Campus Crusade for Cthulhu: IT found ME!
Famous Residents of Arkham

James Biffle was an amateur underwater photographer from Boston who visited Arkham in 1973.

His camera was found in 34 feet of water, but Mr. Biffle was nowhere to be seen. This is the last photo on the roll.

Estimations of the size of the octopoid run from 24 to 36 feet across.

His Last Picture

Whoops

Frederick Z. Hinkleberry teased the Temple snakes once too often.

Their venom produces some odd and unusual effects.


Nyarlathotep Hall is popular for larger gatherings, sings, revivals and meetings.

The Temple Hall

Bound

Young Winston Razzle demonstrates the "glass full of sulphuric acid" method of keeping Temple sacrifices from squirming about.

Notice the ritual fish tablet at his feet, showing that this is a Temple of Dagon ritual.


Ishmael Percival Windsock was popular at dinner parties because of his unusual ability to unscrew his own head.

Unfortunately, one afternoon he set his head on the porch, and a group of small boys discovered it. They found it worked admirably as a soccer ball, and he was never quite the same afterwards.

I. P. Windsock

Nightgaunt B-Gon: A NEW product you can't live without!

the Gumby Brothers

Theodore Gumby, shown with his brothers Patrick and Froufrou, offended a witch-doctor in Africa.

The witch-doctor promptly shrunk Theodore's body, expanded his head, and flattened him to about one inch in thickness.

He was in great demand as a bookmark.


Sadie Etoufeé getting dressed for the Junior-Senior Prom of 1925.

On a dare, she entered the basement of Arkham High School that night, loudly denying that any "axe-wielding maniac" could live down there.

She has never been seen again.

Sadie Etoufee

The Gwinkski Sisters

Lala and Lulu Gwinkski owned and operated Gwinkski's Candy Store for many years in the 1890s.

Unwary children found out that the Gwinkski's had a secret partnership with the Arkham Co-Op.


Young inventor Harvey Blisco explains the operation of his Interossiter to a representative of the Defense Department in 1947.

The Interossiter

Ritual Herpetology

Lillian Mary Wambletoad was a noted ritual herpetologist in the late 1950s.

Her paper on "Snake Rituals and the Single Woman" is still a standard in the field.


Susan White and Annette Thompson mount the steps to the Crypt outside of Arkham for their initiation as novice priestesses.

Those who undergo this form of initiation never smile or laugh again.

The Cave Shrine

Hector Martin stayed at the Bates Motel despite the warnings about the rats in the walls.

He found out the warnings were serious.


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