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Page 24 text:
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Button, Topeka, Jack Tucker, Kansas City, Mo. Second row: John SIGMA CHI Fin! row: Bob Swanson, Kansas City, Mo., Mike Nichols, Phillips- burg, Jim Shondell, Kansas City, Mo., Gordon Miller, Salina, Lloyd Eisenhower, Junction City, Charles Edmondson, Leavenworth, Jack Sutton, Kansas City, Mo., Forrest Logan, Hutchinson, Jim Thomas Bartlesville, Okla, Dick Springe, Leavenworth, jim Conard, Hutch inson, Don Young, Dodge City, Ed Gibbons, Dodge City, Kenneth Hampton, Coffeyville, Don Wyman, Hutchinson. SIGMA KAPPA Princella Wegman, Chanute, Mary Vermillion, Salina, Sheila Guise La June Dunn, Bethany, Mo., Betty Wahlstedt, Kansas City, Mo: Joel Fant, Garden City, Ruth Fisher, Belleville, Peggy Small, Kan- sas City, Mo., Kathleen Wright, Wellington. SIGMA NU Dean Banker, Russell, Ronald Sohn, Oakland, Calif, Bob Miller, Oakland, Calif., John Shackleford, Pullman, Wash., John Robinson, Dallas, Texas, Blaine Nelson, Wichita, Allan Harms, Great Bend. TAU KAPPA EPSILON James Proctor, Kansas City, Mo., Lee Nelson, Larned, Dick True- heart, Sterling, Bill Acton, Kansas City, Mo., Gene Brown, Kansas City, Mo., Emanuel Blando, Kansas City, Mo., Bob McKinley, Kansas City, Mo., ' TRIANGLE Robert Follett, Kansas City, John Fuchs, Kansas City, Mb- Clif- ford Bates, Lawrence, Graybill Parks, Umatilla, Fla., Clifford Karbo Topeka. Not in picture: Robe t D l dore Wagner, St. Joseph, Mo. r aw ey, Kansas City, Mo., Thegj Fin! row: Ieannette Perkins, Lawrence, Caroline Morris, To- peka, Lola Meltvedt, Arlington, Va., Dorothy Walker, Dodge City' 7 1 Brewster. Second row: Martha Belle Hogan, Rock Springs, Wyo.,
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Page 23 text:
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PHI DELTA THETA First row: John Hirschler, Halstead, Bob Geis, Salina, Bob Mer- rick, Salina, Dick Porter, Concordia, Oliver Samuels, Emporia, Arnold Nye, Newton, Leonard Menzie, Montezuma, Gilbert Wood- worth, Halstead, Bill Belden, Eskridge. Second row: Bob Corder, Welda, Joe Dickey, Kansas City, Mo., Homer Hoover, Kansas City, john Heffernan, Seattle, Wash, Sam Harris, Kansas City, Mo., lHoward Ryan, Abilene, Charlie Black, Lawrence, Wendell Good, Perry. PHI KAPPA PSI First row: Rudy Carl, Lawrence, Wayne Hird, Lawrence, Woody Runyan, Topeka, Charles Robertson, Lawrence, Kenneth Bellamy, Colby, Earle Crawford, Chanute. Second row: John Umbach, Dodge City, Robert Pugh, Lawrence, Jack Bouse, Kansas City, Bill Com- best, Lawrence, Lloyd Grant, Kansas City, Mo., Not in picture: Gene Kittle, Kansas City, jack Gosnell, Kansas City, Bill Watson, Kansas City, Eddie Fritz, Lawrence. PI BETA PHI First row: Dorothy Davis, Miami, Okla., Betsy Ewing, Houston, Texas, Pat Tuller, El Paso, Texas, Mary Gayle Marsh, Emporia, june Plumb, Newton, Elaine Wyman, Hutchinson, Pat Penney, Law- rence, Peggy Sanderson, Lawrence. Second row: Betty Jeanne Grant, Wichita, Dorothy Warren, Billings, Mont., Martha Lou Cable, Kan- sas City, Pat lHorner, Kansas City, Edith Marie Darby, Kansas City, Carolyn Morrison, Coffeyville, Carolyn Carson, Wichita, Margaret Hardie, Carlinville, Ill., Laura Beth Sifers, Iola, Dottie Rose Stod- der, Wichita, Shirley McGinnis, Kansas City, Mo. N ot in picture: Jean Saffell, Lawrence. PI KAPPA ALPHA Fifi! row: Paul C. Vertrees, Puyallup, Wash., Don Ireland, Seat- tle, Wash., Paul Finck, Orchard Farm, Mo., T. E. Davis, Newton, Gordon Poole, Colorado Springs, Colo., Harvey Morrow, Colorado Springs, Colo., Dale Kerfoot, Wiley, Colo. Second row: Richard Houts, St. Louis, Mo., Norma Vaa, Poulsbo, Wash., Robert Ma- hanna, Hoxie, Robert Mathews, Kansas City, Mo., Lloyd Palmer, Postville, Ia., Charles Fisher, Sullivan, Mo. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Jim Shepherd, Kansas City, Mo., Joe Sanchel, Craig, Mo., Jim Mueller, Kansas City, Mo., Page Brent, Kansas City, Mo., Bud Bartling, Kansas City, Jerry O'Dowd, Kansas City,'Mo., Bob Hutchings, Kansas City, Mo. Not in picture.: Larry Benedict, Ben- nington, Bob Daleen, Salina, Pat Billingsley, Sioux Falls, S. D., Kenn Nohe, Kansas City, Mo., Dave Veitch, Kansas City, Mo., Don Barrington, Kansas City.
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Page 25 text:
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NOVEMBER 1943 NlW lHllS IN lHlIlHHM HE MEN'S and womenis dormitories at K. U. in the fall of 1943 present a significant picture of the times in which we live. Girls' dormitories have been forced to concentrate all available living space. Women have moved into dormitories which for- merly housed men students. The navy, as evidenced on the campus, has generally moved into Lawrence. The exigencies of war have done much to mold this general picture of University dormitory life, out of this, above all, remain the friendliness, the frankness, the independence characteristic of this phase of living. This is perhaps an outstanding feature associated with living in a dormitory,-independence. Inde- pendence in the forming of opinions, in actions, and in an outlook on life. Let us look at the Women's Residence Halls, Corbin Hall, Foster Hall, and Jolliffe Hall. This year, 148 girls are residing in Corbin Hall of which 69 are new girls. Through the concerted efforts of carpenters and painters the hall has increased its ca- pacity for holding femme fatales to 27 more girls than it held two years ago. This involved compacting the available living space by introducing those space- savers known as bunks, and throwing up a wall here and there to insure privacy in newly constructed rooms. The girls secure their rooms by application through -by Marianne Glad the office of the Dean of Women. The house is or- ganized under the direction of a social director and the usual four officers elected by the members. Abid- ing by the rules set up by this group is the only order of the day. Everything from Hill politics to attend- ing house meetings is up to each girl, and perhaps to her conscience. The beauty of this phase of living is realized when it is fully understood that each girl experiences the friendship and fun that can be hadin living as a social unit, and also retains her individ- uality and the privilege of thinking for herself. In the pre-war period, Foster Hall housed men seeking scholastic enlightenment at the Univer- sity. Keeping pace with the changing times, Foster is now the site of a residence hall for 32 girls. To date these girls have traveled to Corbin for their meals and social activities, but soon this will cease, and Foster Hall will be considered a ,separate entity sheltering and feeding degree-bound females. Form- erly a residence hall for men, jolliffe Hall is currently a trifle perturbed to find feminine apparel hanging languidly in closets, and creatures in skirts and sweat- ers ambling up and down its halls. Twenty-three girls have appeared to replace the men, and Jolliffe Hall may be antagonistic at first, but in time the shift will speak for itself. Being a generous woman with a thought for the CORBIN HALL Firrt row: Joyce Ann Staley, Kingman, Virginia Wickert, Claflin, Virginia Williams, Great Bend! Jackie NVOOClS, Garnett, Donna Glorvick, Faulkton, S. D., Kaye Townsend, Phillipsburg, Gwendolyn Paine, Kansas City, Elizabeth Niven, Topeka, Eleanor Brown, Bethel, Mary Holtzclaw, Lawrence, Ruth. Larson, Galva, Jess Roy, Hartford, Conn., Dortha Jane Wilson, Kansas City. Second row: Betty Huffman, Glasco, Esther Lewis, Muskogee, Okla., Gracie Janke, Claflm, Jane Ukena Highland, Laura Jayne Smith, High: land: Mary Todd, Atchison, Harriet Davis, Troy, Lucille Steckel, Emporia, Colleen Mason, Norton, Norma jean Pyke, Florence, Shirley Oviatt, Kansas City, Mo., Marguerite Hedrick, Rich- mond, Mary Kay Parker, Salina, Mar- garet Husted. Salina. Third row: June Thompsin, Kansas City, LaVon Hays, Larned, Hannah Roberts, Kansas City, Barbara Clark, Potwin, Edith Sula, Wilson, Shirley Rinker, Wakeeney, Ina Katherine Roderick, Wetmore, Jean A. Jones, Chanute, Dixie Williams, Utica, Barbara Haas, Bethany, Elizabeth Beard, Independence, Mo., Amy Dombeck, Hartford, Conn., Helen Bush, Eureka, Donna Hempler, Almena, Elizabeth Kindig, Medicine Lodge, Dorothy Tweedy, Iola. Fourth row: Ann Scipes, Slat M .' B t Sl' k W ll' er, o, ety in er, e mgton, Gerry Speck, Nortonville, Betty XVoods, Caldwell, Marybelle White, Wlellington, Virginia Urban, Dorrance, Cynthia Smith, Baldwin, Esther DeBord, Kansas City, Chesnev Shirley, Topeka, Lois Ann McDowell, Topeka: Jean Hollis, Over- brook, Charleen McCann, Iola, Vivian Riffer, Corning, Marjorie Stroup, Iola. S,
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