TAMANAWAS 1934 Published by the Associated Students of the College of Puget Sound Tacoma, Washington Delmore Martin, Editor; Richard Zehnder, Business Manager
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TAMANAWAS 1934 Published by the Associated Students of the College of Puget Sound Tacoma, Washington Delmore Martin, editor; Richard Zehnder, business manager Iswv4r?mL"t \ . 4 ' <=7/L1934 TAMANAWAS ir- v. m. m• '. _ - .4 sS • • *in IIIn llll p " *. COMMENCEMENT o JL.1934 TAMANAWAS iP U B L I S H E D B Y THE A S S O C I A T E D S T U D E N T S COPYRIGHTED BY DELMORE MARTIN , EDITOR AND RICHARD ZEHNDER , BUSINESS MANAGER . COLLEGE OF PUGET SOUND » « TACOMA , WASH . w D E D I C A T ! O N rpO THE seniors under whose leadership we have been proud to serve and which we strive to match and reap the rewards of increasing wisdom and judgment . To the seniors and their college spirit engendered by four years of daily contacts, and this spirit for which we see perpetual existence in CPS alumni. Experience which culminates with time to the faculty and discipline of school life, and which we hope to carry on as part of the traditions of CPS. Seniors, to your exemplification of leader ¬ ship and spirit we dedicate the Tamanawas of 1934. CONTENTS Frontispiece Photo by Robert Richards Administration Page 7 Classes - - Page 1 5 Senior Class Page 17 Junior Class - - Page 24 Sophomore Class Page 27 Freshman Class - Page 30 Events of the Year Page 33 Activities -- - - - - Page 39 Athletics - Page 51 Organizations Page 71 Advertisements Page 89 ## v /\J& Jm I N M E M O R I A M WILLIAM HOMER MARIS FRANCIS W. HANAWALT LET US PAUSE A MOMENT WHILE WE PAY A TRIBUTE OF MEMORY TO TWO OF THE COLLEGE’S MOST BELOVED PROFESSORS. H * ADMINISTRATION HI I , - ifi .* I \ I i — I i , c i s i! ! I Portrait in oils by Rowena Clement Lung DR. EDWARD HOWARD TODD President of the College I 8 P R E S I D E N T ' S M E S S A G E T H E T I C K E R T A P E T T 1SIT some stock broker’s office and watch higher learning called LIFE. You have passed V for a few moments the ticker tape. It is through different grades of that school already. endless. It never passes through but once. In College is a little world in itself. At least, we try reality it carries a story of men’s acts affecting at CPS to make it such. Prerequisites for what is economic values. before you have been offered by the College in t6xtbooks, library, faculty and fellow students. The ticker tape of time is much more interest ¬ The ticker tape has told your story day by day to ing. It carries a daily record of each individual classmates, parents and professors. Your stock is life. The old earth revolves at the rate of 1000 listed. Its value is known. miles an hour, and flies along its well worn path at the rate of nineteen miles per second. Com ¬ But new values may be written in if wisdom is mencement day is rolling around at just that pace. sought crom One on high and from fellow “ livers.” It is not a commencement at all. It is not an The ticker tape does not tell the same story twice “ endment” either. It is a period marking a change because the factors making the data change daily. in the quotation of the ticker tape of time. The If your stock price range does not reach the level moment you receive your diploma from the College which you wish, you ought to know how to remedy of Puget Sound, you have the evidence of having it, having passed through college. gained an enviable distinction some may call it — Let me recommend that you employ as a daily honor by your effort as a college student. A — tutor the One who said , “ Ask and ye shall receive, phase of life has ended , but life has not. You will seek and ye shall find , knock and it shall be opened begin a new record , where examinations will come unto you.” * If you employ Him and follow His upon you at any time from sympathetic or unsym ¬ instruct ons, men will seek and pay well for part ¬ pathetic onlookers. Your stock will go up or down nership in your life. as these examiners estimate your worth. Yes, you are going to enroll in a new school of ’" Matt. 7 :7. The context is interesting. 9 #1 RAYMOND G. DREWRY Dean of the College F A R E W E L L , S E N I O R S ! | T IS our belief that in coming to the College of we must look for solution of crucial, pressing world JL Puget Sound you made a wise decision. You problems. cast your lot with an organization which has had an enviable history and which faces a brilliant May I suggest several objectives for your con¬ future. You have been privileged to enjoy the sideration? First, so plan your program of life that fruits of years of the arduous labor of others; you may retain the buoyant health which has char¬ through your efforts, your co-operation, and your acterized your school days. Efforts are ineffectual devotion there has emerged a greater institution. and life loses zest without this precious thing called health. Second, it is only through honest As you leave your college work two motives work and diligent study that you may master those should be dominant. In the first place, you should practical things which will enable you to make a continue to develop to the full all those capacities living, and those enriching things which will enable and powers which are your unique possessions. you to live a life. Third, all wisdom and power Secondly, and of equal importance, you should are valueless without character. From day to day have the determination to make a contribution to you are building a character with which you must the welfare of society. It is largely to the wisdom live forever. You can build a character which is a and the idealism of the college trained man that constant source of joy to yourself and others. 10 (yl LYLE FORD DRUSHEL Dean of Women TO THE SENIORS OF 1934 T WONDER what each of you will be thinking on However, the majority of you will, I believe, -L the morning of June fourth as you face Presi¬ realize with regret that four very interesting and dent Todd to receive your diploma. Many of you happy years are drawing to a close and that you will find your minds occupied with externals— are going tomorrow into a strange, new world of what we may call the etiquette of the situation: whose future no one now risks a prophecy. getting safely up the steps without tripping over Sherwood Eddy in his little book, ‘‘Am I Getting your lovely gowns, reaching with a graceful move¬ an Education,” quotes a recent graduate who lists ment for your sheepskin, shifting your dangling the following characteristics as tests of the growth tassels at the prescribed moment, and getting down of an ideal personality: to your seat again with a befitting dignity. 1. Intellectual alertness and initiative 2 A Some of you will frankly face the fact that all ‘‘ . sense of honor and honesty 3 A sense of humor. this time you have hungered and thirsted for . 4. An appreciation of beauty, adventure, and ro¬ credits, not knowledge, and that, as another senior mance. 5. A love for humanity. 6. A creative confesses, '‘You now, having accumulated the re¬ purpose in life. 7. Detachment from bondage to quired number of points and having run the ex¬ things— we live within, yet money can buy only amination gauntlet, are officially excused from the cheap externals of life— nothing within our ¬ hungering and thirsting longer.” You will be re¬ selves. 8. Dedication of one s self to a worthy joicing on Commencement Day that the long grind ’ cause.” is over, that you can now admire your diploma, sign your B. A. with a flourish, and consider your¬ What do you measure now, at graduation, by self educated, retire to a life of purposeless leisure. this yard-stick? 1 1 'at -» * r~ W ’•m*> J« w m i - * X m w i •'v FRONT ROW. TC&D, $ANSEIKO, JONES, COLLINS. FkCKEL CRAPSES. WEIR, DREWSV, STEVENS BACK!C ROW; REGISTER; SEWARD fAfcGEfc ROBBINS. CHAPMAN, ROBERTS, SINCLAIR, HENRY. SCHAFER F A C U L T Y Carol Angst Pernina B. Collins Secretary to the Bursar four years B. S.— University of Washington Director of Women’s Physical Education Reverend John S. Bell three years Field Secretary six years Anna H. Crapser John Paul Bennett A. M.— University of Washington B. F. A.— University of Nebraska Professor of French 1 4 years Music Head four years Walter Scott Davis Ellery Capen A. M.— Cornell University M. B. A.— University of Washington History and Political Science Head 26 years Professor of Business Administration three years Walter A. Eichinger Collidge Otis Chapman M. M.— Northwestern University Ph. D.— Cornell University Professor of Music Theory and Pipe Organ Associate professor of English two years one year Edna Warren Cheney Doris Fickel B. S. University of Washington Assistant Registrar three years Librarian three years John I. Chickenzeff Arthur L. Frederick B. M. E. University of Southern California — A. M.— Northwestern University Professor of Violin two years Religious Education Head seven years Ida Nowels Cochran Louis 0. Grant John Herron Art Institute A.