Rollins College - Tomokan Yearbook (Winter Park, FL)

 - Class of 1935

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Rollins College - Tomokan Yearbook (Winter Park, FL) online collection, 1935 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 196 of the 1935 volume:

I BUSHED St udent sS , °F ROLLINS CO 1 Winter park FLORIDA TO EDWARD FRANCIS WEINBERG We, the Seniors, respectfully dedicate this 1935 edition of the TOMOKAN. Mr. Weinberg, in his loyalty to Rollins College and its ideals, has won for himself an enviable place in the hearts of every one of the Rollins Family. Just how much of the success of the New Rollins can be attributed to Mr. Weinberg we cannot say, but we do know that he has had a large part in making the Rollins Conference Plan a reality. We, as seniors and publishers of this college yearbook, are grateful to be able to so honor Mr. Weinberg, loyal friend, able teacher, and in- spired leader. EDWARD FRANCIS WEINBERG TABLE of CONTENTS Dedication 4 VIEWS The Chapel Tower 9 The College Commons 10 Rollins Hall II The Annie Russell Theatre 12 Knowles Memorial Chapel 13 Pugsley Hall, Interior 14 Chapel Interior 15 The Cloister Garden 16 FACULTY 17 CLASSES Seniors 31 Upper Division .... 67 Lower Division 71 ORGANIZATIONS 87 FRATERNITIES 119 SORORITIES 133 MEN ' S ATHLETICS 151 WOMEN ' S ATHLETICS 163 FEATURES 171 FOREW ORD It is significant that this, the year commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of Rollins College, should also mark the graduation of the first whole class who have received the benefits of the Rollins Conference System. In the last decade Rollins has donned the seven-league boots and has made phenomenal strides in the field of edu- cation. It is the hope of every senior that this great edu- cational plan will be installed in colleges nationwide. We, the class of 1935, have been charter members in this move towards humanizing education. In the course of our college career we have seen an experiment become a real- ity. We have enjoyed our college education, and yet we feel that we have received not only a thorough academic education, but an education in life as well. We feel proud that we have been able to contribute to an ideal; and are happy, at this time, to felicitate President Hamilton Holt and assure him that we believe his vision has become an actuality. h e PRESIDENT ' S MESSAGE T -L HIS is the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of Rollins College and the tenth year of my administration. What are the chief things I have learned in these ten years? I put them down at random. First, that nothing worthwhile comes easily. Work, continuous work and hard work is the only way to achieve results. Half-way work achieves not half results, but no results. Second, that age has as much to learn from youth, as youth from age. Age Ins wisdom, youth idealism. Youth believes in the future. Each one of you in the graduating class no doubt thinks that you will succeed in your chosen work; that you will be happily married; that you will be healthy, wealthy and wise. The fact that you believe these things will make them come true. As we go through life we older ones lose some of these ideals. We need ever to renew them. Youth, however, needs wisdom and that, alas, must come with experience. You cannot be blamed for not having wisdom but we who are older can be blamed for not having idealism. Third, that one must not expect things to come too quickly. When I began my work here I thought that Rollins would be much farther advanced than it is at the end of ten years. But I have found that the people you expect to help you often fail you, and that you often get help from the most unexpected quarters. The College President ' s most needed virtue is patience. Fourth, that the three greatest goal words in our language are Truth, Beauty and Goodness, but the words that tell us how to get there are Faith and Love. One must have faith in what one is doing and love the task at hand. You and I may well rejoice that we have an abiding faith in Rollins and a love for her in our hearts. Hamilton Holt. - 19- TO THE CLASS OF 1935 I OR four years it has been my pleasant • - duty to watch each of you grow in knowledge and wisdom. There is no need to tell you I shall miss you. Your constant cooperation with the Administration has been an ever-present source of strength. May it so continue in the years ahead. For four years it has been your privilege to share in the progress of Rollins. With the approach of your graduation may I ex- press the hope that Rollins will share in your success, for it is thus that a college achieves added prestige. Long may you continue to add to the glory of your alma mater. To each of you: Bon voyage and best wishes on your journey through life. Winslow S. Anderson, Dean of the College. w HAT can one do when one hundred words only are permitted to offer one ' s felicitations to the graduating class? You are to be congratulated, if through your college years you have developed the habit of independent thinking, have discov- ered the difference between mediocrity and fineness of life, have been able to concen- trate, to create things both beautiful and useful, to introduce the principle of loyalty and cooperation and to know the value of understanding comradeship. The best lessons learned from life are through experience, not through the theories and dogmas, and from real people rather than from textbooks and classroom lectures. Christian character is more important than scholarship, however desirable this may be, and faithfulness is greater than worldly success. Every blessing be upon you all. Charles Atwood Campbell, Dean of Knowles Memorial Chapel. TO THE CLASS OF 1935 LIKE to think of you individually rather tlun in a class group, so in my farewell message to you, I am clasping you In the hand, looking you in the eye and wishing you Godspeed. You are facing a world burdened with depression and uncertainty but you are fac- ing a world of opportunity, and you are equipped for service. You have had the ad- vantages of education that come to com- paratively few, because you have learned to lose yourselves in service, we have faith in your ability to find yourselves. The supreme purpose of life is not merely material gain. To be sure, a man must work for financial reward in order to keep alive, but the only reasonable justification for his keeping alive is that he shall have a life worth living, — a life that is more than a mere physical existence — friends, society, phi- losophy, literature, art, all that enlarges the circle of intellectual interest and kindles the imagination, that brings power, breadth and balance, are part of his heritage. I believe in the class of 193 5, in your ability to make the world a better place to work in. Keep in touch with your friends, your classmates and your alma mater. Come back often and drink from the fountain. God bless you all! Arthur Delano Enyart, Dean of Men. OUR years in college! To a freshman, how long they seem, how filled with new and perhaps difficult tasks! To seniors, about to go off the deep end — how many happy memories of work and play in the Florida sunshine, will be recalled in the years to come. The time seems short in retro- spect, but I hope your lives will be happier and richer because of your years in Rollins. Those of us who have had the privilege of carrying on the high adventure of educa- tion with you, will hope for your continued help in making Rollins a living, growing ideal. Helen Guernsey Sprague, Dean of Women. XX Thomas Pearce Bailey A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy, Psychology and Ethology, and Consulting Psychologist William Spencer Beard A.B., B.D., D.I). Assistant to the President and Assistant to the Dean of Knoules Memorial Chapel Jeanne Manteau Bowman Brevet Super) ' - ' - , Certificat d ' Aptitudes Pedagogiques Assistant Professor of French Udolpho Theodore Bradley A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History and Government Ervin Theodore Brown Treasurer and Business Manager Richard Burton A.B., Ph.D., L.H.D. Professor of English Emilie Cass Registrar Edwin Leavitt Clarke A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Sociology Ralph Sherman Clark Director of Publicity Harve Clemens Graduate in Music Degree, Northwestern University Director of the Conservatory and Associate Professor of Theory and C om position - 22 - Gretchen Cox Teacher ' s Certificate, Chicago Musical College Associate Professor of Violin Paul d ' Estournelles de Constant Licence es lettres d ' enseignemcnt, langues et littcra- tures el rangeres vivantes a la Faculte des Lettres de Paris Professor of French Civilization Bruce Dougherty Julliard Graduate School of Music Assistant Professor of Voice Emilii Sellers Dougherty A.B. Instructor in Piano Rosalie Rowena Ernest Instructor in Cello Katherine Everts Ewing A.B. Instructor in Dramatic Art Richard Feuerstein Ph.D. Professor of Modern Languages Earl Emery Fleischman A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Drama and the Speech Arts Royal Wilbur France A.B., A.M. Professor of Economics George Etienne Ganiere Student of Taft, Art Institute (Chicago); Colorossi School (Paris) Instructor in Plastic Art 9 [ -23 - James Madison Glass A.B., A.M. Professor of Secondary Education Edwin Phillips Cranberry a.B. Assistant Professor of English Edwin Osgood Grover B.L., Litt.D. Professor of Books Alfred Jackson Hanna a.B. Associate Professor of History Herman Fermain Harris A.B., Ped.B., A.M. Professor of English Marian Alberta Hawes A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Astronomy Christopher Honaas B.M., M.M. Assistant Professor of Musical Education and Choir Master Robert Howard A.B., A.M. Associate Professor of History Lawrence Edward Kinsler B.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physics Antonia Gonzalez Lamb A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Spanish -24- Doris Bernice Leavitt Diploma, Bouve-Boston School of Physical Education Assistant Instruct or in Physical Education for Women John Witherspoon McDowaii. B.S. Director of Physical Education and Athletics for Men William McIntosh Instructor in Brass, Rollins Conservatory Malcolm MacLaren, Jr. A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Classics Hugh Ferguson McKean A.B., diploma, L ' Ecole des Beaux-Arts Americaine ( Fontainebleau ) Instructor in Art John Martin B.S. Conference Leader and Consultant on International Relations William Melcher A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Business Ad ministration Helen Moore J.M., Diploma, Conservatoire Americaine; Juilliard Graduate School of Music Associate Professor of Piano Evelyn Newman Ph.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of English Literature Audrey Lillian Packham B.S., A.M. Assistant Professor of Education r 3H V 1 ft V -25- 1 Fred Lewis Pattee A.B., A.M., M.L., Litt.D. Professor of American Literature Fleetwood Peeples Director of Aquatic Sports Jean Jacques Pfister Mark Hopkins Fine Arts School, Gewerbe School of Professional Training (Germany), Art Students ' League, Grand Central School of Art. Associate Professor of Art Harry Raymond Pierce B.O., M.O. Professor of Speech William Albert Rogers A.B. Assistant Instructor in Physical Education for Men William Louis Roney A.B., LL.B., A.M. Associate Professor of Modern Languages Cloyde Harlan Russell B.S., A.M. Assistant Instructor in Chemistry Edward John Salstrom B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Chemistry Jessie Belle Rittenhouse Scollard Litt.D. Conference Leader and Consultant in the Art of Poetry Writing Bernice Catherine Shor B.S., M.S. Assistant Professor of Biology -26- HlRMAN 1 : R1 1)1 RICK $11 WIRT F.A.G.O., Graduate Guilmant Organ School; Diploma, Conservatoire Aniericaine Associate Professor of Organ and Organist of Knoules Memorial Chapel Charm s Wardi i i Sum s A.M., Ph.D., M.D., D.S.C., LL.D. Professor of ' .oology 1 N I 1 1 I C HUM M SltlNI A.B., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Philosophy Alexander Buel Trowbridge, Jr. A.B. Assistant Professor of Religion ami Ethics Johannes Cornelis Theodorus Uphof B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Professor of Biology and Rot any Willard Austin Wattles A.B., A.M. Professor of English and Journalism Marjorie Jefferson Webber A.B., A.M. Director of Physical Education for Women Edward Francis Weinberg B.S., C.E. Professor of Mathematics Louis Elsbf.rg Wise A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Organic Chemistry William Frederick Yust A.B., B.L.S. Librarian 1 - 27 - HEADS OF RESIDENCE HALLS Standing: Mrs. Georgia E. Enwright, Miss Ellen V. Apperson, Mrs. Cornelia C. Mendsen, Miss Effie Jane Buell, Mrs. Nell B. Lester. Sitting: Mrs. Marian H. Wilcox, Mrs. Daisy L. Schulten, Mrs. Marcia L. Patterson, Mrs. Norma C. Sti mm, Mrs. Eleanor F. McKean. - 28 - SENIORS Ruth Arrant Kappa Alpha Theta, President in ' 3 3; Pan- Hellenic; Photographic Editor, The Tomo- kan, ' 34, Associate Editor, ' 3 5; Publica- tions Union; Golf and Tennis; Transfer, The University of Miami. Robert W. Black Kappa Alpha; President of the Upper Divi- sion; Interfraternity Council, ' 33- ' 35; Pub- lications Union; Sandspur; Flamingo, Editor, ' 3 3, ' 34, Associate Editor, ' 32, ' 3 3; O. D. K., President, ' 34, ' 3 5; Rollins Key Society; OOOO; Student Dramatic Company; Spanish Club; French Club; Freshman Football. Nancy Bradford Chi Omega; French Club, ' 31, ' 32; Winter Park Symphony Orchestra. WlNTHROP BRUBAKER Rho Lambda Nu; Publications Union; Tomokan, Assistant, ' 33, ' 34, Editor-in- Chief, ' 3 5; Sandspur, Reporter; Rollins Key Society; French Club. 32 - s N I O R S Vincent M. Canzoneri Transfer, Institute of Musical Art. Grace Johnston Connor Pi Beta Phi, Vice-President, ' 34, ' 3 5; Pan- Hellenic Council; Spanish Club, President, ' 3 5; French Club; Transfer, Progressive College, Celigny, Geneva, Switzerland; Overseas, Grenoble, France. George Davison Cornele International Relations Club; Rollins Fly- ing Club, Chairman, ' 34, ' 3 5. Nancy Jane Cushman Kappa Kappa Gamma, President, ' 3 5; Stu- dent Association, Secretary and Treasurer, ' 3 5; Girls ' R Club; Phi Beta; Order of The Fibra; Member of Student Dramatic Company, ' 3 3 - ' 3 5, Student Director, ' 34, ' 3 5 ; International Relations Club; French Club; Sandspur, Reporter; Warcanoeing; Archery; Dancing. - 34- s N O R S Milford J. Davis Theta Kappa Nu; O. D. K.; Rollins Key Society; R Club; Chapel Committee; As- sembly Committee; Publications Union, ' 3 3, ' 34; Sandspur, Copy Editor, Rewrite Editor, ' 31, ' 3 2; Rollinsania, ' 32- ' 3 5; Flamingo, Business Manager, ' 3 3, ' 34; Student Dramatic Company; Glee Club, ' 31- ' 3 5, President and Business Manager, ' 3 3- ' 3 5; Octette, President and Business Man- ager, ' 3 5; Studio Club, ' 3 2, ' 3 3; Varsity De- bate Squad, ' 3 2, ' 3 3; International Relations Club; French Club; German Club; Pi Kap- pa Delta; Rho Kappa Sigma; Oratorical As- sociation; Choir, President and Manager, ' 32- ' 35; Tennis Team, Manager, ' 32, ' 33; Intramural Athletics, President and Man- ager, ' 3 5. Olcott Hawthorne Deming X Club, Secretary, ' 3 5; OOOO; R Club; Glee Club, ' 31, ' 32; International Re- lations Club; Spanish Club, ' 3 3, ' 34, Vice- President; French Club, ' 31, ' 3 2, Vice- President; Choir, ' 3 3 - ' 3 5; Chapel Commit- tee; Sandspur, Reporter; Fencing Team, ' 3 3, ' 34; Football Team, ' 30, ' 31; Crew, ' 34; Tennis Team, ' 31, ' 3 3 - 3 5 . Esther Kendall Earle Pi Beta Phi; Pan-Hellenic; Publications Union; Sandspur, Associate and Manag- ing Editor, ' 32; Golf Team, ' 3 2 - ' 3 4 . Stuart C. Eaton Theta Kappa Nu, President, ' 3 5; Student Council; Interfraternity Council, Secretary- Treasurer, ' 34, Vice-President, ' 3 5; O. D. K.; R Club; Glee Club, ' 31- ' 34; Debate Team; Oratorical Association, ' 3 2; Choir, ' 31- ' 35; Crew; Swimming, ' 3 1 - 3 4 . - 36- S E N O R S Harry Edmonds X Club; Tennis Team, ' 31, ' 32- ' 3 5. Theodore J. Ehrlich The Rollins Key Society, ' 3 4, ' 3 5; Student Dramatic Company, ' 3 2 - ' 3 5 ; Glee Club, ' 31 - ' 3 5; Oratorical Association, ' 3 5; College Band, Student Leader, ' 3 3; Choir, ' 31 - ' 3 5. Constance Etz Gamma Phi Beta; Pan-Hellenic Council; French Club; Swimming, ' 34, ' 3 5; Volley- ball, ' 34; Transfer, Marietta College. Louise Alberta Fariss Phi Mu; Y. V. C. A., ' 3 1, ' 32; Dancing, ' 32- ' 35; Basketball, ' 32- ' 34; Volley-ball, ' 32, ' 33. - 38 - - 39 - s N O R S Blanche Georgene Fishback Kappa Kappa Gamma; Vice-President of the Upper Division, ' 3 5; Student Faculty Dis- cipline Committee, ' 34; Chapel Committee, ' 3 3, ' 34; Social Service, Chairman, ' 3 5; As- sembly Committee, ' 34, ' 3 5; Studio Club, ' 3 2- ' 3 5; French Club, ' 3 3; Oratorical As- sociation, ' 3 3. Guilford E. Galbraith Kappa Phi Sigma. Herbert W. Gardner Phi Delta Thcta; Crew; Transfer, Iowa Wesleyan. Jonathan Hall Phi Delta Theta; Social Service Committee; Fencing Team, Captain, ' 34; R Club; Transfer, The University of Maryland. -40- SEN O R S Sara Colling Harbottle Kappa Kappa Gamma, Vice-President, Pan-Hellenic Council, Vice-President, French Club; Dancing, ' 34. Maxeda Hess ' 3 5; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Rollins Key Society, ' 3 5; ' 3 3- ' 3 5; Girls ' R Club; Order of The Libra; Phi Beta, President, ' 34, Vice-Presi- dent, ' 3 5; Glee Club, ' 31, ' 3 2; Choir, ' 31- ' 3 5; Publications Union, ' 34, ' 3 5; Sand- spur, Feature Editor, ' 31, ' 3 2, Dramatic Critic, ' 34, ' 3 5; Flamingo, Associate Editor, ' 34, ' 3 5; The College Poetry Society of America; Chapel Committee, ' 33- ' 3 5; Tennis Team, ' 31- ' 3 5; Fencing Team, ' 3 1- ' 3 5; Transfer, Cornell College, Iowa. Joseph Corwin Howell Phi Delta Theta; Crew, ' 3 5. Margaret Regan Jenkins Kappa Kappa Gamma; Phi Beta; Student Dramatic Company; Studio Club, ' 3 5; French Club, ' 33, ' 34; Chapel Committee, ' 3 5; Cosmopolitan Club, ' 31, ' 3 2. -42- s N O R S Elbert Gordon Jones Kappa Alpha; O. D. K.; OOOO; Rollins Key Society, President, ' 3 5; Student Faculty Discipline Committee, ' 3 5; Publications Union, President, ' 3 5; Sandspur, Editor- in-Chief, ' 3 5, Associate Editor, ' 34; Fla- mingo, ' 3 2- ' 34; Student Dramatic Com- pany, ' 34; Oratorical Association, Radio Announcer, 3 1- 3 5 ; Chapel Staff, ' 32- ' 35; Vice-President of the Florida Intercollegiate Press Association, ' 3 5. Walter Kimball Staff Organist of Radio Station WDBO, Orlando, Fla., ' 31 - ' 3 5. Mary Jane King Pi Beta Phi; French Club, Vice-President, ' 3 2, ' 3 3; Archery Team; Tennis Team. Katrina Knowlton Pi Beta Phi, President, ' 34, ' 3 5; Hellenic, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Girls ' R ' Secretary, ' 34, German Club; Secretary, ' 3 5; canoeing, ' 31, Hockey Team, Pan- Club, ' 3 5; Order of The Libra; Social Service Committee, Swimming Team; War- ' 32; Volley-ball, ' 32, ' 33; ' 3 3; Basketball Team, ' 3 2- ' 34. -44- S E N O R S Ben F. Kuhns, Jr. X Club, O. D. K„ Vice-President, ' 34, ' 3 5; R Club; Tomokan, Photographic- Editor, ' 3 2 - ' 3 4 ; Sandspur, Photographic Editor, ' 3 2 - ' 3 4 ; Chapel Staff, Chairman, ' 3 2- ' 3 5; Rollins Pictorial, ' 3 2; Golf Team, ' 31- ' 3J; Tennis Team, ' 3 2, ' 3 3. Julia Louise Large Alpha Phi; Rollins Key Society, ' 34; Espe- ranto Club, ' 3 1; Chapel Committee, ' 34; Transfer, The University of Rochester, New York. Frances Lee Kappa Kappa Gamma; Tomokan, Assist- ant, ' 3 5; Rho Kappa Sigma; Transfer, Wells College, New York. Jane Elizabeth LeRoy Pi Beta Phi, Pledge, ' 31; Spanish Club, ' 3 1- ' 3 5; French Club, ' 34, ' 3 5; Oratorical As- sociation, ' 31 - ' 3 3; Golf Team, ' 31 - ' 34, Cap- tain, ' 34. -46- SENIORS Sally Townsend Limerick Jack Alan MacWatt Kappa Alpha Theta; Order of The Libra; Sandspur, Advertising, ' 33, ' 34; Fla- Rollins Key Society; Student Dramatic Mingo, Advertising, ' 34, ' 3 5; Rollins Key Company; Flamingo, Proofreader, ' 3 2, Society, ' 3 3, ' 34, ' 3 5; Canoe Instructor. ' 3 3, Associate Editor, ' 3 3, ' 34; German Club; Chapel Committee; Interracial Com- mittee; Legal Aid Committee, Chairman; Transfer, from Malot Junior College. Linton Malone E. Jane Marshall Kappa Alpha; OOOO; Debating; Oratorical Phi Mu; Pan-Hellenic; Studio Club; French Association, ' 3 2; Spanish Club, ' 3 2; Swim- Club; Sandspur, ' 3 2; R Book, Busi- ming, ' 3 3; Football, ' 3 2, ' 3 3, ' 34. ness Manager. - 48 - SENIORS SEN O R S Louis Minster Janet Rutherford Murphy Kappa Kappa Gamma; Student Association, Lower Division Representative, ' 3 3, ' 34, Upper Division Representative, ' 34, ' 3 5; Rollins Key Society; Girls ' R Club, ' 33, ' 34, ' 3 5; Order of The Libra, Charter Mem- ber, ' 35; Theatre, ' 32, ' 33; Glee Club, ' 32, ' 3 3; Volley-ball; Hockey; Dancing; Tennis. Mary Wanita Mutispaugh Pi Gamma Mu. La Georgia Newell Kappa Kappa Gamma. - 50- S E N O R S SENIORS Marvin Norton Virginia Orebaugh Phi Mu; Phi Beta, Secretary, ' 3 3, ' 34, Treas- urer, ' 34; A Capella Choir; Archery. Jack L. Ott Barbara Dee Parsons Phi Delta Theta; Interfraternity Council, Alpha Phi; Rollins Key Society; Phi Beta; ' 3 5. Theatre; French Club; German Club; A Capella Choir, ' 31, ' 3 2, ' 3 3; Dancing, In- structor. - 52 - SEN O R S Irwin Franklin Price, Jr. Phi Kappa Tau; Senior Loan Committee; Sandspur, Exchange Editor; Transfer, La- fayette University. Georgia Eleanor Reese Pi Beta Phi; Phi Beta; Chapel Music Com- mittee; Choir; Glee Club; French Club; Spanish Club; Golf; Transfer, Boston Con- servatory of Music. Everett L. Roberts Thcta Kappa Nu; Glee Club; A Capella Choir; Winter Park Symphony Orchestra; Member of the Senior Committee, ' 34; Theatre; College Band; Campus Bugler, ' 33, ' 34; Cheering, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35. George Rogers Kappa Alpha; OOOO; Football, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34, ' 3 5; Basketball; Baseball; Head Waiter, College Commons; Transfer, University of New Hampshire. - 54- SEN O R S Leonard Roth Rho Lambda Nu, President; Student Asso- ciation Council; Social Committee; Inter- fraternity Council, Secretary - Treasurer; Sandspur, Columnist (Rothodoxies) ; O. D. K.; Rollins Key Society; R Club; De- bate Team, Pi Kappa Delta; International Relations Club; Spanish Club; Oratorical Association; Football, ' 3 3; Crew, ' 34, ' 3 5; National Institute Public Affairs Internship, ' 3 5; Hall Scholarship, ' 34; Trevellian Schol- arship, ' 34, ' 3 5; Rhodes Scholarship Candi- date, ' 3 5, from Rollins; Transfer, Uni- versity of Florida and Southern College. Virginia Caroline Roush Alpha Phi; Chapel Program Committee; A Capella Choir; Fencing Cup; Transfer, St. Petersburg Junior College. Frederick Griffin Scholfield Rollins Key Society, ' 3 3, ' 34, ' 3 5; Rifle Team; Tennis Team, ' 3 3, ' 34, ' 3 5. David Schrage Kappa Alpha, President; OOOO, President, ' 3 5; O. D. K.; Fox Club, ' 34, ' 3 5; Social Committee; Rat Committee; Football, ' 32, ' 3 3, ' 34, ' 3 5; Student Council, Chairman, ' 3 5; President of Student Association, ' 3 5; Interfraternity Council, ' 34, ' 3 5. - 56- s N O R S Bertha Jennings Shannon Phi Mu, President, ' 3 3, ' 34; Pan-Hellenic; Glee Club, ' 3 3, ' 34, ' 35; French Club; A Capella Choir, ' 33, ' 34. Richard Cutts Shannon, III Rho Lambda Nu; Winter Park Symphony Orchestra. Richard Spoeiord Shattuck Kappa Alpha; Treasurer of Freshman Class; President of Sophomor e Class; Student Faculty Committee; OOOO; Theatre; In- ternational Relations Club; French Club; Pi Kappa Delta, President, ' 3 5; Rollins Repre- sentative in Oratory to Pi Kappa Delta National Convention, ' 34, ' 3 5; Oratorical Association; Sprague Oratorical Contest Winner, ' 3 3; Student Dramatic Company; Annie Russell Company; Crew; Swimming; Fencing. Emily Kathleen Shepherd Phi Mu, Treasurer; Sandspur; Rollins Key Society; Order of The Libra; Girls ' Debate Team; Glee Club, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Debate Team, ' 33, ' 34, ' 3 5; International Relations Club, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Spanish Club, Secre- tary; French Club, ' 3 2, ' 3 3, ' 34, ' 3 5; Es- peranto Club; Y. W. C. A.; Oratorical As- sociation; A Capella Choir; Cosmopolitan Club; Awarded Bronze Medal Award and Certificate from El Instituto de las Espanas of New York City for Excellency in Span- ish, ' 31, ' 3 2. - CO - SEN O R S Elsie Lee Shippey Alpha Phi; Glee Club; A Capella Choir; Chapel Committee; Golf; Transfer, St. Petersburg Junior College. Carol Morrison Smith Alpha Phi; Pan-Hellenic, ' 33, ' 34; Rollins Key Society, Vice-President, ' 3 5; Girls ' R Club, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Studio Club, ' 34, ' 35; International Relations Club; Spanish Club; French Club; Pi Gamma Mu, ' 3 3, ' 34, ' 3 5; Oratorical Association, ' 34, ' 3 5; Swimming; Hockey; Basketball; Tennis. Marion W. Templeton Alpha Chi Omega; Sandspur, Reporter; Flamingo, Associate Editor, ' 34, ' 3 5; Glee Club, ' 33, ' 34; Studio Club, ' 33, ' 34; French Club; Art Library Assistant; Trans- fer, Universities of Michigan and Minne- sota; B.S., University of Minnesota, ' 31. Agatha Townsend Chapel Committee, ' 33, ' 34; Hungerford School Committee, ' 3 5; International Rela- l ions Club, President, ' 34, ' 3 5; Flossie Hill Short Story Prize, ' 32; Archery Champion- ship, ' 3 2, ' 3 3, ' 34. - 60 - SEN O R S Ruth Elizabeth Vruwink Alpha Phi; French Club. Robert Warfield Sandspur, Reporter; Theatre, Assistant to Miss Russell, Student Assistant in Dra- matic Art, ' 3 5; Debate Team, ' 32; Interna- tional Relations Club, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34; Oratori- cal Association; Chapel Committee, ' 3 2, ' 3 3, ' 34, ' 3 5 ; Fencing. Richard Blythe Washington Phi Delta Theta; Student Association, Vice- President; Interfraternity Council; O. D. K.; OOOO; R Club; Rho Sigma Kappa; Social Service Work; Football, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34, ' 3 5; Baseball, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34, ' 3 5; Basketball, ' 3 2 - ' 3 4, ' 3 5. FIelen Louise Welch Phi Beta, President, ' 32; Glee Club; A Ca- pella Choir, ' 3 1 - ' 3 5; Volley-ball, ' 31, ' 3 2; Rollins Octette, ' 3 5. -62- s N O R S Helen Louise Wellman Tomokan, Junior Assistant, ' 3 2; Sand- spur, Reporter, ' 3 2; Theatre, Rollins Players, ' 3 2; Glee Club, ' 31, ' 3 2; Y. W. C. A.; Swimming; Warcanoeing; Volley- ball; Transfer, Florida State College for Women. Eleanor Chapman White Pi Beta Phi, Scholarship Chairman, ' 3 3, ' 34; Order of The Libra; Rollins Student Com- pany, ' 3 3; Social Service Committee, ' 3 5; Tomokan Staff, ' 34; Sandspur, ' 3 5; Transfer, Mills College. Hi i ki da R. Win an i Alpha Phi, President; Pan-Hellenic, Presi- dent; Order of The Libra; Phi Beta; Rollins Key Society; Student Discipline Committee; Senior Committee; Chapel, Program Com- mittee; Theatre. William T. Woodhull Phi Delta Theta; Sandspur, Reporter, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34, ' 3 5; R Book; Rollins Key Society, ' 35; Glee Club, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; A Capella Choir, ' 3 3, ' 34, ' 3 5; Golf; Tennis. - 64- Marguerite Poetzinger Pierce Donald Thomas Member of the Winter Park Symphony Or- Phi Delta Theta chestra and Aeolian Trio; Oratorical Asso- ciation; Transfer, Defiance College, and Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. OLD PLAN JUNIORS Socrates Chakales Walter Jordan - 66- Horace P. Abbott, Jr. Leah Jeanne Bartlett Dante G. Bergonzi John C. Bills, III Dorothea Breck John O. Bullock William Carmody Andrew J. Carter Ann Clark Norris C. Clark Reginald T. Clough Barbara Connor Gulielma Daves William L. Davits Virginia M. Dunn Marlen Eldredge Nancy Gantt Miriam L. Gaertner -68- Anne M. Grand I i i i M. Greeni James F. Holden Virginia Jai ki i Jeanette Lichtenstein H. Law Mai i ri Martha B. Marsh Jean A. Mergentime Sterling P. Olmsted Jean G. Park.] r Dorothy V. Par mi i i Victoria G. Peirce Thomas M. Powell Katharine 15. Rk i Elisabet L. Richards Harrison Roberts - 69 • Eleanor L. Sheetz Howard W. Showalter, Jr. Dorothy E. Smith Frances E. Southgate Sally Stearns Edith A. Stephan Henry Suck Leo Suck Jane Thayer Betty Trevor James L. Tullis Annette S. Twitchell Georgia Walling William F. Whalen Marjorie White Jane Willard Daniel Winant, Jr. Robert L. Wise 70- I Donald F. Aishton Charles W. Allen, Jr. Lennox P. Allen Paul H. Alter Richard J. Alter Adelaide Anderson John O. Andrews Chris Argyris Dolores Asensio Ward L. Atwood Martha J. Axlinl Catharine H. Bailey Eliot S. Baker Richard O. Baldwin Seymour D. Bai i ard Steven H. Bamberger Harriette R. Barbour William E. Barr -72- Stanton A. Barrltt Jac k M. Barring i on Frances Barti iolomew l VRG R1 I K. Bashi ord Bl II II 1. Bas Til N Alice S. Battf.n M AKGAK1 1 BAL 1 M AN N Jane C. Bi auchamp John D. Beaufort Mil. TON R. BlF.KMAN Marjorii M. Bitsi i Barbara A. Binnitt Maiu.ii ki n Bird Li. on rd Birdsong Donald A. Bond Albi rt Bordi n Andreas D. Bonn Hazf.l I. Bow IN - 73 - James Boyd, III Mary Virginia Boyd Anne Louise Bradford Volney Bragg Virginia M. Braznell Helen L. Brown John B. Brown H. Richard Brown, Jr. Jane E. Browne Amelia Buckley Rebecca Bumby Catharine E. Burdette Charlotte R. Cadman Joseph F. Cannon Anthony Carretta Dorothy M. Case Robert Caten Walter S. Chapin -74- Donald A. Cheney, Jr. Hi in Clark Charles H. Clawson Bon k I ). ( m i i n son Lathrop L. Cross Amelia Daii i v David Daly, Jr. Penrose Davis William M. Davis, II Ruth M. Dawson Rosalie R. Dean Sarah R. Dean Arthur T. Dear, Jr. Lewis D. di Schweinitz , Martha M. deSchwfinitz Mary Dm hi Phyllis Dorr Charles F. Draper -75- I Pauline M. Draper Helen M. Droste Richard Dunham Howard W. Edwards, Jr. Sally S. Farnsworth Davitt A. Felder Irving M. Feeder Mary C. Flaherty John A. Fluno Robert Y. Fluno Eleanor P. Ford Dwight Foster George E. Gabriel Henry H. Garrigues, Jr. Margaret Geteiro Ralph H. Gibbs Eleanor B. Gifssen Jeanne B. Gillette - 76- Jean Glass ( i l RI I s T. GoELLER Doiuvnn 1 v Goi i i i k Egbi hi H. ( idii) WARREN R. Goi DSMITH Frances V. Grant Lyman B. Greaves Alleyne F. Grim mir Elizabeth S. Guinan Mary I. Gulnac Patricia Guppy James Haig Violet Halfpenny Marcelle Hammond S a i i v Hammond Jam I I audi c Maxwell Harrington Natai ii G. ] [arris -77- John P. Higley Barbara Hill George W. Hines Grace T. Hiteshew George B. Horne Marie Howe Carl B. Howland, Jr. Frances Hyer Richard K. Ingraham Jane W. Irby Helen F. Jackson Edwin C. Jameson, Jr. Char i i ni Jam Jam in Joe B. Jardine Helen S. Jennison Robert Johnson Beverly M. Jones Katherine A. Jones -78- Magdalene Jones Virginia Jon is Quii.lian Jordan MlCHAEl K AR Nil OW Carl F. Kettles Heli ni Keywan Esther Knepper Gerard KlRBY I.I am Kishi I Ann L. Kramp Katherine Lacy Henry Lauterbacii Doris B. Leavitt Richard Lee Margaret LeFevre Edward Levy Joseph M. Lichtenstein Mortimer Lichtenstein -79- Laura L. Lincoln Ralph Little, Jr. May M. Long Charles R. Lontz Howard C. Lyman Robert S. MacArthur Peter F. McCann Leisa E. McClendon Claudelle McCrary Alfred B. McCreary Mary Jane McCulloch John R. McFarlin Norman J. McGaefin, Jr. Mary S. McGonigal Cleveland McInnis Priscilla A. McLeod Louise B. MacPherson Dorothy Manwaring - 80- ■ I I son Marsi iai 1 GlLBERI 1 1 I I Mars. Jan i Mi EKER Ruth E. Melcher Sydney S. Mm i ar (.1 ORG! Q. Mil l l R W ' ll SON I . Mil LS Isabel S. Moberi y James Mobley Robert M. Morrow Eliza i;i 1 1 1 M i r Donald V. Murray James Myers, Jr. Margaret E. Myers Kuth A. Myers M ARTHA M A Y N E W U Y John A. Nichols M. Perry Oldham -81 - David B. Owen William R. Pagl Lillias A. Parker Paul R. Parker Jane B. Pelton Annajf.anne Pendexter Frances Perpente Opal N. Peters Jean C. Plumb Nan H. Pokller Thomas W. Pope George Porter Dorothy E. Potter Bryant Prentice, Jr. Muriel R. Price George L. Quayle Brown V. Rainwater Hildegarde Rees - 82 - John O. Rich Constancy R. Righter Frances L. Robinson Is Mill D. Roim.i KS Benjamin A. Row i . Jr. Mia K. Rutz Alberta G. Saint Cyr Wilson G. Scanlon WlLDA F. SCHMITT Marjorie E. Schulten Helen J. Sensenbrenner Robert W. Servis Betty J. Short Emily S. Showalter J. Sands Showalter Mary Elizabeth Sinclair Doris H. Smiley Anne R. Smith 83 - Elizabeth G. Smith Eugene Smith Jane L. Smith Louise B. Smith William Socash Kenneth P. Solomons, Jr. Gordon L. Spence Caroline Stanley Robert A. Stanley Olive Jane Stoner Marita A. Stueve Grace Terry Eugene C. Townsend Barbara A. Trueblood Richard G. Tully John Turner James D. Tuverson Paul A. T x achtman - 84- II 1 I AM C. G. TWITCHELL Bernice W. Uphof Juliet E. Vale Carol Valentine Robert H. Van Blvnum Ralph S. Vario Walti r R. Varnly Caroline J. Veeder Robert L. Vogel William R. Vosburgh George M. Waddell Lewis C. Wallace Alberto T. Warren Lloyd L. Wharton Malcom H. Whitelaw Thomas S. Wiiiteway Ricliari) H. Whjttemore Carol H. Williams 85 - GRADUATE STUDENTS THE STUDENT ASSOCIATION The student body of Rollins College is self -governed bv the medium of the Stu- dent Association. Each person regularly enrolled in the college automatically be- comes a member of the Association and has a vote in deciding the leadership of the organization. This group has the highest authority in all student affairs. To expedite governmental affairs the Student Association vests its judicial powers in the Student Council, a body of nine members including the president, vice-president, and secretary of the Student Association. Also serving are six student representatives, three elected from each division of the entire student body. The Student Council controls the business affairs of the five departments of the Student Association, namely: Men ' s Athletics, Women ' s Athletics, Publi- cations Union, Debating, and the Glee Club. Each year the Council receives a lump sum, the Student Association fees, which it divides as it sees fit among the various departments under its jurisdiction. Nancy Cushman David C. Schrage Richard Washington Secretary-Treasurer President Vice-President PERSONNEL OF THE STUDENT COUNCIL David C. Schrage President Richard Washington Vice-President Nancy Cushman Secretary-Treasurer UPPER DIVISION LOWER DIVISION REPRESENTATIVES REPRESENTATIVES Janet Murphy Ralph S. Vario Stuart C. Eaton Thomas M. Powell William F. Whalen Frances Hyer Back row: William Whalen, Thomas Powell, David Schrage, Stuart Eaton. Front row: Frances Hyer, Nancy Cushman, Janet Murphy. -90- Back row: Gordon Jones, Prof. A. ButL Trowbridge, H. P. Abbott. Front row: Prof. Malcolm MacLaren, Grace Terry, Dean Arthur D. Enyart, Dean Winslow S. Anderson, Dean Helen G. Spracue, Blanche Kishback, Dr. Evelyn Newman. STUDENT-FACULTY DISCIPLINE COMMITTEE This organization, composed of Dean Anderson, Dean Enyart, Dean Sprague, three faculty members and six members of the student body, has the final word in deciding most of the disciplinary measures of the college. Few cases are handled during a year, but it is essential that those who allegedly violate the bonds which bind the college community be given a chance to state their cases before a representative body, before the college can reach a final decision. As well qualified as the Rollins administration is, it is n atural that the stu- dents themselves are often better fitted to handle specific cases than is the faculty. It is also by virtue of this committee that the student bodv mav have a con- structive part in formulating regulations. The success of any college is especially dependent on the whole-hearted co-operation of the total organization, students, faculty, and finally of the town in which it is located. -91 - THE CHAPEL STAFF The development and the general oversight of the activities centering on the Chapel are entrusted to the Chapel Staff, consisting of twelve under-graduate students, Dean Charles Campbell of the Chapel, and his assistant, Professor Buel Trowbridge. The staff is the nucleus of a group of five committees each of which is ordained to carry out projects in a specific field. The Program Committee ar- ranges the regular Sunday Morning Meditation Services, choosing s peakers. At Christmas and at Thanksgiving, generous gifts of money and food were gathered and distributed by the Social Service Committee. The Publicity Committee ar- ranges for the publication of announcements and news disseminating from the Chapel. One committee has charge of the handling of the congregation and appoints ushers. Finally, the Music Committee has been a salient factor in the success of the musical portion of the services. -92 - Back row: John Bills, Prof. Wendell C. Stone, David Schrage. Front row: Dean Arthur D. Enyart, Leah Jeanne Bartlftt, I ' rof. Jean Jacques Pfister, Mrs. Mirian H. Wilcox, Dean Helen G. Spracue. SOCIAL COMMITTEE Dean Sprague, Dr. Bradley, Dean Arthur Delano Enyart, Mr. Pfister, Miss Robie, Dr. Wendell Stone, Mrs. Wilcox, and student members, Leah Jeanne Bartlett and Leonard Roth, comprise the Rollins social committee, one of the most important organizations on the college campus. Under the guidance and wise counsel of Chairman Helen Guernsey Sprague, Dean of Women, this committee arranges a calendar for the school year, so that there may be no conflict in the dates of all- college dances and other important social functions. This committee also handles matters of discipline relative to women stu- dents, and enforces rigid regulations regarding their conduct and proper chaperon- age at all college functions. Other duties of this body consist in the passing of house rules governing fraternities, sororities and dormitories, and in enforcing discipline in cases of infractions. - 93 - PUBLICATIONS UNION The Publications Union has concluded its fifth successful year. It was founded to control all student publications and to advance their respective interests within the student body. The specific duties of this group include election of editors, associate editors, and business managers of the Sandspur, the Tomokan and the Flamingo and supervision of all major business transactions made by these publications. The personnel of the Union is composed of the above named heads of each member publication with the addition of the Advertising Commissioner and representatives-at-large from the upper and lower divisions of the Student Asso- ciation. Dean Winslow S. Anderson, Mr. E. T. Brown, and one faculty representative of each publication are members in an advisory capacity only. Back row: Reginald Cloljgh, James Holden, Bonar Collinson, Ervin T. Brown, Prof. Herman F. Harris, John Bills, Socrates Chakales, David Bothi , H. P. Abbott. Front row: Gordon Jones, Dean Winslow S. Anderson, Maxeda Hess, Prof. Edwin O. Grover, Winthrop Brubaker. -94- Back row: Prof. E. O. Grovir, [amis Holden, Seymour Ballard, John Nichols, H. P. Abbott. Front row: Frances Lee, Mildred Muccia, Winthrop Brubakir, Dorothylu Goeller, John C. Bills. THE TOMOKAN STAFF Winthrop Brubaker Editor-in-Chief Ruth Arrant Associate Editor John C. Bills Business Manager Dorothylu Goeller Art Editor Mildred Muccia Photographic Editor Frances Lee Assistant David Bothe Assistant Sterling Olmsted Proof Editor Seymour Ballard Associations Editor James Holden Sports Editor H. P. Abbott Advertising Manager John Nichols Assistant Business Manager Proe. Edwin Osgood Grover Faculty Adviser -95- THE SANDSPUR Now in its forty-first year and rapidly becoming one of the finer leading college weeklies, the Rollins Sahdspur is the college paper. With little faculty super- vision it is truly representative of the voice of the students themselves. This year the paper has made noticeable progress along lines of better make-up and quality of the news articles. Run on a strictly business basis, the Sandspur is largely supported by the advertising, although it receives an allotment from the Student Association yearly. Its sharp, clear editorials clarify the current controversies and state the issues impartially. World news from the United Press is included in each issue so that its readers may have a selected group of the most important national and inter- national happenings. Rollins news, however, takes up the greater part of this journal, and all college events are carefully recorded. For the past year Gordon Jones has been Editor-in-Chief and David Bothe has been Acting Editor. Bonar Collinson has been the Business Manager. Back row: Howard Showalter, Mary Peck, Jane Pelton, Elisabet Richards, Louise MacPhirson, Bonar Collinson, John Bullock, Jack MacWatt, Seymour Ballard, H. P. Abbott. Center row: Jean Parker, David Boihi , Gordon Jones, Reginald Clough, Gordon Spence. Front row: Proe. Willard Wattles, Louise Bradford, Jane Sensenbrenner, Natalie Harris, Marlen Eldredge, Isabel Rodgers, John Bills. -96- Victoria Peirce, F.lisabi t Richards, Sterling Olmsted, James Tuverson, Jean Parker, John Bills, James Holden. THE FLAMINGO This is the literary magazine of Rollins College. It recently concluded an epoch- making year under the leadership of its Editor, James F. Holden. Instead of publishing a small magazine each month as heretofore, the policy was changed to permit the more infrequent publishing of larger issues. Guided by this standard, the staff got out the issues only when the material submitted was of high enough quality to warrant publication. The result was four issues, three of which were double the size of those of any preceding year, and which contained for the first time short stories of magazine length. Associate Editors were Maxeda Hess, John Bills, Gilbert Maxwell, and Marion Templeton. The Business Manager was James Tuverson. - 97 - OMICRON DELTA KAPPA Omicron Delta Kappa is a national honorary campus activity fraternity for men. It aims to accord recognition and to give greater opportunities for service to those who achieve positions of prominence in campus activities. It seeks further to establish a more intimate relationship between administration and students in advancing the best interests of the college. Finally, it exists to foster and maintain healthy traditions among members of the student body. O. D. K. recognizes five major fields of activity: Scholarship, Athletics, Student Government, Publications, and Debating. Its membership is limited to six per cent, of the male student body. Faculty members are elected by the whole group in recognition of conspicuous service. During Founder ' s Week Rex Beach was elected to honorary membership. Members are: David Schrage, E. Gordon Jones, Milford Davis, Stuart Eaton, Richard Washington, Benjamin Kuhns, Robert Black, Leonard Roth, Dean Wins- low S. Anderson, Dean Arthur D. Enyart, President Hamilton Holt, A. J. Hanna, Edward Weinberg, Willard Wattles, Jack McDowell, E. T. Brown and Will Rogers. Back row: Milford Davis, David Schrage, Prof. Willard A. Wattles. Front row: Dean Arthur D. Enyart, Dean Winslow S. Anderson, Robert Black, Benjamin Kuhns, Ervin T. Brown, Dr. Hamilton Holt. Mi -98- Back row: William Davies. Theodore Ehrlich, Howard Shoialter. Dantf. Bergonzi, Jack MacWatt. Center row: Elfkeda Winant, Ben Trevor, Louisi Large, Maxeoa Hess, William Wood- mull. Robert Hi M k. Front row: Gordon Jones, Dorothi Smith, Marlen Eldredge, Jean Parker, Barbara Par- sons, Elisabet Ru hards, Morris Clark, Sally Limerick, Jani t Murphy, Wis. nut op Rruhaki it. THE ROLLINS K E y SOCIETY This honorary scholastic organization was established on the campus in 1928. Thirty students in the Upper Division who have attained high scholarship and are engaged in varied activities in extra-curricular affairs are eligible lor member- ship. The purposes of the society arc to study, discuss, and strive to further the best interests of Rollins College; to encourage graduate work among Rollins students; to help to maintain scholarship and extra-curricular activities on a high plane. The accomplishment of the year to which the society points with most pride is the establishment of the Phi Society, a similar honorary for Lower Division students. The officers are: Cordon Jones. President; Fred Scholfield, Vice-President, and Jean Parker, Secretary-Treasurer. Members are: Dorothy Smith, Marlen Eldredge, Barbara Parsons, Elisabet Richards, Norris Clark, Sally Limerick, Janet Murphy, Winthrop Brubaker, El- freda Winant, Elizabeth Trevor, Louise Large, Maxcda Hess, William Davies, Theodore Ehrlich, Howard Showalter, Dante Bergonzi, Jack MacWatt, William Woodhull. Robert Black. -99- 1935 Robert W. Black Olcott H. Deming E. Gordon Jones Linton Malone George Rogers David C. Schrage Richard Shattuck Richard Washington Back row: Reginald Clough, Dr. Evelyn Newman, Prof. Harry R. Pierce, Milford Davis, Richard Shattuck. Front row: Sterling Olmsted, George Young, David Bothe. PI KAPPA DELTA The Florida Alpha Chapter of Pi Kappa Delta, a national honorary forensic fraternity, has just closed a successful year. Members of this organization are selected on a basis of their records in intercollegiate debating, oratorical con- tests, and contests in extemporaneous and after-dinner speaking. Under the supervision of Professor Harry Raymond Pierce, the Alpha chapter was repre- sented at the national convention of Pi Kappa Delta which was held in Alabama this spring. The Rollins delegates were Richard Shattuck, James Holden, and Sterling Olmsted, who participated in the Oration, Debating, and Extempora- neous Speaking, respectively. Those who were honored by membership in this fraternity this year were: James Holden, George Young, Marita Steuve, Kathleen Shepard and David Bothe. The old members include Richard Shattuck, President; Sterling Olmsted, Vice- President; Milford Davis, Reginald Clough and Leonard Roth. Faculty members are Professor Harry R. Pierce, Dean Winslow S. Anderson and Dr. Evelyn Newman. - 101 - PI GAMMA MU Pi Gamma Mu, the National Social Science Honor Society, was established at Rollins in the spring term of 193 2. The purpose of Pi Gamma Mu is to inculcate and to further the ideals of scholarship and social service and to develop a scientific attitude and approach to all social problems as they arise. Although there is no limit to its membership numerically, it is the purpose of Pi Gamma Mu to restrict its election of members to those who have shown prominence in some field of social service work. Students who are in the Upper Division, hav- ing a major in one of the social sciences, and who have maintained a high scholar- ship in their academic work, are eligible for initiation into the chapter. Student members are: Gordon Jones, Agatha Townsend, Mary Mutispaugh, Milford Davis, Dorothea Yust. Faculty members are: Dean Enyart, Dean An- derson, Royal France, Edwin Clarke and Audrey Packham. Gordon Jones, Dean Arthur D. Enyart, Dean Winslow S. Anderson, Prof. Royal W. France, Milford Davis. - 102 - i Back row: Opal Peters, Eleanor Sheetz, Maxeda Hess, Nancy Cushman, Eleanor Reese. Front row: Elfreda Winant, Frances Hyer, Dorothy Manwaring, Dorothy Smith, Barbara Parsons, Margaret Jenkins. PHI BETA This is a National Honorary Fraternity for women, founded Ma y 5, 1912, at Northwestern University. Its purpose is the promotion of music and drama in college campus life. It is through the medium of the arts and their relation to college life that Phi Beta seeks to teach its members to lead a life of service and to attain the highest type of womanhood. The Theta chapter of Phi Beta was installed on the Rollins campus in 1923, and has since become a strong and influential group. Phi Beta has been of helpful service to the college and to the community at large in its provision of talent for i lie dramatic productions in music. Phi Beta presented several programs on radio station WDBO in Orlando this year. Members are: Dorothy E. Smith, President; Maxeda Hess, Vice-President; El- freda Winant, Secretary; Virginia Orebaugh, Treasurer; Margaret Jenkins, Nancy Cushman, Mary E. Warner, Mary Jane Meeker, Barbara Parsons, Frances Hyer, Dorothy Manwaring, Guliclma Daves, Eleanor Sheetz, Opal Peters, Eleanor Reese, and Catharine Bailey. - 103 - THE PHI SOCIETY The Rollins Chapter of the Phi Society was started during the current college year. It is a national honorary organization, sponsored by Phi Beta Kappa, and its purpose is to recognize scholarship accomplishment during the freshman year. The Phi Society was organized several years ago at Colgate, Western Reserve and Dennison. Since then it has spread to various colleges and universities throughout the country. Ten members will be chosen every year from now on. Ultimately, member- ship in the Phi Society at Rollins will be recognized as a spur towards the win- ning of a Phi Beta Kappa key, when the college is permitted to grant this award. At present it has probably the highest requirements of any honor society on the campus and is the only national society of a purely scholastic nature now repre- sented here. The members of the Phi Society are: John Beaufort, President; Frances Perpente, Secretary; Jane Smith, Carol Valentine, James Myers, Sally Hammond, Paul Parker, Margaret LeFevre, John Fluno and Claudelle McCrary. Back row: Paul Parker, John Beaufort, James Myers. Front row: Carol Valentine, Jane Smith, Sally Hammond, Claudelle McCrary. -104- Back row: Dorothy Smith, Eleanor White, Mrs. Marian H. Wilcox, Maxeda Hess, Nancy CUSHMAN, ElISABET RICHARDS. Front row: Katrina Knowlton, Marlen Elureoge, Sally Limerick, Janet Murphy, Elfredv VCinant, Betty Trevor. THE ORDER OF THE LIBRA The Order of The Libra, a woman ' s honorary organization, was formed on the campus in January, 1 93 5. Its purpose is to recognize women who have at- tained a high standard in campus activities, to serve as an inspiration to others, to bring togeth er student leaders for a common purpose, and to form an under- standing bond between faculty and students. Plans are being made to nationalize the Order next fall. The membership of I ibra includes women prominent in athletics, scholarship and fine arts, publica- tions, social leadership and other activities. Elections of new members take place twice a year, in November and in April, and at no time shall the quota tapped each year exceed three per cent, of the women students. The officers are: Jean Parker, President; Betty Trevor, Vice-President; Dorothy Smith, Secretary, and Marlen Eldredge, Treasurer. Members are: Maxeda Hess, Nancy Cushman, Janet Murphy, Sally Limerick, Elisabet Richards, Elfreda Winant, Eleanor White, and Katrina Knowlton. Faculty members: Dr. Evelyn Newman, Mrs. Richard Burton, Mrs. Marian Wilcox, and Miss Annie Russell. • 105 - DRAMATICS For the past few years the work of the Dramatic Department has resulted in the favorable attention of dramatic groups in other parts of the country. In the Annie Russell Theatre, which is one of the finest equipped theatres in the coun- try for its size, productions have been presented of a superior quality, not only in acting, but in stagecraft. Students majoring in dramatics have splendid opportunities for furthering their interests in these lines. From the work in the department two series of plays are presented each year. The Laboratory Productions are put on by students in the department. The Student Company Productions are open to all students on the campus on an extra-curricular basis. Participation in Student Company Pro- ductions qualifies the student for election to the Student Company of the year, an honor awarded for distinguished work in either the acting or the technical branch. STUDENT PRODUCTIONS December 7 — ' The Wind and the Rain. February 21 — ' Hamlet. April 12 — ' Mr. Pirn Passes By. May 24 — ' Hotel Universe. -106- HONOR STUDENT COMPANY Catharine Bailey Nancy Cushman Ruth Dawson Virginia Holm Elfreda Winant ACTING MEMBERS Theodore Ehrlich Peter McCann Gilbert Maxwell Richard Shattuck Robert Warfield Alberto Warren Sally Limerick Gulielma Daves Virginia Hoi i Frances Southgate Pairicia Guppy PRODUCTION MEMBERS Margaret Jenkins William Davis Li onard Birdsong Alberto Warren Sieey Vario NoRRIS Clark Dr. Earl Fleischman Director Miss Annie Russell Dramatic Advisor Katherine Ewing Assistant Director Elizabeth R. Warner Costumes Donald S. Allen Stagecraft - 107 - THE ROLLINS OCTETTE Under the management and guidance of Milford J. Davis, the Rollins Octette was organized in January of this year. Since that time, this able and talented group has gained a well-deserved reputation for its lively interpretations of the lighter Glee Club classics. The group is under the able direction of Choir- master Christopher O. Honaas, who is in no small way responsible for the great success of the group. The Octette, a double quartette of mixed voices, is composed of Helen Welch and Katherine Winchester, sopranos; Hazel Bowen and Dorothy Smith, altos; John Beaufort and William Page, tenors; and Milford Davis and Lyman Greaves, basses. Organized originally as a supplement to the Chapel Choir, its immediate success sent the Octette into more professional fields. During the Winter Season, the Octette was one of the outstanding entertainment features at many of the leading hotels of this vicinity. The group also sang over the air from Station WDBO in Orlando. Back row: John Beaufort, William Page, Prof. Christopher Honaas, Milford Davis, Lyman Greaves. Front row: Katherine Winchester, Helen Welch, Hazel Bowen, Dorothy Smith. - 108 - liack row: William Woodhull, George Waddell, Prof. Herman Sievcert, Charles Clawson, William Mosteller, Fred Scholfield, Stuart Eaton, Lyman Greaves, Law Mallard, Bonar Collinson, John Beaufort, Everett Roberts, Prof. Malcolm MacLaki n. Tliird row: Prof. Bruce Dougherty, Louise Bradford, Kathleen Shepherd, Frances Grant, Charlotte Cadman, Mary Jane Meeker, Maxeda Hess, Virginia Shaw, Davitt Feeder, Marjorie Beisel, Irving Felder, Maxwell Harrington, Mili ord Davis. Second row: Prof. Christopher Honaas, Eleanor Sheetz, Dante Bi rgonzi, Ralph Gibus, Ruth Melcher, Virginia Orebaugh, Stella Wei.i.i r, Dorothea Yust, Marlen Eldredge, Dorothy Smith, William Page, Marjorie Weber, Theodore EhrLich, Dean Charles A. Campbell. Front row: Betty Trevor, Eleanor Reese, Hildegarde Rees, Katherine Winchester, Lillias Parker, Virginia Roush, Hazel Yarbrough, Hazel Bowi n, Elsie Shippi y, Phyllis Dorr, Pi kky Oldham. THE ROLLINS A CAPELLA CHOIR This musical organization directed by Choirmaster Christopher Honaas, has just completed its fourth season. It has taken a remarkably prominent place in the choral and musical art of the college. The choir leads the Chapel Meditation Service every Sunday morning, and is heard at the convocation and other formal college services. Early in February the choir was featured in a half-hour broadcast on WDBO, Orlando. Following this they presented a full concert program at the Chapel. The choir also assisted at the Semi-Centennial Celebration which was held in Orange City, as well as making a private appearance at a reception held at the home of President and Mrs. Hamilton Holt. The climax to their successful sea- son was the second home concert held in April, at which time the choir sang Requiem of Brahms. Officers of the choir are: Milford Davis, President and Manager; Lyman Greaves, Secretary; Herman Sicwert, Chapel Organist, and Christopher Honaas, Director. - 109 - WOMEN ' S R CLUB The Women ' s Physical Education Department at Rollins offers a wide range of activities including individual sports, seasonal team sports, aquatic sports, and dancing, a health program with corrective and nutritive work, and numerous outdoor activities. In the various sports there is much keen competition to make the honorary varsity teams, which are chosen by a committee of five, consisting of the respective sports heads, two R Club members, and the two Faculty mem- bers. Any girl making three honorary varsity teams, with a combination of team and individual sports, receives an R and automatically becomes a mem- ber of the R Club. This organization governs the W. A. A. Further awards given are the Rollins blazers, which are awarded only when a girl has made six honorary varsity teams. Miss Marjorie Weber has been for six years the competent Director of Physical Education. Miss Doris Leavitt has been her assistant this year. Annette Twitchell, Jean Parker, Jane Thayer, Barbara Connor, Lucy Greene, Katrina Knowlton, Dorothy Manwaring, Elezabeth Mower, Janet Murphy. -110- Back row: George Hines, Daniel Winant, Stuart Eaton, David Bothe. Center row: John Bills, John Nichols, Georgi Rooms, Tom I ' owi i i . Front row: Milford Davis, James Mobley, Carl Goeller, Linton Malone, John Brown, George Miller. THE R CLUB For a man to receive a letter, sweater, service star, or emblem lor his athletic accomplishments, and then to be included in the membership of the club, is to receive one of the highest honors the Student Association, through the athletic department, can bestow, and that is what the R Club is. It consists of those men who have earned their letters in the various major and minor sports, includ- ing football, basket-ball, baseball, golf, tennis and swimming. At the close of the football season, this honorary organization sponsors an annual banquet, at which time the football men are presented with sweaters and letters in recognition of their good sportsmanship. In accordance with an annual custom, the R Club assists in the selection of the year ' s outstanding athlete, the man who has distinguished himself not only in different sports but has also, because of his participation, contributed most to the upholding of the spirit and reputation of Rollins College. - I I I THE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION The Oratorical Association has been in existence in Rollins since 1929. It is an organization designed especially for those who are interested in various forms of public speaking, and is in effect a laboratory of the speech arts. From its member- ship are usually selected the debate teams and the members of Pi Kappa Delta, the national forensic fraternity which maintains a chapter at Rollins. The officers elected for the year 1934-3 5 were: Sterling Olmsted, President; James Holden, Vice-President; David Bothe, Secretary; George Young, Manager of Debate; Betty Ann Wyner, Chairman of the Program Committee. Meetings were held every Tuesday evening at 7:3 0. The programs included debates, readings, recitations, short sketches, and speeches presented by the mem- bers of the Association for the entertainment of other members and visitors. Back row: Richard Shattuck, Lec Suck, Davitt Felder, Prof. Harry R. Pierce, Henry Suck, George Young, David Bothe. Front row: Irving Felder, Virginia Holm, Betty Ann Wyner, Sterling Olmsted. -112- Back row: Irving Felder, George Waddell, George Quayle, Georgia Walling, Jane Beauchamp, Eleanor Reese. Front row: Betty Trevor, Carol Valentine, Victoria Peirce, Sterling Olmsted, George Young, Marlen Eldredge, Grace Connor. LE CERCLE FRANCAIS To further the knowledge of France, the French people, and their literature, con- stitutes the chief aim of the club. It is a member of the Federation de l ' Alliance Francais aux Etats-Unis et au Canada, which is an international organization consisting approximately of two hundred and fifty organizations. Meetings are held bi-monthly, frequently .it the home of some member or at one of the hotels in the town. The association has often been able to secure distinguished visitors to speak before the meeting. This winter the organization co-operated in entertaining the French ambassador, M. Andre L. de ' Laboulay, the French Consul General at New Orleans, M. Jean Rene de Lage, and over one hundred and fifty guests at a dinner held at the Virginia Inn. -113- THE SPANISH CLUB The Spanish Club is largely composed of those students having a fluent knowledge of the Spanish language. However, the group is open to all students interested in any phase of Spanish culture. The meetings are held bi-monthly throughout the year. The purpose of the club is to stimulate an active interest in Spanish cul- ture, the people, and their contributions to the civilization of the world in the past and the present. This purpose has been attained by the club programs which are arranged by the students. The programs have featured the works of modern Spanish composers, the art of Spanish painters, current events and topics of his- torical value and interest. In the early spring a program commemorating the tercentennial anniversary of the death of the Spanish dramatist Lope de Vega will be held. Students in Spanish clubs in Florida universities and colleges will present the program. Back row: Robert Van Beynom, Leo Suck, Henry Garrigues, John Nichols, Jane Beau- champ, Jane LeRoy. Fiont row: Henry Suck, Jane Smith, Eloisa Williams, Grace Connor, Jeanne Gillette, Helen Lamb, Mrs. Antonia G. Lamb, Fred Scholfield. - I 14- Back row: Milford Davis, James Holden, David Bothe, Leo Suck, Davitt Felder, Henry Suck, H. P. Abbott, Norris Clark. Front row: Mia Rutz, Marjorie Beisel, Wilda ScHMITT, Marita Steuve, Marlen ELDREDGE. GERMAN CLUB Under the personal supervision and leadership of Herr Dr. Feuerstein, the Rollins German Club completed a year of enthusiastic study of oral and written German. Many great Teuton masterpieces were discussed and commented upon, and the conversations carried on in German were stimulating as well as productive of original thoughts and ideas. This club fills the needs of the advanced students in that it enables them to carry their researches further than the classroom; for those less advanced, it supplies thorough training in German diction, bringing about an eventual mastery of this phase of the subject. Weekly meetings of the club are conducted by member students, who not only learn the technique of presiding, but also come to understand the language as only one who teaches can understand it. The programs given are interesting and varied, and never fail to draw a large attendance from the club membership. - 1 15- | I THE ROLLINS STUDIO CLUB I he Rollins Studio Club is an organization for students who are interested in the discussion of developments in the world of art. It is affiliated with the American Federation of Art, which has headquarters in Washington, D. C, and with the Florida Federation of Art. The membership in the club is not limited, and the discussions in the meetings, largely concerned with the appreciation of art and its value in the world today, are often led by invited speakers and members of the faculty. During the fall term Guilford Galbraith served as President, and Elisabet Richards as Secretary-Treasurer. After Mr. Galbraith ' s graduation from college at the end of the fall term, Adelaide Anderson was elected President for the re- mainder of the year. The club ' s faculty advisor is Mr. Hugh McKean. Several students have received the Allied Arts awards for oil painting, sculpture, char- coal work, and interior decoration. Back row: Carl Howland, Eugene Smith, Adelaide Anderson, Wilda Schmitt, Miss Virginia Robie, Katherine Jones, Prof. Hugh McKean. Front row: Isabel Moberly, Blanche Fishback, Nan Poeller, Elisabet Richards. 116- Back row: Clevela nd McInnis, Irving Fei.der, Ai.bi-.rto Warren, William Kishel, Lee Cross, Edward Levy, Tom Powell, Mr. Stuart Haggerty, Wilson Scanlon, Peter McCann, Davitt Felder, Watt Marchman. Fourth row: Quillian Jordan, Eugene Smith, Harold Young, Robert Morrow, James Mobley, George Rogers, Vincent Canzoni iu. Third row: Chris Argyris, Linton Malone, John Beaufort, Anthony Carretta, Gerard Kirby, John Nichols, Stanton Barrett, Robert Johnson, Ralph Little, William Whalen, Peggy Jennison. Second row: James Myers, R. Brown, Eleanor Sheetz, Marita Steuve, Gilbert Maxvu m , SlLE Y VaRIO, Front row: Ralph Gibus, John Bills, Martha Mai- Ni wby, Harold Parsons. THE COLLEGE COMMONS CLUB The College Commons, commonly known as the Beanery, has within its walls an organization called the College Commons Club. Every year this closely knit organization welcomes the whole college to a famous function known for genera- tions as the Beanery Ball. Outside of this activity few of its designs and customs are known. An annual award is given to the waiter making the most progress during the year. 117- DEBATING TEAM Rollins College, always a strong contender for southern intercollegiate debating honors, finished its 193 5 season undefeated in over thirty debates. Members of the varsity teams are Sterling Olmsted and George Young, affirmative; James F. Holden and Andreas D. Bothe, negative. Among the notable victories chalked up by this quartet were those over the University of Pennsylvania (2-1 judges ' decision), Emory University, which team was selected by the Student Federation of America to tour Great Britain, and the University of West Virginia. The outstanding encounter of the year took place in the Annie Russell Theatre, when a Rollins team, composed of James F. Holden and George Young, met Bates College, intercollegiate champions of New England, in a non-decision debate. The general consensus of opinion at the close of this clash indicated a draw. Rol- lins ' forensic exponents enjoyed a trip to the National Teachers of Speech Con- vention in South Carolina, and to the Pi Kappa Delta Convention in Alabama. The two Rollins women debaters, Kathleen Shepherd and Marita Steuve, showed fine ability in intercollegiate contests. George Young, Sterling Olmsted, David Bothe, James Holden. -118- L THE INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL Rollins is peculiar!) ' fortunate in having a group of fraternities on its campus which co-operate and fraternize admirably. However there are times of stress, such as the rushing season, when there has to be a certain amount of regulation to prevent clashes in the competition between groups. It is at this time that the organization known as the Inter-Fraternity Council functions. It is made up of ten members, each being elected to represent his respective fraternity. The presidential chair rotates among the fraternities in the order of their founding, .is do other executive positions. This year harmony was so complete among the fraternities that very few meetings were needed to settle the problems. The 1934-3 5 officers were: George Hines, President; Stuart Eaton, Vice-President; Leonard Roth, Secretary. Members this year were: George Hines, Daniel Winant, X Club; David Schrage, Robert Black, Kappa Alpha; Jack Ott, James Tullis, Phi Delta Theta; Leonard Roth, Charles Goeller, Rho Lambda Nu; Stuart Eaton, Harrison Roberts, Theta Kappa Nu. Back row: Daniel Winant, Harrison Robi rts, David Schrage, James Tui l is, Robert Black. Front row: Leonard Roth, George Hines, Stuart Eaton. - 121 - KAPPA ALPHA Founded: Washington and Lee University, 1865. Established at Rollins College, 1927. 62 Chapters. Alpha Psi Chapter. Open Motto: Dieu et les dames. Colors: Crimson and Gold. David Schrage President KOI I Chris Argyris Paul Ney Eliot Baker John Nichols John Bills David Owen Robert Black Harold Parsons John Brown Thomas Powell William Carmody George Rogers Socrates Chakales Benjamin Rowe John Higley Wilson Scanlon Joe Jardine David Schrage Gordon Jones Richard Shattuck Ralph Little Gordon Spence Robert MacArtliur Richard Tully Linton Malone Siley Vario Cleveland McInnis William Whalen George Miller Lewis Wallace - 122 - Back row: William Rogers Eliot Baker Walter Jordan William Whalen Albert Borden Thomas Powell Joe Jardine Edward Levy Wilson Scanlon Center row. William Carmody Siley Vario John Nichols George Miller Robert MacArthur George Rogers David Schrage Cleveland McInnis front row: Linton Malone Gordon Jones Robert Be ac k Chris Argyris John Biles Socrates Chakales Lewis Wallace John Brown- Gordon Spence Paul Ney Kk hard Tully . 123 - THETA KAPPA NU Founded: Springfield, Mo., June 9, 1924. Alpha Chapter Established 1924. Open Motto: Every man a man. Colors: Orange and Black. OFFICERS Stuart Eaton President Paul Alter Secretary William Davies Treasurer ROLL Paul Alter Richard Alter William Barr Milton Beekman Donald Bond Robert Caten Charles Clawson Milford Davis William Davies Stuart Eaton Howard Edwards Lyman Greaves Henry Lauterbach Richard Lee Everett Roberts FIarrison Roberts Kenneth Solomons James Tuverson - 124 - Back row: Milton Beekman Donald Bond Howard Edwards William Barr Mii lord Davis James Tuverson Kenneth Solomons Henry Lauterbach Robert Caten Lyman Greaves Front row: Everett Roberts Ric hard Lee Harrison Roberts Stuart Eaton Paul Alter William Davies Charles Ci.awson Richard Ai ti r - 125 - THE I I V I I CLUB Founded: 1924 at Rollins College. Colors: Blue and White. OFFICERS George Hines President Reginald Clough Secretary ROLL Richard Rrown Reginald Clough Olcott Deming Harry Edmonds George Hines Robert Howe Benjamin Kuhns Charles Lontz Norman MacGaffin Frank Miller John Moore Paul Murphy Raymond Murphy Bryant Prentice Robert Servis William Socash Malcolm Whitelaw Thomas Whiteway Daniel Winant - 126 - hut k row: Malcolm Whitelaw Frank Miller Robert Servis OLCOTT DeMING Robert Howe Harry Edmonds R. Brown Charles Lontz trout row: Benjamin Kuhns Bryant Prentice Daniel Winant George Hines Reginald Clough Norman MacGaifin Paul Murphy - 127 - RHO LAMBDA NU Founded: 1930 at Rollins College. Colors: Black and White. OFFICERS Leonard Roth President Winthrop Brubaker Vice-President Joseph Lichtenstein Treasurer Paul R. Parker Scribe ROLL Winthrop Brubaker Dwight Foster Charles Goeller Maxwell Harrington Robert Johnson Mortimer Lichtenstein Joseph Lichtenstein Harold Young Alfred McCreary James Mobley Robert Morrow Paul Parker Thomas Pope Leonard Roth Richard Shannon - 128 - Rack row. Alfred McCreary Robert Morrow Charles Goeller WlNTHROP BrUBAKER Mortimer Lichtenstein Harold Young Maxwell Harrington Front row: Fleetwood Peeples James Mobley Paul Parker Thomas Pope Joseph Lichtenstein - 129 - PHI DELTA THETA Founded: 1848. 108 Chapters. Florida Beta Chapter. Open Motto: We enjoy life through society and help to others. Pai or • A 7 1 1 ft inn Art cn t . OFFICERS Vice-President BONAR COLLINSON Howard Showalter • ROLL Charles Allen Quillian Jordan John Andrews Gerard Kirby Ward Atwood Donald Murray Seymour Ballard Jack Ott Andreas Bothe Brown Rainwater James Boyd Howard Showalter John Bullock Sands Showalter Anthony Carretta Eugene Smith BONAR COLLINSON Donald Thomas Richard Dunham James Tullis George Gabriel John Turner James Haig William Twitchell Jonathan Hall Robert Van Beynum James Holden Richard Washington Joseph Howell Albert Wilson Richard Ingraham William Woodhull -130- Back row: Ward Atwood Jamfs Boyd jAMtS Haig Donald Murray Richard Incraham Center row. Aldlrt Wilson Jonathan Hall Richard Dunham James Holden George Gabriel Quillian Jordan William Twitchell Anthony Carretta Seymour Ballard Sands Showalter front roiv: Joseph Hovu i i Donald Thomas Ricfiard Washington John Bullock John Andrews David Bothe Robert Van Beynum Eugene Smith Charles Allen Jack Ott Prof. Wendell C. Stone James Tullis BoNAR COI.LINSON Howard Showalter William Woodhull John Turner Prof. Robert Howard Back row: Constance En, Martha Mae Newby, Dorothy Smith, Jean Plumb, Kahuna Knowlton, Grace Connor. Front row: Edith Stephan, Barbara Hill, Elfreda Winant, Amelia Buckley. NATIONAL PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL This organization is composed of two representatives from each of the sororities on campus. The chief aim of this group is to promote a feeling of goodwill among the women ' s fraternities. The Council regulates all rushing and pledging rules and co-operates with the college in settling any group questions which may arise. The most important innovation this year is the quota system which will do away with the breaking down of small groups and lessen the possibility of controversy. Executives are chosen from among the members by rotation in order of the sororities founding on campus. This past year ' s officers were: Elfreda Winant, President; Sara Harbottlc, Vice-President; Annajeanne Pendexter, Secretary. ROLL Phi Mu: Dorothea Brcck, Bertha Shannon. Alpha Phi: Elfreda Winant, Edith Stephan. Chi Omega: Jean Plumb, Dorothy Smith. Gamma Phi Beta: Constance Etz, Martha May Newby. Kappa Alpha Theta: Annajeanne Pendexter, Alice Batten. Pi Beta Phi: Katrina Knowlton, Grace Connor. Kappa Kappa Gamma: Sara Harbottlc, Amelia Buckley. - 135 - PH I M U Founded: Wesleyan College in 18 52. Alpha Omega Chapter. Motto: L es soeurs fidele. Colors: Rose and White. Flower: Enchantress Carnation. OFFICERS Dorothea Breck President Jane Marshall Vice-President Kathleen Shepherd Treasurer Virginia Orebaugh Secretary ROFL Leah Jeanne Bartlett Marjorie Beisel Barbara Bennett Dorothea Breck Gulielma Daves Virginia Dunn Alberta Fariss Doris Leavitt Katherine Winchester Jane Marshall Mary McGonigal Mildred Muccia Virginia Orebaugh Bertha Shannon Kathleen Shepherd Betty Short Bernice Uphof - 136- Back row: Gulielma Daves Marjorie Beisel Doris Leavitt Bernicf. Uphof Virginia Dunn- Kathleen Shepherd Dorothea Breck Katherine Winchester Front row: Jane Marshall Betty Short Mildred Muccia Alberta Fariss Leah Jeanne Bartlett - 137 - PI BETA PHI Founded: Monmouth College in 1867. 79 Chapters. Florida Gamma Chapter. Colors: Wine and Blue. OFFICERS Katrina Knowlton President Grace Connor Vice-President Dorothy Manwaring Treasurer Margaret LeFevre Secretary ROLL Margaret Bashford Jane Beauchamp Virginia Boyd Dorothy Case Grace Connor Esther Earle Jane Harding Frances Hyer Virginia Jaekel Mary Jane King Eleanor White Katrina Knowlton Dorothy Manwaring Isabel Moberly Ruth Myers Eleanor Reese Anne Smith Louise Smith Frances Southgate Jane Thayer Juliet Vale - 138 - Back row: Ella nor Reese Janl Beauchamp Mary Jane King Jam Harding Jane Thayer Virginia Jai m i Dorothy Casl Isabel Moberly Eleanor W ' hiii Vronl row: Frances Hyer Virginia Boyd Margaret LeFevr Margaret BashfoRD Dorothy Manuaring Frances Souiiigate Katrina Knowlton Grace Connor - 139 - KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Founded: Monmouth College in 1870. 71 Chapters. Colors: Dark and Light Blue. Delta Epsilon Chapter. Flower: Fleur-de-lis. OFFICERS Jane Smith President Helen Brown Vice-President Mary Diehl Treasurer Helen Jackson Secretary ROLL Jane Axline Margaret Jenkins Helen Brown Katherinf. Jones Amelia Buckley Magdalene Jones Nancy Cushman Frances Lee Mary Diehl Janet Murphy Blanche Fishback La Georgia Newell Margaret Gethro Victoria Peirce Jeanne Gillette Jane Pelton Jean Glass Opal Peters Sara Harbottle Dorothy Potter Maxhda Hess Emily Showalter Grace Hiteshew Betty Smith Jane Irby Jane Smith Helen Jackson Marjorie White - 140- Back row: Dorothy Potter Magdalene Jones Opal Peters Emily Showalter Grace Hiteshew Jean Glass Margaret Gethro Jane Pelton Center row: Victoria Pi irce Maxeda Hess Mary Diehl Margaret Jenkins La Georgia Newell Nancy Cushman Sara Harbottle Jane Axline Helen Jackson Jane Smith Front row: Mar jorie White Jeanne Gillette Helen Brown Jane Irby - 141 - GAMMA PHI BETA Founded: Syracuse University in 187--I. Alpha Mu Chapter. Colors: Dark and Light Brown. OFFICERS Constance Etz President Lucy Greene Vice-President Annette Twitchell Treasurer Alberta St. Cyr Secretary • ROLL Catharine Bailey Constance Etz Louise Bradi ord Frances Grant Charlotte Cadman Alleyne Grimmi r Barbara Connor Lucy Greene Penrose Davis Martha Mae Newby Sarah Dean Alberta St. Cyr Pauline Draper Marita Steuve Eloisa Williams 142 - Buck rou: Louise Bradiord Alleyne Grimmer Eloisa Williams Sarah Dean Marita Steuve Frances Grant Front row: Penrose Davis Constance Etz Charlotte Cadman Annette TVitchei.l Lucy Greene Pauline Drapi r - 143 - CHI OMEGA Founded: University of Arkansas in 1895. 88 Chapters. Upsilon Chapter. Open Motto: Christian Ideals and Hellenic Culture. Colors: Cardinal and Straw. Flower: White Carnation. OFFICERS Dorothy E. Smith President Elisabet Richards Vice-President Jean Plumb Treasurer Adelaide Anderson Secretary ROLL Adelaide Anderson Hazel Bowen Nancy Bradford Marlen Eldredge Ethyl Horine Lucille Kramp Esther Knepper Mary Jane Meeker Dorothy Smith Claudelle McCrary Jean Parker Jean Plumb Nan Poeller Elisabet Richards Frances Robinson Eleanor Sheetz Mary Sinclair - 144 - Back row: Mary Sinclair Frances Robinson Marlin Ei.DRbocr Nan Poeller Lucille Kramp Claudelle McCrary Eleanor Sheetz Hazel Bowen Esther Knipimr Troni row: Mary Jane Meeker Adelaide Anderson Jean Plumb Dorothy Smith Elisabet Richards Jean Parkfr - 145 - ALPHA PHI Founded: Syracuse University in 1872. 3 5 Chapters. Beta Lambda Chapter. Colors: Silver and Bordeaux. Flowers: Lily-of -the- Valley and Forget-me-not. OFFICERS Edith Stephan President Ruth Vruwink Vice-President Dorothylu Goeller Treasurer Ann Ceark Secretary ROLL Jane Brow n Ann Clark Betty Clark Dorothylu Goeller Natalie Harris Louise Large Perry Oldeiam Mary Peck Barbara Parsons Virginia Roush Isabel Rodgers Carol Smitei Jane Sensenbrenner Jane Stoner Carol Stanley Edith Stepeian Doris Smiley Elsie Shippey Betty Trevor Rutei Vruwink Caroline Veeder Elfreda Winant Jane Willaro Carol Williams - 146- © Back row: Carol Smith Betty Clark Virginia Rousw Louise Largf. Mary Phck Jane. S toner Center row: Doris Smiley Natalie Harris Marcia Patterson Carol Stanley Betty Trevor Caroline Veeder Dorothylu Goelllr Ann Clark Edith Stephan Ruth Vruwink Jane Brown- Jane Sensenbren ni r Elsie Shippey Perry Oldham Front row: Jane Willard Isabel Rodgers Barbara Parsons Elfreda Wl N A NT Carol Williams - 147 - KAPPA ALPHA THETA 64 Chapters. Founded: De Pauw University in 1870. Gamma Gamma Chapter. Colors: Black and Gold. OFFICERS Annajeanne Pendexter President Ruth Arrant Vice-President Sally Limerick Secretary Katharine Rice Treasurer ROLL Ruth Arrant Alice Batten Virginia Braznell Ruth Dawson Rosalie Dean Martha df.Schweinitz Helen Droste Nancy Gantt Barbara Hill Virginia Jones Jeanette Lichtenstein Sally Limerick Ann Lowry Louise MacPherson Jane McCulloch Sydney Millar Betty Myers Dorothy Parmley Annajeanne Pendexter Katharine Rice - 148 - Buck roil, ' : Jeanette Lichtenstein Betty Myers Sydney Millar Martha deSchweinitz Virginia Jones Alice Batten Nancy Gantt Rosalie Dean Front row: Barbara Hill Helen Droste Annajeanne Pendexter Ruth Arrant Sally Limerick - 149 - mr ' Back row: Jardine, Roth, MaLONE, Moore, Tuvf.rson, Carmody, Solomons, Powell, Coach Jack McDowaix. Center row: Howe, R. Brown, Hines, Rogers, Kettles, Murphy, Schrage. Front row: W ' inant, Miller, Chakales, Modi.f.y, Prentice. VARSITY FOOTBALL Five victories and three defeats gave Coach Jack McDowall and his fighting Tars another successful season to swell their record of joint triumphs. Defeated by the University of Florida, Oglethorpe, and Cumberland, Rollins marched through Newberry, Southern, Miami, Erskine, and Tampa U. to capture the unofficial small-college championship of Florida. George Rogers, Leonard Roth, and Daniel Winant, linemen; and David Schrage, back; were the seniors who finished their last year with the Tars and who con- tributed in no small measure to the team ' s success. In the line, the play of Thomas Powell and Cleveland Mclnnis was especially deserving of mention. George Miller at halfback, and Soc Chakales at quarter, were the sparkplugs in the Rollins offense. Although crippled by frequent ineligibilities, swelling to a total of five by midseason, Rollins was nevertheless able to place on the field a light, fast eleven, one which never let down until the final whistle. Highlights of the season were the games with the University of Florida, Miami, and Tampa University. - 153 - Coach Jack McDowall 1934 FOOTBALL RECORD ROLLINS 2— FLORIDA ROLLINS . . 18— NEWBERRY ROLLINS ROLLINS . . 27— ERSKINE . ROLLINS 6— TAMPA U. h 19 3 4 13 6— OGLETHORPE . . 13 KOI I INS . . (i— ( U MB I Kl AND 12 13 Dave Schrage John Moore James Tuverson George Hines Linton Malone Len Roth Ray Murphy FOOTBALL TEAM George Miller Joe Jardine Chick Prentice Bob Howe Ken Solomons Carl Kettles John Baker Soc Chakales Jim Mobley George Rogers Daniel Winant Tom Powell Cleveland McInnis R. Brown VARSITY BASEBALL A veteran team, strengthened by several experienced new men, once again mide the Rollins nine the strongest small-college team in the South. Jim Mobley, ac- complished moundsman of last season, did the greater part of the pitching. He was relieved by Bohunk Young and Brady, with Don Murray receiving. Ed Levy held down first base position, with Soc Chakales and George Miller alter- nating at second, and Bryant Prentice, third base. Jerry Kirby scooped them up at shortstop. In the field were Anthony Carretta and Dick Tully alternating at left. Ralph Little and Dick Washington took turns at center field, and Dan Winant played right field. Sweaters were awarded to all men receiving letters for the first time. Paul Twachtman was the 193 5 manager, and Jack McDowall was coach. April 17 and IS — Millsaps College, at Winter Park. April 22 and 23 — Alabama State Teacher ' s College, at Winter Park. April 26 and 27 — The University of Florida, at Winter Park. April 3 0 and May 1 — Alabama State Teacher ' s College, at Troy, Alabama. May 3 and 4 — Millsaps College, at Jackson, Miss. May 10 and 11 — The University of Florida, at Gainesville. -156- Top row: R. Brown, H. P. Abbott, Joseph Howell, George Waddell, John Beaufort, Alberto Warren, James Myers, Jack McGaffin. Front row: Coach U. T. Bradley, Sally Stearns, Albert Wilson. CREW Renewed interest, aided by the acquisition of new equipment, is making crew a popular sport at Rollins. Conditions here are very favorable towards rowing training, the sport being conducted here throughout the whole year. This year the crew was light, averaging about 160 pounds to the man. Pulling the oar at stroke was James Myers; number 7, H. P. Abbott; number 6, Joseph Howell; ntimber 5, Alberto Warren; number 4, John Beaufort; number 3, George Waddell; number 2, Captain R. Brown; number 1, Wilson Scanlon. George Young was the regular coxswain, but was relieved during practice by Miss Sally Stearns. Leaving on a trip north near the end of the year the Tar Crew met Ashe- ville School at Asheville, North Carolina, May 23, and Marietta College of Marietta, Ohio, on May 26. Prof. U. T. Bradley has been coach for the past two years and Albert Wilson has been the manager this year. - 157 - FENCING Undefeated in the South for the second straight year, the Tar Fencers established, during the 1934-3 5 season, the best record in the history of the sport at Rollins. Beginning three years ago as an intercollegiate sport, the team, under the leader- ship and coaching of Professor William Louis Roney, has shown vast improve- ment with the passing of each succeeding season. Out of a varsity four, three new faces appeared in the lineup this year. They were: Michael Karnilow, Eu- gene Townsend, and Lyman Greaves. Captain Andreas D. Bothe was the only veteran swordsman on the team. These four men, Donald A. Cheney as first substitute, and Coach Roney toured the North in the latter part of March, meeting Army, Yale, Navy, Harvard, Princeton, and New York University. Army, Yale, and Princeton fell before the flashing blades of the foils team, all by the score of 5-4. Weakness in Sabre and Epee prevented complete victories over these teams. Prospects for next year are very bright as the entire varsity will return for the 193 5-36 season. The scores are as follows: ROLLINS 12— ALABAMA U 6 ROLLINS 9— GEORGIA TECH ... 8 ROLLINS 9— GEORGIA TECH ... 6 ROLLINS 7— NAVY 12 ROLLINS 8— ARMY 14 ROLLINS 6— YALE 11 ROLLINS 3— HARVARD 14 ROLLINS 6— PRINCETON ... .11 ROLLINS 6 — N. Y. U 11 Back row: Siley Vario, Lyman Greaves, Michael Karnilow, William Twitchell. Front row: Sterling Olmsted, Donald Cheney, Eugene Townsend, Prof. Roney. - 158 - Paul Ney, Eliot Baker, Fred Scholfield, Coach A. Buel Trowbridge, Henry Lauterbach, Robert Vogel, Olcott Deminc, Harry Edmonds, James Holden, David Daly, William Carmody. Led by Captain Henry Lauterbach, the Rollins netmen gained an even break during the 193 5 season, winning four matches and dropping an equal number. The play of Lauterbach was steady and consistent at all times, and he seldom failed to contribute points on the winning side of the ledger. Also notable was the work of the veterans, Olcott Deming and Fred Scholfield, while among the new team members Volney Bragg and Bob Vogel were outstand- ing. In the majority of their matches the netmen appeared in the following order: Lauterbach, No. 1; Bragg, No. 2; Vogel, No. 3; Deming, No. 4; Schol- field, No. 5, and Edmonds, No. 6. Professor Buel Trowbridge has been the coach for the last two years. TENNIS 193 5 SEASON (Incomplete as the Tomokan went to press) ROLLINS ROLLINS ROLLINS ROLLINS ROLLINS ROLLINS ROLLINS ROLLINS . . . 3— MIAMI 4 . . . 3— FLORIDA 5 . . . S— STETSON 1 . . . 5— MIAMI 3 . . . 3— FLORIDA 6 . . . 7— ST. PETERSBURG IR. COLLEGE 2 . . . 3— DAVIDSON 5 . . . ... _— ST. PETERSBURG JR. COLLEGE .... -159- SWIMMING At the outset of the swim schedule, Rollins was defeated in three starts, neverthe- less the team showed decided promise and a fairly successful season was predicted at the time of this printing. The Tars lost their initial meet to the University of Florida by a wide margin. Then, at home, on March 23, they were again defeated by the powerful University of Florida team, 31-37. On March 27 the team met defeat at the hands of the strong aggregation from Clemson College, 52-31. Outstanding on the swimming team are Captain John Nichols, who swims the SO and 100-yard freestyle, also participating in the diving, and Paul Alter swimming the 220 and 440-yard events, who scored the only first place gained by Rollins against Clemson. Other members of the team and their events fol- low: Relay team, Tom Powell, Lewis Wallace, Paul Alter, and John Nichols; 100-yard backstroke, Carl Goeller. 193 5 RESULTS (Incomplete as the Tomokan went to press) ROLLINS . . . 31— U. OF FLORIDA ROLLINS . . . 31— CLEMSON . . 37 53 Back row: Lewis Wallace, John Nichols, John Turner, Paul Alter, Nelson Marshall, Coach Fleetwood Peeples. Front row: Thomas Powell, Arthur Dear. - 160 - Left to right: Robert Servis, John Brown, Thomas Whiteway, Robert Caten, Benjamin Kuhns. GOLF Strengthened by the addition of Bob Servis, former Ohio State Amateur Cham- pion, and Tom Whiteway, Champion of the Pine Ridge Club, Cleveland, Ohio, the Rollins golf team recently concluded a conspicuously successful season. The Tar club swingers dropped only three matches during the past year, losing to Georgia, North Carolina State, and Georgetown University, while included in their triumphs were victories over such formidable opponents as the University of Florida, Emory University, Miami, and the University of Virginia. The Tars were greatly aided in their 193 5 campaign by John Brown, Maine State Amateur Champion, and Ben Kuhns, veterans of previous years. In addi- tion, Brown Rainwater, Bob Caten, and John F. McFarlin were indispensable to the team on its northern swing, which unfortunately came at a time when Servis and Whiteway were scholastically ineligible. THE 193 5 SCHEDULE ROLLINS . . 10 ' ,— U. OF FLORIDA J4 ROLLINS . . 3 — ST. PETERSBURG JR. COLLEGE 3 ROLLINS . . 16 —MIAMI 2 ROLLINS . . 3 — U. OF FLORIDA 3 ROLLINS . . 14 T 2 — EMORY UNIVERSITY .... 3 y 2 ROLLINS . . 7 Vi— GEORGIA 10 y 2 ROLLINS . . 5 y 2 — NORTH CAROLINA STATE . 12 2 ROLLINS . . 16 — U. OF VIRGINIA 2 ROLLINS . . 1 —GEORGETOWN U 5 - 161 - INTRAMURAL ATHLETICS It is part of the New Curriculum Plan to include in its schedule a system of intramural athletics so that all students may be able to participate in some sport. Members of the various varsity squads are not eligible, thereby making skill a nonessential. The system at Rollins his been particularly successful because of the excellent spirit shown by the students. It has been the custom each year to award a cup to the organization making the greatest number of points in all sports collectively. For the second consecutive year the Kappa Alpha fraternity has dominated the Intramural League, nosing out the X Club by a narrow margin. Phi Delta Theta was runne -up for the coveted Gary Cup, Theta Kappa Nu pb.ced fourth, and Rho Lambda Nu ended in fifth place. Rollins Hall and Chase Hall did well in some of the sports but did not enter all activities. In the fall season the Kappa Alphas nosed out the X Club in a close run for the touch-football tournament. A smooth working quintet gave the Kappa Alphas another first place in the basket-ball race, with a dark-horse Phi Delta five a constant threat. Coming up from behind, the X Club topped the Kappa Alpha runners in the grueling cross-country run. Final results in detail were not available at the time the Tomokan went to press, however the Kappa Alpha fraternity is slated to win the Gary Trophy. The picture below is of the Kappa Alpha Touch-Football team which was victorious this season. - 162 - Janet Murphy, Barbara Connor, Lucv Greene. BLAZER WINNERS Maxeda Hess, Tennis; Opal Peters, Posture; Penrose Davis, Swimming; Doris Smiley, Archery; Betty Myers, Golf. SPORTS WINNERS - 170 - College Garage feat ti ring PUROL PEP TIOLENE Yale Tires Pure Batteries Storage 1 Expert Repair Washing : Polishing Specialized Lubrication • Come Up and See KIRBY PHONE 112 THE WINTER PARK LAND COMPANY Realtors Homesites in Lake Forest on Lake Virginia • Selling and Serving Since 1904 RENTALS SALES j i ( j Office: 128 E. Park Avenue ( j i BUICK PONTIAC CADILLAC THREE FINE CARS SALES ' SERVICE ORANGE BUICK PONTIAC COMPANY PHONE 330 North Orange Avenue PHONE 8 3 3 5 Orlando, Florida 5 3 5 3 Williams Racing Shell Boatyard FOXBORO, MASS. MASTER BOAT BUILDER SINCE 1912 AWAffOCD GOLD M£DAt !OV e£HC£ BOAT SHOW Singles -Doubles-Fours - Eights =T Barges -Wherries-Second Boats Skillful Designs and Forms STUDENTS -SCHOOLS -UNIVERSITIES Special Prices • 4sA m mecfiate y BE AMERICAN ■ BUY AMERICAN BOATS - 178 - ROSTER -A- BROWN, HELEN L. DIEHL, MARY K ABBOTT, HORACE P., JR. „„ u 806 N. Ninth St., Beatrice, Neb. 308 S. Parkview Ave Columhns nhi„ 44 Larchmont Rd„ Melrose, Mass. ROWN, JOHN BUN DY DORR, PHYLLIS .84 Pine St Newport ' n h AISHTON DONALD F 218 Midd| e St., Portland, Me. DRAPER, CHARLES F ' ' 13801 Shaker Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio BROWN RICHAR D . . , , „ n d a d c d n T Coventry Rd„ Cleveland, Ohio ALLEN, CHARLES W„ JR Glenview, Ky. R ROWN F IAMP : n ' rftu Beat,i ' Neb - ' mrh r t M ' DJ ALLEN IFNOX P ri i BROWNE - JA NE ELIZABETH 2258 Coventry Rd., C eveland Ohio AITF l PAIN m SJenv ew Ky. 134 W. 55th St., New York City DROSTE, HELEN M. ' PAUL H 4 85 Virginia Court BRUBAKER, WINTHROP Browns Lane, Bellport N Y ALTER, RICHARD J.... 485 Virginia Court Box 88, Green ' s Farms Conn DUNHAM, RICHARD ' ANDERSON, ADELAIDE BUCKLEY, AMELIA 225 E. 73rd St., New York City 5 Cleveland Rd., Caldwell, N. J. 211 S. Ashland Ave., Lexington Ky DUNN - VIR GINIA M. ANDREWS, JOHN O. BULLOCK, JOHN O. 229 M| dland Ave., Montclair, N. J. 15 Gramercy Park, New York City 875 Thorn St., Sewickley Pa . P ARGYRIS, CHRIS BURDETTE, CATHERINE E. EARLE ESTHER K 5 c FeSt 5 ' EATON 0 ' StSarTc ' M ASENSIO, KSSrV ' y CADMAN mr A O, d F, EDMONDS, RRy ' ATWOOD, WARD L. ' CANNON JOSEPH o i r M r ' ' Rational House, Rivers.de Dr., at 124th AXLInTm TH JANE H - tf ° ' d - ™™i™™£ - I 0 ' ' - E WaW.JR. 20, E. Wheeling St., Lancaster, Ohio CARMODY, WILLIAM ' 5 EHRLICh thEODORE ' - B- „„ rxT , 276 Meeker Ave Newarl . N - J- p - 6. Box 8654, S. S. Sta., Tampa, Fla. BAILEY CATHFPINF H CARRETTA, ANTHONY ELDREDGE, MARLEN ' Hevelvn Rd Flm. M v 4 Hancock Ave - Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 174 N. Highland Ave., Memphis, Tenn. BAKER ELIOT SPFNrP El ™ ' ° ' d . N. Y. CARTER, JACK ETZ, CONSTANCE Bethesda, Md. BAKER, ELIOT SPENCE 424 Orlando Ave., W. P., P. O. Box 282 C 430 Park Ave., New York City CASE DOROTHY M • f - BALDWIN, RICHARD C 1378 Richmond Rd. ' 5914 Clemens St. St Louis Mo FARISS LOUISE A - BALLARD, SEYMOUR D. CATEN, ROBERT McA Alexander Place, ' New [1 . un „ n „ T 4 , 3 1 l Hillcrest Ave., Orlando, Fla. 401 Franklin St., Geneva III. England Ave. (Mail-P. O Box 253 W P) FAR NSWORTH, SALLY S. BAMBERGER, STEVEN H 28 Barney St., Gouverneur, NY c . n 5470 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, Fla. 36 W. 74th St., New York City CHAKALES, L. SOCRATES FELDER, DAVITT A. BARBOUR, HARRIETTE R. ..Spring Lake Mich 187 Charlotte St., Asheville, N. C. eei rvcp iRvisir M ' No,w,ch ' Conn ' BARR, WILLIAM E. CHAPIN. WALTER S. FELDER, IRVING M BARRr-°TT Be s e TAMTn L M an A e ' N ' CH EN EY DONALD A ' Jr ' Br °° kl ' nC ' EE RNAN DEZ, M AY E ... Duke HaTl ' , C 6rfa° ' do BARRETT, STANTON A Panama City, Fla. ,|, w ' u c d n i inn r i j FISHBACK, BLANCHE G. BARRINGTON, JACK M. ' ' W ' Ma ' ks St.. P - °- B ° l017 - Orlando, 536 N 0 , ange A OHando p|a 255 W. 90th St., New York City n apV amm  a« c r i w FLAHERTY, MARY C. BARTHOLOMEW, FRANCES Y . LAR AN TT N y Afton Farm Culpeper, Va. 66 Me|bourn£ st p Qrt|and Me 1023 Lakcview Dri -L kis, Bhliy FLUNO JOHN BARTLETT, LEAH JEANE... Vemc e FlT 1404 N ' Cllnton Blvd - Bloomington, III. 78 | Antonette Ave. (P. O Box 851 W P) BASHFORD, MARGARET R. ' ' CLARK, NORRIS C Lakeville, Conn. FLUNO, ROBERT 700 Alhambra Circle, Coral Gables Fla CLAWSON, CHARLES H Babson Park, Fla. 78 1 Antonette Ave. (P. O. Box 854, W. P.) BASTIEN, BETTIE M. ' CLOUGH, REGINALD T. FORD, ELEANOR P. I6830 Village Lane, Grosse Point, Mich. 19 Shaw St., Lebanon, N. H. r „ rr , w „ 6 Utica Si - Clinton, N. Y. BATTEN, ALICE S..I324 Main St., Racine, Wis COLLINSON, BONAR D Scobey, Montana FOSTER DWIGHT Bridgehampton, N. Y. BAUMAN, PEGGY 5I4 Palmer St., Orlando CONNOR. BARBARA N. . G- BEAUCHAMP, JANE C. Indian River Ranch, New Smyrna, Fla. rARPlFl rpnprc e I760 Casselberry Rd., Louisville, Ky. CONNOR. GRACE J. I iq rL a , H « A r BEAUFORT, JOHN D. 840 Beach Drive. N„ St. Petersburg, Fla. GAERTNER MIRIAM L ' C ° nn ' BFFKM AM S1 UUT TT Rd 5 ' °° ne - Ma - CORNELL, GEORGE D. Central Valley, N. Y. ' 92 W . Rlver ' St., W,lkes-Barre, Pa. RRSFI MAf n ? m Cranbury, N. J. CROSS, LATHROP L. GANTT, NANCY ' w n a a u u D 88,8 Dauph,n Ave ' Chl SO, III. Scarswold Apts., Scarsdale, N. Y. RFMMFTT A r ' ad ' raTa ' Haze t ° n -, Pa - CUSHMAN, NANCY GARDNER, HERBERT W. South Hanson, Mass. R F prv Ki 7 i n a m tc - Maitland 52 Clark St., Brooklyn, N. Y. GARRIGUES, HENRY H„ JR. BERGONZI, DANTE G. n 800 Vallamont Drive, Williamsport, Pa. RFRTI IMP up 44 Barr ° w St - New y ° rk City -D- GETHRO, MARGARET J i , P DAI LEY, AMELIA..I8 Mendale, Orlando, Fla. 4730 Kimbark Ave., Chicago, III. Mountain Lodge Park, Washingtonville N. Y. DALY, DAVID, JR. GIBBS, RALPH H. BILLS, JOHN Geneva, Fla. 64 Summit, Pawtucket, R. I. S2 Warner St., Springfield, Mass. BIRD, MARGUERITE .Bangall, N. Y. DAVES. GULIELMA K. Gl ESSEN, ELEANOR B. Orange Park, Fla. BIRDSONG, LEONARD Scottdale Ga 140 ' 3th Ave., N. E., St. Petersburg, Fla. GILLETTE JEANNE B BIRKBECK, ALEXANDRA Mount Dora, ' Fla DAVIES, WILLIAM L. ' 60 Beach Ave., Larchmont, N. Y BLACK, ROBERT Panora Iow a 8 67 East Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio GLASS, JEAN BOND, DONALD A. DAVIS, DOROTHY PENROSE 835 Antonette Ave., Winter Park, Fla. 5845 Phillips Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Lancaster Road, Shirley, Mass. GOELLER, CARL BORDEN, ALBERT DAVIS, MILFORD J. 2190 Andrews Ave., New York City I E. 42nd. St., New York City 411 Australian Ave., Palm Beach, Fla. GOELLER, DOROTHYLU BOTHE, A. DAVID.. ..Weldy Ave., Oreland, Pa. DAVIS, WILLIAM M. 2190 Andrews Ave., New York City BOWEN, HAZEL I Winter Vark Lancaster Road, Shirley, Mass. GOLD, EGBERT H. BOYD JAMES III DAWSON. RUTH M. 5349 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, Fla. 2521 Francis St., St. Joseph Mo 73,d St ' Broadwa Y. New y ° ' k City GOLDSMITH, WARREN R. BOYD, MARY VIRGINIA DEAN, ROSALIE R 123 W. 57th St., New York City 2521 Francs St., St. Joseph, Mo. nc4M ci IO p S ' Ce ter St ' ° ranSe ' N ' J ' GRAND, ANNE MARIE BRADFORD, ANNE L. DEAN ' S R V. m u sm c f And™., 2224 E - Concord, Orlando, Fla. 50 Argyle Ave., New Rochelle, N. V. nFAP apthi r 4 St Andover ' Ma5S ' GRANT, FRANCES VIRGINIA BRADFORD, MRS. NANCY Winter Park ° EAR ' |2 Chestnut St Ridgewood N J 3617 1 lth St - Gljlf P° rt , Miss. BRAGG, VOLNEY DEMING, OLCOTT H. GREAVES, LYMAN B 1046 Union St., Manchester, N. H. 3| Owen St. Hartford, Conn. Rambler Hill, Woodbridge, Conn. BRAZNELL, VIRGINIA M. deSCH WEI N ITZ, LEWIS D. ' GREENE, LUCY M . 3605 Flamingo Drive, Miami Beach, Fla. West Road, Dorset, Vt. High Street, Ashland, Mass. BRECK, DOROTHEA deSCH WEI N ITZ, MARTHA M. GRIMMER, ALLEYNE F. 1911 Dekle Ave Tampa Fla. West Road, Dorset, Vt. 15 St. Paul s Place, Hempstead, L. I., N. Y. FOR 10 YEARS . . . Our name has been associated with the Best Dressed Men on the Campus R. C. BAKER, INC. j Shoes ' Clothing Furnishings j at the corner, downtown N O R R I S ' ... the COLLEG E j STORE | BLEDSOE ' S The Student ' s Garage TAXIE STORAGE Gas 1 Oil ■ Repairs PHONE 200 Sun Bathing . . . I THE SOLARIUM ORWIN MANOR ORLANDO, FLORIDA | Swimming Yacht Basin NOACK ' S RESTAURANT Where the Students Eat WINTER PARK, FLORIDA D E R R y D E L| ■ The Rollins Tea House Extends a cordial welcome to the faculty, students and friends of Rollins College. 22 East Gore Avenue ORLANDO, FLORIDA Compliments i Serros Fish and Poultry Co. FRESH SEA FOOD • FRESH DRESSED POULTRY 117 Court St. Phone 5762 ORLANDO, FLORIDA STEVENS GARAGE Storage Greasing Mechanic Service • Everything for Every Car 180- ROSTER GUI NAN, ELIZABETH 31 Whiting Lane, West Hartford, Conn. GULNAC, MARY I. Box 428, Rensselaer, N. Y. GUPPy, PATRICIA T. 5 Coblentz Ave., Port of Spain, Trinidad, B. W. I. -H- HAIG, JAMES 4647 Delafield Ave., Fieldston, Riverdale, New York City HAIR, ALICE LAMB 1163 Pennsylvania Ave., Winter Park, Fla. HALFPENNY, VIOLET 5033 Parkway, Fairfield, Ala. HALL, JONATHON I Kendall Green, Washington, D. C. HAMMOND, MARCELLE Westerly, R. I. HAMMOND, SALLY Westerly, R. I. HARBOTTLE, SARA C. 437 Forest Ave., Dayton, Ohio HARDING, JANE Babson Park, Fla. HARRINGTON, MAXWELL 386 Fairbanks Ave., Winter Park, Fla. HARRIS, NATALIE G. 13 Clark Ave., Rockport, Mass. HESS, MAXEDA. 192 Brewer Ave., Winter Park HIGLEY, JOHN P. 2681 W. Scarborough Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio HILL, BARBARA 1647 S. Washington Ave., Saginaw, Mich. HINES, GEORGE W. 710 Junior Terrace, Chicago, III. HITESHEW, GRACE T. 1208 Ann St. Parkersburg, W. Va. HOLDEN, JAMES F. 311 Moore St., Hackettstown, N. J. HOLM, VIRGINIA 913 W. Allegan, Lansing, Mich. HORINE, ETHEL 346 Victoria Ave., Winter Park HOWARD, FLORIDA E. 411 E. Jackson St., Orlando, Fla. HOWE, MARIE 540 Lenox Ave., Westfield, N. J. HOWE, ROBERT 315 S. East Ave., Oak Park, III. HOWELL, JOSEPH 914 Lucerne Terrace, Orlando, Fla. HOWLAND, CARL B., JR. 89 Whitmarsh St., Providence, R. I. HYER, FRANCES. .1902 Ardsley St., Tampa, Fla. -I- INGRAHAM, RICHARD K. 30 Prospect Place, Bristol, Conn. I R B y , JANE W. 520 Royal St., New Orleans, La. -J- JACKSON, HELEN 226 Park Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. JACKEL, VIRGINIA Glen Echo Farm, Doylestown, Pa. JAMESON, EDWIN C, JR. 9 E. 69th St., New York City JAMIN, CHARLENE J. 1121 12th St. N., St. Petersburg, Fla. JARDINE, JOE B. 201 Gaskin Ave., Douglas, Ga. JENKINS, MARGARET 1903 E. Main St., Richmond, Ind. JENNISON, HELEN S. 609 Swann Ave., Tampa, Fla. JOHNSON, ROBERT 516 N. Vermont Ave., Lakeland, Fla. JONES, BEVERLY M Fitzwilliam, N. H. JONES, GORDON 153 Cortland Ave., Winter Park JONES, KATHERINE A. 1615 Ridgewood Ave., Orlando, Fla. JONES, MAGDALENE 1724 E. 54th St., Chicago, III. JONES, VIRGINIA E. 612 Springfield Ave., Wyoming, Ohio JORDAN, QUILLIAN Sanford, Fla. JORDAN, WALTER. ..Box 3071, Orlando, Fla. - K- KALFOPULU, SYLVIA D. 423 E. Pine St., Orlando, Fla. KARN I LOW, MICHAEL Third Ave., Woodridge N Y KETTLES, CARL 9 Elm, Dalton, Ga. KEW, THEODORE 515 Philadelphia Ave., Chambcrsburq, Pa. KEWYAN, HELENE J. 35 Belleview Ave., Ossining, N. Y KIMBLE, WALTER D. . Box 457, Titusville Fla KING, MARY JANE 617 Sayre Ave., Lexington, Ky. KNEPPER, CARL 515 N. Highland Ave., Oakdale Pa. KNOWLTON, KATRINA 706 19th Ave., N. E., St. Petersburg, Fla. KRAMP, ANN L. 5490 South Shore Drive, Chicago III. KUHNS, BEN F. 551 Superior Ave., Dayton, O. LACY, KATHERINE 167 Buffalo Ave., Niagara Falls, N. Y. LAMB, HELEN 814 Antonette Ave., Winter Park, Fla. LAUTERBECK, HENRY 421 Riverside Ave., Saugatuck, Conn. LEAVITT, DORIS B. 44 Clifford St., Readville, Mass. LEE, FRANCES 2310 Blaisdell Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. LEE, RICHARD 4545 Boston Post Rd., Pelham Manor, N. Y. LeFEVRE, MARGARET 1500 Berkshire Ave., Winter Park, Fla. LeROY, JANE 432 Chase Ave., Winter Park, Fla. LEVY, EDWARD C. Grayson Apts., Liberty St., Asheville, N. C. LICHTENSTEI N, JEANETTE 62 Lake Forest, Richmond Heights, Mo. LICHTENSTEIN, JOSEPH 137 Centre St., New York City LICHTENSTEIN, MORTIMER 137 Centre St., New York City LIMERICK, SARA T. 70 Clinton St., Newburgh, N. Y. LINCOLN, LAURA L. 336 Church St., Marion, Va. LITTLE, RALPH 411 Charlotte St., Asheville, N. C. LONG, MAY M Lakemont, N. Y. LONTZ, CHARLES R. 1607 Reeveston Rd., Richmond, Ind. LYMAN HOWARD Altamonte Springs, Fla. - M - MacARTHUR, ROBERT S. Maple St., Sterling, Mass. McCANN, PETER F. 1631 Oneida St., Utica, N. Y. McCLENDON, LEISA E. 2832 Morgan St., Tampa, Fla. McCRARY, CLAUDELLE L. 2803 Jefferson St., Tampa, Fla. McCREARY, ALFRED B. Upper River Rd., Louisville, Ky. McCULLOCH, MARY JANE Indian River Dr., Ft. Pierce, Fla. McFARLIN, JOHN R. 1630 S. Elwood, Tulsa, Okla. MacGAFFIN, NORMAN 120 Broadway, New York City McGONIGAL, MARY S. 907 N. Garden Ave., Clearwater, Fla. MclNNIS, CLEVELAND 1212 W. Bay St., Palmetto, Fla. MacLEOD, PRISCILLA A. Red Stone Hill, Plainville, Conn. MACPHERSON, LOUISE 3110 St. Johns Ave., Jacksonville, Fla. MacWATT, JACK A. 8 Radnor Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. MALLARD, H. LAW Mascotte, Fla. MALONE, LINTON Palmetto, Fla. MANWARING, DOROTHY 601 Grove Ave., Jenkintown, Pa. MARSH, MARTHA R. F. D. No. I, Avon Park, Fla. MARSHALL, JANE 437 Virginia Court, Winter Park MARSHALL, NELSON 1195 Warburton Ave., Yonkers N Y MAXWELL, GILBERT 328 Norman St., Washington, Ga. MEEKER, MARY JANE 210 W. Giddens St., Tampa, Fla. MEEK I SON, MARY G. 207 Liberty St., Orlando, Fla. MEER, ABE 352 E. Park Ave., Winter Park MELCHER, RUTH ELIZABETH 1095 Pennsylvania Ave., Winter Park MERGENTIME, JEAN 485 Fifth Ave., New York City MILLAR, SYDNEY 2301 N. Front St., Harrisburg, Pa MILLER, FRANK M. 934 Centre St., Ashland, Ohio MILLER, GEORGE Q. Box 175, Leesburg Fla. MILLS, WILSON Tuckaseege Rd., Charlotte, N. C. MINSTER, LEWIS Newportville, Pa. MOBERLY, ISABEL S. 6820 Delmar St., St. Louis, Mo. MOBLEY, JAMES Sylvania Ga. MORROW, ROBERT 701 28th Ave., Lake Worth, Fla. MOUSSELET, MABEL P. O. Box 254, Winter Park MOWER, ELIZABETH 728 Laurence Ave., Detroit, Mich. MUCCIA, MILDRED F. I 10 Riverside Drive, New York City MURPHY, JANET Killam ' s Point, Branford, Conn. MURPHY, PAUL E. 6107 Kenmore Ave., Chicago, III. MURRAY, DONALD V. 26 Bushnell Ave., Monticello, N. Y. MUTISPAUGH, MRS. MARY 1324 Gene St., Winter Park, Fla. MYERS, JAMES, JR. 34 Strickland Rd. Cos Cob, Conn. MYERS, M. ELIZABETH 26 Wallace Place, Covington, Ky. MYERS, RUTH A. 928 N. Water St., Uhrichsville, Ohio -N- NEWBY, MARTHA MAE 19 E. 59th St., New York City NEWELL, LA GEORGIA 460 E. 2nd St., Chattanooga, Tenn. NEY, PAUL Chesire, Conn. NICHOLS, JOHN A. Beaverdam Rd., Asheville, N. C. NORTON, MARVIN 404 S. Rosalind Ave., Orlando, Fla. -O- OLDHAM, M. PERRY 29 Elk St., Albany, N. Y . OLMSTED, STERLING 16 Sterling Rd., East Hartford, Conn. OREBAUGH, VIRGINIA 178 Brewer Ave., Winter Park OTT, JACK L Pass-a-Gnlle, Fla. OWEN, DAVID Lawrence Park West, Bronxville, N. Y. PAGE, WILLIAM R. 800 Central Ave., Dover, N. H. PARKER, JEAN G. 152 Marine St., St. Augustine, Fla. PARKER, LILLIAS 212 W. Hillsboro Ave., Tampa, Fla. PARKER, PAUL R. 25 Hawthorne Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. PARSONS, BARBARA 8 Runnemede Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. PARSONS, HAROLD B Acton, Mass. PECK, MARY Crestline Rd., Strafford, Pa. PEIRCE, VICTORIA 235 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. PELTON, JANE B. .220 S. State St., Elgin, III. PENDEXTER, ANNAJEANNE 399 Fullerton Parkway, Chicago, III. PERPENTE, FRANCES 323 E. Robinson Ave., Orlando, Fla. Compliments of . . . SPARKS THEATRES . . . OPERATING . . . B E A C H A M Orlando ' s Best i i i GRAND Theatre Beautiful 1 1 i R I A L T O Comfort With Economy i i 1 BABY GRAND Winter Park In Appreciation DR. R. F. HOTARD IN ORLANDO OVER 49 YEARS | Joseph Bumby Hardware Company Hardware and Sporting Goods I Largest Leather Repair Shop in Orange County Branch Stores: WINTER PARK : WINTER GARDEN E - 182 PETERS, OPAL Geneva, Fla. PIERCE, MARGUERITE (MRS. HARRY R.) Maitland, Fla. PLUMB, JEAN 26 N. Main St., Terryville, Conn. POELLER, NAN H. Indian Hill Farm, Canton, Conn. POPE, THOMAS W Westbury, L. I., N. Y. POTTER, DOROTHY E. 19 Forest Rd., Madison, N. J. POWELL, THOMAS Rocky Mount, N. C. PRENTICE, BRYANT, JR. 320 Summer St., Buffalo, N. Y. PRICE, FRANKLIN 608 Minooka Ave., Moosic, Pa. PRICE, MURIEL 1204 Seasirt Ave., Far Rockaway, L. I. N. Y. - Q - QUAYLE, GEORGE L. 2948 Fairmount Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio - R- RAINWATER, BROWN V. 794 Sprinsdale Rd., Atlanta, Ga. REES, HILDEGARDE Box 445, DeLand, Fla. REESE, ELEANOR 2977 Fontenay Rd., Cleveland, Ohio RICE, KATHARINE 2 Lenox Terrace, South Orange, N. J. RICH, JOHN O. 8049 Walker St., Philadelphia, Pa. RICH, WILLARD M. 73 Humboldt St., Buffalo, N. Y. RICHARDS, ELISABET Clapboard Hill Rd., New Canaan, Conn. ROBERTS, EVERETT 110 Bryan St., Kissimmee, Fla. ROBERTS, HARRISON 11703 85th Ave., Richmond Hill, L. I„ N. Y. ROBINSON, FRANCES L. 211 Swope Ave., Winter Park, Fla. RODGERS, ISABEL D. 10 Grenfell Ave., Kew Gardens, N. Y. ROGERS, GEORGE Box 5, Dover, N. H. ROTH, LEONARD 846 S. Boulevard, Lakeland, Fla. ROUSH, VIRGINIA C. 4689 Lakeview Ave., St. Petersburg, Fla. ROWE, BENJAMIN 27 Rose Hill Gardens, New Rochelle, N. Y. RUTZ, MIA 10 Schmitzberg, Oberammergau, Germany -S- SAINT CYR, ALBERTA The Drake Hotel, 440 Park Ave., N. Y. C. SCANLON, WILSON G Mantua, Ohio SCHMITT, WILDA Oxford, Fla. SCHOLFI ELD, FREDERICK Longwood, Fla. SCHRAGE, DAVID 332 Linden Ave., Oak Park, III. SCHULTEN, MARJORIE 4801 N. Irving Ave., Chicago, III. SENSENBRENNER, HELEN J. 345 Buffalo Ave., Niagara Falls, N. Y. SERVIS, ROBERT W. 33 W. Second St., Dayton, Ohio SHANNON, BERTHA (MRS. R.) 485 Main St., Saco, Me. SHANNON, RICHARD 485 Mam St., Saco, Me. SHATTUCK, RICHARD Jaffrey, N. H. SHEETZ, ELEANOR 619 19th St., Bradenton, Fla. SHEPHERD, KATHLEEN 534 Palmer Ave., Winter Park, Fla. ROSTER SHIPPEY, ELSIE L. 360 5th St. S., St. Petersburg, Fla. SHORT, BETTY J Box 343, Clermont, Fla. SHOWALTER, EMILY SANDS Peacock Farm, Fairmont, W. Va. SHOWALTER, HOWARD W. Peacock Farm, Fairmont, W. Va. SHOWALTER, J. SANDS Peacock Farm, Fairmont, W. Va SINCLAIR, MARY E. 699 Osceola Ave., W. P., Fla. SMILEY, DORIS H Minnewaska, N. Y. SMITH, ANNE R. 1301 Ashland Ave., St. Joseph, Mo. SMITH, BETTY G. 1445 N. Marshall St., Milwaukee, Wis. SMITH, DOROTHY EDWARDS London, Ky. SMITH, EUGENE 7028 Milwaukee, Ave., Wauwatosa, Wis. SMITH, JANE L. Walnut Lane, Oakwood, Dayton, Ohio SMITH, LOUISE BUTLER Ormond Beach, Fla. SOCASH, WILLIAM 807 Wilson St., Struthers, Ohio SOLOMONS, KENNETH, JR. 7 Knollwood Terrace, Caldwell, N. J. SOUTHGATE, FRANCES 909 Essex Rd., Birmingham, Ala. SPENCE, GORDON 430 Park Ave., New York City STANLEY, CAROLYN Lincoln, N. H. STANLEY, ROBERT A Lincoln, N. H. STEARNS, SALLY Peterboro, N. H. STEPHAN, EDITH 2903 Weybridge Rd., Cleveland, Ohio STONER, OLIVE JANE Chagrin Falls, Ohio STUEVE, MARTIA A. Station Place 212, Mount Vernon, N. Y. STURGES, ANNE 913 Osceola Ave., Fla. SUCK, HENRY 20 Safarikova, Prague XII, Czechoslovakia SUCK, LEO 20 Safarikova, Prague XII, Czechoslovakia -T- TEMPLETON, MARIAN Glasgow, Montana TERRY, GRACE..28I8 Morgan St., Tampa, Fla. THAYER, JANE 2880 Woodbury Rd., Shaker Hts., Cleveland, Ohio THOMAS, DONALD 2001 Robinson Rd., Grand Rapids, Mich. TOWNSEND, AGATHA 314 Forest Ave., G len Ridge, N. J. TOWNSEND, EUGENE 626 Anderson St., Orlando, Fla. TREVOR, BETTY 664 Richmond Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. TRUEBLOOD, BARBARA 1036 W. Stephenson, Freeport, III. TULLIS, JAMES L. 1530 E. 1 15th St., Cleveland, Ohio TULLY, RICHARD G. 37 Forest Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. TURNER, JOHN 232 E. Walton Place, Chicago, III. TUVERSON, JAMES D. 39 Bernice Ave., Woonsocket, R. I. TWACHTMAN, PAUL A 414 Interlachen, Fla. TWITCHELL, ANNETTE 325 E. Main St., Owatonna, Minn. TWITCHELL, WILLIAM 325 E. Main St., Owatonna, Minn. - U- UGARTE, AMPARO Granja 5 Prague Metropolitan, Madrid, Spain UPHOF, BERNICE W Route 3, Orlando, Fla. -V- VAIL, WILLIAM H. H. 86 S. Clinton St., East Orange, N. J. VALE, JULIET Southern Pines, N. C VALENTINE, CAROL .Stafford Springs, Conn. VAN BEYNUM, ROBERT H. 203 Palm St., Hartford, Conn. VARIO, RALPH S. .120 Front St., Mineola, N. Y. VARNEY, WALTER R. 20 Arch St., Dover ' N. H. VEEDER, CAROLINE J. 635 Maple Ave., Winnetka, III. VOGEL, ROBERT L. 161 Brewster Rd., Scardale, N. y. VOSBURGH, WILLIAM Box 67, Lutz, Fla. VRUWINK, RUTH E. I Pinewood Ave., Albany, N. Y. - W- WADDELL, GEORGE M. 305 S. Washington St., Greenfield, Ohio WALLACE, LEWIS C Stuart, Fla. WALLING, GEORGIA Brookside Park, Greenwich, Conn. WARFIELD, ROBERT 43 Hillside Rd., Newton Highlands, Mass. WARNER, ELIZABETH R. 420 Webster Ave., Winter Park WARREN, ALBERTO T. 3 Stetson St., Brunswick, Me. WASHINGTON, RICHARD Cherokee, N. C. WELCH, HELEN South Highlands, Sarasota, Fla. WELLMAN, HELEN 157 New England Ave., Winter Park WHALEN, WILLIAM 246 Depew St., Peekskill, N. Y. WHARTON, LLOYD 948 N. Massasoit Ave., Chicago, III WHITE, ELEANOR 2222 Delamere Drive, Cleveland, Ohio WHITE, MARJORIE 4227 9th Court South, Birmingham, Ala. WHITELAW, MALCOLM H. 38th Pacific Aves., Virginia Beach, Va. WH ITEWAY, THOMAS S. 2096 Hampstead Rd., Cleveland, Ohio WHITTEMORE, RICHARD H. 39 Meadow Way, Cambridge, Mass. WILLARD, JANE Main St., Clinton, Conn. WILLIAMS, CAROL 2374 Roseboro Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio WILLIAMS, MARY ELOISA Belmont Park Ranch, Alder, Montana WILSON, ALBERT DEL 58 Afton Ave., Crafton, Pittsburgh, Pa. WILSON, BETTY ANN 758 Washington Rd., Crosse Point, Mich. WINANT, DANIEL 1278 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y. WINANT, ELFREDA 1278 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y. WINCHESTER, KATHARINE 112 13th Ave., N., St. Petersburg, Fla. WISE, ROBERT 144 Comstock Ave., Winter Park WOODHULL, WILLIAM 950 Park Ave., New York City WYNER, BETTY ANN 78 Dean Rd., Brookline, Mass. -y- YOUNG, GEORGE C. Seabreeze Station, Box 5237, Daytona Beach, Fla. YUST, DOROTHEA 1520 Glencoe Ave., Winter Park, Fla. YOUNG, HAROLD (Box 3165) 721 27th St., Orlando, Fla.


Suggestions in the Rollins College - Tomokan Yearbook (Winter Park, FL) collection:

Rollins College - Tomokan Yearbook (Winter Park, FL) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Rollins College - Tomokan Yearbook (Winter Park, FL) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Rollins College - Tomokan Yearbook (Winter Park, FL) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Rollins College - Tomokan Yearbook (Winter Park, FL) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Rollins College - Tomokan Yearbook (Winter Park, FL) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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Rollins College - Tomokan Yearbook (Winter Park, FL) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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