostwick, H. K Chew Arndt Bostwick, R. H. Clock Bailey Boyd Crawford Bair Brain Cron Banks Branch Danes Barkan Brewer Davies Bennett, A. Brooks ' Davis, A. C. Bennett, W. Brown, IC. A. Davis, VV. C l Biggs, B. C. Browne, C. P. ' Dechant Biggs, F. L. Brush Devault Biggs, L. B. Cable Dickson Billow Carabelli Doolittle Bitzer Carr Drake THE 1920 REVEILLE Durbin Ierpe, A. Nlosser Eastman Jerpe, J. Nlouat Eggert Johnson lvlueller 1 Farley Jones, L. lll. Nall Forster Jones, N. Needs Frehse Jones, S. B. Newman Geil Kastor Niver Geis Keating Norton Geringer Kelley Olds Glasser Kerr Owen Golding Ketterer Park Graham, C. A. Kilgore, L. C. Parker Graham, D. S. Kilgore, L. D. Pears Graham, W W. Kniseley Perelman Grasgreen Lashley Perrin Greenberg Lausa Pilum Greulich Lea Price Grossman Lewis Ralston Hahn Luctenberg Ramey Hamilton Lutz Reily' Harris Lybarger, C. D. Robb, Ferd. Harvey Lybarger, VV. N. Robb, L. L. Heinbuch lVIabley Rogers Heitz ,A lVIacAdie Roth Henderson NIclWurray, H. Rousseau Higgins llflclllurray, R. G. Salisbury Hill McNutt A Sant Hoffman, A. C. llflartin Schafer Hoffman, A. R. lllaxwell Schneider, F. E. P Holley lliell Schneider, G. B. Hoyt lVIeredith Schooley Hubbard llliller ' Schwartz y Hulse lllontgomery Seitz Jacobsen Moriarty Sellers Jenkins, VA. A. lVIOrton Severance Jenkins, E. L. lllorrison Shaffer 30 THE 1920 REVEILLE Sheerin Thomas, L. C. Walton Shelhart Thomas, M. A. Ward Shimmon Thrift Warman Sidener Trautman Webber Smurf Treat Weida Snow Trott Wells Southard Underwood lfVilliams J. C. Sprigg Van Dellen VVilliams, VV. D Steinbrenner Van Pelt Willis Stewart Vodrey Wilsoix Stirling Vokoun Wiseman Stock Wade Wolfe Strasburg Walker, J. C. Woods Swanson Walker, L. I. Wuerfel T aylor, E. B. Walker Zollinger Taylor, P. E. Y Wzmtland lv 1 x THE 1920 REVEILLE 1, - ,,...x 1--,.f x -. . '-. x N I ' ' s I v FY 1 X 'fxk I, xx ..' ,, N , 1 ls-K I. WEE . . EDA Q BLAWV ur Q. HORU5 ...D-uve:-l 1 K 'lil 5 5 f THE 1920 REVEILLE 7'- LL-f'-.51 1 L L 1. 6 1 z E I 4 w K 1 1 s i 1 Q 1 9 l 5 3 1 E THE 1920 REVETLLE 33 The Faculty -THE REV. WILLIAM FOSTER P1ERc12, B.A.,' M.A., L.H.D., D.D. President of Kenyon College, and Spencer and Wolfe. Professor of lVIental and NIoral Philosophy. B. A., Amherst College, 1888. Post-Graduate Department' of Cornell University, 1889-1890. Instructor in 1X'Iental and IVIoral Philosophy, lVIt. Hermon, 1890-1891. Acting Professor of Pedagogy and Psychology, Ohio University, 1891-18'92. lVI.A., Amherst College, 1892. L.H.D., Hobart College, 1896. President of Kenyon College, 1896. D.D., VVestern Reserve, University of the South, 1908. CID B K. I HENRY Trrus VVEST, B.A., M.A. Professor of German and Dean of the College. B.A., Oberlin, 1891. Instruc- tor in German, Oberlin Academy, 1891-1892. University of Leipzig, Germany, 1892-1894. Instructor in German, Oberlin, 1894-1895. lVI.A., Oberlin, 1895. Assistant Professor of French and German, Kenyon College, 1895-1897. Professor of lVIoclern Languages, Kenyon College, 1897-1903. Professor -of German, Kenyon College, 1903. III B K. E BARKER NEYVH.ALL, BA., M.A., Ph.D. V Professor of Greek. Registrar of the College. B.A., Haverford College, 1887. lVI.A., Haverford College, 1890. Fellow in Greek and Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1891. Student in Berlin, lVIunich and Athens, 1891-1892. Instructor in Greek, Brovvn University, 1892-1895. Classical Nlaster in lVIonson Academy, 1896-1897. Haver- ford Alumni Orator, 1899. Professor of Greek, Kenyon College, 1897. fb B K. VVILLIAIVI 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- I897. Professor of English in the State University of Iowa, 1898-1900. Mcllvaine Professor of the English Language and Literature,Kenyor1 College, 1900. AAfIJ,fIJBK. 34 THE 1920 REVEILLE LEE BARKER VVALTON, Ph.B., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Biology, Ph.B., Cornell University, 1897. lVI.A., Brown Univer- sity, 1900. Ph.D., Cornell University, 1902. Post-Graduate work, University of Bonn, Germany, 1897-1899. Assistant, Brown University, 1899-1900. American 1VIuseum of Natural History, New York, 1901-1902. Goldman Smith Fellowship in Biology, Cornell University, 1902-1903. Professor' of Biology, Kenyon College, 1903. ATo,se. , ' RICHARD CLARK 114.-XNNING, B.A., M.A., Pb.D. Benson lVIemoria1 Professor of Latin. B.A., Harvard, 1888. M.A., Harvard, 1892. Student at the Universities of Bonn and Leipzig, Germany, 1892-1894. Ph.D., Harvard, 1896. Tutor in Latin, Harvard College, 1896-1899. Assistant Professor' in Latin and Greek, Hobart College, 1899-1903. Professor of Latin, Kenyon College, 1903. CID B K. 1 REGINALD BRYANT A1.LEN, B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Peabody Professor of Mathematics and Civil Engineering. B.S., 111. S., Rut- gers- College, .1893-1897. Ph.D., Clark University, 1905. Engineer of County Surveys invNexv Jersey, 1893-189-1. Acting Professor of Nlathematics and Physics, lwassachusetts ' Agricultural College, 1894-1895. Head of the Department of Nlatlieinatics, Paterson, New Jersey Classical and Scientific School, 1895-1897. Instructor and Assistant Professor of lXdathematics, in charge of the Department of Engineering, Adelphi College, Brooklyn, New York, 1897-1901. Lecturer and -Instructor in Matliematics, Clark University, 1905-1906. Professor of lVIathematics, Kenyon College, 1906. X XII, CID B K. RAYh'IOND.DUBL7IS CAHAL1., Ph.B., MA., Ph.D. Professor of History. Ph,B., Kenyon, 1908. Fellow at Universities of Chicago, Harvard and Columbia, 1908-191-1. Ph.D., Columbia, 191-I-, Professor of Economics Kenyon, 1915. Professor of History, 1916. BGII. THE 1920 REVEILLE 35 PAUL HERIZERT LARXVILL, Ph.B., A.B. U Samuel Rlather Professor of Romance Languages. Ph.B., University of Lou- vain, 1898. AB., Princeton, 1900. Student at Oxford, the Sorbonne, Berlin, Athens and Johns Hopkins. Professor at Kenyon, 1915. AAfIf. C1-IARLES LACY LOCKERT, JR., BA., MA., QPh.D. Assistant Professor of English. B.A., Southwestern Presbyterian University, 1917. M.A., 1909. Ph.D., Princeton, 1916. Assistant Professor at Kenyon,'l916. ELBE PIERBERT JOHNSON, BA., M.A. I Professor of Physics. B.A., Olivet College, 1911. KLA., Olivet College, 1913. Graduate Student, University of VVisconsin, 1911-1914. Graduate Student, Univer- sity of Chicago, Summer Quarters, 1916-1917. Assistant in Physics, Olivet College, '1909-1911. Assistant Instructor in Physics, University of VVisconsin, 1.911-1914. Assistant Professor of Physics, Kenyon College, 1914-1915. Assistant Professor of Physics and Chemistry, Kenyon College, 1915-1917. Associate- Professor of Physics, Kenyon College, 1917-1918. Professor of Physics, Kenyon' College, 1918. REV. GEoRoE FRANCIS VVEIDA, B.S., Ph.D. Bowler Professor of Physics and Chemistry. B.S., University of.Kansas, 1890. Fellow, Johns Hopkins, 189-l-. Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 189-1. Assistant' Pharmacent' Chemist, University of Kansas, 1888-1890. Professor of' Chemistry, Blackburn, 1894- l896, and Baker, 1896-1897. Professor of Chemistry, Kansas State Agricultural College, 1897-1903. Professor of Organic Chemistry at Ripon College, 1903-1907. Professor of Physics and Chemistry, Kenyon College, 1907. A X 2, E E.. R 36 THE 1920 REVEILLE 1 THE REV. HORACE YVYNDOME Wooo, B.A. Clzaplairz of the College. B.A., Kenyon, l9'11. Graduate, General Theological Seminary, 1914. Ordered Deacon, 1914. Ordained Priest, 1914. Staff, All Saints' Cathedral, Indianapolis, 1914-1915. Vicar, St. Iohn's Church, Crawfordsville, lndiana, 1915-1918: Civilian Chaplain, Fort Benjamin Harrison, lndiana, 1918. Chaplain of the College, 1919. E A E, fb B K. LIEUT.-COL. ROLAND W. BOUGHTON, West Point, 'O3. Commmzzlfmt, R. O. T. C. Professor of llffilitary Science and Tzzctirs. THE 1920 REVEILLE B EXL Eye . f y,,,.2-.- ,,ii.L,- .i-iii' Honra Lduaarec.. l v .wx FII-LL EITTIEIAEIYI OZCQI THE 1920 REVEILLE 39 Bexley Faculty THE REV. WM. FOSTER PEIRCE, B.A., M.A., L.H.D., D.D. Presizlerzzf of the Sezlzinrzry. THE REV. GEORGE FRANKLIN SMYTHE, B.A., M.A.. D.D. Demi of the Faczzlty. Colburn Professor of Homiletics and Religious Education, Professor of the Bible, Kenyon. B.A., WCStC1'I1 Reserve University, 1874. INT. A., W6StC1'H Reserve University, 1877. Instructor in Hudson Grammar School, 1874-1875. Cleveland Academy, 1876. Cleveland Central High School, 1877-1880. Greylock Institute, Williamstovifir, lVIass., 1880-188-1-. Ordained Deacon, 1885. Ordained Priest, 1886. In charge of Ch1'ist's Church, Elyria, Ohio, 1888-1890. Rector of St. Paulis, Toledo, 1890-1892. Rector of St. Paul's, hit. Vernon, 1892-1899. Instructor in Latin, Kenyon College, 1898-1899. Rector of Trinity Church, Bridgewater, Nlass., 1899- 1900. D.D., Kenyon College, 1899. Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, Kenyon College, 1900-1903. Rector of Harcourt Parish, and Chaplain of Kenyon College, 1902-1916. A A fb, flv B K. THE REV. JACOB STREIBERT, B.A., MA., Ph.D. Griswold Instructor of Old Testament Instruction. B.A., Hamilton College, 1877. M.A. and Ph.D., Hamilton College. Instructor in Classics and in German, Lowville Academy, New York. Berkeley Divinity School, lVIiddletown, Conn. Ordained Deacon. Ordained Priest, 1881. Rector of Zion Church, Fonda, and Christ Church, Gloversville, N. Y., 1882. Christ Church, West Haven, Conn., 1882-1885. Acting Professor of Greek, Kenyon College, 1885-1890. Professor of Old Testament Instruc- tion, Bexley Hall, 1885. CD B K. THE REV. DAVID FELIX DAVIES, B.A., M.A., D.D. lVIilnor and Lewis Professor of Dogmatic Theology, Moral Theology and Christian Evidences. B.A., lVIarietta College, 1874. Lane Seminary, Cincinnati, 1876. Rector of Parish at Fostoria, Ohio, 1891-18935 at Mansfield, 1893-1896. lVI.A., lVIarietta, 1898. Instructor in Dogmatic Theology, Bexley Hall, 18'95-1896. Professor of Dogmatic Theology, Bexley Hall, 1896. A 3 CIP, HID B K. A THE REV. ORVILLE ERNEST VVATSON, B.A., B.D., D.D. Mcllvaine Professor of New Testament Instruction and Liturgics. B.A., Ohio VVesleyan University, 1882. Bexley Hall, 1892. B.D., Bexley Hall. Mirror Canon at Trinity Cathedral, Cleveland, 1892-1903. D.D., Ohio YVesleyan, 1905. Pro- fessor of New Testament Instruction and Liturgics, Bexley Hall, 1903. +19 K 111, fI1BK. NGTHE REV. WILSON LLOYD BEVAN, Ph.D. Eleutheros Cooke Professor of Ecclesiastical History, Church Polity and Canon Law. THE REV. WALTER FREEMAN WHITMAN, A.B., B.D. Adjunct Professor of Ecclesiastical Polity. A.B., Harvard University, 1913. B.D., Bexley Hall, 1917. Adjunct Professor of Ecclesiastical Polity, 1918. CIF B K. 1'Duties to begin in September, 1919. THE 1920 REVEILLE Students of Bexley Hall SENIOR CLASS Robert Lee Baird, B. Lit ..... .... S outhern Ohio Otey Robinson Berkeley ...... .. ..... Ohio Roy Ellicott Delariest, B.A .... .... O hio James Pernette DeWolf . . . .... Kansas MIDDLE CLASS Harold Frederick Hohly ................. .... O hio Arthur Raymond NIcKinstry, B.Ph ..... ....... K ansas William Vincent lVIueller, B.A ...... .... F ond du Lac Lawrence Breed Walker ...... ....... O hio JUNIOR CLASS Guong Henk Diong .................... .... F ukien Raymond James Harkins ...... ........... O hio Eugene Aaron Webbe1', B.A ..... .... S outhern Ohio SPECIAL STUDENTS George Linn Ferguson ,.......... .... O hio Herbert Leigh Lawrence, A.lVI7 .... .... O hio X4 -' :Sil- THE 1920 REVEILLE EWQ CII L,'I: 'T 'X J Y...-' 3 kg 3 i 1 I ' 1 J Z'V HL EITTIEIAHEI OZ6I EI THE 1920 REVEILLE 43 Senior Valedicforyw It is with a poignant regret that we attempt to write this, our last memoir in a Kenyon Reveille. Que may consider a college senior a lucky man, but when one arrives at his senior year in college, he does not consider himself such. On the con- trary, he considers himself an object of pity-and particularly is this true when one is a senior at Kenyon. As Freshmen, we were fifty strong and, although a trifle too fresh, showed promise of great things. VVe were well represented on the football field, the basket- ball court, the baseball diamond, the tennis court, the track and in the Stires prize debate one of our number won first prize. Then, the blow came-when the United States declared a state of war existing between itself and Germany, as freedom-loving and high spirited citizehs of this great democracy, the great majority of our classmates heard the call of battle and enlisted in some branch of the service. Those of us who were left, for one reason or anotherj put our shoulder to the task of maintaining the high standard of eHiciency set by our former classmates in every undertaking which presented itself. Now, we are about to bid farewell to Kenyon with all her old rich traditions and happy undergraduate life. And, as seniors, when we look back over our four years on the Hill we look through a mist of tears for those four years we shall ever count as the happiest and most productive of our whole lives. To present and future students, we have but one thing to say: Nlake the most of your collegiate Course both on the campus and in the classroom and you will be supremely happy. V A THE 192.0 REVEILLE Nineieen Hundred and Ninefeen CLASS OFFICERS PAUL FEI-IR SEIBOLD ...................... .... P resident ROMAYNE B. HILL ..... Vice-President RALPH NELSON ANDREWS .... .... S ecretary ARTHUR BENJAMIN PARKER. . .... Treasurer THE 1920 REVEILLII The Senzor Class RALPH N. ANDREXVS Special Huntington, W. Va. K B ID, Denison University Cljg Dormitory Committee CZD, C3Qg Honor Committee C3Dg Sophomore Hop Com- mittee CZJ 5 Prom Committee C3j 9 Senior Prom Committee C4-jg Reveille Board C315 Class Secretary C455 Song Committee Cellg Collegian Board C255 Class Basketball C21 g Rifle Club C4j. Talk about your grand old manu- here's one tl1at's got ,em all beat. Andy started atADenison, but found it too easy at the end of his first year so is spend- ing the remainder 'steen years of his col legiate course on the Hill, With animous toward nonefl Andy is a real scout. BYRON COLEMAN Bioos Plzilosoplziml Gambier, Ohio Rifle Club CU, CZD, C313 Nu Pi Kappa Clj, CZJ, C3Dg Senior Prom Committee By. Biggs has a poetic soul. We know this by the way he recites in German. Because he's quiet, reticent and an ever- Willing worker, we will ove1'look this Curse on his Career 46 THE 19,20 REVEILLE CARTER SMART NIILLER Plzilosaplzical Bay City, Nlich. ' WY Rifle Club C11, C215 C315 Presi- dent C315 Collegian Board C315 Editor C315 Choir C115 C31-5 Glee Club C315 Puff and Powder Club C115 C215 C315 Assistant Director C315 Class Secretary C31 5 Hop Committee C215 Property lllanager C315 Executive Committee C315 Dormitory Committee C31 5 Foot- ball lldanager C41 5 Commons Committee C1- T'oreaclor lVIiller was one of the most active men in the college, viz: graduated in less than three years despite the turbulenceof the S. A. T. C. regime. LELAND C. GUNN Plzilosoplzical Toledo, Ohio ATA Dormitory Committee C415 Art Editor, Reveille C315 Senior Council C415 Choir C31. If one calls Lee Cecil, one gets busted and busted quickly. WhC1'Cf01'C, we say heis a man! Lee wields a com- paratively wickecl brush and pencilg is as responsive a chap as you'd care to meet and is a holy whiz when it comes to doing favors. Draw a bumper to him, 1919! ARTHUR BENJAMIN PARKER A Scientific Gambier, Ohio Class Treasurer C415 Assistant Phy- sics Laboratory Gaze upon the Chancellor of the Ex- chequer, messieurs. Art Parker owns a smile factory and is generous with free samples. Artls a good student but has an ill-concealed proclivity toward slum- bering in Chapel. THE 1920 REVEILLE ' 47 ' EDXVARD B. PEDLOW Ravenna, Ohio BQII, KBIIP, Philo C115 C215 C315 C415 Hop Committee C215 Executive Committee C21 5 Dormitory Committee C215 Senior Council C415 Assistant, Bi- ology Laboratory C415 Class Secretary C315 Brotherhood of St. Andrew C215 431, C41- Could this photograph have been pro- duced in color, it would be easyto see what Bicardi has acquired at Kenyon College. CYessir, it's red like a berry!1 A better-dispositioned man is hard to find -and he has accomplished something for is .not Ed. the Nlookus of the Kappa Betes? He is! GEORGE BENJAMIN SCHNEIDER Plzilosoplzicfzl Hartland, Wisconsin E II, Philo C11, C21, C315 Rifle Club C21, C31, C41, Treasurer C41 5 Com- mittee C31, C415 Secretary C41 5 Dormi- tory Committee' C315 Collegian Board, Junior Editor C315 Football C315 Hop Committeeg Coach Committee C315 Jun- ior Reception Committee C31 5 Commons Committee C41 5 P r om Committee Senior Council C4-1. George is a crook, 'cause he once wouldn't let us cheat when it was cock- dice! But, gosh-all-hemlockls, he's a business man. He's the Gambier tobacco magot and was instrumental in declaring the recent dividend of 147.3 per cent on the common stock of Schneider, Kilgore, Inc. George Schneider rings true! li ll EDGAR B. READ Scientific . Salem, Ohio EH, Philo C215 C315 Science Club C215 C315 'Class Vice-President C315 Dormitory Committee C315 Football C215 Captain, Track C215 Basketball C215 C315 Captain C315 Coach Comit- tee C315 Riiie Club C315 Captain of the Range C315 Hop Committee C21. Here's a real man! Started with the class of 1920, participated in college activities besides his academic work, was away from college for three months while serving as a lieutenant in the army and now has returned to graduate with the class of 1919. Eddie is a staunch be- liever in the right. 48 THE 1920 REVEILLE JOHN LLOYD SNOOK Slfifflfiflf Troy, Ohio AKE, Nu Pi Kappa C155 C255 C35, President C355 Science Club C25, C35, Vice-President C35, President-Elect C355 Brotherhood of St. Andrew C25, C355 Secretary C25, Director C355 Class President C355 Collegian Board C355 Junior Editor C355 Rille Club C255 C355 Glee Club C25, C355 Choir C155 C25, C355 lvlgnagirfg Editor, Reveille C355 Freshman Footballg Football C25, C355 Basketball Nlanager C355 Chairman, Coach Committee C355 AS- sembly Council C355 Executive Com-- mittee C355 Dormitory Committee C255 C355 Comons Committee C355 President-Elect, Assembly C355 Chair- man, Senior Council C45. PAUL FEHR SEIBOLD SCi67lfij11iC lVIt. Vernon, Ohio Nu Pi Kappa C35, C45 5 President C45 5 Science Club C25, C35, C45 5 Presi- dent C4-5 5 Class President C45 5 Football C355 Basketball C35, C4-55 Executive Committee C355 Dormitory Committee C355 Coach Committee C355 Assistant Physics Laboratory C45. lVIonkey's his soubriquet and, b'gol, Monke5f's his nature. We'll remem- ber him because he's smart, because he's an athletic plugger, because he knocked down a commission in Coast Artillery, but chiefly because he's so exasperatingly good-natured! FRANCIS XIVHARTON WEIDA Scientific Gambier, Ohio QY, Choir C255 C35, C455 Glee Club C35, C455 Tennis Nlanager C355 Rifle Club C255 C35, C455 Senior Council C455 First Sophomore English Prize. Squads East Weida,-the topper dur- ing the S. A. T. C. farce. And he made a good one, too. 'Course, we're still sore 'cause he asked us what our names were-when the sinner had known us four years! Wah! Wha1't's a scout, though, and few of us can boast the friends he has. THE 1920 REVEILLE 49 , JOSEPH EMERSON CARTER Classical A Cleveland, Ohio Nu Pi Kappa, Secretary CU, Rifle Club fly, QZD, CSD, Secretary 1335 Dormitory Committee But for the war, Joe would have waltzed away from Gambier in three years with a check-for -one Kenyon A.B. packed on his hip. Since his poilu days he draws few easy breaths, so much is he pestered for tales from his swelling storehouse of spicy anecdotes relative to his overseas career. 1919 is proud of Carter for his persistence and for his running fount of humor. Joe has the stuff and showed it this spring when he passed up a mighty good chance of being valedictorian' of his class, CIP B K, etc., by leaving college when the faculty and Board of Trustees insisted on giving him drill after he had been overseas almost a year. TODD MEARL FRAZIER ' Philosophical Cleveland, Ohio Philo, Baseball C11 gTrack CZQ, C3j 3 Lieutenant, K. O. B. Todd was a man of firm convictions and you could depend on it they were always of the best. Meaning what he said, and if he had nothing to say, re- maining quiet. Todd was a model for many college men in this respect as well as in many others. Straightforward and frank in every way, he bespeaks the best characteristics there are. A A ROMAYNE B. HILL Philosophical Senior Council, Executive Committee C41 g Dormitory Committee C4-D 3 Senior Prom Committee, Class Vice-President HJ. Tr0tzky'l-so called for his similar- ity in disposition and character to the immortal Russian. Romey Hill has dis- tinguished Kenyon. He holds the na- tional intercollegiate belt for consecutive Hunks. BRYANT KERR Philosophical Centerburg Kerr is our ,impassioned orator-but it's a shame that he lets his love for the Boche prejudice him. just the -same, there hasn't been a bud at Kenyon Col- lege in last four years, who has had Bryar1t's characteristic pep at football games, etc. , THOMAS lXqABLEY Classical VVinslow, Arkansas Dormitory Committee Q41 5 Choir C3l, Ciljg Glee Club Q4jg Rifle Club C43- If you didn't know Tom Mabley, heyd scare you away with that fog-horn voice of his. Tom's a plugger from the West. He'd get more done along academic lines but, yo-ho, he's a charter member of the Royal Frolicers. THE 1920 REVEILLE 19149 Class Song Tune: .John Harvard, Here's to You. All classes every year Honor some dear name, Raise it in song or cheer, Fling it high with loud acclaim. Some sing to Eighteen's praise, Some sing to Fifteen's few, But Nineteen denotes the fondest days, So, Nineteen, here's to you! Kenyon, thy beauty still Guards thine ancient past, Sweet mem'ries of the Hill Shall with us forever last. To love thy glorious name We shall be ever true, And keeping with us thy wondrous fame., Let Nineteen sing to you. THE 1920 REVEILLE S1 Former Members Senior Class -Lafayette Abbott, A K E .................................. VVilliam Bauer, B GJ II ....... James VVhitcomb Beach, B 8 H .... E. C. Carpenter, 111 Y ,......... john Jonas Chester, XII Y .......... Chester Samuel Danforth, B GJ II .... Fletcher llflarsh Devin, A A ib .... John Fendall Dudley, A A fb ..... . VVilliam Kenneth Edwards, A T A. . . Reginald Ferrar Emmons .,...... Josiah Karnes Garretson, A A fb .... Walter Scott Gordon, B GJ II .... Frank Richeson Gunn, A T A .... Herbert Wfilliam Harkness ..... R. U. Hastings, A K E ..... Roy Heck, E II ............. Rudolph Rite Knode, A A 411 ..... Frank Bertolette Leonard ...... lllorris Vickers Liepman, E II .... VV. C. Love, B GJ II .......... Robert Lincoln Lowrie, 111 Y ..... Charles 'h1cGuire, A K E ....... R, J. hflurphy, E II ................ VVilliam Addison Park CDied April 3, Herbert Bruce Pu'Her, A A CD ....... Francis Edward Rogers ....... A. B. C. Rowe, XII T ........... Walter Jacob Sapp ............. Norman Prime Sanborn, NI' Y ..... Charles VVilford Sheerin, A K E .... Walter' James Starrett ............ Rollo W7illiam Edwin Walter' Thorn, B CD H ...... Robert Hoffet Tilden, A K E ....... Griswilcl Butterheld W'erner, A K E Dale Trimmer Wl1ite, A T A ...... Thomas Edward Yerxa, A K E .... Frederick Pilling Young, A A 111. . .. Truman Paddock Young ........ Stevens QDied Jan. IS, ..... ...Lancaster . . . . . .Bellevue . . . .Coshocton ........Kenton . .. ... ...Columbus . . .Park Ridge, ill. Vernon . . . . .Washington, D. C. . ............. Findlay . . . .Boston, lVIass. ..........Lima . . . . .Cleveland . . .Toledo . . . . Norwalk . . . .Lancaster ..........Ironton Richmond, Ind. ...........Danville D . . . . .1 ittsburgh, Kans. Fremont ..........Toledo . . . . . . . . .Cleveland . NVilliston, N. D. 19171, A A KD .... ........ F ranklin, Pa. lVIinneapolis, Minn. . . . .Portishead, Eng. . . . . . .Cincinnati . . .Brinkhaven ..,... , .Cleveland . .... New Yo rk City ............C1eveland 19185, 111 Y .... .... A flinneapolis, Aflinn. Oneida, Wis. . . . .... Cleveland ....Fostoria . . .Elyria . . . . .Minneapolis hdlinn , . . .Bismark, N. D. . . . .Faribault, Minn. THE 1920 REVEILLE H H4 , wx H uv' f'W'-4 u W MQ.. ww'u. ' fi? K sw mx , .1 -F.,-,,, Wlffff I 1 179 OZ6I III-Il. EVTIIEIAEIH THE 1920 REVEILLE S5 Junior Ediiorial Unique is the history of a class whose every year has been encroached upon and broken by the sacrifices of a great war. It may be unsatisfactory as regards unity and volume yet it is entirely honorable. Almost every man has served in that great war and the class of 1920 has been represented in all branches and all manner of service. - The men of the present Junior class began their college life in September, 1916, when they out-fought and out-maneuvered the numerically superior Sophomores in the annual cane 'rush. Since that ti1ne their annals have been varied and momentous. The class as a unit remained long enough to assimilate the incomparable Kenyon, spirit. April, 1917, broughtthe European war and with it the loss of many of the personnel. Those who remained until the end of the year prepared in the Kenyon military unit under Captain Parson. The'Sophomore year saw a class much reduced in numbers among whose ranks were many men already in service and awaiting call. Everyone drilled in those days and trained for approaching service. Throughout the year the class, slowly dwindling kept up the 1920 spirit and all of its activities. The Sophomore Hop was a Hnancial success and unusually well-received. Creditably, to say the least, it Weatheredlthe crisis. A N-ow at the close of the war the men are returning and resuming college life on a pre-war basis. The class of 1920 will play a large part in'the history of the college from now on. Its functions, its enterprises, its activities are being renewed under favorable auspices. lVIany will not graduate on schedule, since their academic work has been interrupted. To them all honor is dueg they will perpetuate the twenties' reputation on future classes. The class of 1920 has served its college. THE 1920 REVEILLF. Nineteen Hundred and Twenty CLASS OFFICERS JOHN FRANCIS SANT ...................... ..... P 'resident EDGAR BARTON READ ........ .... V ice-President HAROLD GRAHAM WALTON ..... ..... S ecretary JOHN MAGNUS IERPE.. .... Treasurer THE 1920 REVEILLE S7 The Junior Class GEORGE Louis BRAIN Classical , Springfield WY, B Kf1v,KA M, N H K, Riiie Club 115, 125, 1355 Collegian Board 115, 125, 135, Junior Editor 1355 Reveille Board 1353 Class Historian 1255 Sophomore Hop Committee, Exe- cutive Committee 135. Ensign usually doesn't have much to say, but when he does, itls very much to the point. Rather slow and easy-going, no one suspected that when George left here last year as a K'Gob in the navy he would soon blossom forth as a full- fledged ensign, but he did and in a miraculously. short space of time, too. Ensign is back on the hill and 1920 welcomes him with open arms. JAMES HENRY GREGC. Plzilosoplziml Nlinneapolis, Nlinn. A A fp, N H K, K B fb, K A M, Freshman. Baseball, Football 1253 Glee Club 115, 125, 135, President, Sopho- more Classg Honor Committee 115, 125. Our Jamie ? Yes, our Jamie! He's the old kid than can do it. Jamie is one of the most -accomplished men in college, which makes it pretty tough sometimes, but he doesnlt mind-always comes through with flying-colors., Iim's a true gentleman and friend, is the most apt description of hin:-we are surely glad to see him back from the olzl navee. VVILLIAM LARXVILL CARR Plzilosoplziml llflansfield A A fb Choir 125, 135, Executive Committee 135, Senior Council 135, Rifle Club 125, 135, Philo 115, 125, 1353 Senior Prom Committee 1355 Col- legian 115, 125, 135, Associate Editor 125, 135- 'WVill's,' course has been interspersed with a little farming, ship building, etc., and as a result, he has fallen one class behind, but not through lack of study. 58 THE 1920 REVEILLE ISCENNETH MERCER PIARPER Pllilosojwflical lldt. Vernon A A o, K B qi, K A M, N 11 K, Freshman Football, Football Squad C25, C35, lvlanager-Elect C355 Choir C15 C25, C355 Glee Club Cl5, C25, C355 Collegian Board C15, C25, C35, Editor- Elect C355 Editor, 1920 Reveille5 Class Secretary C255 Nlanager of Puff and Powder Club C25, C355 Chairman, Sophomore Hop Committee, resigned C255 Dormitory Committee C355 2nd Prize Stires Debate C25 5 Vice-President, Assembly C35. If you don't believe that Kenyon is the greatest little College in the World, talk to Kennie for about three minutes y HENRY Smiru DOWNE . ' Pllilosoplzical Burlington, Vt. 111 Y, K E fb, K A M, N H K5 Puri' and Powder Club Cl5, C25, C355 Col- legian Board C15, C25, C355 Secretary, Board C35 5 Assistant Editor C35 5 Foot- ball C25, C35 5 Choir C25, C35 5 Reveille Board .C35 5 Dormitory Committee C35 5 Junior Prom Committee And here's the Big Tent-Fuzzysmith Downe, erstwhile trick ensign in Naval Aviation. Wliexm Hen left school in Seventeen, some one hundred and fifty of us lost a friend. But boy, he's back! Yes-sir-ree! And with a wife and-with a dog! And as soon as he has his spavin cured, he can clog! Three fingers of it and lookin' at you, Hen. l . JOHN M: JERPE Special Norwalk A T A, K B 1115 Philomathesian C15, C25, C35, President C355 Class Treas- urer Cl5, C355 Executive Committee C255 Honor Committee, Chairman C35 5 Sophomore Cane Rush Captain5 Choir C15, C25, C35: G1SC'C1Ub CU, C253 lkianager resigned C35 5 lldanager, Track C255 llolanager, Basketball C35 5' Coach Football C355 Coach Basketball C355 Coach, Track C355 Brotherhood of St. Andrew Cl5, C255 Advertising lxfiflll- ager, Reveille C25, C355 Hamlet Cast C255 Collegian Board CI5, C25, C355 President of the Assembly C35 5 Football Squad THE 1920 REVEILLE 59 JOHN ll'IARSI-IALL KLNOX . Phiofophical Lima A A 111, K B fb, K A M, N II Kg Associate Editor, 1920 Reveille Board f3J3 Puff and Powder Club Wlieii the war started, Charkie packed his grip and made a bee-line for the coast. He was underweight then, but kept on trying, until he got overseas. llflarshall made good in the regular Navy, a feat which is no sinecure. Now he is back and the class of 1920 is the gainer. JAMES HERBERT lVlClVlURRAY Classical l.VIZlTlOl1 B GJ II, K B fb, K A M, Philo, Sopho- moge Hop Committeeg Reveille Board C3 . Jimmie is the other pardner of the Pedlow-hdchflurray Drug Store Co. fin- corporated July 1, 19191. When not visiting Harcourt he sucks on the end of a comparatively huge pipe. Jimfs con- geniality and personality have made him one of the best-liked men on the Hill. He gained fame in his Sophomore year by joining Dr. Pei'rce's prohibition club. SAMUEL LEXVIS lV.lARTIN Clamical Woodsneld N HK CU, QZJ, QD, Secretary 1315 Freshman Baseballg Reveille Board CSD. Although a whale of an art critic, Sam expects to be a newspaper m.an and he will make a good one. Sam says that the navy beats the army and he ought to know-tried' them all and is now back again chasing the elusive Catullus. He lives in Woodsfield but makes frequent trips to Akron. Everyone admires Sam for his high ideals. 60 THE 1920 REVEILLE 1 N - N 'nr rl rx JOHN FRANCIS SANT Scienlifc East Liverpool B o 11, K it M, K B 111, N TI K, Col- legian CI5, C25, C35, Junior Editor C35, Business lVIanager C35 5 Chairman, Hop Committee C255 Second Prize, Stire's Debate C255 King Prize C255 Business Manage1', Reveille C355 Class President C355 Secretary, Kenyon As- sembly C355 Executive Committee C355 Coach Committee C35. Frank has to alibi his prominence by signing his name, J. F., John F., and John Francis. As a business manager, he just about runs the college, getting away With it very Well. WILBUR EVERETT POSTLE Scierztifc Columbus in Y, K B fb. When I went up in a balloon -yes, it's Doc. speaking, alias E.nsign,Postle, U. S. N. R. F., Class 5, for Aviation, emphasis on the five. Doc. spends two- thirds of his time telling us of his soaring daysg the rest of the time he sits on his books and reads suspiciously perfumed pink letters. Well, he's the stuff, and We're glad to have him back among us. l HAROLD G. VVALTON Sliifllfijllif Gambier 1 A A fb, N H K, Class Secretary C15 5 Science Club C25, C355 Basketball C25, C35 5 Choir CZ5, C35 5 Tennis C25, C35, Captain C355 President Ohio Intercol- legiate Tennis Association C35 5 Assistant, Department of l5fI2ltl1CI'1'lZ1f1iCS C255 Rifle Club C25, C35, President C35 5 Art Edi- to'r, Reveille. C355 Honor Committee C35- 5 Time was when we used to query what Harold's grades were. Now We just put him down for a one in Math. 23 and 36 and let it go at that. Hal. is not grind, however, and finds time to make good in many other college activities. As a basketballer, canoest, artist, or fusser, he is there. To Harold, K has a double meaning. THE 1920 REVEILLE 1920i Class Song Tune: Akron lVIa1'Ching Song Come men of Kenyon, join us in our song And sing to Twenty's praises loud and long, As Freshmen true, we fought in every fight To raise on high the lVIz1uve and Wlrite. Thy sons of Twenty will still Fight for thee, And pledge a toast of loyalty, Our hearts will ne'er forget the glory of thy name Along with dear old Kenyonls fame. Our Sophomore days for us will soon be o'er, A Of Junior pleasures we will know no more, And may the sparkling stars forever shine, On each loyal son of thine. And when our college days are gone at last Witlm fondest memories of the past, Cm' hearts will ne'er forget the glories of thy name Along with dear old Kenyon's fame. 62 THE 1920 REVEILLE Former Members Junior Class Frank Albert Allen, B 0 H ..... James Lawrence Berkey, A A 111. . . Robert Williain Berkey, A K E. .. Arthur Lawrence Boyd, B GD II .... Robert Brown ............... Eugene Frank Close, A T A ..... Bernard Weller Coldewey, A A CIP. Thomas Comstock, A T A ...... Russell Vance Eastman, A A fb. . . Barton Henry Graves, A K E .... Harold Hoadley Green, A K E. . . William Andrew Henderson ..... Alfred Leonard Hohlfelder, B QD II .... Chester James Holley, E II ...... Arthur Orrel Howarth, E II .... Carl Gilbert James, NI' Y ........ Herbert Downey Kelley, A K E ..... Carl Kerber, B G II ............. Lloyd Larkin lVlcCartney, B G II. Edwin Parrott Nlatthews, XII Y. . . William Campbell Presley, 111 Y.. William Walsh lVIcNeill, A T A. Wilford Seitz, A T A .............. Arthur Leslie Sidnell, E II ...... William Philip Smith, A K E ..... Harold B. Steele, B 0 H ......... Joseph Russel Thompson, B GJ II. Glen Preston Vinson, 2 TI ...... Paul Bernard Wendler, A T A. . . Dickson Hinell Wells, A TA ..... Alfred Brooke Willianis, A K E. . . Walter Prank Wright, A T A .... RoyZeman,AKE..' .... . . . .Cleveland . . . , Cleveland ..........Dayton ......Sharon, Pa. .New Philadelphia - ............ Sandusky .Santa lllonica, Cal. . . . . . . . .Cleveland . . . .Alt Vernon . . . . . .Toledo . . . .Cleveland . . . .Zanesville . . . . . .Cleveland . . .llflartins Ferry . . . .Cleveland . . . .Youngstown . . . . . .Toledo . . . . .Sandusky . . . .Lakewood . .......... .Dayton ..Bay City, Mich ..........Dayton . . . . Sandusky . . .Cuyahoga Falls . . . . . .Sandusky .... . . . .llflansfield . . . .East Liverpool ..........Lima . . . .Dayton . . . .Dayton . . . . .Canton . . . . . .Lima . . . .Cleveland THE 1920 REVEILLE 7 -5 . ,. r , -::Pf?l, ' Qu --XXVIII, '- '--XG 1 5 I N Xxx If ' 4 l. -I ' . I lx 1' E I , 4 If K ll, 1,3 ' Nix XX 1 R xx XX X I ,lf xx !, XX N I I I . xl ly 1' , fl, A III. X '?f - ff , ' w A QM ' 3 ff X jjj! E! -'fx , ff A41 Q W .tx 0 w M x -,I , 4 Ylfaw nfl' ' 1 +1 i .wfifw I ' W V A nb N G 0 , ' M 'hz t' . K fl 4:-fi -I QS! 1 -Q W A QV W- Y ' ax- ' ' fi Mn we . ' ly ,M 4 X Nmxx Wt, 4 I Q I I I V .bouru utlfr. I.. Hggfis' I ' V9 HLL OZ6I EI EITTIEIJXEIEI THE 1920 REVEILLE 65 Sophomore Retrospect As We take up the pen to make a sketch of our life at Kenyon the problem looms up before us an immense one. We must mix our words and thoughts for the mem- ories of the Class of 1921 are many and How like the dashing waters of the Kokosing over the Dam. Our Freshman year was a joyous one and profitable. We were victorious in our first live days on the Hill and the same Characteristics that led us then have stayed with us and have marked many successes and victories in our history. As Sophomores, our class has fought against odds and won. Our ranks were greatly diminished by enlistments in the several branches of the serviceg but we are once more on Hrm footing and a large number of our class are now back taking up the life where it was severed by the World VVar. In looking ahead to posterity We see nothing but brightness for the annals of 1921. We are Certain that our early days at College will he exemplified in our older life here at Kenyon-and in the World. THE 1920 REVEILLE Nineteen Hundred and Tweniy-one CLASS GFFICERS VVILLIAM GALE PFLUEVI ...... WILLIAM WALLACE GRAHAM ..... EDWARD DAVIS MAIRE ...... Louis DEAN KILGORE ..... OSCAR ADAIR LASHLIIY. . . . ALDEN SEITZ . . .. ...President . . . . .Vice-President . . . .Secretary . . . . .Treasurer . . . .Toastmaster Sergeant-at-Arms THE 1920 REVEILLE 67 The Sophomore Class, John Williaiii Anger, Classical ........ John Falkner Arndt, Classiral ........ Lewis James Bailey, Philosoplzical .... . Aa'ron Charles Bennett, Classical ..... VValter Bennett, Scirfntifc ........... James Foster Branch, Philosophical .... Isaac Curtis Brewer, Philosoplzical. . David Lee Cable, Scientifc ........... Albert Spencer Danes .............. Willizim C. T. Davis, Philosojwlzical... VVill G. Gehri, Classical ............. VVillia1n Wallace Graham, Scientific. .. Shelley Bryant Jones, Plzilosoplzical. Lester Carson Kilgore, Plzilosoplzical. .. Louis Dean Kilgore, Plzilosoplzical. . Oscar Adair Lashley, Sciemfifc ..... Edward Davis llflaire, Plzilosophical. . . Paul Russell Nlaxwell, Classical. .. Donald Charles lVIell, Philosoplziral. .. Henry Reubens Nlosser, Classical. . . James Olds, Classical ............... Everett Towle Perrin, Philosojvlrical. . . VVilliam Gale Pflum, Plzilosojwhical .... Glenn Eugene Robinson, Special ...... Franz E. P. Schneider, Plziloxoplzical. . Alden Seitz, Pllilosopllical ............ Herman Sucker Sidener, Plzilosoplzical. Willianu James Stewart, Jr., Scientific. . Everett Bailey Taylor, Plzilofophical Leslie Earl Treat, Srientifc .......... Horace Vokoun, Plzilosoplzical ........ George lkirt Zollenger, Scientific. . . Beta Theta Pi . . . Psi Upsilon ....... Delta Kappa Epsilon .Sigma P1 ......... Sigma Pi ....... Beta Theta Pi ....... Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Tau Delta . . . Psi Upsilon ,... Psi Upsilon .... Sigma Pi ....... Beta Theta Pi ..... Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Tau Delta . . . Delta Tau Delta . . . Sigma Pi ....... Alpha Delta Phi. . . Beta Theta Pi . . . Beta Theta Pi . . . Delta Kappa Epsilon ...Ste. 1921 ..........T1'enton Germantown, Pa. St. lVlarie, lVIich. ...........Sharon, Pa. . . .. Sharon, Pa. . ..... .Akron . . .... Sandusky ... . . . .Akron . . . . .New York . . . .Youngstown . . . . . . Sandusky ..........Cleveland . . . . . . Nlarquette, lVIicl1. . . . . .St. Paul, Miiiii. .. . . .St. Paul, Minn. . . . . Steubenville . . . .Detroit, Nlich. .. . . .Mansfield .........Akron . . . .Chicago, Ill. . . . . lVIt. Gilead . . . . .Cleveland Delta Tau Delta .................. Dayton .....BentonHarbor,lVIich. Sigma Pi ....... 4 Delta Tau Delta . . Sigma Pi ...... Psi Upsilon . . Psi Upsilon .... Psi Upsilon ..... Delta Tau Delta . . . ... . . . .. Hartland, Wis. .... . . . . Sandusky . . . . . . . . . Steubenville . . . . Kansas City, lVIo. . . . . .' .hdiamisburg . . . . . . .Akron . . . . . .Cleveland . . . . East Liverpool THE 1920 REVEILLE THE 1920 REVELLLE 69 Former Members Paul Hughes Aves, Scientific. .. Orris Napier Berkebile, Special ...... . Williani Herr Burnett, Philosophical.. Howard Granger Fishack, Philosophical. Carl Feeney, Sfitfllflf-C .......... . . . . Phillips Brooks Franklin, Clfrssiml. . . . Leo Stanford Ganter, Philosophical. . . . Carl Stanford Geis, Scientiie ........ . Robert Joshua Gunn, Philosophical. .. Augustus Elson Jones, Classical ....... Lad. Edward Krejci, Plzilosoplziml .... Frank Rowland llflelville, Seiwztife .... Eugene Edwin Neale, Jr., Special .... Bernard Cromley Newman, Classical. . . John Goodwin Schwartz, Plzilosofrlzical. Ernest Vincent Siggens, Scientiflc ...... J James Lawrence Tugman, I lzilosaplzical. Joseph Curtis -WCHVCl',.l1'.,IJlll!0.V0f7l1lLYIl. Jacob Arthur Welle1', Sciwztiic .....' John Nugen Wilkin, Scientifc ........ Delta Tau Delta. . . Alpha Delta Phi Alpha Delta Phi Alpha Delta Phi Beta Theta Pi .... .Delta Tau Delta. . . Delta Tau Delta. . . Delta Tau Delta. . . Beta Theta Pi .... Delta Kappa Epsilon ..... . . . . .Galveston, Texas Toledo . . .Pittsburg Pa. . . . .Port Clinton . . . . . .Mt. Vernon St. Johnsburg, Vt. . . . lluncie, Ind. . . . Zanesville . . . . . Toledo . . . .Pittsburg, Pa. . . . -Cleveland . . . Sandusky . . . Wiekliffe . . . .Indiana, Pa. . . . . Dayton . . . . . . . Sandusky ..Mt. Washington Toledo . . . Bucyrus . . . . . . . Cleveland Randolph Stough Yerxa, Plzilosoplzical. .... , . . . . . . ..Minneapolis, Minn. THE 1920 REVEILLE Ajva1gI g ' i -flffmiii ' 11 11 f ' 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 , W E51 1 11 111, .N E H 1 1 2 M, mmm . 11 11.,,,1 1 1 1 1 S , , , , f 1- 11 Y v 'I - FM- I ff '3 - 111 11 11 - - , 1 1 Y ' jgflf - 11 11 1 11 ' 11 37 11 ff ' 3131 -' 1 '2 37 11 1115, 1 11 1 .ff 11 11 ' I g41?i11u11Ls 111 11 1111.311 ,mm 11 11 11 1 1 11 gn 1 X N N 11 113 H H 1 ,211- Z 1,,., MJN111111 H H H H N N ,N W igiksggf - H 1 , jk ' F9 111 ' M, 1 f 1 :bf ' ' fi 18555 111' 5 - 5255 1 4 1111 11 35 1111 11 S , V. ' , 1, 1 11- ,V 11 1111 H5111 11' 11' H is 1, 11 15 ' ' X ' 1 11 11 1 A .--, 1 11 1 1 ' V- 'L - '1g,s?i Q' W, ... pr i -' if' Fil ' A 1: ,. -i!'ff1 ' Y .1-1 1 1, ,M 111111 11 11 12. .V , - 111111 seam 11 N' 111 ' 1 .-1 -...I , 1 V'-' 1 S 1 M f Q icy? 1 1 1 1211 f- 1 -L 11121 ,' ,' : 1' 1 L 1 a- ' ' 'sf '4 1.2 2, A i ,rg , 1 , T1 W ' ly in ' - , 1'-1 ' 1. - 11. A, 5. 1 Y ' 7 . .l 1g3,ff? -1 1 1 ' is , ,f:1,,g, -- - -V , ., ,L j ,,- 1 1. ,V 1 :11 ,, '1 1 :..:-111: f , ,Q -. . 32?-2 ' fi- 1 - A ,1,. . :1 , V ,1 1 1 111 55 5 1 ' 55 Y - I :- ?l?i3f35x? L - fp 1 1 f 1 'N ' K' K My 11,,,Sfff - 8355 .1 1 M1 X 1111 11 1111 11,11 1111111331111 11 11111111111111,5igg?g,sixx:1 1115353155111 :f1 111? 2111 M, SA . 111 111 695711 :ff gg! 111 VT- 3,51 f j if ' 4,11 , 2- 113 111 ssr- ,, 11 X THE 1920 REVEILLE I ZL I-Il. 'I'IIEIAEI?I 0261 EI EI THE 1920 REVEILLE 73 As It Was In the Beginning This year we Freshmen were doubly unfortunate. In the first place we were Freshmen-which is bad enough-and in the second, we were the first' class to enter Kenyon under the S. A. T. C. regime. Although we were held in our place to a Certain extent, the fact that we were under military discipline and that a number of us were non-coms deprived us of many of the benefits and rather doubtful joys of Freshman life. At the beginning of the second term, however, those of us that were fortunate enough to return soon learned the proper conduct of true Kenyon Freshmen. To say that our course of training under the ever watchful Sophomore eye was bene- ficial is to put it mildly. We all believe though, that we have Boola-booladl' and Cuckood our way very successfully along the straight and narrow path. Our most noticeable record was made on the basketball floor. Although barred from the Varsity, the Freshman. team was considered one of the strongest class teams seen in college for many years. Our course as Freshmen is almost run. We have, of course, erred in many ways, and our faults are many but we are only Freshmen after all. There were many times when we would have gladly tried to clean up the entire Sophomore class, but that is all forgotten. The time is coming when we will be the disciplinarians and we are confident of filling the position with ability due to the strenuous efforts of our tru.. friends the Sophomores and upper-classmen. THE 1920 REVEILLE Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-z'w0 CLASS OFFICERS RUSSELL T. SYVANSON ..... JAMES M. WADE .... CHARLES B. NORTON. LESTER C. THOMAS.. . . . . .President Vice-President . . . . . .Secretary . , . . .Treasurer THE 1920 REVEILLE 75 Freshman Class, 1922 MALCOIJNI BODINE ADAMS, Sigma Pi ..... TH.EODORE LISTON BLISS, Alpha Delta Phi... LHAROLD BOSTVVICK . . ........... .. RICHARD BOSTWVICK ............... CHARLES KING BRAIN, Psi Upsilon. . , . . EDGAR ARTHUR BROWN, Beta Theta Pi ...... . SHANNON DOUGLAS BUNTIN, Beta Theta Pi. . . LOUIS PAUI. CARAEELLI, Delta Tau Delta ......... JACK WELNER CI-IENEVERT, Delta Kappa Epsilon... ROBERT ZENT CHEXV, Beta Theta Pi ............. CLARENCE JOHN DE BOEURA CUMMINGS ....... TSHOMAS AUGUSTAS EGGERT, Delta Tau Delta .... ADAM GRAHAM ........................ . . . DAVID SELSOR GRAI'IAM, Delta Kappa Epsilon ....... . . HARRY FREDRICK GROSSMANN, Delta Kappa Epsilon .... JOHN FRANCIS GORSUCH, Alpha Delta Phi ......... PAUL REINHOLD H.AHN ................. PIAROLD HOBSON HALL, Delta Tau Delta .... SAMUEL FOSTER HAIIRIS, Sigma Pi ....... BENSON HEAXLE HARVEY .... I ......... ROBERT lVIII.LS HEINEUCH, Sigma Pi .......... FRANCIS HOR.LXTIO HUBB.1XRD, Delta Tau Delta. .. LAWRENCE KE.AXTING, Delta Tau Delta ........ GEORGE COOK LEA, Psi Upsilon ....... .EDXVARD PIENRY LEWIS, Sigma Pi... VVALKER LYEARGER ............ DONALD MACADIE, Sigma Pi .,.............. ROBERT GORDON l.XfIClh4URRAY, Beta Theta Pi. .. PAUL MORRISON .,....................... RUSSELL JABEZ NALL ..... STANLEY RICHARD NIVER .............. CHARLES BATE NORTON, Beta Theta Pi. . . FRED HERBER PALMER .............. FRANCIS PROPHET PLATE ............... ANDERSON WHEELER RALSTON, Sigma Pi. . . HARLEY FRANKLIN RILEY, Psi Upsilou .... . . . .Gambier . . .Sandusky . . . .Chardon . . . .Chardon . . .Springfield . . . . . . .Cleveland Terre Haute, Ind. ........Norwalk .........'TOledo . . .Freclericktown . . .Detroit, Mich. . . . . .Norwalk . . . . . . .Cleveland . . .South Charleston .........To1edo .......Gambie'r . . . .RaCine, VVis. . . . .Columbus . . .... Dayton . . .Grafton, Pa. . . . Cleveland . . .Piqua .....Lima . . . ,Sandusky . . . .Steubenville ........Gambier ..Bayonne, N. .......Marion . . .lVIartinS Ferry . . . .Cleveland . . .Norwalk . . . . Cleveland . . . .Cleveland .........Lima . . .lVIartins Ferry .. . ...Toledo 76 THE 1920 REVEILLE JOHN SCHOOLEY .. .... Zanesville CTLENMORE SEALTS ..................... ..... L ima NORMAN EDWARD SEVERANCE, Psi Upsilon .... .... R avenna HERBERT STOCK .......................... ....... C olumbus RUSSELL THEODORE SWANSON, Beta Theta Pi. . . LESTER CHALNIER F111-IOMAS, Delta Tau Delta .... H. BERT VAN DELLEN ..................... JAMES lX'IULFORD WADE, Delta Tau Delta. . . LOUIS JAMES WALKER, Alpha Delta Phi .... ROISERT RTALCOLNI WARD, Delta Tau Delta. . . JOHN CYRUS VVILLIAMS ......................... WILLIAM DIDYMUS VVILLIAMS, Delta. Kappa Epsilon. XVILLIABI PARR VVISEMAN, Alpha Delta Phi ........ HENRY WOLFE, Delta Kappa Epsilon ........... CARL ADOLP1-I WUEREEL, Delta Kappa Epsilon .... FORNIER M ENIBERS ALBERT B ERNSTEIN ...................... ARTHUR FERNANDO BILLOW, Beta Theta Pi... GAVIN lVIOUATT, Sigma Pi ................ JOHN SEIB-ERS ......................... LEONARD CRABLE WEBBER, Beta Theta Pi .... Peelcskill, N. Y. .........Lima . . .Cleveland . . . .Akron . . . .Akron . . . .Huron . . . .Lima . . .London . . . Lancaster . . . .Coshocton . . . . .Toledo ....Lima ......Akron .. . .Cleveland .........Lima .East Liverpool THE 1920 REVEILLE Class Song 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 Z1 Hell for Freshmen And there they all 'must go There to: repent their many sins And lead a life of WVOE. II. 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: CLASS COLORS Red, Red and Red. S CLASS YELL Boola-boola Cock-a-lung-gai Boola-boola Cock-a-lung-gai Boola-boola' Cock-21-lung-gai Cuckoo. SL HL IH 'IIHAEIH OZ6 HT PHE 1920 REVEILLE 79 I I f SO THE -1920 REVEILLE I Fraierniiies In the order of their establishment at Kenyon College. DELTA KAPPA EPSILON ALPHA DELTA PHI PSI UPSILON BETA THETA PI DELTA TAU DELTA SIGMA PI - Y ,iriw L N QWIQQ li-1.1,-'il NS-fin,- J 'ff'-9. 'Z fsNXFYi5x-gfgu M E 45 IIIHW i Q H ml ! Www Qfff' -- 0 ez Q 9 Cv qmw THE 1920 REVEILLE Lambda Chapier af Delia Kappa Epsilon Established 185 2 SENIOR JOHN LLOYD SNOOK I SOPHOMORES ISAAC CURTIS BREWER, JR. SI-IEIJLEY BRYANT JONES EVERETT TOWLE PERRIN LEVVIS JAMES BAILEY FRESHIVIEN JOHN WALKER CHENEVERT DAVID SELSOR GRAHAM HARRY FREDRICK GRossMAN WILLIAM DIDYMUS WILLIAMS HENRY CUTLER WOLFE CARL ADOLPH WUERFEL 84 THE 1920 REVEILLE Phi ..... Theta. . . Xi .... Sigma. . . Gamma. . . Psi ..... Upsilon. . . Chi ..... Beta .... Eta ..... Kappa .... Lambda. . . Pi ......... Iota ........ Alpha Alpha. . . Omicron .... Epsilon ..... Rho .... Tau . . lldu ..... Nu'........ Beta Phi. . . Phi Chi .... Psi Chi ........ 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 . . Omega Chi. Delia Kappa Epsilon Founded in 1844 at Yale University ROLL OF CHAPTERS . . . . . .Yale University . . . . . . . . .Bowdoin College . . . . . . . .Colby University . . . . . . . .Amherst College. . . . . . . . . . Vanderbilt University . . . . . . . University of Alabama. . . . . . .Brown University. . . . . . . . . . . . . .University of Nlississippi. . . . . . . . . .University of North Carolina. . . . . .University of Virginia. . . . . . ....lMiami University. . . . . . . .. . . . .Kenyon College . . . . . . .Dartmouth College. . . . . . . Central University. . . . . . . .lVIiddlebury College. . . . . . . . .University of lVIichigan. . . . . .Williams College . . . . . . . . . Lafayette College . . . . ....Hamilton College.............. ...Colgate University. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .College of the City of New York. . . . . . . .University of Rochester. . . . . . . . . . . ...Rutgers College .. . .DePauw University' . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Wesleyan University . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. . . . ....Adelbert College............... . . . .Cornell University . . . . . . . . . Chicago University. . . . . . . .Syracuse University. . . . . . . .Columbia College. . . . . . . . . University of California ....Trinity College................... . . . .University of Minnesota. . . . . . . . . .. . . . .Niassachusetts Institute of Technology. . . . . . . ....Tulane University................ ....Toronto University............... . . . .University of Pennsylvania. . . . ....McGi11University............. . . . . Leland Stanford, Jr., University. . . . . ...University of Il1inois........... . . . .University of Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . University of Washington. . . . . .University of Texas.-. . . . 1844 1844 1844 1846 1847 1847 1850 1850 1851 1852 1852 1852 1853 1853 1854 1855 1855 1855 1856 1856 1856 1856 1861 1866 1867 1867 1868 1870 1871 1871 1874 1876 1879 1889 1890 1898 1898 1899 1901 1902 1904 1907 1911 1913 mm Ax rum-Q r- THE 1920 REVEILLF. Kenyon Chapter of Alpha Established in 1858 IN FACULTATE WILLIAM PETERS REEVES GEORGE FRANKLIN SMYTHE PAUL HERBERT LARWILL 'IN URBE FRANCIS WLIARTON BLAKE IN BEXLEY OTEY ROBINSON BERKEIIEY JUNIORS WILLIAM LARWILL CARR JAMES HENRY GREGG KENNETH MERCER HARPER JOHN IVIARSHALL KNOX SOPHOMORE EDWARD DAVIS IVIAIRE FRESHIWEN 'THEODORE LISTON BLISS JOHN FRANCIS GORSUCH LoUIs JAIVIES WALKER WILLIAM PARR WISEMAN PLEDGED FRED H. PALMER, JR. Delia Phi CB 88 THE 1920 REVEILLE Hamilton .... Columbia. . . Yale ....... Amherst .... Brunonian .,.. Hudson .... Bowdoin. . . Dartmouth. . . Peninsular. . Rochester. . . Williams. . . lVIiddletown Kenyon .... Union. . . Cornell .... Phi Kappa. . . Johns Hopkins. . . . . . Mirrnesota .... Toronto .... Chicago .... McGill .... Wisconsin .... California . Illinois ..... Stanford .... Alpha Delta Phi Founded in 1832 at Hamilton College ROLL OF CHAPTERS . . . . . .Hamilton College. . . . . . Columbia University . . . Yale University ...... . . . . .Amherst College . . . Brown University ..... Adelbert College .... Bowdoin College ..... Dartmouth College .... University of Nlichigan. . . University of Rochester. . . Williams College ...... Wesleyan University . . . Kenyon College ...... Union College ...... . . . ..Co'rnell University. . . . . . . Trinity College ............. . . . . . Johns Hopkins University.. University of lvfinnesota. .. University of Toronto .... University -of Chicago .... . . . . .lVIcGill University . . . . . University of Wisconsin .. . . . . .University of California . . . University of Illinois ......... . . . Leland Stanford University .... .... 1832 1836 1837 1837 1837 1841 1841 1845 1846 1851 1851 1856 1858 1859 1869 1877 1889 1891 1893 1895 1897 1902 1908 ' UH1912 1915 -I I hp. W 1 M 1 - K gs H f' ---- ., 6 E . 45 1 V. gf . xtx. ' , c 'QW ff J 5 1 'JJ Q -l- -4 L .ffm . gy 3, Jw: 1 fri gg k NV f 5 T 4 Wu Q' v A if A-Q ' . Mu-mm - '. 5 :i k ,.5,a-mf-: ':' U ' ? 3' n !f L'1 m ,Wm ..m....u. .. , , ........ Ji Y I m...2.,,,,.,.,. + X aw W X Q? QW Aj Ufffs zfvuw- THE 1920 REVEILLE Ioia Chapter of Psi Upsilon Established in 1860 SENIORS CARTER SMART MILLER FRANCIS WHARTON VVEIDA JUNIORS GEORGE LOUIS BRAIN HENRY SMITH DOWNE VVILEUR EVERETT POSTLE, JR. SOPHOMORES JOHN FALKNER ARNDT ALBERT SPENCER DfXNES VVILLIAM COTTON TYHURST DAVIS, JR. VVILLIAM JAMES STEYVART, JR. EVERETT BAILEY TAYLOR EARL LESLIE TREAT FRESHMEN CHARLES ICING BRAIN GEORGE COOKE LEA HARLEY FRANKLIN REILY NORINIAN EDWARD SEVERANCE- 92 THE 1920 REVEILLE Theta .... Delta .... Beta ..... Sigma .... Psi Upsilon Founded in 1833 at Union College ROLL OF CHAPTERS Union College ......... New York University .... .... Yale University ....... . . . . .Brown University. . . . . University of Syracuse .... .... Gamma .... .... Am herst College .... Zeta ....... .... D artmouth College .... Lambda .... .... C olumbia University . . . Kappa .... ..... B owdoin College ..... Psi ...... .... H amilton College ..... Xi ....... .... W esleyan University ..... Upsilon. . .... University of Rochester. . . . . . Iota .... .... K enyon College ......,.. Phi .... ..... U niversity of lVIichigan ..... . . . Pi ....... ..... Chi ....... ..... C ornell University ..... Beta Beta .... ...., T rinity College ....... Eta ....... Tau ..... Mu .... Rho. . . Omega. . . Epsilon .... Omicron .... Delta Delta .... .... Theta Theta... ..... Lehigh University ....... .... University of Pennsylvania .... . . . . ,University of lylinnesota . . . . University of Wisco11sin Chicago University ....... .... . . . . .University of California University of Illinois. .. Williams College ........ .... University of VVashington. . . . . . . 1833 1837 1839 1840 1841 1842 1842 1843 1843 1843 iiii1858 1860 'f1865 1875 1876 1880 1884 1891 1891 1896 1897 1902 1910 1913 1916 . ,. . ,' A i 'S'-gf: 44. f ,fig g f. . :x'A . .4 fx-N, d .,,, N f in HW, L- wmv , 3 fhgixw , J ff 1 V- 5,91 1, I.,- m s mmm H A 1Hi -ii: 1 HMV ,Wu rf . ,-.XM W1 f1,,f ,uw WWX WWI 'WE EWGQW5 THE 1920 REVEILLE Beia Alpha Chapter of Beia Established in 1879 IN FACULTATE RAYMOND DUBOIS CAHALL IN BEXLEY ROBERT LEE BAIRD WILLIAM VINCENT NIUELLER POST-GRADUATE RICHARD WILLIAMS MAXWELL SENIOR EDWARD BENJAMIN PEDLOVV JUNIORS J JAMES PIERBERT IVICMURRAY JOHN FRANCIS SANT SOPHOMORES JOHN WILLIAM ANGER JAMES FOSTER BRANCH WILLIAM WALLACE GRAHAM PAUL IRUSSELL lVIAXYVELIL DONALD CHARLES NIELL FRESHMEN ARTHUR FERNANDO BILLOW' EDGAR ARTHUR BROWN SHANNON DOUGLAS BUNTIN ROBERT ZENT CHEW ROBERT GORDON MCNIURRAY CHARLES BATES NORTON RUSSELL THEODORE SWANSON LEONARD CRABLE WEBBER PLEDGED PAUL REINHOLD HAHN RUSSELL JABEZ NALL Theia Pi 96 THE 1920 REVEILLE Beta Theta Pi Founded in 1839 at Nliami University ROLL OF CHAPTERS Miami University ...,.......,.,,......,.... .........,.........,,.. 1 839 Ohio University ....,.,,............,,.......... ...,,..,...., 1 841 University of Cincinnati ........... ............. 1 841 DePauw University ..........,.....,.................................. 1845 Adelbert College ...............,.............i.....,...,..,.............. 1841 Washington and Jefferson University ....., 1842 Indiana University .........,...............................,............ 1845 University of Michigan .............. .....i....... 1 845 WVabash College ...,.............,...... ........,.... 1 845 Central University .........,.,......,.. ............. 1 847 NVilliams College ...,..,...........,............... ............. 1 847 I-Iampton-Sidney College ....,.... ..... . ,.... ....... 1 8 50 University of North Carolina .....,,.......,......,...., 1852 Ohio Wesleyan University ................,. ..........,.. 1 853 Hanover College ,.................................... .......,..... 1 853 Knox College ...........,.....,....,.......... ,.,,......... 1 855 University of Virginia .--....,.. .. .......,..... 1856 Davidson College ,....... ....... , .. ..,,.......,. 1858 Beloit College .....ii..................,. ......,...... l 860 Bethany College ......................,... ............. 1 861 Iowa State University ......,...., lrVittenberg College ...i....,......... Westminster College ,,.,,.. ..,..,....... ..,..........1866 1 867 1 867 Iowa Wesleyan University .,........ ...........,. 1 868 University of Chicago ,,,..........,.., ,... ............. l 8 68 Denison University ......,....,,...., ..........,.. 1 868 WVashington University ...... University of Kansas .................... University of Wisconsin ........l.. Northwestern University ........ Dickinson College ...,................. Boston University .........,........,....... Johns Hopkins University ......... University of California ..l......... Kenyon College .,,.................,...,.. Rutgers College .........,....,. Cornell University ................ Stevens Institute ...... Q .,,,..,......,...,.. St. Lawrence University ...........,.. University of Maine ..........,......, ,WWWMIS69 .mmma1872 - ,,......... 1873 .mmmm1873 .mmmm1874 .mmmm1876 ......,..,...l878 ..r.,...,Y...1879 l....,,......1879 1 879 879 1 879 1879 University of Pennsylvania ........., Colgate University .,.....,..............,.... Union College ......................,.,...,,... Columbia University .....,.... Amherst College l............,.....,.. Vanderbilt University .,..... University of Texas .................. Ohio State University .................... University of Nebraska ..,.........r,..... Pennsylvania State College ....,..... University of Denver .,.,.,.........,.,... Syracuse University ..,...,............ Dartmouth College .................,... University of Minnesota .....,,..,,.... l1Vesileyan University ................ University of Missouri .,...,.......,,,.,......... Lehigh University ,,.. ....,. ,.,,.......... , .,.,...,..... . Yale University ....,......,....,,...,,..,........,..,....... Leland Stanford, Ir., Bovvtloin College ,...........,........ .......,.....,........,............ mmmm1880 mwmw1880 WWmm1881 wmmm1881 wmmm1883 wmmm1884 mmmm1885 mmmm1885 1888 1888 1 888 1 889 1889 1890 1890 1890 1891 1892 11894 .1900 University of West Virginia ....................,......... 1900 University of Colorado .........,,.,....,,,..., ............ l 900 NVashington State University .,.........,............... 1901 Illinois State University .,r...............,.....,..........,... 1902 Purdue University ..,....,........ .......... ..........., 1 9 03 Case School ........,..,........,,....,,. ...,,....... 1 905 Iowa State College ,,.. ....... ...,........ 1 9 05 Toronto University .................. .Y.......... 1 906 Oklahoma University ................. Colorado. School of Mines .............. Tulane University ........,,.......,......... University of Oregon ............,.....,.... University of South Dakota ............. M. I. T- ..................,.........Y.....................,...-..- - University of Utah ...................... University of Idaho ..,....,.............,,. Folorado College ...,..................,.,....,..... Kansas State Ag. College .............. Whitman College ....,..,....................,. Georgia School of Tech ,..,......... ..........,.1907 1908 1908 ,...........1912 191 3 1913 .. ,..,...... 1914 , ...,....... 1914 19 14 1915 1917 N L M' ff WM ?E'fa lllIIIllrll111 1 HlHlUI9F 1n11rIIlII?iIlWHiIUAHuluup F gli? Q E YQ' ' nik M 3-: s A Ill A X 5.15 THE 1920 REVEILLE Chi Chapter of Delia Tau Established in 1881 IN BEXLEY HAROLD FREDERICK PIOHLY SENIOR LELAND CECIL GUNN JUNIOR I JOHN IVLAGNUS JERPE SOPHOMORES DAVID LEE CABLE LESTER CARSON IQILGORE LOUIS DEAN IQILGORE VVILLIAM GALE PELUM ALDEN SEITZ HORACE CHARLES VOKOUN FRESHMEN LOUIS PAUL CARABELLI THOMAS AUGUSTUS EGGERT HAROLD HOBSON HALL FRANCIS HORATIUS HUBBARD LAWRENCE IQEATING LESTER CHALMERS THOMAS JAMES IVIULFORD WADE ROBERT MALCOLM WARD ' PLEDGED CLARENCE DE BOER CUMMINGS BENSON HALE H.ARVEY FRANCIS PROPHET PLATE GLENMORE SEALTS J-OHN CYRUS VVILLIAIVIS Delta 100 THE 1920 REVEILL12 Delta Tau Delia I Founded in 1859 at Bethany College ROLL OF CHAPTERS Washington and Jefferson College .......A.... 1860 Ohio University ,....,........,,....,,,.....,,............,........,,....,,, 1862 Alleghany College .........,..,..............,.......,. .,..,...,... 1 863 Ohio VVesleyan University ...,........... .....,...... 1 866 Hillsdale College ...i..............,............... ...,.,...... 1 867 Indiana University ..........,,........... ,,.,,...,,.. 1 870 University of Michigan ....,..,,...,. ,...,....,.. 1 871 DePauw University ,........,...,.,., .....,...... 1 871 University of Illinois ,....,......., .....,...... 1 872 Wabash College ..................... ,....,...... 1 872 Stevens Institute ............. Lehigh University .......... Lafayette University ......... Iowa State College ...,.......,,.. i...........1874 1874 ...,,.i.....1874 .....,......1875 Butler College ........................,.. ............, 1 875 Albion College ,.......,....,,.................. ..,......... ...,......,. 1 8 76 University of Wooster ....................,.,...,,,...,......,.. 1879 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute .....,..........,. 1879 University of Iowa ....,.............,......................,.....,...... 1880 Kenyon College ..................,....,........,...,....,... .........,.. 1 881 Columbia University ..,,......... ....... ............ 1 8 82 University of Georgia ......... ,,..,........ ..........., 1 8 82 Emory College ...,..................,............,......... ............. 1 882 Western Reserve University Y.,....., .........., ,1882 University of the South ,....,............. University of Minnesota ........,.. University of Colorado .........,.... Vanderbilt University .........,. University of 11Visconsin .........,, ............l883 .....,......1883 ,.,,........1888 Tufts College ...,.............................,...,,..,,..,.................... 1889 Massachusetts Institute of Technology...1889 Tulane University ..............,.....................,,...,..........., 1889 Cornell University .,,.............,,.,.... ,,.................. ,......... 1 8 90 Northwestern University ,....,. ,....... . .,.,.,...,.......... 1 893 Leland Stanford, Ir., University ...,,.....,....... 1893 University of Nebraska ,...... .....,......, ,......,.... .......... 1 8 9 4 Ohio State University ,.......... ........................ , ......... 1 894 Brown University ....................................................,...', 1896 Wasliiiigton and Lee University ...,.,............ 1896 University of Pennsylvania ....,......................... 1897 University of California .......... ,.,.....,..... .......... 1 8 98 University of Chicago ....................., 1898 University of Virginia ....,,........,............... ....,,,... 1 898 University of W'est Virginia ........,.................i... 1900 Armour Institute of Technology .........,........ 1901 Dartmouth College ..................,................. i............. ,... 1 9 01 Wesleyan University .......................,....,........,....... 1902 George Wasliixigton University .......,......,...... 1903 Baker University ......,.......,,,..,.............,......, .......,.. 1 903 University of Texas ....,,.Y,.....,.i.......... 1904 University of Missouri ,............ .......... 1 905 Purdue University ...........,.......... .........., 1 907 University of Maine .......................,. 1903 University of 11Vashington ............... 1908 University of Cincinnati .....,.,..... 1909 Syracuse University .........v.......... 1910 Miami University ,...........,,.,... A 1916 Amherst College ...... - ..... 1918 A -N, ,L 1 ,V V ,,, ,, 'Q-' v-A-XX. M, X 1 X N I Lu, Y f H U 151 ,. 'K U - ' - A-a, W vas ffffy, SIZE? ,X-X Xi: ' .br J '35-,F iw.-,gfiigrj--.Y Z V A,,Y'A 1 U ' vs- '.' ' ' In 'llv THE 1920 REVEILLE Lambda Chapter of Sigma Established in 1916 IN BEXLEY JAMES PERNETTE DEWOLE RAYMOND ARTHUR MCKINSTRY SENIORS I TODD NIERLE FRAZIER EDGAR BARTON READ GEORGE BENJAMIN SCHNEIDER SOPHOMORES AARON CHARLES BENNETT WALTER BENNETT WILL GREGG GEHRI FRANZ EDWARD PHILLIP SCHNEIDER I'IEIiMAN SUKER S1DENER FRESHMEN MALCOLM BODINE ADAMS SAINIUEL FOSTER HARRIS ROBERT E'IILL'HEINlBUCH EDNVARD HENRY LEVVIS , DONALD MACADIE GAVON WALLACE MOUAT ANDERSON WHEELER' RALSTON 104 THE 1920 REVEILLE Alpha. . Phi' .... Garnma Delta. . Epsilon. Zeta. . . Eta .... Theta. . . Iota... Lambda. . .i Mu... Nu .... Xi .... S zgma Pl Founded in 1898, at the University of Vincennes ROLL OF CHAPTERS . . . . . . .University of Vincennes . . . . . . . .University of Illinois. . . . . . .. ..... Ohio State University. . . . . . . .. . . . . . University of Pennsylvania. . . . . .....Oliio University............ . . . . .Ohio Northern University . . . . ... . .Purdue University. . . . . . . . .. . . . . .Pennsylvania State College. . . . . . . . University of California. . . . . . . Q . . .Kenyon College. ......... . . . . ... . .Cornell University . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .Franklin and lvlarshall College. . . . . .Iowa State University. . . . . . . . . 1898 1908 1908 1909 1910 1912 1912 1912 1913 1910 1917 1918 1918 THE 1920 REVEILLE Phi Beta Kappa Beta of Ohio Established in 1858 THE REV. WILLIAM FOSTER PEIRCE, L.H.D. ........ .... P resident RAYMOND DUBOIS CAHALL ................... Secretary-Treasurer IN FACULTATE THE REV. WILLIAM FOSTER PEIRCE THE REV. JACOB STREIBERT HENRY FFITUS WEST THE REV. DAVID FELIX DAVIES BARKER N EYVHALL THE REV. GEORGE FRANKLIN SMYTI-IE WILLIAM PETERS REEVES THE REV. ORVILLE ERNEST WATSON RICHARD C:LARK MANNING I REGINALD BRYANT ALLEN 106 THE 1920 REVEILLE Phi Beta Kappa Honorary Society Founded at William and Nlary College, 1776 William and Mary College .... Yale University .............. Harvard University ....... Dartmouth College .. Union College ..... Bowdoin College .... Brown University ..... Trinity College .............. Wesleyan University .......... Adelbert College, VV. R. U .... University of Vermont ........ Amherst College ......,...... ROLL OF CHAPTERS .......1776 .....l780 .....1781 .....l787 .....18l7 .....l824 .....1830 ,....184S . ..... 1845 . ..... 1848 .......l848 .......l853 University of City of New York ...... 1858 lienyon College .............. Marietta College .. ., ..... . . . . . XVilliarns College ............. College of City of New York. Middlebury College ...,...... Columbia University ........ Rutgers College ..... Columbia College .... Hamilton College .... Hobart College ..... Colgate University ,... Cornell University ...... University of Rochester .... Dickinson College ....... Lehigh College ........ Lafayette College DePauw University ..... University of Kansas ...... Northwestern University ..... Tufts College ............... University of- Minnesota ...... University of Pennsylvania .... Swarthmore College ........ University of Iowa ......... University of Nebraska.-. .. Colby University ........ Syracuse Universftv ....... Iohns Hopkins University .... Brown University ........... University of California ..... University of Chicago ....... University of Cincinnati ..... E' ......,l858 . ..... 1860 . ..... 1864 .......1867 . ..... 1868 .....1868 .....1869 .....l869 .....1S69 .....1871 .....1875 .....1882 .....18S6 .....1886 .....1886 .....1889 .....l889 .....1889 .....1889 .....l892 .....1892 .....1892 .....l895 .....1895 .....1895 .....l895 .....1895 .....r395 .....1898 .....189S .....1898 .....1S98 Haverford College ....... Princeton University ....... St. Lawrence University ..... Vassar College ...... Wlabash College .......... University of Wisconsin ..... Alleghany College ,........ University of Missouri ..... Vanderbilt University ............... University of Colorado .............. Leland Stanford, Jr., University ...... Middlebury College ........,...,..... lllt. Holyoke College .......... University of North Carolina ........ Ohio State University .......... Smith College ............... University of Texas ........ NVellesley ................... XlVOl'I1211'l,S College, Baltimore .... Goucher .................... Qberlin ..... ....... ........ Ohio NVesleyan .... Illinois ........,...... Michigan ............... Franklin and Marshall ..... Grinell ..... ............ Virginia .... .. Tulane ......... NVest Virginia .... Denison ............ Indiana .............. VVashington and Lee .... Miami ............... Beloit .............. Lawrence Pamona ......... Georgia ........... Carleton ............. lklashington State ...... Radcliffe ................. 'wlfaghington University . .. North Dakota ......... Randolph-Macon ..... Bates College .... Knox College 1898 1898 1898 1898 1898 1898 1901 1901 1901 1904 1904 1904 1904 1904 1904 1904 1904 1904 1905 1905 1907 1907 1907 1907 1908 1908 1909 1909 1910 1911 1911 1911 1911 1911 1914 1914 1914 1914 1914 1914 1914 1914 1916 1918 1916 ' xx... THE 1920 REVEILLE Kenyon Chapter of Kappa Baia Phi Founded at HObartICO11ege, 1898 IN BEXLEY WILLIAM VINCENT :NIUELLER , SENIORS A RALPH NELSON ANDREXVS EDYVARD BENJAMIN PEDLOXV CARTER SMART MILLER ' JU1NIORS GEORGE LOUIS BRAIN HENRY SMITH DOWNE JAMES HENRY GREGG KENNETH MVERCER HARPER JOHN NIAGNUS JERPE JAMES HERBERT IVICMURRAY A WILBUR EVERETT POSTLE, JR. JOHN FRANCIS SANT 108 THE 1920 REVEILLE Kenyon Chapter of Kappa Lambda Mu Sophcimorc Society, Founded at Kenyon, 1916 MEMBERS JOHN WILLIAM ANGER WILLIAM COTTON TYHURST DAVIS, JR. WILLIAM WALLACE GRAHAM LESTER CARSON KILGORE LEWIS DEAN KILGORE EDWARD DAVIS MAIRE DONALD CHARLES MELL WILLIAM GALE PFLUM WILLIAM JAMES STEWART, JR. - EARL LESLIE TREAT THE 1920 REVEILLE O11 0261 EIHLL 'IIHAHEI SVI THE 1920 REVEILLE 111 The Assembly Kenyon undoubtedly has the distinction of being the most democratic institution in its self-governing ways as well as in many others. The Kenyon Assembly, com- posed of every matriculated student of Kenyon College, meets the first Moiiday in every month and decides questions pertaining to college activities. As all organizations, whether athletic, literary, scientific, or musical, are con- trolled by the student body, a multitudinous amount of power is thrown on its shoulders. And yet, withal, not one iota of this power is taken advantage of or abused in any possible way. Kenyon's system indeed approaches the perfect. The various Assembly committees: Executive, Dormitory, Honor, Commons, Senior Council and such special committees as may be appointed from time to time, are subdivisions of the student body and are the governing power as far as the men in college are concerned. A As an attest of the smoothness and accepted elriciency of the Kenyon system of student self government, the Nebraska Wesleyaii College of Nebraska, recently requested the rules and regulations of the Honor system as instituted here together with the constitution of the Kenyon Assembly. OFFICERS JOHN hd. JERPE, '20 ....... ...... P resident KENNETH M. HARPER, '20. . . . . .Vice-President JOHN F. SANT, '20 .... ...Secretary Da. L. B. W.ALToN. . . . . . .Treasurer 112 THE 1920 REVEILLE Execuiive Commizfiee The Executive Committee controls the finances of the college activities and does so in an extremely eFHCient manner. It meets the second and fourth Tuesdays in every month of the academic year. The action of this ever-changing body has never, as far as is known, been reversed by the student body. 'DPL R. B. ALLEN, Clzairnmn G. B. SCHNEIDER, '19, Secretary DR. L. B. WALTON I. C. BREWER, JR., '21 G. L. BRAIN, '20 R. B. HILL,,19 I. F. SANT, '20 W. G. PFLUM, '21 W. L. CARR, '20 THE 1920 REVEILLE 113 KM.. Dormitory Committee This Committee is undoubtedly, the most used target for slighting remarks in the whole of the college. To it is entrusted the power to recommend for censure anyone using intoxicants on college p'rope1'ty and to assess men for any damage they do to college property. Only once in its history has the action of this committee been reversed and that was when it went on a rampage this previous year and attempted to censure over half the College all at once. 'TI-IOIVIAS NIABLEY, '19, C lzairman L. C. GUNN, '19 E. B. READ, '20 R. B. HILL, '19 K. M. HARPER, '20 J. H. MCMURR.AY, '20 W. C. T. DAVIS, JR., '21 S. B. JONES, '21 114 THE 1920 REVEILLE .....-Z . Honor Committee This is the one Assembly Committee that isrepresentative of all classes, the remaining Consisting purely of upper classmen. This body has very little work to do and in the history of the college, only about two or three men have had to be recom- mended by this Committee for expulsion. It arranges the rule for all examinations. JOHN NI. JERPE, Cllairmzzn C. M. lVIILLER, '19 L. J. BAILEY, '21 R. B. HILL, '19 VV. VV. GRAHAM, '21 H. G. VVALTON, '20 DONALD lVIACliD1E, '22 THE 1920 REVEILLE ' 115 Commons C ommi Hee Each year, the Commons Committee conceives the magnificent idea of revolu- tionizing the Commons and its management, but, upon investigation, finds things in much better condition than it had hitherto suspected. The past year, this Committee had more reason for a change than in previous ones as the Commons had been placed on a cafeteria plan which was not satisfactory to the students. The claims were presented and the system changed. C. NI. MILLER, '19, Cllflifllllill G. B. SCHNEIDER, '19 D. C. MELL, '21 J. H. OLDS, '21 D. L. CABLE, '21 E. D. INIAIRE, '21 S. B. JONES, '21 116 A THE 1920 REVEILLE Senior Council - The general Welfare of the college comes under the jurisdiction of this commit ee. It also conducts Assembly elections, the Cane Rush, etc. ' J. L. SNOOK, '19, Chairmrzn F. VV. WEIDA, '19 ' 'vV. L. CARR, '19 L. C. GUNN, '19 R. B. HILL, '19 G. B. SCHNEIDER, '19 1 E. B. PEDLOW, '19 TI-HQ 1920 RIIVIIILLE , g lgmlrnlullllljl ylqmnuaslilrargrlxrllrllrw rlrwuunn : WH Mfg!! wuanndIll4I'1lI lWl V ,l un 'mv ' ' 11 ' 4 'krztnllg-'--.. , f ff-31.--5:5:.:5g1' s ', ! - 5 l 4 , ' 4? Y f I If ff! 5211- 717' 1':3fi':'?f' ' 0 if rgtfiiv- Ev' .diaffizd f if Wf NJN Q5' -'eaiwril4ffe:5S3'f:.'-iii? 1 ,.. . A .. -,H-.f-,.,1 4. --vw .1 C' Q. I -qv , I HEEE '1 ! ul ,H S N hulllh7iL I Y b I w fl-Q , 335- j Q X W I A ...ff FEL 3 'Q Mix . ,u -1 41.2. 811 I-Il. 0261 EI 'il'I'H'HA2I2I THE 1920 REVEILLE 119 L. IPREAT, Cllfllllin MILLER, fllgznggffr Fooiball Among the many things that the S. A. T. C. regime upset was the football team and schedule of 1918. Luckily, John NI. Jerpe, a student in the college and a mem- ber of the corps, had had some experience in coaching and was called upon to take up the reins during the S. A. T. C. Fighting against heavy odds from beginning to Hnish, Coach Jerpe handled his team in a clever Way and, toward the end of the season developed a team that was mighty hard to beat, holding Wittenberg 3-0 and defeating Otterbein 39-0 despite the epidemic of influenza and short time given for practice. Much credit is clue Ierpenfor his work with the team. One of the bright sides of the season is that a number of Freshmen 'received the value and experience of one year of college football without making themselves ineligible for three more years so much is expected of the team next fall. 120 THE 1920 REVEILLE L. E. TREAT. C. S. NIILLER Left End .. . Left Tackle . Left Guard . Center ......... Right Guard Right Tackle Right End . . Quarterbatk . Left Half .... Right Half.. Full Back . . . E. T. PERRIN .... Football SEASON OF 1918 THE TEAM SEASON OF 1919 . . . . .Captain . . .Nlanager ..........THoMAs . . . .CABLE-EGGERT .CHEXV-SCHNEIDER SCHAEFER-SHEERIN MAxw1zL-L-VOKOUN . .I'IAL'L-CARABELLI ...........FORSTER .............KELLY . , .'TRIZAT CCaptainj . . . . NORTON-TAYLOR . . . . .... 1 .PERRIN . . . . .Captain K. M. HARPER .... .... 1X flanagel' THE 1920 REVEILLE 121 Foofball Record of 1918 Kenyon . . Kenyon . Kenyon . Kenyon . Kenyon . . Kenyon . llflt. Union Nliami .. VVooster .. Otterbein .... YVittenberg . . . Opponents . . . . Foofball Schedule for 1919 lwiami at Oxford Wittenberg at Springfield Cincinnati at Cincinnati Ohio University at Home Open Reserve at Cleveland VVooster at Home Denison at Newark Oct. 4 Oct. 1 1 Oct. 18 Oct. 25 Nov. 1 Nov. 8 Nov. 15 Nov. 27 C'l'1ienksgivi11g Dayj 50 62 9 0 3 124 r-K T0 IX! HLL EI'I'IIEIAEI2I 0261 EI THE 1920 REVEILLE 123 lf. B. READ, Crzlvtain D. C. NTELL, flssislfllzt-Manager' 1 Basketball At the start of the season, Read, Seibold and Walton were the veterans avail- able for the nucleus of the team. The new material was none too promising o'r abundant. Within a week after the first practice, Coach Jerpe had picked a team to undertake the difficult schedule, starting with the Wooster game. A Although defeated by both Wooster and Akron on the first trip, the team steadily improved and the fighting spirit and team work were more and more in evidence as the season progressed. The first game played in Gambier, the second tilt with Wooster, was the best of the season. Kenyon's fighting comeback in the second period was beautiful to watch and very encouraging to the team's loyal supporters. Captain Read scored five field goals, most of them on long shots, and the defensive work of Seibold and the rest was excellent. Kenyon scored fourteen points in the last half, whilethe Wooster team was unable to cage a single field goal. The team continued its scrappy work in the next two games against Miami and Mt. Union, but the paucity of basket shooting prevented Kenyon victories. Dick Maxwell, a forward on last year's team, returned to college and played in the Mt. Union and Reserve games, and his shooting helped in both. The Reserve game was hard fought, Reserve winning in the last five minutes by three long, lucky shots. During the last trip, both forwards, Pflum and Treat, were injured in the game with Ohio University. Sant played -left forward in the last game of the season against Capital University. Capital was outplayed in every department of the game, except basket shooting, which was responsible for the Capital victory. Paul Max- well, center, caged five field goals, and the guarding of Read and Seihold was fine. The team, fighting hard in every game, was fatally handicapped by inability to pile up points. Captain Read's Hoor work was excellent in every game and Seihold's guarding was so good that he was given honorable mention by all the writers in their resumes of the season. A124 THE 1920 REVEILLE E. B. READ .... J. M. JERPE .... L. E. TREAT 2 . W. G. PFLUM5 . . SANT H. G. WALTONI ..... J' F 5 P. R. NIAXWELL. P. F, SEIBOLD. . . E. B. READ ..... Season of 1919 TEAM . . . . .Captain . . . .Manager .Left Forward Right Forward .......Cer1ter . . .Left Guard . .Right Guard THE 1920 REVEILLE Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon Kenyon 1 13 ..... Record of 1919 January 10, at VV00ster January 11, at Akron January 16, at Springfield 8 .... .......................... 1 January 17, at Cincinnati' 9 .........................,.... January 18, at Oxford 12 ............................ 21 .... 10 ..... January 25, at Gambier February 1, at Gambier February 6, at Gambier 26 ..... ...........,............ 22 .... February S, at Cleveland February 21, at Gambier 21 ............................. 16 1 February 27, at Athens lVIa1'ch 1, at Columbus 9 ..... ........................ . . . .VVooster . . . .Akron . . .Wittenberg . . . .Cincinnati ... Mfiami . . . .Wooster ....Miami Mt. Union ......Reserve ....Akron ...Ohio . . . . .Capital QZI H.L 'IIEIAEIEI 0261 El EFI THE 1920 REVEILLE 127 - 11- wa an E Y 1. w , . I w .- - , E.. A as ii . . Ka wwwwwlww J, - W -as M l , 'w ., X M- Q Q., V In g.-5. M www www... ,w w ' 2 1 1, 3 E ' A .T 4 . V www w, www Q www ww ww www Y s eaves? M. V. H. G. WALTON, Captain ' JAMES OLDS, Manage:- Tennis In spite of the several serious handicaps, the 1918 Tennis season was a successful one. Sidnell and VValton represented Kenyon most creditably against the best teams in the state. Baldyxfin-Wallace was easily disposed of in the only match played in Gambier, defeated in both the singles and the doubles. The matches with Denison, Wesleyan, Capital, Ohio State, Baldvxfin-Wallace, and Otterbein were all close and interesting. Sidnell's excellent serve and his good all around playing were much in evidence in every match. Walton's headwork and his placing made him usually unbeat- able. As VValton, captain of the team this year, is also President of the Ohio Inter- collegiate Tennis Association, he secured the state tennis tourney for Gambier which was played the latter part of llflay, unfortunately after the Reveille went to press. THE 1920 REVEILLE Season of 1919 H. G. VVALTON .... ..... C aptain JAMES OLDS ..... .... R lanager April lVIay lVIay lVIay June June june June May 26 .... 3. 10 .... 17 5. 6. 7. 18 22, 23, THE TEAM HAROLD GRAHAM WALTON, Captain LESTER CARSON IQILGORE LOUIS DEAN KILGORE TENNIS SCHEDULE, 1919 S. U. at Columbus . . . .Oberlin at Gambier . . . .Denison at Granville . . . . . . .Akron at Gambier . . . . . . . . . . .Akron at Akron .Baldwin-VVallaCe at Berea Oberlin at Oberlin Open 24- ................ State Tournament at Gambier CCinCinnati, Denison, Wesleyfaii and O. S. U., THE 1920 REVEILLE 129 Track, 1918 EDGAR B. READ, Captain JOHN M. JERPE, fllanrzgw- Because of the great depletion of the student body by the war, a track team was almost out of the question in the spring of 1918, and there were but two willing candidates available in the hour of need. These men, Read, a half miler, and Wells, a hundred yard dash man, represented Kenyon at the Big Six meet. Read finished seventh out of sixteen in the half mile. Thus far only one meet has been definitely scheduled by Nlanager Perrin for this season in Track. That is with Denison at Granville, lVIay 10. The team will, of course, be at the Bix Six. Baseball The war and its attendant unsettled conditions shoved baseball in every form into the background in the spring of 1918. Even the inter-class and inter-division varieties flourished not. This year, however, efforts are being mfade to revive interest in the sport by means of inter-dormitory and inter-division Contests. Without a doubt, Kenyon should be represented in the Ohio conference by a baseball team, and with every man in college interested, the 1920 team will become an assured fact. 130 THE 1920 REVEILLE Wearers of the K DOWNE . . . .... Football. TREAT ........... .... F ootball, Basketball. SCHNEIDER, G. B ..... .... F ootball. READ ........... .... F ootball, Basketball BCTAXVVELL, R. .... Football, Basketball. MAXWELL, P. .... Football, Basketball SNOOK .... .... F ootball. SEIBOLD .... Football, Basketball PFLUM .... .... I Sasketball. 'GRISGG .. .... Football. YVALTON .... .... T ennis, Basketball. PEIIRIN . ......... Football. MANAGERS K's'l IERPE . .. .... Basketball and Tr W121D.fx . . . . . . . .Tem1is. SNOOK . . .... Basketball. ack. Track 'IHC 1920 REX EILLII NI n ' + W X , N 1 1 1 :QF m 1 ,, 4. W. 'ai 511' ' . ' I 1 lfiaa. nl A 5? I , 1 ff' ,- 1 N, ' f W -llllllllllllllllIIIlIllIllllIIIIHIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ESI 'TTIEILAXEIEI 'OZCJI EIHL H THE 1920 REVEILLE 133 The Reveille, Founded 1855 Published by the Junior Class EDITOR-IN-CHIEF KENN ETH M ERCER HARIPER ASSOCIATE EDITORS GEORGE LOUIS BRAIN EDGAR BARTON READ JAMES HERBERT IVICIVIURRAY SAMUEL LEWIS IVIARTIN JOHN MARSHALL KNOX ART EDITOR HfXROI.D GRAHAM VVALTON BUSINESS MANAGER JOHN FRANc1s SANT ADVERTISING MANAGER JOHN MAGNUS JERPE V91 H.L 0261 EI IEIAEIEI EI'I'I THE 1920 REVEILLE 135 The Collegian Founded in 1855, the Kenyon Collegian is the ollicial mouth-piece of the student body on the I-lill. As a newspaper, its object is. lost and matter contained in it is ancient history, as a magazine for the portrayal of past happenings, it Contains good material for a memory book. Practically the only persons who have ever been known to do any work on the Collegian are the editor and perhaps some ambitious freshman: it is a pity, but it is true. We1'e it but realized by men in College with even the slightest journalistic tendencies the opportunities'presenting themselves in the shape of improvements on the Collegian, they would Certainly take a keener interest in the paper and make the work of a more serious nature. Since the time of its founding, the Collegian has seen its ups and downs the same as any other enterprise, but has the advantage in that it has a new editor each year who may either incorporate new ideas into the makeup and writing himself or at least maintain the standard set by the one preceding him. Every now and then there will be an editor who is ambitious enough, has ingenuity enough or else with some newspaper experience who raises the standard of the pape1'. College papers, as a whole throughout the state, are of a very low standard, but from every other one in Ohio, The Kenyon Collegian stands out as a beacon light to the lost seaman. The paper had somewhat of a shake-up and improvement in its appearance under the careful eye of D. W. Bowman, ,l4, and it is very probable that it will have some more material improvements made in it within the next year. THE 1920 REVEILLE The Collegian Founded in 1855 Pubhshgd f01tn1ght1y during the Collegiate year by ' EDITOR-IN-CHIEF CARTER SMART IVIILLER, '19 ASSISTANT EDITOR IQENNETH MERCER HARPER, '20 JUNIOR EDITORS GEORGE LOUIS BRAIN, '20 JOHN FRANCIS SANT, '20 JOHN MAGNUS JERPE, '20 ASSOCIATE EDITORS JOSEPH EMERSON CARTER, '19 JAMES OLDS, '21 JOHN FALKNER ARNDT, '21 DAVID LEE CABLE, '21 LESTER CARSON KILOORE, '21 REPORTERS JOHN VVILLIAM IALNGER, '21 LOUIS JAMES BAILEY, '21 WILLIAM GREGG CIEI-IRI, '21 HERNIAN SUKER SIDENER, '21 SHANNON DOUGLAS BUNTIN, '22 GEORGE COOKE LEA, '22 CARL ADOLPH WUEREEL, '22 BUSINESS MANAGER JOHN FRANCIS SANT, '20 the Student body THE 1920 REVEILLE km S :Q 'ff' GD 'A d'7A II Q :1-P 15-1 ff z 22 399 5 5 5 f ' ? Igs 2 , - Q Q' 7:'f 4'.':: f- !Wll!!l!!' ' IW' 43 .15 29 , 4' I , 3 G3 , ' rx 1960 I f an u I f ' 5, 142: 9 A -lp 69 99 ' jd 5' an 0 ' Qf5 U' f' 1, ' a 5'3 - fo f W 1 ,. W if ' Q rdf If I LITEGBK - - HW , 4 .DQLPH VJUERFHIQS 138 ' THE 1920 RIEVEILLE ?ill1lilllwi1i1lx1iT. ,, 'Q I Wmmww y Qlllllilixlgml-Elie .- xx, X qaiw .iw glllwly. 3 lllx . LWI1 as-alll? n- -n What's in a name? If there's nothing in a name, there is nothing to Philo- mathesian, for all there is to it is its name. Ages and ages ago, Philomathesian meant fluent oratory, beginning of sound and spectacular statemanship, etc., today, Philo- mathesian means-Philomathesian and nothing more. In the past few years, the rival literary society, Nu Pi Kappa, has made such strides towards progress and permanent prosperity that it has completely outclassed the older organization. By reason of the fact that its ollicers would order sandwiches, coffee, and cigar- ettes for practically every meeting, Philo, in past years' has been able to hold meetings fairly regularly, but this year even that novelty seems to have worn away and the organization now appears aged and decrepit, ready to take the count at any moment. THE 1920 REVEILLE Phzlomaiheszan OFFICERS President ....... ............... ......... J o HN M JERII' Vice-President .... ..... , IAMES H. MCMURRAY Secretary ....... .......... G . A LASHLEY HONORARY MEMBERS PRESIDENT PEIRCE and DR. REEvEs SENIORS GEORGE B. SCHNEIDER C. S. NIILLER B C BIGGS IUNIORS I. M. JERPE J. I-I. MCMURRAY W E POSTIE SOPHOMORES I. W. .ANGER L. C. IQILGORE H. R. 'NIOSSER H. S. SIDENER VV. VV. GRAHAM L. D. IQILGORE YV. G. PFLUNI O. A. LASHLEY FRESHMEN L. J. VVALKER T. L. BI.Iss L. P. CARAEELLI J. C. VVILLIAMS B. W. HARVEY H. N. STOCK D. S. GRAHAM R. H. NALL A. W. RALSTON G. C. LEA I. F. BRANCH D. C. IVIELL E. D. AQAIRE A. S. DANES NT. W. WADE GLEN SEALTS R. S. SCHCOLEY P. L. I'1AI-IN C. K. BRAIN 140 THE 1920 REVEILLE .i1imillumxiilin'l1gl'aef ll in mm i lllllll lu' ru lui i b A . NU Pl PP I.jluwgggiav,.rfvn!liinIm, ll if1lilllilllMMillll ' ,n wins, .ii anim' ll limnu llllllll E -DOL!! WUZRFLL. Most men join Nu Pi Kappa for the simple reason that, as they say, it has a nice, mysterious sounding name,', not because it has any literary advantages-because it hasn't any. Nupi is simply the off-spring of the older, more sedate and intellectual Philomathesian which became so powerful that it became a monopoly to such an extent that another was formed from its lesser intelligent members who were not able to keep up with the high standard set by their superiors. Nu Pi Kappa is widely known for not having held more than one meeting each year when a smoker and election of new members takes place. True, Nupi has been able to win the last few debates-but how? lWainly through a lot of hot air, wild gesticulations and exaggeration and misstatement of facts to such an extent that the judges have been completely bamboozled to such an extent as to vote for their representatives on the platforml. And, then, too, the promise of a treat of an ice cream cone may have had something to- do with it, too. Anyway, Nupi men don't know the Hrst principles of debate. THE 1920 REVEILLE 141 Nu Pi Kappa OFFICERS .President ........ ............ .... P I XUL FEHR SEIBOLD Vlce-Presldent ..... ..... 5 IOI-IN FRANCIS SANT Secretary and T1'CHSUlLl . .SAMUEL LEXVIS RTARTIN J. L. SNOOK G. L. BRAIN S. L. MARTIN J. H. GREGG J. F. ARNDT D. L. CABLE' W. J. STEYVART G. I. ZOLLINGER C. J. CUMMINGS NI. F. WARD H. N. HALL H. K. BOSTXVICK I. F. GORSUCI-I T. L. EGGERT F. W. ILIUBBARD R. C. HEINBUOH H. L. REILY HONORARY MEMBERS DR. R. D. CAHALL and C. L. LCCKERT SENIORS P. F. SEIBOLD IUNIORS J. F. SANT J. M. KNOX K. NI. HARPER SOPHOMORES L. J. BAILEY S. JONES E. B. TAYLOR W. G. GEHRI FRESHIWEN P. S. MORRISON . NV. P. WISEMAN L. C. THOMAS R. H. BOSTXVICK A. L. BERNSTEIN J. R. SEIBERS H. F. GROSSNIAN J. S. CHENEVERT S. D. BUNTIN J. E. H. G. WALTON I. C. BREWER, IR. J. OLDS L. E. TREAT R. L. SVVANSON G. W. IVIOUAT N. E. SEVERANCE C. A. WUEREEL W. D. WILLIAMS C. B. NORTON L. C. WERBER D. Z. MACADIE L. E. IQEATING CARTER 142 THE 1920 REVEILLE ri - u I ui 1.4 W W , W 'm , N. 1 w , E. X 5 :2 1 I Q13-. ' , , 1 '. x . SW' fi ' ' - fr -1:-w4f,g',1 A , V -f ,-:..- fg ii W, im' L' ' ' My . ,,,,5.,,, ,. , , , ., . f' p-P-A f-1f,ff:',g..13.1g-L-,nf iw, -far: .5+ .M4i- J' ,. Nm- V- , 'jf C X xl 'Yu 'fs 1 V' ' 1' Fi? ' 5' W 7 if J gf, 1. 'Y ff-?v,.1,u91gfzbf4Jv- - f' sf, , 1: .' Q, If ,gg -4, - 1.1 - - H UW, W ,.,, mi-V .-,W Y f, H.,- j Z'j1 j'31. .2--1 L , ' ' f ' 1 Q- :, V L N , Q 1. ' - 'W' V ' .- .,...-.- . - ., PN N Q- fr ' ,411-3, ' -,V -,,, 4' . 134. - V , A 14 A 1,,-1, ' 'I .J 'z f' Vw ., . . ' . W '-:H -7 ' ' ' --,. -Q -I ,W 1, X 1 -' 5 ,-L. f-f 1 Q59 'r , ' , , yi 5 -fzisgi-2 .msg .fn W WH, Hu W' . 4 WR., ,. .- Izwfigun 11' f fu H if - ' W 3:41 mei- 'e -if-f,.:1 .., -. v'. r':+-'J 71 ,-. -1 4 M A-.,-:- 1 i f 3.10 -- -f f ' ', 1 ' 1 4 1' tif? . , 2,11 f, 11 ' -ef IH, :- 2552!-N4 Q, , R 1 gm 'Hgiif' .Q ,vf ,3?f'5' , 7. ,fl-.y -.f'-a .e,-. ,. A 3.1 -m. , 1 W' -, M '- -.-smsf , A, '. -I ' -fs:'?-1-I, , FV. 'tial Laci' ' '5 -. - 'f-f?'fui1 ':54!,s.4:E'.- 4, :J 21.-' 1 .r,,.jg1-' Y Ng . -11 f ' 'H+ . I in D X Q ffm 5, v- 4 w , 1 V' VJI PHE 1920 REVEILLE - .Dunn Wven FEI- ,.. W HL 0Z6I EI 'H'I'IIEIAEI2I THE 1920 REVEILLE JAMES PERNETTE DEWOLF, '17, Leader SHELLEY BRYANT JONES, .Mmmger First Tezzors J. H. GRECG, '20 VV. W. GRAHANI, '21 NV. C. T. DAVIS, '21 J. F. BRANCH, '21 STANLEY NIVER, '22 Second y'l?7Z07'.Y K. IW. HAXRIPER, '20 E. T. PERRIN, '21 D. C. NIELL, '21 J. E. ARNDT, '21 G. -B. ZOLLINGER, '21 R. B. HEINBUCH, '22 D. S. GRAHAM, '22 First Basses F. W. VVEIDA, '19 H. S. DOWNE, '20 L. J. BAILEY, '21 S. B. JONES, '21 R. W. NIAXVVELL, '17 Sem nf! Bam-as R. L. BAIRD, '16 CBexD J. L. SNOOK, '19 F121-IOMAS NIABELY, '19 P. R. Rd:AXWVE'LL, '21 I -P p-A 9 .L HH TIIEIAEIEI 0Z6I EI ceqc A SG' Eg N WM THE 1920 REVEILLE g 9 1 N' X 'X ' f , L QV xx AQXIILS WAX JAMES PERNETTE DEWOLF, '17 CBCXQ, Leader RAYMOND ARTHUR BCICKINSTRY, '17 QBexJ,'0rganist First Tenors W. W. GRAHAM, '21 W. C. T. DAVIS, '21 J. F. BRANCH, '21 STANLEY NIX'ER, '22 Second Tezzors H. G. WALTON, '20 K. M. HARPER, '20 J. F. ARNDT, '21 O. A. LASHLEY, '21 D. C. NIE'LL, '21 H. S. SHJEN R, '21 E. T. PERRIN, '21 G. C. LEA, '22 J. W. WADE, '22 R. C. HEINBUCFI, '22 G. VV. MOUAT, '22 W. P. VVISEIVIAN, '22 First Basses . F. W. WEIDA, '19 H. S. DOWNE, '20 L. J. BAILEY, '21 S. B. JONES, '21 T. L. BLISS, '22 Second Basses J. L. SNOOK, '19 THOMAS NIABELY, '19 P. R. TVIAXVVELL, '21 D. L. CABLE, '21 ' ,. :fi :X :fm Huw uw A M , w u w S x ., ww 'W ' H -f H5 H H1 H THE 1 920 'REVEILLE THi1TKf5 150 THE 1920 REVEILLE Dramaiics az' Kenyon 'As the official dramatic association of Kenyon College, the Puff and Powder Club has a larger membership this year than for ten years past. The club has not done much work this year, staging but one play, The Original Version of Hamlet, on the evening of February 15 before a Prom-time audience which received it with loud acclaim. Dramatics in general have been let wane the past few years and it is now' time that they should be revived again as there is no feature about college life that may give as joyous and pleasing entertainment as some kind of a play. There is a Wealth of material in the college' right at the present if it could be brought into play more often. We hope for a big year next year for the Puff and Powder Club. THE 1920 REVEILLE v Puff and Powder Club OFFICERS Director. .. ................ R. A. NICKINSTRY 17 CBexD Manager .... R. A. 1X4CKINSTRY, '17 CBexj J. P. DEWOLF, '17 QBQXD O. R. BERKELEY CBexD H. F. I-IOHLY, '18 CBexD W. V. MUELLER, '18 QBQXQ C. S. IVIILLER, '19 H. S. DOWNE, '20 H. C. VOKOUN, '21 M HARPER 20 MEMBERS S. B. JONES, '21 I. C. BREWER, JR., '21 L. C. KILGORE, 21 W. G. GE1-IRI, '21 J. M. WADE, '22 C. 1. DE-BOER CUMMINGS STANLEY NIVIZR, '22 W. P. VVISEMAN, '22 152 THE 1920 REVEILLE PI A ner fl li , U . I 1 1 , 'I 1 if I ' Al N x I I A,-f , ..... SW? iii N PUFF AND POWDER CLUB PLAY Rosse Hall, Saturday Evening, February 15, 1919 ORIGINAL VERSION OF I-IANILET Cast of Characters HAMLET, Prince. Son to the murdered King ...,... ..... IX ENRICO, Brother to the King ..,.... THE QUEEN, I-Iamlet's mother ..... THE GHOST of the King of Denmark I-IORATIO, a noble friend of the Prince. . CARAMBUS, Royal Chamberlain ..... LEONHARDUS, his son ......... OPHELIA, his daughter .......,.. PHANTASMO, the Court Fool ....... FRANCISCO, Oilicer of the Guard .... CARL, Principal of the Actors .... SENTINELS and BANDITTI ...... Two ACTORS ............. fIr, NICKinstry . . .lXfIr..lWil1er . . . . . .lin Volcoun . . . . .lVIr. Wiseinan .....NIr. Hohly . . . .NIr. llflueller . . . . .lVI'r. Berkeley .....lVIr. Wade . . . . lVIr. Rlueller . . .NIL Gehri Niver . . .lVIessrs. Jones and Brewer . . . .lVIessrs. Kilgore and de Boer Cummings qu THE 1920 REVEILLE. ff . 4 ull if AA Nxt ' TW' v , 9 . 4 l , IIIVHP- ' i 3. A, i ' Fi ,, swf 1, g ai ' 154 THE 1920 REVEILLE The Science Club OFFICERS PAUL FEHR SEIBOLD .... ............ .... P r esident EDGAR BARTON READ ..... ............. .... S e cretary MEMBERS In Faculty PROFESSOR ALLEN PROFESSOR WALTON PROFESSOR JOHNSON I PROFESSOR WEIDA SENIORS PAUL FEHR SEIBOLD JOHN LLOYD SNOOK . ARTHUR BENJAMIN PARTR JUNIGRS EDGAR BARTON READ HAROLD GRAPIAM WALTON SOPHOMORES GEORGE ZOLLINGER OSCAR A. LASHLEY WALTER BENNETT THE 1920 REVEILLE 155 H.AROLD G. WALTON. . EDGAR B. READ. . . .. A Rifle Club OFFICERS PROE. WILLIAM P. REEvEs .... .......,.... GEORGE B. SCHNEIDER ..... . ............... . PROFESSOR REEVES C. S. MILLER L. C. GUNN E. B. READ G. L. BRAIN J. L. C. ICILGORE O. A. LASHLEY L. D. KILGORE F. E. P. SCHNEIDER MEMBERS In the Faculty PRESIDENT PEIRCE SENIORS ff. E. CARTER F. W. WEIDA .............P1'esident . . . .Captain of the Range . . . . . . . . . . .Secretary . . . . . . . .Treasurer PROFESSOR LARWI LL P. F. SEIBOLD G. B. SCHNEIDER B. C. BIGGS J. E. CARTER ' J. L. SNOOK JUNIORS H. IVICIVIURRAY W. L. CARR H. G. WALTON SOPHOMORES W. W. GRAHAM E. L. TAYLOR JANIES OLDS J. F. ARNDT E. D. NIAIRE GEORGE ZOLLINGER D. C. MELL VV. J. STEXVART FRESHMEN W. L. LYBARGER R. A. NALI. A. W. IYALSTON R. S. YERRA 156 THE 1920 REVEILLE C. S. ACIILLER, '19 -T. M. KNOX, '20. L. E. TREAT, '21 ..... H. S. DOWNE W. E. POSTLE R. N. ANDREXVS L. C. KILGORE Commercial Club Devoted to Research of Nloney and Banking OFFICERS MEMBERS C. S. MILLER L. E. TREAT S. L. MARTIN I. C. BREWER, IR. Honorary lVIernber-C. R. JACKSON Book-Call of the Wild. ' Poem-Break, Break, Break. Boy-Big Dick. Girl-Queenie. . . . . . .President . . . . . . .Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer . M. KNOX . F. SANT . H. GREGG . F. BRANCH lbliddle Path made famous by following line: One mile from home, -- THE 1920 REVEILLE -D 158 THE 1920 REVEILLE Senior Reception Rosse Hall, Tuesday Evening, June 18, 1918 MR. R. U. HASTINGS MRS. PEIRCE MRS. WEST COMMITTEE MR. C. S. MILLER, Chairman MR. PFI-IOMAS MABELY MR. G. B. SCHNEIDER ' PATRONESSES EQRS. NEXK'HA'LL MRS. MANNING MRS. REEVES MRS. STREIBERT THE 1920 REVEILLE 159 The Junior Promenade Rosse Hall, Friday Evening, February 14, 1919 COMMITTEE TMR. C. S. MILLER, Chairman MR. W. L. CARR MR. E. B. PEIILOW MR. P. F. SEIBOLD MR. T. M. FRAZIER MR. L. C. GUNN MR. R. B. HILL MR. G. B. SCHNEIDER MR. A. B. PARKER MR. B. C. BIGGS MR R. N. ANDREWVS PATRONESSES TVIRS. ALLEN MRS. JOHNSON MRS. WIIIDA MRS. CAI-IALL MRS. VVI-IITMAN 160 THE 1920 REVEILLE Sophomore Hop Rossa Hall, Friday Evening, Nlay 10, 1918 COMMITTEE NIR. J. F. SANT, Chairman MR. B. H. GRAVES MR. A. SEITZ MR. G. L. BRAIN MR. J. H. BICMURRAY MR. I. L. BERKEY MR. E. B. READ PATRONESSES MRS. WEST MRS. ALLEN MRS. VVEIDA MRS. JOHNSON MRS. SELINGER THE 1920 REVEILLE The S. A. T. C. Dance ROSSG Hall, Friday Evening, December 6, 1918 COMMITTEE C. S. MILLER DAVID S. GRAHAM C. ADOLPH VVUERFEL FRED B. DECHANT HORACE VoKoUN J. FRANK SANT KENNETH M. HARPER J.-M. JERPE LIE UT. OFFICERS KENYON UNIT S. M. BREXVSTER, Commanding LIEUT. L. B. MAPLESDEN LIEUT. J. I. KINDEI. LIEUT. J. C. WILLIAMS Ofliicer THE 1920 REVEILLE THE 1920 REVEILLE I6 'F-me. QNMON5 X .Donn-4 WuamrLx..1 V91 EIHLL IZIAEIH 0261 EVVI THE 1920 REVEILLE 165 The College Commons But a relatively few years ago, the fraternity men on the hill dined together at eating clubs, while the others dined where they chose and could get sustenance at a reasonable price. 'This system was a bad one for numerous reasons among which are: That only a minimum number of the clubs were getting good food and getting it well Cooked, men in some divisions had to Walk perhaps a couple of miles for a meal, it fostered snobbishness, and others too numerous to mention. Then, the long hoped-for Commons was constructed and the dreams of many had at last come true. Now, all the men ate together, the food was sure to be good and well cooked, there would vanish all snobbishness and, by the very gathering together of all the men in college three times a day to eat together made for a good wholesome democracy and college spirit that could not be broken or that did not care to be broken. Today, the Commons is not what we all might desire a Commons to be, but it has a nice appearance-dining hall, roomiy lower floor with comfortable chairs in which to loaf while waiting for a meal, together with a piano which is being played most the time about meal time. The food, while not what one might receive at one's own home, is better and certainly is more Wholesome and better cooked than one gets at a restaurant for extreme care is taken in the work. From year to year, the men acquire ufastidious spells and stir up an argu- ment in the Assembly over the Commons, but it always ends favorably to all. The administrative work is done by a board of managers, the names of whom follow: President Peirce, Dr. Allen, Nliss Taylor and C. S. Miller, 19. FY 991 EH-LL 0261 EITIIEIAFITI THE 1920 REVEILLE 167 The Nineteenth Annual Commencement The nineteenth annual commencement, Kenyon's second warn commencement, did not brin back as manv alumni as is customarf for Kenyon commencementsto . 5 . bring back, but those who came, were all true Kenyon men and returned because their hearts were so full of the joys of their undergraduate days that they just had to get back on the Hill again. ' President and lldrs. Peirce entertained at their home, Cromwell Cottage, on Saturday afternoon while in the evening the senior class presented that historical farce, The Original Version of Hamlet, much to the delight of the commencement visitors. V President Peirce delivered a most inspiring and scholarly address in his bac- ca laureate sermon on Sunday evening to the graduation class following which the Glee Club entertained with a few selections near Rosse Hall. - The commencement proper was held on lVIonday morning at which time twelve were graduated from Kenyon College. Williaimu Vincent Nlueller delivered the class address, while Josiah Kingsley Ohl, editor of the New York Herald, spoke extremely interestingly in his alumni address. V The crowning event of all for the students came on the following evening, Tues- day, when the Junior reception to the graduating class was held in Rosse Hall and about sixty couples danced to music furnished by Johnson's orchestra of Cleveland. 168 J THE 1920 REVEILLE Evenis of Commencement Week Friday, June 14rli 7:30 p. m.-Annual lvleeting of the Board of Trustees, Alumni Library. 9:00a 4-6p.m. 3:00p 7:30p 10:30 a. 7:30 p. 9:00 p 9:00 a. 9:30 a. 12 100 p. 3 100 p. 3:30p 7:00 p. 8:00 a. 3:00p 5:30p 8:30p ' Saturday, June 15th -Adjourned session of the Annual Nleeting of the Board of Trustees, Alumni Library. -President and lVIrs. Peirce at home, Cromwell Cottage. .m.-Senior Play: A Farce of Historical Interest. Rosse Hall. Sunday, June 16th -Celebration of the Holy Communion, Church of the Holy Spirit. -Ordination Service. Se'rmon by the Rev. William H. Dewart, 187, A.B., Boston, lVIass. Ordination to the Diaconate by the Bishop of Ohio. -College Baccalaureate Service. Sermon by the President of Kenyon College. -College Singing by the Glee Club, near Rosse Hall. Monday, June 17th m.-lVIorning Prayer, Church of the Holy Spirit. -The Nineteenth Commencement. Rosse Hall. Class Orator, William Vincent Mueller, 'l8. Alumni Orator, Josiah Kingsley Ohl. LL. D., 'S-1 Editor of the New York Herald. -Alumni Luncheon, College Commons. -Alumni Business Nleeting, Dempsey Room. -T ennis-College versus Freshman. -Fraternity Banquets. Tuesday, June 18th -Bexeley Alumni Breakfast, Colburn Hall. -Tennis-Faculty versus Students. Initation and Supper of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, Ascension Hall. m.-Junior -Reception to the Graduating Class, Rosse Hall. THE 1920 REVEILLE 169 Senior Play The Original Version of Hamlet Presented by the Graduating Class, 1918 Rosse Hall, Saturday Evening, June 15, 1918 CAST OF CHARACTERS HANILET, Prince. Son to the murdered King ...... ENRICO, Brother to the King ...... ....... THE QUEEN, Hamlet's lVIother ...,... . THE GHOST of the King of Denmark ..... HORATIO, a noble friend of the Prince. CARANIBUS, Royal Chamberlain.. LEONHARDUS, his Son ...... OPHELIA, his Daughter ....... . PHANTASNIO, the Court Fool .... FRANCICO, Officer of the Guard .... CARL, Principal of the Actor .... . SENTINELS and BADITTI ..... TWO ACTORS ............ . . . .lVIr. Kinstry . . . .Miz Snook . . .lWr. Smith . . . . .Mr. lldiller . .lVIr. Wiseman . . . . .lVIr. lVIueller . . . .lVIr. Jerpe ....lVIr. Tate .....Mr. Krejci . . . .lVIr. Gehri .Mr. Fishack . . . .lVIessrs. Jones and Brewer lVIessrs. Kilgore and Fishack THE 1920 REVEILLE The N inefeenih Annual Commencemeni Of Kenyon College and Bexley Hall, lVIonday, June 17, 1918 PROGRAIVIME , Mzzsic By THE KENYON COLLEGE CHOIR Invocation THE RIGHT REV. ROBERT LEROY'HARRIS Bishop Coadjutor of Marquette ' Class AIIIITESS WILLIAM VINCENT lV.lUELLER M1zsic .fllumni dddresx JOSIAH KINGSLEY OHL '84, M.g '01, A.M.g '17, LL. D., New York City I fllusic The Conferring of Degrees Alnnouncements Belzediction THE RIGHT R.Ev. BOYD VINCENT, D.D. Bishop of Southern Ohio THE 1920 REVEILLE 171 Degrees in Course, Bexley Hall Cerlifcate of Grzzduation flfffitlzout ffebrewj LEONARD MITCHELL KENYON COLLEGE Bachelor of fl:-ts LUTHER HEISLER TATE MARION DREXEL DOUGLASS First Honor Mzxn Second Honor Nlan WILLIAM VINCENT NIUELLER Bachelor of Plzilosoplzy I CLIFTON KINGSLEY LOOMIS RICHARD WILLIAMS MAXWELL In Absentia, Fourth Honor' Man LEONARD MITCHELL RAYMOND ARTHUR TX4CKINSTRY' AYDEN ARBERT REMY Bachelor of Science HAROLD BAKER SMITH FREDERICK BONNER DECHANT WARREN HASKELL CATT THOMAS WETZLER WISEMAN, Third Honor Man Bachelor of Letters ROBERT LEE BAIRD .lllrzster of Arts YOSHIHARU TVIINEO, St. Paul's College, Tokio THE REV. WILLIAM A. GRIER, B.S., '97 LUTHER HEIS1LER TATE PAUL ASHLEY WEST, A.B., '12 EDWARD RYANT DEYER, A.B., '06, In Absentia, Wusin, China THE 1920 REVEILLE Honorary Degrees Mastzfr' of Hrts ALBERT A. AUGUSTUS, CLEVELAND A Doctor of Divinity THE REV. JANIES HENRY YOUNG Professor in the Seabury Divinity School, Faribault, lVIinn. THE RIGHT REV. LEROY HARRIS A.B., X965 Bex., ,995 A.,RfI., '13g Bishop Coadjutor of llflzlrquette THE REV. GEoRGE PARKIN ATW',ATER ' A.B., '95g Bax., '9Sg A.lVI., '99 A ' A Doctor of Letters THE REV. H. DEXVART,4,87 Q THE REV. GEORGE GUNNELL Christ Church, Boston Trinity Church, Toledo n Doctor of Laws MAJOR GUY D. GOEF, A.B., '88 JANIES W. ELLSXVORTH, ESQ. Washington New York City THE 1920 RLY LILLII ggillgplarl, H K' Q' 4f ' 40 in 'Vi' f . '- ' . , - 'f'-' f Pi5' my 'jj' I .gs ,un t 9 93h A . -'-'Il 5: L1 f 5 0 , 0 6. 6 ,Wlli'g5!?L'E:1::' ' f H' f 452- G :f:E55 -1 4 5,3 xiii. 4.2522 ' fin 515' 0' A ' ' .11f'2r'E?f:5SiIlIuN -.. Lggzl. . ' eff: - A : A4':i:::E: N -2 iii? V : -' 'lfalgim may . mowes mcrw 9gQl3i2g in-e!Q59gm 3361 sv. 'Qs 00, -am, ggw' S 'mg . W any ' sv-fe 5?s G92 ' ' gqtgx W' 30 'Q Q A at I. ','-,Q if u .-S11 .V 15,-1 -. , Q --1 -:', THE 1920 REVEILLE 'P ld ATCLNSW-NON 'fl giiilifilh V 31 px?-W6 THE 1920 REVEILLE gun DINQ Yfimvc. WM uv,-i. UCILFELL THE 1920 REVEILLE The Rogues' Gallery XVILLIAM COTTON TOWEL Davis Alias Bud,,' hdotorman, L'Child North Hanna Warbler. Subject for college censor, loose mentally. A good man gone wrong, especially in Peteis English. Description: Corn Cob pipe, pasty Loolqlbleary eyes, fluffy hair, bad reat 1. JOHN FRANK SANT Alias Felix Agitator Of Dry Kenyon. Fools the Gambier folks, bullies South Hanna freshmen, shaves once a month. Implicated in any deal which is shady or crooked. Getting by on his name. Description: Hang-dog look, shufliing gait, smokes Camels. EDGAR BUNR READ Alias The Deaconi' a'Shave Tail. Nliddle Hanna's pride. Greasy grind, expects to graduate in three years. Cootie inspector at Camp Taylor. Flunky to Lieutenant Nlonk Siebold. H.G.lV. Hard on women. Disguise: Second Lieutis uniform. TADUS A. UM FRAZIER Alias 'LTad, 'cBum.,' lndustry personified, faker, dealer in first editions, bolshevikist, math genius. Description: Wfeak eyes, caused by a fallen eye brow, worried look, cause unknown. Disguise: Pleasant smile. RsX.LPH PEDAGOGUE ANDREWS Alias The Silent Kid.', ' Part of Kenyon's traditions. In- timate friend of Philander Chase. Profane, gambler and supporter of vice, nasty disposition, bruiser. Disguise: Bland smile, daily attend- ance at Chapel. VVell known- to Newark police. JOHN Nln,RsHn,LL KNOX. H.O.F. Alias 'LGob, Rum, Remorse. Short Tank, hell on freshmen, red nose, hungry look, woolly hair. iVanted in several states for disorderly conduct. Disguise: Gob clothes, sailor's swagger. Louis RED IQILGORE Alias Playmate.,' Disgrace to his family. Seducer, dangerous companion, low ideals, and morals, leads young men wrong. Bosom friend of Bud Pfium. Disguise: Swagger stick, spats, Sears Roebuck clothes, Omar complexion. SHELLEY B. JONES Alias g'Casey. hflatinee idol, ship builder, anarchist, suave, astute,urbane, and ingratiating. Has DeW'olf bulled into believing he is Glee Club material. Intimate friend of Shelley B. Jones. SAMUEL SHEENEY NTARTIN Alias Snoozer, H Sam, Thamy. i' l-las peculiar, ideas about women. Four Husher, Greek shark, visits Nlt. Vernon frequently. Ambition none. Straight IJS in his sleep course-fiunks the rest. Disguise: Shaggy hair, forced smile, degenerate look. Isaac CURTIS BREWER Alias Ike, 'fCurt. Our hero. Fought a noble fight on the slopes of Gambier, sergeant infinit- issimo. Freshmen's friend, grouch, chapel cutter. Disguise: Khaki. DONALD CHARLY lfTELL Alias Bonehead,', Alibi Kid, Enoch.77 Barkeris chum. Says nice things in Greek Art so as to make the course more interesting. Adores Greek Sculpture. Taking course over again. Works for the librarian spare hours. Description: Dreamy look, sissy walk, Kappa Lambda Nlu key. ED SOPHOMORE BTAIRE n Ladies' man. On the blacklist at at Harcourt and Bill Carson's. Description: Polished mannerisms, fake uniform, roguish chuckle. Disguise: friendly greeting. THE 1920 REVEILLE Adverlising and College Calendar rqmninansug 1 xg. 11 can usucnniu-in: 178 THE 1920 REVEILLE January 3-College opens with evening prayah'l. 4-Commons on cafeteria basis. lVlen rave. 5-Rev. W. H. Wood, '11, preaches first sermon. 6-Kenyon loses to lVlt. Vernon, 43-17. 7-Assembly meetsg Commons butt of debate. 8-Brigadier-General Richard Lionel Kenyon speaks to students and faculty. , 9-College settling down to work. ' 10-Woiostex' 21, Kenyon 195 awful mistake. ll-Akron 4-1, Kenyon 139 not so much of a one. 12-Hosannah in the Highest. Fat receives a keg of beer! 13-Assembly meets again in special session and again Commons discussed. 15-VVattley, 17, back for a few days. 16-llfliller starts eyebrow on upper lip. 17-Wittenbe1'g 32, Kenyon 85 nothing to say, whatsoever. . , 18-lVIiami 23, Kenyon 145 lldauve shows some real fight. ,19- Gob Knox returns to college. Gold stripe 'nl everything. 204Waite1's and table linen at last. - 21-Glee Club starts practise. 23-Winte1', h-I 60 above, 24-Eddie Goodman and Jamie Greegg, both class of '20, visit the Hill. 25-Kenyon 21, Wooster 165 hflauve does come-back in second half that ' was veritable whirlwind. . 26-Reveille,board elected. 27-Intramural startsg lVl. H. 28, N. H. 6. 28-E. VV. 26, W. W. 13. '29-First Collegian appears. 31-Fat lZ1YSiLlOVl'I'l law to Freshmen. February 1-llliami 28, Kenyon 10-San makes his debut. 2-And still they wear no OVC1'CO21'tS. 3-Seniors appeal to college for help on dance, and VVORSE YET, As- sembly agrees. 4-Joe Carter back from Francef-many wild tales. 5-Unknown vandals wreck lVIosser's suite. 6--llflt. Union defeats Kenyon rather handily despite presence of Dick hflaxwell on the team. 7-lVIiller shaves off rnustache,'. S-Barker throws party for select few. Freshmen beat Lima, 22-11. 9-Mell and Harper join the navy. 10-Lt. Bish', lllillspaugh, '11, arrives on Hill. 11- Bish tells of experiences in German prison camp. 13-Freshmen smear the town with paint-Jack raves. 14-Senior Promg the fair ones arrive. 15-Rosse Hall a fairyland--Julius going strong. 16-Girls leave and men grab an hour's sleep. 17-Blue llflondayl 18'-East Wing forms Lt. I. A. Gregg Bring 'Em Back Club. 1'9-Wish this were Ash Wediiesclay so we could swear off work. 21 iRLllHO1'Cd war started again-Freshmen start to enlist and lllonk gets blame. I I 22-lWonsieu'r Louge and llflonsieur Beneteau arrive Bonheur, monsieurs. 23-Oh, yes-they like the American femmes, Oui, om, 1ls sent tres jolies. - THE 1920 REVEILLE 179 lVfIL'l'ON S. LEWIS Mtn. Vernon, O. MILTON S. LEVVIS CLOTHING Hats Caps and Furnishings The New Styles First. The Home of Good Clothes Mi1ton S. Lewis We specialize in the exclusive designs and latest patterns in ' WALL PAPER. INTERIOR DECORATOR-CONTRACT PAINTERS-PAPER HANGERS -. - I Complete line of paints and varnishes Fry Brothers MT. VERNON, OHIO 24-NVater main bursts. Dirty hands and face prevalent.. 25-VVater main fixed and high water mark washed offi 26-Nu Pi Kappa holds smoker and elects oflicers. Philo sore. EAD. 15, S. H. 13. Close game. ' 27-Qnce more the navy takes the army across-Navy 26, Army l-l Qbasket- balll. ' . 28-Glad this isn't next year or we might get proposed to. First Reveille assessment paid. ' OUR WORD STANDS BACK OF THIS I When you buy your clot-hes here you can do so with the absolute certainty of getting the lowest price on the highest nierehandise, that can be obtained any- Where. Lur1es A SAFE PLACE TO TRADE MT. VERNON The Kenyon Society Four MUSIC FOR THOSE WHO WANT THE BEST THAT CAN BE SECURED Address: H. C. VOKOUN Box 167 Gambier, Ohio ISO THE 1920 REVElLLE San Felice 81 El Verso QUALITY CIGARS ' THE DEISEL-WEMMER CO., MAKERS LIMA, OHIO lVIarch l-Came in like a lion-Pathetic drama given at Harcourt. French poilu ' popular. 2-Harvard triumphs over Yale 18-165 Dormant committee comes to life and recommends 35 for censure. Constitution rules make action void. 3-Freshmen l4acAclie and Heinbuch serenade Harcourt, but watchmen scare them away. The steady growth of our Men's The Busy Bee Furnisliiug Departmeiit is Clue to that fact that we aim to give unusually Rggtaufant good values here. Wfhen you are in need of HOSIERY, UNDERWEAR, SHIRTS 01- NECKWEAR we shall KENYON TRADE SOLICITED be ,Qglnd to have you come and look over our lines- I CLEANLINESS and HOME I l cooK1NG The A. A. Dowds Dry Goods Co. Mt. Vernon Ohio. West High St. Mt. Vernon, Ohio THE 1920 REVEILLE 181 When in need of anything in the DRUG LINE go to Carl N. Lorey's Opposite CANDYLAND Candylandi T The home of sweets. Home made candies. Chocolates, bon bons, caramels, mint wafers, and all fine confections. Salted almonds, delicious ice cream, . ices, sherberts. and frozen dainties. Hot and cold drinks. 4-Sh1'oveNTuesdayg Barker slings pre-lenten beer party, sans beer. 5-Thirty-tour decide to give up somethingn during Lent. 6-Z6 of the 34 decide what they gave up is necessary to livelihood. 7-Exams one Week from today-nun'mu'rings and mutterings. 8-Maxiv see Head over Heels in Columbus. ' 9-Many dark brown tastesg better start recording them now or woin't have Chance to before long. Get a Sanitary Hair Cut in a Sanitary Barber Shop T aylor's MT. VERNON Sharp, The Florist For Flowers Main St. Mt. Vernon, Ohio SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Pressing Sc Repairing Clothes made to measure Zulandt MT. VERNON Take your films to Al1en's Drug Store Mt. Vernon, ' Ohio 182 THE 1920 REVEILLE Tinkey's Art E Studio The right place for particular men We Ask Kenyon Men to try us and BE CONVINCED x Over Dowds Store hit. Vernon Ohio The virtues of honest materials, faith- ful workmanship and a high standard have brought their reward for STAUFFEPUS CLOTHES. Known all over Knox County as garinents of absolutely pure wool, cold water shrunk, and rnodelecl on lines laid clown by correct fashions for men. Stauffers On the square-both ways Y0u'11 do better there IO-College settles clown to Work, but don't like R. O. T.C. ll-Vile imprecations against the R. O. T. C. 12-Pedlow sends Newty' Baker telegram to revoke S. A. T. C. order. 13-Andrews sends similar one to Lieut.-Col. Houghton. 14- Phat begins to worry. Bolsheviki war song out: Tune, I didn't raise my boy to be zi soldier. li-Exams start. Have catered to KENYON MEN Coinplinients of for years DR. BLAKE KEY'S BARBER SHOP HARCOURT PLACE SCHOOL FOR The Bakery GIRLS Offers superior advantages in pre- paration for college as well as for honie life. Large faculty and liinitecl number pupils insure personal at- tention. Rev. Jacob Streibert, Ph.D., Regent Mrs. Streibert and Miss Streibert, Principals Short Orders or Banquets Cigars, Candy, Cigarettes, Tobacco Pool and Billiards H. C. Stoyle 8m Son THE 1920 REVELLLE 183 YOUNG MEN'S STYLES. YOUNG MEN'S FABRICS. YOUNG MEN'S SERVICE. THOSE are some of the reasons why young men think of this as their storeg we put our entire know- ledge, experience and resources at their disposal. The Rosenthall Co. The Home of Hart Schaffner 8s Marx clothes 16-Sudden interest in Church studies and liking for Profs. 17-lVIuCh green in evidence-also some orange. 19-Little Cards begin to come back marked four. ' 20-Exams all over-Kappa Beta Phi initiates! 21-Spring term begins, fresh inatriculateg Brig.-Gen. Richard Lionel Kenyon gets degree. YOUR FRATERNITY STATIONERY In Either Greek or English Buy it as you need it. lVe will die-stamp any style or size of stationery in any quantity on twenty-four hour delivery. Our work is rlght., and our prices will surprise you. The Book and Art Shop Mt. Vernon, Ohio The jewelry Service Station ' Kenyon trade is solicited. GUY LAUDERBAUGH 80 CO. MT. VERNON, OHIO 184 THE 1920 REVEILLE Faulhaber for Service Taxi and Auto Service to Gambier HUDSON MOTOR CARS Phone 1030 Mt. Vernon, , Ohio The Corner Drug Store Newly installed SODA FOUNTAIN FRANCIS WILLARD CHOCOLATES HIGH CLASS MERCHANDISE IN DRUGS AND TOILET ARTICLES LAWLER'S Mt. Vernon, Ohio 24-Rumors that drill in R. O. T. C. will start soon. 25-Students await action of Board of Trustees before striking. 26-Nothing much doing today. 27-Has the nialiinls of going out like a lamb, although rainy, not a bit ' Cold. L. S. Jacobs has the SHOES FOR KENYON MEN The new Spring Merchandise we have for the NEYV MODEL MEN has ai snap and distinction you will want. SHIRTS-HATS-SUITS-TIES Suits to order by Adler-Rochester Stamm's GOOD' CLOTHES SHOP Gambier, Ohio Mt, Vernon, Ohio THE 1920 REVEILLE 185 The White Studio PllOlL0g1'2l,1JllC1'S'l3O the Reveille and College Pulnlieations in many other colleges and universities of America. 1548 Broadway, New York 28-Keeping this is getting too darned tiresome. 30-just 29 more shopping days in Ohio. Get busy. 31-Let's have your attention right here just one minute in order to get 'ready for toniorrowis astounding announcement which you will all be interested in. April l-just to let you know. that we're through keeping this and damned glad of it-Reveille goes to press and the editors on a party. U The Republican Vernon's A News , l Restaurant Prmtery A PRINTERS FOR KENYON The best place in Gambier to eat Fraternities Societies Clubs Home Cooking U Mt. Ver A non Ohio Cigars Cigarettes Tobacco 186 THE 1920 REVEILLE -mxm N 84 LLIE ENGRAVING COMPANXf Cnfyfzerf affcffifgrdweff yf7fg75effQ11afgf A N N U A L S' UAW, 0,0 Hlush-qtions. Desions Photographs O Half-Tones , Line 8115 senoaq zinc Eichings Three -1110 Four Color Process Plates - Ajvafgfasf Quay ' d 1 1 fl f -D -f-Jr rf 'fi955L11Qf9S i1f '7ff,5Z..S5.2 C H I C AG O iifviiizm 3552573 Qni'5235f:JJ' Ni This nnual is a Product of the Year Book De- partment of the Rogers Printing Compan Dixon, Illinois THE 1920 REVEILLE Contributors to the Reveille ART CARL ADOLPH. XVUERFEL A LITERARY CARTER SMART IXTILLER EDXVARD DAVIS TVTAIRE SHANON DOLTGLAS BUNTIN ADVERTISING NORMAN EDXVARD SEVERANCE - l 1 C .M fi A 44.15,-d' 1 . i , ' , J W , ,' V ' 4 , , ' ' 1 w Q 3 ' 1 , J. , I 'L . , Q ,I . :YI , 2 . Q . . .1 . 3 5 -, 'Q xAQ'3l3,5 f5:'5ifw3ii4 'ff MF 'fJzl'f 'f' , .R f' ri 1 lie?
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