.• v « ’ ! Copyright DOROTHY STUDDARD.Editor-in-Chief WILLIAM CAMERON.Business Manager T E Published bv the STUDENTS OF PARK COLLEGE AT -— SP r bv L Llo Dedication To Mother Green who, because of her love for and interest in the students of Park through the span of nearly a quarter of a century of service on the campus, has firmly intrenched herself into the hearts of all who know her, the Friendly Narva of 1933 is affectionately dedicated. Mrs. Ruth H. Schall, Dean of Women since 1920, held the re¬ spect of all the students on the campus. She was loved by those who knew her well and admired by those who did not belong to her wide circle of friends for her infinite tact and diplomacy in deal¬ ing with all who came in contact with her. Park College has lost a loyal friend and the students a trusted confidante with the death of Dean Schall. MRS. RUTH H. SCHALL April 22, 1933 THE NTE NTS l CAMPUS ADMINISTRATION CLASSES ACTIVITIES ORGANIZATIONS ATHLETICS PUS • j 1 mk: V t i r ' 1 i • ' Ow ’kJNkISm it Bj K ’’ 4-UPS jkfy W ' a H |Mr . v r THOMPSON COMMONS CARNEGIE LIBRARY iii Davis. Mann, Hawley, Thompson. Porter, Brokaw, Melcher, Scott. Myers, Elliott, Raison, Thompson BOARD OF TRUSTEES OFFICERS Homer B. Mann Charles L. Brokaw - J. A. Bowman - David M. Knight - President Vice-President T reasurer Secretary, Business Manager BOARD J. A. Bowman .Kansas City, Mo. Charles L. Brokaw .Kansas City, Kans. George H. Davis .Kansas City, Mo. R. B. Elliott .Parkville, Mo. Rev. F. W. Hawley, D.D., LL.D.Parkville, Mo. Robert Johnston .St. Louis, Mo. George A. Lawrence, LL.D.Galesburg, Ill. Rev. John W. MacIvor. D.D.St. Louis, Mo. H. B. Mann .Kansas City, Mo. George Melcher, LL.D.Kansas City, Mo. Dr. Wilson A. Myers .Kansas City, Mo. Joseph F. Porter .Kansas City, Mo. W. C. Ralston. LL.D.Topeka, Kans. Rev. Harry C. Rogers, D.D.Kansas City, Mo. ISADORE Samuels .Denver, Colo. Miss Elizabeth Scott .Kansas City, Mo. Rev. W. C. Templeton. D.D.Dodge City, Kans. A. O. THOMPSON.Kansas City, Mo. J. P. TUCKER.Parkville, Mo. L. H. Wakefield .Seattle. Wash. [ 19 1 Frederick William Hawley, A.M., D.D., LL.D. President since 1915 I 20 ] HHHHH Walter Frederick Sanders, AB., A.M. Dean, Park College since 1920 I 21 ] ADMINISTRATION Professor M. C. Findlay Head, of Department of Biology Park College. 180 2 Professo r R. V. Magers Head of Department of History Park College, 1900 Professor Claude Rader Professor of Music Director of Band and Orchestra Park College. 1907 Professor m. H. Wilson Head of Department of Psychology Park College. 1908 Professor w. A. Cook Head of Department of Philosophy Park College, 1900-05, 1916 Professor R. A. Wells Head of Department of Mathematics and Astronomy Registrar Park College, 1912 Professor Mary Harrison Head of Department of Education Park College, 1913 Professor Ethel E. Lyon Head of Department of English Literature and Language Park College, 1915 [ 22 ] ADMINISTRATION Professor D. M. Knight Secretary and Business Manager Board of Trustees Park College, 1916 Dean R. H. Schall Dean of Women Park College. 1916 Professor J. W. Teener Head of Department of Biblical Literature Park College, 19 20 Mrs. m. e. Beers Instructor in Latin Park College, 1921 Professor Miriam Wilson Professor of French Acting Chairman of Depart¬ ment of Modern Foreign Languages Park College, 19 22 Professor H. L. Williams Head of Department of Sociology and Economics Park College, 1923 Professor F. W. Beers Head of Department of Public Speaking Park College. 1925 Professor Leon Robbins Associate Professor of Mathematics Park College. 1925 [ 23 ] ADMINISTRATION Professor Elsa Grueneberg Associate Professor of German and Spanish Park College. 1925 Professor Alice M. Waldron Librarian Associate Professor of Library Science Park College. 19 2 5 Professor R. A. Rogers Head of Department of Physics Park College. 19 26 Professor Margaret Lorimer Head of Department of Home Economics Park College, 1926 Professor Neil H. Baxter Associate Professor of History Park College. 1927 Mrs. Jeanette Robbins Miss Frances Fishburn Instructor in Spanish Assistant Librarian Instructor in Physical Edu- Park College. 1928 cation for Women Professor C. A. Metz Associate Professor of Chemistry and Physics Park College, 19 28 1 24 ] ADMINISTRATION Professor Francis Bouquet Associate Professor of Bible Park College. 1929 Professor H. G. Parker Head of Department of Chemistry Park College. 1931 MR. L. R. Setty Instructor in Biology Park College, 193 1 Miss Esther Sullivan Instructor in English Park College. 19 31 Miss Mary Strain Instructor in Mathematics Park College, 193 2 Miss Margaret Barrett Instructor in Home Economics Acting Dean of Women Park College. 193 3 Professor C. L. Griffith Professor of Music Chairman of Department Park College. 19 33 Mr. Walter Krattli Instructor in Education Park College, 1933 [ 25 ] 5 Morrow, Knight. Shannon, Morrison OTHER ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS Mr. David M. Knight Miss Hazel Morrow Business Manager of College Secretary to President Secretary of Board of Trustees Mrs. Bess D. Shannon Miss Oleva Morrison Assistant Business Manager Secretary to Dean HOUSE MOTHERS Mrs. Sue V. Greene Retired Mrs. Mary Goodson Herr House Mrs. F. w. Beers Gillette Cottage Mrs. M. M. McCluer Thompson Commons Mrs. A. A. Cook Chesnut Hall Mrs. Katie Hamilton Waverly Hospital Mrs. George Young Copley Thaw Mrs. William Young Nickel Hall Mrs. Kenneth Jennings Sunset Mrs. Arthur Fleming Woodward Mrs. Lulu Wirtman Dietitian at Thompson Commons Dr. Hawley. McCluer, Wirtman, Hawley, Fleming, Jennings, Cook. Goodson Hamilton, Beers, G. Young, Green. W. Young, Barrett 1 26 ] Harris, Barton, Baird A. Young, Nelson, Studdard, Gillespie STUDENT BODY GOVERNMENT The members of the student body government are elected each year to represent various organizations and classes on the student council. The student council prepares reports to present to the administration and sponsors the Thursday chapel each week consisting of musical numbers by talented members of the student body. OFFICERS Kay Harris Clara Newcomb - Ruth Nelson - Paul Barton Dorthy Studdard - Edwin Withington - Justus Baird - Aubrey Young - Edward Gillespie - Thomas Hopkins Alice Oiens Woodson Seuell - President Secretary-Treasurer Y. W. C. A. - Y. M. C. A. Narva Stylus Senior Class - Junior Class Sophomore Class Freshman Class Women ' s Athletic Assn. - Men ' s Athletic Assn. I 27 ] “Green Spring receiveth The vacant earth; The white sun shineth: Spring wind provoketh To burst and burgeon Each sprout and flower.” — CH ' U YUAN (4th Century B. C.) t 28 ] SENIORS SENIORS 4 tfc Baird, Justus Kansas City, Kansas Chemistry Orion. President 4: Band 1, 2. 3, 4; Choir 4; Publication Board 4: Track 2, Captain 3, 4; Cross Country 3, 4; The Constant Wife 3. Baker. Maxine Beloit. Kansas Sociology Calliopean: Pauline Hawley Music Club. Vice-President 4, President 4: International Relations Club 2, 3. 4; French Club 1. 2. 3: Zeta Kappa Epsilon: Orchestra 1. 2. 4: Glee Club 3, 4: Choir 3. 4; Christian En¬ deavor 1. 2. 3, 4: Y. W. C. A. 1. 2, 3. 4. Barksdale. Elizabeth Mirabile. Missouri History Aurora; Zeta Kappa Epsilon. Barton, Paul Espanola, Washington Social Science Lowell, Secretary 3: Pauline Hawley Music Club 3, 4; Choir 2, 3; Orchestra 1, 2; Glee Club 3, 4: Oratory 3; Y. M. C. A , Vice-President 3, President 4; Cross Coun¬ try 2; Marriage of Nannette ; Mikado.’ Beiler, Florence Waterman. Illinois History Lucerne; Zeta Kappa Epsilon; International Relations Club 3. Bibler, Walter Hoyt, Kansas Chemistry Lowell; Pauline Hawley Music Club 3, 4; Wakefield Science Club 4; Band 1, 2, 3. 4; Choir 4; Christian Endeavor 1, 2, 3, 4. Bonacker, Ralph St. Louis, Missouri History Lowell, Secretary 3, President 4; Zeta Kappa Epsilon; Pi Kappa Delta; Band 1, 2. 3, 4; Orchestra 4; Choir 4; Parkolle- gians 2, 3, 4; Ministerial Group, Secretary 3, President 4; Christian Endeavor 1, 2. 3; Y. M. C. A., Treasurer 4; Debate 4; Oratory 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 4: The Stoker ; Outward Bound”; Slag.” Brink, Nelle Parkville, Missouri Mathematics Calliopean; Mathematics Club; German Club. Cameron, William Henryetta, Oklahoma Chemistry Orion: Sigma Pi Sigma; Alpha Phi Omega; Kappa Sigma Pi; Narva Business Manager 4; Y. M. C. A. 2, 3, 4; Chemistry Club 1, 2; Wakefield Science Club 4; Mikado. ' ' Campbell, Melvin Ames, Kansas History Lowell; Zeta Kappa Epsilon; Pi Kappa Delta; International Relations Club 4; His¬ tory Club 2, 4; Debate 3; Oratory 2, 3; Y. M. C. A. 2, 3. Treasurer 4; Ministerial Group; Band 1, 2; Baseball 1, 2. 3, 4; Class Treasurer 4. Canaday, Duff North Kansas City, Missouri Sociology Lowell; Band 1, 2; Ministerial Group 1, 2; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Cross Country 2, 4. Chambers, Anna Belle Mifflinberg, Pennsylvania Social Sciences Calliopean. Vice-President 2, 3, President 4; Narva 3, 4; W. A. A. 1. Vice-President 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1. 2 , 3; Hockey 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1. Captain 2, 3; Base¬ ball 2; Volleyball 2, 3. Cowgill. Don Wood River, Nebraska Sociology Parcbcvard, Vice-President 2, President 3; Pi Kappa Delta; Pauline Hawley Music Club. Secretary-Treasurer 3, 4; Debate 3; Oratory 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1. 2. 3. 4; Choir 1. 2, 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Mikado ; The Real Thing”; Slag”; The Messiah.” , Dahlstrom. Evelyn Chanute, Kansas French Lucerne; Beta Pi Theta 3, President 4; French Club 2 , 3, 4; French Club 2, Vice- President 3, 4; Spanish Club 2, 3; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 3. 1 32 ] Dyer, Arthur Beverly, Kansas Mathematics Orion: Mathematics Club, Secretary-Treas¬ urer 3, President 4; Y. M. C. A., Cabinet 4; Men’s Athletic Association 3, 4, Class Basketball 2, 3, Captain 4; Class Baseball 4; Basketball 2, Captain 3, 4; Baseball 3, 4; Choir 3; Marriage of Nannette.’’ Eddy, Mary Mound City, Missouri Social Sciences Aurora: Pi Kappa Delta: Pauline Hawley Music Club 3. 4; International Relations Club 4; Spanish Club 2; W. A. A. 4; Baseball 2, 3: Hockey 3, 4: Volleyball. Captain 3, 4; Debate 3. Faris, Clara Spring Hill, Kansas History Calliopean, President 4: Zeta Kappa Ep¬ silon 3, Secretary-Treasurer 4; History Club 3. 4: W. A. A. 1, 3. 4; Basketball 1, 3, 4; Hockey 4; Volleyball 4. Farnsworth, Mayme Salt Lake City, Utah French Lucerne; Beta Pi Theta; French Club. Faurot, Jean Smith Center, Kansas History Orion: Orchestra 1, 2. 3, 4; Band 1, Student Director 2, 3, 4; Oratory 2, 3. Gass, Olive Polo. Missouri Biology Calliopean; Wakefield Science Club 3, 4. Spanish Club 2. 3; Christian Endeavor; Y. W. C. A. 1. 2, 3, 4. Halsted. Helene Junction City, Kansas History Lucerne. President 4; Zeta Kappa Epsilon; International Relations Club 2. 3: Y. W. C. A . Cabinet 3; Freshman Commission Leader 4; Hockey 3. Hanssen, Elizabeth North Kansas City, Missouri History Lucerne: Zeta Kappa Epsilon; International Relations 3, 4; Narva 4. Harris, Kay Vesta, Minnesota Physics Orion; Sigma Pi Sigma. Vice-President 3; Sunday School Student Council 4; President of Student Body 4; Class President 2, 4; Class Secretary 3; Cross Country, Captain 2, 3; Track 1. 2. 3. 4; Baseball 2. 3. 4; Gymnasium Players, President 2, 3; Sub¬ merged. Hostetter, Paul Indianapolis, Indiana Social Sciences Lowell. Vice-President 4; Science Club 3. 4; French Club 2. 3. 4; International Re¬ lations Club 3, 4 ; L. I. D.; Theta Alpha Phi; Narva 3; Y. M. C. A., Cabinet 3; Choir 4; Glee Club 4: Track 2; Cross Country, Captain 3; Mikado ; Marriage of Nannette ; The Witching Hour ; The Stoker ; On Approval ; You and I : Outward Bound ; The Real Thing ; Slag. Hoth. Ruby Dwyer, Wyoming Biology Lucerne: Pi Kappa Delta, Secretary-Treas¬ urer 3; Wakefield Science Club. Vice-Presi¬ dent 3, 4, President 4; Debate 2; Y. W C. A.; Freshman Commission Leader 4; Narva 4; Hockey 4; Baseball 4. James, Elizabeth Sedalia, Missouri Foreign Languages Lucerne; Beta Pi Theta; Theta Alpha Phi. Treasurer 4; Hockey 4; Y. W. C. A.; Freshman Commission Leader 4; The Real Thing. Jenkins. Estelle Hughesville, Missouri Foreign Languages Lucerne. Treasurer 2, 3. President 4; Beta Pi Theta 3. 4; French Club 3; Speech Club 2; Y. W. C. A., Cabinet 3, Vice-President 4; W. A. A. 2, 3. Treasurer 4; Hockey 4; Baseball 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4; The Real Thing. JEpson. Ruth Grand Island, Nebraska Public Speaking Lucerne: Theta Alpha Phi: German Club 2. 3: Pauline Hawley Music Club. Vice- President 3; Gymnasium Players 2, 3; Speech Club 2; Kit-Kat Klub 2, 3; Chem¬ istry Club 1; Choir 1. 2. 3. 4; Orchestra 1. 2; W. A. A. 1. 2. 3; Christian En¬ deavor 1. 2, 3; Y. W. C. A. 1. 2, 3. 4; Pickles ; Mikado ; Marriage of Nan¬ nette ; In the Shadow of the Glen ; The Stoker. Kelly, Warren Marceline, Missouri Biology Orion: Wakefield Science Club 2. 3. 4: History Club 3; French Club 2. 3; Y. M. C. A. 1, 3. Kieser. Elizabeth Omaha, Nebraska German Aurora: German Club 2. 3, 4; Pi Kappa Delta, President 4; Debate 1. 2; Hockey 3, 4: Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, Vice-President 3, President 4. ♦ 33 ] mmm SEN ORS Kilmer. Margaret Belle Plaine, Kansas Spanish Aurora; Pauline Hawley Music Club Spanish Club, Secretary 4. W. A. A. Hockey 3, 4; Volleyball 3: Baseball 3 Women ' s Glee Club; Choir 3. 4. Knight. Christine Parkville, Missouri Home Economics Aurora, Secretary 2, 3; Alpha Theta Pi; German Club 3. 4; Pauline Hawley Music Club 2, 3, 4; Choir 3, 4; Y. W. C. A.. Cabinet 4. Linville, Anita Parkville, Missouri Spanish Lucerne; Spanish Club 3, 4; Baseball 3; Volleyball 4. LUDWICK, JOHN Florence. Colorado English Honors Course Lowell; English Club 3, 4; French Club 2. 3, 4; Chemistry Club 1: History Club 3: Narva 2; Stylus 2, 4: Ministerial Group 1, 2, 3, Secretary 4; Christian Endeavor 1, 2, 3. 4: Student Volunteers 2, 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. 1. 2, 3, 4. Lutz, Robert Webster Groves. Missouri Bible Lowell, President 4; Pauline Hawley Music Club 3; French Club 2; Oratory 3; Band 1, 2. 3, 4; Orchestra 2, 3, 4: Glee Club 3, 4; Christian Endeavor 1, 2, 3, 4; Student Volunteers 3: President 4; Reli¬ gious Council 3, 4; Y. M. C. A., Cabinet 3; Class Baseball Captain 1. Class Tennis 1; Class Basketball 2, 4; Basketball 2: “Pickles “Marriage of Nannette”; “The Witching Hour ; “The Real Thing ; “Slag ; “The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife. McCarroll, Gladys Hamilton. Missouri Home Economics Aurora; Alpha Theta Pi, President 4. MacDonald. Kenneth Fergus Falls. Minnesota Biology Lowell, Secretary 3 . Wakefield Science Club 3. 4; Y. M. C. A. 4. McGeehan. Madeline Clinton, Missouri Social Sciences Lucerne; Choir 1. 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 3. McKibben. Joseph Martinsburg. Missouri Physics Orion; Sigma Pi Sigma; Narva 2, 3. 4. Mackenzie. Don Homewood, Illinois Sociology Honors Course Orion; Publication Board 4; Stylus 1. 2; Narva 2. Editor-in-Chief 3; Sunday School Student Council 4; Y. M. C ' . A. 1. 2. President 3. Cabinet 4: Gymnasium Play¬ ers 1. 2. MAGERS. Rhoda Parkville, Missouri History Lucerne; Zeta Kappa Epsilon, Vice-Presi¬ dent 4; Pauline Hawley Music Club. President 4: Men ' s Glee Club, Accompanist 1. 2; Choir 3. 4; Stylus 2, 3; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; “The White-Headed Boy. ' Markward, Mary Bess Pilot Grove, Missouri English Lucerne; English Club, Secretary 4; The Witching Hour”; The Constant Wife ; Slag.” Martin, Eleanor Ruffsdale, Pennsylvania Bible Lucerne; Spanish Club 1, 2; Christian En¬ deavor 1. 2, 3, 4; Student Volunteers. Vice-President 4; Y. W. C. A., Cabinet 4. Mayhew, Loucile Atchison, Kansas English Calliopean; English Club 3, 4; Glee Club 4. ♦ [ 34 ] Mayne, Robert Tucumcari, New Mexico English Honors Course Orion, Secretary 3; Narva 2, 3; English Club; Y. M. C. A., Cabinet 4; Tennis 2, 3. 4; The Witching Hour”; The Real Thing”; “You and I.” Medill, Sally Kansas City, Missouri French Lucerne; Beta Pi Theta 3, Secretary 4: French Club, Vice-President 3; W. A. A. 1, 3, 4; Choir 1, 4; Glee Club 3. 4; Basketball 1; Volleyball 3; Baseball 3; Y. W. C. A., Freshmen Commission Leader 4; “The Real Thing.” Melcher, Mildred Webster Groves, Missouri Mathematics Aurora, President 4; Mathematics Club 4; French Club 1; Stylus 2; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, Cabinet 3, 4; W. A. A. 1, 3. 4; Baseball 3, 4; Hockey 4; Basketball 1, 3, 4; Hiking 4; Tennis 3. Mitchell, Louise Shawnee, Kansas French Aurora; Beta Pi Theta; French Club, Secre¬ tary 4; Spanish Club 2, 3, 4; Pauline Hawley Music Club 3, 4; Glee Club 4; Choir 4; Christian Endeavor. Morrow, Mary Ruth Wellington, Kansas History Aurora; Zeta Kappa Epsilon; Pauline Haw¬ ley Music Club 3, 4: History Club 2. 3; Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Women’s Glee Club 3; Narva 3; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2. Mudd, Margaret Jefferson City, Missouri Biology Calliopean; Wakefield Science Club 4; W. A. A. 3, 4; Hockey 3, Captain 4; Volley¬ ball 2. 3, Captain 4; Baseball 2, 3. New. Maxine Grand Island, Nebraska French Lucerne; French Club 3, 4. Newcomb, Clara Trinidad, Colorado Mathematics Aurora; Mathematics Club, Secretary-Treas¬ urer 2, Vice-President 3, President 3; Narva 1. 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1. 2, Treasurer 3, 4; Secretary-Treasurer Student Body 4; “Slag.” Oakley, Edna Beloit, Kansas Mathematics Honors Course Lucerne; Mathematics Club 1, 2, Vice-Presi¬ dent 4; Spanish Club 1, Vice-President 2; Debate 1; Y. W. C. A. 1, 4. Oien, Alice Canby, Minnesota History Aurora; Zeta Kappa Epsilon: International Relations Club 3, 4: W. A. A. 1, 2, Vice- President 3, President 4; Basketball 1. 2, 3, 4; Baseball 3; Volleyball 3, 4; Hockey 3, 4; “The Constant Wife.” Passiglia, Sam Kansas City. Missouri Sociology Peterson, Maxine Kansas City, Missouri French Aurora; Beta Pi Theta, Treasurer 4; French Club 3, President 4; Spanish Club 3; Stylus 3; Student Volunteers 3; Y. W. C. A. 3; “The Real Thing.” Porzsolt, Ernest Ashtabula, Ohio Biology Parchevard. Radford, Herschel D. Butler. Missouri Chemistry Orion; Sigma Pi Sigma: Kappa Sigma Pi, Secretary-Treasurer 3; Chemistry Club 1. 2, 3; Basketball 3, 4: Baseball 4; Class Basketball 2, 3, 4. Ramsay, Vivian Watson, Missouri French Aurora; Beta Pi Theta, President 3, Vice- President 4; French Club, Vice-President 2; Glee Club 3; Hockey 4. Reimold, William Salina, Kansas Physics Orion; Sigma Pi Sigma, President 3; Class Basketball 4; Baseball 3. [ 35 ] SENIORS ■■■■■■■■ ■■■■■■■Hi Ritchie, Robert McLouth, Kansas Mathematics Orion: Basketball 4; Class Basketball 3, 4 ; Baseball 2, 4. Satorius, Mary Jo Petersburg, Illinois Chemistry Aurora: Wakefield Science Club 3, 4; Mathematics Club 3, 4: Y. W. C. A. 3, 4: Blackburn College 1, 2. Scheer. Marie Holden. Missouri Spanish Calliopean ; Treasurer 4, Spanish Club, Secretary Vice-President 4; Narva 4. 3. Scherer. Margaret Raymond. Illinois History Calliopean: Zeta Kappa Epsilon; History Club 3, 4: W. A. A. 3, 4: Hockey 3, 4; Baseball 3: Y. W. C. A. 3, 4; Blackburn College 1, 2. Schmidt, Alice Bluff City, Kansas Home Economics Aurora, President 4; Alpha Theta Pi; Pauline Hawley Music Club 3, 4; Band 2. 3, 4; Orchestra 1, 2; W- A. A. 2, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4. Settle, Eugene Walnut, Kansas Biology Parchevard; Wakefield Science Club 3, 4; Stylus 3, 4; Band 3, 4; Basketball 3. Seuell, Woodson Camden Point, Missouri Parchevard, President 4; Sigma Pi Sigma, President 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Track 3, 4; Basketball 2, 3, 4; Men ' s Athletic Association 3, President 4; Class Basketball Captain 3, 4. Shaw, Esther Cameron. Missouri History Lucerne; Zeta Kappa Epsilon; Women ' s Glee Club 4; Y. W. C. A., Freshmen Com¬ mission Leader 4. Strieby, LeRoy Smith Center. Kansas Psychology Orion, Treasurer 4; Pauline Hawley Music Club 3, 4; Band 1. 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 1. 2, 3, 4; Ministerial Group 1, 2; Y. M. C. A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Pickles”; Marriage of Nanncttc. ' ' Studdard. Dorothy Kansas City, Kansas English Aurora, Narva 2, 3, Editor-in-Chief 4: Stylus 2, 3; English Club 3, 4; Class Secretary 4; International Relations Club 4; W. A. A, 3, 4; Y. W. C. A..2, 3, Secre¬ tary 4; Hockey 3, Captain 4; Volleyball 3, 4; Baseball 3; Student Council 4. Sweet, George Belle Plaine, Kansas Social Sciences Orion; Theta Alpha Phi. Secretary 4; Narva, Asst. Bus. Mgr. 3; Stylus Business Man¬ ager 4; Ministerial Group 1, 2, 3, 4; Christian Endeavor; Religious Council 3: T rack White- Wife”; Out- ; The Student Volunteer, Vice-President 4 3; Pickles ; Submerged ; The Headed Boy ; Her Husband ' s The Witching Hour : Mikado ; ward Bound ; The Real Thing Marriage of Nannette.” Swischer, Harold Kansas City, Missouri Music Pauline Hawley Music Club 4; Orchestra 3, 4. Throw. Francis Manilla, Iowa Physics Orion; Sigma Pi Sigma, Country 3, 4. Secretary 3; Cross Turner, Harry Pinckneyville, Illinois Public Speaking Parchevard, President 4; Theta Alpha Phi. President 4; Chemistry Club 1; Speech Club 3; Choir 1. 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 3. 4; Y. M. C. A., Cabinet 1, 4: Class Presi¬ dent 3; Student Council 1; Track 1, Cap¬ tain 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Basket¬ ball 1; Debate 4; The Show-Off”; Judge Lynch : The Belle of Barcelona”; On Approval ; The Goal. 1 30 ] Vulliamy, Constance Donaldsville. Louisiana Eng lish Aurora. Treasurer 3: English Club 3. 4: French Club 2. 3, 4; Spanish Club. Vice- President 3; German Club 2, 3. 4; Choir 1 ; Y. W. C. A. 1, 2, 3. Wakeman. Frederic Scranton. Kansas English Honors Course Stylus 2. Editor-in-Chief 3. 4: English Club 3. President 4. Ward, Eleanor St. Joseph. Missouri Home Economics Calliopean: Alpha Theta Pi; Volleyball 4; Student Volunteers 3, 4; Christian En¬ deavor 3, 4; Y. W. C. A. 3, 4. Wilson. Carol Honolulu. Hawaii Sociology Lucerne: Wakefield Science Club 3, 4; Narva 2; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet 3. ♦ WlTHINGTON, EDWIN Kansas City, Missouri English Honors Course Theta Alpha Phi, Vice-President 4; English Club 2, 3, 4; Narva 3; Stylus 1, 2, 3. Editor-in-Chief 4; Submerged ; The Witching Hour ”: You and I ; Outward Bound ; The Real Thing ; In the Shadow of the Glen ; The Stoker. Witt. Grace St. Joseph, Missouri Home Economics Aurora: Alpha Theta Pi: Y. W. C. A. 3. 4: The Constant Wife. Yoakum. Ruth Leavenworth. Kansas English Honors Course Lucerne: Theta Alpha Phi; French Club 2. 3; English Club, Secretary 3, 4; Pauline Hawley Music Club 3, 4; Pauline Hawley Trio 1, 2; Choir 2. 3. 4; Women s Glee Club, Student Director 4; Orchestra 2, 3; Y. W. C. A. 1. 3: The Stoker ; Pickles ; The Real Thing ; The Con¬ stant Wife. You to the left and I to the right For the wags of men must sever — And it well may be for a day and a night. And it well may be forever. But whether we meet or whether we part (For our ways are past our knowing ) A pledge from the heart to its fellow heart On the ways we all are goingl Here’s luck! For we know not where we are going. Richard Hovey. 1 37 ] It is so small a thing To have enjoyed the sun, To have lived light in the spring. To have loved, to have thought, to have done; To have advanced true friends, and beat down baffling foes . . . —MATTHEW ARNOLD. [ 38 ] JUNIORS JUNIORS Bain. Howard Kansas City, Kansas Orion Chemistry Bernhardt, Franz Richmond. Missouri Parchevard History Blackman, Hazel Oswego, Illinois Aurora English Becker. Clarissa Lewistown. Illinois Aurora Biology Bowman, Robert Johnstown, Pennsylvania Parchevard History Boyle. Kathleen Dodge City, Kansas Calliopean Social Sciences Boyles, Ben Dresden, Missouri Lowell Mathematics Boyles, Bob Dresden. Missouri Lowell Physics Brightwell, Evelyn Kansas City, Missouri Lucerne Biology Brownell. Charles Kansas City, Kansas Lowell Mathematics Bundren, Ella Kansas City, Missouri Lucerne Mathematics Burgess, Carrie Belle Quezaltenango, Guatemala, C. Am. Calliopean Biology Carson. Janet Omaha, Nebraska L ucerne Home Economics Chapman. Katherine Damaguete, P. I. Lucerne Biology Clark. Henrietta Holden. Missouri Calliopean Mathematics ♦ Collisson. Charles Keokuk, Iowa Parchevard Sociology [ 40 ] Crews. Evelyn Amarillo, Texas Lucerne History Fields, Frances Kansas City, Missouri Lucerne Bible Dallinger. Carl Council Bluffs. Iowa Lowell Speech Fitch. Keith Delphos, Kansas Parchevard Chemistry Davis. Della Mae Kansas City, Kansas M usic Fleming, Ruth Parkville, Missouri Aurora Home Economics Eckman, Marjorie Hammond, Indiana Calliopean Home Economics Gladson, Alice Pinckneyville, Illinois Calliopean Psychology Eringa, Alys Orange City, Iowa Calliopean Grayson, Anne Parkville, Missouri Aurora History Eskridge. Louisa Florence, Colorado Lucerne Biology Hall. Genevieve Solomon. Kansas Lucerne Home Economics Eubank. Ruth Kansas City, Missouri Aurora Biology Hancock. Edwin San Juan. Texas Lowell Bible Evans. Nell Beloit. Kansas Lucerne English Harris. August Kamiah. Idaho Lowell Bible Field. Harley Parkville. Missouri Lowell Physics ♦ Heartwell. Dorothy Hastings. Nebraska Calliopean Bible [ 41 ] JUNIORS ■■ Hermansky, Marjorie Omaha, Nebraska Aurora English Hitchcock. Rinard Washington. Indiana Lowell Psychology Humphreys. Philip Galt. Missouri Lowell Mathematics Johnson, Vallie Miller, Kansas L ucerne English Keys, Margaret Ruth Platte City, Missouri Lucerne History Kimpton, Sarah Florence, Colorado Lucerne English Kinch, Maxine Worthington, Minnesota Aurora Elistory LOE, MAUR1NE St. Joseph, Missouri Lucerne English Lorimer, Margaret Olathe, Kansas Calliopean English MacDonald, Gladys Indianapolis, Indiana Lucerne Home Economics Mace, Hazel Neosho, Missouri Aurora Biology Mason, Mary Amity, Missouri Lucerne History Miller. Berniece Parkville, Missouri Lucerne Biology Mix, Mary Elizabeth Troy, Kansas Aurora English Montgomery, Bruce Milan. Missouri Orion Physics Moore, Forrest Kansas City, Missouri Spanish [ 42 ] Mutz. Dorothy Omaha, Nebraska Aurora Sociology Rogers, Gilbert Kansas City, Kansas Lowell Romance Languages Nelson, Ruth Racine, Wisconsin Calliopean History Roller, Helen Irving ton, New Jersey Lucerne Psychology Nielsen, Freda Parkville, Missouri Calliopean Sociology Ross, LaVerne Tarentum, Pennsylvania Parchevard History Patton. Charles McFall. Missouri Orion Mathematics Sanders, Eleanor Parkville, Missouri Lucerne English Pennington, Lois Wichita, Kansas Calliopean Home Economics Schadt, Rodney Jewell, Kansas Parchevard Psychology Perry, Thomas Raton. New Mexico Lowell English Scotten, Virginia Kansas City, Missouri Lucerne Pool, Eugene Wynne Wood, Oklahoma Orion Biology Shafer, Floyd Kansas City, Missouri Lowell Chemistry Rader, Doris Kansas City, Missouri Lucerne Psychology Skinner, Phene Camden Point. Missouri Orion Physics Richardson, Catherine Elgin, Minnesota Calliopean Mathematics Snow, Mary Louise Cheyenne. Wyoming Calliopean Bible l 43 ] JUNIORS Mi Stahlman, Marian Potwin. Kansas Aurora Strohm. William Carlisle. Pennsylvania Lowell History Tlrrell, Marion Parkville. Missouri Aurora Mathematics Tucker. Dean Kansas City. Missouri Spanish Waggoner. Robert Juneau. Alaska Parchevard Chemistry Wall. David St. Joseph. Missouri Lowell Pre-Medic Wallace. Elizabeth Stafford, Kansas Lucerne Social Sciences Warden. Philip Trenton, Missouri Lowell English Wells. Thomas Parkville. Missouri Lowell M athematics Wene, George Austinburgh. Ohio Orion Chemistry Weathers, Christine Rich Hill. Missouri Calliopean Social Sciences Wright. Elizabeth Santee, Nebraska Lucerne Biology Wright. Margaret Santee. Nebraska Lucerne Sociology Wyant, Wilma Glen wood, Iowa Lucerne Young. Arthur Kansas City, Missouri Lowell Sociology Young. Aubrey Ft. Collins. Colorado Lowell English SOPHOMORES SOPHOMORES ■■■■■ Aden. Richard Lowell Campbell. Winona Lucerne Edmonds, Leonard Lowell Sutherland, Nebraska Ames, Kansas Oskaloosa, Kansas Bonner, Miriam Calliopean Clark, Eunice Lucerne Spearville, Kansas Loveland, Colorado Entrikin. Raeburn Aurora Kingston, Missouri Bromley, Alice Calliopean Coffey, Margaret Calliopean Felts. Gordon Orion Elaines, Alaska Ulysses. Kansas Odessa, Missouri Burgess, Eugenia Albion. Nebraska Calliopean Crawford. Margaret Chillicothe, Missouri Aurora FIELD. WAVA Parkville, Missouri Lucerne Burry, Elizabeth Calliopean Csatlos, Paul Parchevard Fleming, Lulu Aurora Ludlow, Missouri Parkville. Missouri Parkville, Missouri Busch, Theodore Lowell Dawson, Ruth Lucerne Fulton, Joe Parchevard Parkville, Missouri Rolfe, Iowa Topeka, Kansas Cain, Helen Aurora Dodds, William Lowell Goerner, Ruth Lucerne Oregon. Mis souri Newton. Iowa Aurora, Illinois Carlyle, Collins Orion Downey, Kenneth Lowell Gordon, Viola Lucerne Chula, Missouri Douglass, Kansas Kansas City, Missouri [ 46 ] HADSELL. MELVIN Schenectady, New York Lowell Kiefer, Lois Aurora Kingston. Illinois MEREDITH. James Poplar Bluff, Missouri Lowell Hart, Francis Lowell Leech. Amos Lowell Skidmore, Missouri Oskaloosa, Kansas Middleton. Ernestine Lucerne Adrian, Missouri Havener. Mary Elizabeth Odessa, Missouri Aurora LEWIS, Leonard Webster Groves, Missouri Lowell Nelson, Clara Calliopean Council Bluffs. Iowa Hebb, Frances Aurora Lohff, Carlton Lowell Noland, Denzel Roswell. New Mexico Pontiac, Michigan Parkville, Missouri Hensley. John Parchevard Marstellar, Evadne Lucerne Olsen, Ralph Orion Kansas City, Kansas Sterling, Colorado Plattsmouth, Nebraska Johnson. Dean Aurora Mendenhall. Kirk Peery, Laura Calliopean Kankakee, Illinois Merriam, Kansas Parkville, Missouri JOHNSON, FRANKLYN Kansas City, Missouri MENOHER, MARY Ligonier. Pennsylvania Aurora PARKHURST, Gordon Houstonia. Missouri Lowell JONES, ELMA Lucerne Merchant. Phoebe Lucerne Petit. Helen Lucerne Florence, Colorado Brigham, Utah Chanute. Kansas Kerline, Jerry Lowell Merchant, John Lowell Pettit, Mareen Lucerne Albany, Missouri Brigham. Utah Carson. Iowa [ 47 ] SOPHOMORES Pettit, Virginia Calliopean Schooler, Wilbur Orion Swift, Altheda Lucerne Kansas City, Missouri Fairfax, Missouri Kansas City, Missouri Price. Maxine Aurora Seifert, Gary Lowell Tarr, Levi Orion Corder, Missouri Poplar Bluffs, Missouri Paola, Kansas Prout, Margaret Lucerne Sims, William Lowell Teter. Catherine Calliopean Ironwood, Michigan Poplar Bluff, Missouri Pacific, Missouri Rasmussen. David Orion Smith. Fern Lucerne Tims, Fred Parchevard Byers, Colorado Lakin. Kansas Harrison. Arkansas Richards, Hila Calliopean Smith, Marie Aurora Platteville, Wisconsin Voss, Florence A urora Wyconda, Missouri Kankakee, Illinois Richards, Jessie Aurora Smith, Philip Lowell Osceola, Iowa Fullerton. California WESTLAKE, Robert Kansas City, Missouri Lowell Schaffnit, John Lowell Snyder. Marjorie Aurora Omaha, Nebraska Canadian, Texas WlLCOXON. MARVINE Lucerne Odessa, Missouri Schneider, Carl Lowell Denver, Colorado SUMMERS, Martha Kansas City, Missouri Calliopean YOUEL, SARAH Lee Fairfax, Missouri Aurora 1 -18 ] FRESHMEN FRESHMEN ADAMS, ELIZABETH Kingston, Missouri Aurora BLAKE, Paul Ft. Collins, Colorado Lowell CLYMER, HARRY Durant, Oklahoma Lowell Adams, Leigh Aurora Bowles, Hazel Lucerne Coffin. Sarah Aurora St. Louis, Missouri Junction City, Kansas Liverpool, New York ATKINSON, Georgia RAE Kansas City, Missouri Aurora BOYD, KENNETH Independence, Missouri Lowell Colville, Mildred Parkville, Missouri Calliopean BARNES, John Parkville, Missouri Parchevard BROWN, Victor Danville, Illinois Lowell CRAMER, John Bogard, Missouri Orion BATEMAN, Louise Loveland, Colorado Calliopean BRYANT, Lucille Kansas City, Missouri Calliopean CRISMAN, GOLDA BELLE Darlington, Missouri Lucerne BAXTER, THOMAS Pinckneyville, Illinois Parchevard BUCK. Neal Bethany, Missouri Orion CROSBY, Roberta Sutherland, Missouri Lucerne Beery. James Lucerne Cameron, Robert Orion Davis, Edwin Orion Kansas City, Missouri Henryetta, Oklahoma Grant, Nebraska Blacklock, Mary Lucerne Closson, Esther Lucerne Desens, Hattie Aurora King City, Missouri Ashland, Kansas Kankakee, Illinois 1 50 ] Bois D’Arc, Missouri Dyer, Loreeta Calliopean Fuqua, Philip Orion Higgins. Malcolm Calliopean Seward, Nebraska Sylvan Grove. Nebraska ELLIOTT, George San Luis Obispo. California Lowell GlFFEE, ROLAND Platte City, Missouri Parchevard HITCHCOCK, Arlene Washington, Indiana Lucerne ERWIN, William Marceline, Missouri Lowell GlLLENWATER, Thurston Kansas City, Mo. Orion HARNER, OPAL Spring Valley, Ohio Lucerne FARMER, Margaret Kansas City , Missouri Aurora Gilchrist, Edward Parkville, Missouri Parchevard HOPKINS, Thomas Nanty Glo. Pennsylvania Parchevard FAUROT, ALBERT Smith Center, Kansas Lowell GOOD, William Eureka, Kansas Parchevard HORTENSTINE, Henry Brookfield, Missouri Lowell Fellers, Maida Lucerne Green, Lawrence Parchevard HOW, G. A. Mullinsville, Missouri Jewell, Kansas Weston, Missouri FERGUSON, Clarence Raymondville, Missouri Parchevard GRESHAM, Dorothy Parkville, Missouri Lucerne Humphreys, Charles Lebanon, Missouri Lowell FRAME, JOAN Bois D’Arc, Missouri Calliopean GRIFFIN, Viola May Chillicothe, Missouri Aurora IRWIN, Helen Frankfort, Kansas Lucerne Fulton, Beth Lucerne Griset, Evelyn Calliopean Jenkins, Alfred Orion Topeka, Kansas Santa Ana, California Carthage, Missouri 1 51 ] Jennings, Kenneth Bois D’Arc, Missouri Parchevard Ladwig, BLANDENA Manilla, Iowa Aurora McCOY, Jane Clarence, Missouri Lucerne Jennings, Marie Willard, Missouri Calliopean LARRISON, KATHLEEN Grand Island, Nebraska Lucerne MACLEAN, FLORA Rock Springs, Wyoming Lucerne Johnson, Edward Eldora, Iowa Lowell LAUDERDALE, Frank Wellington, Missouri Orion MALAN, FLORENCE Pinckneyville, Illinois Calliopean JOHNSON, William Patterson, New York Lowell LEBO, HOWARD Kansas City, Missouri Orion MALAN. HUGH Pinckneyville, Missouri Parchevard KEESHAN, MABELLE St. Edward. Nebraska Calliopean LlNDEMAN, RAYMOND Clements, Minnesota Lowell MASSINGILL, Alberta Ulrich, Missouri Calliopean KEITHLEY, GENELLE St. Peters, Missouri Lucerne LONG, Doris Farber, Missouri Aurora MATHES, THELMA Leoti, Kansas Aurora KlNDEL, ERSAL Marshfield, Missouri Lowell LONG, Bill Overbrook, Kansas Lowell Mendenhall, Charles Ashland, Kansas KNAPP, Robert Bradford, Pennsylvania Orion LUNN, JAMES Northmoor, Missouri Mendenhall, Louise Wellington, Kansas Lucerne [ 52 ] Miller, Velma Parkville, Missouri Lucerne Patterson, Dorothy Aurora Sagerser, Ruth Lucerne Morehead, Elizabeth Lucerne Perry, Fontella Lucerne Schiller, Ruth Aurora MUNSON, Byron King City, Missouri Parchevard POOL, Mildred Wynne Wood, Oklahoma Aurora SCHRADER, Helen Blue Springs, Missouri Calliopean MYERS, Ruth Redwood Falls, Minnesota Lucerne PRICE, George Triplett, Missouri Orion SHAFFER, Gladys Braymcr, Missouri Calliopean NELSON, Janet Gresham, Nebraska Lucerne REDHEFFER, Jack Kansas City, Missouri Lowell Simpson, William Newburgh, New York Orion Louisburg, Kansas Kansas City, Missouri Milan, Missouri Ashland, Kansas Kirwin, Kansas Nystrom, Louis Lowell Reed, Roberta Lucerne Smith, Henry Orion Topeka, Kansas Elkhart, Kansas Wallingford, Pennsylvania OLSEN, Josephine Tccumseh, Nebraska Lucerne ROBINSON, Robert Tonganoxie, Kansas Orion Smith, Leonora Gove, Kansas Aurora Oltrogge, Robert Orion Robinson. Millicent Aurora Sneed, Mildred Aurora Westside, Iowa Tonganoxie, Kansas Chillicothe, Missouri ORR, MAXINE Junction City, Kansas Lucerne ROE, CHARLES Pinckneyville, Illinois Parchevard Squires, FRANKLYN Hampton Bays, N. Y. Orion t 53 } FRESHMEN Stith, Sarah Aurora Kankakee, Illinois WANNER, CHARLES Webster Groves, Missouri Lowell WINTER, Milton West Side, Iowa Orion Arapaho, Oklahoma Kansas City, Kansas Wolfe. Twila JO Roswell, New Mexico Strong, Ruth Lucerne Wetmore, Alvin Orion .ucerne Strong. R. B. Lowell Arapaho, Oklahoma WHEELING, HERSCHEL Florence, S. Carolina Orion Wright, Matilda Anna, Illinois Calliopean Thompson, Elizabeth Oklahoma City, Okla. Lucerne Whipple, Ward Lowell Young. Jean Lucerne Parkville, Missouri Falls City, Nebraska Todd. Edwin Orion Kansas City, Missouri Whitlock, Catherine Oklahoma City, Okla. Aurora YOUNG, Marjorie Galesville, Wisconsin Aurora VAN Metre, RHODA Rockwell City, Iowa Aurora Wilkins, Anne Aurora Minneapolis, Minnesota Zimmerman, Zona Calliopean Galesville, Wisconsin WALKER. William Fannettsburg, Pennsylvania Lowell Wiltse, Evelyn Lucerne Fleming, Elton Parchevard Falls City, Nebraska Parkville, Missouri l 54 1 MUSIC AND DRAMA PARK NOTES Cross-currents of campus entertainment revealed many contrasts this year, ranging from the ridiculous capers of Tony Sarg’s marionettes to the sublime singing of the Russian Chorus; from student discussion of technocracy and the presidential campaign to the lectures of Professor Charles Booth from London, England. Appropriately the longest sensational serial ever written, the Oxford Dictionary, appeared on the library shelves early in the school year. It is a culmination of forty-five years’ work by eminent specialists of all fields. . . . Then for a few weeks we turned to politics, airing our views on repeal, a new deal, Government control, and engineering with Hoover. . . . One Sunday in November art-lovers flocked to the first art exhibit of its kind on the campus. We all appreciated the Italian paintings, chatted and sipped tea in our best diletanttish manner. The exhibit was arranged by Dr. Charles L. Griffith, new head of fine arts department. . . . The serious and the comic were thrown in high relief in the first student enterprise program of the year in a lecture by a Park alumnus. Mr. Kingsley Given delighted us because he told us about ourselves and our faculty, and because he could keep us breathless in a classic which had all the elements of a modern detective story. Vivid costuming and brilliant singing and dancing made Mme. Slaviansky and the Russian Chorus a long to be remembered musical program in December. Later in that month we heard two student enterprise numbers, both by skilled vocalists. Versatile John Toms and vivacious Stella Wrenn charmed their audiences with their well-trained voices and skilled interpretations of well- chosen songs. . . . After the holidays Mr. Rollo H. Brown asked us why In¬ telligent people read novels,” a lecture dealing with the foibles of the present day reading public. . . . Tony Sarg’s marionettes in Further adventures of Sinbad the Sailor, held us spellbound. [ 58 ] MEN ' S GLEE CLUB A men ' s glee club has been organized at Park for over fifty years and is one of the oldest musical organizations on the campus. The glee club gives con¬ certs during the year both at the chapel and at the conservatory. The programs are varied, offering a wide selection of songs both old and new. The men’s glee club appears once a year on a nation-wide radio hook-up sponsored by the Alumni Association of Park College. This year the glee club is under the direction of Dr. Charles S. Griffith, who also accompanies the group, with Arthur Young as student director and manager. PERSONNEL Dr. Charles S. Griffith, Director and Accompanist Arthur Young, Student Director and Manager First Tenors Carl Dallinger Albert Faurot Dick Paris William Small Gilbert Rogers Second Tenors Richard Aden Gordon Felts Edward Gillespie Charles Roe Harry Turner Baritones Collins Carlyle Lawrence Green Robert Lutz Robert Waggoner David Wall Arthur Young Henry Young Basses Paul Barton Victor Brown Donald Cowgill Paul Hostetter Raymond Lindeman Rodney Schadt Lindeman, Felts, Barton, Hostetter, Carlyle Small, Brown. Wall, Lutz, Roe. Turner, Griffith Faurot. Green, Rogers, A. Young, Waggoner, Cowgill l r 9 CHOIR Succeeding Professor Roy V. Magers as director of the college choir is Dr. Charles L. Griffith, former head of the music department of Penn College. Under Dr. Griffith’s skilled leadership, the choir plays an important part in church services, lending much to their spiritual atmosphere. The Christmas service was made unusually colorful and impressive this year by the presentation of Handel ' s “Messiah” with solos sung by members of the student body. It is hoped to establish the singing of this great oratorio as an annual musical tradition. “From Olivet to Calvary,” a cantata, was given by the choir Palm Sunday. PERSONNEL Dr. Charles L. Griffith, Director and Organist Sopranos —Pauline Burgess. Eunice Clark. Esther Fintcll. Arlene Hitchcock, Margaret Kilmer. Christine Knight, Madeline McGee- han. Mary Ruth Morrow, Helen Newlin, Janet Nelson. Margaret Peterson, Mary Louise Snow, Marion Terrell, Louise Mitchell, Bernice Edwards, E ugenia Burgess. Louise Mendenhall, Ruth Eubank. Marie Jennings, Lenorc Smith, Mary Frances Polk, Mildred Pool. “f 1 . Tenors —Richard Aden. Albert Faurot, William Good. Eugene Pool, Gilbert Rogers, William Small, Harry Turner, John DeLisa. Carl Dallinger, Charles Roe, Edwin Todd, Thurston Gillenwater, Ersal Kindel, Wendell Newell, Leonard Edmonds. Altos —Maxine Baker, Viola Gordan, Dean Johnson. Ernestine Lessley, Gladys MacDonald, Rhoda Magers, Sally Medill, Rhoda Van Metre, Merrillie McAfee, Wava Field, Mary Mason, Carrie Belle Burgess, Clara Nelson, Marjorie Young, Katherine Richardson, Margaret Greenwood, Alice Sun- barger. Basses —Walter Bibler, Don Cowgill, Gordon Felts, Paul Hostetter, David Wall, Arthur Young, Raymond Lindeman, Hugh Malan, David Rasmussen. William Long, Orland McKinley, Levi Tarr, Justus Baird, Kenneth Jennings, Edward Johnson, Ralph Bonacker, Keith Fitch. Pool, Hostetter, McKinley, Felts, Aden, Long, Rasmussen, Good, Small Wall, Bibler. Rogers. Lindeman. Baker, Sunbarger, McGeehan. Schmidt, Verbrugge, Medill, Mitchell Turner, Dallinger, Young, Field, Van Metre, Gordon, Johnson, Knight, Morrow, Peterson, Cowgill. Eubank. Newlin, Mason, Tarr, Malan Roe, Faurot, Terrell, Edwards, Snow, Magers, Burgess, Richardson, Kilmer, MacDonald, Clark, Hitchcock, Nelson, Griffith, Bouquet 1 CO ] LITTLE SYMPHONY Continuing its valuable existence as a part of the musical background and training of Park College students musically inclined is the Little Symphony. Dr. Claude O. Rader is the director with Jean Faurot, student director, assisting. This musical organization plays at many campus activities and gives an annual concert in the spring. It also furnishes talent for ensembles and in¬ dividual appearances at the Commons, entertainments and recitals. Dr. Claude O. Rader Director PERSONNEL Jean Faurot Jack Rodeman Student Director Manager First Violins Elazel Bowles Arlene Hitchcock Doris Rader John Schaffnit Harold Swischer Jean Young Second Violins Richard Aden Paul Csatlos Opal Harner Eleanor Sanders Marie Smith Matilda Wright Clarinets Victor Brown Kenneth Downey William Plummer Oboe Robert Westlake Flutes Frances Fields Henry Hortenstine Cello Evelyn Wiltse Ftorns Robert Lutz Hila Richards Bass Hazel Blackman Cornets Ralph Bonacker Jean Faurot Levi Tarr Violas Maxine Baker Le Roy Strieby Drums and Tympani Jack Rodeman Piano Albert Faurot Lutz, Rodeman, Richards, Blackman. Munson, Tarr, Faurot, Faurot, Rader Schaffnit, Hitchcock, Aden, Csatlos. Smith, Sanders Swischer, Rader, Rader, Hortenstine, Westlake, Downey. Brown, Plummer, Strieby. Baker. Wright [ 61 ] PARK-LAWRENCE BAND Ample proof that the influence of the robot of mechanical music has not penetrated campus musical life is the interest maintained in the musical organi¬ zations of the campus. The Park-Lawrence Band, directed by Dr. Claude O. Rader, assisted by Jean Faurot, student director, is an example of this. An innovation this year was the modern symphonic seating arrangement, taking the place of the old military arrangement. The band assisted at many plays and entertainments this year besides giving an annual concert and a broadcast over station KMBC during the season. PFRSONNEL Dr. Claude O. Rader Director Jean Faurot Student Director Clarinets Justus Baird Victor Brown Paul Csatlos Kenneth Downey Keith Fitch Viola Mae Griffin John Hamilton Edward Johnson Roberta Reed Robert Robinson Rhoda Van Metre Alvin J. Wetmorc Cornels Ralph Bonacker Elma Jones Ersal Kindel Amos Leech Robert Lutz Charles R oe Levi Tarr Flutes Frances Fields Henry Hortenstine Baritones Walber Bibler Lawrence Green T rombones Byron Munson Orville Kroger Saxophones William Plummer Alice Schmidt Basses Edward Gillespie Le Roy Strieby Philip Warden Jack Rodf.man Manager Horns Eugene Settle Hila Richards Hugh Malan Oboe Robert Westlake Drums and Tympam Jack Rodeman Merritt Peterson Plummer, Faurot, Rodeman, Gillespie, Strieby, Munson. Bibler, Tarr, Jones Brown, Wetmore, Van Metre, Kindel, Csatlos, Small Baird, Downey, Johnson, Richards, Hortenstine, Malan, Westlake, Roe, Lutz, Griffin, Fitch ( 62 ] WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB Pleasing lyrical voices, skilled interpretation of songs, and the lovely formal gowns of the singers make the annual Women s Glee Club concert an anticipated musical event of the season. Mrs. Alberta Brewster, teacher of voice, directs the club, assisted by Ruth Yoakum, student director and accompanist. The glee club has participated in chapel and church programs, and members of the club have supplied musical talent for recitals both as accompanists and soloists. PERSONNEL Mrs. Alberta Brewster Director Ruth Yoakum Student Director First Sopranos Bernice Edwards Opal Goodman Arlene Hitchcock Janet Nelson Margaret Peterson Mary Frances Polk Marion Terrell Florence Voss Second Sopranos Mildred Colville Roberta Crosby Winona Campbell Margaret Kilmer Evadne Marstellar Mary E. Mason Loucile Mayhew Ruth Nelson Helen Newlin Esther Shaw Altos Maxine Baker Sally Medill Louise Mitchell Vivian Ramsay Catherine Richardson Beth Wallace Twila Jo Wolfe Campbell, Hitchcock, Medill, Peterson, Mason. Mitchell Baker, Crosby, Nelson, Newlin. Richardson. Goodman, Ramsay, Nelson Yoakum, Wolfe, Shaw, Marstellar, Kilmer. Mayhew. Edwards, Terrell 1 C3 ] SLAG By Don Feerer A slag pile, burning sullenly in the distance, a symbol of the unquench¬ able memorial to the inertia of social conscience, was the realistic background of the annual Theta Alpha Phi production. Slag was the work of Don Feerer. a graduate of Park in 1931. Miss Sullivan directed the play. Social and psychological in its treatment, the play concerns the practical idealism of a newspaper editor, played by Paul Hostetter, and the desire of his wife, Sarah Kimpton. for beauty, luxury and social success. Although the play does not attempt to solve any specific social or economic ills, it is a chal¬ lenge to the intelligent, who may easily find their own lives depicted and who are provoked to serious thought by its problems. Other roles were taken by Donald Cowgill, Thomas Perry, Mary Bess Mark- ward. Mary Frances Polk, Clara Newcomb, Edwin Todd, Fred Tims and Robert Lutz. Ralph Bonacker was business manager and Eugene Pool was stage manager. Cowgill. Newcomb. Lutz. Hostetter, Kimpton. Perry, Polk [ 04 ] PARODIES ON RHAPSODIES A MUSICAL COMEDY It sparkled, it sobbed, it scintillated; in short, the Sophomore musical comedy, “Parodies on Rhapsodies, was an interesting not to say refreshing departure from the usual type of program given on the college stage. Solos, choruses, interpretive dances, dialogue and piano ensemble were fea¬ tures of the entertainment. Direction was by Dick Trent Paris, scenery by Margaret Prout, dancing by Edna Burger, a trio of piano numbers by Merrilee McAfee, Wava Field and Ruth Goerner, violin solo by John Schaffnit and solos and choruses made up of Jo Barni. Evadne Marstellar, Levi Tarr, Betty Godard, David Rasmussen, Vi Gordon, Philip Smith, Edward Gillespie, Eunice Clark, Joe Fulton and Fern Smith. William Sims was business manager. Some random highlights . . . dusky negro figures crooning plantation melo¬ dies against a glowing rose-colored curtain . . . misses mcafee, goerner, field at the grand pianos, sharply silhouetted against the smart backdrop . . . the swirling, sinuous figure of miss burger . . . the silver strains of mr. schaffnit’s violin . . . the pleading tenor of mr. paris’s Body and Soul. Unusual lighting effects, a clever well developed theme, and ultra-modern stage settings combined to make the musical comedy a successful production. Field, Barni, Marstellar. Tarr, Paris. Fulton. McAfee, Smith. Godard, Rasmussen, Gordon, Smith, Gillespie, Clark, Goerner I Go ] “Out of the earth, and out of the tree Strength comes flowing into me. Out of the brook comes quietude Down from the sky comes Wisdom s food.” —M. C. Davies. I 66 | FORENSICS MEN AND WOMEN ' S DEBATE A trend in the field of forensics toward non-decision debates and the ad¬ vent of a new type of cross-questioning debate characterized this year’s debate season at Park. The main topic for discussion was the Pi Kappa Delta question, Resolved, that the United States should agree to the cancellation of inter-allied war debts. At the regional Pi Kappa Delta convention at Des Moines, the men’s debate team won second place. Harry Porter and Carl Dallinger represented Park in this contest. Men ' s Team Harry Turner Harry Porter Aubrey Young Charles Brownell Carl Dallinger Ralph Bonacker Women ' s Team Pearl Baker Helen Schrader Wilma Wyant Jo Ver Brugge Among the schools debated were the following: University of Kansas William Jewell Rockhurst St. Benedict ' s College St. Teresa’s College Wentworth Military Academy St. Mary’s College Marysville State Teachers College Principia Central College Kansas City, Kans., Junior College Tarkio College Independence, Kans., Junior College Dallinger, Turner, Baker, Young, Porter, Brownell L G8 ] ORATORY World friendship set up against war and ignorance has been a popular theme upon which Park orators have elaborated to add to the forensics laurels this year. Ralph Bonacker, whose oration was titled “A Mandate to the College Bred,” won first place in the Old Line contest in the state. He entered the divisional contests at Evanston, Illinois, representing the state of Missouri and was among the three to place in that contest. He then entered the national contest and won second place. In his oration, Bonacker challenged college bred youth to rise up against the old social order and create a new and better one. Arthur Young set forth the evils of ' dressed up militarism” in his oration, The Pied Piper of America,” to win the annual Harry S. Jewett Peace Con¬ test. In the state contest he placed second, which allowed him to enter the national contest. At the Pi Kappa Delta convention at Des Moines, Iowa, Park won fur¬ ther victories. Arthur Young placed first in the oratorical contests and Beth Wallace first in the women’s extempore division. Dr. Forrest W. Beers is coach of oratory, both for preliminary and inter¬ collegiate contests. L 09 1 When flowers thrust their heads above the ground In showers pale as raindrops and as round Who would suspect that such before they ' re gone, Could hold the sun. ? ” —Alfred Kreymborg. [ 70 ] PUBLICATIONS PUBLICATIONS BOARD The publications board of Park College was organized for the purpose of relieving the difficulty in the selection of capable editors and business managers of the student publications, which hithertofore had been elected by the stu¬ dent body. The board of publications is made up of two faculty members appointed by the administration and of three student members elected by the student body. The students are generally those in the upper class division who have had some experience in dealing with publications. The editors and business managers of the annual and the college paper are appointed by the board which reserves the right to remove any officer dis¬ playing gross inefficiency. The board also keeps a close check on the activi¬ ties of the publications and audits the finances, preventing serious financial difficulties. MEMBERS OF THE BOARD Professor Ethel E. Lyon - Faculty Professor John Barnes ----- Faculty Don Mackenzie ------ Student Justus Baird ....... Student FRED Wakf.MAN - Student, Chairman of the Board l 2 ] Several new features have been added to the Park Stylus, the weekly news¬ paper of Park, this year. The editorial page has developed into an impor¬ tant outlet for literary talent. Linoleum block cuts have been one of the most attractive features of the paper. Two special editions were put out during the year, the Christmas edition and an April 1 edition, titled “Park’s Vilest.’’ STAFF Edwin Withington - Editor-in-Chief GEORGE Sweet - Business Manager Thomas Perry. Assistant Editor News Marjorie Hermansky Malcolm Higgins John Ludwick Sports Bill Long George Elliott Column Fred Wakeman Features Philip Smith Eugene Settle Denzel Noland Music Albert Faurot Forensics Aubrey Young Art Edwin Todd Dorothy Mutz Reporters Kenneth Downey Herschel Wheeling Joe Fulton Olive Bennett Charles Mendenhall Dick Trent Paris Paris, Ludwick, Wheeling, Higgins. Long Perry, Faurot, Mutz, Noland, Downey I 73 ] THE 1933 FRIENDLY NARVA Dorothy Studdard Editrix William Cameron Business Manager Friendliness is an intangible spirit that dwells best in simplicity. We offer this Friendly” Narva of 1 933 in simple, almost plain style as a record of your friends at work and play upon the campus. A review of most of the triumphs and some of the tragedies is given in this memory book to be pre¬ served for all the times. This year the editrix and business manager were appointed by the board of publications. There was no faculty supervision or censorship of the book, the entire responsibility for the annual falling upon the editrix and her hard working and loyal assistants. To them she wishes to express her sincere thanks for their willing cooperation throughout the year. Don Mackenzie of the board of publications acted as advisor for the edi¬ torial staff of the Narva. He was ready at all times to assist and loyally helped us out of the snarls and difficulties that were bound to occur. To Mr. Mervin Cooksey, Furn Brockman and Paul Horstman of the Teachenor-Bartberger Engraving Company, we wish to also extend our thanks for their splendid cooperation and patience in working with us. [ 74 ] THE 1933 FRIENDLY NARVA The annual of any school is as good as the staff endeavor to make it. In order to insure the success of the 1 933 Narva, competitive try-outs were held in the fall and from the applicants the staff for the year was chosen. There have been many who, though they did not do any of the actual writ¬ ing or editing of the book, by their encouragement and interest spurred us on to our best efforts. To all these friends of the “Friendly” Narva we offer our thanks. Dorothy Studdard - Editor-in-Chief WILLIAM Cameron - Business Manager EDITORIAL STAFF Philip Smith Elizabeth Hanssen Maybelle Keeshan - Dorothy Mutz William Sims Hershel Wheeling Anna Belle Chambers Marie Scheer Eugene Pool Edwin Todd - Joe McKibben - Assistant Editor - Administration Classes - Activities Organizations - Men ' s Athletics Women ' s Athletics Snapshots Snapshots Art - Photography BUSINESS STAFF Ruby Hoth Clara Newcomb Helen Roller Twila Jo Wolfe Carl Schneider Bernice Edwards Louise Mendenhall. - Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager Bookkeeper - Stenographer Salesman Salesman Salesman Wolfe, McKibben, Wheeling, Scheer Keeshan, Hanssen, Roller, Mutz I 75 ] “A thing of beauty is a joy forever; Its loveliness increases: it will never Pass into nothingness —John Keats [ 76 ] ELIZABETH KIESER PARK ' S POPULARITY QUEEN [ 78 ] WOODSON SEUELL PARK’S POPULARITY KING [ 79 ] HELENE HALSTED LUCERNE QUEEN [ 80 1 GRACE WITT AURORA QUEEN [ 81 ] MARIE JENNINGS CALLIOPEAN QUEEN [ 82 ] i First Row Helen Irwin Marjorie Eckman Maxine Kinch Dear Miss Studdard: Enclosed are the photo¬ graphs you sent me. May I say in trying to grade com¬ parative pulchritudes. I am left with a feeling of inade¬ quacy. From bitter personal ex¬ perience I know how much a camera can miss (see cut) ! So much of the personality and charm that makes beauty Second Row Beatrice Beranek Mildred Melcher Zona Zimmerman is not portrayed in a repro¬ duction of features, as you doubtless know, that I take refuge in this fact should my selections not meet with unanimous approval. (They never really do.) Practically overwhelmed with the honor, I am Yours sincerely, Charles R. Overman “The moon ' s a devil jester Who makes himself too free. The rascal is not always Where he appears to be. —VACHEL LINDSAY. I 84 J CAMPUS LIFE Park at play . . . the freshmen are put on the spot . . . attending the King and Queen of May . . . call me early, mother dear . . . as interpreted by Edna Burger . . . the crown¬ ing . . . three artists at ease. ' V ' Our brave fire fighters . . . the genial laun¬ dry drivers . . . General Force in action . . . headwaitresses, if you please . . . the kitchen force demonstrate their dentist bill . . . Franz enjoys his work. Notables around the campus . . . Professor Charles Booth of the Royal Institute of Inter¬ national Affairs of London . . . Waverly Hos¬ pital . . . Boyles at play . . . Mr. Setty in dis¬ guise . . . Spencer, our philosopher . . . Jean wields the club. Some more of them . . . Happy, Estelle f . . . cross-country gets ' em . . . Arkansas in review . . . How about letting us in on it. Tomf . . . Boyles and Leaches . . . Looking up at Chesnut. Around the campus . . . Tyler chapel in the moonlight . . . Observatory . . . Herr House . . Park House . . . the Meetin ' House near¬ ing completion . . . looking south toward Mackay. The moon shines bright . . . Copley Thaw through the trees . . I a cozy corner at Herr House . . . the Meet in ' House in the snow . . . down the old board walk to Stevens. Sweethearts on parade . . . old stuff, but still good . . . Baird and McAfee . . . Don must be alibiing . . . Eleanor and George . . . Peterson and Waggoner ... in the distance . . . Ruth and Bob believe in the old adage . . . come closer to the camera. Evadne and Carl. “Slowly, silently, now the moon Walks the night in her silver shoon; This way and that, she peers and sees Snow crystals glittering in branches of trees. —WALTER DE LA MARE. I DM Organizations SCHOLASTIC AND HONORARY ALPHA DELTA The Alpha Delta, the local honor scholarship society at Park College, was founded in 1927. The charter members were members of the faculty who were especially interested in stimulating interest in securing a charter from the national honor scholarship society, Phi Beta Kappa Society. The present group is composed of members of the faculty who were charter members of this group and those who are members of the Phi Beta Kappa Society. In addition, members of each graduating class ranking highest in scholarship, in the first ten per cent, are invited to membership. Fifty students have been recognized by an invitation to membership from 1927 to 1932. Members now in Parkville are: Miss Alice Waldron President of Alpha Delta President F. W. Hawley Dean W. F. Sanders Mrs. F. W. Beers Miss Elsa Grueneberg Professor R. V. Magers Dr. Robert Rogers Miss Edith Eiker Miss Sarah Osborne STUDENTS Mary Eddy Mayme Farnsworth Jean Faurot Rhoda Magers Edna Oakley Christine Pollard Mary Jo Satorious Francis Throw Constance Vulliamy Ruth Yoakum Eddy Satorious Faurot Throw Magers Oakley Vulliamy Yoakum [ 98 ] HONORS COURSES Each year a select group of students who have done well above the average in their special field and are judged capable of doing honors work in their maj or subject are given an opportunity to do so. Honors courses are open to juniors and seniors. Honors students are not required to report for regular class work or exami¬ nations, but upon completion of their work under the head of their major department they are required to write a dissertation upon some problem and to take several hours of written examinations in addition to an oral com¬ prehensive given by a visiting professor. HONORS STUDENTS Department of English Literature Robert Mayne John Ludwick Eleanor Sanders Fred Wakeman Edwin Withington Ruth Yoakum Department of Physics Kay Harris Francis Throw Department of Psychology Gertrude Pehl Rodney Schadt Department of History Esther Shaw Department of Mathematics Edna Oakley Department of Sociology and Economics Dale Bartlett Duff Canaday Don Cowgill Den Mackenzie Canaday, Cowgill, Harris, Ludwick. Mackenzie. Mayne. Oakley, Pehl Sanders, Shaw, Schadt, Throw, Wakeman, Withington, Yoakum [ 99 1 THETA ALPHA PHI The outstanding achievement of the Missouri Beta chapter of T heta Alpha Phi, honorary dramatic fraternity, was the premiere production on Novem¬ ber 19, 1932, of the play, Slag,’’ written by a member, Mr. Don Feerer, who graduated from Park College in 1931. This social drama was produced under the direction of Miss Esther Sullivan. The stage director, Mr. Eugene Pool, has been ingenious in installing new stage facilities for the conservatory this year. The stage is now equipped with a new pin-rock, and with new strip and border lights which make possible adequate, flexible and artistic lighting. Theta Alpha Phi sponsored the senior play given at Commencement, “Belinda,” by A. A. Milne. At this time a beautiful new exterior set was initiated. OFFICERS Harry Turner Edwin Withington - George Sweet Betty James Harold Hill Paul Hostetter Betty James Ruth Jepson Ethel E. Lyon MEMBERS Clifford Leach Hazel Morrow Eugene Pool George Sweet Dean W. F. Sanders Mrs. W. F. Sanders President Vice-President Secretary T reasurer Esther Sullivan Harry Turner Miriam Wilson Edwin Withington Ruth Yoakum Hjll. Hostetter, James, Jepson. Lyon. Morrow. Pool Sweet. Sanders. Sullivan, Turner, Wilson, Withington, Yoakum [ 100 ] PI KAPPA DELTA Many students find a field of interest in oratory and debate, and to these people the work alone is fully remunerative in pleasure and increased ability. To those who attain excellence in these activities is given a higher honor than mere recognition of ability. This honor is membership in Pi Kappa Delta, a national honorary forensic fraternity. It is a mark of distinction to wear the Pi Kappa Delta key, gold for de¬ bate, silver for oratory, indicating both personal achievement and service to the college. The requirements of the fraternity are high: those admitted to membership must have represented their college creditably in a required num¬ ber of intercollegiate debates, or have distinguished themselves in oratory. Each year the local fraternity sends a representation to the Pi Kappa Delta convention, held this year at Des Moines, Iowa. This year Park sent a men ' s debate team composed of Carl Dallinger and Harry Porter, an extempore speaker, Elizabeth Wallace, and an orator, Arthur Young. The debate team won second place, while Miss Wallace and Mr. Young placed first. OFFICERS Elizabeth Kieser ----- President JOSEPHINE Ver Brugge - - Secretary-Treasurer Pearl Baker Charles Brownell Melvin Campbell Don Cowgill MEMBERS Mary Eddy Ruby Hoth Elizabeth Kieser Harry Porter Professor John Barnes Rev. Francis Bouquet Dean W. F. Sanders Harry Turner Josephine Ver Brugge Aubrey Young Arthur Young Cowgill, Turner, Brownell Young. Kieser, Baker, Porter [ 101 ] Dahlstrom, Blackman, Medill. Mitchell. Jenkins, Walker James, Ramsay, Sanders, Sullenberger, Peterson. Wilson BETA PI THETA National Honorary French Fraternity OFFICERS Evelyn Dahlstrom - - - President Eleanor Sanders - - - Secretary Vivian Ramsay - - - V iie-President Maxine Peterson - - Treasurer Professor Miriam Wilson MEMBERS Evelyn Dahlstrom Estelle Jenkins Vivian Ramsay Jessie Sullenberger Hazel Blackman Louise Mitchell Eleanor Sanders Clare Walker Betty James Professor Miriam Wilson ZETA KAPPA EPSILON OFFICERS - President CLARA FARIS V ice-President MEMBERS Oleva Morrison Rhoda Magers - Maxine Baker Betty Barksdale Prof. N. H. Baxter Florence Beiler Ralph Bonacker Rev. Francis Bouquet Melvin Campbell Clara Faris Elizabeth Hanssen Prof. R. V. Magers Rhoda Magers Oleva Morrison Secretary-T reasurer Esther Shaw Margaret Scherer William Strohm Bonacker. Strohm, Magers, Baxter, Campbell Morrison, Oien, Magers Faris. Shaw, Beiler, Baker, Scherer, Barksdale 1 102 ] Metz, Field, Montgomery, McKibben Radford. Harris, Porter. Throw, Humphreys Wells, Boyles, Seuell, Patton, Boyles, Rogers Ben Boyles Bob Boyles William Cameron Harley Field SIGMA PI SIGMA OFFICERS Woodson Seuell William Cameron MEMBERS Kay Harris Philip Humphreys Prof. M. C. Metz Bruce Montgomery - President Secretary-Treasurer I Joe McKibben Charles Patton Harry Porter Herschel Radford Prof. K. A. Rogers Woodson Seuell Prof. R. A. Wells Francis Throw Janet Carson Margaret Coffey Ruth Dawson Marjorie Eckman ALPHA THETA PI OFFICERS Gladys McCarroll Janet Carson - Marjorie Eckman Margaret Barrett MEMBERS Ada Freece Ruth Fleming Genevieve Hall Geneva Hewitt Christine Knight President - Vice-President Secretary -Treasurer Faculty Sponsor Evadne Marstellar Hazel Martin Gladys MacDonald Gladys McCarroll Ann Oakes Lois Pennington Alice Schmidt Fern Smith Marie Smith McCarroll. Freece, Martin, Coffey, Pennington, Dawson Hall, Eckman, Wright, Snyder, Hewitt, Fleming Carson, Smith, Marstellar, Oakes, Ward, MacDonald. Smith r 103 i Lentz. Oakley, Voss. Clark, Pollard, Swift, Strain. Leach, Thompson Boyles. Terrell. Melcher. Richardson. Pettit, Burry, Dyer, Wells MATTOON MATHEMATICS CLUB First Semester Arthur Dyer Edna Oakley - Ben Boyles - Clayton Leach Prof. OFFICERS President V ice-President Secretary- Treasurer - Publicity Chairman - R. A. Wells, Faculty S Second Semester Edna Oakley Clayton Leach Nelle Brink Henrietta Clark nsor EL CLUB CERVANTES OFFICERS First Semester Second Semester Thomas Perry - - - President - - - Gilbert Rogers Opal Goodman - - - Vice-President - - - Marie Scheer Pauline Burgess - - - Secretary - - - Margaret Kilmer Marie Scheer - - - Treasurer - Carrie Belle Burgess Mrs. Jeanette Robbins, Faculty Advisor Teter, Burgess, Rogers, Busch, Perry, Collisson, Bonner, Robbins Terrell, Scheer, Tarwater. Kilmer, Sullenberger, Griset, Mutz, Goodman [ 104 ] WAKEFIELD SCIENCE CLUB The Wakefield Science Club was first organized in 1926 to include only those studying natural sciences, that is, physics, chemistry and biology. How¬ ever, in 1930 the psychology and sociology students were invited to join. The object of the society is to promote an interest in science of a larger extent than that found in the regular curriculum and to create a desire for further study among the individual members. “Scie ntia Vincit” was adopted as the official club motto. An interesting emblem has been devised made up of a benzene ring within which are the letters “WSC” and the winged staff of the god Mercury entwined by the sacred snakes of Hygeia, the goddess of Health. All the natural sciences are repre¬ sented by this emblem; chemistry by the benzene ring, physics by the physical forces and power of the god Mercury, and biology by the emblem of Hygeia, the goddess of health and life. OFFICERS First Semester Second Semester Hazel Mace - President - Ruby Hoth Ruby Hoth - Vice-President - - - - Eugene Pool Louisa Eskridge - - Secretary-Treasurer - KATHERINE CHAPMAN Professor M. C. Findlay, Advisor Setty, Pool, Hostetter, Hoth, Dodds, Bibler, Williams, Johnson Wene, Eskridge, Wilson, Wright, Burgess, Cameron Findlay, Mace, Eubank. Gass, Mudd, Newlin, Rogers t 105 ] Should auld acquaintance be forgot. And never brought to mind? Should auld acquaintance be forgot. And auld lang syne? —ROBERT BURNS. L 100 ] RELIGIOUS YOUNG WOMEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION This year has been a notable one in the life of the Y. W. C. A. A program for freshmen girls was instituted in the fall. The girls were divided into groups and met once a week at the home of a faculty advisor under the leader¬ ship of two upperclass girls. They discussed problems of interest of the group. An old-fashioned meeting-house to be called the Y. W. Meetin’ House is being constructed on the terrace below the Commons to replace the Hut, which burned in November, 1931. An organ, two bells to ring from the tower, an old clock, a spinning wheel and several other antique articles are ready to be placed in the Meetin’ House as soon as it is completed. Other activities of the year: Spring May Fete, Waffle Supper on 1 hanks- giving evening, Japanese Bazaar, opening of the lower dining hall for recrea¬ tion on Saturday nights, program given in the colored church, clothing and gifts sent to the Helping Hand Institute and Mercy Hospital: and several musicales and speakers were provided for student body entertainment. ELECTIVE OFFICERS 1932-33 1933-34 Elizabeth Kieser - - President - - Elizabeth Wright Estelle Jenkins - - Vice-President - Dorothy Heartwell Dorothy Studdard - - Secretary - - Evadne Marstellar Clara Newcomb - - Treasurer - - Twila Jo Wolfe Ruth Nelson ----- Student Council Mrs. John Moore ------ Sponsor Committee chairmen for 1932-33 were as follows: Program, Elizabeth Wright: Social, Sarah Kimpton; Devotional, Ruth Goerner; Social Service, Eleanor Martin; Music, Betty Godard: Meetin’ House, Evelyn Brightwell; Book Exchange, Mildred Melcher and Christine Knight. Freshmen group leaders for 1932-33 were as follows: Betty James and Dorothy Heartwell; Helene Halsted and Janet Carson; Esther Shaw and Ruth Nelson; Peggy Hoth and Mildred Waid; Sally Medill and Carol Wilson. Halsted. Marstellar, Goerner. Johnson, Jenkins, Martin, Heininger, Medill, Kieser, Wallace Knight, Gordon. Carson. Wilson, Wright. Walker, Shaw, Crews, Nelson. Campbell Heartwell, Wilcoxon, Melcher, Waid, Moore, James, Wolfe, Wright, Sullenberger t 108 ] YOUNG MEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION The Y. M. C. A. has its own room in the lobby of Copley-Thaw where meetings are held twice a month. T he Y. M. C. A. endeavors to bring into its group all the men on the campus who are interested in Y. M. work. Discussion groups were held in conjunction with the Y. W. C. A. on such subjects as family relations, race relations, social problems and the meaning of religion. The groups were well attended and interest was high. Speakers were brought to the campus to talk on subjects that would interest students, such as present day political problems, race relations and economic problems. Athletic events for the season consisted of boxing matches and wrestling matches in the gymnasium. The Y. M. C. A. also sponsors a doubles tennis tournament each fall. OFFICERS 1932-33 Paul Barton - - - President Carl Schneider - - Vice-President Thomas Perry - - - Secretary Melvin Campbell - - - Treasurer - Professor Neil Baxter 1933-34 Arthur Young William Strohm Victor Brown - William Sims Sponsor Cameron, Brown, Barton, Mayne, Fitch, Strohm Dyer, Turner, Schneider, Perry, Young, Baxter [ 109 I Knapp, Edmonds. Brown, Fields. Lutz. Goerner. Ludwick, Teener Sweet. Collisson. Clark. Angus. Heininger, Merchant. Heartwell, Griset Faurot. Martin. Burgess. Ward. Eubank. Richards. Fintel. Edwards. Wilson STUDENT VOLUNTEERS OFFICERS Robert Lutz ------ President Ruth Goerner - Secretary-Treasurer First Semester Second Semester Eleanor Martin - - Vice-President - - - Frances Fields George Sweet - - - Vice-President - - Woodrow Wilson Prof. J. W. Teener, Sponsor MINISTERIAL GROUP OFFICERS Ralph Bonacker ----- President Carl Schneider ----- Vice-President John Ludwick - Secretary-Treasurer Knapp. Edmonds, Brown, Bonacker, Campbell. Kindel Boesman, Schneider, Lutz, Bowman. Ludwick, Lewis. Wilson Strohm, Sweet, Turner. Johnson, Young, Collisson [ 110 ] CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR The Christian Endeavor has been functioning on Park College campus for many years. Its object is to promote the highest type of Christian life on the campus and to allow students to participate in discussions on religious themes. Occasional Quaker meetings are held. Some meetings are given over to music, some devoted entirely to worship and others to some outstanding speaker. The social part of the program consists in some social event once a month. Picnics, get-togethers in the gymnasium and parties for special holidays are given. OFFICERS Fa Verne Ross ------ President Floyd Shafer ------ Vice-President Dorothy Heartwell - - - Secretary-Treasurer Lewis, Edmonds, Good. Brown, Knapp. Fields, Lutz. Goerner. Johnson Collisson, Clark, Fintel, Voss, Baker, Campbell, Sweet Ludwick, Martin, Richards, Heininger, Bromley, Sunbarger, Heartwell, Burgess, Griset Boesman, Ward, Eubank, Gass, Walker, Sullenberger, Goodman, Newlin, Edwards, Angus, Wilson [ 111 1 “The peace of great churches be for you Where the players of loft pipe organs Practice old lovely fragments, alone. ' ' -CARL SANDBURG. [ 112 J SOCIAL Becker, Johnson, Schmidt Mace, Melcher, Snyder, Terrell First Semester Mildred Melcher Clarissa Becker - Marjorie Snyder Dean Johnson - AURORA CLUB OFFICERS President V ice-President Secretary T reasurer Second Semester Alice Schmidt - Hazel Mace Ruth Schiller - Dean Johnson ORION CLUB OFFICERS Justus Baird—William Reimold Levi Tarr L. B. Carpenter LeRoy Strieby President Vice-President Secretary - T reasurer Sweet, Carpenter, Strieby, Bain, Tarr 1 114 1 Wilson, Fields, Baxter, Jenkins Carson, Wright, Wallace, Hall, Halsted First Semester Estelle Jenkins - Elizabeth Wright - Helene Halsted - Janet Carson - Ralph Bonacker - Carl Schneider Kenneth McDonald Leonard Edmonds LUCERNE CLUB OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer - LOWELL CLUB OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary T reasurer - Second Semester Helene Halsted - Carol Wilson - Frances Fields - Janet Carson Robert Lutz Kenneth McDonald William Strohm - Leonard Edmonds Lutz, Hostetter, Bonacker, Schneider Strohm, Perry, Baxter [ 115 ] Pennington, Clark Chambers, Paris, Eckman, Pleartwell CALLIOPEAN CLUB OFFICERS First Semester Anna Belle Chambers - President DOROTHY HEARTWELL - Vice-President Marjorie Eckman - - Secretary Henrietta Clark - - - Treasurer - Second Semester Clara Faris - Lois Pennington Dorothy Heartwell - Henrietta Clark PARCHEVARD CLUB OFFICERS Woodson Seuell - - - President - - - Harry Turner Dale Bartlett - - - Vice-President - - - Eugene Settle Beverly Bowman - - Secretary ----- Hugh Malan Robert Waggoner - - - Treasurer - - - Robert Waggoner Seuell. Malan, Roe, Waggoner, Turner r 110 1 Athletics ATHLETICS ARTHUR YOUNG REPRESENTATIVE LOWELL ATHLETE f 120 I ARTHUR DYER REPRESENTATIVE ORION ATHLETE [ 121 ] HARRY TURNER REPRESENTATIVE PARCHEVARD ATHLETE l 122 ] MEN ' S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Since Park College does not have the time to devote to inter-collegiate sports, a variety of inter-mural athletics provide entertainment for the students in¬ terested. The Men’s Athletic Association is an organization whose purpose is the promotion of athletic life on the campus and the improvement of athletic facilities. ATHLETIC COUNCIL WOODSON Seueli _Parchevard_ President EARL Lusk _Parchevard_ Secretary and I ' reasurer Ben BOYLES _Lowell _ Chairman of Baseball ARTHUR Dyer _Orion _ _ Chairman of Basketball L. B. CARPENTER _Orion _ Chairman of Cross-Country Roy MERTZ _Parchevard_ Chairman of Tennis Arthur Young _Lowell_ Chairman of Track L. A. Robbins. Faculty Advisor Carpenter, Lusk Seueli, Dyer, Boyles, Young I 123 ] CLUB BASKETBALL The struggle for court supremacy rested upon the should ers of the Parchies and Lowells this year. The Orions got off to a poor start and trailed in third. At the beginning of the last quarter of the last game of the season the Parchies had a ten point lead. However, the luck changed and with the superb playing of Kerlin, Hank Young, and Art Young, the Lowells were able to creep into the shadow of the Parchevards’ score. The score about a minute before the beil stood 26-25. On a per¬ fect tip-off. Art Young dribbled the ball a few paces and then tossed it neatly into the net. The game ended with the Lowells the champs of the season. The high scorers for the season were: Lusk(P), 46: Dyer (O), 42; Yarnell (L), 38; Leech (L), 29: and Gresham (P), 26. LOWELL TEAM Arthur Young, Captain Henry Young Duane Yarnell - Guard Center Forward Seuell, Lusk. Gilchrist, Gresham, Mertz, Boesman [ 124 ] CLUB BASKETBALL With the aid of a committee chosen by Profes¬ sor L. A. Robbins, the athletic editor chose an all-star-all-year basketball team. Forwards Lusk (P) Yarnell (L) Sub. Dyer(O) Center Gresham (P) Guards Schneider (L) Seuell (P) Sub. KERLIN (L) LOWELL Jerry Kerlin - Carl Schneider - Amos Leech TEAM Guard Guard Forward u I IRION rVRlON | £ Dyer, Radford, Felts, Ritchie, Gillenwater, Simpson I 125 ] CLASS BASKETBALL The seniors made one last dash before the Christmas holidays to win the championship, tri¬ umphantly closing their record with six wins and no defeats. Throughout the tourney, the upper- class team displayed excellent team work. Usually the freshman team, made up of play¬ ers just out of high school, win the tournament, but this year the seniors, led by Art Dyer, pre¬ sented a team of such speed and polish that they completely eclipsed the other teams. The senior team was composed of Dyer, Ritchie, Seuell, Reimold. Young and Radford. Most of the games were close. In the final week the seniors met the hard fighting freshmen to emerge victorious with a score of 24-22. In the last game with the sophomores the seniors main¬ tained their lead and defeated the sophomores 29-20. The final standing was: W L Per Seniors 6 0 1000 Juniors 1 5 166 Sophomores - 3 3 500 Freshmen 2 4 333 Art Dyer Senior Captain Wayne Gresham - Sophomore Captain Edward Gilchrist - Freshman Captain Dyer, Radford, Young, Seuell, Ritchie 1 126 ] TENNIS Skid Gilchrist and Tommy Jamias defeated Leach and Lohff 6-4, 6-1, 6-3, to win the Y. M. C. A. fall doubles tennis tournament. During the tourney the biggest difficulty that the Gilchrist-Jamias team met was in defeating the Brown-Wall combination. Leach and Lohff met hard sledding all the way to the finals. Drawing first late teams every play, they managed to come through the first round with flying colors, defeating Mertz and Smith 3-6, 6-3, 6-3 in the second round. Dyer and Mayne battled gamely in the third round, but lost to Gilchrist and Jamias in a 6-4, 7-5, 6-2 score. The freshmen and sophomores sponsored a tourney between the two classes. Gilchrist was again triumphant in the singles; and teaming with Vic Brown in the doubles they won from Smith and Sims with 3-6, 6-0, 6-0 score. In last year’s spring tournament, Hugh Hamil¬ ton defeated Harold Ellison in the singles, 5-7, 7-5, 6-3, 6-1. Brown and Wall defeated in semi-finals by Leach and Lohff. Gilchrist and Jamias victors of Y. M. C. A. doubles. Hugh Hamilton, last spring ' s singles champion. A fast return at the net [ 127 ] CLUB TRACK One of the major events of the spring athletic season is the annual track meet. The Lowells de¬ feated the Parchevards and the Orions with a final score of 5 2 points; Parchevards having 46 points and the Orions having 37 points. High point man of the meet was Jimmy Wat¬ son, Parchevard, with a total of 20 points. The only new record for the meet was set by Alfsen, Lowell, when he heaved the shot-put 38 feet 8.5 inches to better the old mark by four feet. The Orions were able to capture first place in the 100 yard and 440 yard dash with Baird first to touch the string, and to win first place in the relay race. James Watson - - - High Hurdles Rinard Hitchcock - Shot-put Amos Leech ----- Pole Vault Watson, Runke, Hitchcock, Seuell, Baird [ 128 ] CROSS-COUNTRY Bob Waggoner, Parchevard flash, repeated his triumph of last year in the annual cross-country run, completing the course in 21.56 minutes to come in first by a fifty yard margin. The race was one of the closest run for some time as all three clubs were distinctly in the run¬ ning until ten places had been accounted for. The Lowells had the most men to rank in the finish, taking first place, the Orions second place, and the Parchevards third place. Points were awarded in the following manner by Coach L. A. Robbins: First place, 1 point: second place, 2 points: third place, 3 points, etc., down to the fifteenth man, counting, however, no more than five men from each club. The follow¬ ing are the first ten men to finish the race with the initial of their club: 1. Waggoner (P) 2. Patton (O) 3. Seifert (L) 4. Hamilton (P) 5. Yarnell (L) 6. Bain (O) 7. Perry (L) 8. Throw (O) 9. Bowman (P) 10. Shafer (L) Robert Waggoner, Charles Patton, Gary Seifert, Parchevard. Orion, Lowell, 21.56 minutes 22.57 minutes 23.03 minutes Patton, Yarnell, Bain. Perry, Throw. Bowman I 129 ] CLASS BASEBALL The fall baseball season opened with a tilt between the sophomores and juniors. Interest in the games was high and rivalry between the classes brought out enthusiastic crowds to see Park’s Babe Ruths perform. In a final thrilling game between the juniors and seniors, the juniors came out the victor of the season with a score of 1 1 to the seniors’ 10. A wet field made the game rather hazardous and sliding to bases an easy feat. The brilliant playing of Ben Boyles, pitcher, and of Art Young was re¬ sponsible for the junior win. MEMBERS OF THE TEAM Bob Boyles, c Clayton Leach, 2b Ben Boyles, p Arthur Young, ss Howard Bain, cf Rinard Hitchcock, Earl Lusk, lb Paul Johnson, rf Bob Waggoner, 3b Umpire— Prof. J. W. Teener Referee —A. NORRINGTON If Lusk, Johnson, Young, Hitchcock Bain, Boyles, Leach, Boyles I 130 ] As the camera sees Park ' s athletes . . . Prof. poses . . . some baseball action . . . over the high jump . . . waiting for the dash . . . Wat¬ son clears the high hurdles . . . Woody, presi¬ dent of M. A. A. m jsteja trnmm I - park %WUzM COLLEGE 4 K m mm • iMz ss • mmm . M.wmmt amaium mmomm - . • i mmm mm mm mm a •mmm i t tmm i % Coeds playing the game . . . Auroras try for a goal . . . Park sweaters to Mudd, Chambers, Melcher, Oien and Schmidt . . . Auroras, run¬ ners up in volleyball . . . Calhos defending their goal . . . fast play at center field . . . Mrs. Robbins, physical education instructor. ALICE OIEN PARK ' S REPRESENTATIVE GIRL ATHLETE [ 133 ] CLUB BASKETBALL Fast playing and close guarding on the part of the Aurora team captained by Max Kinch won for them the championship of the tournament. The Auroras won four, lost none; the Lucernes won two, lost two; and the Calliopeans were un¬ able to score a win in the series. The varsity team as chosen by Mrs. Robbins, Annabelle Chambers, referee, and the three cap¬ tains, Lois Pennington, Calliopeans; Ruth Goern- er, Lucernes; and Maxine Kinch, Auroras, were as follows: Mary Frances Polk (L), captain, forward: Thelma Mathes (A), forward; Jessie Richards (A), j. center: Fred Nielsen (C), guard: Eunice Clark (L), r. center: Alice Schmidt (A), guard. Annabelle Chambers - - - Referee Maxine Kinch - - - Aurora Captain Ruth Goerner - - - Lucerne Captain Melcher. Schmidt, Richards, Oien, Schiller. Mathes [ 134 ] HOCKEY The athletic season for women opened with a tilt on the hockey field between the Auroras and Calliopeans. The score was a tie, 1-1. Through the rest of the season the Auroras were able to rally sufficiently to hold the big end of the score at the end of each game and came out the victors of the tournament. The Calliopeans, captained by Peggy Mudd. were second with two wins, one tie and one lost; and the Lucernes last with no victories. The varsity team was chosen by Mrs. Robbins, referee, and the three captains. Lucernes, “Dud” Wright; Calliopenas, Peggy Mudd; and Dorothy Studdard, Aurora captain, as follows: Dorothy Studdard (A), captain, c. field; Lois Pennington (C), 1. inside: Peggy Mudd (C), r. inside: Dud Wright (L), 1. wing: Margaret Kil¬ mer (A), r. wing; Mildred Melcher (A), r. half; Geneva Hewitt, c. half; Ruth Schiller, 1. half: Alice Oien (A), r. full; Clara Faris (C), 1. full; Alice Schmidt (A), goalie. Dorothy Studdard Peggy Mudd Dud Wright Aurora Captain Calliopean Captain Lucerne Captain Richards, Kieser, Robinson, Studdard, Schmidt. Eddy, Schiller, Whitlock Crawford, Mace. Kilemer, Melcher, Ramsay, Oien [ 135 ] VOLLEYBALL Volleyball teams exhibited better playing this year because of so many experienced players. Powerful serves were a feature of the offensive playing while the defense concentrated upon “set¬ ups to take the spin off the ball and return it to the net players. The competing teams were evenly matched and the final round of the tournament ended with a tie between the Auroras and Lucernes. The de¬ ciding game was close, but the Lucernes emerged triumphant with a marginal score of 35-26. The Auroras, captained by Alice Oien, won three games, lost two; the Calliopeans, captained by Peggy Mudd, lost three; and the Lucernes, cap¬ tained by Dud Wright, won four and lost one. The varsity team chosen by Mrs. Robbins, referee, and the three captains, was as follows: Dud Wright (L ), captain Fred Nielsen (C) Raeburn Entrikin (A) Madeline McGeehan (L) Estelle Jenkins (L) Alice Oien ( A) Dorothy Studdard (L) Evelyn Dahlstrom (L) Dud Wright - - - Lucerne Captain ALICE Oien - Aurora Captain PEGGY Mudd - - - Calliopean Captain Wilson. Jenkins, Polk, Yoakum, Goerner McGeehan, Wright, Linville. Dahlstrom [ T10 1 WOMEN ' S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Membership in the W. A. A. is open to college women who participate in any of the major sports. The program for this year included hockey, basket¬ ball, volleyball, baseball and tennis. Soccer may be added next year. Athletic accomplishments are recognized and rewarded by the presentation of Park sweaters and letters to those women who have won the required num¬ ber of points, which is 800 this year. The following women were awarded this athletic honor this year: Anna Belle Chambers, Mildred Melcher, Alice Oien, Margaret Mudd, and Alice Schmidt. OFFICERS Alice Oien ----- Aurora Elizabeth Wright - - - Lucerne Ruth GOERNER - - - - Lucerne Estelle Jenkins - Lucerne Mrs. Jeanette Robbins, Faculty Advisor President V ice-President Secretary T reasurer CHAIRMEN OF SPORTS Alice Schmidt - Lois Kiefer - Christine Weathers Mary Frances Polk - Jessie Richards - Mildred Melcher Aurora Aurora Calliopean Lucerne Aurora Aurora Hockey Basketball Volleyball Baseball Tennis Hiking Clark, Bromley, Eddy, Goerner, Medill, Jenkins, Campbell, Hewitt Weathers, Wright, Kilmer. Eskridge, Scherer, Griset Chambers, Melcher, Oien, Faris, Mudd, Kiefer 1 137 ] “When katydids wear overshoes To guard their toes from cold, When violets their fragrance lose Or buttercups their gold, When birds prefer old nests to new, When cats from sweet cream shrink I’ll find a better friend than you — Perhaps so. I don ' t think.” [ 1.58 ] Is Breakfast a Relay Race in Your Home? (Or is Your Home Electrically-Modern?) Is breakfast a race from the range to the table; back and forth, there and back? First the coffee and then the bacon and eggs, and afterward the toast—and one starting to cool before the other’s ready? Is that the way of it, or is breakfast at your house a well-ordered meal, with coffee and bacon and eggs and toast all made conveniently and sociably at the table, and all served piping hot and delicious! Add electric appliances, one by one, till you have a completely modern home Kansas City Power fe? Li Kansas City, Missouri ht Co. [ 141 ] IN AFTER DAYS w hen you live again in memory the happy days at Park and recall in truer aspect the old scenes and old faces— Remember HAUBER ' S DRUG STORE The rendezvous down on the corner across from the Post Office, where you used to meet nights or on Spring or Autumn afternoons, to gossip or to tell of your joys or sorrows over a sandwich, soda, or “a cone ”; where you bought that box of chocolates for that greatest of all dates or that Christmas or Mothers’ Day card—perhaps the last one; where you got that first glimpse of that snapshot when it came back finished. Do you remember? We do and appreciate. HAUBER’S DRUG STORE ARCTIC ICE CREAM DOUGLAS CANDY ELKO PHOTO DEV. THis and two other beautiful build¬ ings, Donald Davis Herr Memorial Hall and Thompson Commons, have been built on the Park College campus since 1927, by H. H. FOX GENERAL CONTRACTOR KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI THE COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK KANSAS CITY, KANSAS Capital and Surplus, $1,000,000.00 Everything in the Banking Line—Investment, Trust Depart¬ ment, Steamship Tickets, Cruises Arranged, Travelers Cheques, Real Estate Loans, Savings Department, Safety Deposit Boxes. All in a thoroughly up-to-date new, modern bank building. COME AND SEE US OFFICERS M. L. ALDEN. Chairman of Board J. D. BJORKMAN. Cashier C. L. BROKAW. President W. H. GUILD, Assistant Cashier E. W. STILLWELL, Vice-President HATTIE ROTF.RT, Assistant Cashier G. J. BISHOP, Vice-President J. W. MARTIN. Assistant Cashier HUGH C. WHITEFORD, Vice-President QUALITY IS THE FIRST REQUISITE OF SOUND ECONOMY The Best Foods you can buy are the most economical in the end. The Lee Trade Mark is your assurance of Highest Quality, the pleas¬ ure of good living — sound economy! The Lee Trade Mark is the Guide to More than 300 High Grade Foods THE GUIDE TO HIGH GRADE FOODS I WALKED WITH THE CHIEF It was Spring! The flaming sun had just plunged beyond the edge of the earth. All afternoon I had looked for a man that I knew was real, yet I could not find him. I had heard about him all of my life and I knew I had seen evidences of his presence when I came back to the haunts of my for¬ bears. Wearily I dropped down on Philosopher’s rock and looked into the West; down the trail the Sun-God had just vanished. A cool breeze touched my hair—“Boom—boom- boom — BOOM!! Boom - boom - boom.’’ Startled for a moment I leaped to my feet. “Bijou! White Boy!” HOMER B. MANN RAYNOLDS BARNUM GEORGE W. KERDOLFF ROBERT H. MANN WILLIAM J. WELSH Mann, Barnum, Kerdolff 6? Welsh INSURANCE SURETY BONDS 800 BRYANT BUILDING PHONES HARRISON 1635 KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI [ 144 ] O-oh, Ch-chief Narva! Hello!” At last I had found the Chief. Bijou Chief,” I said. My mother told me of you. She said that she had known you when she lived in these green hills. She wanted me to find you, and have you show me all the nooks and corners that legends have told are in these hills.” Come with me. I will show you these things. Silently as he came, he glided ahead of me, leading me towards his village. The tom-toms were still beating their monot¬ onous rhythm. My people are dancing the dance of Friendship,” the Chief explained. Every time the trees get green again, we dance this way for seven days and seven nights. It is FARMERS EXCHANGE BANK PARKVILLE, MO. Every accommodation given to the faculty and student accounts consistent with sound banking INTER-OCEAN OIL COMPANY High Grade Oils and Greases Office and Factory 2009-201 1 Baltimore Avenue KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI PARK STUDENTS . . . OLD GRADS WELCOME HERE COMMUNITY SHOP .A p ,P V p ' o Society Brand Clothes v % ' 4 f V QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT REASONABLE PRICES HERRICK K. HAWLEY PARKVILLE, MISSOURI Compliments of HILLYARD CHEMICAL COMPANY Home of Hillyard’s Standard Registered Waxes, Cleaners, and Disinfectants [ 115 1 38 Years This Company has had an unbroken record of EXCELLENCE in the field of Life Insurance for thirty-eight years. Kansas City Life Insurance Company 3520 BROADWAY KANSAS CITY. MISSOURI - _ .-v-. 1 a welcome to the birds who have returned and the new greenness of the hills. And too, it was with the new trees that we smoked the pipe of peace and friendship with the white man. Yes, White Boy, we were glad too, when the white man wanted to be friendly. We held the council in our Sacred glen in back of this first row of hills. It was the spot where lovers came and made their promises when the new leaves came. It was there I won my Princess. We sat there and tossed pebbles in the babbling brook while our fathers talked of tribal affairs. We called it the Spoon-holder.” Then Chief Narva took me up the trail a little ways to a tiny spring that flowed from the rocks. “This,” he said, “is what UHRICH SUPPLY CO. Tel. Main 4393 FOR POWER PLANT SUPPLIES AND PACKINGS 9 1 4 Central St. Kansas City, Mo. Super Finish Covers for Schools and Colleges CHARNO BINDERY COMPANY A Kansas City Institution 716 Delaware Street Victor 9674 1 146 ] we call ' Dear Park.’ Now I will take you to Inspiration Point. That is where we sit and look at the Sun-God go to sleep.” “Chief,” I interrupted. Mother told me you knew a story about ‘Lowell Point’.” “Yes I do. Ugh! You young tenderfeet make me mad. You change the good old names of these places and call them some¬ thing that means nothing. We called that ‘Look-Out Point.’ We could stand there and see the wagon trains come out of the East from the little town on the bend of the river. From there we could signal with smoke and our village and the other villages in our tribe could bring their furs and leather goods down to the river-bank trail to trade them to the white men.” “Chief, take me to the cliff ledges west of the village, and to Falling Springs and to SQUIRE ELECTRIC COMPANY Electrical Engineers and Contractors 401 Wyandotte Street Kansas City, Missouri WINER AND SAROFF COMMISSION CO. Carload receivers and distributors of fruit and vegetables the year around. Kansas City, Missouri GAS OIL FUEL OIL For Homes, Buildings, Hotels and Apartments TRUCK DELIVERIES EVERYWHERE WHOLESALE AND RETAIL EUREKA PETROLEUM CO. 917 East 19th, Kansas City, Mo. Victor 7365-6 [ 147 ] KANSAS CITY SCHOOL OF LAW In the Law School’s own new building at 913 Baltimore Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. Offers opportunity to students to earn livelihood while acquiring profession of the law with the degree of LL.B. Faculty of fifty-three, including certain Federal, District and Circuit Judges. Tuition payable in installments or in advance. A post-graduate course leading to the degree of Master of Laws together with a Pub¬ lic Speaking course have been added. Complete library privileges. For catalogue, call or write MERRILL E. OTIS, President JUDGE EDWARD D. ELLISON, Dean JUDGE ELMER N. POWELL, Secretary-Treasurer Executive Offices, Law Building, 913 Baltimore Ave. KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI Telephone HA 3262 the old mud hole out beyond orchard where we go swimming in the evening, and tell me the stories about these places that are so dear to your people, and Chief—Chief!— CHIEF NARVA. Where are you Chief, Oh, Chief Narva. What was that bell that struck?” Again—again. The old clock in Mackay tower struck eleven times. I have been gone longer than I thought, but I wouldn’t have missed it for the world. I know now why my Mother has always loved these hills, for I have walked there with the Chief. WE STUDY YOUR WANTS OF PROVISIONS VAWTER BROTHERS If you like good things to eat, come to us PARKVILLE, MISSOURI Phones 23 and 54 [ 148 ] West Side Machine Works ENGINEERS AND MACHINISTS General Machine Work and Ice Machine Repairing and Up-to-date Welding De¬ partment in conjunction with Shop. Mechanical Engineer at your service Drexel 3898 Third and Minnesota Avenue Kansas City, Kansas INTER COLLEGIATE PRESS MANUFACTURERS OF COMMENCEMENT INVITATIONS DIPLOMAS CLASS GIFTS PARK PHARMACY ICE «Z )eCcnMeifd CREAM Mrs. Stover’s Ice Cream School Supplies Drugs GRASS, FLOWER AND FARM SEEDS T he cover for this annual was created by The DAVID J. MOLLOY CO. 2857 N. Western Avenue Chicago, Illinois K very Molloy Made Cover bean th it trade mark on (H« back lid- We specialize in fine flower seeds, bulbs and supplies for florists and nurserymen HARNDEN SEED CO. 505 Walnut Kansas City, Mo. [ 149 ] [ 150 ] TEACHENOR- BARTBERGER ENGRAVING COMPANY PRoto Engravers Artists and Makers of Fine Printing.Plates C j S. E .COR.SEVENTH CENTRAL STS. Kansas City; Mo. THIS BOOK PRINTED AND BOUND IN THE PLANT OF THE SMITH-GRIEVES CO. ANNUAL SPECIALISTS KANSAS CITY, MO. [ 152 ] INDEX Adams, Helen Elizabeth .“0 Adams, Mary Leigh .50 Aden, Richard .46, 59, 60, 61 Angus, Alice .110,111 Atkinson, Georgia ..50 Bain, Howard . Baird, Justus . Baker, Maxine . Baker, Pearl . Barksdale, Elizabeth Barnes, John. Barni, Josephine . . . Bartlett, Dale. Barton, Paul . Bateman, Louise . . . Baxter, Thomas Becker, Clarissa Beery, James . Beiler, Florence Bennett, Olive Ann Beranek, Beatrice . . Bernhardt, Franz .. . Bibler, Walter . Blacklock, Mary . . . Blackman, Hazel . . Blake, Paul . Boesman, Earl . Bonacker, Ralph . . Bonner, Miriam . . . Bowles, Hazel . Bowman, Robert . . Boyd, Kenneth . . . Boyle, Kathleen . . . Boyles, Ben . Boyles, Bob . Brightwell, Evelyn . Brink, Nelle . Bromley, Alice . Brown, Victor . Brownell, Charles . Bryant, Lueile .... Buck, Neal . Bundren, Ella . Burgess, Carrie Burgess, Eugenia . Burgess, Ruth . Burry, Elizabeth . . Busch, Theodore . . . .40, 130 ; . 27, 32, 62, 72, 114 . 32, 60,61, 63, 102, 111 .68, 101 .32, 102 .50 .65 ' ' ' .99, 116 . 27, 32, 59, 109 .50 .50 .40, 114 .50 . !.32, 102 .73 .83 .40 .32, 60, 62, 105 .50 .40, 61 .50 .110, 111, 124 . . . .32, 61, 62, 68, 102, 110, 115 .46, 104 ' X.50, 61 .40, 110, 116 .50 .40 . 40, 104, 123, 130 .40, 130 .40 .32 .46, 111, 137 50, 59, 61, 62, 109, 110, 111, 127 .40, 101 .50 .50 .40 ..40, 104, 105, no .46 .60, 104, 111 .46, 104 .46, 104 Cain, Helen . Cameron, Robert . Cameron, William . . . . Campbell, Melvin . . . . Campbell, Winona . . . Canada) ' , Duff . Carlyle, Collins . Carpenter, L. B. Carson, Janet . Chambers, Anna Belle Chapman, Katherine . Clark, Eunice . Clark, Henrietta . Closson, Esther . Collisson, Charles . . . Clymer, Harry . Coffey, Margaret . Coffin, Sarah . Colville, Mildred .... Cowgill, Donald . Cramer, John . Crawford, Margaret . . Crews, Evelyn . Crisman, Golda Belle Crosby, Roberta . Csatlos, Paul . .46 .50 . 32, 74, 105, 109 . . .32, 101, 102, 109, 110 . . . .46, 63, 108, 111, 137 .32, 99 .46, 59 .114, 123 .40, 103, 108, 115 ... .32, 75, 116, 134, 137 .4 0 . 46, 60, 65, 134, 137 . . .40, 104, 110, 111, 116 .50 .40, 104, 110, 111 .50 .46, 103 .50 .50, 63 32, 59, 60, 64, 69, 99, 101 .50 .135 .41, 108 .50 . . .50, 63 46, 61, 62 Dahlstrom, Evelyn Dallinger, Carl . . Davis, Edwin Davis, Della Mae Dawson, Ruth . . . Desens, Hattie . . . Dodds, William . . Downey, Kenneth Dyer, Arthur . . . Dyer, Loreeta . . . . 33 . . 32, 136 .41, 60, 68 .50 .41 . . .46, 103 .50 .46, 105 ..46, 61, 62. 73 104, 109, 121, 123, 125, 126 .51 Eckman. Marjorie Eddy, Mary . Edmonds, Leonard Edwards, Bernice Elliott, George . . . Entrikin, Raeburn Eringa, Alys . Erwin, William . . Eskridge, Louisa . Eubank, Ruth . . Evans, Nell . ... .41, 83, 103, 116 33, 98, 101, 135, 137 . . .46, 110, 111, 115 .60, 63, 65, 110, 111 .51, 73 .46, 136 . 41 .51 .41. 105, 137 41, 60, 105, 110, 111 .41 Faris, Clara . Farmer, Margaret . . Farnsworth, Mayme Faurot, Albert . . . . Faurot, Jean . Fellers, Maida . Felts, Gordon . 33, 102, 116, 135, 137 . 51 .33, 98 51, 59, 60, 61, 73, 110 .33, 61, 62, 9S .51 . 46, 59, 60, 125 Ferguson, Clarence Field, Harley . . . . Field, Wava . Fields, Frances . . . Fintel, Esther . . . . Fitch, Keith .... Fleming, Elton . . . Fleming, Lulu . . . Fleming, Ruth . . . Frame, Joan . Freece, Ada . Fulton, Joe . Fuqua, Philip . . . . .51 .41 . 46, 60, 64 41, 61, 62, 110, 111, 115 . 110 , 111 .41, 62, 109 .54 .46 .41, 103 .51 .103 .51, 65, 73 .51 Gass, Olive . Giffee, Roland . Gillenwater, Thurston Gillespie, Edward . . . Gilchrist, Edward . . Gladson, Alice . Godard, Elizabeth . . . Goerner, Ruth . Good, William . Goodman, Opal . Gordon, Viola . Grayson, Anne . Green, Lawrence . . . Gresham, Dorothy . . Gresham, Wayne . . . Griffin, Viola . Griset, Evelyn .... .33, 105, 111 .51 .51, 125 .27, 59, 62,65 .51, 124, 126, 127 .41 . 65 46, 65, 10S, 110, 111, 134, 136, 137 .51, 60, 111 .63, 104, 111 .46, 60, 65, 108 .41 .51, 59, 62 .51 .124, 126 .51, 62 .. .51, 104, 110, 111, 137 Hadsell, Melvin . Hall, Genevieve . Halsted, Helene . Hamilton, John . Hancock, Edwin . Hanssen, Elizabeth . Harner, Opal . Harris, August . Harris, Kay . Hart, Francis . Havener, Mary Elizabeth Heartwell, Dorothy . . . . Hebb, Frances . Heininger, Martha . Hensley, John . Hermansky, Marjorie . . Hewitt, Geneva . Higgins, Malcolm . Hill, Harold . Hitchcock, Rinard . Hitchcock. Arlene . Hopkins, Thomas . Hortenstine, Henry . . . Hostetter, Paul . Hoth, Ruby . How, G. A. Humphreys, Charles . . . Humphreys, Philip . .47 .41, 103 . 33, 80, 108, 115 .62 .41 . 33, 75, 102 .51, 61 .27, 41 .33, 99 .47 .47 .41, 108, 110, 111, 116 .47 .108, no, in .47 .42, 73 . 103, 135, 137 .51,73 .69, 100 .42, 12S, 130 .51, 60, 61, 63 .27, 51 .51, 61, 62 33, 59, 60, 64, 100, 105 .33, 75, 101, 105 . 51 .51 .42 Irwin, Helen 51, S3 James, Elizabeth Jamias, Thomas . . Jenkins, Alfred . . Jenkins, Estelle . Jennings, Kenneth Jennings, Marie . Jepson, Ruth . . . Johnson, Dean . . . Johnson, Edward Johnson, Franklin Johnson, Paul ... Johnson, Vallie . . Johnson, William Jones, Elma . .. 33, 100, 108 .126 .51 33, 108, 115, 136, 137 .52 .52, 82 .33. 100 47, 108, 110, 111, 114 .52, 62 .47 . 105 .42 .52 .47, 62 Keeshan, Mabeile . . . Keithley, Genelle . . . Kelly, Warren . Kiefer, Lois . Kieser, Elizabeth . . . Kerlin, John . Keys, Margaret Ruth Kilmer, Margaret . . Kimpton, Sarah .... Kinch, Maxine .... Kindel, Ersal . Knapp. Robert .... Knight, Christine . . . Kroger, Orville . . . . .52, 73 .52 .33 .47, 137 . . .33. 78, 101, 108, 135 .47, 125 .42 34, 60, 63, 104, 135, 137 .42, 64 .42, 83, 134 ..52, 62, 110 .52, 110, 111 .34, 60, 103, 108 .62 Ladwig, Blandena . . Larrison, Kathleen . Lauderdale, Frank . Leach, Amos . Leach, Clayton Leach, Clifford . . . . Lebo, Howard . Lentz, Hazel . Lewis, Leonard . . . . Lindeman, Raymond Linville, Anita . Loe, Maurine . Lohff, Carlton . Long, Doris . .52 .52 .52 47, 62, 125, 128 .104, 130 .69, 99 .52 .104 ... 47, 110, 111 .52, 59, 60 .34, 136 .42 .47 .52 [ 153 ] Long ' , William . . . Lorimer, Margaret Ludwick, John . . Lunn, James . Lusk, Earl . Lutz, Robert . .52, 60, 73 .42 . . . .34, 73, 99, 110, 111 .52 . . ..12 3, 124, 130 34, 61, 62, 64, llu, 111, 116 Robinson, Robert Rodeman, Jack . Roe, Charles Rogers, Gilbert . Roller, Helen . . . Ross, La Verne . . .53, 62 .61, 62 . 53, 59, 60, 62 43, 59, 60, 103, 105 .43, 75 .43, 111 McAfee, Merrilie . MeCarroll, Gladys . . • McCoy, .lone . McDonald, Kenneth . . McGeehan, Madeline . McKibben, Joseph . . . . McKinley. Crland . . . MacDonald, Gladys . . Mace, Hazel . Mackenzie, Donald . . . MacLean, Flora . Magers, Rhoda . Malan, Florence . Malan, Hugh . Markward. Mary Bess Marstellar, Evadne . . Martin, Eleanor . Martin, Hazel . Mason, Mary Elisabeth Massingill, Alberta . . . Mathes, Thelma . Mayhevv, Loucile . Mayne, Robert . Meoill, Sally . Melcher, Mildred . Mendenhall, Charles .. Mendenhall, Kirk Mendenhall, Louise . . Menoher, Mary . Merchant, John . Merchant, Phoebe . . . . Meredith, Janies . Mertz, Roy . Middleton, Ernestine Miller, Berniece . Miller, Velma . Mitchell, Louise . Mix, Mary Elizabeth . Montgomery, Bruce . . Morehead, Elizabeth . Moore, Forrest . Morrow, Mary Ruth . Mudd, Margaret . Munson. Bryon . Mutz, Dorothy . Myers, Ruth . .65 .34, 103 .52 .34, 115 .34, 60, 136 .34, 75 .60 . 4 2, 60, 103 . 4 2, 105, 114, 135 . 34, 72, 99 .52 . 34,60, 98, 102 .52 .. 52,60,62,116 ...3 4 .47, 63, 65, 103, 10S .34, 110, 111 . 103, 108 . 42, 60, 63 :::d2,’i34 .34, 63 . 35, 99, 109 .35,60,63, 108, 137 35, S3, 104, 108, 114, 134, 135, 137 . 52,73 .47 . . 5 2, 7 • .47 . . 47, 110 .47 .47 . 123, 124 . . .47 .42 .53 35, 60, 63, .42 . 42 .42 ... 35, 60 , 136, 137 . . . 53, 62 3, 75, 104 Nelson, Clara Nelson, Janet Nelson, Ruth .. New, Maxine . . . Newcomb, Clara Nowlin, Helen Nielsen, Freda Noland, Denzel Nystrom, Louis .47 . 53, 60, 63 . 27, 43, 63, 108 .39 . 39, 64, 75, 108 60, 63, 105, 111 . . .43. 134, 136 .47, 73 .53 Sargerser, Ruth . . . Sanders, Eleanor . Satorius, Mary Jo . Schaffnit, John ... Scheer, Marie . Schiller, Ruth . Scherer, Margaret Schadt, Rodney . . Schmidt, Alice Schneider, Carl . . . , Schooler, Wilbur . . Schrader, Helen . . . Scotten, Virginia . . Seifert, Gary . Settle, Eugene . . . . Seuell, Woodson . . . Shafer, Floyd . Shaffer. Gladys . . . Shaw, Esther . Simpson, William . Sims, William .... Skinner, Phene .... Small, William Smith, Fern . Smith, H. Lawrence Smith, Leonora . . . Smith, Marie . Smith, Philip . Sneed, Mildred .... Snow, Mary Louise Snyder, Marjorie . . Squires, Franklin . Stahlman, Marian . Stith, Sarah . Strieby, LeRoy Strohm, William Strong, R. B. Strong, Ruth . Studdard, Dorothy . Sullenberger, Jessie Summers, Martha . Sunbarger, Alice . . Sweet, George . Swift, Altheda Swischer, Harold . 3 6 .53 .43, 61, 99 .36, 98 .48, 61 . 36, 75, 104 . 53, 114, 134, 135 ..36, 102, 137 .43, 59, 99 60, 62, 103, 114, 134, 135, 137 .... 48, 75, 109, 110, 115, 125 .48 .53, 6S .43 , . 48, 129 ' _. 36, 73, 116 . 27, 36, 79, 116, 123, 124, 126 .43, 111 .53 36, 63, 99, 102, 108 .53, 125 .48, 75, 109 .43 .60 . 48, 65, 103 .53 .53 .48, 61, 103 .48, 65,73,75 .53 .4 3, 60 .4 8, 114 . 53 .44 ' .54 . 36, 61, 62, 114 44, 102, 109, 110, 115 .54 ’.54 . .27, 36, 74, 108, 135, 136 . 104, 108, 111 .48 .60, 111 36, 73, 100, 110. Ill ... .48, 104 36, 61 Tarr, Levi .. Tarwater, Rosalie . Terrell, Marion . Teter, Catherine . Thompson, Elizabeth Throw, Francis . Tims, Fred . Todd, Edwin . Tucker, Dean . Turner, Harry .36, 59 ... .48, 60, 61, 62, 65, 111 .104 . . . . 44, 60, 63, 104 .48, 10 + .54, 104 . .36, 98, 99 .48 _. ' ...54,73, 75 .44 69, 100, 101, 109, 110, 116, 122 Oakley, Edna .39, 98, 99, 104 Oakes, Ann .103 Oien, Alice .27, 39, 134, 133, 135, 136, 137 Olsen, Josephine .53 Olsen, Ralph .47 Oltrogge, Robert .5 3 Orr, Maxine .53 Paris, Dick . Parkhurst, Gordon . Passiglia, Sam . Patterson, Dorothy . Patton, Charles . . . Peery, Laura . Pehl, Gertrude . . . . Pennington, Lois . . Perry, Thomas Perry, Fontella . . . . Peterson, Margaret . Peterson, Maxine . • Peterson, Merritt . . . Petit, Helen . Pettit, Mareen . Pettit, Virginia Plummer, William Polk. Mary Frances Pollard, Christine Pool, Eugene . Pool, Mildred .. Porter, Harry . Porzsolt, Ernest . . . . Price, George .. Price, Maxine . Prout, Margaret . . . . .59, 65, 73 .47 .39 .53 .43, 129 .47 .99 . .43, 103, 1 16, 135 43. 64, 73, 104, 109 . .53 .63 .3 5 .62 .47 .47, 104 .48 .61, 62 . . . 63, 64, 136, 1.37 .9S, 104 43, 60, 75, i00, 105 .53 . . . ..68, 101 .35 .5 3 .48 .48 Rader, Doris . Radford, Herschel . . . Ramsay, Vivian . Rasmussen, David . . . Redheffer, Jack .... Reed, Roberta. Reimold, William . . . . Richards, Hila . Richards, Jessie . Richardson, Catherine Ritchie, Robert . Robinson, Millicent . . .43, 61 . 35, 125, 126 . 35, 63, 135 48, 60, 65 .53 .53, 62 .35, 114 4 8, 61, 62, 110, 111 . . 4S, 134, 135, 137 .... 43, 60, 63, 104 . 36, 125, 126 .53, 135 Van Metre, Rhoda .. 54, 6- Ver Brugge, Josephine .50, 68, 101 Voss, Florence .48, 63, 104, 111 Vulliamy, Constance . 37,98 Waggoner, Robert Waid, Mildred Wakeman, Fred . . . Walker, Claire .... Walker. Wm. Wall, David . Wallace, Elizabeth Wanner, Charles . . Ward, Eleanor .... Warden, Philip . . . Wells, Thomas . . . . Wene, George . Weathers, Christine Westlake, Robert . Wetmore, Alvin J. Wheeling, Herschel Whipple, Ward . . . Whitlock, Catherine Wilcoxon, Marvine Wilkins, Anne. Wilson, Carol . Wilson, Woodrow . Wiltse, Evelyn .... Winters, Milton . . Withington, Edwin Witt, Grace . Wolfe, Twila Jo . . Wright, Elizabeth . Wright, Mathilda . Wright, Margaret . Wyant, Wilma . . . . .44, 116, 129, 130 .108 .37, 73, 99 .108, 111 . 54 . 44, 60, 127 . .44, 63, 108 . 54 . . . .37, 110, 111 .44, 62 .44 .44,105 . .44, 137 . .48, 61, 62 .54, 62 ■.. ' .54, 73, 75 . 54 . 54, 135 .4S, 108 . 54 . .37, 105, 108, 115, 136 .110, 111 ! 54, 61 . 54 . .27, 37, 73, 99, 100 . 37, 81 . 5 4, 63, 75, 10S 44 105, ios, 115, 135, 136, 137 .54, 61 ..44, 108 . . . .44, 68 Yarnell, Duane . . . Yoakum, Ruth . . . Youell, Sarah Young, Arthur . . . Young, Aubrey . . Young, Henry . . . Young, Jean Young, Marjorie . Zimmerman, Zona .124 37, 9S, 99, 100, 136 . .48 ' .44 ' 59! 69 ' , 101, 109, 110. 120, 123, 124 . 27, 44, 68, 73, 101, 130 .59, 124, 126 .54, 61 .;.54 . .54, 83 [ 154 ] AUTOGRAPHS ( 155 ] [ 156 ] Jl .
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