University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS)
- Class of 1945
Page 1 of 254
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 254 of the 1945 volume:
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.,, V - 7.7 W ir . Y...-...,..-1-,-wfv, . . ..,. -H -. ,.,.,,,, 1 I v 1 w I x r E i , Q w w P P i E E 5 m E 5 5 3 Q in I-iz! 5' 314 ,V fqnv ,Qsw H -'B' 9-A95 HL. ., IN 5 a N., in x Wwdmv J, ,V Q ,f 1 X ii Z2 MMM V hw Mg? ' , my ' win? 1-431. .. -.- .J ll I ,........-4 IHI EHHISIHPHH1 Slunuu ICQLL5 Jayhawks Photographer wi? ik if ik Topeka, Kansas TOBER 1944 3 THE N. PINK ELEPHANT in +l1e Sfafe in Kansas Ci'ry or in +l1e Broadview in Wicl1H'a a swell place fo mee'r 'rhe dale. W. G. HUTSON Prefialent R. C. MCCORMICK Secretary-Tremwer ASSOCIATED HUT ll HUTEL In MISSOURI . KANSAS - COLORADO 1000 ROOMS-1000 BATHS Rates 3150 to 3250 Single HOTEL BOULDERADO ROBERT E. LEE HOTEL Boulder, Colo. Kansas City, Mo. I HOTEL STATE HOTEL ELDRIDGE Kamas City, Mo. Lawrence, Kam. HOTEL BROADVIEW Wichita, Kansas W. G. HUTSON R. C. MCCORMICK President Secrela ry- Treaxu T07 We 64355926 nvnnwim A , ggi-in or A , 1 THE JAYHAWKICR 'N , lq ' Wx Editor-in-Chief . . Barlrzeipt Marzag er . Secretary .... flrlrerlirirzg Manager . ErlllorlalA.f,rocla1fer . . flrllflt . . Photographic Staff . . CONTRIBUTORS Mary Alfred R. J. Atkinson Earl Barney Don Diehl Lila Jean Doughman Rosalie Erwin Betty Jo Everly X Robert Gibbon Dixie Gilliland Patricia Glover Nancy Goering Joan Hayden Hanna Hedrick Joan Harris Melvin Kettner Charles Kunzelman Jill Lauderdale Dorthe McGill Jeanne McGrew Pat Penney Dean Sims Emily Stacy Earl Stanton Delores Sulzman Judith Tihen Joan Veatch Neal Woodruff . MARY MORRILL . . BEVERLY BOHAN . SALLY FITZPATRICK . . . . GEORGE WAITT JBETTY Jo EVERLY, ILILA JEAN DOUGHMAN, JHANNA HEoR1cK, IPAT PENNEY, LNEAL WOODRUFF JMARY oL1vE MARSHALL, -1 DORA ANN BROWN lDAVE HALL f JASON DIXON, Editor, JBERT KINTZEL, ' JCHARLES FISHER, LNANCY MILLER OFFICE ASSISTANTS Patricia Abbot Mary Louise Ainsworth Marilyn Carlson Cora Lou Child Frances Chubb Dorothy Dahlin Patricia Glover Joy Godbehere Jean Hendrickson Bonnie Holden Sue Jamieson Dorothy Kintzel Martha Laffer Mary Longenecker Mary Gayle Marsh Eileen O'C0nnor Margaret O'Neil Patricia Rolley Joann Ruse Rosemary Ryan Sara Jayne Scott Emily Stacy Elaine Thalman Nancy Tomlinson Barbara Varner Mary Jane Waggoner Joanna Wagstaff Patricia Williams ADVERTISING STAFF John McGlaughlin Dwight Rounds Kelma Smith Earl Stanton Harold Warwick Virginia Winter Anna Young BUSINESS ASSISTANTS Don Brown Pat Rolley Bonnie Holden Harry Stucker COPY READERS Dorthe McGill Delores Sulzman Elaine Thalman Jayhawker INCE so much of this issue is dedicated to freshmen we have tried to select staff members who would in all ways be sympathetic to the freshmanls cause. After reading the works of R. Atkinson, Don Diehl, and Lila Jean Doughman, and seeing Charles Fishers pictures, we feel we have succeeded. Everyone has been quite sympathetic -especially Charles. One long year of being a freshman and going on three of training them has made R. Atkinson somewhat of an authority on pledge training. His article concerning same CUVhal'r Wrong with Thlr Picture-pp. 58-595 is full of only Atkinson cracks, and, although typical of all sororities and fra- ternities, gives the discerning reader an insight into what makes Phi Psils like that. Atkinson fans will also like R. J.'s comments on the new navy band. C Bell Bottom R. J ATKINSON Blaer-p. 52.5 Don Diehl, navy medic, attributes his remarkable under- standing of women to his summer spent interning in a ward of Waves at the Staff hospital in Norman, Okla. Don served as masseur, hypodermic expert, and general errand boy. His new insight, applied to K.U. coeds, results in the schol- arly article CThey're All Fair in Love and Wfar-p. 613 in our freshman section. PIl0'l'0GIlAPllEIlS Charles Fisher says the first time he tried, his film pack was faulty. Anyway, he managed to have the four freshman women on pages 60, 62, and 63 pose for him twice in a Fraser theater lighted only by two dim ceiling spots. Handi- caps of lighting, a small camera, and a ladder tripod were waived by the enthusiastic Fisher and his zest for the work. Bert Kintzel took more pictures for this issue than any me t Book other photographer and of course, being a freshman him- self, always had a good word for the class. Ready for any assignment, he would pick up his camera at a moment's no- tice and trot along with the stoic comment, I'll go. But I'm Hunkingf' Bert's masterpiece is undoubtedly his Maloney cover, but his shot of the VanderWerfs Cp. 465 and his freshman opener Cp. 575 are just as good. Although instructing this year as well as going to medical school, Jason Dixon still finds time to take pictures- for which we are extremely grateful. His best job this issue is the Theta-Phi Gam walkout Cline jaybawker Goer on a Walken!-pp. 68-695 on which he stuck by his subjects un- til they were actually in bed. Lila Jean Doughman has just about the right slant on the Hill's skepticism-and hope-in the outstanding freshman Cp. 645. Her subtle humor also adds life to what seemed the making of a very routine story on the School of Engineering Cflfter Math-pp. 48-495 and lends vi- tality to The Good Earthf' which 1 . L -'--'- mi A J she somehow manages to sift thor- LILA JEAN DOUGHMAN oughly without actually slinging. Honors for the best personality sketch in this issue go unquestionably to our senior contributor, Dean Sims, for the portrait of E. C. Quigley and his Hampshire Hams CI-Iampfbifef and Hard Work-p. 375. Jeanne McGrew did an interesting bit of reporting, too, on Calvin and Rachel VanderWerf C p. 46 J. Dixie Gilliland C3,000 Queftion About You-p. 425 and Delores Sulzman CTl9e New Bill of Rigblf-p. 475 managed to get furloughs from the shack to do their stories for this issue. Hanna Hedrick also played truant For our cover sho! tographer, raught Peggy Maloney in the basement of the Theta house pol- ishing trophies. The mood the photograph registers is typical of Peggy-if not of freshman training. from the Kansang consequently Hedrick humor brightens the beginning of the issue with a cheery account of return- earlies and their experiences CCome Early and Avoid the Rmb-pp. 14-155. Rosalie Erwin had one of the longest assignments-com- plete coverage of all residence halls, but she managed to hunt down authorities on everything. Her article Clmie- pendentr' Day-pp. 22-245 will answer all of your questions about the greater block of student life. ILLUS'l'RATOBS Mary Olive Marshall keeps insisting that she can't draw -but when she turned in the W, ,V,V .,,, ,,W,,VW Grandpa Jayhawk la y o u t, we started permanently disregarding her chatter. Burger-Baird thinks the series of cartoons with border and lettering looks professional and has taken a'great interest in Mo's graduation which, unfor- tunately for the '46 Jayhawker, be next June MARY OLIVE MARSHALL Dora Ann Brown has also done some good cartooning for this issue. We liked her idea about the bathing suit for summer session classes best-then the Jayhawks on this page and on page eight. Last-and most, we will never get over being grateful to George Zook for taking time off from his work in Wash- ington, D. C, as President of the American Council on Education to explain the veteran's program and point out the problems it will entail C The Education of Vetemm- p. 135. An old Jayhawker, Mr.'Zook answered our request for a story with I'1l do my very best to see if I can get something to you. His article arrived promptly the day before deadline. Bert Kintzel, staff phoz 6 THE JAYHANYKER SEASON'S GREETINGS for JAY!-IAWKERS Gift List PERFUME HOSE SCARFS BILLFOLDS PURSES HOUSEHOLD GIFTS ARMY GIFTS CANDY SOAPS SHAVE SETS HANDKERCHIEFS SWEATERS ROBES LINGERIE A ll these and many more at D CAN BE yr WF 'ngiiiffs 'Gillis Mar: 'ii' You rgrxe BWI' Num BE Lawrence Sanitary Dairy Products by Lila -lc-an Iloughman T Ginny Larson and Jim Baska have a friendly disagreement out on a sandbar in the Kaw. That is a blanket-but the photographer, and say about 35 other Sig Alph's and their dates standing out of range put every- thing on a legal basis. Katie Gorrill and Doc Lamkin leave a mid-week early. There are three possibilities. They could be going to the library or to the 'Mite .... -KINTZEL HE G00ll EARTH HINGS seen and heard on the Hill often times become a bit confused. From such a jambled mess emerge a few tid-bits that will no doubt prove of interest only to those whose names appear in print - ego -- it is sometimes called. In this case the best isn't saved 'til the last. The pause that refreshes bears the label Bob Henry. Perhaps his fame is due to the frequent trips that he and his Phi Delt pledge brother Mike Kuklenski make to the cosmetic counter at Weavers. That droning sound you hear is Fiji Earl Stanton's continued crooning of Her Tears Flowed Like Wine. Does this include Sally Krehbiel's, too? The commotion that invariably necessitates reprimanding by Watson Library's Gravel Gertie is due to the heated discussion between Nancy Love and Dordie Waite while in their respective Pi Phi and Phi Gam study halls. Yeah Study! Looks as if Don Relihan, SX, might be polishing that proverbial apple just a shade by sending Eileen O'Connor's parents pheasant between semesters. Food for thought no doubt. Three blind mice or the eternal triangles: Marge Beneke, Elton Hoff, and Barbara Neely. Thats what happens when an active appears back on the scene. Edith Darby, Kenny Nohie, and jack Nesselrode. Due to rationing it ain't patriotic. Ruth Wright, Ross Skinner, and Jack McDermott. Even orchids fail to make the decision easier. Joy Godbehere, Carl Clark, and Martha Bonebrake. Maybe it will take one of those Phi Delt frys to do the trick. C onlifzueci rm Page 10 HARRY DARBY Manufacturer Iron and Steel Products Bombs and Ships tor the Army and Navy KANSAS CITY KANSAS Post War Planning. 'NX And who ian time days? Just what will happen, when and where - is anyone's guess. But of one thing weire sure . . . looking ahead is really worth while. Whetller it's your future career in lrusiness or one ofthe professions . . . whatever it may he . . . your dreams of today can lead to happiness once the war is won. As yo11 think of tomorrow, picture a world where the Conveniellre of electricity will do much to make living '1 real pleasure. KANSAS CITY POWER gl LIGHT COMPANY KANSAS CITY, Mo. Tllll JAYHAWK li LO0K A'I'... THE FBESIIMAN CAP HE freshman cap was a minor point, but somehow it was typical. Typical of the kind of thing which a very few students bring up, to which the All Student Council generously lends unmerited dignity by discussing, and which eventually ends in action bigger than itself. Action which is detrimental, although the original point was harmless. Wearing freshman caps is a tradition-one of those many little traditions which has given K.U. a personality. It is one of those many little, yes, insignificant things that made us think K.U. was the most wonderful and exciting place in the world. Freshman caps have always been accepted ar a tradition-no one has ever tried to work out the democratic principle in them. But now armed with arguments about the harmful effects of physical coercion Cinjurious hazing was stopped several years ago? and the indignity to freshmen veterans Cfew if any of the 40 veterans on the Hill are freshmenj self-styled intellectuals put aside the duties pressing them as a council to apply the wordy principles of their government classes to the simple freshman cap. The application, of course, was fatal. The cap was found to be an instrument of totali- tarianism and tyrany. So to protect the democratic way of life a resolution passed forbidding physical punishmenti' for the freshman's failure to wear his cap, Fortunately, the All Student Council cannot go behind the locked doors of chapter rooms. Fraternities can still make requirements of their freshmen, and freshman caps still appear. But the University's part in the tradition is dead. To live again freshman caps must wait-along with so many other things, both big and little - until the mind of the student leader becomes keen enough to distinguish between that which is too intimate a part of college life to be judged by worldly standards-and that which is a real opportunity for serious, thoughtful action. A NEW PEP CLUB The case is presented mildly, yet persistantly, - the case for a larger womens pep club. There is little feeling that the jay Janes, themselves, should be expanded or abolished. - XXX., V' As an honorary women's pep club of 48 members the jay Janes are doing their part. They usher, they help in charity drives, they back school programs, and most important of all they attend rallies and games. They are criticized for not making more noise -but 48 women cannot raise a tumult. The tumult is the responsibility of the student body, the Jay Janes' job lies in forming a nucleus. They know the yells and therefore help in a sense to lead them, they set an example by clapping, by rising, by singing, But they cannot, and do not make up for a silent student body. The question of the new pep club, then does not really concern the jay Janes. It concerns, rather, the bulk of stu- dents Who are enthused enough with school spirit to take active responsibility about being at games and rallies, and demonstrating corporate school spirit when they get there. An organization with rules and obligations cannot be forced upon these students. Unless they have the desire and the force to organize, they will lack the drive to continue. Initiative and interest, then, are the questionable ingredients for a new, larger, all inclusive pep club. Whether it arises will depend upon the number of students who are honestly and earnestly interested in improving school demonstra- tions. TIIE SIX WEEK'S SESSIUN With the headache and hurry of the short fall term still fresh in our memory, we pause momentarily to bid the six weeks session good-bye. A contraction of the C-12 pro- gram seems to be slowly, yet most surely, repatriating two regular 18 weeks semesters. Navy students who are left next year will be for the most part advanced engineers who no longer require the time of College faculty members. Other Universities are settling back to normal schedules. K.U. is expected to also. And so the six weeks session goes, taking, along with the headache common to both students and faculty, its scattered advantages. Undoubtedly the short session was convenient for the May high school graduate who was anxious to start college. Continued on Page 77 ,rw gk ,fx ,M Www. . W.. Q. My ' Qfyhll ima 5 gi ,,. , ,, W., , . ,Q 'Nw I f 2-M , 0? 1 T' 5 ' x 1 1 ' 73 ' .,., , M M MW L Q? E HB! H M , VWWWWWWWSQ gmmwvf-Q X 'in NK ff:-iY:4! i, if Q 6 fi .,.,,., 5 'Q N 4 K nmmwwvw Blitz Record Co. fFormerly .'lInry's Record Shop! NEW AND USED RECORDS Mail Orders Filled 1134 Kansas Topeka FOR ALL OCCASONS RIDE THE BUS BUS LEAVES CAMPUS 5-25-45 Min. Past Hour BUS LEAVES DOWNTOWN 15-35-55 Min. Past Hour The Rapid Transit Co. Your Local Bus Service THE JAYHAWIQER Nw Reading from left to right, Charles Piroutek, Virginia Gorrill, Delorice Davis, and Junior Gasawski, snatch an extra intermission in the foyer of Hoch. The navy band is preforming within. 'lllll 0000 EARTH cconawdi Dwight Rounds, frequent escort for Mary Morris, doesnlt appear too upset about Fid Engle, the Wooglin Wooer. ' ' d ' Mordy, Delt, as being a refugee from Sightseers might have suspecte Jim Menningers had they observed him dancing with a coat, sans the body, at the Tsh, tsk and him a Dine-a-Mite -the result of a game of Truth or Dare. college boy! ' k 'n it all in the Phi Psi family Appears as though Norma Anderson is eepi g what with Earle Crawford in tow. Bert Morris, Phi Delt, is so modest that he goes in the closet to change his mind about which Scott will be the lucky girl for the night. just don't get the numbers 415 and 295 confused. Seen about again are Helen Pepperell, Gamma Phi, and Jim Bridgens, Phi Bete. in DG Mary Matthews college career is deciding The biggest decisions 1 between the Phi Gam's and Sig Alph's. Why not just keep it all in one house? Bob Mosser, Beta-boy was seen escorting a lovely skeleton lass about the campus as of this Halloween - just who was scaring who? Other pranksters included a group of Phi Psi's ala dates who went tricking or treating. At Doc Wheelers they had their choice between neckties or cookies. Rumor has it the jar was left empty. Don Cousins and Bobbie Webber are reported to have liipped a coin for Jody McCrory. The loser held no hard feelings as both gents agreed they had excellent taste. In case his football buddies aren't in on the know -Wally Rouse sends C07Ill7Il1L'Zl on Page 74 41 ll TOBER 19 A PRINTING PEACE Printing is a flaming sword helping to win the war. It lllust soon become a dove of peace uniting men to build a new world on the ashes of the old. It must harmonize men, educate, and inspire them. It must pioneer new products and plow new buying habit furrows. It must create jobs and keep factory wheels spinning. It must launch new business ships. It must help men to grow BIGGER in a world grow- ing SMALLER. It must lay foundations of fact and pierce the sky with towers of noble purpose. Printing faces the greatest challenge of history, the biggest opportunity of the ages. The right selection and wide distribution of printed words can be the most dynalnic force in winning the peace. All of us iii the priming and allied trades carry on our shoulders A mighty responsibility. IT IS UP TO Us TO MAKE EVERY PRINTED WORD COUNT Poli ENDURING PEACE AND PEosPEElTY. PPER PRINTING COMPA INCORPORATED ToPEKA,KANsAs Content The Good Earth ........... by Lila .Iean Dougbman The Education of Veterans. . by George Zook COIIIC Early and Avoid the Rush .................. by Hanna Hedrick Tea for Two Hundred and Eighty-six .............. by Hanna Hedrirk Nlenis Rush WIeek .......... by Melvin Kenner So Firm, So Fully Packed. . . by Joady Hayden Independents' Day ..... . by Rosalie Erwin Jeanne Shoemaker ..... . by Nancy Goering Hall Groups .............. Slimmer Obsession . . .... . . . bv Betty .lo Evcrlx Maude Elliott .......... . by Judith Tihen The First 48 Years Arc the Hardest ................ . 6 .. I3 14-15 16-17 .. 18 ..20 ..22 ..25 26-27 H28 ..30 ..32 The Jayhawk Holds His Own. . 34 by Earl Barney The Jayhawk's Caw ........ by Emily Stacy Hard Work and Hampshires. by Dean Sims Intramurals- Men's...... ...... .. . by Earl Slillllllll Wonxenis ............... by Dorthe McGill Physical Culture ........ . by Dorothy WYIIIIP 3,000 Questions About You. . by Dixie Gilliland The Vanderwerfs . ..... . by Jeanne Mvlirew The New Bill of Rights ..... by Delores Sulzman After Math ................ by Lila .lean Doughmun Like Father, Like Son ...... by Bob Gibbon Jack Button . .......... by ,loan Harris Bell Bottom Blues. . . . . by R. J. Atkinson If You Dated the Dean ...... VVhy Students Aren't Passing by Pat Penney What's Wrong with This Picture ? ................ by R. 1. Atkinson They're All Fair in Love and YV ar .................... by Don Diehl Cum Laude-or Lousy? ..... The Jayhawker Goes on a Walkollt ................ Pledge Pictures .... ..36 ..37 ..38 ..39 ..40 ..42 U46 ..47 H49 ..50 .51 ..52 ..53 U51 ..58 ..61 ..64 . . 70 71-73 0 va, vww WW A A mm up me mm? 4, M ,,.. , Q5 1 Fw . .:., ,... : .:..:,.: ..,., , W x , A George Zook, President of American Council on erans' education and dis- cusses the problems it will create. THE ll ll U L A 'll 0 0F V 'llllil N November 15, 1942, when President Roosevelt signed the bill lowering the age of liability for military service from 20 years of age to 18, he promised that if possible provision would be made after the war for those individuals whose education had been inter- rupted by service in the armed forces. ' The congress responded to this challenge, first by the Rehabilitation Act of March 24, 1943, which placed upon the Administrator of Veterans Affairs the power and duty to prescribe and provide suitable training to personsn disabled while serving in the armed forces. Secondly, and more important, was the educational section of the G. I. Bill of Rights, passed June 22, 1944, which withvcertain exceptions enables any veteran whose education or training was impeded, delayed, interrupted, or interfered with by 'reason of his entrance into the service or who desires a refresher or retraining course, and who has served in the armed forces not less than 90 days, to 'secure further education or training for a period of at least one year at an approved institution. If the individual does satisfactory work he may continue his program for a period equal to the time he was in the service, but not longer than a total of four years. Those who were not over 25 years of age at induction are automatically regarded as eligible for training or education. Others, except those who wish to pursue refresher courses, must show that their education was interrupted Each person eligible for the educational benehts of the act may enroll at any institution in the country which will admit him and which is approved for this purpose by the appropriate state educational authority. While in attendance the veteran receives S50 per month - 3575 per month if married -free tuition and books. The institution in which the student is enrolled receives from the Veterans Administration the customary cost of tuition, laboratory, and other fees and books. In instances where the institution has no established tuition fee or where the tuition fee is found to be inadequate compensation, the Administrator of Veterans Affairs may provide reasonable compensation up to 3500 per student for each academic year. It seems clear that the congress intended that the institutions should receive reasonable com- pensation for this service from the United States Government. This and other benefits provided Continued on Page 76 The girl with the glossy finish - Pebble Beach puts the famous hooch dancer's hand ac- tion to practical use. 'KINTZE I. Two neatly stacked sophomores slump up the Kappa hill with everything including the can opener. Chi 0mega's prepare a humpty-dumpty for their nursery party --sure bait for the simple but sweet. alias beautiful but dump, alias typical rushec. KINTZITI. MIME EARLYA ll Gamma, Phi's brighten up the Phi Gam hangout. At swords point over rushees, the chapter IS at least in accord during song practice. BUT THE OLD RULE FAILS TO HOLD FOR SORORITY ACTIVES .infill ,yAjrf7fLkv4 All 0 l ll 'll ll ll ll ll F YOU were an active instead of a rushee, you started ' your education earlier-say around September 7, instead of September 12. Your first chapter meeting was about choosing rooms. You didn't make the meeting on time, so you found your- self living in the phone booth. There were others who drew the basement. You retired to your boudoire that first night at a shameful hour, and, rather than sleep between the mattress and bedsprings to keep warm Qyour blankets hadn't arrivedj, you filched several bedspreads from fresh- man rooms. You dragged out of bed too early the next morning, and for breakfast, ate a crusty sweet roll and chewed on coffee grounds which obviously had been left over from last June. Your first ufilibustery' meeting was at 9 o'clock, and you brought along a comfortable pillow to rest your-ah-head on. The fog from cigarette smoke was dense, and you couldn't see more than two sorority sisters away. The hours rolled by, and at noon, all who were able fell out for lunch. In the interim, you attended song practices, scrubbed floors, mowed the lawns, worked on party decorations, cleaned windows, developed a horrible cold, and put the rat traps in the closets until after rushweek. You also scoured the Hill for houseboys, who had to be tall, dark, handsome, DIXON Bach-both played and broken on the Alpha Chi piano and easy to date. You finally settled for something which looked like a Cro-Magnon man. You spent an equally try- ing time searching for suitable cooks who dished up the kind of a meal you didnit used to get at home. In your next chapter meeting, you argued for two hours over a prospective rushee, Miss Jelly fjam don't shake like thatp, who had little to offer besides her buck-teeth, bow- legs, and a million dollars. The railroading which went on would have put congress to shame. Three chapter members were shot, in the end, and you passed on-Miss jelly. You also discussed other potential, and potent, Cthere is a differ- enceb rushees. Your conversation frequently was inter- polated with What is she like? -i.e., ls she a fast kid?'l The next three days, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, you found to be of the same song, second verse. It couldn't be better, but it was a hell of a lot worse. Tuesday, the day of teas, you clipped your claws, concealed your fangs, and pre- pared to greet sweet young things at the door. You were 'iknocked out, but the worst was yet to come. At end of week, you looked like Dante's interpretation of Hell's Belle. You were ready to pick up the interrupted threads of your life, and think of something really solid - like studying, letters, and the man who left you behind. 10 T H IC J A Y H A TV K I-I Ii KINTZEL TRIUMPHANT MOMENT H - FOR BOTH SlDES FRESHMAN FRUSTRATION SETS lN 'PEA FUR TWO HUNDRED JUST DON'T DO ANYTHING FISHER No spiking on the day of teas . . Legal spike cards . . . Preferential and pledge dinners combined . . . ln the best Hawkshaw fashion, active members, oiled, and with firearms oiled, advanced cautiously across the new mine field of rush rules laid down by Pan-Hellenic when open season on rushees officially began September 12. Big brothers off to the Seven Seas, more girls than ever enrolled at the University and for rush week. Competing in the race were 286, 30 more than last year. But gone were those infamous times when a pledge class was formed - and unformed - all on the day of teas. Gone also, were the days when Greek women dashed into another sorority house, grabbed a spiked rushee by her well-done locks, and yanked her out the back door to reconsider her pledge. Once a girl said I do, she was rushed to the nearest recruiting station QMrs. Brune's headquartersb, to sign her Jane Henry on the dotted line. For a change, the spike card was the final step. Breaking the spike meant that a rushee could not pledge another sorority for one calendar year-which disproves the theory that it's a woman's right to change her mind. KINTZEL U 1,1 'I' 0 Ii li R 10 I I FOUR PHOTOKERAPHS MY DIXON IT THE BEGVNNNF-JIT' TEA. DAY hy Hanna llc-drivk VD EIG H'l'Y- I7 WE BEST D E E AH' LVNCHEON KINTZEL CKRENS HOMERIC PRINCWPAL THE MA YEAR ,, ONE CALENDAR QT STEP M FOR 18 . - 1 NWO l. , fQ,,ij T aff? ITH the approach of fall, University officials again resigned themselves to the task of organizing a pro- gram for the new fall semester. And as a matter of course, following an age-old tradition at K.U., a date was set for registration for men's rush week. Soon after, a meeting of the Inter-Fraternity Council was called, and the big men of Greek letters got their heads to- gether to formulate a scientific plan of attack Ccapturej. It was soon evident that the number of new men starting school in September was even smaller than the number in the july semester, when no rush week had been necessary because of small enrollment. Strained, attentive ears sagged dejectedly when informed that, because so few men were arriving, it would be necesary to apportion them frac- tionally if every fraternity was to have an equal chance. CThis system would have been suitable, except that it might have led to trouble with anti-vivisectionistsb Since rush week would come in the middle of a semester for those who were attending the summer session, it seemed a bit impractical to ask men who were engrossed in their studies to take time out to organize a formal rush which would be completely superfluous. Navy men, who con- stitute a large percentage of the active fraternity member- ships, could have only Wednesday nights free for rush dates. The week-end before the beginning of orientation week was not practical. The fact that new students would not yet be in town obviously made rushing activties rather difficult at that time. The week-end after new student orientation was also discarded. The council recognized the fact that formal rush week after new men students had been running around on the campus freely for a week would be ironically futile. And so the big men of Greek letters rationalized beauti- THE JAYHAWKER MELVIN KE'1'1'NER EXPLAINS WHY MEN'S RUSH WEEK WASN'T. fully and said that after all it would be better not to have a formal rush week. The council declared an open season on new men students, and adjourned, entrusting the lives of a group of innocent young men to several desperate posses of Roger Hailfellows. Remarkable changes appeared in rushing techniques after this decree by the Council. Petty quarrels and little feuds disappeared entirely. Name-calling and mud-slinging were abandoned. Instead of the old techniques, fraternities declared open war on one another, employing machine guns and flame throwers. Traditional booby traps and hot boxesu passed almost completely out of the picture, also. ln their place came un- restrained kidnapping, effected by means of lassoes wielded from flashy convertibles which crusied the campus and streets of town. No unidentified man with the freshman look was safe anywhere. Inter-fraternity Council men just shut their eyes, covered their ears with their hands, and shuddered. There were several new men students who had read about a rush week registration in the bulletin sent out by the Uni- versity, but who had apparently, in spite of all these large scale operations, not yet been contacted by a fraternity. Inter-Fraternity Council officials quickly prepared to register all such men after the first new student convocation. But to no avail. It had been practically impossible for a new man to get from a train station to the University without being assailed somewhere along the route by omnivorous fra- ternity men. Practically no one was left by convocation time to register at the Inter-Fraternity Councils registration. At last, fortunately, the bloody week drew to a close. Only a few exceptionally hearty men were left on the cam- pus without some sort of fraternity affiliation. wa- 1 xv swim 5 was : my, 96 'V up an 33122- Jt, 59' ' f A qmy V A ff 'ZS' ...Q' : W A32 fm 3? Q A wma wfsa mx :. ..: .:, s W' 1 Xl 9 435. 5 fi . 13' H B 1 vm QU 20 THE JAYHAWKER RULES, REGULATIONS, AND RABBLE CONFUSE THE FRESHMAN. filly t-Miyffell UFIRM, llll LLY PACKED AINTLY resembling various members of the ostrich family, they stand first on one foot and then the other- the five hundred new freshman waiting in line for their appointment cards. The situation offers plenty of time to contemplate the future, or to count the cracks in the Hoot, but it becomes increasingly difficult to maintain an active interest in the surroundings as the hours of waiting progress. Appointment card finally in hand Qwe are assuming that they eventually came to Q for Quakebushj the problem of the psychological examination arises. The scene of the mental torture is laid in Hoch auditorium promptly funder- linedr at 9:00 a.m. Fortified with numerous cups of black THREE PHOTOGRAPHS BY DIXON coffee, and armed with a dark lead pencil and high hopes, said freshmen are occupied for the next few hours trying to unravel complicated questions ranging from grammar school arithmetic to advanced physics. The results are amazing, high grade morons being at a premium. Physical examinations come next. Clad in becoming sheets, victims are put through a series of knee-knocking, ear-peering tests. Questionnaires are filled out, X-rays are taken before loafers are returned to their rightful owners. A frank photograph and an advanced case of writer's cramp are the reward for the morning devoted to registra- tion. Patients are wearing thin when at last the day of Continued on Page 79 Professor Stene had plenty of time to give each of his enrollee's a pep talk on the po- litical science depart- ment and any man to man advice which he considered appropri- ate. Ushers brought him about five men in the morning-three in the afternoon. Again this year, freshmen women clad in sheets which do not adapt themselves to draping, were har- rassed in hospital halls during their physical examina- tions by men. Even when they managed to get away from interested interns, there was always a photog- rapher around. Freshmen came from their psychological examina- tions with mingled emotions. There were those who were glad the siege was over. Others sadly wondered what it meant when they hadn't answered any ques- tions. OCTOBER 1944 21 KINTZEL The freshmen's week before classes is spent in line-a line which ends invariably in a Jay Jane who sends them home because they have forgotten their appointment cards. Even at this early stage there are those who have their cards punched at one door and then walk out another. DIXON The- registration camera gets blamed for lots that isn't its fault. As proof we have this picture of Don Alderson- who currently complains that the dejected photo on his activity book, doesn't look a bit like him. Freshmen thought their first enrollment was crowded, but by the middle of November 4th, they were wishing for a return of the calm September process. There is no one in this picture compared to the crowd around Miss Doering six weeks later when students battled to get in on the winter semester. 22 THE JAYHAWKER In the kitchens of Miller and Watkins holls fthis is Millerl students eat, study, and party after hours. A good grade overage, a good sense of humor, and just the slightest trace of domes- ticity fit o girl for college life in either residence hall. KINTZEL by Rosalie Erwin I IIEPE IIE ' DAY HILE the Greeks were rushing madly through rush Week, that great body of University students, the Independents, were rushing also-but in a different direction. Never before has the office of the advisor of women been so swamped with demands for dormitory facilities. The Independents are on the move. From residence halls, scholarship halls, cooperatives, and rooming houses, organized and unorganized, come students who are inde- pendent by choice. Who are these Independents? How do they live? What do they do? When do they play? As john should have done - they speak for themselves. ll? if :JF i'Welcome to Miller hall! Like to look around? Through the Window is the Chancellor's victory garden -or what's left of it. The picture over the fireplace? That's Mrs. J. B. Watkins. If it werenlt for her, we wouldn't be here. She gave Miller and Watkins hall, the house next door, to the Uni- versity. The house is still on the summer schedule with only 35 girls. There will be a complete turnover When the winter term starts in November and a full house of 42 members. Miller is run on a cooperative system, each girl doing her share. We are divided into seven kitchen groups of six girls each and take turns planning and cooking meals. ln addition, each girl has a house shift to do. The executive council is our house governing body and is composed of freshmen as well as upperclassmen. It's a little hard to tell you what it's like here. You'd have to live it. Pl? tl? Hifi And this is Watkins hall. Our house is older than Miller but the two are run much alike. About half of us are fresh- men. Of course, we must keep our grades up in order to live here for this, as well as Miller, is a scholarship hall. Most of us work on the Hill and have scholarships of one kind or another, but it isn't all work. Sports, dances, and bull fests provide lots of fun. Pl? el? Pl? Battenfeld hall is home to a lot of fellows. There are three meals residence halls at the University-Carruth, Templin, and Battenfeld - but since Templin has gone to war, there are only two left for those of us who are carrying on. Battenfeld was built by Mr. and Mrs, John Battenfeld of Kansas City, Mo., in memory of their son, john. Our appointments for residence in Battenfeld are made on the basis of scholarship, character, and willingness to cooperate + it says here. We have always had fellows who are out- standing in every way -leaders here and on the campus. We have a working system by which most of the fellows work about an hour a day. ln actual operation, we have a cost basis which covers such things as food and household supplies. :Xe vile 'Tm from Carruth hall which was named for Vfilliam Herbert Carruth, poet and one-time professor of languages at the University. Carruth is an old red brickhouse--used to be the home of the Chancellor. It is a scholarship hall, too. There are 26 men here now. Seven new fellows came in the Upper-Dancing in the afternoon at Watkins hall, the couple on the left Lower left-Chow call at Battenfeld. The customary jokes and com Crank up for G fake-off. Center- Beds are wonderful things' The two ments are making the rounds, as evidenced by the talkative lad with the sleeping beauties and the leg incased in the pretty pajamas belong to John Moore Co-op. patient piece of bread. Lower right-Life is so calm and peaceful. Corbi nites plunk down on the front porch for a pleasant 60 seconds of social relaxation. 24 FISHER This is Saturday afternoon so we know that Charlie Moffett not Jack Armstrong, has just broken away for a first and ten. The Jolliffe cheering section is in there pushing. p KINTZEL They satisfy -motto-of all Battenfeld formals. Patsy Creel and Bob Andrews don't seem hard to convince. ' KINTZEL Women of Harmon Co-op wouldn't be affected if all the cooks in Lawrence were made vice-presidents, of SOW. On K. P. by choice, they serve some of the best meals on the Hill. THE .IAYHAWKER six weeks session to join those who had been here all summer. A faculty operating committee helps outline our general policy, but we do our own work and are governed by our own officers. Individually we belong to the Independent Student Association and attend its dances en masse. We may not be social butterflies, but all work and no play has never been our rnottof' Il? :Ke ,lb 'QI-Iow do you get to Harmon? Down the steps past Battenfeld hall, along the path past the Kappa house, down the drive by Jolliffe hall then through the wilderness. Follow the path, take the turn to your right, and before you is the girl's cooperative at the University. How is it different from other houses? To begin with, the house is ours and we run it ourselves. The Student Housing board was founded by men who felt that the only way to learn was to learn by doing. The board buys the houses and rents them to us. Planning, cooking, cleaning, buying supplies and furniture, mowing the lawn, running the furnace, making decisions for 30, we have demonstrated that college students are adults and can meet and handle problems and situations which they will be required to meet after graduation. Harmon is not just a place to stay, a place where everything is done for you and all decisions made. It is a place to live. fl? 'llf Il' l'We from john Moore are keeping the co-op fire burning for the men during these lean. years. The John Moore co-op used to be where Harmon is now, but the girls have taken over because they needed a bigger place than we did. Even our unpracticed eyes must admit that feminine hands have done a lot for the place since we left. We manage to get along all right, though. Our services should be at a premium - not all fellows can turn out a neat cherry pie or drape windows. We have house shifts just as the girls at Harmon have and through concerted effort, present a presentable front. Fresh- men have as much voice in running the house as upperclassmen- that is one of the things we like about being Independent. Coopera- tion is no idle word the way we use itf' fl? :XC fl? 'I'm a hayseed, my hair is seaweed and my ears are made of leather and they Hap in windy weather. Gosh all hemlock, I'm tough as a pine knot for I'm a Corbin girl you seel' We always sing this song with pride in our hearts and tongues in our cheeks for we know that Corbin, women's residence hall, has all that other houses have and more of it. It is rather overwhelming, though, to come in as a freshman or new girl as 72 did this fall and find yourself one of 147. More than one girl has been embarrassed to meet another girl at an outside affair and find that she, too, was from Corbin. We feel lucky to be here, for the waiting list is long. The pink hall high on a hill is something more than a hall, it's a madhouse-until quiet hours. Like a separate society within herself, Corbin moves forward with the Independents. Many of its resi- dents work in offices on the Hill and 22 are waitresses in the Corbin dining room. We have a weekly newspaper, The Corbin Times, a budding swing band, and the beginning of a dance club. Our library Continued on Page 78 A V KINTZE L HE words, editorials, ureconstructionfl and travel mean a lot to Jeanne Shoemaker. They express what she hopes will be her future. A senior in the College, Jeanne is a journalism major, a fact which is ob- vious when you look at her record. Last year, she was editor-in-chief, news editor, and managing editor of the University Daily Kansan. The second ff semester she served as chairman of the Kansan Board. K X With an eye to the future, Jeanne keeps well informed on politics, par- . V ticularly international politics. The crystalization of her ambition to link the P 0167! post-War world with travel and journalism would be to write editorials on the rebuilding of Europe, she says. Besides being active in journalism, Jeanne is editor of the Y Calif publica- tion of the YWCA, president of Harmon Co-op, her home on the Hill, a member of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journalistic fraternity, and a member of Forums Board. Topping all other honors, she was elected to Mortar Board last year. NANCY GOERING. 26 THE JAYHAWKEK Left to right Frrstrow Eloise West Kincaid Louise Stevenrn Wells ville Phyllis Cooper St Joseph Mo Wilma Pool St Joseph Mo Mary Jo Trompeter Horton Marllyn Whlteford Garnett Almeda Smlth Olathe Pat Finley Wellington Margaunte Hoover St Joseph Mo Audlne Dyer Wichita Betty Leighton Nortonvllle Second row. Vlr ginia Powell Olathe' Edna Wayne Lamb Olathe' Kathleen Fulk Troy' Katherine Wheelock Abilene' Coryln Holbrock Beloit' Margie Kelsey Topeka' Ray Ann Robinson Neosho Mo: Bonnie Jean Bidleman Kins- FH TEH HALL 915' ley, Joyce Merrick, Wellington, Lois Mann, Olathe. Not in picture: Pat Lattner, Olathe. LATHI HALL JHLLIFFH HALL Left to right, First row: Martha Joe Easter, Abilene, Emmalouise Britton, Columbus, Annette Stout, Rothville, Mo., Grace Piros, Scott City, Gwendolyn Kistler, Kansas City, Barbara Stanley, Coffeyville, Lula Hughes, Anthony, Ruth Dudley, lola, Jadene Stickler, Burlington. Sec- ond row: Marjorie Kaff, Overbrook, Mary Jane Vagt, Hillsboro, Patricia Dye, Independence, Billie Joan Kent, Humboldt, Mary Holbrook, Wash- ington, Helen Bozarth, Topeka, Phylis Oliver, Culver, Marylee Master- son, Columbus, Esther Colvin, Pittsburg. Left to right, First row: Jean Newcom, Oakley, Billie Stillman, Bush- ton, Rhoda Boman, Topeka, Helen Ramsey, Topeka, Rose Coughlin, Kansas City, Caroline Owsley, Kansas City, Jean Ball, Holyrood. Second row: Lula Hall, Powhattan, Kathleen Webster, Hanston, Helen Mather, Kansas City, Ardella Ringwalt, Oakley, Winifred Louis, Emporia, Phyllis Betts, Oberlin, Doris Faust, Kansas City. CHHHI HALL NEW GIRLS OF CORBIN HALL Lett to right, First row: Cor-s Demaree, Kansas City, Dorean Lindquist, Belleville, Mary Parman Arkansas City, Ruth Cawood, Wetmore, Jeanne Smith, Neo- desha, Joan Kirkham, Topeka, Marilyn Adamson, Kansas City, Wanda Dean, Kansas City, Helene Johnson, Chanute, Norma Boyle, Arkansas City, Clarice Kirk- patrick, Council Groye, Marjorie Wright, Atwood, Melba Whiting, Downs, Norma Cornkle, Osawatomie, Leah Smith, Joplin, Mo, Jean Templeton, Log,an, Maxine Jones, Sedan Second row: Lois DeWald, Casper, Wyo, Darlene Copeland, Kansas City, Mo , Beverly Betts, Beloit, Lois Steele, Arkansas City, Jean Bar ow, Kansas City, Ruth Mitchell, Waldo, Neva Unruh, Pratt, Maxine Millhauser, Preston, Marlorie Hedrick, Augusta, Eleanor Edouist, Concordia, Shirley Oelschaeger, Kansas City, Mo, Eunice Carlson, Concordia, Mariorie Peet, Kansas City, Mo, Helen Gilmore, Highland, Mary Ann Ardrey, Stafford, Verlene Kent, Florence, Lee VanAchen, Bonner Springs, Phyllis Jack, Garnett, Mildred Deaver, Sabetha, Geneva Anspach, Haven, Jackie Simmons Norcatur Third row' Nancy Clark, Horton, Esther Baker, Wakeeney, Mary Turkington, McCune, Rosalie Morton, Leavenworth, Marguerite Kaaz, Leayenworth, Virginia Stephenson, Garnett, Betty Sandborn, Stafford, Lor- raine Carpenter Clatlin, Doris Onstott, Independence, Mo, Shirley Wellborne, Lyndon, Dorothy Flarter, Caldweii, Barbara Gibson, Oak Park, lll, Shirley Shanks Kearney, Mo, Mary Jo Cox, Atwood, Shirley Wills, Kansas City, Vivian Grimes, St Joseph, Mo, Rosalie Ferguson, Kincaid, Lorraine Rummsey, Council Grove, Ann Andrews, St Joseph, Mo, Dorothy Hoover, Smith Center, Fourth ro 3 Verla Jones, lola, Barbara Stone, Smith Center, Wilda Vermillion, Junction City, Patricia Cloud, Kansas City, Mo, LaVerne Gieseck, Great Bend, Jane Stitflg, Eureka, Mary Jane Brown, Atchison, Jane Willison, Neodesha, Barbara Stein, Halstead, Bur- bara Jury, Clotlin, Mary Jane Ycllinaer, Junction City, Ruth Brown, Sabetha, Jean Born, Medicine Lodge, Colleen Richmond, Natoma, Margaret Gruenthal, Glasca, Carol Terrill, Osawatomi, Marian Greenlee, Scott City, Jean Lippelman, Oberlin, Paulene Bahannon, Caffevville, Louise Brown, Bethel, JoAnn Joslin, Merriam. HATTH FHLH A H CAHH TH HALL BATTENFELD AND CARRUTH HALLS-NEW RESIDENTS FALL '44 Left to right, First row: William Jader, Selden, Donald Schwartzlaopt, LaCross, Paul Conrad, Hiawatha, Dale Rummer, Wichita, George Exon, Wichita, George Caldwell, Wichita, Richard Brown, Kansas City, Mo, Donald Kistler, Kansas City, Kenneth Miller, Chapman, Marshall Geller,AKansas City, Mo Second rowi George Pyle, Morrill, Lawrence Litwin, Chanute, Victor Hogg, Alden, Arthur Oatman, Independence, Mo, Robert Heckler, Kansas City, Glen Helder, Scranton, Lyle Wheat- croft, Utica, John Hudson, Pittsburg, Duncan Sommerville, Joplin, Mo, Third row: James Nelson, Chase, Donald Fanestil, Emporia, Charles Edgar Allbaugh, Rich- land, Robert Andrews, Woolcott, Keith Bradley, Blue Mound, John Irwin, Merriam, Lindell White, Wetmore, John Brockett, Atchison, Marion Sumner, Independence, John DuMars, Nashville. Fourth row, Fank Stalzer, Kansas City, Robert J. Hamilton, Wichita, Edward Chesky, Herington, Robert McPherson, Topeka, Orval Kauf- man, Kansas City, Robert Brown, Peabody, Earl Strong, Nashville, Weldon Hickey, Topeka, William Hollis, Overbrook, Fifth row: Raymond Whearty, Topeka, William Heald, Jr , Salina, Ralph Kiene, Kansas City, Dale Corder, Welda, Calvin Bolze, Kansas City, Raymond Cooper, Overland Park, Robert Stofter, Topeka, James Lindley, St Joseph, Mo, Stanley Keley, Hope Not in picture: Robert Tucker, Mission, Keith Brecheisen, Welda, Dean Smith, Selden, George Johnson, Chanute, Bob Crawford, Topeka, Earl Barney Topeka, Floyd Baker, Leavenworth, Arthur Coate, Louisburg, Lyle Clark, Eudora, Stewart Lambers, St Joseph, Mo, Donald Lutfel, Fort Scott, Charles Lemon, Parker, Mario Rodriauez, Heredia, Costa Rica, Edward Whiteside, Fort Scott. r 28 0B MMER ESSIU by Bvtty do Evaerly ,- f' W QL Q ffm 5' - 5 120 le all tp M f ll. ,..4 Sw THE JAYHAWKER HAT are you in for? - the duration or six weeks? The person asked might have answered in a number of ways - sixteen weeks, six weeks, eight weeks, two weeks, or no, I'm just up for the Fowler Shop Hop. Summer enrollment was rather confused since everyone en- rolled for everything at the same time, some students enrolling in both the six and sixteen week sessions. The latter proved to be the most popular. Out of a total of 2,553 students, only 276 made up the combined enrollment for the eight weeks, six weeks, and two weeks sessions. Courses offered in the six weeks session were few, and many of them closed when the class met and only two or three students showed up. The service men, naturally, were here for sixteen weeks, but quite a few civilians made the great decision that vacation was a time for more study, especially if he or she had only one more semester before graduating. Many of the students who enrolled in the six weeks session were working toward their masters, others were filling in needed hours, and then there were undoubtedly some women who were just curious to see what life on the University campus would be like with males more evenly distributed among females. The eight weeks session was for high school graduates who wanted to get enough hours to obtain a special teacherls certificate, while the two weeks session at the very beginning of the summer was a guidance institute and work shop for supervisers of personnel and classroom teachers. Each student armed himself with the determination to over- look the heat, be on time for every 7:30 class, and get just as tanned as possible. Consequently, bathing suits were common during study hours, alarm clocks were at a premium, and the roofs of dormitories were dotted with prostrate forms showing life only to the extent of reaching for a towel at the hum of an airplane motor. The University was busy as usual with the band, orchestra, a cappella choir, All Student Council, l.S.A., Union Activities, and Dine-a-Mite going full force. Intramural basketball CPhi Delt's and Phi Garn's tiedj, softball, horseshoes, golf, tennis, and swim- ming were the sports in which most of the students participated. Adults on the campus were provided with recreation in Fowler grove ,by Dr. Allen's croquet, shuffleboard, badminton, and volley ball. The Lawrence municipal swimming pool was the main after- noon attraction, and every day found it crowded with would-be Weissmullers. V Nearly all civilian students lived in organized houses. Women's dormitories open were Corbin, Watkins, Miller, jolliffe, Harmon, Foster, and Campus house. Men's dorms operating were Carruth, Battenfeld, and john Moore Co-op. The A. O. Pi house was the only sorority house open while five fraternity houses were main- tained during the summer. They were Phi Delt, Sigma Chi, Beta, Delt, and Sig Alph. UNNERSWY or KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Il and so then we left. Right now old Shep's over in the corner chewing on a magazine and Alouise is building up her worn out body cells on the sleeping porch. l'm next. You see--we have only one bed among us during the day. All the others are' taken up by the male members of our household. Things were certainly mixed up here at Jolliffe at the first of the session. 'Miss Meguiar, it seems, thought the hall was to continue as a women's dorm, while Mr. Werner thought it was to revert to its former status cf a dormi- tory for men. Consequently they each assigned rooms to 22 members of their respective sexes. The duplication was not discovered until a day before enrollment. and at that late date not even the combined efforts of the two advisors could find 22 extra rooms. Nou Know Lawrence and the rooming situation now.H Miss Meguiar and Kr. Werner got into an impossible deadlock over the question of which gender was to be removed. Neither would yield, so the matter was taken to the Chancellor. The Chancellor threw up his hands at the thought of either sex being refused admittance. He couldn't see the University loosing all that money. Besides he said, the problem was relatively simple. Some classes could be held at night, and the 22 Jolliffe men could be required to enroll in them. So that's what they did--and we're all living here together. Each room has one boy and one girl Lour room being for three people, we have one male apiece. And in war times tooll Our boys are very nice. They pick up their clothes and are no bother to have around at all. we have divided the drawer space with them--also the tops of the dressers. And they take care to use only the room allotted to them. ou see, things really are working out quite well. Ueptember , o '- L S So y See you in o Love L 5, 1? 4 5, l 2 KINTZEL by -llulitll Tihvn uf f eX6l'C'7ZfLlL F, WHILE wandering through the halls of the language department, you should meet a tall, gracious lady with a pair of steady blue-gray eyes in one of the kindest faces you've ever seen-you will know it is Maude Elliott. Those who are lucky enough to have a course from her, soon learn that she is a wonderful Spanish teacher-and more. Vital, business-like-leading her class in the somewhat halting recitation of Spanish -full of ready humor, yet exacting from her students the desired result-homey, the type of person you might expect to find in your own kitchen arranging a bowl of fruit or making cinnamon rolls-Maudie is all this. She is known best for her honest-to-goodness spirit of neighborliness, for her low, gentle voice, her quiet interest in others, the soft shades of blue she loves, for the delightful little Sunday evening get-togethers for students she has at her home, for the effortless ease and efficiency which seem to flow from everything she does. Teaching, red cross work, nurses aiding. helping to manage a home are but a few of her jobs. Still there is an air of serenity about her which defies any suggestion of haste or bother. OCTOBER 1944 ASHORTSTORY 'I'lI IHIVILA ll MET Antoine at M. Fontin's, where we both went, three nights a week, for instruction in sketching. M. Fontin did not have a very large flat, for he was underpaid at the Institute, and without the money from this sketching class, he could not have made ends meet. There were only seven of us, an old storekeeper from the Quartier Latin, a German student, the wife of one of the other instructors at the In- stitute, two young French girls, Antoine and I. Although he was French and I American, we found, as our friendship progressed, that we had quite a bit in common. Both of us were very low on cash, and we finally decided to rent a studio together. After looking for a long time in the Quartier Latin, we found a small flat on the third floor of a ,rooming house in the Rue Verieres. I liked Antoine very much, although we were quite dif- ferent in some respects. He was inclined to be moody, and there were, occasionally, times when I had to leave the flat for a few hours to get away from him. He seemed, also, to enjoy criticizing my work. When he was feeling quite well, he was a fine fellow to be with, but when he became taciturn, he found fault with nearly everything I did. I have always prided myself on my tolerance, however, and, on the whole, I found living with him very interesting. Actually, neither of us was a very good artist. I tried to paint as best I could, but became discouraged occasionally, Antoine was never like that. He was always morose after a failure. I really think that he was almost constantly dis- gusted with himself, and angry because he could do nothing about it. 31 by Neal Woodruff 'I'0l ll Our life together soon became a routine. We spent as much time during the day painting as we could. Three nights a week we were at M. Fontin's, and the other four we usually spent drinking at one of the small cabarets near the Rue Verieres. We seldom left the flat during fhe day. I was not concerned much with getting recognition for my artistic efforts, but Antoine frequently tried to sell his canvases or to get them into shows. He met with very little success. But he had an indomitable will to be a good painter, and an ego that could not be governed. He always seemed to be at work on some new idea. The only times that we forgot art and really enjoyed our- selves were when we went to the little cabarets. I called them joints, and that is all they Were, but Antoine railed at me for disrespect. Most of them were small rooms filled with little round tables or lined with booths. They all had bars and piano players for entertainment, and a few of them had singers. Usually, we went out about nine for supper, and then went to a cabaret afterward. We sat and drank brandy, creme de menthe, or absinthe until one or two in the morn- ing. We most frequently discussed philosophy and our own pet ideas on life. I was very interested in one point I got out of him. He admitted that he was much more interested in personal success than in being an artist for the sake of art. He argued, sociologically, that the basic urge for self- betterment is a greater.. driving force than that for self- expression. I disagreed very violently on that point, and for Continued on Page 74 20 The Fh't 4 Year nk Q3 ig, 5 www M WS 5 -Q.. -. A-heme, V Conard accents the off-beat. Above - Cousins thought her belt was pretty, Below-The Jay Janes envok- ing devine aid at a tense point in the game. Are the Harde t Coach Shenk - correct to date. Kappa skit: lt's o wonderful game, folks! Even the farmers are enjoying the 40 inCl1eS of rain. 'YG 3 Y if to I ,,2 C .: P if ,, ' Apparently the only non- P. B. headed man in the faculty section, the Chan- cellor proudly displays his thatch. Corbin hall's Husking Victory - an interesting number from several stand- points. , , lzml Watkins hall, with at- tendants Norma lKKGl and Shirley lGBPl Henry with the announcing party at the half. With the traditional flowers and in the traditional convertable, the queens leave the field. A warm afternoon made these smiles genuine, instead of forced pleasantry lalso traditionall on the part of three freezing beauties. Queen Gwyn Kistlerf Granny Riegle over the goal line for the first touchdown. The A. P. directed Marty Metcalf to kiss Granny enthusiastically for his part in the vic- tory. Embarrassed lin front of the camera! the two invented something new in football hero-coed relationships-the hand- shake. Although there was little love in their hearts when they arose at 7 a.m. to practice this forma- tion, Jay Janes and band members jumped through their loops willingly enough at the half. Heart and arrow honor the queens, advancing slowly around the track. Although other sections of the stadium weren't quite this full-there was a crowd, a very enthusiastic crowd. The fact that Homecoming spirits were high did not seem to impede spectators from getting that way, too. 34 . , . h wk M the hcl: thepltcwslenneyl X:-:v:'l:1rg9the only .luY o ,evidentllldoiin showering: 5 h kedm liiawm- THE JAYHAWKER by Earl Barney schiie if amvwsswe with State bend fofmfll lzheerlecder' in the 'l'IlIl JAYHAWK HOLll Ill 0W H1944 is the year, Coach Henry Shenk shouted to a throng of rabid Jayhawk fans on the eve of the '44 homecoming fray, that the Browns won a pennant, the Allies defeated Germany, and Kansas beat Nebraska! And to the amazement of 8,000 cheering students and alumni the next afternoon, an inspired Kansas eleven, not even permitting the Cornhuskers to cross the K.U. goal line, drove to a decisive 20-0 victory ending the 28 year drouth since a Kansas team had beaten Nebraska at all, and the 48 year interval since the event had happened on Kansas soil. Pushing the Crimson and Blue eleven to victory that memorable afternoon were Charlie Moffett, fleet sophomore back, and Don Barrington and Warren Riegle, fullback and end, respectively, playing their last game for their alma mater before being shipped to other naval training units. Riegle slipped through a leaky Husker line midway in the second quarter of the classic fray to block a Nebraska punt and lug it across into pay dirt. The other two tallies came on passes from Barrington to Moffett in the third quarter, and from Moffett to Riegle in the fourth. Bill Chestnut, K.U. drop kick specialist, added the two extra points. The 1944 football march at K.U. began back on March 10, when head coach, Henry Shenk, issued his first call for Spring practice, although it was still winter on the calendar as well as in the air. Forty ambitious candidates answered that beckon. The Kansas eleven began to take more definite shape when, on August 14, Shenk again gave the call for the fall sport. Only five weeks separated that date from the Wash- burn game on September 23, and so in the heat of late summer the squad settled down to earnest practice. Men who had worked with Shenk last fall included Don Barring- ton, fullback, Charles Moffett, halfback, Wayne Hird and Dan Chase, centers, Leroy Robinson, blocking back, john Bergin, halfback, Bill Chestnut, drop kick specialist, Charles Keller, guard, Bob Miller, halfback, Warren Riegle, end, and Gene Long, tackle. Shenk's eyes brightened, too, when Dwight Sutherland, Kansas City lad with one year's experi- ence at Princeton, and Sam Hunter, all-state tackle at Leaven- worth High School, reported for early practices. Other faces familiar to state high school fans included Wichita's Wallace Rouse and john McDermott, and Ralph Wygle of Raymond. V-12 trainees composed more than two-thirds of the squad, and Shenk again thanked his stars for the- Navy program. After five weeks of intensive training in fundamentals and team play, Shenk and assistant coaches, Elmer Schaake, George Dick, and Dean Nesmith, had produced a team whose running from a single wingback formation gave pre- season prognosticators the impression that Kansas was out to go somewhere in '44, Many even went so far as to say that the Big Six team that beat K.U. would win the title. The Washburn game gave them more evidence. The fresh, well-drilled Jayhawk eleven, playing their first 'game of the season under the lights at Haskell stadium trampled the Washburn Ichabods under a 47-0 count. Charlie Moffett, speedy K.U. halfback, sparked the slaughter as he scored two OCTOBER 1944 touchdowns and paved the way for two more through long off-tackle smashes. The entire Kansas squad saw action in the walkaway, while Dee Erickson's Washburn outfit just couldn't seem to find holes in the sturdy Kansas forward wall. It was an ambitious Jayhawk eleven, then, that ventured into Kansas City the next Saturday for a tough inter- sectional battle with rugged Texas Christian. Pre-game rallies both here and in the City added to the occasion. The valiant Kansas team fought three grueling quarters against a superior Horned Frog eleven, outplayed, yet hold- ing them scoreless. But a T.C,U. punt in the fourth and final stanza rolled dead on the Kansas one-yard line, giving the Texans the break that was to mean seven points and the game. With most of the weaknesses evident in the T.C.U. game ironed out, the crimson and blue travelling squad be- gan its second of four consecutive road trips the follow- ing Thursday for Denver and the fray with the potent Denver Pioneers. For the second time in a row, the Shenk- coached gridsters went into a game knowing little of what the opposition was to use, for Kansas had been able to scout neither T.C.U. nor Denver. A leaky pass defense gave the husky Pioneers the first score of the ball game in the second Continued on Page 79 This close up of Moffett hints of the mental inse- curity involved in side-step- ping l9O pounds of Ne- braska persistency. With a necktie tackle and a stomach punch, two Kan- sans put a stop to the Cornhusker advance. The shoe string reproach is used by Dreher while Hird charges up for demolition duty. Cut off from Hunter and other approaching Kansans, it seems certain that Charlie Moffett is on the downward path. 36 THE JAYHAWKER DIXON The fracus before the Denver game swept porters off their feet and team members into their Pullmans with a roar that put any self-respecting train to shame. 'lllll JAYHAWIVS Gill ANDEMONIUM cut loose while students in various stages of hilarity sent the team off to Denver on an earth-shaking gust of spirit fthe train, to be more specificb. The scene was the K.U.-Denver football rally, the characters were plenty. The multitude gathered at the Community building and marched down Massachusetts streetg the band leading, fol- lowed by hand-clapping jay Janes Csee Deep in the Heart of Texasuj, cheerleaders, and an elaborate array of students. Stopping at the Crown drug store for a short yell, they continued across the bridge to the Union Pacific station for more of the same. The team showed their appreciation by jumping up and down on the train platform and bumping their heads against the door, while the rest of the passengers merely surveyed the situation with uncontrolled amusement. It was one of the better rallies. by Emily Stacey Dressed in red and white and fairly exuding vitality, the K.U. cheerleaders are the head men on such occasions. A mere yell loses its anonymity under their direction and be- comes a 4.0 cheer. Head cheerleader is jim Vitamin-kid Conard, a Sigma Chi from Hutchinson. Aloise Brown, Chi Omega and a College senior, acts as assistant head cheer- leader. Completing the yell lineup are four sophomores: Virginia Urban and Frankie, Mullenbruch, Gamma Ph'sg Alberta Cornwell, Delta Gamma, and Pat Penney, Pi Phi. After several weeks of intensive PT, and a rare good- nights sleep, jayhawkers aspiring to the position of cheer- leader appear before a board of judges to display their talents. The board, consisting of the presidents of the K-Club and jay janesg coaches, Phog Allen and Henry Shenkg alumni secretary, Fred Ellsworth, and a committee Continued 072 Page 79 KINTZEL K. U. spirit followed the Jayhawk eleven to Kansas City where traffic Rally at l o'cIock -and the whole Hill is there. Maybe lunches are in front of the Continental Hotel gave up while students bolstered their just poorer this year. But it's more fun to think that school spirit is spirits to advance on Ruppert stadium. staging a comeback. ocToBER 1944 3, d77ZlD5bi7 6S and am' Work Q jean Q lkllffa GC HAT'S my hobby? I raise the best darn Hampshire hogs in the country. The owner of the Quigley Hampshire hog farm, St. Marys, Kans., and the new University of Kansas director of athletics are one and the same-E. C. Quigley. Hog raisingf' thundered dynamic Quig when the suggestion was made that perhaps too much emphasis should not be placed on the fact that he raised hogs as a sideline, is one of the greatest businesses in the world. I'm proud to be called a hog raiser. So, in the beginning, as you can realize from what you have heard and seen of this new K.U. athletic director, it must be said that E. C. Quigley is first of all things a down to earth guyg a grand fellow to know, and even a better man with whom to work. Quig was born in New Castle, New Brunswick, Dominion of Canada, on March 22,188l. He is married to the grandest wife and partner in the world and is the father of a couple of grown sons. It is the same Quigley who has officiated at six World Series baseball season, three Rose Bowl football games, five Yale-Harvard football games, one Cotton Bowl football classic, one N. C. A. A. basketball playoff, the Olympic basketball playoff in Madison Continued on Page 78 38 fgrwff , Wrmzfwz him TKE's battle Phi Psi's Hopi and Phi DeIt's meet John Moore Co-op ibelowl. THE JAYHAWKER I 'l'liAMllIlAL ITLES in both intramural football leagues were practically clinched, Thursday, November 9, when the Phi Delt's de- feated the Phi Gam's and the Beta's defeated the Sig Alph's in two decisive games of the season. The Phi Delt victory become evident shortly after the game was underway. With Don Cousins, V-12, as the leading player, the Phi Delt's scored methodically in the first, second, and fourth quarters. The defeat of the Phi Gam team, the only other unde- feated squad in the B league, gives Phi Delta Theta a clear sweep for the league title. Walking over the Sig Alph's 30-0, the Beta's clinched an almost certain victory in the A league. Even if the Beta team should loose their next game to the Residence halls, and this is not fore- cast, it would still just be tied with Sig Alph. And a play-off between the two teams would probably end again in victory for the Wooglin boys. After being delayed a week because of bad weather, intramural football finally pushed off on October 10. In the first games Beta defeated Sigma Chi 6-0, Phi Gam defeated TKE 18-0, and Sig Alph defeated the Residence halls 6-0. Teams have been divided into two leagues this year. In the A group are 'Residence halls, Sigma Chi, Delta Tau Delta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and Beta Theta Pi. john Moore Co-op, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Phi Kappa Psi, Sigma Nu, Phi Gamma Delta, and Phi Delta Theta make up the B league. A set number of points are given to teams in both leagues for each game played and the winning team has its points doubled. When the winners of the A league and the B league have been determined, the play-off game for the championship will be held. ln this final game, 25 points are awarded to the winning team, while the team placing second receives 15 points, and the next two teams in line receive 10 points each. After football season these points are carried over to the other sports, and at the end of the year the organization with the highest point total in all intra- mural activities receives the coveted intramural cup. Outstanding players for the four leading teams have been Schell, Sargent, and Roderick, Beta, Dalhen, Smith, and Enloe, Sig Alph, Hamilton, Turner, Stucker, and McVey, Phi Gamg and Cousins, McShane, Harris, and Jensen, Phi Delt. Roderick of the Beta team is an outstanding passer. Sargent does most of the running, while Schell is the mainstay of the line. Hamilton, Turner, and McVey are the men who make the Fiji attack function smoothly, while Stucker is on the receiving end of the Hamilton to Stucker passing combination. Enloe is the star back for S.A.E., while Doleen and Smith bul- Wark the lme' Continued on Page 82 OCTOBER 1944 39 0llPE'l'l'l'l0 F THE three fall sports in the held of women's intramurals, the tennis and badminton have already been played off leaving only the volley ball championship undecided. The tennis singles were completed by the end of the six weeks term with Lucille Land, Alpha Delta Pi, defeating Patricia Sloan, Alpha Omicron Pi, by a set score of 6-2, 6-1. Shirley Kreinheder, Corbin hall, and Kathryn O'Leary, Kappa Alpha Theta, were runners-up. Each house could enter six players in the tennis singles contest. The group scoring the greatest number of points was Alpha Delta Pi with 52. Kappa Kappa Gamma came in second with 48 points while the Kappa Alpha Theta ranked third with a total of 44 points. In the badminton tournament, Lavone Jacobson, IWW, de- feated Marjorie Free, Kappa, to win the championship. jane Sweeney, Alpha Chi Omega, and joan Lippelman, Corbin, were runners-up. Team victors were the Kappa's with 62 points. IWW placed second with a total of 60, and Alpha Chi Omega came in third. Here, as in the tennis tournament, each house could enter six players. Interest in volley ball is greater this year than in any other period up to date, Miss Ruth Hoover, assistant professor of phy- sical education, said. Eighteen teams, enough to form three leagues, signed up to compete in the tournament. In the first league, the Etcetera's and Theta's are on top, both having a record of two victories and no losses. Outstanding players on the Theta team are Kathryn O'Leary, Marjorie Fadler, and Catherine Burchheld. Other groups in this league are Miller hall, Alpha Chi Omega, Gamma Phi Beta, and Harmon Co-op. Annella Hammer, Audrey Harris, Barbara Sherrard, and Beverly Waters star on the Alpha Chi team while Roberta Sue McCluggage, Lucy Johnson, Marianne Glad, and Maxine Kelley are outstanding players for Gamma Phi. Lois Harkleroad is Har- mon's best all around team member. Chi Omega holds top honors in the second division with no defeats. Chi Omega stars are Barbara Baker, Dona Burkhead, Mimi Nettles, and Margaret Kreider. Other teams in the division are Delta Gamma, Kappa, Alpha Delta Pi, Watkins hall, and Foster hall. Marjorie Free, Lucy Smith, Maxine Gunsolly, and Martha Lou Little have consistently played good games for Kappa while Alberta Cornwell, Ruth Payne ,and Barbara Kile are DG high scorers. Lucille Land, Jeanne Cooper, and Bobette Sellers spark the A. D. Pi team, and Sara Sachse, Lois Mann, and june Ashloch are outstanding on the Foster team. Violet Conard, Mar- jorie Kaff, and Helen Bozarth do credit to XVatkins. The third division is topped by IWW and Corbin hall. Both Continued on Page 77 Lucille Land, winner of women's tennis singles for Alpha Delta Pi her . Qawfle QNTZEL With added emphasis on athletics, K.U. becomes a young ladies finishing school. fy Qdwfdmy 7ZNO but also amm'f'5 . h nO 9000 sw A wil i not of-Y 'he same 'un mo hue mail ho 6099 - yes b HY outs G ' houies' W ' c0 mbu Quack Cllljequiredu n. heslgmji mogul! gl: hilignts fowuld W bY We Membvsm or9oniz0l'0 ' PHY ICAL U LTURE HE unprecedented turn out for women's sports the last two years is cause for speculation Miss Ruth Hoover, indefatigable head of the womens department of physical education, suspects the man power shortagev has something to do with it. Possibly, though, women are just beginning to realize that they become acquainted with 10 or 20 other women every time they play a volley ball game and get to be almost old friends with someone in half an hour i over a ping pong table. Possibly, too, they are just beginning to realize the slenderizing effects Camong othersj of two duce sets of tennis or a tear around the hockey field. The organization got off to a big start this year with a combination sports review-fashion show, September 28, in Fraser theater. Approximately four hundred energetic-looking women were present and Bobbie Sue McCluggage, WAA's versatile president, was master of cere- pmonies. Following the review, Miss Hoover announced last year's intramural winners. Just for the record, Kappa Kappa Gamma carried off the big cupu annually awarded the organized house with the largest total number of points for the 5th year in succession. IWW won the University awards for volley ball, basketball, and softball. Organized house winners in these three sports were Kappa, Delta Gamma, and Chi Omega, respectively. Kappa Alpha , Theta won both tennis doubles and tennis singles. Peggy Davis was named individual cham- pion in tennis singles and was also a member with Kathryn O'Leary of the winning Theta tennis doubles team. Barbara Prier, Pi Beta Phi, received the award for table tennis singles. Marjorie Free, Kappa Kappa Gamma, received the award for having the highest number of individual points in athletics during the year. Lavone Jacobson, IWW, was awarded the medal for being top ranking point woman among unorganized house athletes. Participation in any WAA sport contributes 10 points toward the 125 required points for membership in WAA, whether one wins or loses. One may reach the goal more quickly by being chosen for membership in Quack Club ifor swimmersj, Tau Sigma Cfor dancersb, or one of the class teams made up of the season's best players, each of which counts 100 points. Member- ship on the varsity team counts 10 points. To retain membership, women earn 50 points each semester and maintain a C grade average. Aspirants to crimson and blue K.U. letters must accumulate 650 points. K.U. blazers, made of blue flannel and embellished with a K. U. emblem, entail accumulating 1,350 points. The trophy cup, awarded to only one or two each year, calls for a total of 2,000 points, and recom- mendation by a WAA board on the basis of contribution to the organization and general worth- fullness. K. U. WOmeh meet a B . . t Marge Free accepts th e Sweepstakes trophy for Kappa Kappa Gamma. aker University squad on the h ockey field. KIN IZEL QR' QQON Roberta Sue McCluggage WAAS president is a speech mayor Conccn tratlng on the dramatic side she is president of the Dramatic workshop and received the actor s award on the Hill last year for her performances in Ladies in Retirement and Nine Girls. In addition to her athletic and dramatic interests, she is on the executive board of State Wide Activities and is house manager of the Gamma Phi house. Her best friends call her McBaggage. DIXON 42 by Dixie Gilliland il00 0 E TIU HAT kind of things did you like in high school? What lines of work have you considered? Why did you come to the University? How much do you date? These are a few of the more than 3,000 questions asked applicants at the new University Vocational Guidance Bu- reau, the department which attempts to aid students in choosing an occupation and in adapting themselves to col- lege life. With more than 6636 percent of the Hrst year's expected total of 150 students already registered at the Guidance Bureau, Dr. A. H. Turney, director, expects the new organi- tion to have a big year. The Bureau is already considering plans for expansion after only two months of service at K.U. Started this fall, the new Bureau was intended chiefly for returning servicemen attending the University under the veterans bill. So far, however, more regular students than servicemen have taken advantage of the program. This is due, Dr. Turney believes, to overlapping work done by the National Veterans Bureau and, also, to the unexpected in- terest of University students, especially freshmen. Bureau help has been essential, however, in special cases as aptitude testing of veterans, not high school graduates, who wish to take college work. Other returning servicemen, as regular students, have been given vocational advice and help in making adjustments to college life. The Bureau, which has been located in Fraser hall, is located now in Frank Strong hall where it has been set up in room 1, The staff at present includes Dr. Turney and Dr. H. B. Pepinsky, councelorsg Mrs. Byran Sarvis, psy- chometristg and several office helpers. In its first month and a half, the new Bureau has started guidance work with 105 students. Of these, about 40 per- cent have made vocational decisions, Dr. Turney said. l'We don't really consider a case closed, howeverj' he added, as long as the student is in school. He is welcome to come in any time he wishesf' THE JAYHAWKER ABUUT Y0l Tests and interviews included in the program vary in each case according to the needs of the student. Each ap- plicant is given a preliminary consultation and asked to fill out a number of blanks before actual testing and inter- viewing is started. Results obtained in the first meeting determine the amount and type of testing the applicant should have. These tests include the regular college entrance examinations in reading, mathematics, and English, and the psycological test, if the student has not had them, in addition to many specialized tests according to individual require- ments. Average testing and interviewing periods cover about 18 hours, over 10 days or longer. Thirty to forty hours are spent by staff members on each case, in testing, scoring and interviewing. Special feature of the K.U. bureau is its clinical counsel- ing, the consideration of each case individually. Many students do not know their real interest, Dr. Turney explains, and it is the duty of the Guidance Bureau to help them find it. The K.U. plan is non-directive. Stu- dents are given data, and if necessary it is interpreted for them, but their decisions must be made individually. The idea of a Vocational Guidance Bureau, although used by several schools in the country for some time, is just becoming popular. The K.U. bureau, fashioned after the Minnesota University pattern, is available to University and University High School students free of charge. To other high school students a 555 charge is made for help. Most universities have advisory systems, but schools are now be- ginning to realize that clinical counseling for students is valuable. Most of the recent interest in vocational guidance has been prompted by the problem of servicemen returning to college life, according to Dr. Turney. The K.U, system will remain after the war, he believes, if' the interest of regular students continues. 0 ll 'l' U B Ii R 19 4 L .13 KINTZI I. N54 . M.-.w1,,m...... AA-. M -V' f ,fi K 3' x f of 'Q Pictured here interviewing Mildred Hack, the first student to go through the Vocational Guidance Bureau, Dr. A. H. Turney, director of the Bureau, is familiar to all freshmen as the short, stout man in gray who gave them their entrance examinations. Dr. Turney has B.A., M.A., and Ph,D. degrees- all from the University of Min- nesota. During the l7 years he has been at the University, K.U. has found that his apparent gruffness is a thin camoflage for a pleasant personality. 1 Above all else, he loves mystery stories. l Coming to the campus this year from the University of Minnesota, H, B, Pepin- sky, is serving as assistant director of the Guidance Bureau. He is also an assistant professor of education. DIXON it 4 0 . Q Q Q F O 4 Q 5 Q Q ' I l ' . I if 4 1 1 1 J .W 1 1 , L 'lg 1 Before the day of the traveler, on a promontory between the Vfakarusa 1' N 1 and the Kaw stood many a Kanza warrior viewing a land that was literally 0 K1 ,f the happy hunting ground. Even when the west began to be settled, this ' ' -X hill and its surrounding territory were reserved for the Kanzan as long as U, N n X the grass should grow and the water should run, X , J 1 we Water stopped running and grass ceased to grow, according to the 0 .5 . . . . 3 Q politicians in Washington, in 1854. In that year the land was removed f 1 from the red man's domain. l 'WE ,taxi . Q J s Among the first to settle in the newly declared whitemans terri- X 4 tory was a band of New Englanders who, on the first day of August 1 , in 1854, pushed their way up the 14th street incline. These settlers ' A' fffk named the promontory Mount Oreadn from Oread Institute in El..- ,A 'W' ,2. Q Massachusetts. 'H ' 'Q X , -fs as it .1 V w 1 47 xx sf inuicnct I X ,-tfli , gt, L6 ion A ang Time passed, more settlers came and Kansas grew into a state. ln g X E- - 9 the early years of statehood, the selection of the University site was a Lakai' 'pg matter of considerable logrolling. In 1861, both houses of the state V x-S legislature passed a bill placing the University at Manhattan. But Gov- ' X1 iii? , XD-S ernor Robinson, a resident of Lawrence, promptly vetoed it. X ,K rf' ll 5 NX -L K 531' Even after Lawrence won over Emporia in 1865 by one . vote in the house, and the site was set, plans did not progress rapidly. The terror of death and destruction by Quantrill and his followers in the summer of that year turned Law- rence inhabitants from building a University to rebuilding homes. U y I By the summer of 1866, however, a building was com- pleted on the brow of Mount Oread. On September 12 the opening services of the University were held, and three faculty members took stock of the 55 students -- none of ' whom it turned out were high school graduates. The University promptly reverted to an academy. I 1 F 9 6 ' Q Q 4 9 0 o s s s Q 4 1 o 0 9 1 ' l 55? o 0 X , sg., s ,, ,fl The Constitution under which Kansas was admitted as a state declared, 'df ' The legislature in providing for schools, shall make no distinction between K 1 f males and females. State schools, therefore, had to admit women, a prin- 19 Q, x ciple almost revoluntionary in its day. D 'U' 3 iw-7 The framers of the legislative act establishing the University were more 'f 'L 1 J ' ' cautious. There shall be two branches of the University, the act still reads, i 'lgsgifu' li fl -5 I, ff?-f a male and a female branch. The female branch may be taught exclusively Wmfll L by women and building for that branch shall be entirely separate from the , ,AL ,, ,, M,-L, HJ, ,, buildings of the male branch. Fortunately, this provision was never put - ' ' ll 1l'1fO PIHCIICC. fx 9 may In the summer of 1874, S. H. Carpenter of Wisconsin, newly elected 3 1 Chancellor arrived. The temperature was 100 degrees, and a severe X , S drouth accompanied the torrid temperature. It was also a ugrasshopper - LJ f year. Carpenter took one look at the grasshoppers and at the University ,Q 7 ' Q . perched on the bleak hill-and departed. As soon as he had returned to x l .J 4X his home amid the Wisconsin lakes, he wrote declining the chancellor- ' , h' . 5 ' 1'l S IP ll N-L A x 1 1, if-2 if AIIIIOIIIICCIIICHI of the Univc1'sity's first baseball game - 1866: The game will consist of nine innings, if they are not all played before time for the union meeting at the Methodist church, the game will be stopped until immediately after 1 the service. N. we fi U p 1 'ls ? L ln 1877 the prevailing mode of fraternity life was set for many years. ,QQ ,X The Kansas Collegian reports, The Phi Kappa Psi fraternity has fitted 'jrzx qlll- 4 f . up an elegant apartment for its own use in the third story of the First X 5 X National Bank buildingfl Q Such apartments prevailed until 1899, when Sigma Chi moved into the mam' first chapter house especially built for the purpose, a cozy little brick f J house provided with lmodern conveniences' 'l N I x , 4- J rl f 1 1 f 1 . of N In 1891, 17 boys, charter members, it seems, of the TGIF club, fog, sh if IO were caught red-handed. Three were indefinitely suspended, two QQ 12 N placed on probation, and the remaining twelve trod their way X gpg' , with uneasy air awaiting faculty action. When the affair was X f mt X closed, the press triumphantly reported, lt is needless to X 'J ' e A ' say that the evil of cards and liquor has been effectively 1 ' ff- stamped out in the state University. They don't even play 1 1 ,- 1 Y - 4 authors there now, and the sight of a long necked catsup 7 l f lr bottle fills them with a feeling of vague unrest. X X 1 - if X l J l 'll Before Now. ' 4 Q D Q 5 n Q w Q 1 as fb O I 4 Q 6 1 8 U Y if gv A ifg , ,ww .Jr Us f621tfffl711 an ff .ffrmfwf vqnderwerf need no intro' duction to University students. Precocious freshmen have whistled in Rachel's red-haired directicn more than once before noticing her rings. And there isn't a student on the Hill who hasn't thought Cal was a stu- dent, too-until he learned about his Ph.D. lt was back in l94l that Cal was asked to stand in for the best man at a wedding so the maid of honor could have a date to the party follow- ing. Being obliging, Cal took over- and met Rachel. They had both been in school for three years at Ohio State and had never met. Columbus was Rachel's home, and she had been doing YWCA work KINTII I for some time there before she came to K.U. as Mrs. VanderWerf to sponsor the Y, Now 25, she works at Henley house, Y headquarters, two-thirds ofa full-time schedule, which includes serving as legislative chairman of the Leaque of Women Voters and doing her own housework. Although his home was in Michigan, Cal got his degrees at Ohio State. tHe was just 24 when he became a doctor of philosophy.J Hav- ing been interested in photography and journalism in school, he turned down a career as o journalist because he believed that chemistry offered c greater challenge, and because he liked the contact with students. Continued on Page 80 l'O li lull 1945 -17 Q' ,V Z ,JEAWEJ 04774672 THE W BILL 0F RIGHT X-G. I. JOE was among the new Jayhawkers who stood in line for psychologicals, registration, enrollment, etc., this fall. There he was-right along with Oliver Ob- long, Jr., high school class of '45 and candidate for the bachelor of arts degree in '48 via K.U.'s accelerated program, and the regular assortment of new students, including refugees from junior colleges and girls schools, and perhaps an unsubsidized athlete. The ex-G. I. Ccall him Mikey -was taking the waiting like a veteran stander-in-line. But you mention something about a helluva line to him anyway - and then he tells you. He tells you about the time he waited five hours Cwith not even his shoes onj to get his first pair of G. I. drawers, and about how he was accustomed to standing in line to draw his pay, to lend it, or even to play a game to get rid of it. So you try complaining about all the darn red tap you have to go through to get signed up for an education. Red tape? Well now you could hardly call it that, Mike says to you -- after he has spent half a day checking credits with the registrar, appearing before the vets' administration board every few minutes, and filling out a string of registration and enrollment cards. After all, there was the time it took the outfit at the induction center three days to decide whether or not he was born. At least the campus and all these strange people must be new to him, you probe. But, no - here we find Mike to be the true cosmopolitan. After being stationed in Colorado, Texas, California, Kansas, and back to Texas within a period of several months, he tells you, you learn to skip the formal get-acquainted procedure and pick up things Cthings, meaning in- formationj fast. Mike goes on to explain that the really progressive Caggressiveb type knows within 10 minutes after hitting a new station the local theater prices, which are the best nights at the U.S.O., how to get your laundry back in one week, and, yes, - the mayorfs daughter. Which brings us to the question, How about the women here? Our veteran, Mike, comes out of his shell at this, looses some of his reserve, and gives out with the All-American symbol of appreciation of the female species, a whistle. Then slightly embarrassed, he calms down a bit and says, Really, it sure is something to see so many women around, talk to them on the campus, and now and then Cor more often Continued on Page 82 Q 3 2 L ii w 35 Y fa S' sf 1 x Q K ,Kg K - 25522 Ev 123 35 2.255 ggwilwwqe , is Q' it Q il ,.:, I 3- L Q 2' 3 4 2 :imwf vw r w'QQwQwn Q v 9 M wi 5 ,gEg', - M xx ,,, me X Q r .gil ni. 5 X X. 5 . :' :Ei , .W X 9 5 A Q , -' f 1 4 W 'ff 1 f h, ,sf li! if QE 'N 6? v 1 1 Y ,.N,,NkM pwgwggnaswmgy' 'Vx , Q33.,1,.m , A h 8 'lflt SCHOOL OF lNiilNEi Rlhlfl llll'I'Ell lllil'I'll HERE are those of us who think that an engineer auto- matically follows Casey jonesl footsteps in mounting the cabby to the Promise Land. For those unsuspecting is this article intended. The school was born and the building raised atop Mt. Oread. A decade or a half previous to 1891, the Chancellor of the University spotted an upright and promising young chap in the East and twisted his arm to cross the prairie and teach a few small but firm courses in engineering in the College of Liberal Arts. This Kansas sightseer was Frank O. Marvin by name, frank by choice. He engineered great in- terest, and before too many years passed a separate school began with Marvin initiated as dean. The first class was quite gigantic, 88 in all. In 30 years the academic simonizers numbered 649. Wcmrld War I brought to the campus a snappy unit that bore the label SATC, Student Army Training Corps, which greatly en- hanced class attendance. Up until 1909 the places of habita- tion were the second and third floors of south Fraser hall and also a small test tube in Blake. A complete rejuvenation to 'A ZH!! HXUNV I Ill fl77f K, K K followed the moving van to Marvin hall, present address of the School of Engineering until final arrangements with Uncle Sam can be made concerning Lindley hall. A new engineering student sometimes finds it a bit hard to decide in just which category he cares to file himself. There is Aeronautical Engineering, strictly for Betas, Archi- tectural Engineering, emphasis placed on fallen arches, Chemical Engineering, a bang guaranteed out of this, Elec- trical Engineering, where one learns the shocking truth, Mechanical Engineering, primarily for those whose ancestors were grease monkeys, Civil Engineering, where a likewise tongue is a necessity, Mining and Nleterology, the latter for taxi drivers, and a newly adopted course in Geological Engi- neering, where one learns which dirt is best to throw. Before the present skirmish Chemical Engineering topped the transcripts with electrical running a short circuit. The case is now reversed however. The V-12 has its own cur- riculum which is followed as far as possible-in the manner that any good sailor follows a promising subject. Civilians Relegating an automobile engine from a scrap pile, mechanical engi- neers, repaired old parts, found new ones, and meticulously assembled them. This picture was taken on the first day the rejuvenated hodge- podge turned over for the boys. Pairs of civil engineers working on their continual projects are re- sponsible for the campus being probably the most surveyed section of land in Kansas. Here Roland Hamilton squints through his transit to scme distant point beyond the tennis courts where a colleague stands with a pole. THE JAYHAWKER BOB GIBBON, FORUMS BOARD CHAIRMAN, INTERPRETS STU- DENT POLITICAL ACTION LIKE FATHER LIKE EALIZING that too often University students tend to create private worlds of their own on the campus and watch the world go by the Student Forums Board conducted a political education program this year. After mock campaigns conducted by students represent- ing the Republican, Democratic, and Socialist parties, a student vote was taken on November 3. Using special ballots, patterned after the Kansas soldier ballot, faculty members and students indicated their preferences for President, Vice-President, Governor, and Senator, in polling booths placed in three of the campus buildings. The outcome of both student and faculty polls is interesting, especially when compared to the national and state election results. Students and faculty combined polled 900 votes with the following results: President - 900 votes cast 'J Dewey CRepublicanJ . 549 61.096 Roosevelt CDem0cratD 304 53.895 Thomas CSocialistJ . . . 46 5.196 Watson fProhibitionD . 1 -- Governor - 864 votes cast Schoeppel CRepublicanj 609 70.6Wn Lemon CDemocratD ... 217 25.1572 Tamplin CSocialistj . . 35 4.05 96 White CPr0hibiti0nj . . 9 - Senator - 862 votes cast Reed CRepublicanD . . . 516 ' 59.896 Hill CDemocratJ . . . Billings QSocialistJ . .. Dubbs CPr0hibitionD . 300 45 5 34.895 4.996 The incomplete national returns show Roosevelt winning over Dewey. Roosevelt's popular vote was 24,249,098 or about 5695, while Dewey polled 21,195,298 votes. In Kansas Dewey received 428,222 votes against Rooseveltls 275,990. Dewey won in Kansas with 6196 of the votes which is the same percentage as the student poll. In the state Schoeppel polled 441,752 or 66527 of the votes cast for governor. In the Senatorial race Reed won over Hill with 5951 of the votes. These tabulations clearly show the close similarity between Kansas University student voting and the voting of the entire state. This fact is more significant than the fact that Roosevelt carried the nation for the important conclusion from it is that Kansas sons apparently vote as Kansas parents vote, indicating perhaps that there is a definite need on the campus for more individual and analytical thinking. Rm f as its The Hills best private secretary is not a blond. He is jack Blair Button, brunette, who takes minutes for the All Student Council, YMCA, and Inter-Fraternity Council. ln addition to this specialty, he is a Sigma Chi. an ardent Pachacamac politician, and a member of the varsity debate squad He says he enjoys his work in the latter more than anything else, including the secretaryships. Known sometimes as the child wonder, jack was gradu- ated from high school in the spring of 1945 and now, at l8, is a senior in college. Wlmen asked if anything in his child- hood such as being able to spell cJtorhinolaryngology when two years of age pointed to his being a wizard, jack could think of nothing except that he skipped the third grade. He was a freshman Summerfield, before becoming a V-l 2, how- ever, which might indicate something. Right now Jacks parents are in Anthony, Kansas. lack, himself, has never lived there. His favorite home is Hutch- inson. And he thinks that the better women have red hair. jack has his own unique reason for preferring red-heads. He thinks they are intelligent. The records show that between the ages of 16 and l7, jack spent a great deal of time at the Southard School for emotionally disturbed children in Topeka. We like to be- lieve that he was working there. K1N'i'7.X2L ABOVE: Don C the Navy band, closes his eyes and lets go. A Phi Delt on the last lap of his V-l2 training, Don is more than just an attractive front for the band. His persistance and leadership have been import- ant factors in its growth. ousins, good looking leader of BELO , gina ivory expert, and Rod Mclvar, new addition to the V-l2's boogie woogie and vocal interests, share the bench at a Union hour dance. W: Marshal Fryar the bands ori ' I by R. J. ATKINSON HELL li0'l I'llM BLUE HlS modern age were goin' through has got me in a spin. But the spin hasn't been from a social whirl featuring good student dance bands. During the past few years, the W.C.T.U. hasnt seen the inside of many saloons. We have seen about the same number of good dance bands. The pre-war good, or available, KU. musical organizations left the campus with the end of the Pope-Bachmann era. If you wanted to get a good orche- stra for a house party last year, it took all of the scheming and ingenuity of Sally and Talleyrand. But now there is again an organization, musically in- tlined, on the Hill which seems to be pretty good. The editor of this conservative publication thinks it is good enough to rate a story. I cant pass judgment on it because I am not a bonafide critic. Marsh Fryar says it is pretty good. He plays in it. Don Cousins, a hold-over big time sax man, thinks it is pretty good, too. He leads it. The band was organized about the middle of last May. Chief Hayes brought the group together by scouring the P.Tfs for talent. At hrst they had a lot of trouble finding a place to practice. The auditorium was in use every night. Lieutenant Buhl and Chancellor Nlalott did not react favorably to the idea of using their offices. Finally the Kansas room wa s made available. Don Cousins was persuaded to lead and he whipped a creditable organiza- Ctmtifzued on Page 80 QR ' 4' DW l-Things start out with you, Shirley Henry, on the auction block, you are donating an evening to the War Chest Fund. When the bidding on you starts you get nervous. The money runs up to S25 with nothing particularly interesting in view. And then the Dean steps in. T E 0 ll ll a ti Q d 2-The freshman call girl looks pale when she un- 'lllll llllll FOUR PHOTOGRAPHS BY KINTZEL wh 1. fi is 4-After dinner you help the Dean set up a card table. You are really having a good time. Mrs. Lawson is around, but she doesn't make it seem like a triangle. You play some kind of card game and win a mouse trap and a box of Mrs. Stover's mints. 5-The Dean has you back at the Gamma Phi house, hair and lip- stick impeccable, promptly at closing hours. He pauses only mo- mentarily on the doorstep, clears his throat, says it was a refreshing evening-and tips his hat. nounces your date is waiting, but you ignore her. The Dean is a gentleman. He helps you down the steps and opens the car door primly. But he grins at your skirt and sweater. He asked you to wear them. 3-You have dinner at the Dean's. Mrs. Lawson has unselfishly prepared curry and rice, and husk tomotoe pie. You have never heard of either before. The Dean makes you eat so much you finally have to say, lf I eat another bite, l won't be able to walk home. To which he gallantly replies, But my dear, you don't have to walk home. 56.41. 5-l Clever decorations, poor lighting, and the habitual absence ofa ping- pong table in the ping-pong room characterize Sigma Chi parties which have long been classed among the Hill's best. The barn dance, last frolic before the Navy took over at 1439 Tennessee, was no excep- tion. THE JAYHAWKER IVIIEN TIIERE ISN'T ANYTIIING ELSE T0 D0 WYE HAVE A PARTY. LOTS 0F PARTIES. fg7l7Z0f7 WHY 'l' llll 'l' Allll HI' PASSI ll Private intermissions before and after organized migrations to the 'Mite are spent at the entrance to the Union which although cool, is usually far from desirably private. Fugatives from the D. G. open house, Rosemary Ryan, and Pete Carey seem captivated by something out of range of the camera. OCIAL life on the K.U. front has, of course, been curbed l greatly for the fourth consecutive year because This is Wah! CPaid advertisement - Democratic party.j But war or no war, socially included jayhawkers plod along un- daunted, digging up various and Sunday forms of entertain- ment for themselves. The typical evening begins with: Well, letls toss a coin to see where we'll go tonight-the Dine-a-Mite or the Din- a-Mite?'l It really isn't as bad as all that, but Roy's and Mary's 'Mite undoubtedly has the student vote as a lovely place to spend an evening. Other entertainment during the early fall season on the Hill has included numerous rallies and football games, hour dances, midweeks to the music of Pretty Boy Cousins and his V-lZ Pretty Boys, serenades, freshman walk outs, movies, roller-skating, bowling, and sports like horseback riding courtesy of Mott's glue factory. There are occasional trips into the City for supper at the Grill or an evening with Harry james or T. D., and Sunday dinner at the organized houses always Ends numerous sailors, fugitives from Navy chow. The Secret Room of Student Union Activities will house the Friday-Saturday Club and promises to be something new and different in the way of hang-outs for the campus jitterbugs. The authorized season got off to a fine start with the I.S.A. mixer on September ll, and the Jayhawk Nibble for 0 C 'l' 0 B li R 1 9 li all new students in the Union on September 16. The YWCA sponsored a Weiner roast at Potter lake on September l9, and the YW membership banquet was September 27. September 25 the Phi Gams had a stagfgerl dinner at the Continental prefacing the T.C.U. game. The week-end of the Tulsa game proved a successful one 4, socially speaking onlyl with four parties the night of Octo- ber 7. Sigma Kappa held the Hrst open house of the year in the Kansas room to the music of jimmy Bradfield lwho- ever that isp. The Phi Psis served cokes, pickles, ice cream, beans, potato salad, weiners, and lipstick Cand we quote the Psislll at their picnic in Clinton park the same night. A combination football and baseball game - boys versus the girlsAculn'1inated in no serious injuries, but the nicest and most profuse of bruises. Thirty-five Delts and their dates journeyed down to Baker the night of the 7th for the 55th annual chicken fry. Tommy Hahn was jolted off the back end of the truck on the way home, was grabbed in the nick of time by D. Stutz, and dragged a considerable distance, but suffered no real in- juries except the loss of a couple of inches of precious shoe leather. The Sigma Chi house was decorated this same eve- Si The Cousins' Company attracted Oread seamen to the band stand frequently during the evening of October l3. The fact that it was also Friday augured no evil. The navy had liberty especially for the dance, and women enjoyed the luxury of Friday night dates. ning for a barn party. As the evening wore on, joe Bukaty was hit over the head with corn stalks, several bales of hay were tossed around, and the ping-pong room became the scene of action for jim Rally Conard and Ginny Larson. The fact that the Sigma Chi cook refused to make sand- wiches for the party was disasterous, for the boys made them! An l.S.A. dance was held in the Union Lounge this same Saturday night. Charlie Moffett, better known as Magic, snapped out of the stupor into which he was accidentally knocked in prac- tice in time to take in the K Club picnic, Sunday, October 8. One of the seasons most unusual parties was the costume one given by Sigma Kappa on October ll. Everyone came A hay-venly time was had by all at the Alpha Chi barn party . . . except for Eddie Snyder who spent a miserable evening in the corner with his hay fever. Pictured here is what we commonly call a hay fight. Popular at barn parties and on hay rack rides, the hay fight is an excellent get-acquainted game. The new Pan-Hellenic rule about the president and another girl from every sorority attending all open houses accounts for Jane Priest, Pi Phi, being in the middle of this picture of the Sigma Kappa formal. The dance was another Kansas room run-around. 56 TOP: The night of the pre-enrollment, all school mixer-which just goes to show what a damper studies are on the social life of the Uni- versity. BELOW: Except for the flash camera, things were so dark no one had to worry about weiners being burned at this YWCA picnic. The darkness also completely obscured the identity of the person to your right with whom you were getting chummy. It was an ideal mixer. dressed as a popular song titlef Max Shulman hasn't sued yetj. Jill La.uderdale, as a hula-hula girl, represented Sweet Leilani, while Margaret Hall was garbed in a flannel night- gown for Goodnight, Wherever You Are. Beth Beamer, dressed as a shoe-sine boy, had them all guessing, but finally revealed her title as This Will Be My Shining Hour. Dale Corder was awarded the prize for being the best guesser present. The prize was a make-up kit, which he promptly put to use on himself. The V-12 dance in Hic-Haec-Hoch auditorium, October 13, was a howling-and we do mean howling-success, with half time entertainment amusing to all, including THE JAYHAWKER Naval big-wigs, Fitzhugh and Michaelman. joan Woodward and Shirley McGinness succeeded in luring the band off the stage to make way for a hilarious take-off on the well-known Ctoo well-knownb Captain's Mass. V-12's jim Sanders and Clinton Sloan were convincing as the culprits tried by Captain Michaelman C Bill Leej. Bunk Chase brought many a laugh with his imitation of Lieutenant Fitzhugh, executive oliicer of the shipf' Post Mortem: Clinton Sloan was hanged at dawn for wearing Ctattle-talej gray socks -an inexcusable offense. Corbin, Alpha Chi Omega, and Delta Gamma chose October 14 as a suitable party night. Corbin held formal open house. A scavenger hunt was the main event of the evening at the Alpha Chi barn party, and among the trophies collected were a dead rat, school sign, a kitten, fruitcake, french fries, a cigar butt, lock of hair, and pledge pins from all the frats. Eddie Snyder spent a miserable evening in the corner with his hay fever. Melvin Kettner, Beta, indignant because he had not received an invitation to the party, was pacified by a huge, heavily lipsticked sign- Welcome Mel- vin -which was hanging on the front door when he arrived at the party. Liz Esterle and Mary jane Waggoner weighed anchor for the Delta Gamma open house by each falling down a full flight of stairs. Liz pulled the trick the night before and appeared at the party with a large-sized knot on her head, while M. J. chose to fall into the arms of some 20 boys waiting in the hall for their dates before the dance. The football team enjoyed a pleasant Saturday evening in Des Moines after the Iowa State game, and was entertained at the Tromar room, Babes, the Spa, Mary's, and joe's by the greater part of the city's 20,000 WACYS. Alpha Omicron Pi was entertained at the home of Prof. Earl Hay on October 16, with a pre-Hallowe'en serving of cider and doughnuts. jo Ann Tindall set the record for the party by eating eight doughnuts. Homecoming was a tremendous success, principally be- cause we beat Nebraska for the first time in years. Phi Delt's and their dates enjoyed a weiner roast at Holcomb's grove following the afternoon's fracas. Songs around a blazing bonfire highlighted the event, and a few couples actually did leave to attend the Homecoming dance in Hoch. A dinner party was held at the Hearth by the Phi Gam's after the game, honoring departing Fijis Granny Riegle, Sparky McSpadden, Frank Libby, Willard Frank, Vic Cos- tello, and Oliver Hamilton. Also guests were ex-prexy Gor- don the Warden Stucker, Mr. and Mrs. Wally Henshaw, and Marshall Hulet. Everyone took in the Homecoming dance at Hoch from 9-12 and danced to the music QD of Kay Stark and company. FRESHNIEN su Rush Week Dupes the Pledge y , Qgfhzaon THE JAYHAWKER WHAT' WHO ll Wl'l'H 'l'Hl lllll'l'llHH. ALL is the season of the chase! After lazy summer months, we come back to school to give vent to stored up energies. In either organized or unorganized pursuits, we will chase almost anything this time of the year. If the men aren't busy chasing an egg shaped ball around a Held, they are out chasing coeds over and beyond the campus. The coeds don't play football. They devote all of their time to chasing men. There is one more chase worthy of mention. It is chase week, or rush week, if you prefer it by that name. During this hectic seven days, the members of the various Greek letter societies are out chasing down prospective members and these prospective members are out chasing down the Greek letter societies. This is all very confusing to the neophyte. The poor freshmen get very warped ideas of Greek life. We Phi Psis have an age old quotation which sums it up like this- Rush Week presents a ziiitorlecl picturef, The Greek pledge learns the full meaning of the word distorted as the year wears on, and his freshman training program gets under way. One of the most rapid transfigura- tions known to the modern world is the complete change of the neophyte's status between the rushee and pledge periods. During the rushee cycle, actives try to kill the freshmen with kindness. During the pledge period, they try to just kill them. To undertake a serious study of freshman training, it would be best to discuss it in a piecemeal fashion. This will put the reader and the writer on even terms. We will both be confused. First the freshmen come across the to be or not to be, that is the question stage. This is the period of the rush or chase, and it is taken up in detail elsewhere in this magazine. The only training derived from this dilemma is a practical exposure to the principles of the chase which the frosh can apply the next year as an active. Secondly, frosh come to the Old Home Week or They C oniinued on Page 80 Gamma Phi freshmen have their private study table in the library basement. From gi the standpoint of both freshmen and actives -a good table is one so located that it enables the pledges to meet the best freshman men. Difficulty arises when actives expect their pledges to get lessons as well as dates at these tables. Saturday morning work periods are common to almost all fraternities. Getting out o ladder and polishing the brass plate above the door is only one of the many time- fiIlers designed by Phi Psi actives for Don MaCaul and other pledges. .gk W XXX. frm . L if QAQV ,. i I n .S Kim 'K Qi? -sf 'S N vf he 5 sang, 14 . . x gear: nf f -ei: -. 555535: 5' 3'-1: sf' 5, H :. .,,.: .:3:li55:5 -g.,-.- . 4 Q . ' Q I 3 5? 5 2 fix -A K .Q 2 54 uf, w M aw? :ga : 'vffwavqv - 13 'Fx fin mi a.: ,gg W . af- A w K I Q21 L s Q N w w 1 K, 5' wk 1 155 'X mx E52 5 fax, Q 2 fig, Q x9 'YY ,Z Nj ww W 'swf 2Wff::QiQiwQ L- . WW: W -- . ZSSEKQ QFX' N W T4-ifk.:i?' 'Q'.5 wi, fa., Y ' ' 1, '-1 :. Q E Jw M is J -ff Y, .f, D V wx kg? 'K 44 61 by Don Diehl RE ALL FAIR I LIIVE A ll WAR OU all know the little guy with the bell bottom trousers who is supposed to have a sweet- heart in every port - well, mebbe so for the ones who've never coked the Union or danced the Dine-a-Mite-but for the Mac who has, the other ports are about as effective as Count Basie on Communion Sunday. These K.U. women have it. CAlso prounced IT.J This year's crop of lovelies is no exception - they're as enticing as Potter lake, unpatrolled - attractive to the oomph degree. Nacherly according to Newton's fourth law, Darwin's opus 7.11, and Robert's Rules of Order, we must admit that the usual small percentage is strictly nonhabit-forming - the type of girl who wears a sweater to keep warm. But the Pythagorean theorem proves that 99 441 10071 C they float-from one man to anotherj have beautiful profiles all the way down. The former Come to college to prepare themselves for a career, the latter came to college to prepare themselves. Rush week - that wonderful cooing system which degenerates into an arm-twisting period - was a trying but ecstatic time for these sweet little things in their early nicoteens. If Pret- zel's great uncle, twice removed, invented the centrifugal hangnail remover, she was in. If Cookies second cousin by marriage owned a chain of yo-yo concessions in Afghanistan, she headed the prize rushee list. Every sisterhood was a uchawming group - jusg let them tell youg every Conversation was a glow by glow deSCl'lptlOI1 of the abundant life tO be achieved lil the chapter house land outjg every pledge pin was a guarantee for a husbandi' or your pledge dues cheerfully refunded and no questions asked. The marriage market rose two points when said pins were placed upon lovely crowded sweHrerS. After pledging ceremonies the new Greeks took care of the formalities by religiously read- ing 47915e pages of Ethereal Otta Belta Thi, and What Makes Us Irresistiblef by Ima Good- win, of The Pretty Prairie Goodwins, three chHpfe1'S of What Every Young, Innocent, Red- blooded College Girl Should Know, by Iva Binna Wround, and Barefoot Boy with Cheek. Then after an illuminating lecture by the president on How to Obtain and Hold a Pinmate - Your Main Obligationj' they were ready - oh S0 ready -- for Coeducationl Having been told that a diamond is the stepping stone to success, the pledglings started out to collect the pebbles in the form of fraternity hardware-new or used. As a result of this, the usual number of pins was rebosomed, The freshman independents, not having been encum- bered by sorority red tape, had a three-day start on the same project. The usteadying it stage was also popular - that's the period during which the girl decides whether or not she can do any better. My man's far away in the army personnel were true-red-white-and-blueing it. The future femme fatale corps found the dating situation uniform,-and then only on V-12 liberty nights. C A V-12 - that's an officer in ship's clothingb But this situation hasnit proved fatal to romance due to stolen moments in exercises ocular and oscular between classes. Where there's a wile, thereis a way. The competition for the few civilian males roaming the Hill is so keen that most girls date so many uniforms it's platoonic. The study angle of the frosh should, of course, be mentioned in this exhaustive research. Continued on Page 81 0 C T 0 li li R l 9 it all fri FRE Hllill FA'I'.lLE A low, slow voice and a marked reserve are seldom characteristic of freshmen. But Nancy Slater whose wide, blue eyes quietly question, is a freshman. Her long wavy brown hair has been growing since high school days at Southwest in Kansas City. Mo. She is 18 and a Kappa pledge. Grace Piros of Scott City, new this year to Miller hall, is the only true brunette among Jayhawkers freshman beauties. Rich coloring, flashing dark eyes, and thick, almost black hair give this very small, very intelligent independent woman an irresistable charm. 64 KEITH BRADLEY JOAN HENDRICKSON CM LII IIE-- OLLEGE wouldnlt be college without freshmen and visa-versa. Always from the various shades of fall green there are many outstanding values and intensities. In the past, it is true, many of the brightest colors have been the first to fade. But there are always those few who remain fast. QRunning only for All Student Council and the Y presi- dency,I Theoretically, the freshmen pictured on these pages are the ones who will be outstanding during all of their years in these portals of learning. Almost all of the houses on the Hill have either chosen or drafted one of their inmates to pose as a person quite likely to succeed. In just what field these young hopefuls will flower remains to be seen. But here they are the future's BTO's - women, and, yes, men. Although scarce, men are still ambitions-one of these young men may even aspire to be President some day, if the position is still open to the public. Some authorities have compared brainless freshmen to burning candles in that both are usually lit, but in these THE JAYHAWKER A CHALLENGE TO THE FRESH- MEN WHO LOOK PRECO- CIOUS AND ARE, THEREFORE, BEING GROOMED FOR PUBLIC LIFE. IIII LII . times this comparison will have to be catalogued for future references. In the meantime it will be interesting to see which of the chosen few climbs highest. MARY LOUISE AI NSWORTH EILLEN O'CONNLR ,af ELAI NE SAWYER www ef HAROLD WARWICK WALLY ROUSI' DON MCCAUL MARY VARNER CUYIXELLE JONLS X LAIRD BOWMAN QQ, vim W 'W ssl Wi 1 gal' gw .1 e Wfmwm WW' if 1 AM QQQTWSS ' ' b, 1 ww aw ,, 2 iw.. NUI gg-sur sf Me., X Nb-QW. Y 5 2 ,Al- 'p . ii Y 'S S af 2 1' la 6 x Nw WM we iw' 'ff ii. ,M U, , fi L31 , X ff MM U K M 1 Mn we 233+ o Nd 551 5 2 If x wiv F W Q 3 ii ww Q ' ,fy W 2 wif? W . 'Q iw is ff w R3 :ggidww ww -2 V H, , . Ai 1 If N 2 . 351 x-yiw-iw ,, ff gin Q A gag., -:I .ip 5 4 -1 an ' ' N. IX 25 5 iw Z v 6? 2' V 'il 451 M CQ wwf' ,aw Wg va 5 HMM. 4-Q... 5? 5 .ji ff 1' S f 1 'I 3' X ' 5 A 3 mrawwawf E55 wav 5? if Q? W 5'.HZ,g , idx, Q-f ' 5 -5' F s,,fAf.f ai 'wi Q iw The Meek Greek .G ,WLM K N, ,A . uw' uf A- , E45 4 . V ,H 5 J ff f ,gre J J .- T ,H ,. Se' , , . -it S J 'K . Q 4, I 7312 3 A. , Y, M , L, Q, M ,,- - -V , E, .4 X gym rw a 4 su, Q, - ry tr, js dn S R' ' ,W 'W ,L Q if ff 'K it itil 'Z 5 5 f I ' J A L . - .e ALPHA CHI OMEGA Lett to ricght, First row.. Bettg Rendelrnan, Olathe, Peugy Durr, Olathe, Maralxn Rosenau, Eudora, Beverley Gill, Fort Scott, Ruth Richmond, Fart Scott, Rachel Fuller, Beloit, jane Anderson Lawrence, Margaret Logan, Garden City, Marlorie Gardner, Arkansas City Second row' Frankie Holland, Kansas City, Jo Ellen Hall, Kansas City, Mo, Charmin Been, Kansas City, Nancy Parshall, Kansas City Mo, Mary Lee Asher, Sterling, Barbara Ford, Osborne, Martha Neuer, Kansas City, Mo, Beth Russell, Lawrence, Mariel Luckens, Wichita, Margaret McKee, Kansas City If Lawrence were just a little more modernized, we could have called these next three pages the Dial File. The principle, however, is still the same. With this section blind dates cease to be such a risk. ALPHA DELTA PI Lett to right, First row Lucille Land, Lee Surnrnit, Mo, Joan Schindling, Leavenworth, Mary Neel, Topeka, Kathryn Hover El Dorado, Jacouette Shaw, Holton, Jeanne Cooper, Lawrence, Murice Mrnrard, Holton, Eunice Brownell, Wichita Second row Ruth Ann Prestoury, Farrtax, Okla , Jean Knuth, Kansas City, Mo, Beverly Balocca, Paola, Sylvia Hinds, Topeka, Evelyn Ableson, Kansas City, Mary Lars Rice, Butler, Mo, Delores Cluster, Wichita, Pearl Geiger, Paola Third row: Teresa Norton, Salina, Beverly Robertson, Kansas City, Mo, Martha McLean, Kansas City, Mo, Virginia Hazlett, Lawrence, Sara Russell, Liberty, Mo, Rosemary Hall, Weston, Mo, Dorothy Savage, lnde- pendence, Mo, Shirley Acker, Lawrence Not in picture: Lpurilla Cox, Pare sons Eloise Crandall, Sylvia, Mariam Howell, Cofteyville. ALPHA OMICRON Pl Lett to riaht, First row. Sidney Mayfield, Hutchinson, Janet Belt, Lawrence, Sara Ann Jones, Garden City, Phyllis Good, Perry, Ruth McWilliams, Kansas City, Beverly Reitz, Olathe, Bette Pearce, Duluth, Minn Second row: Marv Beth Jepson, Oskaloosa, Carol Long, Kansas City, Wilma Bowen, Kansas City, Rose Hasking, Kansas City, Marv Stark, Perry, Helen Mather, Kansas City, Rowena Robe, Ottawa, Helen Lawrence, Ottawa, Frances Zoiic, Goshland, Mo Nut in picture, Nancy Caek Lawrence BETA THETA PI Lett to right, First row' George Nettels, Pittsburg, John Mclfvers, Kansas City, Mo , Henry Raah, Kansas City, George Timmons, Pittsburg, Frank Engle, Topeka, Robert Idol, Robinson, Robert Mosser, Wichita, Second row: Charles McGill, Kansas City, Mo, Richard Thomas, Tulsa, Okla., Robert Freeto, Pitts- burg, Charles Betsher, Eureka, William Spencer, Pittsburg, John Robinson, Kansas City, Mo Not in picturei Robert Schwanzrle, Chicago, Ill , John Stites, Wichita, Hulbert Murray, El Dorado CHI OMEGA Lett to right, First rowi Patricia Rolley, Holton, Ann Cadwalader, Topeka, Bonnie Holden, Pittsburg, Barbara Mottet, Kansas City, Mo, Patricia Belt, Lawrence, Rose Nell Curtis, lola, Margaret O'Neil, Leavenworth Second row Meredith Gear, Guyrnan, Okla Q Joyce Mahin, Bartlesville, Okla, Dorothy Louise Thomas, Pittsburg, Virginia Larson Kansas City, Sally Houck Independence, Patricia Nees, Kansas City Mo DELTA GAMMA Lett to right, tirst rowi Nancy Jean McCleary, Excelsior Springs, Mo, Nancy Lowe, BIue Springs, Ma, Patricia Vance, Kansas City, Mo, Guynelle Jones, Kansas City, Mo, Elizabeth Esterle, Kansas City, Mo, Mary Lau Mathews, Kansas City, Mo, Arnnelda Lincoln, Liberty, Mo, Shirley Corlett, Kansas City, Mo, Eleanor Smith, Butler, Mo Second row. Carolyn Nigg, Whitewater, Wanda Fausett, Osawatomie, Mari Jane Waggener, Baxter Springs, Bene Horine, Wichita, Oliyia Garyex, Wichita, Patti, Abbott, Wichita, virginia Gcrrul Lawrence, LaRue Johnson, Salina DELTA TAU DELTA Left to right, First row: Wayne Stallard, Lawrence, Robert Snyder, Colby, Thomas Eberliri, Kansas City, Mo., Stanley Cain, Coney, Donald Spangler, Belleville, Edgar Miner, l-lays. Second rowi Maynard Terry, Junction City, Patrick Clemens, Pittsburg, LaMonte Gaston, Lawrence, Victor Chesky, Half stead, Richard Ebbert, Kansas City, Mo., Phillip Stockton, Lawrence. Not in picture: Thomas Hahn, Topeka, Robert Lindley, Kansas City, Mo., William Weiser, Kansas City, Mo, John Gunther, Leavenworth, Edward Allbough, Rich- land, David Frisbie, Kansas City, Richard Emerson, Topeka. GAMMA PHl BETA left to right First row: Elaine Falconer, Kansas Citi, Judith Tihen, Wichita, B Ann Brown, Lawrence, Glenda Leuhring, Leavenworth, Barbara Hindenach, lndependence, Peggy Howard, Cotfeyville, Mariorie Reich, Kansas City, Mo, Gerry Kreider, Cnanute, Joan Vickers, Lawrence, Mary Schnitzler, Wichita. Second row: Bonnie Veatch, Kansas City, Penny Houston, Kansas City, Mo., Elizabeth Evans, Winfield, Sheila Stryker, Fredonia, Mary Ann McClure, Kan- sas City, Mo, Joan l-iendrickson, Kansas City, Mo, Jaan l-lurst, Topeka, Dorothy Feldcarnp, Kansas City, Norma Whittaker, Parsons, Jean Quaney, Chonute, Jeanne Brown, Kansas City, Mo., Joan Hise, Kansas City, Mo Not in picturei Jo Ellen Shirley, Chanute. KAPPA ALPHA THETA Left to right, First rawt Alice Wright, Topeka, Martha Yingling, Wichita, Anne Scott, Pratt, Rebecca Vallette, Beloit, Margaret Maloney, Wichita, Pa- tricia Nlaloney, Wichita, Doris Doane, El Dorado, Frances Hodges, Olathe. Sec- ond row: Margaret Peacock, Ottawa, Ruth Wright, Topeka, Virginia Winter, Lawrence, Margaret O'Brian, Fredonia, Susan Blessingtan, Wellington, Gladys Blue, Emporia, Martha Bonebrake, Wichita, Katherine Roberts, Kansas City, Mo, Marilyn Smart, Lawrence, Eileen O'Connor, Wichita, Mary Alford, Sioux City, Iowa, Mary Elizabeth Faulders, El Dorado KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Lett tc right, First rowi Nancy Slater, Kansas City, Mo, Patricia Glover, Newton, Eleanor Churchill, Kansas City, Mo, Mary Louise Ainsworth, Derby, Sara Krehbiel, Kansas City, Mo., Mariorie Beneke, Kansas City, Mo, Nancy Goering, Newton. Second row: Allison Jones, Lawrence, Catherine Piller, Great Bend, Mary Kathrine Sims, Miami, Okla, Marv Margaret Morris, Wichita, Lois Bradstreet, Topeka, Mary Zeller, Howard, Third row: Cora Lou Child, Great Bend, Maxine Gunsolly, Lawrence, Nancy Stephen, Pueblo, Colo, Martha Latter, Wichita, Patricia Ferguson, Kansas City, Mo. Not in Picuret. Patricia Moyer, Lawrence, Carrie Arnold, Ashland. PHI DELTA THETA Lett to right, First row: John Hawley, Republic City, Nebr, Gordon Sondker, Holton, Frank Pomeroy, Holton, John McClaughlin, Topeka, Donald Moseley, Kansas City, Mo., Richard Ong, Kansas City, Mo, Harold Baker, Kansas City, Ma., Charles Ball, Pasadena, Calif. Second rowi James Sanders, San Fran- cisco, Calif, Bruce Fitts, Wichita, Kenneth Danneberg, Kansas City, Ma., Richard l-lawkinson, Kansas City, Mo., Matthew Zimmermann, Kansas City, Mo, Donald Cousins, Washington, D, C. Third row: Bertram Morris, Hutch- inson, Carl Clark, Kansas City, Mo., Harold Warwick, Kansas City, Mo, Michael Kuklenski, Kansas City, Joseph Boyd, Bartlesville, Okla Not in pic- turei Robert Henry, Wichita, Edward Denning, Wichita, Charles Aylward, Kansas City, Mo, Keith Congdon, Winfield, Neal Thompson, Cavalier, N. D. PHI GAMMA DELTA Left to right, First row: Rodney Mclvor, Wichita, Dudley Johnson, Law- rence, Ray Simonson, Great Bend, Joe Turner, Independence, George Waitt, Jr., Wichita, Earl Stanton, Jr., Leavenworth, William Douglass, Topeka, Second row: Don Brown, Wichita, Don Fricker, Great Bend, Wallace Rouse, Wichita, Tom Jones, Lawrence, Jack McDermott, Wichita. PHI KAPPA PSI Left to right, First row: John Miller, Kansas City, Ma., Burris Jones, Kan- sas City, Duke Montgomery, Kansas City, Mo, Noryal Jackson, Kansas City, Mo, Lewis Bayles, Lawrence, Charles Kunzelman, Buffalo, N Y Second row: Marshal Fryar, Wichita, Donald McCaul, Kansas City, Mo, William Lynn, Kansas City, Theodore Batchelder, Garden City, George Cox, Kansas City. Not in picturei William Ritt, Kansas City, Mo., William Lacy, Kansas City, Mo, Edward Brunk, Kansas City, Gettrey Abbey, Baxter Springs, Leroy Robison, Lawrence. Pl BETA PHI Lett to right, First row: Mary Breed, Kansas City, Mo, Imogene Billings, Gig Harbor, Wash , Joy Codbehere, Kansas City, Mo, Ann Newcomer, Kansas City, Mo, Carolyn Campbell, Kansas City, Mo, Sara Jayne Scott, Kansas City Mo, Carolyn Brown, Kansas City, Mc, Adrienne Hiscox, San Mateo, Calif Second row: Katherine Brooks, Wichita, Dorothy Dahtin, Kansas City, Sue Jamieson, Kansas City, Mary Varner, Wichita, Joan Armocost, Kansas City, Mo, Louise Schwartz, Neosho, Mo, Marx Longenecker, Lawrence, Eleanor Rack, Kansas City, Joan Gardner, Winfield Third ravi: Betty Aylward, Wichita, Joan Woodward, Kansas City, Mo, Joann Ruese, Lawrence, Nancy loye, Wichita, Frances Chubb Lawrence, Janet Sue Hobart, Kansas City, Mo, Barbara Varner, Wichita, Marilyn Erway, Hutchinson, Nelle Claycomb, Kansas City, Mo, Jo Ann McCrory, Hutchinson. SHINE 0314-rw-QW SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Left to right, First row: Donald Fulghum, Winfield, Paul Jones, Herington, Miter Nordeen, Mound City, Francis Pierpont, Chanute, DuMont Reed, Larned, Harold Wilcox, Winfield, Gus Enloe, Shawnee. Second row: Robert Jones, Hutchinson, Charles Church, Kansas City, Mo., Walter Yount, Chanute, James Johnston, Kansas City, Mo., William Charlton, Mission, Jack Hastings, Sedge wick, Third rowi Donald Frei, Kansas City, Mo, Robert Rosenfield, Junction City, Daniel Gardner, Chanute, James Baska, Kansas City, James McCollem, Kansas City, Mo, Jack Black, Kansas City, Ma, Dean Perkins, Liberty, Mo. Not in picture: James Briley, Tulsa, Okla., James McBride, Kansas City, Mo., Hubert Kintzel, Wichita, Frank Has, Kohler, Wisconsin, Gene Geist, Chanute, Leon Thomas, Seminole, Okla, William Lamkin, Santa Ana, Calif, Thomas Mayhew, Truesdale, Samuel Crow, Topeka, Dayid Hall, Miami, Fla. SIGMA CHI Lett to right, First roy.: Joseph Bukaty, Kansas City, William McGregor, Medicine Lodge, Owen Peck, Kansas City, lyal Wantlancl, Ottawa, Donald Relihan, Smith Center, Myron Rake, Horton, John Jackson, Kansas City, Mo, John Couch, Anthony. Second rowi Samuel l-lunter, Leavenworth, George Newton, Kansas City, Ralph Reed, Hays, Joseph Carlson, Kansas City, Meade Almond, Topeka, Robert Sellers, Bartlesyille, Okla, Laird Bowman, Dodge City, Harry Starks, Dodge City. Not in picture' William McGarry, Kansas City Mo, Eldon Luehring, Leayenviorth, Gordon Reynolds, Tacoma, Wash. SIGMA KAPPA Lett to rignt, First rowi Marilyn Boucher, Kansas City, Mo, Lucena Burns, Leavenworth, Alice Hobbs, Topeka, Jeanne Smith, Topeka, Mary Jane Pis- torius, Lawrence, Betty Jean Whitney, Wichita, Jaaueline Sommeryille, Har per, Martha Jewett, Lawrence, Ruth McCurry, Wichita, Betty Emiah, Arkansas City, Margaret Wright, Wellington, Marilyn Beck, Mission. Second row: ilrirley Guenther, Kansas City, Mo, Mary Dudley, Hudoton, Elya Wallace Wichita, Lorea Norrie Sabetha, Marguenta Shipley, Wichita, Janice Lowe Paola, Elizabeth McMillin, Kansas City, Mo, Sally Scothorn, Watertown, S. D, Mary Holtzclaw, Lawrence, Louise Morrow, Lay-.rence, Frances Hadley, Topeka, Jill Lauderdale, Kansas City, Mo Not ir picture: Betty Jean Courthe, St Mary s. TAU KAPPA EPSILON Lett to righti Bruce Benedictson, Tievton, Wash , Richard Fyans, Great Bend, Gordon Miercer, Pasco, Wash Not in picturei Robert D. Spencer, Kansas City, Robert McKinley, Kansas City, Mo, Theodore Shafer, Great Bend, Mortar, Fiauserman, Kansas City, Mo 74 The Good Earih fConlinued from Page 102 Ginny Winter, KAT, airmail special deliveries while on all out of town games. New angle-intercepting passes via mail. Bill Chestnut, Phi Psi, leads a rather interesting and eventful life. It isn't every boy that can have coke dates in sorority laundry rooms and second floor halls. Tuck Sifers, Nu Sig medic, seems to be doing his operating early. The pretty patient is Frances Schloesser- natcherly. Question before the Hill. Are Mar- gie Reich and Lynn Lee really going steady? Forward all answers to B. H. 957. Girl with the highest batting aver- age for the six weeks session -Sarah jane Scott. Pin-up girl of the month-Virginia Larson, Chi O. Dated-up girl of the month-Bunny Kline, Miller hall. Newsome Twosome: Marian Miller, Gamma Phi, and Carl Ehrlich, DU. Beth Beamer, Sigma Kappa, and Don Dimond-for sure-they're married! Prediction for the month. Ed Den- ning wrapped around Johnny Green's statue amidst his automobile due to the fact that he just couldn't resist adding one more sticker to that bare space on his windshield. O The Devil and Anfoine fCon!inued from Page 312 that reason, regarded him as an artistic prostitute. We did find, on the other hand, a number of basic ideas on which we agreed. One night we wandered into Chez Oscar, our favorite cabaret. We walked to the back, to the booth which we MIX THEM MATCH THEM TO BE CHOSEN FROM OUR SPORT SHOP SUITS JUMPERS SWEATERS JACKETS SKIRTS JERKINS SLACKS BLOUSES ff to 49 . i - 0 u ' gl - I 4 .I TOPEKA, KANSAS THE JAYHAWKER usually had. For some reason, which I was momentarily unable to explain, I noticed particularly a man who was sitting in the booth next to ours. He was dressed in a very old and ragged suit and looked terrible. There was nothing particularly unusual about him, though. One who lives in the Quartier Latin is used to seeing people in rags, I think it was his face that struck me. In contrast to his dress, his face looked like that of a cultured gentleman. It was florid, and gave one a sense of sharpness. As soon as we were seated, Antoine leaned across the table and whispered, Did you notice that fellow in the next booth?'l Surprised, I said, Yes, as a matter of fact, I didf' Interesting, but he certainly looks like the devil, doesnlt he? At that moment, the gentleman of whom we spoke rose, turned, and said, I believe I heard my name mentioned. Do you mind if I sit down with you?,' UNO-no, of course not, stammered Antoine, But I don't know your name. Meadow Acres BALLROOM The Home of the Name Bands PHONE 939i TOPEKA KANSAS OCTOBER 1944 Didnt you just remark that I look' like the Devil? Yes, but . . Well you see, I not only look like the Devil, I am hef, He smiled blandly at both of us, as he made this matter- of-fact statement. Antoine laughed loudly. You must be crazy. Besides, I don't even believe in the Devil . . Oh, it gets so tiresome proving my identity to people. Do you believe in magic? No . . . ofcourse not. He reached over to his table, turned, and set down a full glass of absinthe. Taste it,', he said, and Antoine did so. Now you will see, he said, and waved his hand over the glass. Taste it now, Antoine tilted the glass back, but recoiled in disgust. It's vinegar. Yes, yes, of course it is. Now . . And he proceeded to do a number of amazing things. They were absolutely unbelievable. During the process of this performance, Antoinels manner changed. He became very solicitous. Well, I've read about you, but I HCOKES? NO But it its sweaters you want, we have them. Cardigan or pullovers . hand tashioned. Johnson's formerly Wiedemans LAWRENCE KANSAS never believed that you existed--much less that Iyd ever have the pleasure of meeting you personally. Antoine ordered a bottle of absinthe, and began plying the gentleman subtly with it. I tried to ask him about the ragged suit, but he evaded my ques- tion. He did not seem anxious to an- swer questions, but as he drank, he be- came more loquacious, and was soon telling us stories. Most of them were too horrible to repeat, but they were all interesting. We sat and listened for several hours, and he became more and more intoxi- cated as time went on. About two, we decided to leave. Antoine told me to go on to the Hat, and that he would see the gentleman home. He did not come in until nearly six. I tried to question him about what he had done, but he would not give me an answer. He was very happy that morn- ing, and started painting without sleep- 75 ing. During the next few weeks, his paintings began to become better and better. He began to show them and to sell a few. Due to this fact more than anything else, Antoine and I drifted slowly apart. I gave up painting and began to write. I have lost now all personal contact with him. The only news I know of him I have learned by reading the newspapers. A great change seems to have come over him. He is now one of Frances greatest painters, and one of her richest men. He has become extremely religious, and I notice that he frequently makes large contributions to the church. Several months ago, my curiosity got the better of me. I wrote to Antoine. I asked him bluntly what happened that night. He replied to my letter very cordially, but very evasively. He did not tell me what happened, but he EXCITE HIM This Christmas With a Gift From RAY BEERS And Every Gift AftTdCtiU8ljl Boxed 'AY A, c-:en5 CLOTHING COMPANY IN TOPEKA THE PLACE TO GO FOR THE BRANDS YOU KNOW -.4 76 wrote, with a little awe, it seemed to me, of the kindness of our friend. From what he said, I cannot but believe that he thinks the change in his fortunes has been due to the happenings of that night, whatever they were. I have devoted a great deal of thought to the problem. I have per- suaded myself that all the tricks the man did for us could have been very Clever slight of hand. I have also had a great deal of experience with the pan- handlers and tricksters of the Quartier Latin. If I interpret him correctly, Antoine, on the other hand, is firmly convinced of the genuineness of the man. My I i I Rankin Drug guess is that he made a deal with him. And yet there is a price on such deal- ings, which Antoine has not payed as yet. Antoine must be firm in his faith. But for myself, I still do not quite think I believe in the Devil. I The Eclucafion of Veterans fConIinued from Page 132 in the veterans law are federal obliga- tions. With this situation in mind the Administrator of Veterans Affairs re- cently announced that in the case of state and municipal institutions the government will pay the usual charges made by these institutions against out- of-state or out-of-city residents, respec- tively, and that in no case shall the compensation be less than S10 per month. Even this provision is plainly unfair THE JAYHAWKER to most publicly controlled institutions and to a substantial number of pri- vately controlled institutions. It is well known that only a few state univer- sities and colleges ever charge anything like the cost of instruction even for out- of-state students. Under the present regulations the only institutions which will receive reasonable compensationn are the high tuition institutions - mostly privately controlled colleges. Uncle Sam will pay their bills, whereas under present regulations the hard pressed states will have to bear a substantial portion of the burden in the public institutions. This matter is of great importance to the state univer- sities and colleges, which in addition to the veterans, will be flooded after the war with a regular student body at least as large as before the war. Under the terms of the law the ap- propriate state educational agency has the responsibility of making up a list CO. of educational and training institutions C O 1.. O N 1 A 1. which are qualified to carry on the pro- f . d ' . Th' ' T E A R O O M ffl ileflfililffiiyi diliiifl BOTH PHONES CHICKEN AND STEAK of this duty lies the entire level at 678 DINNERS which the educational and training pro- Serviug Hours: gram is set. If there is laxity in the WEEK DAYS: performance of this duty as is already 11130 ' 1 1304 5130 ' 7230 becoming evident in certain states, the 1101 Mass. SUNDAY: whole program of veterans' education 12:00 - 2:30 . , . will suffer in public esteem and the f CLOSED SATURDAYS ability of states to control the plan. LAWRENCE KANSAS Phone 978 936 Kentucky On the other hand, as everybody mm-,'.-. ..,. -.-,-.,.1-.wi-M ...v ,,...,.,.,,....Y-.'.,..,., ...,. - ..... 1, .,... -. -. -. .- I-zr:r:r:2:::rs::,.g::::: :z:1:rx:::1::1:1:gltg34,12:5:5,1315,:15:,1,1:15:gg:::3:,rg:5:Z:5:1:5:5:515:115.5:,:5f1:5:1:rs:r:1:2:z' aurzrtrzr- 2 12: :f:f:r:r:r:r:f-2 r.'1r.r1f '-1.2-1:2 2 :2-21'1'sz1zz1:2:rss:2:2121r:2:21If:1:2s:1:1:1:r:rs::sag:5:5:1::r::::::::::::1:1f: . ....... .. 5.,.,:.,.:.,,.1:, gg., ::I::15,:1:::,11:11gl:33311:51,rg:1,15:5::5:3:gg:ggg:5:g:5f5::15:r:3:r:5:r-1:2-1:5:3:g-5g5:5:5:g:1s -as-1:21531 , -15 :1rr:-1-:1:1:::1:1:::g::::::.:.,:.E:5:1:5:,:::::,:::g:,1g:5' 3.I1I.,.I.1.1.,.,.:.,.,.,:5:gi:1311:5:gi:1:15:,::tr:3:,Qg:51,:5:,g:5:,:5:,:5:r:,s:,4I:-4'1-1,f-:,1r- ,-111-3 ..., 58 me as ff f' 1'4 -s:'o i' a' lii p 1, W. gig' - Vppp ,pljfil fig V r M..--e i Iiiil ii: --rr 1- 1 f:.s-.2a2iEEi55::5iE1e2 tfll 2: SEED ... ts. OCTOBER 1944 knows, veterans of the war in college present special problems. They will be older than the usual college student and in many instances they will have been through very disconcerting experiences. little understood by those, faculty as well as students, who have not shared these experiences. Yet it seems gen- erally agreed that the veteran should be absorbed into college life as rapidly as possible - a process in which the vet- eran both gives and takes, and vice versa. Many veterans will come to the col- leges and universities with a back- ground of specialized training in the various branches of the armed services and off-duty study which the institu- tion should be able to evaluate sym- pathetically, but fairly. A large portion will be impatient to complete their courses of study in the shortest pos- sible time, which will require institu- tions to keep open their doors through- out the year and to take proper pre- cautions against whar amounts to sub- standard degrees. Many will be in need of advice and guidance as to vocations and the institution should be prepared to render that service. Many, too, will be married, thus presenting a housing problem of considerable dimensions. O Compe+i'rion fContinued from Page 391 of these teams have also defeated two opponents and have been downed by Lavone Jacobson, Maurice Zimmerman, jean Boardman, and Elizabeth Tripp, while joan Lippelman, Marian Green- ley, Alice Gaston, and Marie Sandburn uphold the honor of Corbin. Alpha Omicron Pi, Pi Beta Phi, Sigma Kappa, and Independent make up the rest of division III. Patricia Sloan and joan Tindall, A. O. Pi's and Pi Phi's Bar- bara Prier, Barbara Winn, and Pat Billings have been outstanding on their teams. For Sigma Kappa, Mary Ver- million, Beth Beamer, and Caroline tions and organize their capabilities. Undoubtedly it brought to the Univer- sity a number of students who would have enrolled in other schools if K.U. had not been open in September. Un- doubtedly it helped sophomores to be- come upperclassmen before their time and enabled seniors to carry a lighter CordeII's Drug Morriss are outstanding while Vera store Strobel, Charlotte Price, and Marita Lenski are leaders of the Independent team. For the Best Ice Cream Sodas ' in Town The Jayhawker Looks ai' . . . 7 fContinued from Page 82 Come to Cordell S Undoubtedly it helped freshmen who were striving for that all important l. phone 521 1345 Mass. grade average to recognize their limita- REEVE'S uFoods That Satisfyv FANCY GROCERIES QUALITY MEATS Phone 4l3 9th and Mass. Lawrence, Kan. Jayhawker Taxi The Oldesf and Mosi' Reliable PHGNE 65 WE LEAD AND THE REST FOLLOW no one. Best players for the IWW are OUR HAT IS OFF To All the Men of Konsos Now in the Service Winter Chevrolet Company PHONE 77 LAWRENCE 78 load during their last months on the Hill. The short session did all of this and took a total of only two weeks more than students were accustomed to spending at the University each year, because with its initiation, each regular semester was cut to 16 weeks. I Hampshires and Hard Work fcomimled from Page 372 Square garden in 1936, and who spent the whole winter of 1925 in Tokyo officiating at the japanese World Series in baseball. His list of other outstand- ing assignments would fill a fat volume. My favorite food? repeated Mr, Quigley. Pork chops, and don't ask me why. O Independenis' Day fConlinued from Page 241 on fourth social center provides fiction and non-fiction - even Barefoot Boy With Cheek. SI! S? :IF Foster hall, formerly the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity house, in its second year as a womens dormitory is still tucked under Corbin's wing. Thirty- two strong now, morning, noon, and night residents may be seen trekking fe T N y It's a boy. MacTavish is passing y I out matches so we can light our Sir Walter Raleigh. E., ..-M THE JAYHAWKER down the street for food in Corbin's dining room. In other activities, how- ever, we are independent, having our own volley ball team, hour dances, and officers. SF II? if Ricker hall is the wandering one of the Universityls flock. There are 12 living here, all new women. We operate on a cooperative basis, but the house is owned by the University. The long hike to the campus from 745 Ohio is the most unpleasant part of Ricker life, and even that isn't bad in autumn. 3? is 9? ujolliffe hall is still going strong de- spite its turn to the feminine last year. Most of the officers are freshmen for of 25 women,upperclassmen are definitely in the minority. We are a residence hall like Corbin and Foster and think it's wonderful. Our biggest gripe at present is that we haven't any bath tub. There are plenty of showers, but boys just don't seem to take baths. ,IF 9? HKS Come November thereys going to be quite a game of upset the fruit bas- ket involving Corbin and Foster halls and the Kappa Sigma and Delta Up- silon houses in West Hills. Some girls will vacate Foster and Corbin in No- vember to live in other University TOPS IN PASTRIES D R A K E ' S 907 MASS PHONE 635 0 ' gleurimg, ele, :Airlie lodcy, Brown 8 Williamson fobaccc Corporcfion, louisville I, Kenfuciy. ' . AT YOUR SERVICE CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS eAS - out - LUBRICATION - TIRES - BATTERIES FRITZ CO. Phone 4 8I'I'1 and New Hampshire OCTOBER 1941 residence halls for the year. The Kappa Sig and DU houses have been rented by the University and will be used as women's dormitories this year to solve the housing shortage, now at its peak. Altogether 92 girls will stay at the two houses. O The Jayl1awk's Caw fConliuued from Page 362 representing the All Student Council, chooses six or seven of these applicants to lead the K.U. cheers. Their job is to encourage the crowd to give out with enough concentrated noise to raise the roof off the stadium Qhguratively speaking, of coursej, and to provide the proper esprit de corps for all athletic events. O So Firm, So Fully Packed fC0nlinued from Page 202 enrollment dawns. The brave ven- ture forth to Robinson gymnasium for lengthy consultations concerning classes, hours, and credits. The process is long and involves more line-waiting. The lack of men is very evident. Ex- tensive research reveals that there are fee adders. The last signature is in place. The last figure is added. En- rollment is over, and K.U.'s 1,803 civilians are ready to attend classes. I The Jayhawlcer Holds His Own fConlinued from Page 351 quarter, but Barrington and Moffett, playing fine games in the mile-high city, took turns lugging the ball. finally countering to bring the score up to 7 all. Another long pass gave the Denver eleven its second tally, and the Pioneers went into what appeared to be a com- manding I4-7 lead. But the KU. back- field kept plugging at the Denver line, and Moffett's pass to Riegle was good for 23 yards and the tying points. A game at Tulsa the next Satur- day night proved a debacle for the out- classed Jayhawkers, and the hnal gun saw the Golden Hurricane eleven on the long end of a 27-0 count. The next 79 week-end was the annual Big Six opener with Iowa State. and the Crim- son and Blue, now used to bunking on trains and in hotels, sallied forth for Ames, where a Cyclone eleven scored in every quarter of the game and added one extra point to make the final score 25-O. ASK DAD ! WE HAVE OUTFITTED K. U. MEN FOR OVER 40 YEARS Today we are headquarters for lrotll men in civilian clothes and men in uniform. ' 9 Nm C t Are YOU SOUTHERN Hung ry? PIT If You Are fifty more students this year than last, BARBECUE there are fewer boys, and-can you STOP AT THE FAMOUS FRIED CHICKEN bear it-seventy-live more girls. Slowly, but inevitably, the 540 men and l,263 Del-UXE CAFE PHONE 2001 women who failed to think better of attending the six weeks session, file past 711 Mass. Lawrence 1834 MASS' the checkers, past the scribes, past the Love Box GOMPAN CORRUGATED AND WOOD SHIPPING CONTAINERS 6I2 SOUTH COMMERCE STREET WICHITA, KANSAS 80 Kansas was reeling, but she hadn't fallen, there was still Nebraska. And the result is history! O The VanderWerfs fConIinued from Page 462 Working for Michigan daily papers, he discovered that a young journalist has to follow the policies of his paper and has no real freedom to write as he thinks. Besides teaching organic chemistry, he is very active in intramural and faculty sports and still finds time for research. Along what line? Well, he'll tell you its Synthesis of Carcinogenic Hydrocarbons. Translated, that means that, along with a few scientists at Ohio State, Harvard, and England he may be on the right track for a cure for cancer. In his spare time Cal, who is 27, raises about 60 chickens every year - the scientific way. Both he and Rachel ENJOY TOPS Fountain Service Hluslni . ..,. 'll H H 'llil collect records, chiefiy classical with a few Harry James disks for Rachel and some by Duke Ellington for Cal. They know their music, for Rachel used to be a violinist for the Columbus Phil- harmonic orchestra. As for being Mr. and Mrs. Vander- Werf, Cal says that even with her red hair, Rachel doesn't have a temper. I Bell BoH'om Blues Kffontinued from Page 522 tion together by driving its members into practice from 5:45 to 7:00 every night, Monday through Friday. Their first dance was an all Navy affair, held Friday the 1. of i. CNote: If you are interested in the date call Chief Hayes. If I had been interested in re- search writing, I would have written The History of Rome Hanks and Kindred Mattersj The bandis theme has something to do with the Early Morning Sunrise. They chose to honor their early morn- ing muster in this way. They feature Kansas City Moods as something we all should hear. They also play it for those in the V-I2 unit who go to Kansas City and can't remember much about the place after theyire back. C Wha+'s Wrong wifh This Picfure? KContinued from Page 582 Are Not Letting Us Know What We Are in for Until It Is Too Late stage. This goes on for about a week. Dur- ing this cycle everyone becomes better THE JAYHAWKER acquainted. It is a pre-segregation period where actives and pledges live as a unit and do things together. In other words, they try to do things for each other. Later they will try to do things to each other. All good things must come to an end and this takes the freshmen into the third or Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead, stage. House bills come out and house rules go on. Somewhere in this period is the walk out. Freshmen find a sympathetic pledge group of the opposite sex and pick up and leave. They usually go out into the country and analyze their grievances over bottles of cough syrup and antiseptic mouthwash. Some drink cokes or 7-up. There is hardly any freshman training significance in the walk out. We might consider that it is here the freshman classes get their first taste of organization. It is often their first opportunity to get the taste of something else. XXX. With walk out and walk in now un- der the bridge, the freshman training program settles down to the droll and seemingly endless period of fraternity education, character molding, and per- sonality building. In the discussion that follows on fra- ternity education, fraternity should be taken in a broad sense Cwomen as well as men are includedj. We mention fraternity education only because it is mentioned to the pledge every Mon- day night right up to the end of the first NI l lliilflii l YTIUNRI U N OCTOBER 1944 semester. Each pledge is furnished with a manual. His first lessons usually in- clude the Greek alphabet and instan- taneous recognition of the pins of the rest of the fraternities on the campus. For confusion, a few important groups not on the campus are tossed in. Inas- much as most groups are not in posses- sion of other letter society pins, the only thing the poor freshman can do is draw them from memory. All fraternities and sororities have what are known as duty charts. These are usually large-sized cardboard affairs which are good for all year. The charts are complicated, confusing, and ob- noxious to the eyes of the pledge. Upon these cardboards, are timefillers. Far- seeing Greek actives, who realize that inactivity may lead to corruption and sin, have provided certain little things to help fill a pledge's day. These time- 6llers may be almost anything. They give the pledge an opportunity to arise at the crack of the back and start call- ing everyone in the house at a pre- destined hour. Sororities also have a nice arrangement where their freshmen are allowed to make a tour through the house and close the windows over sleeping active formsf but not very at 5:50 in the morningb. Of course there isn't any person so base as to want to devour a meal in peace, so actives have allowed their pledges the privilege of answering the telephone during meals. It does not look well for freshmen to walk up on the Hill practically empty handed, so they are given several laundry bags or library books to deposit in the appro- priate place. Frosh are also awarded the responsibility of forwarding mail never heard. Then of course there is study hall. All letter groups want their freshmen to make the grade requirements for initiation. When they do, the chapter treasury swells from the booty collected. It runs as high as S5200 per head. During the day study hall is at the library. This has converted a very dig- nified looking library into a first class jelly joint. Evening study hall is held in the chapter house. This is a better arrange- ment. There the freshmen sit and wait for the actives to go to the show. When all have gone, they follow themselves. O They're All Fair in Love and War fConlinued from Page 612 Said studying is done only as a last re- sort and by eager beavers who hoarsely sing I'll Walk Alonel' -and do. By the second week all the aspiring young things have joined the Y, the C.V.C., and anything else that will give them prestige. As a rule they're about as use- ful to the crusader clans as a UC' card to a V-12. By this time the embryo 81 coed is using the college vernac and is ready to be a party girl. So she goes to parties, usually chaperuined. After a month she either is or she ain't on the steak fry list of the campus wolves. According to Gray's Anatomy, page l,144, line 92 a steak fry girl is a comely lass who listens when she should be thinking. It is said that gentlemen prefer blondes, but if that be true, then sailors are no gentlemen-for they prefer 'em all- blondes, brunettes, red-heads- especially this year's crop. God bless F or Better jewelry DlANANT'S Esfablished I900 H. W. STOWITS Store KANSAS CITY, MO. Phone 5I6 I 9th and Mass. Lawrence to people of whom they have probably I N D E P E N D E N T LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 740 VERMONT PHONE 432 'fi 82 the upperclasswomen - the freshmen can take care of themselves! O lnframurals fContinued from Page 381 McShane's passes to Cousins and Harris spark Phi Delt scoring drives. Jensen, also of the Phi team, is one of the outstanding linemen of the intra- mural season. O Affer Math fConlinued from Page 491 have filled seats in the same classrooms crming for the same quizzes. In the past year the school has ac- quired 360,000 worth of new equip- ment but still requires three new men to fit the locks of the key men they have lost. A man by man survey shows that there has been no gigantic objec- tion to the feminine gender pursuing this field. Their work is as good as the WE HAVE A WAR T0 WIN AND WE ARE GOING TO WIN IT. Phone 75,1 tiemtis He:-chants oi GOOD APPEARANCE 926 MASS. men's, particularily in the class room. The Aircraft Engineering Technician course proved quite profitable, not only to the aircraft factories, but has been disbanded due to sufficient training. just what the future holds can hardly be called in the bag but it seems likely that as far as engineering is con- cerned it will give more attention to what people call the humanities - the understanding of the social conse- quences of technical activities - an ex- ample being the outcome in establish- ing a ski lift on 14th. U The New Bill of Rights fC07lfi11Il?d from Page 471 than notb have a coke with them in the Union. Mike admits that he has been looking them over, and he says that last year's jayhawker fplugj is one way to connect faces with phone numbers. He went through rush week in much the same way he managed all the regu- lar freshman activities. According to him, all it amounted to was fellows in- viting you to this house and that house for a meal-and who turns down a meal these days? All the way around, College appeals to Mike. At first the loud socks and sweaters shocked him, but he's beginning to look as collegiate as his brothers since he's convinced theres no extra duty for unshined shoes and baggy trousers. Mikes here for a purpose, namely to get a bachelor of science degree in busi- THE JAYHAWKER ness and become a certified public ac- countant. After he was discharged last December ,he worked for awhile. He had always thought about going to col- lege, and then he learned about the G. I. Bill of Rights. Leonard H. Axe, University coordi- nator for the V-12 unit, has taken on the job as director of veterans' service. The Veterans' Service Bureau, in room 2 of Frank Strong hall, is the guidance and counseling center for returning servicemen. Contacts with district ad- ministration boards, army and navy headquarters, etc., are made through the Bureau. Dr. Axe takes the role of dean of veterans,', irons out all the little details, and acts as contact man for the government bureaus and the student veterans. There are approximately 40 veterans attending the University now under the Veterans' Administration program. CARTEIPS STATIONERY 1025 MASS. PHONE 1051 THE G ANT.BILLI FRUIT COMPANY Wholesale Fruit and Produce WICHITA GSLEY Ilome is a lot of little things-the way you want 'em. A certain chair, and the ticking of :L clock, the smell of what's on the stove, your old hat, and good friends. And among these is a pipeful of tobacco, and plenty of time to enjoy it. Kaywoodie Pipes are part of this picture. When the work is done, when the slugging is over, when you've sweat it out successfully, youlll have the finest pipe that money and experience and pains- taking care can produce. Kaywoodie promises you that. Flame Grain Kovwoodie 'Bulldogn Shape No. l2B 510 Talking If Over' pc med by Redelf Vletterao A Kaywoodie takes years to make, and is, we believe, the mildest, coolest, pleasantest form of smoking. This is due to the Kaywoodie Briar which comes from the countries surrounding the Slediterf ranean Sea Cand only from therej. You can't rush it, or mass- produce it, or short-cut it. After it has grown, it has to be seasoned and mellowed, aged and tempered, so it will draw the goodness from tobacco, and yield a cool, smooth, delicious smoke . . . a smoke free from trouhle, with the distinctive Hlfaywoodie Flavor. Yes, Kaywoodie is, and will he, one of the things worth while in your home. War Bonds come first V M ff l -i t . i te, ' V get W it W -. i i wf fr - fbqjf-,3?c,j E 5,f..fjQ,ws-5 fs, 55t5'QF - t T 'filiilif Koywoodie Company, New York and London Q 7944 ln New York, 630 Fihh Avenue f MIDWINTER I945 I l K l l T x I T l l I l, I I . 4 THE -. N my LI PINK ELEPHANT in 'I'l1e Shale in Kansas Cify or in fhe Broadview in Wicl1i'I'a a swell place fo meei' fhe dafe. W. G. HUTSON Prefidenl R. C. MCCORMICK Secretary-T1'eam're'r ASSOCIATED HUT ll HUTELS In MISSOURI . KANSAS . COLORADO 1000 ROOMS-1000 BATHS Rates 3150 no 5250 Single ' ' HOTEL BOULDERADO ROBERT E. LEE HOTEL Boulder, Colo. Kansax Cily, Ma. HOTEL STATE HOTEL ELDRIDGE Kansas City, Mo. Lawrence, Kam. HOTEL BROADVIEW W. G. HUTSON R. C. MCCORMICK Presiden! Secretary-Treasurer IH? EHHISHlI1HlH Slum IQLL5 Jayhawkar photographer if Wiki? fl? Topeka, Kansas We HIHHWHIHWW Iiflilrizf-if?-Chief . B1z.ri11e,u' Almmgez' . SL'Cl'ClcII'y . . . . A rf zfw'li,ti11g A I KHHIAQCI' . MARY MORRILL BEVERLY BOHAN . SALLY EITZPATRICK . GEORGE WAITT A.i'.i'i.i'lm1l ArIz'w'li.i'i1zg fllmzuger . . EARL STANTON A flirt ...... Ellffhffcll1I.I'.1'0Cf:Il0.I' . IlhofognlplvicSm-If . CONTRIBUTORS R. .Atkinson Liz Baker Earl Barney Lila jean Doughman jim Mordy J. C. Nichols Pat Penney Dean Sims Dolores Sulzman Neal Vifoodruff Joan Wfoodward . MARY OLIVE M.ARSHALL IBETTY ATO EVERLY IHANNA HEDRICK I PAT PENNEY INEAL NWOODRUFE I CHARLES FISHER IBERT KINTZEL OFFICE ASSISTANT Pat Cheney Cora Lou Child Frances Chubb Eleanor Churchill Nelle Claycomb Joy Godbehere Bonnie Holden Mary Longenecker Ann Newcomer jean O'Connor Catherine Piller Pat Rolley Joann Ruese Mary Lou Shinkle Elaine Thalman Nancy Tomlinson Pat Williams ADVERTISING STAFF Don Brown John McLaughlin Shirley Otter Anne Scott Barbara Varner Harold Wfarwick Virginia Winter S 'I' ll li J A Y ll X W li H Il Q il I i -. 1 I I gf I flq ' , l 'H Q JIIYIIIIWKER ITHOUT even trying to crowd every activity on the Hill into this issue, we still dedicate the midrwinter 'Iayhawker to campus actives. For whom that means the magazine is meant is, indeed, somewhat of a question. Suf- fice it to say that we have in mind not the self-advertised BMOC's and BXX7OC's but the honest-to-goodness workers with a talent for acting as well as talking. Opening on page l3'I with Bert Kintzels excellent shot of Bud Eisenhower in an All Student Council meeting, our 18-page activity section will be augmented with pictures of other organizations throughout the year. This is really just a starter. Pat Penney is high on interviews in this issue with the four which resulted in her stories on State-wide Activities, Student Union Activities, Lonnie Kelley, and Luther Buchele. Pats inter- viewing technique seems to de- pend upon the Union fountain as a settingg and just how she en- ticed YM president Luther Buchele out of the hospital into a corner PAT IIWNEY booth is a story in itself. CELEBRITIES Liz Baker has made the most of brief backstage friend- ships with Grace Moore and Etta Moten in her stories on page l47. Liz says she found Miss Moore charming, even with a cold, I:ut was a nervous wreck after talking through intermission and two piano solos. The continuity of her carefully planned interview was shattered time and again when the stage door opened, playing a draft on the sensitive soprano. Her interview with Etta Moten in Catnsh Row seems to have been shorter but none the less eventful with Sportin' Life and Porgy clowning around the set. The meeting left Liz with only one question-does the famous negro singer really have a grown daughter? R. Atkinson is as slap-happy as ever in his account vii Boot of the disturbing influences of life in an organized house. iLife Without Father--pp. 96-97.5 The story is illustrated by Marshall cartoons which are surprisingly true to the out of this world life R. J. has described. Dean Sims is a strongparty man himself, however he claims that the good in him won out when he was writing for this issue and that there are no hidden blurbs for Pachacamac in his story on politics. CK.U. Politics H909-:I -pp. 140-141.5 Dean does deserve credit, even the navy vote question upon which he once felt so fervently is han- dled on the straight and narrow. Editorial associate Neal Woodruff catches the real Christ- mas spirit in his review of the All- Musical Vespers and then displays ability as a critic in a lighter vein with his review of Tune in Yes- terday. In spite of his professed sympathy for Prof. Crafton's war- time problems, Neal admits that as a critic he will hate to see all girl casts go. NEAL WOODRUFF jim Mordy CMore Champions? -p. 1455 and Earl Barney 111944 on the Kansas Gridiron -pp. 144-1451 have both done a good job on sports for this issue, althought jim unquestionably drew the long straw for subjects. While Barney had to do some tall rationalizing to show that the fooball season wasnlt fatal, jim has been able to truthfully forecast the possibility of another confer- ence championship for Kansas. Welve included their stories in the activity section-because what takes more time, energy, and spirit than voluntary P.T. under Shenk or Allen. Bert Kintzel had a larger car with several new telephone bell attachments in which to go about his assignments for this issue, but he still was not happy. Complaining of an underhanded reform movement, Bert points out that he was assigned no boudoir interiors and claims to have been maliciously purified with required afternoons in Henley house doing retakes. In spite of its hills K.U dnesn't seem to have devielopetl many expert skiers. Most win- ter sportsmen fall into a class with C a r ol Stuart, Delta Gamma, and Jim Calkins, Beta, attractive if not active. Carol had no trouble falling down for this cover shot - and Jim, scooting up afterwards for the rescue, careened dizzily by for an extra collapse. Operating now at the rate of any other commercial photographer, Jason Dixon Cthe original Bitter Birdj, again did his best work on a series CThe jayhawker Goes on a Serenade-pp. 120-1215. Like a real correspondent, jason experienced all phases of the serenade right along with the Chi's-a fact which automatically explains the blur in pic- ture No. 10. IDEA QUUTIENTS If there were such a title as idea woman Betty .Io Everly would unquestionably hold it. Pic- tures and copy in for an issue the by the editorial associate. It is a berserk pastime. After attempting to be clever for several hours the associate loses control of himself and everything becomes hilari- -- thinking still remains to be done ,I 5 ously funny. Betty Jo, however, r - always manages to regain her per- BETTY JO EVERLY spective and emerge from a session with more than one person's share of the little things that make you chuckle. Hanna Hedrick is another associate with a high I.Q. CHI as in ideal. Among other things, the K.U. Country Club,', layout and captions, are hers. joan Woodward makes her first appearance as a jay- hawker contributor in this issue. A freshman, she has done well with her initial interview assignments and will prob- ably do more work in later issues. i If space permitted the secretaries of every organized house whose semester was filled with the constant compila- tion of some new list would be listed as contributors. Here we can only say their patience was appreciated. This issue also, thanks a former Kansas University man for its starting editorial. Guest writer, J. C. Nichols, so well known in Kansas City for his work in building up suburban areas that the Plaza now serves C. Nichols chop suey, speaks from experience and firm personal belief in his arti- cle, qThe Midwestern Frontier-p. 95J. 90 1 1 I 1 1 ' . Where lhere's always 0ME'l'lIlll THE JAYHAWKEP F . HAP f vw' left '- -. A ' woe V' vhvj . . ,,,, .. A H! IAA.: . -1 TE 0 A A Wiighraa Z ,f'l'4S9 M M5 vol 41004, o ' llooeNT'0N5 .1-'P4o7'9e4 9 CONV 23. 410 H I 'P MW. V A : A FINE 0 wwe ... I Swmmmc 52 fmt: .. 2201 FOR FTMNMENT- ' ... I ERCISE Even the engaged enjoy clos- - V . ing hours on Saturday night 05' ' at the Pi Phi house. 9 , st ot fe '41 otlxowixtl 'V i 0141004700141 C ,Q-OQXQ C25 ,. V I 4 ,470 ,KOR QPF i 'A -X4 4!C!4,44'0 Q 0.1 in Another innocent y o u n g All the conveniences of a metropolitan hotel are yours at the . :mai1Zthgid3E? g::eg:le::JEg house. Enchantress is Marion CO NTI N E NTA Henry, pledge- ln the midst of things in KANSAS CITY, MO. H. cnriov MANNING DIRECTION Southwest Hotels, Inc. R. E. MCEACHIN POWDER M 'AG 'G D 'mo by Lila ,Ivan Doughmun. .f f it ' ,,.. .,., , . , 1 ing:-ft - .5 41 . . :Q g ,Ml A Q. .,., D. ,I J . ,VA 1 ' '- p flesh! . XE 1 ,-.1, if .4 . , uul, X Q .ax i g PPROPRIATE to say the least was KAT Nancy Tom- il . .gs 5 fi linson's Valentine greeting to jim Roderick, Beta. The A f -- q,,, ::,. 4, V .-', ,, A 15. V , , , . H . H - QAI- xg inscription read- If I had the wings of an angel. You ' if-,Q 1' '--. Y.. , M I 5- f 3 5 V --,. A 3, wg D . :.:. i'f.: .i1,g iff. ifih . P 2 S, 5 A 11' A 1 it it can make your own substitutions. fi i i Tiff . ,fi 1 A if ir' - ii 'V H . . .- - 'X J Z' e Wonder of the Week: How Tom Bailey, affectionately ' Q J ' t called Fat Boy, casually refrains from embarrassment when ' 5 his Fiji brothers sing the phrase in a porch swing strong 7 ' Q . '- C enough for two-tonf' Q Q A ' - i C Best looking couple: Dorothy Warren and Kirk Scott. i 'W ' . Betty Coed nominee: Eleanor Churchill. Again, Kimball proves itself unequailed for sheer C P exhiloration . . . in o long scarf, bordered in flowers of exotic hue . . .p a Sfldff with the high purpose of making you pretty. Af all fine stores, about 32. Send today for bookletCN2 HeodV5quore Into High Fashion. 5 L, l.:...L..ll 9 EAST 38Il l STREET ' NEW YORK 16, N. Y. joe College winner: Kenny Danneburg. Man about Campus: Bud Eisenhower and even in the proverbial Sophomore Slump. Jane Eby, Alpha Chi, can kill two birds with one stone. It isn't every girl that wears one boy's ring and another's pin. It's plain to see that the ring isn't in her nose. Well, Melvin? These poor medics in the City are always the last to know. fCo121i1zuetl on Page 1521 FIBRUARY 1945 91 W o t C I1 F o r . . TI-IE EXTRA APRIL ISSUE of Your I945 JAYHAWKER ix? SI.0O TO SUBSCRIBERS SI.25 FDR SINGLE ISSUE 1--1 -it - fC aw I I VI I lVait'll he starts smoking his Sir Walter Raleigh- then go in and ask him fora raise. . W cleunmg, en, Write today, Brown A Williamson fobauo Corporation, lourxville I, Kentucky. Content The Good Earth ............. 90 by Lila Jean Doughman The Midwestern Frontier .... . 95 by J. C. Nu-hols Life Without Father. . . .... 96-97 hy R. .l. Atkinson Fraternities and Sororities. .98-119 The .layhawker Goes on a Serenade .............. 120-121 K. U. Country Club ....... 122-123 The Halls and Dorms Unite to Differ .................. 124 lnter-Dorm, Inter-Hall Councils .................. 125 lnrlepemlents .... ....... 1 26-133 Stale-Wille Activities, Student Union Activities ......... . .135 hy Pal Penney ,lay Janes, Ku Ku's .... . . .136 Mary Olive lllarshall, Dewey Nenlee ............. 137 by .Ioan Woodward 111011161115 Glee Cluh . . . . . .138 A Cappella Choir . . ..... 139 K. U. Politics ............. 140-141 lry Dean b ms Quaelc Club, Tau Sigma ....... 142 More Champions? ..... . ...... 143 hy .lim Moraly 1944 on the Kansas Gridiron .............. 144-145 by Earl Barney Tune in Yesterdayf, All-Music Vespers .......... 146 by Neal Woorlrull Grace Moore PorvV and 9 F. Bess .................... 147 hy Liz Baker Lonnie Kelley, Luther Buehele . 148 hy Pal Penney YWCA, YMCA cabinets ....... 149 Home Economics Club, ISA council .......... . . .150 Pan-Hellenic council, lnter- Fraternity council .... . . .151 1 THE JAYIIAWKEII Lllllll AT . .. THE INDEPENDENT MIDVEMENT HE new Independent Movement on the Hill is slowly emerging from its first amorphous state into what may be the. structure of a lasting and useful organization. Its four groups over the welfare, social life, political interests, and activities of the Independent student form a foundation at least for an over all reform of the Independent way of living. Legitimate doubts have been raised as to whether two of the four programs can even be started now. Will it be pos- sible to improve student living conditions and raise student wages in a war year? And will it be possible to increase social activities now? Acquainting Independent women with Independent men is a disheartening project when there are so few of the latter. It will soon be evident whether these points in the pro- gram can be developed this year. If they cannot, it is not important. The two real punches which the Movement packs relate to politics and activities. Although even in the minds of some Independents there is a question as to its advisability, the plan of the Movement is to unite all Independents in existing political parties into one large party - which will have a 200 majority over all remaining students in the Uni- versity. Greeks warn that such a union might bring back a Greek vs. Independent animosity which has not been charac- teristic of the campus for many years. The Independent seems to regard this professed drawback as a red herring- created by the Greeks in an attempt to stop something which may mean their political downfall. But surely the Independent cannot so easily dispense with the possibility that in the long run, he will not profit-that when the first year's general enthusiasm for the new Movement dies down, the Greeks with their faculty for requiring votes can win over a larger but less active Independent electorate. As for the activity reform, the small booklet planned by the Movement explaining the process of becoming a part of every Hill activity will unquestionably be of great service li Xi! x Xeklf' and convenience to the Independent student. XWith this silent butler pledge trainer, the freshman Independent will at least know when and what is going on his first se- mester, instead of slowly learning of activities after months on the Hill. But, even if the booklet is printed year after year, it is doubtful that 'more leaders will appear among the Inde- pendent students. There are today fully as many Inde- pendent leaders as Greek leaders-a check with the blue pages of a student directory proves that. For the truth is that a pledge trainer's prodding does not make a leader. It may increase the number of names from a house which ap- pear on staff lists over the campus, but it cannot make a freshman dynamic, tireless, and valuable to an organization. These prerequisites for student leadership-in both the Greek and Independent, have always depended upon the in- dividual, they will continue to do so, in spite of all the pledge trainers and activity manuals in the world. TIIE POINT SYSTEM The University used to have a point system, a graded checking arrangement whereby a capacity of individual participation in activities was set. Wfhen an individual reached this capacity, he either stopped joining things, or he resigned from something to balance up new activities. The University had this system and it died-from atrophy. Now it is being considered again by the All Student Council. Few things seem so unquestionably desirable. Under our existing system, a relatively few people are doing everything, not because they are covetous of all the high positions on the campus, but because early in their college careers they did something well, and since, organiza- tions have been piling jobs on them, knowing the work will be done. This system works a hardship on the few, but more important, it works a hardship on the University. A student is not particularly interested in the welfare of his school-unless he has the feeling that he personally is in part responsibile for its functioning. This is a feeling that should be passed around-and could be easily by a lCwzZinzfed 011 Page 1642 Twp: Antoorc ---'- Meinlwcrs nf thc University V-ll miss one night Top: . . . anti so was liar tlauiglitcr. l grit-wr, Ths tag licnil flux Of love to hear thc famous mmanol tnnvinccs Mike Kulilcnslci that Clih' wasnt laiiltlinu. Carrier: Fretl Ellsworth presents the alumni uwartl to returning Carrier: All in it quiet uftcrnmm at the Plii Psi lwusc. gI'1lLlLl21I2. Etta Moten. V I . A b Baffin' Santa Claus' lwcllwr. Virginia Urlmri. tluliwrs 11 gilt tn Bffffffl MDW fllls Wldurc WHS mlien I-ll Blllicl' ll-'S mmvl ln- Holm Gnvc git the Ciillilllkl Plmi Cliristiniis imrfv. Roll lirmllcy looks lC.l1allc unc up for X7-IT1Llll.l us fllULIjlll lic knows it's gi Snmll 11lllAL1.lflJl'. K .mf wwf, M4 A . A-www www- K MIIIWE 'PER Fllll 'PIER We are proud that our country has done the impossible to prepare for war. We have done a job that nobody but a free people could do. But can we gird ourselves to prepare for peace on the same grand scale? With the same determination and wholeheartedness of every citizen of our great country? In these days when a total peace may be a long way off, it is time to think what we can do to keep our country on an even keel-growing, and prospering. Here in the Middle Wfest a great industrial giant lies sleeping. A giant that can be awakened, and the post-war provides us with opportunity for such awakening. We can and must balance agri- culture and industry. The men and women who pioneered our great Middle West knew nothing of the tremendous wealth lying beneath the fertile soil, the oil and gas deposits, the salt mines, the lime rock deposits, the forests of fine timber, the 53 billion tons of coal reserves, the possibilities of our great fields of clay, and sand. Industry is our undeveloped frontier. We have space, cheap fuel, water, mineral and agricul- tural resources sufncient to support many small and great industries. We are accessible to both coasts as well as to our northern and southern borders by rail and air. We have great waterways already improved, we have a splendid network of paved highways. Now, what do we lack? It has been charged we lack the industrial know-how.'l But today we have proved ourselves. Our industrialists have been as quick to convert to War production as any. Our industries are going full-blast in this emergency, and can continue. Do we lack skilled labor? Before the war our young men worked on farms, and eastern industrialists claimed they knew nothing else. Now, the same industrialisrs tell us their experience with our farm-trained, 90 percent American born, labor has opened their eyes and that these boys are quicker to learn industrial skills than their city-born-and- bred cousins. What must we do then to awaken our sleeping industrial giant and make the Middle West hum with industry, to bring into use our vast reservoir of resources, to make jobs in the post-war period? We mm! manufacture. We must cease to send our raw materials to far distant places to be pro- cessed. We must not allow our population to be drained away merely for the lack of opportunity to work. We must bring the work here for them-use our own raw resources-give our people em- fC0nlimfed on Page 1572 96 LIF WITHU T VERY year in nearly every organized house, enough money to throw a very happy party is wasted on things that go bad, get broken, or simply disintegrate through both normal and abnormal circumstances. The number of things that can go wrong in one of these places is directly propor- tional to one thousand times the square of the number of people per abode. While this doesnt include an occasional collision with another planet, it does account for both collisions and collusions of other opposing forces. These opposing forces are often in the nature of fraternity- sorority feuds. In any of the battles that ensue these engage- ments of friendly strife, plaster seems to detach itself from its natural resting place, table and floor lamps settle to the floor in piecemeal fashion to think things over, enough nap emerges from the rug to give the whole affair an Angora effect, and overstuffed furniture loses many a pound on an accelerated diet. Probably the even more disconcerting is the adverse situation arising from bad plumbing. W'hen a sewer system becomes clogged in habitats as large as most of the organ- fr YH 7 ,,,, t 9-n-fmb sf' 'gk U N X i X l 3 XX .9 tx ....... V bg, l Q ' s F' . S -' X S ,', W -. , rertiil r in i ' m.o.mmxsr1fw- T II li .l A Y H A W K E K ' ' f f . -KW -filllljffll f FATHER ized houses, the trouble is neither soon nor easily eradicated. and, until these drains have been reopened, the use of all plumbing facilities is prohibited. Unless the group in dis- tress wishes to hear the Lifebouy foghorn at every turn, it must resort to either one of two things. The first alternative is a cologne-shaving lotion-talcum powder-under arm deodorant bath in which one odor 'is played against the other. The pungency of this aroma is about on a par with the stopped-up sewerage. Both are easily discernible up to twenty-five yards. As the last resort, members are forced to don robes, grab their towels, and remove themselves en masse to Robinson gymnasium and have a shower on the Univer- sity. How the rest of the difficulties due to faulty modern conveniences are to be overcome is usually left to the indi- vidualls ingenuity. Before the war when these facilities were restored to normal-a celebration was in order. Probably a water fight. A prewar-sixty-man-waterfight was a water spout magnified several times. With buckets being emptied here and there, several garden hoses being played around, and overflowing tubs and basins running unchecked, moisture became rather deep. What didnt go straight through from one floor to the next went boiling down the stairs. This was a sight re- mindful of the fish ladders on the Columbia river, lacking only the salmon. However, many poor fish, wet to the gills, filled in nicely. Then of course there are the winter months when Mt. Oread is cold and nearly as breezy as the wind tunnel at Lockheed, the furnace will somehow manage to go on strike. When the call boy for girl as the case may lcej drags a sleeping form from a warm bunk on a cool January morn- ing, the prostrate figure usually jerks to life and leaves the dormitory in a mad dash for a warm room. Upon reaching the aforementioned room the hapless person usually bolts inside and emits a long sigh of relief. At this time of the day there is nothing quite so alarming as to see this sigh lazily float across the room in the form of a white fog. There is only one thing left to do and that is to seek warmth in a hot shower, but unfortunately the heating plant and hot water plant are usually tied in together for opera- tion economy. The screams of horror that emit from the FEBRU-XRY 19-15 showers these mornings are remindful of those made by people who lean out too far to look down three thousand foot precipices. Fraternities and their broad expanses of living rooms are often thought quite the place to stage athletic events or intramural football practices on cold days. The hgures on the losses of arms and legs are appalling. Of course everyone is thankful that these limbs are the former parts of tables and chairs and were not being worn by the participants. The long corridors on the second and third floors of these houses are often tempting to the golfer who feels he needs a few practice shots or to the baseball pitcher who wants to get his arm in shape. There is a very small animal which innocently leaves de- struction in its wake. These rodents produce opposite re- actions in men and womens dormitories. When one is dis- covered by a woman-before the piercing screams of mice has ceased to echo through the halls, nearly every occupant in the house is pushing her long spiked heels through the upholstery and bumping study lamps to the floor in her mad scramble for safer heights. However, in a mens dorm, the cry of mice is a signal to join chase. Armed with hockey sticks, brooms, ball bats, shoes, and shotguns residents light out. Upsetting desks, dresses, tables, chairs and anything else which happens to be in the path-the sterner sex con- tinues the mad pursuit until the mouse has been taken- dead or alive! A final problem which we shall discuss pads the expense account of the organized house most certainly-but is unique in that it exists over and above actions of the inmates them- selves. This problem disturbs, of course, only those houses hiring help from outside their own ranks. It is the cook situation. The easiest way to keep a chef is to pay her S100 per week, let her come to work at noon, take an hour off for lunch, and quit at one. Then, of course, some kind of recreational facilities must be made available for her free time. A ping pong table, a two lane bowling alley with the house president and the housemother to set pins, and a com- bination checkers-chess-backgammon-roulette table which automatically serves Tom Collins every hour on the hour will suffice. That is, until Cookie starts screaming about class preju- dice. If a seat at the head of the table won't work, the house is forced to present her a gift. For good taste it must be neither too large nor too small. Though this eliminates mountain ranges and paramecia specimens, it does not hope- lessly narrow the field. A thousand dollar war bond has the simple dignity desired. A card such as, To the One Whrm Cooks Our Goose, should do very nicely. 97 1 . O L Dio 05,5 4 is O 0 a 6 O ti 0 I 0 O 0 0 K 11 O b n 0 J O l 0 1 0 I , J Co 0 6 O O O I 4 h O O , C I I O fj fl 0 s O in U O f O O o o ,, nf-Y L yr :I . C 4 O 0 fi O o 0 u 1 t, 0 a . x I Q K. -O I O '..! dia-S5 0: JO O O Q 5 lil OO Q Q !-I, 1 I u ifllliiii l i o ' Qi VU . 6 ' SOAP IVYN Oo O O A , ' x , . , 3 i x. L' X1 l f ij t 4, i L 'A f 0 A O up O ff 4 i 1. . O yx' L l-is tw i , o O C U O O W ll il Oo LV fs O KX' 5 I ' 5 U 0 0 O ll O xwlllllllil x ,I lu 1 xl 0 A D D 6 UA J 0 o A l O O O 00 ' O A A V x 0 I 0 0 to 0 ff X U 1 f 0 0 , C I X U ll KN fl X , 9 tl L-, - on o maast-sau if, L- qi fb O L o 1 X I . C 0 1 Lf Although these arent nearly all of the little items which pad the expense accounts of the organized houses, neverthe- less it is enough to show that if people are just left to their own and their cooks devices they will cause more destruction and bring about more added expense than any of the mighty and unconquerable forces of nature. fx i is KA bn li l ls rl, , lil lx IL . f. , f V m 5. OO CQ ,XZ ...., Q , k:0.: 0::o 4 A, 1 o l 0: I A ir, ' :E:ii::. NPVY .zonal . ,iihwl N Qi , on 0 , i ' '. Q 9 6 X ' 0 0. H '. 'O V MH i ii ' s..it -'eff s QL N T X fe' .c wuz' J- -1 'TvB'm-i-.x f Left to right-First row: Drais, Durr, Gardner, Vfaters, Anderson, Friesen, Giles, Rendleman, Parshall, Ford. Second row: Ball, Asher, Teeter, Hammett Barnium, Sherrard, Power, Reed, Boxemeyer, Hall, Steeper, Holland, Mossman. Third row: Gill, Davis, Eby, Cowan, Rosenau, Ecord, Fuller, Smith, Hall Neuer Harris, Logan, Russell. Vogt. Fourth row: Dixon, McKee, Sweeney, Hamel, Richmond, Brown, Ackerman, Johnson, Haines, Bean. E LPH1-l CHI UMEGA A. w' A,-re Lfozfi-.0112 .Wh g 41 ,Ui lil 0, t . :.-5, .t . -t Y. 0-'Sf'!t, a '5'J'2'.f if dffffdgt , J J 5, Mbit Alpha Chi Omega was ,founded Uctulmr 15, 1885, at DePauw University, Greencastle, Ind. Phi, now one of 07 urtire chapters, urns established at thr- University in the full of 1914. KINTZEL The leisure of learning. OFFICERS Prefialenz . . V1L'6'P76J1lIl67Zf . Treamfev' . . Secretary . . Joan Power . Cleo Rein . . Nancy Reed . Margaret Fesler PLEDGES ,lane Anderson, Lawrence Mary Lee Asher, Sterling Charmin Bean, Kansas City Peggy Durr, Olathe Barbara Ford, Osborne Rachel Fuller, Beloit Marjorie Gardner, Arkansas City Beverly jean Gill, Fort Scott ,lo Ellen Hall, Kansas City, Mo. Frankie Holland, Kansas City ACT Alice Ackerman, Kansas City Betty Ann Ball, Newton Barbara Barnjum, Halstead Penelope Boxemeyer, Overland Park Eleanor Brown, Kansas City, Mo, Ann Cowan, Wicllita Virginia Davis, Newton Doris Dixon, Kansas City Sarah Lee Drais, St. Joseph, Mo. jane Eby, Lawrence Evamay Ecord, Burlington Margaret Fesler, Sedan Eileen Friesen, Cheney Eileen Giles, Abilene Martha Haines, Kansas City mm Margaret Logan, Garden City Mariel Luckens, Wichita Margaret McKee, Kansas City Martha Neuer, Kansas City, Mo. Nancy Parshall, Kansas City, Mo. Betty Rendleman, Olathe Ruth Richmond, Fort Scott Marilyn Rosenau, Eudora Beth Russell, Lawrence Evelyn Vogt, Newton IVES Barbara Hall, Kansas City, Mo. Suzanne Hamel, St. Joseph, Mo. Annella Hammett, Kansas City, Mo Audrey Harris, St. joseph, Mo. Barbara Johnson, Eudora Vivian Mossman, Kansas City ,loan Power, Beloit Nancy Reed, Grove, Okla. Cleo Rein, Russell Barbara Sherrard, Beloit Peggy Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Margaret Steeper, Lawrence Muriel Swanson, Kansas City, Mo. Jane Sweeney, Crawford, N. J. Lorraine Teeter, Hutchinson Beverly jane Waters, Fargo, N. D. M Mvmmmm,away W Left to Right-First Row: Holman, Schindling, Miniard, Land, Haver, Biggs, Neel, Geiger. Cooper, Keeler. Second Roux' Benscheidt. Kaufmann, Isern Wagner, Hollabaugh, Stutz, Clawson, Sellers, Scott, Sartori, Hardman. Third Ro Holzman, Sluss, Shryock, DeAtmond, Presbury, Zuercher, Shaw, Howell, Rice, Hazlett, Knuth. Sanford, Custer. Fourth Roux' Robertson, Spring, Acher, McLean, Balocca, Logsdon, Cox, Hall. Ableson. Hinds, Russell, Crandall, Norton, Nieweg. 0 F F I C E R S Prefillen! .........,.. Thelma Stutz Vice-Prefillefzl . . Elizabeth Clawson Secretary . . .... Mary Hardman Treamrer . . Mary Louise Hollabaugh PLEDGES Evelyn Ableson, Kansas City, Mo. Shirley Acher, Lawrence Beverly Balocca, Paola Jeanne Cooper, Lawrence Laurilla Cox, Parsons Eloise Crandall, Sylvia Dolores Custer, Wichita Pearl Geiger, Paola Rosemary Hall, Weston, Mo. Kathryn Haver, El Dorado Virginia Hazlett, Lawrence Sylvia Hinds, Topeka Marian Howell, Coffeyville ACTI Betty June Bacon, Lakewood, Ohio Dayle Benscheidt, Hutchinson Peggy Sue Biggs, Ponca City, Okla. Elizabeth Clawson, Ponca City, Okla. Melba DeArmond, Kansas City, Mo. Mary Dickinson, Lawrence Mary Hardman, Leavenworth Mary Hollabaugh, Wichita Jeanne Holman, Leavenworth Mary jane Holzman, Springfield, Mo. Betty lsern, Ellinwood Jean Kaufmann, Leavenworth Anabel Keeler, Lawrence Jean Knuth, Kansas City, Mo. Lucile Land, Lee's Summit, Mo. Martha McLean, Kansas City, Mo. Murice Miniard, Holton Mary Neel, Topeka Teresa Norton, Salina Ruth Presbury, Fairfax, Okla. Mary Lois Rice, Butler, Mo. Beverly Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. Sara Russell, Liberty, Mo. Dorothy Savage, Independence, Joan Schindling, Leavenworth Mo. ALPHA llIlL'l'A Pl Jacquetta Shaw, Holton -tree' Luau ,aff 1 X 34 V E S af, Carol Lembeck, Leavenworth '- Suzanna Logsdon, Lawrence ' Barbara Nieweg, Leavenworth Leatha Sanford, Lawrence Frances Sartori, Kansas City, Mo. Lois Elaine Scott, Topeka Bobette Sellers, Paola V Nfgflofle ShfY0Ck, Kansas CNY, NIO- Alpha lleltu Pi wus fuulzrlezl llay 15. 1351. ul lf'1-slr-yan Female College, ghia -lliagnsslgslf' JIIICIIII Ca., llIllll'f the mum' of the Adelplleun Society. Tau, non' one of 64 , 0 Tliellma Suiz Erica urrire clzuptz-rs, was l'SllllIIiShf'!l al the llIlll'f'I'Sllj' in 1012. Charlotte Wagner, Ellinwood Barbara Zuercher, Wichita 1 1 KINTZEL 'Vt Don't fence me in. ,l'Q9 M OFFICERS Prefiffeilf . . . . Janet Sloan Vice-Prerialefzi . . Geraldine Gentry Treayzncif' .... . Maguerita Kerschen Recording Secretary . . Helen June Wise PLEDGES janet Belt, Lawrence Wilma Bown, Kansas City Nancy Cook, Lawrence Phyllis Good, Perry Rose Hosking, Kansas City Helen Mather, Kansas City Mary Beth Jepson, Oskaloosa Sara Ann Jones, Garden City Helen Lawrence, Ottawa Carol Long, Kansas City Helen Mather, Kansas City Sidney Mayfield, Hutchinson Ruth McXX'illiams, Kansas City Bette Pearce, Duluth, Minn. Beverly Reitz, Olathe Rowena Robe, Ottawa Mary Sedlock, Kansas City Mary Stark, Perry Frances Zajic, Gashland, Mo. ALPH lllllICPt0 Pl .Z X' A 9 93 I JQQE 1' ' E . e.,t:, ,,agH N Alpha Umir-ron Pi was founded December 8, 1897, at Barnard College, New York City, N. Y. Phi, now one of 50 uvlivv chapters, was established at the l,7ni1'vrsity in 1914. After dinner din. KINTZEL ACTIVES Dorothy Deem, Lawrence Mary Margaret Gaynor, Kansas City Virginia Miller, Alexander Patricia Sloan, Kansas City, Mo. Norma Deem, Oneida Geraldine Gentry, Neodesha Elizabeth Ann Schieber, Kelma Smith, Bigelow Dcris Dunkley, Lawrence Alice jean Harrison, Lawrence Bonner Springs Ruth Stallard, Perry Marvel Eno, Parsons Marguerita Kerschen, Matianthal Janet Sloan, Kansas City, Mo. jo Ann Tindall, Hoisington Marilyn Voth, Goessel Helen June XX7ise, Lawrence Lorraine Witt, Russell Kerschen, Smith. Third row: Belt. Pierce, Good. -1 223. 'Qi Lefl to rigb!-First rouu' Hosking, Robe, Deem, Stark, Sedlock, D. Deem, Lawrence, Tindall. Second rouu' Harrison, Dunkley, Schieber. Gentry, J. Sloan, Wise, Stallard, Jepson, Long, Eno. Bown, Miller, Witt, P. Sloan, Gaynor. Fourth row: Voth, Mayfield, Jones, Reitz, Zajic, McWilliams, fa 3 .j 1,,,h i ' f r - -Q fe 'Q it il C M llE'l'il 'l'llE'I'll Pl ,Q-we ' rf! aff li 5.2-9 ri j BGH i lic-lu 'flmla l'i :mx f0llllll1'1l ul llliruni lvllilVl'l'Silj', Uxforrl. Ohio. in 13311 llplm Nu. noir our of 'Ili 1'lmpl1'l's. :mx vslulrlishvrl ut the finirvrsitj' in 11572 No jelly. but jam. KlN'lZlil, 1 ix x xl' Charles Betsher, Eureka Lelancl Bohl, Kansas City W'alker Butin, Chanute james Calkins, Kansas City Daniel Chase, Parsons Lindley Chase, Parsons lirank Davis, Denver, Colo. Donald Diehl, Smith Center Robert Ellsworth, Lawrence Clarence Engle, Topeka Robert Freeto, Pittsburg A C T I V E S Llion Hoff, Kansas City Clyde Jacobs, Herington Yifilliam johnson, Kansas City, Mo, Howard joseph, Whitewater Melvin Kettner. Hutchinson Charles McGill, Kansas City, Mo. Xlifilliam Mowery, Salina George Nettels, Pittsburg Robert Neustrom. Kansas City Wfenciell Nickell, Smith Center FICERS Premiefzt ......... . ' Sidney Wfalker Vice-Preritferzf . . XVilliam Mowery Secfelmy . Robert Ellsworth Trea.i'znfe1' . Clarence Engle E D G E S john McEvers, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Schwanzle, Pittsburg Carl Murray, El Dorado John Stites, Wichita Frank Raab, Kansas City Richard Thomas, Tulsa, Okla. John Robinson, Kansas City. Mo. james Roderick, Wetmore James Sargent, Wichita William Schell, Wichita Earl Sifers, Iola jerry Simpson, Salina William Spencer, Pittsburg Sidney Walker, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Weber, Kansas City William West, Wichita Neal Wfoodruff, Kansas City, Mo. Lefl io right-First roux' Wfest, Sifers, Butin, Engle, Xwalker, Mowery, Ellsworth. Woodruff. Roderick. Second rouu' Nettels. Spencer. McGill. Robinson, Hoff Freeto, Diehl, Sargent, Nickell, Bohl, L. Chase. Calkins, Kettncr. Third faux' Wfeber, Jacobs. Simpson. Davis. Joseph. Neustrom, D. Chase. Thomas, Stites Schwanzle. Murray. McEvers, Raab. PIQEDGES Left lo right-Firsl rozr: Moffett, Gilliland. M. Smith, Cody. Kufahl, Atkinson, Legler, Craig, Sigman, Belt. Second row: Diggs, Burkhead Pollock, Bohan Gore, Kreider, Nettels, Reynolds, Faubion, Hatch, Brown. Third rouu' Ott, Betty Smith, Curtis, Larsen, Kern, Nichols, Shankland. Holden, Coolidge, Duemcke Rolley. Karr, Crawford, Gear. Fourth rnuu' Mahin. Young, Thomas, Nees, Barcroft, Houck, Henry, Baker, Cadwalader, O'Neil, Barbara Smith, Sweeney, McClure Thorpe, Taylor. KINTZIEL Bright flight. ifiww, ' 351 if Q sift-.4 gif Chi Omega was founded April 5. HI05, ut the lfnivvrsity of Arkansas. Lambda, now one of 97 active chapters, was establishurl at the University in 1930. CHI IINIEGA Prerirlenz . ........ Margaret Kreider Vice-President . . Marian Montgomery Treasurer . . . . . Patricia Gore Secretary . . Mary Nettels Patricia Belt, Lawrence Ann Cadwalader, Topeka Rose Nell Curtis, loal Meredith Gear, Guymon, Okla. Marion Henry, Battle Creek, Mich. Bonnie Holden, Pittsburg Sally Houck, Independence Virginia Larsen, Kansas City Joyce Mahin, Bartlesville, Okla. Barbara Moffett, Kansas City, Mo. Patricia Nees, Independence Margaret O'Neil, Leavenworth Patricia Rolley, Holton Janet Taylor, Topeka Dorthea Thomas, Pittsburg ACTIVES Jeanne Atkinson, Kansas City Elizabeth Baker, Larned Barbara Barcroft, Seattle, Wash. Beverly Bohan, Coifeyville Alice Louise Brown, Wichita Dona Burkhead, Wichita Helen Clickner, Hutchinson Jean Cody, Clay Center Patricia Coolidge, Estes Park. Colo, Betty Craig, Wichita Shirley Crawford, Lyons Virginia Sue Diggs, Coifeyville Betty Duemcke, Coffeyville Martha Euler, Topeka Jeanne Faubion, Kansas City, Mo. Dixie Gilliland, Ottawa Patricia Gore, El Dorado Louise Hatch, Kansas City, Mo, Ernestine Karr, Paola Marjorie Kern, Leavenworth Margaret Kreider, Lawrence Katharine Kufahl, Emporia Neil Legler, Leavenworth Madelon McClure, El Dorado Marian Montgomery, Kansas City, Mo. Mary Nettels, Pittsburg Betty Nichols, Topeka Margaret Ott, Ottawa Marjorie Pollock, Kansas City, Mo Mary Margaret Reynolds, Iola Alice Shankland, Kansas City Patricia Sigman, Kansas City, Mo. Barbara Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Betty Smith, Lawrence Mary Margaret Smith, Colby Marilyn Sweeney, Pittsburg Barbara Thorpe, Clay Center Anna Jeannette Young, Concordia 6 gal IA Lx. An. , ta it ,ac 4.-... ,sawi- Lefl to right-First row: McCleary, Miller, Esterle, Manley, Ashby, Carpenter, Crisp, Hartwell, Vance, Cochner. Kintzel, Second row: Severson, Stuart, Wor- sley, Kile, Creel, Bixby, Ryan, Payne, Marks, Sanden, Marks. Third row: Gray, Abbott, Cornwell, Small, Thiele, Jones, Saffortl, Johnson, Oswalt, Horme, Oel- schlaeger, Faucett, Lincoln, Mathews. Fourth rouv Bixby, Nig, Johnson, Waggoner, Gorrill, Corlett, Garvey, Harris, Smith, Morris, Replogle, Beach. DELTA GAMMA OFFICERS President ...... Vice-Preritienz . Secretary .... Chapter Treamref . H Ozzie Treamrer . . . , . . . Doris Bixby . Betty Leibbrand . . Ruth Payne . Rosemary Ryan . Patricia Creel PLEDGES Patricia Abbott, Wichita Shirley Corlett, Kansas City, Mo. Elizabeth Esterle, Kansas City, Mo. Wanda Fausett, Osawatomie Olivia Garvey, Wichita Virginia Gorrill, Lawrence Bebe Horine, Wichita LaRue Johnson, Salina Guynelle Jones, Kansas City Armilda Lincoln, Liberty, Mo. Nancy Lowe, Blue Springs, Mo, ACT Robyn Ashby, Lawrence Elizabeth Beach, Kansas City, Mo. Doris Bixby, Valley Center Elizabeth Bixby, Valley Center Mildred Carpenter, Lawrence Virginia Cochner, Kansas City, Mo. Alberta Cornwell, Lawrence Patricia Creel, Topeka Frances Crisp, Cofleyville Mary Ann Gray, Seneca Paula Harris, Kansas City, Mo. Joyce Hartwell, Wichita Joanne johnson, Kansas City, Mo. Barbara Kile, Hutchinson Dorothy Kintzel, Wichita Betty Leibbrand, Lawrence Nancy Jean McCleary, Excelsior Springs, Mo. Mary Mathews, Kansas City, Mo. Patricia Miller, Topeka Carolyn N igg, Wlhitewater Shirley Oelschlaeger, Kansas City, Mo. Eleanor Smith, Butler, Mo. Patricia Vance, Kansas City, Mo. Mary Jane Waggoner, Baxter Springs IVES Patricia Manley, Stanley Leeta Marks, Valley Falls Sarah Marks, Valley Falls Donna Jean Morris, Oskaloosa Marilyn Nigg, Whitewater Bonnie Oswalt, Garden City Ruth Payne, Oskaloosa Burnett Replogle, Cottonwood Falls Muriel Rodgers, Lawrence Rosemary Ryan, Kansas City Dorothy jean Salford, Augusta Betty Ann Sanden, Iola Faith Severson, Augusta Sylvia Small, Kansas City, Mo. Carol Stuart, Neosho, Mo. Barbara Thiele, Kansas City, Mo. Sarah Jane Worsley, Salina And how many nightcaps are there in this picture? P 1 ., X x ii. ' l As, izitf M52-fsf ,- Q7-771 7 Delta Gamma zrus f0UI1lll'll Junuury 2, 1871, ut Lewis School, Oxford Miss. Beta Kappa, now one of 57 active chapters, was estublislwcl at lhv L'uirersity in the full ol 1940. LTA 'MU DELTA Fifi ia A 'ff E is G 3 'Wm 4 -T i , we -.. Delta Tau Dvltu was foundz-al in 1859. ut Bolhuny College in Virginia. Cunxma Tau, now one of 76 ar'ti1'0 !'lIflllIlPTS, it-us vxmlflislzvrl at Ihr' University' in 1911 Q Y s Le!! lo rigbl-Firsl rouu' Weiser, Cain, Moore, Wendlandt, Marshall, Moffett, Mordy, Hall, Frisbie. Second roux' P. Stockton, Lessenden, Stinson, Allbaugh Miner, Stallard, Spangler, Fleagle, Stimson, Pro, Stutz, Douglass, Schwartz, Gunther. Third row: Wheatcroft, Lindley, Froom, Emerson, Hartley, Baker, S. Stockton Eberlin, Lindquist, Terry, Clemens. OFFICERS PLEDGES PW-fiflenf - ---- - - Wllllilln Mafsllilll Charles Allbaugh,Richland Charles Froom,Vermillion Vice-Prefiriwzl . . Charles Moffett Treawrer .... . James Mordy Recording Secretary ........ Robert Moore Hand to 4- Combat. Stanley Cain, Caney Patrick Clemens, Pittsburg Richard Ebbert, Kansas City, Mo. Thomas Eberlin, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Emerson, Topeka David Frisbie, Kansas City john Gunther, Leavenworth Robert Lindley, Kansas City, Mo. Elmer Lindquist, Lawrence Edgar Miner, Hays Maynard Terry, Junction City William Weiser, Kansas City, Mo ACTIVES Willis Baker, Pleasanton Charles Douglass, Kansas City Robert Elbel, Lawrence Ralph Fleagle, Lawrence Charles Hall, Junction City Philip Hartley, Wichita Dorwin Lamkin, Hudson, Wis. Glen Lessenden, Lawrence William Marshall, Bonner Springs Charles Mofietr, Peabody Robert Moore, Lawrence james Mordy, Fredonia Phillip Pine, Lawrence Wilbur Pro, Pawnee Rock Dean Schwartz, Blue Rapids Donald Spangler, Belleville Wayne Stallard, Lawrence David Stimson, Kansas City, Mo. Eugene Stinson, Kansas City, Mo. Phillip Stockton, Lawrence Stansbury Stockton, Lawrence Richard Stutz, Topeka Frank Wendlandt, Heringron Jackson Wheatcroft, Junction City ll LTA UI' lL0 T350 X .t , -gi, : .f X . X C y ii? .,'A 3, V I 'rt'-5 5 , I Delta Upsilon was founded in 1834, at Williams College in Massachusetts. The local Kanza Club, now one of 61 active chapters, was establislwrl at the University in 1920. Lefl to righl: Reeder, Bunnel, Higdon, Steinhauer, Ruggles, Buechel, Nelson, Ehrlich, Paulsen, Henry. PLEDGES OFFICERS Rex Paulsen, Zenith Alvin Steinhauer, Berwin, Ill. Robert Unger, Dayton, Ohio ACTIVES Robert Buechel, Wichita Kenneth Higdon, Kansas City, Mo. Keith Bunnel, Humboldt Bentley Nelson, Kansas City, Mo. Karl Ehrlich, Coldwater Willard'Reeder, Kansas City Clarke Henry, Wichita William Ruggles, Lawrence President . . Robert Buechel Secretary . Kenneth Higdon DIXON These boys rake it in. KINTZEL Back to somebody's brother, GAMMA PHI BETA rr sy Ffr-i'.-f up 9 D A :Qui f. l ian- ,. - . 1- t X.,- iif Q'Wlf':. P 13.2 l . , ., J H 5-ilfaalfllf-il . '-.,- ' 1-A.: .. ., . ,. x' A f.' 'sf 'Je' 'A iz3's4- lr? fdlllllllld Phi Bela was fllllllllf-'ll ilY0l'0lIlIH?l' 11, 1874, ut Syracuse lhirersity. Sigma, now one of 52 uctirv clmplvrx, was established at llw Univer- .sily in 1915. OFFICERS Preridemf . . . Marianne Glad Vice-Plreridenl . . Helen Pepperell Secrelary . . . Joanne Johnson Tremwer . . . . Jane Owen 'mm' '. -if , ,. l 'YP . ,MVN 4, .,., A- R. 'alfa . Q.. if , Q, ' 9' ga Q P B. Ann Brown, Lawrence Jeanne Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Elizabeth Evans, Winfield Elaine Falconer, Kansas City Dorothy Feldkamp, Kansas City Sara Heil, Topeka Joan Hendrickson, Kansas City Barbara Hindenach, Independence Joan Hise, Mission Peggy Howard, Coffeyville Geralee Kreider, Chanute A Jane Atwood, Kansas City, Mo. Lee Blackwill, Wamego Shirley Carl, Cherryvale Joan Carr, Kansas City, Mo. Marjorie Cooper, El Dorado Beverly Gaines, Lawrence Leatrice Gibbs, Kansas City Marianne Glad, Pratt Elizabeth Hall, Kansas City Mary Tudor Hanna, Lawrence Joanne Johnson, Rosiclare, Ill. Hazel Jones, Omaha, Nebr. Maxine Kelley, Hutchinson Mazzie Lane, Coffeyville Betty Learned, Boston, Mass. Roberta Sue McCluggage, Topeka Marian Miller, Erie LEDGES Glenda Luehring, Leavenworth Mary Ann McClure, Kansas City, Mo Jeane Quaney, Chanute Marjorie Reich, Kansas City, Mo. Mary Schnitzler, Wichita Jo Ellen Shirley, Chanute Sheila Stryker, Fredonia Judith Tihen, Wichita Bonnie Veatch, Kansas City Joan Vickers, Lawrence Norma Whittaker, Iola CTIVES Patricia Miller, Lawrence Ann Moorhead, Sabetha Mignon Morton, Nortonville Anna Frances Muhlenbruch, Argonia Geraldine Nelson, Kansas City Gloria Nelson, Kansas City Betty Jo O'Neal, Ponca City, Okla. Shirley Otter, Norton Jane Owen, Kansas City Helen Pepperell, Wichita Elizabeth Pile, Winfield Mary Lou Shinkle, Paola Billye Simmons, Sublette Emily Jane Stacey, Lawrence Virginia Urban, Lucas Jane Woestemeyer, Lawrence Anne Zimmerman, Kansas City, Mo. Left to right--First row: Carl, Hindenach, P. Miller, Kelley, Vickers, Learned, Leuhring, Kreider, Brown, Howard, Carr, Zimmerman. Second rouu' McClug gage, Simmons, Jones, Owen, Pepperell, Glad, Pile, Moorhead, Shinkle, Nelson, Morton. Third row: Hise, Stacey, Heil, Stryker, Hendrickson, Feldkamp, Tihen G. Nelson, Otter, Reich, Muhlenbruch, Gibbs, Quaney, Schnitzler, Shirley. Fourth row: Veatch, Woestemeyer, Urban, Cooper, Whittaker, Atwood, Blackwill McClure, Lane, J. Brown, Falconer, Perkins, Evans, M. Miller, Hanna. PLEDGES Mary Alford, Sioux City, Iowa Suzanne Blessington, Wellington Gladys Blue, Emporia Martha Bonebrake, Wichita Doris Doane, El Dorado Mary Elizabeth Faulders, Wichita Barbara I-Iaffner, Kansas City, Mo. Frances Hodges, Olathe Kathryn Maloney, Wichita Frances Maloney, Wichita Eileen O'Connor, Wichita Margaret Peacock, Ottawa Kate Roberts, Kansas City, Mo. Anne Scott, Pratt Marilyn Smart, Lawrence Rebecca Vallette, Beloit Virginia Winter, Lawrence Alice Wright, Topeka Martha Yingling, Wichita ACTIVES Aileen Ainsworth, Kansas City, Mo. Patricia Armel, Lawrence Mariette Bennett, Ottawa Nancy Brown, Bartlesville, Okla. Catherine Burchfield, Tulsa, Okla. Marilyn Carlson, Blue Rapids Mary Donovan, Kansas City, Mo. Lila Jean Doughman, Wichita Marjorie Fadler, Pittsburg Jean Fergus, Wichita Marion Hasty, Wichita Winifred Ice, Newton Virginia Kline, Emporia Frances Lawrence, Lawrence Norma Lutz, Dodge City Dorthe McGill, Kansas City, Mo. Mary Ruth Murray, El Dorado Virginia Neal, Kansas City, Mo. Nancy Neville, Kansas City, Mo. Left to right-First faux' McGill, Haffner, Bonebrake, Ice, Blessington, Russell, Bennett. Tomlinson, Teichgraeber, Woodward. Doughman, Rowsey, ArmeL O'Connor, Wells, Stucker. Burchfield, Regier, Wagstaff, Blue, Roberts, Brown, Donovan, Hodges, O'Leary. Fourth roux' Kline, Wright, Scott, Carlson, F. Maloney, Stratton. Jean O'Connor, Wichita Katherine O'Leary, Kansas City, Mo. Sarah Frances Phipps, Wichita Virginia Phipps, Wichita Marylou Regier, Newton Marylouise Rowsey, Omaha, Nebr. Ruth Russell, Lawrence Marjorie Snyder, Winlield Dineen Somers, Newton Margaret Stratton, Lawrence Beverly Stucker, Ottawa Nancy Teichgraeber, Emporia Nancy Tomlinson, Ft. Worth, Texas Virginia Thompson, Waterville Joan Veatch, Pittsburg Joanna Wagstaff, Lawrence Elaine Wells, Ottawa Martha Woodward, Cincinnati, Ohio Ruth Wright, Topeka L.. 4-. KINTZEL x., Later tonight. KAPPA ALPHA 'I'llll'I'A :fs 3' 'P .pi fl. J' 'P , , . ., X, av ., .5519 ,. ., , ,. .'UCl,o . ,. ., ,f Kappa Alpha Theta was founded Jnnuury 27, 1870, at DePauw University, Greencastle, Intl. Kappa, nun' one of 66 native chapters was estnlt- lished at the University in 1831. 0 F F I C E R S Prefidetzt . . . Lila jean Doughman Vice-Preritfetzt . Martha Ellen Woodward Secretfzry .... Marylouise Rowsey Ttefzrurct' ..... Marjorie Snyder Neai, Alford, Wfinter. Second rouu' Snyder, Ainsworth, Murray, Lutz. Third row: Doane, Wright, O'Connor, Fadler, Thompson. Lawrence, K. Maloney, Yingling, Somers, Vallette, Neville, Faulders, It-1. PLEDGES i 1 S B ...ia A L Q.. Left to right-First rouu' Hedrick, Schloesser, Henry, M. L. Laffer, McEwen, P. Piller, M. Morrill, F. Mor 'll Tibb t K'lm t' Littl M'l.l S d - C. Child, Neely, McGrew, Krehbiel. Hayes, Crabb, Free, Ainsworth, Beneke, Hayden, Slater,.Churchill. Third ifhtzf: Sanliizliusl, Ex-erlly, Ghild: 1Shck,eSl'l-I, Laffer, Gunsolly, Hargxss, Cheney, Jones, Nelson, Bossemeyer, Maloney. Fourth rouu' Gray, Samson, Sewell, Metcalf, Glover, Zeller, Bradstreet, Goering, Sims, KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA 0 F F I C E R S Preridefzz .......,.... Mary Morrill Ferguson, Stephan, Morris, C. Piller, Frizcll. KINTZITL Vice-Preriden! . . Frances Morrill Secretary . . . Nancy Miller Treamrer . . Patricia Piller Hmmm--When were you out of town. Tuck? 1 EAQO sw ax, :QQ QE'5lllSIsT2Iill'l3lllZ915E3 Kappa Kappa Gamma N'llSf0llllll1'l1 October 13. 11170, at Monmouth Cul- lvgu, Monmouth, Ill. Omega. now one of T4 aclirv chapters, was eslablislwfl ut the University in 1883. Carrie Arnold, Ashland Mary Louise Ainsworth, Derby Marjorie Beneke, Kansas City, Mo. Lois Bradstreet, Topeka Cora Lou Child, Great Bend Eleanor Churchill, Kansas City, Mo. Patricia Ferguson, Kansas City, Mo. Patricia Glover, Newton Nancy Goering, Newton Maxine Gunsolly, Emporia ACT Harriet Bossemeyer, Hutchinson Priscilla Ann Cheney, Salina Laurel Sue Crabb, Kansas City, Mo. Marilyn Child, Hutchinson Charlotte Dack, Hutchinson Betty .lo Everly, Garden City Marjorie Free, Wichita Beverly Frizell, Larned Gloria Gray, Topeka Joanne Hayden, Mission Shirley Hargiss, Kansas City Mary Jane Hayes, Atchison Hanna Hedrick, Newton Norma Henry, Wichita Irma Lee Kilmartin, Wichita Mary Louise Lalier, Wichita Martha Lou Little, Salina Marilyn Maloney, Tulsa Allison Jones, Lawrence Sara Krehbiel, Kansas City, Mo. Martha Laffer, Wichita Mary Margaret Morris, Wichita Patricia Moyer, Lawrence Catherine Piller, Great Bend Mary Katherine Sims, Miami, Okla. Nancy Slater, Kansas City, Mo. Nancy Stephan, Pueblo, Colo. Mary Zeller, Howard IVES Marilyn McEwen, Wichita Jeanne McGrew, Lawrence Martha Metcalf, Kansas City, Mo. Nancy Miller, Iola Frances Morrill, Hiawatha Mary Morrill, Hiawatha Jeanne Murray, Lawrence Barbara Neely, Wichita Charlotte Nelson, Kansas City, Mo. Patricia Orr, Independence Patricia Piller, Great Bend Mary Louise Samson, Roswell, N. M. Irene Sandelius, Lawrence Frances Schloesser, Fredonia Irene Sewell, Kansas City, Mo. Mary Lou Shewey, Blue Springs, Mo Lucy Smith, Lawrence Marjorie Tibbets, Kansas City, Mo. Left to right-Firrt row: Nelson, Ballard. Herrmann, Perritt, Daneke, Ethritie, Howell. Second rouu' Darden, Laub, Kerr. Reed, Albert, Johnson. Third row: Brenza, Luhn, Crass. Kendrick, Mische, Jarden, Reynolds. KAPPA IGMA OFFICERS P1'E.liOlC7.7l . Gmmi Scribe . Gram! Trefzrzmfer . Roland Pettitt . Fred Daneke . Fred Daneke PLEDGES Don Albert, Savonburg William Brenza, Pittsburgh, Pa. Paul Crass, San Bernadino, Calif. Frank Darden, Longview, Texas jarrell Erhridge, Thornaston, Ga. Richard Jarden, Cleveland, Ohio Foster Rey nolds, A C 'I' David Ballard, Topeka Fred Daneke, Topeka john Herrmann, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Howell, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Johnson, Cedar Falls, Iowa john Kendrick, Inglewood, Calif. Richard Kerr, Galena, Ill. Richard Laub, Kansas City, Mo. Lester Mische, Trousdale Eugene Reed, Charles City, Iowa Upper Darby, Pa. I V E S Robert Luhn, Langley, Xwash. Theodore Misselwitz, Edwardsville Richard Nelson, Kilgore, Texas Roland Perritt, Yakima, Wash. John Witlierstwtxcmii, Kansas City, Mo. ,WR new KINTZIZT. Inner Sanctum. .rp 'S' ag M 4 , :Ili G27 ' , 71339. T5 15 ia Ya X as. 2 Z' Kappa Sigma rms fUIllIlI1'll il! 15100. ut llzv l1lIIl'l'I'SIfj' of Iirginiu Crunnm f,ll1iCflIll, mm' one of 110 uctirf' rlluplers. was esllllilisllvrl fl! 1111 I'l1il'r'rsiIy in 1912. PHI DELTA 'I'Hll'l'il ,ai fx ,,A' 5? lg . f f Phi Delta Theta was foiuulrzzl in 1848, at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Kansas Alpha, now one of 106 active chapters. was estahlishvrl at the University in 1912. KINTZEL OFFICERS Prerizicfzt . . ....... William Jenson Vice-President . . Charles Black Secretary . . . Homer Hoover Tifecmwer . . James Sanders Wfm'rie12 . . David Whyte P L E D G E S James Burwell, Kansas City Stanley Hobbs, Venice, Calif. Keith Congdon, Winfield Michael Kuklenski, Kansas City Kenneth Danneberg, Kansas City, Mo. John McGuckin, Philadelphia, Pa. Edward Denning, Wichita John McLaughlin, Topeka Bruce Fitts, Wichita Jack McShane, Santa Monica, Calif, James Gregath, Kansas City, Mo. Bertrand Morris, Hutchinson Richard Hawkinson, Kansas City, Mo. Donald Moseley, Kansas City Fred Helm, Grove City, Pa. Richard Ong, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Henry, Wlchliirold Warwick, igigggigflxfcjj Holton Wfolf brothers-but what they really need to see is Woolf Bros. ACTIVES Charles Aylward, Kansas City, Mo. Wendell Good, Perry Donald Ong, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Baker, Kansas City, Mo. Samuel Harris, Kansas City, Mo. Franklin Pomeroy, Holton Charles Ball, Pasadena, Calif. John Hawley, Republican City, Neb. Richard Potter, Lawrence Charles Black, Lawrence Homer Hoover, Kansas City James Sanders, San Francisco, Calif. Joseph Boyd, Bartlesville, Okla. XVilliam Jenson, Colby Closson Kirkpatrick Scott, Newton Carl Clark, Kansas City William Kanaga, Kansas City Neil Thompson, Cavalier, N. D. Robert Corder, Welda Donald Miller, Kansas City David Whyne, Kansas City, Mo. Donald Cousins, Washington, D. C. Harry Mills, Seattle, Wash. Keith Zarker, Topeka Jack Giesch, Kansas City John Nesselrode, Kansas City Matthew Zimmerman, Kansas City, Mo. Louis Goehring, Wichita Arthur Nussbaum, St. Joseph, Mo. Left to rigbl-First row: Baker, Warwick, Hawley, Cousins, Hoover, Whyte, Jenson. Black, Sanders, Mills, Congdon, R. Ong, Zimmerman. Second row: Sondker, Aylward, Potter, Boyd, Henry, McGuckin, Harris, Clark, Miller, Giesch, Kanaga, Scott, Kuklenski. Third row: Zarker, McLaughlin, Good, Corder, Moseley, Hobbs, Goehrirrg, Helm, McShane, Danneberg, Hawkinson, D. Ong, Ball. Plll GAAAAAA DELTA fIv.11A. N 4154213 Phi flllllllllll Helm 14115 fllllllflvd ul ,1eff1'rsun College, filllllIllS1llll'g, Pu.. in 13-IH. Pi Dent:-ron, nun' our' of T2 tll'lfl'f' l'IIIlIIN'I'X. rms vslrllzlisllvrl ut llu' l'Illl'0TSiIj' in HHH . KlN'lZlII Granny doesnt live here anymore. Thomas Bailey, Topeka Robert Bayles, Lawrence Frank Brosius, Wichita Richard Carter, El Dorado William Douglas, Topeka Eric Eulich, Kansas City, Mo. ACTIYES Robert Gove, St, joseph, Mo. Tom jones, Lawrence Nelson May. Lawrence Rensselaer McClure, Lawrence Jack McDermott, Wichita Rod Maclvor, Wichita FFICERS Prefirfwzf . . Robert Ramsey Secrezfzry . . Robert Gove i141'66l.l'llI'C7' , . Nelson May P L E D G E S Don Brown, Wichita Clifford Hargis, Atchison Harlow Cook, Leavenworth Ray Simonson, Great Bend Donald Fricker, Great Bend Earl Stanton, Leavenworth George Waitt, Wichita Roy McVey, Great Bend Robert Ramsey, Atchison Wallace Rouse, Wichita Edison Shive, Independence Harry Stucker, Lawrence Christopher Thomas, Pittsburg Joe Turner. Independence Left io rigbl-First rouz' Maclvor. Stanton, Douglas. Cook. Gove, Stucker. Ramsey. Brosius, May. McDermott, Bayles, McVey. Second row: Eulich, Carter. Rouse. Shive, McClure, Bailey, Turner, Hargis. Waitt, Frickcr ,4- Left to right-First rouu' Sinclair. Bayles, Buress, Robison, Umbach Batch -lde F Sh' M ' K ' Al S d 1- I Runyan, Atkinson, Kittie, Fritz, Crawford, Hird, Chestnut. Third row: Abbey, gong, Nalsler, ColiifolgglfigfILynliiiLE2?nMcCe:1i,l,i ijziiicgbnikamscyi Evans PHI OFFICERS Prerizlwzz . . , R, Afki1150f1 Vice-Preriden! . Wotud Runyan K A P P A Secretary . . . . Jack Ramsey Tf6zl.iill1'67' . . Lawrence E. Kittle P I :f..'? ?:1:i: f ag' Y, . if, lg, H5z,g,,a-f' tw-Si? Phi Kappa Psi it-as fnuritlefl in 18.32, at Jvfft-rson College, ffrumnsburg, Pu. Alpha, now one of 52 attire vlmplvrs, wax eslulilislzvfl at the Univ:-rsily in 1876. FISHER Low down on the Phi Psi's. P L E D G Harry Jefferson Abbey, Baxter Springs Theodore Batchelder, Garden City Lewis Bayles, Lawrence Edward Brunk, Kansas City William Burgess, Oklahoma City, Okla. George Cox, Kansas City Norval Jackson, Kansas City, Mo. Burris Jones, Kansas City Charles Kunzelman, Buffalo, N. Y. ACTIV R. J. Atkinson, Kansas City Rudolf Carl, Lawrence William Chestnut, Beloit Earle Crawford, Chanute William A. Evans, Kansas City, Mo. Edwin Fritz, Lawrence Lloyd Grant, Kansas City, Mo. ES William Lacy, Kansas City, Mo. jack Lasley, Dodge City William Lynn, Mission Donald McCaul, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Miller, Kansas City, Mo. Duke Montgomery, Kansas City, Mo Edward Roberts, Defiance, Ohio Leroy Robison, Lawrence Eugene Shaw, Missoula, Mont. ES Wayne Hird, Lawrence Lawrence E. Kittle, Mission Edwin Pyle, Beloit Jack Ramsey, Kansas City Wood Runyan, Topeka Dean Sims, Miami, Okla. Thomas Sinclair, Humboldt john Umbach, Dodge City www A' M -is-aa :Lf-f'2f1W:s' ,:..f: si H ragga, 'gigwgzi rr rw 12r1 't' . ---' , ,-, --- ., ,... .ai-5-,,. g1.,5,.5 ,.,,R,,m, 35f, U, M 71 ,3 ' gg - - Q. ' ' b- 15 rw i A . 3 -M v ' 15 'K' 1 X ,gg - In A , as 5 V Q '. . A , ,, A ' ' 3 :. s Yi - ti' W M A . e 1 . ' 1 1 2 1 r . gg hm, sr, N31 Ef 'r ' ' ' v 'f., A I . , 4 L V M m....JQnihn-......,nei, FL-.nf , L fl I bl-F' I 'o Frowe, Hobart, Aylward, Erway, Wyman, McCrory, McGinnis, Jamieson, L. Schwartz, Warren. Claycomb, Longenecker Second rou 9 0 VIL lf! 1 U Darby. S. Schwartz, Marsh. Fitzpatrick, Prier, Anderson, Winn, Carey, Carson, Priest, Stoclder, Hepworth. 'Ihzrfi rout: .Hiscox, Stodard, Brown Breed Godbehcre Armacost, Sanderson, Bredouw, Newcomer, Campbell, Billings, Horner, Myers. Pack, M. Varner, Chubb, Davis, Williams. Fourth rouu' Dahlin Mayer Foster Ewing, Ruese, B. Vurner, Brooks, Burch, Cable, Hardie, Saffell, Scott, Lockwood, Miller, Love, Gardner, Borders, Lay. 0 F F I C E R S Prcxirlerzf .... ..... B arbara Winn Vice-Prerideazz . . Norma Anderson Secretary . . . Betty Frank Carey T1'efz.rm'e1f . . . . ..... Barbara Prier PLEDGES Joan Armacost, Kansas City, Mo. Betty Aylward, Wichita Imogen Billings, Gig Harbor, Wash. Mary Breed, Kansas City, Mo. Katherine Brooks, Wichita Carolyn Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Carolyn Campbell, Kansas City, Mo. Frances Chubb, Lawrence Nelle Claycomb, Kansas City, Mo. Courtney Cowgill, San Francisco, Calif. Dorothy Dahlin, Kansas City Marilyn Erway, Hutchinson Joan Gardner, Winheld Jane Gillespie, Sioux City, Iowa Joy Godbehere, Kansas City, Mo. Adrienne Hiscox, San Mateo, Calif. Janet Sue Hobart, Kansas City, Mo. Sue Jamieson, Kansas City Donna Sue Landrith, Lawrence Mary Longenecker, Lawrence Nancy Love, Wichita Joan McCrory, Hutchinson Ann Newcomer, Kansas City, Mo. Eleanor Pack, Kansas City Joann Ruese, Lawrence Sara Jayne Scott, Kansas City, Mo. Louise Schwartz, Neosho, Mo. Barbara Varner, Wichita Mary Varner, Wichita Joan Woodward, Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES Norma Lee Anderson, Wichita Margaret Borders, El Paso, Texas Betty Bredouw, Kansas City, Mo. Joan Burch, Vllichita Martha Lou Cable, Kansas City Betty Frank Carey, Kansas City Caroline Carson, Wichita Edith Marie Darby, Kansas City Dorothy Davis, Miami, Okla. Betse Ewing, Houston, Texas Sally Fitzpatrick, Lawrence Catherine Foster, Hutchinson Roberta Frowe, Lawrence Betty Jeanne Grant, Wichita Margaret Hardie, Carlinville, Ill. Eugenia Hepworth, Burlingame Patricia Horner, Kansas City Betty Lay, Wichita Patricia Lockwood, Atchison Shirley McGinnis, Kansas City, Mo. Mary Gayle Marsh, Emporia Carol Mayer, Kansas City Jane Miller, Lawrence Sara Jayne Myers, Joplin, Mo. Patricia Penney, Lawrence Barbara Prier, Emporia Jane Priest, Wichita Jean Saffell, Junction City Peggy Sanderson, Lawrence Suzanne Schwartz, Neosho, Mo Jean Stodard, Burlingame Dorthea Rose Stodder, Wichita BETA PIII f , , Pi Hem Phi wus founded April 28 1807 at Mun mouth College, Monmouth, Ill. Kansas Alpha now one of 87 active chapters, was established at the Uni versity in 1372. Dorothy Xwarren, Denver, Colo. Patricia Williams, Fritch, Texas Barbara Winn, Kansas City, Mo. Elaine Wyman, Hutchinson ui The last stretch PI KAPPA ALPHA If x a, an -rf A, 'fx J V 1, ,,.A E is .gs Af' wry-1 -' W Pi Kappa Alpha was founded in 1868, at the University of Virginia. Beta fumma, now one of 80 active chapters, was established at the University in 1913 Left to right Fzrrt mu Morrow Sreyer Burch McCabe Hamm Irwin Davis, McDonald. Second row: Harrington, Miller, Hours, Yendes, Fisher, Martin OFFICERS PLEDGES Bobby Burch, Rockwall, Texa Robert Hamm, Atchison James Irwin, Dallas, Texas Ralph Martin, Atchison A Thomas Davis, Newton Paul Finck, St. Charles, Mo. Charles Fisher, Sullivan, Mo. Richard Hours, Sr. Louis, Mo. Wayne Harrington, Parkville, William Miller, Wichita Vernon Pieron, Niles, Ohio Dean Sreyer, Chanute Robert Yendes, Kansas City IVES Robert Hunter, Lawrence Vincent J. McCabe, Parkville, Mo. Paul McDonald, Los Angeles, Calif Harvey Morrow, Colorado Springs, Colo. ZAE IGMA ALPHA EP lL0 Sigma Alpha Epsilon was founrlefl in 1856, ia Tuscaloosa, Ala. The Kansas Alpha chapter, now one of 113 active chapters. was established at the University ia 1903. Left to right--First row: McCollem, Parker, Metcalf, Gardner, Black, Jones. Second row: Johnston, Reed, Alexander, Shepherd, Brent, Nohe, Nelson, Bgoone, Frei, Pierpont, Smith, Little, Crow, Rosenfield, McBride, Mayhew, Yount, Perkins, Haas, Thomas. Third row: Lamkin, Fnloe, Fulghum, Wilcox, Hall, Kintzel, Nordeen, Mann, Charlton. PLEDGES OFFICERS Robert Corber, Topeka Samuel Crow, Topeka Peyton Enloe, Mission Donald Fulghum, Winfield Daniel Gardner, Chanute Eugene Geist, Chanute Jack Hastings, Sedgwick Robert Lee jones, Hutchinson William Lamkin, Los Angeles, Calif. William Mann, Kansas City A C T John Alexander, Bartlesville, Okla. James Baska, Kansas City John Black, Kansas City, Mo. George Boone, Manhattan Page Brent, Kansas City, Mo. James Briley, Tulsa, Okla. William Charlton, DeSoto Charles Church, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Daleen, Salina Donald Frei, Kansas City, Mo. Frank Haas, Milwaukee, Wis. Tom Mayhew, Truesdale James McBride, Kansas City, Mo. james McCollem, Kansas City, Mo. James Metcalf, Kansas City Wallace Parker, Mission Deane Perkins, Liberty, Mo. Francis Pierpont, Chanute Robert Rosenfleld, Junction City Hal Wilcox, Winfield W'alter Yount, Kansas City, Mo. I V E S David Hall, Miami, Fla. James Johnston, Kansas City Paul Jones, III, Herington Hubert O. Kintzel, Wichita Robert Little, Kansas City Robert A. Nelson, Tulsa, Okla. Kenneth Nohe, Kansas City Miller Nordeen, Mound City DuMont Reed, Larned james Shepherd, Kansas City Charles Smith, Tulsa, Okla. Leon Thomas, Seminole, Okla. Prerident . Vice-Pfericlent Secretary . Treamfer . . Page Brent Kenneth Nohe . john Black ohn Alexander KINTZEL one meat bn-a-ll. Left to right-First row: Hunter, MacGregor, Schneitter, Nichols, Schroll, Button. Conard, Bowman. Reed, Second row: Patterson, Peck, Woerner, Coate, Almond, Reynolds. Newton, Leigh, Sellers, Thomas, Bukaty. Third raw: Luehring, Couch, McGarry, jackson, Keller, Eisenhower, Relihan, Rake, Williams, Du- boc, Wildgen. PLEDGES Meade Almond, Topeka Laird Bowman, Dodge City joseph Bukaty, Kansas City John Couch, Anthony Barry Crosby, Bixby, Okla. Sam Hunter, Leavenworth John jackson, Kansas City Eldon Luehring, Leavenworth William Mac Gregor, Medicine Lodge William McGarry, Kansas City A C T I William Benefiel, Medicine Lodge Jack Button, Topeka James Conard, Hutchinson Lloyd Eisenhower, Junction City Charles Keller, Kansas City, Mo. Lynn Leigh, Burley, Idaho George Newton, Kansas City Owen Peck, Kansas City Myron Rake, Horton Ralph Reed, Stockton Donald Relihan, Smith Center Gordon Reynolds, Bixby, Okla. Robert Sellers, Bartlesville, Okla, Harry Starks, Dodge City Ival Wantland, Ottawa Geldard Woerner, Kansas City, Mo. V E S Michael Nichols, Phillipsburg Dean Patterson, Leavenworth Edward Schneitter, St. Joseph, Mo. jack Schroll, Hutchinson Dwight Sutherland, Kansas City, Mo. james Thomas, Bartlesville, Okla. Jerome Vfildgen, Canon City, Colo. Sigma .-llpliu Xi, IGNIA CHI pf? 1 as Mfpgizii xii Q xx Chi was foumlvil in 15155, at Miami Unirvrsily, Oxford, Ohin. nun' one of 1113 1u'li1'r' l'IHlllfl'l'.Y, :ras vslrilrlislwrl at Ihr' Lini- rv-rxily' in HH! l. OFFICERS Prefidenl . . Jack Schroll Vice-Prefiafefzl . . Michael Nichols Tireafznfer' . . Edward Schneitter Secretary . . Jack Button KINTZEL . . . and the pig got up and slowly walked away. Betty Jeanne Whitney, Wichita Left to right-First row: Lowe, Morrow, Hadley, Norrie, Holtzclaw, Hogan, McMillin, Carmichael, Smith. Second rouu' Wahlstedt, Vermillion, Lukert, Brew ster, Perry, Scherrer, Hayes, Meltvedt, Morriss, Dunn, Guise. Third raw: Todd, Fant, Courtney, Harris, Shipley, McCurry, Lauderdale, Dudley, Burns, Perkins Guenther. Fourth rouu' Beck, Emih, Hall, Jewett, Somerville, Pistorius, Breitenbach, Wright, Hobbs, Boucher, Wright. IGMA KAPPA .t is af 'lu ,vw at ' :V ip! 'l a 1 U fu nf? Rs, !.'J'L ' 1949 iwfh Sigma Kappa was f0llIlll0ll in 187-1, at Colby College, Wulert'illt', Maine. Xi, non' one of 50 ll!'If1'1' vllafllers, was esI11lrli.slu'll ul ilu' flui- tw-rsily in I0 OFFICERS Prerizlent . . Patricia Scherrer Vice-Prericlenz . . . . Doradeen Perry Second Vice-Pferidefzt . . Alice Marie Hayes Secremry .... . Betty Wahlstedt Treai-wer . Mavis Lukert KINTZEL sf ff, ff ,wiwvagwivxh ,gfw xr-all A W 11. 'Q fi, fe We B1 fdifaillf at It's snowbody's fight. if I . E. I PLEDGES Marilyn Boucher, Kansas City, Mo. Lucena Burns, Leavenworth Roberta Carmichael, Lawrence Elizabeth Courtney, St. Marys Betty Emigh, Arkansas City Shirley Guenther, Kansas City, Mo. Frances Hadley, Topeka Alice Hobbs, Topeka Jill Lauderdale, Kansas City, Mo. Janice Lowe, Paola Ruth McCurry, Wichita Elizabeth McMillin, Kansas City, Mo Louise Morrow, Lawrence Lorea Norrie, Sabetha Sara Scothorn, Watertown, S. D. Marguerita Shipley, Wichita Jeanne Smith, Topeka Jacqueline Somerville, Harper Margaret Wright, Wellington ACTIVES Marilyn Beck, Kansas City, Mo. Maurine Breitenbach, Belpte Doris Brewster, Lawrence Beth Beamer Dimond, Lawrence Mary Dudley, Hugoton LaJune Dunn, Bethany, Mo. Joel Fant, Garden City Sheila Guise, Brewster Margaret Hall, Oakley Joan Harris, Wichita Alice Marie Hayes, Lawrence Martha Belle Hogan, Rock Springs, Wyo. Mary Holtzclaw, Lawrence Martha Jewett, Lawrence Mavis Lukert, Sabetha Lola Meltvedt, Stafford, Va. Caroline Morriss, Topeka Jeanette Perkins, Lawrence Doradeen Perry, Coifeyville Mary Jane Pistorius, Lawrence Patricia Scherrer, Kansas City, Mo Helen Todd, Kansas City, Mo. Mary Vermillion, Salina Betty Wahlstedt, Kansas City, Mo. Kathleen Wright, Wellington Left to rigblglfirst row: Pierce, Bradley, Shackelford, Miller, Stewart, Holland. Secmid mum' Swanson, Palmer, Riehl, Darsie, Kelsey. I'll never smile again. 5- 14 ' 4,2961 Us E53 ff 4 , WL . :R 51? ary, ' .., j W ' ffm' ' +5 ,.,,, v- .'i?sC ' 'E illgbii D gtxy. .gg 4 3, v' Sigma Nu was founrlefl in 1869, at the Virginia Military Institute. Nu, naw one of 98 uelive chapters, was vstalzlishecl ul lhc Unizfvrxily in 1884. IGMA T Commander . . Robert Miller LI. Conmmfzflef' . . john Shackelford Secretmy-7'1'emmfer . . Robert Stewart P L E D G E S Darsie, George, St. Paul, Minn. Palmer, James, Rushville, Ind. Pierce, Frank, Wamego A C T I V E S Bradley, Roderick, Greensburg Riehl, William J., Santa Rosa, Calil. Holland, Robert E., Denver Shackelfortl, john R., Walters, Okla Kelsey, J. F., Osawatomie Stewart, Robert, Wamego Miller, Robert, Oakland, Calif. Swanson, Dick, Concordia R 4 Left to right-First row: Howland, Hauserman, Read, Danneber, Acton, Cowling, Whearty, Evans. Second row: McCall, Spencer, Brown, Shafer, Mercier Illgner, McKinley. 'FAU KAPPA EI' lL0 Prytzmitf . Epi-Prymnis . Gmmmatem . C rym pb ylm . A C. T Lorn Evans, Great Bend Morton Hauserman, Kansas City Shannon Howland, Liberal . John Darmeberg . Leonard Brown . William Acton . Robert Cowling Wait! There must be a harder way. lag Zz I V E S V. k Jack Illgner, Wichita ' qi , Robert McKinley, Kansas City, Mo. ' i Lloyd Shafer, Great Bend Raymond Whearty, Topeka PLEDGES William Acton, Kansas City, Mo. Leonard Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Cowling, Leavenworth John Danneberg, Kansas City, Mo. Jason Dixon, Mound Valley Hubert McCall, Ulysses Gordon Mercier, Paseo, Wash. Edwin Read, Leavenworth Tau Kappa Epsilon was ,founded at Illinois Wesleyan in 1899. Alpha Phi, now one of 45 active chapters, was established at the University in 1942. 1. All serenades begin with the song practice. Here leader, -lim Conard, finds the boys a little out of training. Bud Wantland Cmy mother told me there would be pajamas like thatl nurses a frog while johnny jackson idly plucks hairs from the head of pianist, Ralph Reed. 3. Ready Freddies. Gobs of civilians roll out of the Chi house. Johnny Jackson again, as an Esquire ad on ascots, is encouraged along by party whip, Don Relihan. 4. A rear view of Chi O's leaning over their balcony shows that everything from Hrst-nighters to ski caps are vogue at serenades. Jason Dixon, photographer, shot four double- exposures in his excitement, then reeled down the fire escape exhausted. 2. There're on the last lap now and things begin to look up-all except Fig Newton who is still looking down. Conard has converted the group into a smooth a cappella choir. Even Owen Peck, whose falsetto solo was giving him trouble, is now serene. Tllll J YHAWKEH GUE CCORDING to the popular observation, the desirability of a Serenade depends upon a number of things, the most im- portant being whether you are asleep when it comes. This repre- sents, of course, the listeners point of view. The zest of the serenader, himself, for the custom depends chiefly upon weather, other factors being the morrow's quizzes, his natural love for music, his natural love for women, the group's post-serenade plans. Women are said to be less keen for serenading because of the inhibiting influence certain mores have upon the latter incen- tive. Of the four general classes of serenades-Christmas, spring, pinning, and drunken-only the lirst three are premeditated and therefore required for members of both listening and performing groups. But it is usually not hard to arouse enthusiasm. Rich in tradi- 5. Laird Bowman got the spiritfsb early, kept up his sing- ing between engagements. The entire chapter approached each sorority house singing My Name Is Sigma Chi, a scheme which proved quite effective everywhere except on the ramp to the Kappa house. 6. On low balconies such as this one at the Pi Phi house, boys are always tempted to bring along a fire net. Here Pi Phi gla-moor captivates the songsters at close range. ASEIIE lilllll tion, serenades have a certain romantic quality which Cover and above the dollar hnej attracts even the most determined sleepers from their beds and impels ardent fireside lovers to tramp around in snow for hours after mid-night. The Sigma Chi serenade on December 16 was typical of most fraternity serenades. After hours of practice, the Chi's started out at 1 o'clock going from one sorority house to another until 3: 15. Including the time taken up with applause, with return songs from listening women, and their own four numbers, the Sigma Chi's spent about 20 minutes at each house. Led by Jim Conard, they sang My Name ls Sigma Chi, The Sweetheart of Sigma Chij' or Memories -depending upon which the women had sung back to them-the sorority's song and the Steamboat Song. 9. Dreamy-eyed--or sleepy-the first Kappa's arrive at the scene of the crime and beam cheerfully. Caught by surprise, Nancy Goering flashes a foamy lpana grin. 7. Tactfully concealing their enthusiasm for boudoir attire, the Chi's line up in their rut. Conardls modest leadership from the back row is a masterpiece of subtlety. CNotice jack Schroll as the vampire bat in extreme right corner.D .... -N - w .W mm -,.,...... , . f Q.. - V We - - 2 pr: :E - .-.. .:.::... SS!'Ieb wgjg .- a 3 ag em H , r .... . A M. ,ul ffff .SW f Q. A ,KX g 8. Gamma Phi Beta huddles collectively around the front door, from whence the chapter hears the cordant C and dis- cordantj harmony of all serenades. The seven choice places are filled quickly-other members must be satished with fragmentary accounts later. 10. lntoxicated by their success- and aided and abetted by no small quantity of brew-the Sigma Chi's bring their Serenade to a close in typical fashion. There was no drink- ing in the house but frequent trips to the back porch kept things on high. l E1 N21 - 'l ' -M T' ' . JAH i r . if . sf. , az ii -v ...A ...,.. .,,.. ,Q ew E . I 52 Pinees at ease. Peggy Sanderson finally claims her mate, Gene Kittlc. CHe came as an ape.J THREE puorocimms BY Km-rzm. If Here's to the Psi boys, they're true blue . . . Shipwreck party, December 16. Menu: chickens in the rough. ki ..Lx K'U . 1.x CU U NT RY ELU B K Carnival scenes. Left: Kappa's won the ducks at the 1943 carnival, gave them away this year. Center: 'Meet me in St. Louis, Lewief' Higher and higher by Alpha Delt can-can girls. Right: Carnivals brccd strange bedfellows . . . Pi Phi wedding booth promotes juvenile delinquency. held an annual mess Dece at the Eldridge hotel. Fresh to wait tables to facilitate serv orchestra arrived late and in of bu-z-z. Center: Merry Ch from Gamma Phi Beta. Top: In traditional style, Ph , n m Lower center: Battenfel home of staunch Lilly Whit guers, breaks over in favo: sweater dance. FISHER Betty Young and Richard Smith sample the 0.00 percent Typical Nu Sig. Rod Bradley is getting a big rush this year punch at thc Jolliffe hall winter formal. Csee page 933. Ruth Tuley as Santa Claus waives the old behavior rule and remembers everyone at the Miller hall Christmas party. O KEEP dormitory life at the University running smoothly and correlate activities of the University's organized halls are the aims of the Inter-Dorm and Inter- Hall councils. The Inter-Dorm council is the advisory board for the eight womens dormitories, and the Inter-Hall council, for the two men's residence halls, Battenfeld and Carruth. A On the first Thursday of each month, the Inter-Dorm Council meets to discuss problems and policies of dormitory life. The president and a representative of Corbin, Miller, Writkiiis, Riclcer, Tipperary, Locksley, jolliffe, and Foster- all University womens dormitories-are the council mem- bers. lllllllll A IIHALL ll l'I'll 'llll DIFFER f ZQWGJ A L6l7?f f f Now in its second year, the Inter-Dorm council was or- ganized to encourage cooperation among women students living in University dormitories and to help independent women students become better acquainted. The council sponsors exchange dinners, and plans inter-dorm parties. Wfith jolliffe converted to a womens residence hall and Templin established as a PT, men of the Inter-Hall council come now from only Battenfeld and Carruth Halls. The council nevertheless feels that it has a definite job in main- taining morale between the two houses, which must co- operate even more closely than ever now that Carruth resi- dents are boarding at Battenfeld. This assortment of house loyalties was made possible by one of many Inter-Dorm exchange dinners. Seated from left to right are Lorraine Carpenter, Corbin: Wfilda Vermillion, Locksleyg Kay Dietrick, Watkinsg Charlotte Bartley, Fosterg Ina Kay Roderick, Corbin, Iona Mae Hodgman, Locksleyg Marie Hunt, Tipperary: Helen Hoyt, Corbin. ls. E' 1r zvuw.anm,. ,mt 'Z u JMR .,,.. E H, . al. .. l'TER-DURM U UNUIL Lefl lo righl-First rouf: Dolores Farrell, jolliffeg Elizabeth Anne Pratt, Fosterg Elinor Kline All Student Council representative Miller Patricia Graham president, Corbing June Peterson, vice-president. Wfatkinsg Joanne Bauer, Jolliffe: Jean Templeton Locksley Scroud rou Katharine Cibes Ricker Ina Katherine Roderick, Corbing Eunice Carlson. Tipperaryg Betty Cunningham, Foster: Mary Ellen Halstead Rucker Louise Mclntire Tipperary Ruth Tippin Miller Nor :n pirfure: Donna Jean Nichols, secretary-treasurer. Corbing Wfilda Vermillion. Locksleyg Violet Conard social chnrman Watkins Left lo right: Robert Witt, vice-president. Bartenfeld Cecil Hudson. Carrurhg Otto Theel, president. Carruthg Dewey Ncmec, Battenfeldg Donald Alderson, Carruth Not in picture: William Hollis, secretary-treasurer. Batten- fcld: Eugene Schwartz, Battenfeld. I TEH- CUUNCI ll0PKl HALL OFFICERS Prefident ..... Kathryn Eaton lf'ice-Prerirlefzt .... Susan Sackett Left to right-First row: Watson, Hershey Eaton Secretary . . . Margaret Kallenberger Sankeg, Cmmelii gscand 3,02 Hahn, ggi-,l,:,,,g,e,1,,,,fi Wo, Trearurer ..... Georgia Mitchell f2,,,,,g1g:g,:1, SHEEP? 'r 'aw C mm emc Carolyn Carson, Fairfax Ines Hahn, Healy Georgia Mitchell, Montezuma Velma Chamberlain, Kansas City Allene Hershey, Iola Susan Sackett, Casper, Wyo. Catherine Cramer, Dighton Edna Hettich, East Leavenworth, Mo. Janice Schwartz,Kansas City Kathryn Eaton, Torrington, Wyo. Margery Kallenberger, Edna ' Adelaide Snapp, Kansas City, Mo. Roberta Watson, Hannibal, Mo. Patricia Wforrall, Kansas City WESTMI 'PER HALL O F F I C E R S Preridevzl ....... Ruth Stoll . . . L ft to r' bl-F' JI o f: Jones, Henso , S th ll H d V160-Pfewieflf . . . Phyllls Hvde swif, Thoffsof., 1S2fkinf'Tas, Gfeenwoga. miefgna ,Lf l Gregory, Myers, Jeffery, Johnson, McHarg, Peters Bod Trerzrwer ..... Carolyn Southall man, Jeanne Bodman, Kansas City, Mo. Margaret Botkin, Kansas City, Mo. Lois Greenwood, Kansas City Emadee Gregory, Lovington, Ill. Margaret Henson, Kansas City, Mo. Phyllis Hyde, Kansas City, Mo. Theresa Jeffery, Oskaloosa Martha Johnson, Kansas City Maxine jones, Topeka Margaret McHarg, El Dorado Eileen Myers, Overland Park Lavon Peters, Minneapolis Carolyn Southall, Kansas City, Mo Ruth Stoll, Kansas City Frances Williams Teis, Waverly Mildred Thomson, Irving 4.1611 to right-First row: Easter, Sulzman, Campbell, Britton, Kelley, Tippin, Mrs. A. G. Swaney, Greep, Hatch, Thompson, Green, McCoy, Bundren. Second row: Meinke, D. Carr, Allen, Sonkup, Casad, Johnson, I. Rothenberger, Holsinger, Sawyer, Piros, Johnston, Norris. Spencer. Third row: Tuley, Bowlby, M. Carr, Oehrle, Snook, Maxwell, D. Brown, Anderson, Rotermund, Wynne, Masterson, Moser, Ellis, M. Brown. OFFICE Pwrident . Vice-Prerifleizt . . Secretary . . Treamrer . RS Ruth Tippin Norma Greep Shirley Kelley . Jean Hatch MILLER HALL Virginia Allen, Fairview julia Ann Casad, Wfichita Doris Anderson, Lecompton Martha Easter, Abilene Jeanne Bowlby, Liberal Marguherita Ellis, Leavenworth Emalouise Britton, Columbus Ruth Green, Berryton Dora Ann Brown, Kansas City Norma Greep, Longford Marjorie Brown, Walceeneyf Jean Hatch, Gridley Gracia Bundren, Berryton Mary Holbrook, Washington Betty jo Campbell, Lawrence Erna johnson, Fort Scott Dorothy Carr, Osawatomie Anna Johnston, Marysville Elinor Kline, Salina Marylee Masterson, Columbus Patricia Maxwell, Leavenworth Joyce McCoy, Oskaloosa Muriel Meinke, Linwood Phyllis Moser, Sabetha Cleo Norris, Mullinville Margaret Oehrle, Overbrook Grace Piros, Scott City Marajean Carr, Wichita Left to rigbl-First raw: Stanley, Justice, Peterson, Mrs. E. S. Claassen, Bradley, Glover, Van Order, Ruhlen. Marlatt, Niedens, Temple, Kistler, Horton, Stout, Stormont, Hughes, Third row: Calvin, Dietrich, Stembe Shirley Kelley, Hope Kaff, Allen, Stevens Conard, Waterstradt, . Second row: Durall, Pfeiulwif . Scott, Montgomery, '. - . ' Sdcklery Whiting. Vue Pfemlefzf r, Crocker, Snodgrass, Segremry , Billie Rotermund, Independence, Mo. , OFFICERS Violet Conard june Peterson . . . . Myrtle Glover Bozrth,OI.i ,M ,C ',H ,V ,D', . Fudge, Ver ercer ummm unter og! am Trearurer . . . Maurine Waterstradt Iva Rothenberger, Osborne Lucile Rothenberger, Osborne Winifred Sawyer, Fairview Persis Snook, Wichita Betty Sonkup, Wilson Marilyn Spencer, Bethel Dolores Sulzman, Selden Lois Thompson, McPherson Ruth Tippin, Topeka Ruth Tuley, Republic Dorothy Wynne, Hays WATKI HALL Jeanice Allen, Burlington Helen Bozarth, Topeka ldabelle Bradley, Blue Mound Esther Calvin, Pittsburg Margaret Cevely, Wichita Violet Conard, Coolidge Carolyn Crocker, Kansas City Bertha Cummins, Holyrood Mary Lou Davis, Blue Mound Katherine Dietrich, Richmond Joyce Durall, Coats Ruth Mary Fudge, Topeka Myrtle Glover, Hutchinson Wilda Horton, Blue Mound Lula Hughes, Anthony Lucy Hunter, Tonganoxie Joan Justice, Buffalo Marjorie Kali, Overbrook Billie Joan Kent, Humboldt Gwendolyn Kistler, Kansas City Bonnie Marlart, Rock Port, Mo. Mary jo Mercer, Wellington june Montgomery, St. John Alverta Niedens, Dighton Phyllis Oliver, Culver .lu ne Peterson, Osage City Lylas Ruhlen, Clearwater Sara Jean Scott, Garnett Phyllis Singer, Parker Margaret Snodgrass, Corning,lowa Barbara Stanley, Cofieyville Muriel Stember, Ozawkie Anna Marie Stevens, Frankfort Jadene Stickler, Burlington Helen Stornzont, Dighton Annetta Stout, Rothville, Mo. Lois Temple, Holyrood Virginia Van Order, Wichita Mary Jane Vogt, Hillsboro Maurine Waterstradt, Detroit Gorgjia Weinrich, Kansas City Marilyn Whiting, Topeka JULLI FE HALL Left to rigbl-Front row: Paulette, Wineinger, Young, Coughlin, Bauer, Cassell, Boman, Hall, Barker. Second raw: Farrell, Good, Faust, Stillman, Owsley Betts. Barber, Schreiber, Ramsey, Smith. Third row: Louis, Webster, jones, Decker, Hahn, Ringwalt, Goodell, Gregory, Newcom, Merrifield. Pretizievzl . Maryella Barbar, Atchison Margaret Barker, Bucklin Joanne Bauer, Clay Center Phyllis Betts, Oberlin Rhoda Boman, Topeka Virginia Cassell, Independence. Mo. F0 TER HALL OFFICERS . . . . . Joanne Bauer Secretary-Treamrer . . Catherine Decker, Sussex, N. J. Dolores Farrell, Marysville Doris Faust, Kansas City, Mo. Dorothy Good, Perry Mary Goodell, Kansas City, Mo. Bettilou Gregory, Muncie Joyce Hahn, Norwich Vice-Preticient .... . . . . Rhoda Boman Lulu Hall, Powhattan Colleen Jones, Kansas City Winifred Louis, Emporia Margaret Merrineld, Mena, Ark. Jean Newcom, Oakley Carolyn Owsley, Kansas City, Mo. Georgia Paulette, Great Bend . Rose Coughlin Helen Ramsey, Topeka Ardella Ringwalt, Oakley Mary Louise Schreiber, Kansas City Phyllis Smith, Dighton Billie Stillman, Bushton Cathleen Webster, Hanston Carol Wineinger, Dighton Elizabeth Young, Kansas City OFFICERS ' Prefidevzt . . . . . Secretary . . Tl'6llJZlf67' . Charlotte Bartley, Horton Mary Booth, Olathe Norma Burnstein, Olathe Phyllis Cooper, St. Joseph, Mo. Betty Cunningham, Downs Marian DeVault, Spring Hill Caryl Dyer, Wichita Patricia Finley, Wellington Norma Fulk, Troy Jacqueline Goodell, Abilene Kathleen Hazen, Thayer Corlyn Holbrook, Beloit Margie Kelsey, Topeka Dorothy Klock, Neodesha . Elizabeth Anne Pratt . Mary Louise Harling . Jacqueline Goodell Patricia Lattner, Olathe Betty Leighton, Nortonville Gertrude Leslie, Kansas City, Mo Johnnie May Mann, Olathe Lois Mann, Olathe Wilma Pool, St. Joseph, Mo. Virginia Powell, Olathe Elizabeth Anne Pratt, Galveston, Texas Ray Anne Robison, Neosho, Mo. Mary Louise Harling, Tonganoxie Harriet Sharpe, Neodesha Almeda Smith, Olathe Mary Trompeter, Horton Ruth West, Kincaid Katherine Wheelock, Abilene Marilyn Whiteford, Garnett Edna Lamb, Olathe Left to right-Fira! row: Lamb, Cooper, J. Mann, Goodell, Hurling Pratt, Mrs. R. G. Roche, Booth, West, Leighton. Second row: Holbrook Kelsey, Pool, Powell, Dyer, Burastein, Robison. Third rouu' Whiteford Smith, Finley, Hazen. Fourlb rouu' Sharpe. Klock, Trompeter. Bartley Fifth row: Fulk, Cunningham, Lattner, L. Mann. Sixth row: DeVault Leslie. wa:x Q-ff fnwyml- LUUK LEY HALL Left to right-First row: Richmond, Onstott, Baker, Greenlee, Schroeder, Terrill, Bidleman, Vermillion, Jones, Taylor, During, Hodgman. Second faux' Copeland, Shanks, Simmons, Lippelmann, Brown, Wellborn, Templeton, Adamson, Zollinger, Cloud, Joslin, Barlow, Peck, Giesick. Third rout: Conkle, Gilmore, Mitchell, Unruh, Hughes, Anspach, Wills, Rumsey, Mrs. R. H. Wilson, Leonard, Woodard, Corwin, Smith, Morgan, Stevenin, Hoover. Prerident . . Vice-Prefidenz . . Marilyn Adamson, Kansas City Geneva Anspach, Haven Esther Baker, Wakeeney' Jeanne Barlow, Kansas City Bonnie Jean Bidleman, Kinsley Ruth Brown, Sabetha Patricia Cloud, Kansas City Norma Conkle, Osawatomie Darlene Copeland, Kansas City, Mo. Jean Corwin, Wfakeeney W'anda Dean, Kansas City OF . Jean Templeton . . Shirley Wellborn Mary Jane During, Meade La Vergne Giesick, Great Bend Helen Marie Gilmore, Highland Marion Greenlee, Scott City Iona Mae Hodgman, Garnett Marguerite Hoover, St. Joseph, Mo. Betty Lou Hughes, Kansas City Helen Jones, Ponca City, Okla. Jo Ann Joslin, Merriam Patricia Leonard. Ellinwood Joan Lippelmann. Oberlin OFFIC Prerideni . . . Vice-Prefiderzt . Secretary . . Treafurer . . . . Ana Mae Andrews, St. Joseph, Helen Arnette, Winfield Josephine Barney, Topeka Mary Beiderwell, Garden City Martha Beihl, St. Joseph, Mo. Beverly Betz, Beloit Mary Ruth Burns, Winfield Eunice Carlson, Concordia Ruth Cawood, Wetmore Betty Cummings, Almena Mildred Deaver, Sabetha Lois DeWald, Casper, Wyo. Ruth Dudley, Iola Patricia Dye, Independence Elnora Edquist, Concordia Pauline Elliott, Chanute Barbara Gibson, Oak Park, Ill. U. Alice Goldsworthy, Minneapolis, Minn. Jeanne Gorbutt, Topeka Vivian Grimes, St. Joseph, -Mo. Dorothy Higginbottom, Winfield Martha Hudson, Winfield Marie Hunt, Arkansas City Joyce Johnson, Belleville Verla Jones, Iola h Eunice King, Hutchinson Barbara Yo ERS . . . . Louise Mclntire . Elnora Edquist . Norma Stephens . . . Eunice King Clarice Kirkpatrick, Council Grove Margaret Kleinhein, Osawatomie Lillian Koch, Kansas City, Mo. Anita Landrum, Hays Marita Lenski, Iola Doraen Lindquist, Belleville Jean Mclntire, Carthage, Mo. Louise Mclntire, Carthage, Mo. Barbara Meyer, Wichita Patricia Miller, Kansas City, Mo. Marian Minor, Hutchinson Janice Nattier, Concordia Betty Park, Blue Springs, Mo. Mariorie Peet, Kansas City, Mo, Helen Petterson, Plainville Marietta Richardson, Kansas City, Mo, Vivian Rogers, Hoisington Evalyn Scamell, Kansas City Phyllis Scott, Topeka Virginia Shimer, Topeka Dora Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Madge Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Marylyn Smith, Overland Park Polly Rae Staples, Ft. Madison, Iowa Norma Stephens, Kansas City, Mo. Virginia Stephenson, Garnett ung, Norton Left io right--First row: Kirkpatrick, Edquist, Peet, Dudley, Stephens, Mrs. George Vogt, L. Mclntire, King, Scott, Park, Deaver, Cawood, Barney, D. Smith. Second row: Hunt. Hudson, Shimer, Rogers, M. Smith, Betz, Nattier, Andrews, J, Mclntire. DeWald, Cummings, Goldsworthy, Higginbottom. Third row: Lenski, Meyer, Beihl, Johnson, Lindquist, Burns, Minor, Miller, Stephenson, Carlson, Arnette. Fourth row: Dye, Koch, Kleinhein, Landrum, Young, Peterson, M. Smith. Fiflb row: Scamell, Gibson, Richardson, Beiderwell, Grimes, Staples. FI CERS Secretary . Trearurer . Ruth Mitchell, XValdo Joyce Morgan, Wichita Doris Onstotr, Highland Ruby Peck, Kansas City Colleen Richmond. Natoma Lorraine Rumsey, Council Grove Margrete Schroeder, Newton Shirley Shanks, Kearney, Mo. Jacqueline Simmons, Oberlin Leah Smith, Joplin, Mo. Lois Steele, Junction City . . Ruth Brown . . Marilyn Adamson Louise Stevenin, VC'ellsville Betty Jean Taylor, Topeka Jean Templeton, Logan Carol Jean Terrill, Osawatomie Neva Jean Unruh, Pratt Wilda Vermillion, Junction City Shirley Wellborn, Lyndon Shirley Jean Wills, Kansas City Marlane W'oodard, Topeka Mary Jane Zollingcr, Junction City TIPPERARY HALL 1 M rw vQa,,.wfr ' Q ' he UAMPU H0 OFFICERS Prerirlent . . . . , . . . Roberta Kackley Secretary . . . Hope Bunch, Bronson Roberta Jacobus, Wichita Joyce Mamigonian, Wichita Frances Fridell, Robinson Roberta Kackley, Independence Alberta Moe, Richey Jean Gardiner, Topeka Doris Klindt, Cassville, Wis. Naomi Norquest, Fredonia Nancy Jack, Mission Berry List, Leavenworth Betty Pretz, Olathe . . . . . . Frances Fridell Elizabeth Spratt, W'eston, Mo. Hazel Wathen, Xllleston, Mo. Beverly Wilbur, Wichita Janet W'iley, Tonganoxie Left to right-First row: Pretz, List, Kackley, Mrs. Joseph Goode, Jack, Wiley. Second row: Norquest, Mamigonian, Klindt, Wilbur, Jacobus. Third row Spratt, Fridell, Burtch, Moe, Wathen. HARMO U0-0P JAYHAWK C0-Ill' Prerirlem . . ......... Jeanne Shoemaker Vice-Preridefft . . Marjorie Conkey Secretary . . . . Laura Schmid Treafurer .... ...... G eneva Peirano Jean Boardman, Lawrence Geneva Peirano, Wilson Barbara Chapin, Emporia Betty Lou Pelot, Higginsville, Mo. Marian Conkey, Edmond Edith Reeder, Caldwell Marjorie Conkey, Edmond Rosamond Rowe, Tribune Charlotte Cummings, Topeka Laura Schmid, Atwood Marjorie Doyle, El Dorado Jeanne Shoemaker, Salina Nancy Jane Groff, Nortonville Mary Virginia Turner, Iola Lois Harkleroad. Whitewater Marguerite Watson, Liberal Irene James, Belleville Mildred Whitted, Porwin Joan Jay, Wichita Arlene Wfilliams, Anthony Betty Jean May, McPherson Mary Wisner, Wichita Lorna Nokes, W'elda Prexideul ........ Vice-Prexifleffz . . S ecrelrzr 31 . . Treasurer . John Blodig. Atchison Luther Buchele, Cedar Vale Robert Campbell, Wichita XVesley Elliott, Newton Edwin Grey, Parsons . . . . . . John Scurlock . John Blodig . John Wetmore . Luther Buchele Frank Jirik, Kansas City James Mundell, Parker Benjamin Nichols, Leavenworth Jose Portuguez, Cartago, Costa Rica Charles Pursell, Paola O. T. Hayward, Ft. Morgan, Colo. John Scurlock, Victoria John Wetmore, Wichita Left lo right-Firrt row: James, Wisner, Turner, Doyle, Reeder, Shoemaker, Jay. Cummings, Harkleroad. Second row: Watson, Rowe,iPeirano, Mundell Nichols, Portuguez, Chapin, Pelot, May. Third row: Boardman, Nokes, Jirik, Campbell, Schmid, Wfhitted, Groff. Fourlb row: Buchele, Grey, bcurlock, Wetmore Hayward, Pursell, Elliott, Blodig. CARR TH HALL OFFICERS Preyidevzl . . . Vice-Prefident . Secretary Tfeamrer . Donald Alderson, Effingham Earl Barney, Topeka Calvin Bolze, Kansas City Keith Brecheisen, Welda Paul Conrad, Hiawatha Raymond Cooper, Overland Park . Otto Theel . Cecil Hudson . Paul Zook . Paul Conrad Robert Crawford, Topeka John DuMars, Nashville Marshall Geller, Kansas City, Mo. Wfeldon Hickey, Topeka Cecil Hudson, Oskaloosa George Johnson, Chanute Stanley Kelley, Hope Andress Kernick, Overland Park Donald Kistler, Kansas City Edmond Marks, Topeka Kenneth Miller, Chapman Kenneth Reasons, Coldwater Dean Smith, Selden Duncan Sommerville, Jo Earl Strong, Nashville Otto Theel, Leavenworth Robert Tucker, Mission Paul Zook, Larned plin, Mo Left to right-Firxt raw: Kelley, Conrad, Hudson, Marks, Theel, Alderson, Reasons, Barney, Tucker, Geller. Second row: Miller, Sommerville, DuMars Brecheisen, Cooper, Bolze, Strong, Crawford, Smith, Johnson, Kistler. Left to righl-First raw: Carpenter, Parker, Hollis, Krehbiel, Nichols, Mrs. Ramage, Staley, Ukena, Erwin, Brenner. Haas. Second row: Thompson, Antone Graham, Swoyer, Hoyt, Larson, Kirkham, Johnson, Shirley, Ruegsegger, Davis,Bonjour, Peters, Von Achen, Stroup, Boyle, Scipes. Third row: Larson, Hays Robbins, Howard, Hollis, Smith, Diaz-Gomez, Riffer, Turney, Cox, Demaree, Whiting, Markley, Fourth row: Brown, Clark, Jones, Beard, Dombek, Boyle, Barton Hempler, Atherton, Wagenfield, Cochren, Roberts. Fifth row: Bossom, Walker, Hammer, Morton-, Keeven, Sandborn, Patterson, Janke, Heinsohn, Wenger Huffman. Sixth row: Rathbun, McCann, Kaaz, Boehmer, Hedrick, Esmond, Bruce, Clarke, Bird, Millhauser, Vanderpool. Seventh row: Paslay, Todd, Sula, M Hedrick, Kelley, Smith, Wriston, Ricker, Knowles. Wolfe. Eighth row: Husted, Niven, Pyke, Harter, Stehley, Wickert, McAninch, Fink, Slinker, Woods, Hoover Brown. Ninlh rouf: Gruenthal. Williams, Jury, Roderick, Roy, Johnson, Thompson, Parker, Jennings, Jones, Steckel, Davis, Danly, Tenth row: Pfaff, Murray D. Pfaff, Osterhout, Hopkins, Abts, Janes, Willison, Stein, Yung, Kay, Born, Smith, Stone, Johnson, Bohannon. Ball, Stark, Heinson, Brown. C0lllll HALL OFFICERS Maureen Abts, Iola Norma Antone, Ottawa Mary Ann Ardrey, Stafford Jean Atherton, Marceline, Mo. Geneva Ball, McFarland Barbara Barton, Independence, Mo. Elizabeth Beard, Independence, Mo. Ruth Ann Bird, Kansas City, Mo. Edith Boehrner, Sugar Creek, Mo. Pauline Bohannon, Colleyville Evelyn Bonjour, Onaga Jean Marie Born, Medicine Lodge Edith Bossom, Concordia Marjorie M. Boyle, Great Bend Alice Gaston Bragg, Florence Dorothy Brenner, Olathe Eleanor Brown, Bethel Geneva Brown, Hutchinson Louine Brown, Bethel Mary Jane Brown, Atchison Dorothy Bruce, Horton Lorraine Carlson, Smolan Lorraine Carpenter, Claflin Barbara Mae Clark, Potwin Nancy Clarke, Horton Joy Cochren, Whiting Mary Jo Cox, Atwood Harriet Evelyn Danly, Kansas City, Mo. Harriet Davis, Troy Phyllis M. Davis, Kanapolis Doris Jane Demaree, Kansas City Amelia Dombek, Hartford, Conn. Pina Diaz-Gomez, Bogoa, Columbia, S. A. Rosalie Erwin, Niotaze Barbara Esmond, Springfield, lll. Betty Lou Fink, Sherman Texas Donna Glorvick, Faulkton, S. D. Patricia Graham, Winheld ' Margaret Gruenthal, Glasco Virginia Guill, Kansas City Elma Haas, Hiawatha Lucille Hammer, Leon Dorothy Harter, Caldwell Lavon Hays, Larned Marguerite Hedrick, Richmond Marjorie Hedrick, Augusta Barbara Heinsohn, Topeka Meredith Heinsohn, Topeka Donna Hemplet, Almena Emily Hollis, Overbrook Jeanne Hollis, Overbrook Dorothy Hoover, Smith Center Wanda Faye Hopkins, Colleyville Elaine Howard, McDonald Helen Hoyt, Caldwell Betty Huffman, Glasco Margaret Husted, Salina Frances Janes, Eureka Leda Grace Janke, Claflin Betty Jennings, Junction City Helene Louise Johnson, Salina Margie Ann Johnson, Salina Vivian Johnson, Enterprise Jean A. Jones, Chanute Maxine Jones, Sedan Barbara Jury, Claflin Marguerite Kaaz, Leavenworth Margaret Kay, Dodge City LaVerne Keeven, Troy Lonnie Kelley, Atwood Preriflefzt . . . . Donna Jean Nichols Vice-Prerialefzt . , Joyce Ann Staley Secretary . . . Jane Ukena T1'ea.rm'ef . . Kathryn Krehbiel Verlene Kent, Florence Joan Kirkham, Topeka Dorothy Knowles, Atchison Kathryn Krehbiel, Mound ridge Marie Larson, Osage City Ruth Larson, Galva Betty Jo McAninch, Mt, Ayr, Iowa Charleen McCann, Iola Virginia Markley, Minneapolis Maxine Millhauser, Preston Rosalie Morton, Leavenworth Joan Murray, Herington Donna Jean Nichols, Phillipsburg Elizabeth Niven, Topeka Mildred Osterhout, W'ichita Bobe Jane Parker, Robinson Mary Kathryn Parker, Salina Mary Parman, Arkansas City Lucille Paslay, Lecompton Margaret Patterson, Leon Bonnie Peters, Utica Dorothy Pfall, Hazelton Shirley Pfaff, Hazelton Bettie Pflueger, Santa Fe, N. M. Ruth Prentice, Kansas City Norma Jean Pyke, Strong 'City Phara Rathbun, Dexter Florence Richert, Newton Vivian Ritler, Corning Hannah Roberts, Kansas City Ina K. Roderick, Wetmore Giselle J. Roy, Hartford, Conn. Fern Ruegsegger, Wamego Betty Marie Sandborn, Stafford Ann Scipes, Slater, Mo. Chesney Shirley, Topeka Betty Jeanne Slinker, Wellington Jeanne Clara Smith, Neodesha Joyce Smith, Kansas City Marylyn Clare Smith, Kansas City Joyce Ann Staley, Kingman Helen Stark, Sabetha Lucille Steckel, Emporia Phyllis Stehley, Wilson Barbara Stein, Halstead Barbara Stone, Smith Center Marjory Stroup, Iola Edith Sula, Wilson Marian Swoyer, Oskaloosa Elsie Thompson, Augusta June Thompson, Kansas City Mary Todd, Atchison Mary Turkington, McCune Jean Turnbull, Topeka Doris Turney, Edgerton, Mo. Jane Ukena, Highland Ellen Utley, Bartlesville, Okla. Barbara Vanderpool, Wellington Opal Von Achen, Kansas City Ellen Wagenheld, St. Joseph, Mo. Christine Walker, Wakeeney Melba Wenger, Horton Melba Whiting, Downs Virginia Wickert, Claflin Virginia Williams, Great Bend Jane Willison, Neodesha Willa Wolfe, Meade Jacqueline Woods, Garnett Marjorie Wright, Atwood Allabelle Wristen, Garden City Eva Lou Yung, Sedgwick Left to riglsl-Firrl row: Lemon, Curry, Postlewaite, Rodriquez, Howland, Van Meter, Witt, Nemec. Hollis, Schwartz. Lambers, Kaufman. Hamilton, Saffell Second row: Arnspiger, Greenhouse, Ashcraft, Clark, Fanestil, Heald, Kiene, Hudson, Sumner, Brown, Nelson. Rummer, Pyle, Wheatcroft. Third row: ,hder Whiteside. Luffell.. Hogg, Litwin, Brown, Nichols, Irwin, Stalzer, Baker, Hollingsworth, Andrews, Schwartzkopf, Oatman. Caldwell, Gibbon. llA'I I'll FELII HALL OFFICERS P1fe,riafe11t .... Vice-Preriden! . Secretary . . Treamrer . Robert Andrews, Bethel Larry Arnspiger, Wellington Guy Ashcraft, Osage City Floyd Baker, Leavenworth Robert Brown, Peabody George Caldwell, Wichita Lyle Clark, Eudora Frank Curry, Wichita Donald Fanestil, Emporia Robert Gibbon, Howard Arnold Greenhouse, Leavenworth Robert Witt . Orville Van Meter . William Hollis . Willard Howland Jerry Hamilton, Wichita William Heald, Salina Victor Hogg, Delphos Richard Hollingsworth, Seward William Hollis, Overbrook Willard Howland, Nortonville John Hudson, Pittsburg John Irwin, Merriam William Jader, Selden Orval Kaufman, Moundridge . Ralph Kiene, Kansas City Stewart Lambers, St. joseph, Mo. Charles Lemon, Parker Lawrence Litwin, Chanute Donald Luifell, Fort Scott james Nelson, Chase Dewey Nemec, Agenda Jack Lee Nichols, Vfichita Arthur Oatman, Independence, Mo. Deane Postlewaite, Delphos George Pyle, Morrill Mario Rodriquez, San Jose, Costa Rica it . ex, ,f Dale Rummer, Wfichita Thomas Saffell, Berryton Eugene Schwartz, Hoisington Donald Schwartzkopf, LaCrosse Frank Stalzer, Kansas City Marion Sumner, Independence Orville Van Meter, St. joseph, Mo Lyle Wheatcroft, Utica Edward Whiteside, Fort Scott Robert XYfitt, Hays 4.4 l 51 11 if 'N I P JZ ' FEBRUARY 1945 135 KINTZEL Silcrft-tart' just like Grand Central station-thats the Union Activi- ties ofhce. With a calendar so round, so firm, so fully packed, the Union office is perhaps the busiest place on the campus with a hand in any and every University activity. If y0u're in the mood for midweek, bridge tournament, faculty tea, Saturday afternoon canteen, or carnival, look no furtheri ltls all yours free of charge in the Union Activities asylum. Eugenia Hepworth, Pi Phi, is Union president for 1944- 1945, and is assisted by jane Atwood, Gamma Phi. Secre- taries are Barbara Haffner and Mattie Woodward, and com- mittee heads are Emily Stacey, Elizabeth Bixby, Barbara Prier, Alberta Cornwell, Edith Darby, Elaine Wells, and Dixie Gilliland. Four new clubs have been instigated this year under the auspices of the Student Union. They are ping pong, bowl- ing, book review, and bridge. The Travel Agency enables those handicapped by transportation difficulties to obtain rides home for vacations. The Music Appreciation club, in- augurated last year, is continued this year with a large and active membership. Marian Miller is president. The Last Resort, new coke room, may be on its way to becoming a registered campus hangout. It was decorated and furnished by a committee under the direction of Edith Darby which was assisted by the School of Fine Arts. Under a layer of posters, V-12's, freshmen, copies of the K Union, and coke bottles, is the Lost and Found drawer. The two most popular items in the office are a type- writer, which is used by everyone ir1 the Union except the Union secretaries, and a makeshift radio in the top left- hand drawer of the desk.-Pal Penney. DIXON Sillttlrfnf Liam XlcfLtJ'UfEMl,i The University of Kansas is presumably one of the few schools ever really to succeed in self-advertisement, an achievement which can be largely attributed to the hard work of a group of students who make up the State-wide Activities commission. The organization has two distinct divisions, county chair- men and correspondents. There is a chairman in each county and a correspondent in every fair-sized town, over 200 students in all. It is the job of the county chairmen to keep in touch with high school superintendents in their counties and to arrange special high school assemblies about the University at some time during the year. These chair- men also write letters to every graduating senior in the state telling them of the opportunities offered at K.U. The commission which is sponsored by the All Student Council, is headed by Frances Morrill, chairman, who is appointed by the A. S. C. The headquarters of the commis- sion are in the alumni ofhces, under the sponsorship of Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary. A Kappa, a Jay jane, and president of French club, Francie keeps track of the University pretty well-and her Phi Beta Kappa mind sees that things are organized so that her co-workers pass its activities promptly out through the state. Ten cash prizes are awarded by the commission every year to the students who have the best string booksf' in which they keep clippings of columns of University news sent to their home-town papers. Correspondents try to fur- nish home-town papers with at least one column of news from the University a week. According to Francie, the commission tries especially to 'li37?E J'gr gr 'E e'1 1 v 1, ' fy 3 'WV C A Xgfi ggi! rw . r P ry f it E Left to right--First row: Kati Gorrill, Donna Jean Morris, Ruth Stallard, Betty Jo 0'Neal, social chairman, Ruth Prentice, secretary, Mary Olive Marshall, president, Mary Morrill, vice-president, Elizabeth Baker, publicity chairman, Lonnie Kelley, notification chairman, Anne Young, Joan Power. Second row: Mary Kathryn Booth, Betty Ball, Patricia Scherrer, Johnnie May Mann, Bobette Sellers, Betty Jeanne Whitney, Rosemary Harding, Frances Morrill, Dolores Sulzman, Ruth Cawood. Third row: Emily Stacey, Edith Marie Darby, Joan Justice, Mary Dell Burnside, Maxine Jones, Ann Redding, Charlotte Bartley, Barbara Zuercher, Ruth Wright, Emily Hollis. Fourth row: Virginia Wickert, Betty Leibbrand, Caroline Morriss, Jane Miller, Shirley Jameson, Lorraine Witt, Evelyn Mercer, Virginia Rader, Mary Turkington. Fifth row: Maurine Waterstradt, Dona Wingerson, Nancy Tomlinson, Dora Ann Brown, Mildred Hack, Jean Boardman Mary Jo Cox. Left to right-First row: Christopher Thomas, Robert Andrews, Jack Nichols, James Conard, treasurer, Dewey Nemec, president, Robert Henry, secretary, Michael Kuklenski, vice-president, Donald Relihan, Francis Pierpont Second row: Paul Conrad, Laray Arnspiger, Richard Evans, Robert Stewart, Michael Nichols, Thomas Eberlin Leonard Brown, Willard Reeder. Third row: Lew Purinton, Keith Bradley, Victor Pirnie, Dave Frisbie, Guy Ash craft, Bertrand Morris. Fourth row: Kenneth Higdon, Karl Ehrlich, William Acton, Douglas Irwin, Donald Spangler Donald Cousins. HEWEY NE EU Dewey Nemec is one of the few old boys left. Standing six foot one, he is a loyal Jayhawker doing a bit of instructing as well as learning. His students in bio- chemistry recognize him not only by his height but by the necktie he wears fkujust to teach in l and his loud socks and amazing pharmaceutical knowledge. As president of the Ku Ku's he applied this knowledge in fixing 'hlthy brews for re- cent Ku Ku initiates. Besides being president of Ku Ku, Dewey is a Sachem, past president of both the Inter-Hall council and Battenfeld hall of which he was a charter member and is at present the house manager. He has been on the Deans honor roll every se- mester, is a member of the P.S.G.L. Senate, has an honorable discharge from the navy. He recently pledged to Nu Sigma Nu, is a regent of Kappa Psi, an assistant instructor of pharmacy, and he baked 275 cup cakes and 800 brownies one Saturday morning! This is Dewey's fifth year Qguess he's staying until he gets that pastry eatenb and is now enrolled as a graduate of the school of pharmacy. He plans to enter medical school next SCPICIUDCF.-106177 W n ozlzvmffi, KINTZE L MARYIMJVE MAR HALL Mary Olive Marshall, tall, slender blonde from Ottawa, is known as Mo, but she is so loyally a Kansan no one would ever accuse it of being the abbreviation for Missouri. Mo is the third generation of her family to attend the University and will add her name to the list of its graduates next june. Mo believes nice things always come in pairs. By way of illustration she points out that she was elected president of jay Janes and chosen a member of Mortar Board on the same day. Speaking of illustrating Mo does a nice job of that also as shown by her work in recent Jayhawkers. She likes sketching faces best and has done work for an adver- tising firm in Kansas City for two years. This type of work is her choice for a career. Mo is active in W.I.G.S. political party, has been a member of All Student Council, was photo- graphic editor for the KU. Calendar last year, and is a mem- ber of Dramatic Workshop. Concerning clothes, the glamorous gavel gripper of Jay Janes prefers things smooth looking and blue. She believes slacks are a necessary evil here on the Hill and says of the currently popular short slacks, I like them, but they make me feel like a Swiss hiker. When asked of her most embarrassing moment she con- fessed she couldn't think of one but added, l'm always pull- ing a prize onef'-joan W00d'zz'fzrd. KINTZEL an -1 M M an Qi mt Left to right-Firrl row: Savage, Hempler, Hall, Malin, Krehbiel, Carpenter, Miss Peabody, Stucker, Lutz, Antone, Burnstein, Reilly. Second row: Merri- field, Wright, Hobbs, Johnson, Von Achen, Ruegsegger, Fausett, Booth, Hodges, Hibbs, Riffer. Third row: Fuller, Reitz, C. Markley, R. Brown, Mclntire V. Markley, B. Clark. Todd, Trompeter, Scott. Fourth row: Peacock, Morris, Holland, Ainsworth, Turney, Simmons, Wellborn, Laffer, Krug, J. Brown, Whit: taker, Mayfield. Fiflb row: Shultz, Dymond, Kelley, Lowe, Lamb, Pack, Veatch, J. Jones, Miniard, Harris, Belt, Hustcd, Hogan. Sixth row: Geiger, Gustafson, Onstott, Hindenach, Roderick, B. Anderson, Cochren, Osrerhout, Shaw, Shryock, G. Jones, Slater, Jamison. Sevenlb row: Blessington, Robe, Keeler, Moyer, Owen Bossom, Kelsey. McMillin, Mort-iss, J. Anderson. Fletcher, Newcomer, Vogt. Wlllflll ' Prerifien! ..... . . Margaret Hall G L E E Secretary , . . . Beverly Stucker Burifzefr zllnmzger . . Jane Malin Student Direrlor . . . Norma Lutz C L B IDirev!0r . . Miss Irene Peabody Aileen Ainsworth Barbara Anderson Jane Anderson Norma Antone Janet Belt Suzanne Blessington Mary Booth Edith Bossom Jean Brown Norma Burnstein Mild red Carpenter Barbara Clark Joy Cochren Norma Dymond Marjorie Facller Wancla Fausett Jeanne Fletcher Rachel Fuller Pearl Geiger Bonita Gustafson Elma Haas Margaret Hall Billie Hamilton Joan Harris Donna Hempler Ruth Hibbs Barbara Hindenach Alice Hobbs Frances Hodges Martha Hogan Frankie Holland Margaret Husted Lois Jamison Mary Shultz Jepson LaRue Johnson Guynelle Jones Jean Jones Anabel Keeler Shirley Kelley Margie Kelsey Anne Krehbiel Naomi Krug Martha Laffer lidna Lamb Janice Lowe Norma Lutz Jane Malin Constance Markley virginia Markley ' Sidney Mayfield Jean Mclntire Elizabeth McMillin Margaret Merrifield Murice Miniard Mary Morris Caroline Morriss Patricia Moyer Anna Newcomer Doris Onstort Mildred Osterhout Jane Owen Eleanor Pack Margaret Peacock Margaret Wright Suzanne Reilly Beverly Reitz Vivian Riffer Rowena Robe Ina Roderick Fern Ruegsegger Dorothy Savage Anne Scott Jacquetta Shaw Marjorie Shryock Billye Simmons Nancy Slater Beverly Stucker Helen Todd Mary Trompeter Doris Turney Joan Veatch Mary Vogt Opal Von Achen Shirley Wellborn Norma Wfhittaker Left to rigbl-Firsl raw: Sandelius, Dudley, Talley, Hepworth, Young, Clarke, Hedrick, Cooper, Whiting. Owsley, Breitenbach, Utley, Smart Krehbiel Nichols. Second row: Shirley, Russell, Dunn, Doyle, Stock, Kent, Ringwalt, Vickers, Duemcke, Masterson, Kass, Wagenfield, McGrew. Logsdon, Richmond Tbzrd row: Jones. Staley, Ross, Belt, Abelson, Reisner, Scott, Giesick, Bidleman, Cloud, Mathews, Evans, Asher, E. Smith, Gray. Fourlb row: Winter, Little Ardrey Kackley, McMahon, Brewster, May. Thorpe, Thalman, Emick, Kufahl, Wingerson, Holden, Fifth row: Johnson, Zollinger. Miller. Southall, M. Smith Sixth rou Roberts, Lawson, XVil.cox, Ericsson, Fountain, Conner, Jackson, Kocourek, Baker, Sisler, Alexander, Ballard, Hamilton, Kettner. Seventh row: Reed, Moore Strawn Swarthout, Ellsworth, Bnnnel, Lee, Yeckel, Gettys. 0 lf' F I C E R S Pifeficlefzl . . . . Elaine Talley Secretary . . . Donna Mae Wingerson Tfemznfei' . . . Ruth Russell Libmffifm . Melvin Kettner Director . . D. VU. Swarthout Ahleson, Evelyn Emick, Margaret Lawson, David Sisler, Harry' Alexander, Warren Ericsson, Eric Lee, Jess Smart, Marilyn Arclrey, Mary Asher, Mary Ballard, David Baker, John Belt, Patricia Bidleman, Bonnie Billings, Imogen Breitenhach, Maurine Brewster, Doris Bunnel, Keith Clarke, Nancy Cloud, Patricia Conner, Ralph Cooper, Phyllis Doyle, Marjorie Dudley, Ruth Duemcke, Betty Dunn, LaJune Ellsworth, Robert Evans, Elizabeth Fountain, Robert Gettys, James Giesick, LaVergne Gray, Mary Ann Hamilton, Robert Hedrick, Marguerite Hepworth, Eugenia Holden, Bonnie Jackson, William Johnston, Elizabeth Jones, Kathleen Kackley, Roberta Kass, Zend ra Kent, Billie Kettner, Melvin Kocourek, Francis Krehbiel, Kathryn Kufahl, Katharine Little, Martha Lou Logsdon, Suzanna McGrew, Jeanne McMahon, Patricia Masterson, Marylee Mathews, Mary May, Betty Miller, Hope Moore, Jean Nichols, Donna Owsley, Carolyn Reed, DuMont Reisner, Ruth Richmond, Ruth Ringwalt, Ardella Roberts, Orville Ross, Marylou Russell, Ruth Sandelius, Irene Shirley, Jo Ellen Smith, Eleanor Smith, Margaret Southall, Carolyn Staley, Joyce Steeper, Margaret Stock, Bonnie Strawn, Richard Talley, Elaine Thalman, Elaine Thorpe, Barbara Utley, Ellen Vickers, Joan Wagenheltl, Ellen Whiting, Marilyn Wilcox, Hal Wingerson, Donn Wlinter, Virginia Yeckel, George Young, Barbara Zollinger, Mary 21 Dean Sims discusses a campus bug-hear which seems to be immortal. ' DIXON The meeting -where all good political strategy begins. Here PWCLers led by Virginia Wickert of Corbin draw up an elaborate offensive. KINTZEL Personal contact, best, but most tedious campaigning technique. Forays for the Navy vote have recently re- lieved some of this monotony for staunch party women. DIXON The atmosphere is strained when ballots are being counted in the Pine room. Prof. E. O. Stene annually is charged with keeping the various factions out of each 0ther's hair. . .POLl'I'lCi 1909 - Ye gocir-wfmfr tbfzl? EJqzzi4'e'5 Fall edition? Hell, no-you mp! Thafi HIM-our Campm polilicimzf' , S THE State of Kansas gives birth only to Republican babies, colts and puppies, so the various fraternities, sororities, and other forms of co-ops within the bounds of the University give birth Cpledgeb to members of This student political party or That student political fac- tion. Quite obviously, this number yearly stays approximately the same. The big fight in K.U. student politics, then, has always centered around the free, unattached Independent students whose vote is just as valid as that of the confirmed party man. So we find a light to get Independent student voters to vote This ticket or That ticket. The All Student Council, as we read about it in the University Daily Kansan today, come into existence in the fall of 1941. It replaced the two councils for governing student affairs, the Menis Student Council and the Women's Self-Governing Association. The new council, com- posed of representatives of both sexes, is something a little more stream- lined. Political fighting, since the advent of the A.S.C. has narrowed into two annual fights, the freshman election in the fall and the regular spring election, with both sexes participating in scrambles for seats on council and class offices. The Progressive Wornen's Cooperative League battles the Womens Independent-Greek Society for offices and posi- tions on the A.S,C., while Pachacamac wrestles with the Progressive Student Governing League for the same. K.U.'s army and navy trainees provoked a savage political dispute last spring as the Pachacamac party with their cohorts, W.I.G.S., feeling a large number of their votes were vested in these servicemen, began a fight to obtain for them the right to actively participate in stu- dent politics-meanwhile, the generally disinterested servicemen merely viewed the fight nonchalantly, not really caring whether they voted or not. Pachacamac claimed that P.S.G.L. and the P.W.C.L. parties, holding a majority vote on the Council, had purposely disfranchised the Army and Navy men just to spike Pachacamads chances at the coming poll for A.S.C. positions. The two accused parties sputtered profusely and denied the charge with passionate speeches concerning their love for the campus fighting men. In the long run, the trainees got to vote and even run for office. To wonder where K.U. politics had a beginning is natural, and it would not be too far from true to state that they had their beginning when K.U. herself was founded. Things really went into full swing, however, on April 27, 1909, when Chancellor Frank Strong appointed a student election committee to elect a Men's Student Council. May 12 of that year saw the first student council elected at the University by a general student poll. Later that same year, jayhawker coeds, quick to organize for strength of unity, founded the first Women's Self-Govern- l l'1llRl,KRY l9l3 Ill Jack Button, 5I3Cl'9IHI'y'-IICZISLIFCY. presides over a meeting of the All Student Council. Occupying the coveted seats are-First row: Lloyd Eisenhower, Marjorie Shryock, Martha Woodwartl. John Irwin, Beth Dimond, Kenneth Reasons, Robert Campbell, Leonard Brown, Dewey Nemec. Second row: Marjorie Free, Joan Burch, Elinor Kline, Eugenia Hepworth, Emily Hollis, Beverly Waters, Donald Cousins, Robert Buechel, Robert Henry, Evelyn Mercer. No! in picture: Jean Templeton, Jean Mclntire, Patricia Graham, Doris Bixby, vice-president, Persis Snook, president. ing Association. The initial K.U. elections of the hrst student councils, really quite peaceful the first year, within 12 months turned into a bitter struggle between fraternity and non-fraternity groups. The XV.S.G.A. rebelled against being regulated under certain rulings of the men on the M.S.C. on January 25, l9l2, by meeting in Fraser theater to proclaim that they believed they should have as much to say in regard to the governing of their affairs as the men had and, therefore, from that time hence, would be responsible for themselves. lt was decided at this historic meeting that all night strolls to and from the library, committee meetings, and University entertainment would not fall under the classification of dates The W.S.G.A further stipulated, however, that no stop overs would be allowed University women and fC01z1fi1mecl wz Page 1632 DIXON 0 Q Every election is heralded with reams of literature, handbills, posters, and candi- date's cards. Along with the regular campaign goes the sideline battle between poster chairmen of each party and their active squads of bulletin hoard vandals. 0 OFFICERS Presirlenf . . . Martha Ellen Woodwarul Scaretary-Treasurer . Laura Belle Moore Club Sponsor . . Miss Ruth Hoover f, E E Left to right-First row: Mary Longenecker, Sara Jayne Myers, Jeanne McGrew, Barbara Varner, Barbara Smith, Patricia Nees, Alice Ackerman, Olivia Garvey, Imogen Billings. Second row: Marjorie Free, Carrie Arnold, Joyce Smith, Betty Leibbrand,Laura Belle Moore, Martha Ellen Woodward, Miss Ruth Hoover, Suzanne Schwartz, Louise Mclntire, Eleanor Pack, Mary Varner, Audrey Harris. Not in picture: Phyllis Ellis, Jean Hamilton, Irma Lee Kilmartin, Marilyn McEwen, Kathryn 0'Leary, Bar- bara Sherrard. 0 F F 1 c E R s 'Il A President ...,.. Marian Miller Vice-Presidelzl . . . .loan Power Secretary . . . .... Belly Ball Treasurer . . . Laura Belle Moore Club Sponsor .... Miss Gloria Smith Left to right-First row: Margaret Ott, Meredith Gear, Shirley McGinnis, Katherine Kufahl, Betty Ball, Marian Miller, Margaret Smith, Laura Belle Moore, Joan Power, Jo Ellen Hall, Maurine Zimmer- man, Joyce Bonrassa. Second row: Nancy Parshall, Marion Henry, Barbara Varner, Doris Dixon, Frances Lawrence, Marilyn Erway, Joan Hise, Joan Woodward, Margaret Barker. Third row: Ann Cowan, Katherine Brooks, Dorothy Dahlin, Kathryn 0'Leary, Virginia Davis, Rachel Fuller, Patricia Penney, Jeanne Atkinson. Fourth row: Patricia Miller, Joan Hendrickson, Ruth Russell, Jean Board- man, Barbara Moffett, Patricia Sigman, Glenda Luehring, Betty Nichols, Joan Harris. Fifth row: Marian Minor, Shirley Oelschlaeger, Joan Veatch, Beverly Mendenhall, Alice Ackerman. Not in picture: Bar- bara Barcroft, Marilyn Sweeney. Nlid-Season Reports Indicate HPIIULIN May llave Done lt Again IIRE CHAMPIUN . EXV Jayhawker fans dreamed that Phog Allen might have another champion basketball team this season. Gone were S ark McSpadden, Don Barrington, Gordon Stucker, P Y Bill Lindquist, Homer Sherwood, Abe Turner, and George Dick from the 1944 team, w ici W y f h' l on onl five and lost five to finish in a tie for third. But with the exciting 59 to 56 victory over Kansas State, Kansas is tied with the Oklahoma Sooners for first place with four victories and one defeat each, and it looks as if K.U. has an excellent chance to win another Big Six basketball title, l 'll be at Ames. Manhattan, and The toughtest games aheat wi the Oklahoma game at Lawrence. With a squad of about 35, Dr. Allen started to build this S l' f three nights each week sa e1r's team back in October. penn ing y 1 . . on fundamentals, the squad soon became accustomed to the well-known Allen coaching system. f football season Charles Moffett, Gordon Rey- At the close o nolds, Gus Daum, XVallace Rouse. and Tex Langford turned in their moleskins for basketball suits, and practice began in C2lI'I1CSf. Traveling to Topeka for their first game with Wzislibtirn on Monday, December 4, the jayhawkers came home on the short lb artially achieved end of a 40 to 35 score. Revenge wr' p. . . that Friday when the Ichabods lost by a 31 to 27 score in 1C01zli121zed 072 Page 1599 Top: Scott stunifies his Nebraska guard with a graceful left-winger. Cwzlerr The reserves attempt a talley. Beloux' Tension strikes a dozen poses as the bench fights it out, too. Observe Phog's folded hands, Peck's open mouth, Carlson's leg hitch, Rouse's glassy stare, and Langford's rapidly dis- appearing fingernails. A season which neither kills nor cures the ,lay- l1ilVVkiS reputation. HAT 1944 was an eventful if not an al- together successful football year is the only conclusion that can be drawn by viewing the season in retrospect. A record of three victories, six losses, and one tie- while not fatal- cer- tainly does not 'give the fervent alumnus any thing of which he can be proud. However, when the many stumbling blocks are viewed as a unit, we can hardly see how Henry Shenk, head coach, Elmer Schaake and George Dick, assistants, were able to push the jayhawkers as far as they did. The V-5 training program had gone from the campus before the season began and the rugged naval aviators were sorely missed. Navy V-12 transfers on November 1 again slaughtered the squad, but this time there were no replacements, The presence of V-12 trainees on the squad also cut practices to a little over an hour daily, giving 1944 01TH Coach Shenk barely time to meet the men and get acquainted. The Jayhawks started out as if they were really going places. They slaughtered Washburn 47-0, dropped a close one to Texas Christian 7-O, and played Denver to a 14-14 tie. Then came two games which football fans would rather not mention. The traveling Kansans came back from Tulsa dragging their tail feathers after a 27-O defeat at the hands of the Golden Hurri- canes, and the following weekend the exhausted Birdmen were pushed all over the held, going down under Iowa State 25-0. The Kansans turned on more power than they had ben able to display all season in trounc- ing a Nebraska Cornhusker eleven, for the first time on Kansas soil for 48 years. The Hne de- fensive team developed by Shenk was then doomed when on November 1 navy transfers l. Gordon Reynolds, endg 2. Sam Hunter, end: 3. Jim Weatherby, backg 4. Don Stockdale, guardg 5. Wally kl 6 C il Lan ford center' 7 Wayne Hird center' 8 Lee Gregory. endg 9. Bob Miller, half-backg 10. Rouse, tae eg . ec g , , . , , . Kenneth Danneberg, half-backg ll. Charlie Moffett, half-backg 21. Charles Keller, guard, 13. Leroy Robison, full back: 14. Gene Long, guardg 15. Don Faulkner, back: 16. Dorwin Lamkin. tackle: 17. Bill Chestnut, halfback. dropkickerg 18. Dan Chase, centerg 19. Garland Cantrell, guardg 20. Ivory Bird, guardg 21. Dud Day, guardg 22. Ted Short, backg 25. John Schimenz, endg 24. Don Barrington, fullback, 25. O. J. Endicott, backg 26. Charles Daig- neault endg 27. Warren Riegle, end. Upper left: Captains and referees confer before the game with M.U. in Ruppert stadiufn. Lower right: M.U. mows Moffett on an attempted pass. If S S Gllllllllll lny Earl Barney took Don Barrington, hne line backerg John Schimenz, Charles Daigneault, and Wzltren Riegle, first string ends, and Endicott, regular quarter back. The Kansans made a fine comeback the first weekend after the winter semester had begun by turning a fighting Olathe naval air base eleven, 33-15, but that seemed to be the end of the road. A freak play at Manhattan the follow- ing week-end in the annual K.U.-KeState classic sent Charlie Moffett across the Aggie goal line with the winning touchdown in the last two seconds of the game, but a penalty nullified the score, giving the Wildcats the decision. An attempted comeback at Lawrence the following weekend against Oklahoma failed, 20-O. Hopes for a repeat over Mis- Wfarren Riegle, star Jayhawk end who almost single-handedly engineeited the triumph over Nebraska last fall, was named honorary captain of the 1944 squad. Granny, as he was known to the squad and the school at large, was one of the most popular lads on the team, and his Hght- ing spirit seemd to find its way into the hearts of eleven on the field at the most crucial times, especially during the Nebraska struggle. Riegle, Charlie Moffett, Wayne Hird, and Gene Long were named on the all-Big Six squad. Moffett making the first eleven. Lettermen on the l944 Jayhawk grid machine not pictured are: Dwight Sutherland, back, Dick Dreher, guard, Bill Wygle, tackle, and Bill Mowery, back. souri were destined to be shattered, for the Tigers unlimbered their mas- sive V-5 Weapon, jim Kekeris, on the Thanksgiving day affair in Kan- sas City. The 300-pound tackle, shifted to fullback, pounded the Kansas team into submission while his mates ran piling up a 28-0 score. 1- ff ':Em3dZ ,'H I3'P?2- . 'ZW Lffaewl. 'W' .9l2.A fx? x.Ym.vQdS4T,:S2ZMi43wl9Wf' 'WF' WT? ZSTZVWHQAG ll 'I' ll IC .I -I Y Il .K W lx IC II . ' ' may E , Q ifisuux --f , r f '-l S 1 ' OGRAM Ns 4 I XRINII Nl UI Nl'l'.I'LXlI .NXIU I7Il.X5I.X Xb fifxmi milf, q 1 P 1 t . t 11 1 5 J ' S Q I I : gg u f 'f11UNE IN YESTERDAY 5, I t H I 1tf,111t.:- 11.1u-11141, ata Q 1.1. 11- .XlltulT1.1fto11 1 II ' i.lIXIL.XL.IIliSi111o1dt1-11.1ppt1111141 f 5' B Il xx num on ROISI1 NI XRGIIW IUHNSQN I 5 1IiIlXIkX1IlUllIllI',1IIUISIKJX LUIKN-l',I.l,X .XXX XIII I.l'.Il .W ui, S.XIl.XIl 1 ' ' . . - A ' ' Ii 4 1' 1 ' , ' ' 1 by NEAL WOODRUFF Crafton has done it again. In dehance of the manpower h tl e University play director for the second time For more than twenty years, the spirit of the Yuletide Season has been uppermost in with the University at the time of the annual Christmas the minds of those associated Vespers. This devotional was presented by the School of Fine Arts on December l7tli, again carrying out the tradi- tion. Throngs approached Hoch auditorium, to the merry sound of carols. Once inside, listeners were struck with a kind of atmospheric awe, at what they did not quite know. The spirit increased as the lovely Ave Maria was played, the Christmas candles were lighted, and to the solemn grandeur of O Come All Ye Faithful two long columns advanced toward the stage. Passive feelings were aroused as the tableaux unfolded- Bringing in the Yule Log, a l2 century seceneg A Wliite Christmasf which carried thoughts to our boys, The Shepherds, reminiscent of the Gospels, Adoration, of the Virgin-a Bibical, yet modern scene. Music, vocal and instrumental, and it was Christmas. The listener himself sang, Noel, Nolf' and Silent Night, and went out again into the cold, humming I-lark! the Herald Angels Sing. s ortage, 1 has written an p Yeyzewlay, a comedy of sorority life. An explanation of the play read any likeness to episodes or characters on our campus is purely coincidental. But few sorority and fra- who saw it failed to find a situation or d roduced a play for an all-girl cast, Tune in ternity members person that they had not met before. The play tells the story of the wartime tribulations of the hypothetical Zeta Beta Mu sorority. The situations, if not previously experienced by many, are easily plausible . . . two girls fighting over a man, the attempted wartime main- tenance of sorority tra upholding the organizations grade-point average, entertain- nt and naive rushee. The situation reaches a climax when it is disclosed that if one more girl leaves the sorority, the university will consider the organization defunct and appropriate the house for a dormitory. Exceptional performances were given by Roberta Sue Mc- Cluggage, as the bubbling and bouncing Dooley, and by Shirley Wagimer, as the brazen Swede, Also in the cast were Margie Johnson, Cornel Dorothy Savage, Shirley Corlett, Virginia Davis, Kathleen jones, Gloria Goff, Joan McCrory, Shirley Nan Hargiss, Shirley Kelly, Violet Conard, and Emily Stacey. ditions, the ever-present necessity of ing the effervesce ia Ann Miller, Sarah Heil, FEBRUARY 1945 147 ......q is sa........ SWQOTOGRAPHS hx Ce X vlll uurfx ' v, un 'Y X r X! SOPMAIO 0 ,ff H 'J 'i S ? 1fYwAnn- , rl I1 ,T ' fi ' ' f I X 'Z ll f I ' ,Tm HOHN WH Suu, W 2 . X 1 ,K , by LIZ BAKER The Moore the Merrietn aptly describes one Monday night on November 6. Hoch was filled to capacity with an audience anxious to hear a great, joyous woman sing. You're such an appreciative audience, I could sing for you all night, said vivacious Grace Moore. The concert fell several hours short of the dusk-to-dawn wish, but the soprano sang something for everyone. Popu- lar songs came after intermission. Fritz Kreisler's The Old Refrain, was dedicated to the guests of honor, 75 grinning members of the University V-12 unit. It went over, yes, it went over big. Not many of the audience that night saw the twelve sparkling medals pinned on the sopranols sequined dress, representing tributes from a dozen countries. Miss Moore is the only American to be awarded the Sign of the Southern Cross, the highest honor the Brazilian government can give, She received it as Singing Ambassadress of North America in 1941, when she toured 26,000 miles for a Pan-American concert trip under the sponsorship of the Rockefeller foun- dation. I've spent the past months going from coast to coast on tours, said Miss Moore. Before the war my maid, my sec- retary, and my husband, accompanied me everywhere. But that has been shelved for the duration. We get reservations when we can, but they are often cancelled. Recently I traded my drawing room for the upper berth in which a naval lieutenant and his bride were starting out on their honey- moon. Touring is a hectic business, but I love every minute of itf' Swarming with humanity and excitement, colorful Cat- fish Row conquered 5,500 hearts at Hoch auditorium on November 21. It was homecoming for vibrant Etta Moten, star of Porgy and Bess, who had not seen the University since her graduation from the School of Fine Arts in1931. Catfish Row, delapidated, happy-go-lucky tenement dis- trict on a South Carolina waterfront, was the background for Porgy and Bess. Against it unfolded the story of an emotional, life-loving, group of Negroes who didn't make much money, but didn't much care. Murder and grief stalked the Row, but it was soon forgotten in the rich after- math of carefree pleasures on the waterfront, of warm love, and dramatic quarrels. K.U. will not forget its own Etta Moten, and Etta Moten will not forget K.U. As guest of honor at a reception pre- ceding the I-Ioch performance she received a citation from the University Alumni Association for distinguished service in her field. I have always had dreams to fulfill, and this was the ful- fillment of my biggest one. To return to my own University, and receive this tribute means everything, Miss Moten said. Etta Moten has other dreams, When I Hnish 'Porgy and Bess,' I want to play straight drama for a year or so and, with a wink, rest my pipes. But that will be in the future. On tour, the cast begins on one coast and winds up on the other. Starting last July in San Francisco, the current season will end May 15 in New York's City Center theater. xg. 2 . W ff 'EW U Sw 1m'Qef:t2 t3ygh ,A A W ,J . W . f 5 iwzesgw Xfdffi' AMER A MQ ,.-i,,,2, ,1gg , -:gi jf , ' 573252 iiizw ,:sW2'i1p.u 'Hg fl ' . Q4 ffifzilgyig 'K' ' Z slwgmgzizi 2 ' Ai Mari ,siflfz We 4 fm mi lnsrm. 3 Q, 2 wgzsggw M, my A,Q5,,w1q fzipggiii . , Wiki' gif 19253. Jigs: fwxwf Mqfiil '-iff? Ez: vrff-M K L 2532 : 253.51 S 38 fag: Y 'r . W '-, , J W wwf , X5 EF Q5 ' f 1L?' 'W M W Q Q gg :js Q W ' lpffgcil Q6 M V 251 . M JM Vishnu ,T ,M Q ww r Q. K , f f :N 2 W' X Ji Q M Qggeglswfif M it 3 5 K .3 7' .pez i 4 M z Q 48- w Sziv 2 Q we A nie W Q Q Q H N ,, za. .Q ,V Q' Q YMCA YWCA UABI ET Left lo rigbl-First row: Jones, Gilliland, Kelley. Pile, Morton, Robbins. Second row: Bixby, Hepworth, Woodward, Jackson, Casad, Free. CABINET MEMBERS The Wforh of the Chrarrh . . Rosalie Ervin Prericient . , .......... Lonnie Kelley American Lahor Mozfernerll , . . Dorothy Wynne Vice-Prefident . . . Elizabeth Pile Iaparzere-Arzzericarz Stmlerzty . . . Ftonzena jackson Serrelary ..... . Charlotte Price Vocafiorzal Informatiori ...... Betty Jeanne Whitney Zirgrig Ilieprerentatire . . . . Mignon Morton COMMITTEES . . . eprerentatizfe .,...... Eugenia Hepworth 1 . Y he Y Call ..,...... . Jeanne Shoemaker COMlVIISSI'0N LEADERS Poi! Wfar Sfhofarrhip Fund . . . . Hazel Jones Cahirzel Ifzfacaliorz .......... Marjorie Robbins Memherrhip a11.i Coffee Honrr . Elizabeth Bixby Mirzorilier ....... . . . Frances Janes Pahlicit-1 ...... . Dixie Gilliland World arid Community Service . . Martha Vfoodward Drama ........ . . Patsy Creel The Y Lohhy ..... . Julia Ann Casad Sofia! and Fellozrrhip Sapperr . . Marjorie Free CAB! ET Left to right: Gibbon. Button, Woodruff, Nickell, Alexander, Buechel. Prelideizl . . Vine-Pre,vide1ft . Secrelary . . . Sw'1'ife lllbllbl' Ariirf Program Chairman Foramr .... Service Clnh . Minoritier . , . Publicity Chairman ti CABINET MEMBERS Luther Buchele Wenclell Nickell . Jack Button el . . Lee Alexander Richard Hoover Robert Buechel Robert Gibbon Neal Vfoodruff james Thomas HUME ECUNUMICS CL B Left to right-First row: Betty Pretz, Juanita Basinger, Lucena Burns, Eleanor Brown, Joanna Wagstaff, Miss Lucille Aust, Ruth Prentice, Jeanne Hollis, Thelma Stutz, Nancy Neville, Dorothy Warren, Laurilla Cox. Second row: Margaret Stratton, Dolores Farrell, Mary Ruth Murray, Lorraine Teeter, Martha Haines, Pina Diaz-Gomez, Frankie Holland, Virginia Miller, Charlotte Bartley. Patsy Piller, Lois Bradstreet, Dora Lee Smith, Frances Clancy. Third row: Naomi Norquest, Betty Jane Moate, Eileen Giles, Ernestine Karr, Mary- lou Regier, Virginia Kline, Mary Jo Trompeter, Marjorie- Dinsmoor, Louise Mclntire, Jeane Quaney, Barbara Ford, Betty Jo Spring. Fourth row: Ann Dctlor, Elva Heuer, Jean Fergus, Marian Swoyer, Eva Lee Yung, Beverly Stucker, Betty Jo Everly, Marilyn Maloney, Verla Jones, Esther VanBuskirk, Nancy Parshall, Dorothy Gates, Fifth row: Alice Jean Harrison, Anne Louise Anderson, Evalyn Scamell, Barbara Gibson, Doris Kenton, Sue Hamel, Irma Lee Kilmartin, Mary Gayle Marsh, Pauline Elliott, Kay Dietrich, May Feder, Rose Hos- king, Virginia Guill. Not in picture: Joyce Adams, Peggy Sue Biggs, Betty Bredouw, Marictte Bennett, Helen Clickner, Vera Louise Durbin, Catherine Decker, Charlotte Dack, Marjorie Dinsmore, Evamay Ecord, Elaine Falconer, Jacqueline Goodell, Lucille Hammer, Martha Haines, Laurel Hessler, Mary Evelyn King, Mrs. Kathryn Krehbiel, Dorothy Knowles, Patricia Leonard, Madelon McClure, Betty Jo McAninch, Helen Mather. Shirley Pro, Helen Ramsey, Coral Schmitendorf. Mary Lou Schreiber, Marguerita Shipley, Bonnie Veatch. I DEPE DENT T DENT ASSUCIATIU CUUNCIL Left to right-First row: Muriel Meinke, Shirley Wellborn, Patrcia Graham, Donald Aledrson, president, Emily Hollis, secretary, Ann Sipes, vice-president. Second row: Robert Kunkle, Jack Nichols, business managerg Richard Hartzell, publicity director. Not in picture: Marie Larson. WIIMENH PA -HELLE IU UIIUTUIL fw 1-wr' '53 nik Left to right-First row: Carol Stuart, Delta Gamma, Martha Ellen Woodward, Kappa Alpha Theta, Edith Marie Darby, Pi Beta Phi, Elizabeth Beach, president. Delta Gamma, Jane Miller, secretary, Pi Beta Phi, Joan Power, Alpha Chi Omega, Mary Margaret Gaynor, Alpha Omicron Pi. Second row: Jeanne Atkinson, Chi Omega, Lila Jean Doughman, Kappa Alpha Theta, Gloria Nelson, Gamma Phi Beta, Janet Sloan, Alpha Omicron Pi, Marjorie Pollock, Chi Omega, Bobette Sellers, Alpha Delta Pi. Third row: Irma Lee Kilmartin. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Caroline Morriss. Sigma Kappa, Mary Morrill, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Marianne Glad, Gamma Phi Beta, Marjorie Shryock, Alpha Delta Pi. l 'PER-FRATER ITY UUUNCIL I, ww-Gimme 1 Left to right-First row: Sidney Walker, Beta Theta Pig Roderick Bradley, Sigma Nu, Frank Brosius, secretary, Phi Gamma Delta, WR. J. Atkinson, vice-president, Phi Kappa Psi, Robert Stewart. president, Sigma Nu, Robert Buechel. Delta Upsilong John Hawley, Phi Delta Theta, David Whyte, treasurer, Phi Delta Theta, Kenneth Nohe, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Second row: Ralph Fleagle, Delta Tau Delta, Harry Stucker, Phi Gamma, Delta, Page Brent, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Wood Runyan, Phi Kappa Psi, Jerome Wildgen, Sigma Chi: William Chestnut, Phi Kappa Psi, Homer Hoover, Phi Delta Theta, James Calkins, Beta Theta Pi. Third row: Dean Schwartz. Delta Tau Delta, Charles Hall, Delta Tau Delta, Elton Hoff. Beta Theta Pi. I 9 The Good Ear+h flfontinuetl from Page 901 Steve Phelps doesn't have that red hair for nothing as Hanna Hedrick, KKG, can certainly conhrm. Seems that things were a bit strained when she told him of the return,of the conquer- THE HEARTH Open Ivy Iicstwvutioll Only Phone 1036 1941 Mass. ing hero, Ed Kelly. just how conquer- ing he was remains to be seen. I Belong To The Harry jennison Club is giving the Van Johnson clubs stiff competition. Pre-requisites for membership requires two dates. Shirley Otter, Gamma Phi, is the latest addi- tion and at a recent Phi Bere Sunday grub fest she was ceremoniously pre- sented with a certificate stating her eligibility-hm. Marge Pollock, Chi O, the picture of health in the before of a before and after picture is rapidly loosing more of her precious red corpusules. When all your men arrive on the scene at once it takes huge quantities of intestinal fortitude and Polly hasn't any too much to spare. Mary Olive Marshall was heard com- menting rhat she was never bothered by strange men but the day the Marine HUIII IIHNSHN ALL ROADS LEAD TO THE HOTEL KANSAN In Topeka, It's the Place to Go for Finer Food, and Unexcelled Hospitality and Service WHEN IN TOPEKA-STAY WITH US 'l'IIE .IAYHAWKE The S+uden+'s Choice ROY and MARY'S .. Q .. DINE-A-MITE INN - Q - Phone 845 236 Louisianna Jayhawker Taxi The Oldest and Mos'r Reliable PHONE 65 WE LEAD AND THE REST FOLLOW Meadow Acres BALLROOM wilt Coming Soon: FRANKIE MASTERS GLENN GRAY DUKE ELLINGTON HAL MCINTYRE COUNT BASIE ik PHONE 939I TOPEKA KANSAS FEBRUARY1945 Corp landed in the K.C. Union Station her statement was directly reversed. Two years in the South Pacific gives one ideas! Vote for the most forgetful fresh- men goes to Martha Yingling. Mo- biles just won't run without gas. One should be thankful that they are never in her careening path as she backs down 14th the third time in a week. Things that cause mutterings and the people that necessitate them: Sam Hunter, Sigma Chi and Virginia Lar- sen, Chi O. Dancing is a wonderful institution. Bill Kanaga, Phi Delt, and Sylvia Small, D.G.. There's a lot of lipstick in a tube. Guynelle Jones, Rankin Drug 153 DC., and engaged at that. Dolores Delt boy. Sure he's taking care of her Custer, A.D. Pi, and Winifred Winni's while her BF. is delayed by the Navy. L. G. BALFOUR CO. National Manufacturers Fraternity, School and College Jewelry Commencement Announcements, Bids and Favors SOLE OFFICIAL .IEWELERS TO 90170 OF ALL NATIONAL COLLEGE FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES Co. O BOTH PHONES 678 S JOHN ROONEY, representative, always on or near the Campus 1101 Mae- looz Walnuf Rooms 407-8 Phone vi-6855 LAWRENCE KANSAS Kansas Cify, Missouri N ova- Box COMPANY - CORRUGATED AND WOOD SHIPPING CONTAINERS 6I2 SOUTH COMMERCE STREET WICHITA, KANSAS 151 Those starring in Three's a Crowdnz Jean Brown, Gamma Phi, Bill Ritt, Phi Psi, and Gladys Blue, K..A.T. Sam Harris, Phi Delt, Mary Margaret Mor- ris, K.K.G., and Hulburt Murray, Beta. Jason Dixon, Nu Sig, Virginia Phipps, K.A.T., and Barbara Neely, K.K.G. jack Miller, Phi Psi, Betty Aylward, Pi Phi, and Mary Longenecker, Pi Phi. Lois Bradstreet, K.K.G., Bud Wzintland, '1'HEJAYHAWKER Sigma Chi, and Jane Gillespie, Phi Phi. jane Atwood, Gamma Phi, Bill West, Beta, and Mike Nichols, Sigma Chi. Harold Wairwick, Phi Delt, Eleanor Pack, Pi Phi, and jim Sargent, Beta. Insurance for the Entire Family HEALTH AND ACCIDENT LIFE HOSPITALIZATION The Standard LIFE Association IIUVIE OFFICIC LAWRENCE, KANSAS Foumlerl 1890 IN WICI-IITA IT'S YINHHNH EHlVH FOR THE BEST OF SERVICE Hill EUMPHNY 300 South Topeka Outdoor Laboratory War has hrought lllillly drastic ehanges to our American way of living and our educational system has heen no exception. Today many young men and women. who might in normal times have heen studv- ing in college elassrooms, are out on far flunug hattle fronts doing their Mlahoratory work in a far different way. As peacetime plans erystalize more sharply, an even greater challenge and opportunity will faee these young Americans to return and remake a ehaotie world. Holding open the doors of higher edu- eation to these returning veterans will mean nlueh to their future . . . and the future of lAllli'l'lCil itselfl Kansas City Power 81 Light Company l4'l'1l5lCllKl!Y l9l5 But then theres a waiting line every place these days. Campus Casanovas that are Confined to quarters: Corky Baker, Phi Delt- Pi Phi quarters. Burris Jones, Phi Psi -Theta quarters. Campus Casanova that is just cou- fined-darn it: Gordon Reynolds, 15 Sigma Chi. dating girls who are available in a re Hill Flash who seems to persist in stricted sort of way, Tom Bailey. MW? r Q 3 5 rf 'fbi' .ififv H. w. srowws i z p:.:: re Refreshing as thc flowerfs own fragrance, F ig f is the HPPOaranco of our Pastel Suits in Phone 5l6 classic dressmakcr styles. f.f' l 9th and Mass. Lawrence Sizes I2 +0 20' 9 +0 I5 Are You H u1zg1'yP ik If You Arc If I--QNX' Stop at the Famous .bm 1 - . if osys f as SUITS4SECOND FLOOR . 'M ,N DeLUXE CAFE . TQ 711 Mass. Lawrence Kansas To All the Men of Kcmsos Now in the Service Winter Chevrolet Company PHONE 77 LAWRENCE 156 THE .IAYHAWKER Double Trouble: Howard joseph, Morris, Phi Delt, and Nancy Love, Pi McCleary, D.G. Dave Hall, Sig Alph, Beta, and Joan Woodward, Pi Phi. Bert Phi. Joe Turner, Phi Gam, and Pooh and Meredith Gear, Chi O. Rose Nell I Curtis, Chi O., and Jim McCollem, Sig Alph. Eileen O'Connor, K.A.T., and Bob Schwanzie, Beta. Wally Rouse, Phi Gam, and Mary Zeller, K.K.G. Bob Henry, Phi Delt, and Mary Ruth Mur- ray, K.A.T. Bob Ramsey, Phi Gam, G e O . I n n e S C O . and Gloria Gray, K.K.G. 3 ' t Kansas Largest and Fznes Store IPS the Service That Counts! Q L. r, . EXCLUSIVE WICHITA HOME or Eldridge Pharmacy Adele Simpson Originals Hattie Carnegie Creations Q Shagmoor Coats Philip Mangone Suits ii' 701 Mass. Phone 999 Eisenberg Creations Hantlmacher Originals Kay Dunhill Dresses Gay Gibsons WE HAVE A WAR T0 WIN AND ' WE ARE GOING T0 WIN IT. And Dozens of Other World Famous Garments Phono and Accessories 7511 Clleangps Merchants of GOOD RPPERRRHCB 926 MASS. THE G AN -BILLINGSLEY FRUIT CoMPANY Wflaolesale Fruit and Produce WICHITA KANSAS FEBRUARY 1945 The Midwegfern Fr-gn-Her show men what they can do. Looking desire to balance agriculture with in fcaminued from Page 952 ahead to the postwar period, and the dustry in the Middle West, a grou of ployment, in turn furnishing an ever- widening market for the products we create either from the soil or from the . factory. This is our 1945 frontier. G 0 0 d IJ I Scientific research has been born to INSURED CA BS BAGGAGE HANDLED C I T Y C A B Phone 3-200 Makes Seeing Easier 24-Hour Service CoUETEoUs DRIVERS Speeds Up Wgrk ' ' Increases Sales Srunan Accounrs Pmlecls P'0pe ly WELCOME Lawrence National Bank i Where Your Savings Are Safe NxXf, X IIN '79 f i Pl ,rf I O , i Uwsonzmiawwm THE KANSAS ELEGTRIG PUWER GUMPANY MEBIBER FDIC lf? 553 8121? 515 rrr ii isuraa i u ts a c i i E ii E E E E ii ii e s suscsusctssurirt rrr s rr ,' ,g.,if., r.:- , 'V,, eser si t 5000 '7 , . gg Ji? ,fi M You Con Do It Better with GAS Kansas Public Service Go., Inc Lawrence Sanitary Milk 81 Ice Gream Kansas City men have launched a movement to produce a great Midwest Research Institute to serve the whole area. Kansas City has no selfish interest -if the area grows, Kansas City will grow. There is no limit to the items which our area can produce, and with the aid 'l'IIE .IA YIIA WEEK of research we can awaken our indus- trial giant, and prove to the world that the Middle West is a land of oppor- tunity for everyone-a land where we can produce raw materials, and process them into articles of daily use for the peoples of the world. AVO Clean Everything You Vfear . FLOWERS But Your Shoes -for - . - her Lawrence Laundry EASTER PARADE and Allison-Armstrong Dry Gleaners Flower Shep We Like Jayhawkers . . . WE LIKE SHOWING YOU THE DRESS FOR 'l'HA'l' FIIRLOUGH . . . WE LIKE PUTTING THE GLEAM IN YOUR EYES AND THE POSIES IN YOUR HAIR . . . XX' E LIKE EQUIPPIING YOU WITH LAUNDRY BAGS AND MOTH BALLS . . . WE LIKE SELLING YOU QUALITY MERCHANDISE WITH LABELS AND PRICES YOUR MOTHERS APPROVE . . . Gvmnanv . . . We Lake Bezng Your Favorzte Store . 1 SQHVQPS Phone 696 Ft. of Vt. LAWRENCE KANSAS ifnnnu ixuv ruin More Champions? fCnn!inuer1lrom Page 1131 Hoch. Rockhurst was defeated twice, 47 to 23 and 47 to 28 during the next week and a half. Taking part in the pre-Christmas doubleheader in Kansas City's Muni- cipal auditorium, the Jayhawkers easily SHOP ON Country Club Plaza ik llere you'll lind merchan- dise to meet every need at prices witllin your budget. Wide streets and free park- ing Stations Solve the parking prolilem. Pleasant. intelligent, and helpful sales people make Plaza shopping a pleasure. won from Kansas State 63 to 40 as night, however, the Missouri T1.,ers Moffett dropped in 25 points. The next knocked off the Kansans 48 to U9 FAMOUS FASHION CAMPUS CLOTHES -2 35' -A .5 :ste .Y 4-I -1- Up on Your College- Knowledge You Know Youill Find Them at Hinkels. ik Fashion Headquarters in Wichita at' Country Club Plaza wlci-HTA, KANSAS SERVICE MEN STUDENTS ALWAYS YOUR IVHMUHIHI UNIUN After the unimpressive non-confer- position, the Jayhawkers journeyed to ence showing of four victories and two Columbia january 5 to meet the same defeats against comparitively weak op- Tigers who had defeated them two QUALITY APPAREL FOR THE JAYHAWKER weeks earlier on a neutral court. The 45 to 28 lacing which they received from the Kansans was a sign to many followers that Phog had found another winning combination to harass other Big Six coaches and give them sleep- less nights. Moffett was high with 12 counters. Bolstering their morale with a 48 to RUMSEY MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN FUNFRM- HUM! SPINES' CLOTHING STORE Wesi' Douglas West Douglas 60' INDIANA Phone 672 WICHITA, KANSAS 1 5 , tvx I I I fp J Ay '21 s ' u A i . ' 'A WICHITA KANSAS FEBRUARY 1915 101 Royal College Shop 33 triumph over the Nebraska Corn- huskers on the following Saturday in the first conference home game, the jayhawkers were looking ahead to the Oklahoma game at Norman, january 20. They found a new scoring combi- nation in their second conference game iff as Gordon Reynolds made 16 points I l, F and Dean Corder 12. Reynolds, a V-12 Cm' Hy Uommr from Tacoma, Wash., is leading the a hawkers in conference la with an ik Y P Y 1 1.6 average, followed by Moffett, with 1 .2 1 . . 837-39 Mass. Phone 648 1 10 Sverige . . . Meeting tougher opposition with the Where Sfudenis Go 0 0 For 0 Universiiy Tex+ Boolcs and Supplies Rowlands TWO BOOK STORES TOPS IN PASTRIES D R A K E ' S See It At THE PALACE FIRST THEN CoNF1RM rr IN ESQUIRE Q Springl . . . Vs hen life seems free of care . . . Wlhcn you get an extra kick out of smart clothes . . . Wlhon somo- thing new is eallocl for . . The PALACE has it hrst. SEE US FOR YOUR NEW OUTFIT 907 MASS PHONE 635 LAWRENCE. KANSAS . THE PALACE Store No. 1 Store No. 2 1401 ohio sn.. 1237 oread Ave. 0 0 843 Mass. AT YOUR SERVICE Our 24+h Year Serving K. U. S+ucIenl's and Facully GAS - OIL - LUBRICATION - TIRES - BATTERIES FRITZ CO. 8+h and Phone 4 CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS New Hampshire For I-lecilth 546 MISSISSIPPI PHONE l28O 102 Sooners than they had expected, the Kansans took their only conference loss on the chin, a 44 to 43 overtime thriller. Moffett tied the score at 40- all, sinking a long one with 35 seconds remaining, but the Sooners managed to outpoint the jayhawkers in the over- time. Reynolds again led the losers For You KERRY CRICKET has created fine sports- wear fhaf answers your caII for DURABILITY in ma- ferial especially adopfecl for youfI1fuI fown and coun- fry wear. I Johnson s Phone 77I 835 Mass. with 10 points, as the winners took over first place, only a loss to Kansas State to be held against them in four games. The Jayhawkers met the defending co-champion Iowa Staters the next Saturday and sent them home licking their wounds after a 50 to 35 trouncing which knocked them 'down to fourth place and gave the Kansans undisputed possession of second. Reynolds, with 16, and Moffet, with 10, led the Jay- hawker's scoring attack. Kansas regained first place in the topsy-turvy race by their 39 to 36 vic- tory over the Kansas State Wildcats on january 50. Several dozen Aggie stu- dents accompanied their team to Law- rence, only to see them defeated after leading a good share of the last half. Kirk Scott put the Jayhawkers ahead 37 to 36 with 1 minute and 40 seconds to play, and Reynolds made a setup to DINING AND DANCING N I G H T LY AT John Dotson's Famous B L U E M 0 0 N The Soutpbwesfs Largest Night Club 5 Miles South on Oliver Wliehita, Kansas 'l' ll E J A Y ll N W lx ld K clinch the Kansans' fourth conference victory. Moffett led with 14 points, followed by Reynolds with 11. After a non-conference game with the Olathe Clippers, February 6, the Jayhawkers will start on the second leg of the double round robin schedule, hoping to gain their 12th champion- ship since the Big Six was formed in 1929. Aside from Reynolds and Moffett, the other regulars are Kirk Scott, Herb Heim, Dean Corder, and Gus Daum. Owen Peck, Everett Hill, Norman Carl- COLONIAL T E A R O O M CHICKEN AND STEAK DINNERS Serving Hours: WEEK DAYS: - 11:30-1:2305 5:30-7:30 SUNDAY: 12:00 - 2:30 CLOSED SATURDAYS Phone 978 936 Kentucky Sure Winners . . . THE JAYHAWKERS GOODYEAR TIRES For Your Tire Needs Visit Our llflotlcl Store. BROWNIE'S Cnr mul Home Supply ,Q . i 9I I Mass. Phone I630 FEBRUARY 1945 son, Odd Williams, and Lou Goehring constitute the reserves on the travelling squad. Moffett, Corder, and Goehring were lettermen last year. O Siafe-wide Acfivifies flfontinuefl from Page 1351 establish contacts in the small com- munities, where there are fewer chances for publicity of the University. -Paz Penney. O K.U. Poliiics fflontinued from Page 1412 their escorts as they walked the straight and narrow path from their places of residence to the campus, then home again on week nights. Women who violated this regulation by so much as stopping for a coke were subject to trial before the W'.S.G.A. Later in 1912, because of a factional Hght, the M.S.C. was withdrawn from campus life by the University faculty senate. It, regardless, continued to function in a limited and undercover way until 1920, when a new M.S.C. constitution was approved by the sen- ate. ln l925 K.U. politics were back in full swing with the Pachacamac party, composed of fraternity men, fighting the Black Mask party, composed of non-fraternity men, for positions on the M.S.C. The Women's Representa- tive Party, an all-Greek political party, fought the coed Black Mask party for seats on the W.S.G.A. In 1926 Chan- cellor Lindley publicly criticized par- ticipation in both athletics and politics by jayhawker males. He said student political differences were disuniting the football team to the extent that the crimson and blue eleven was in for a dismal season of defeats. As a result, seven gridders withdrew their names from ballots for M.S.C. positions. Three men's political parties were on hand to campaign in the 1931 stu- dent election - the Pachacamac, the Kayhawk and the Progressive. A fourth 163 party, the Oreads, began an independent race but combined before the election time with the Kayhawks. In 1934 the M.S.C. election was a comparative reign of terror as Pacha- camac vandals are reported to have re- sorted to rotten eggs and barn paint in attacking the Oread-Kayhawk party, WOLF'S JEWELERS . 125Konsas Avenue 'W Topeku,Kansds T0lIl'ln'll.X Olllvsl Ivwvlry Slorf' O O CARTEIVS STATIONERY 1025 MASS. PHONE 1051 Serving Wichita for Over Sixty Years ENJOtn TOPS D 0 C K U M Fountain Service REXALL DRUG STORES HIHSIIH PHHHMHEY In .C.f Allow. Phone 1487 616 W. 9th l6ll There's u Forzl in Your Future ik' Over 30 million Ford, Mer- cury, Lincoln and Ford trucks have been built - As soon as production is resumed we will he glad to deliver one of these units to you. which had been recently joined by Delta Chi, Beta Theta Pi, Acacia, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternities. The four fraternity chapters awoke one morning to find their house fronts splatteted with odotous eggs and huge painted signs of Beat the Oreadsf' Then in l94l the A.S.C. came into being- partially because, it is said by those who were around at the time, the election teas held by the W.S.G.A. were on the border of turning into cat Hghtsf' Wford got to the proper ad- ministrative authorities that the female ASK DAD! WE HAVE OUTEITTED lk K. U. MEN EoR OVER 40 YEARS Today we are headquarters for both men in civilian Morgan-Mack clothes and men in uniform. Motor Co. 9 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 605 Mass. Phone 277 C. V. Topping G. S. Ware MOTO R-I N THE JAYHAWKER politicos were beginning to punch be- low the belt, so the A.S.C. plan looked like a good remedy of the Whole Hill political situation. And so it came to pass . . . Wartime Jayhawker politics have be- come somewhat coed-ish in nature. That is, since early in l943. Rotten egg campaigns have been supplanted by delicate but stinging mud-balls hurled verbally at one party by the other from coeds who are finding the game exciting enough to occupy their minds as they camp on the home-front. Probably the little ditty hooked to the other end of this story should be temporarily changed to: Ye goclr--whaft that? An Algerian jumping-flea? Hell, no -you Jlupe! Slae'J 41 rep on A.S.C! I The Jayhawker Looks al' . . ffillllfilllltlfl from Page 922 more representative distribution of the many offices in Hill organizations. The point system is also an efficiency measure. There is nothing in the world wrong with the All Student Council today except that the students serving on it are called upon to do so much in other Helds that they have neither the time nor the energy to devote to the full time job of being a council repre- sentative. The same principle is true in other organizations. If leader interests were allowed to center, instead of encouraged to diffuse, the many lame duck activities on the - 0 - campus could be revived. Present lead- ers could cencentrate upon those things l t ' which most vitallly interest them, and Recappmg and TNQ Rgpmrs others could be moved up into the posi- tions they vacated. ... Q - WE SERVICE I 'il' ALL MAKES OF CARS R E E V E S HFoods That Satisfyn .l- - . T FANCY GROCERIES QUALITY MEATS Hotel laghowli Skelly Products Phone 4I 3 q.opEKA- KANSAS Phone 607 827 V+' 9th and Mass. Lawrence, Kan. Coca-Cola is the answer to thirst that adds re- freshment. Your own experience tells you just what tolexpect. Ice-cold Coke has the happy knack of making thirst a minor matter . . . refreshment your foremost feeling. And your own ex- perience will prove this fact: The only thing like Coca-Cola is Coca-Cola itself. 'knl speak for Coca-Cola. I speak for Coke. Both mean the same thing...LlE Ee! Mg. . .'coming from a sin- gle source, and well known to the community'. F' KANSAS Ei?ViE252El3fTE5LiS.Cicoiiiiiimii EOMPANY and III I Walk and Say om gleam wmfyawz Here you Slt ' dd Anil that's a mighty happy picture. f 1 Chestcrlields never fail to fit in with your S f ' plans . . . to add to your pleasure. Cllestorfii-ld's exceptional Mildness, Better Taste 71 and Coolness are built on the only foundation you y can depend on in u cigarette . . . g,:4T'fl7'72gj. RIGHT COMBINATION if WORLDS BEST TOBACCOS H: '11 an Yum 'onf.u,u io. QVQ QI: Q 5 -vu iii H, .pu-fx 1, KX 4' Q Q 'F' avi? .Yx5, F fn iff' 19 45 TRP H is 59 6 Q- 1:1-' 3' i X43 , . at '9 1, 1 4 2 ,ggi :lim 5 1 yi! ,B A if ' ai: X F, J, , Q A . 5,3 0 iw K if AA ti X Q Q V' 1 A ab., 2.ig x Ar 3:f,S35' my fx? ' 9 Hwy F. N a if '+ 1' 4' wi ijlggill 1 W Z' AI-'Elf fy Kailua? ,gm .lf ' mugs kk,-if 4 'dgf fi 5 igf. k 4: q if ml is ,NLi?Q?' it . ,f K 1 'x Q? to ,Z ' 1' ff' ' ? I '3 'ff' Q Jw g 'T 3 .1 M M . I 3, Q. . ig O gf biggifp 25' P 4 .1 ' fa. '. f - i W llgj ff: 4 X x 1' - '9 ' W If Wav-'s if . '- 5 AJR. X V MQ' Wa 23.51 wid! . -I-A W ' s- 1 N ' 4 I 14 .49 HH UHHISHIPHIH Slum IC9LL5Ja3yl'1aWI4 Photographer ii? ikirikf TIQK T NE 1945 -. 'X M H C THE PINK ELEPHANT in 'rhe S1'a+e in Kansas Cify or in +l1e Broadview in Wichila a swell place 'ro meef 'I'he cla+e. W. G. HUTSON Prefident R. C. MCCORMICK Secretary-Treamrer ASSOCIATED HUT 0 HUTELS 1000 ROOMS- 1000 BATHS Rates 3150 to 35250 Single HOTEL BOULDERADO ROBERT E. LEE HOTEL Boulder, Cola. Kansa.: City M HOTEL STATE HOTEL ELDRIDGE Kansas City, Mo. Lawrence, K 5 HOTEL BROADVIEW Wichita, Kansas W. G. HUTSON R. C. MCCORMICK President Setrelary-Tr ' ' ' ' ' ZBERT KINTZEL 238 Editor-in-Chief . . . . MARY MORRILL Barinexr Manager . . . BEVERLY BOHAN Secretary ....... SALLY FITZPATRICK Aalverliring Manager ..... EARL STANTON Arrirtanl Aritfertiring Manager . HAROLD WARWICK Artirtf . Editorial A.rrociate.r Phozographic Staff TDORA ANN BROWN lcARoLYN CAMPBELL LILA JEAN DOUGHMAN . . MARY OLIVE MARSHALL BARBARA NEELY IJEAN SAFEELL INANCY TEICHGRAEBER JOADY CATES BETTY Jo EVERLY . . L1LA JEAN DOUGHMAN HANNA HEDRICK PAT PENNEY jCHARLES FISHER CONTRIBUTORS jane Anderson Elizabeth Baker Earl Barney joady Cates John Conard Hanna Hedrick Pat Penney Dolores Sulzman Mary Turkington OFFICE ASSISTANTS Carolyln Campbell Frances Chubb Nelle Claycomb Dorothy Dahlin Elaine Falconer Patricia Glover Nancy Goering Meredith Gear Margaret Hardie Sara Heil Bonnie Holden Sue Jamieson Sara Krehbiel Shirley McGinness Margaret O'Neil Marjorie Peet Catherine Piller Marjorie Reich Louise Schwartz Mary Lou Shinkle Billye Simmons Elaine Thalman Judith Tihen Patricia Williams joan Woodward ADVERTISING STAFF John McLaughlin Barbara Varner Virginia Winter T H E J A Y H A W K E R QW . . IG I 1,53 , I .A I I L 5 11 T' I fx T X -- : 'IIIIE JAYHAWKEII T LAST We are at the end of the commencement issue -the issue seniors who aren't graduating have been writing for, the issue parents have been ordering, and the issue we have hated most to Hnish-because it was our last. We have planned these seventy-six pages keeping in mind principally the seniors who are leaving-and those who are not here to leave. We thought of them when we were taking pictures, and tried to find scenes and situations typical of the things they would want to remember. We like to think of the whole magazine as an illustration more or less for John Conard's KNOW Have It Framed. An ensign in the navy air corps instructing now at Ottumwa, Iowa, john looks back at the University with an evaluating eye which places the little things with the big, to form a true picture of Mt. Oread. Dave and Dave's letter are of course figments of the mind. It was John Conard, graduate in '43 and one of the jayhawkeris best editors, who went to college to get a degree. Thank You Notes This is our last opportunity to thank our associates and assistants-the people who have really made these four issues possible. To begin with, there is Beverly Bohan who topped off a lengthy association with the magazine by being business manager this year. Her trials and tribulations are generally known. With advertising and enrollment on rock bottom and engraving and printing costs lost in the clouds, she had enough to worry about before we started insisting on an extra issue. Cautious but willing, she tackled the project- and brought the budget through in tact. Although we could have excused her for cracking up completely at the sight of another organization list, Sally Fitzpatrick, secretary, remained sound of mind throughout the year. During the last two semesters she has checked so many names, she threatens to recite the student directory GUE 'l'li00ll from memory. Her other duties have included sending out bills, writing letters, telephoning, and fixing the pencil Sharpener. Such rounded experience could not help but qualify her for a bigger responsibility next year, the busi- ness managership. With three women on the staff things might have been rather colorless around the office had it not been for Earl Stanton whose feet perpetually crowded the adding machine on Beverly's desk. The round man always said he was tired-and we generally let it go at that, since his daily record of ads entitled him to be. We have no apprehensions about turning the editor's desk over to Hanna Hedrick, who has done outstanding work as an editorial associate. Hanna's supply of ideas seem inexhaustable. She has been giving them away all this year, and still has enough, apparently, for a magazine of her own. Although only a sophomore, Pat Penney, always willing to work, always possessed with a wave of enthusiasm, has been one of our most valuable associates. That she will go far during the next two years is not a matter of speculation. And two of the staff associates, Lila Jean Doughman and Betty Jo Everly are graduating this spring. The places they leave will be hard to fill. The Unsung We have had few contributors as energetic as Liz Baker, celeb- rity expert, who has arranged for pictures and interviews with practically every notable who has ever stepped on the campus. Liz never expects to live down her tete-a-tete's with Bert Brandt, Sigmund Romberg, and Alec Templeton -to mention only a ELIZABETH BAKER few- Richard Hartzel, PT 8, and Jane Ukena, Corbin hall, pose at the entrance of the Memorial Union build- ing for the commencement cover. Unsung-but heroes all the same are the dozen or so members of our office ad advertising staffs-the people who don't get paid and those who don't get paid much. Appearing daily to type and file, the only ones it seemed at times to accomplish anything, were Margaret O'Neil, Bonnie Holden, Pat Williams, Meredith Gear, Sara Heil, and many others. Members of the advertising staff who faithfully packed contract books in their week-end bags and pounded the home town streets on Saturday afternoons were less numer- ous. Emmisaries who lasted out to the end were Harold Warwick in Kansas City, Mo., Barbara Varner in Wichita, and John McLaughlin in Topeka. In all the years the jayhawker has been published it is doubtful if two more tireless and reliable photographers have been on the staff. Certainly there were never two more over-worked. Both Bert Kintzel and Charles Fisher were entitled to the sigh of relief, mingled we liked to imagine with regret which went with the last pictures they turned in. And now we turn the difficult task of thanking Elaine Thalman for something that has no specific classification. Elaine's job has been the nameless one of transferring every layout from the dummy to the make-up sheet. Since proofs have an unpleasant habit of coming back on Satur- day afternoon Elaine's work has frequently fallen on Saturday evening- and she has devoted ELMNE THALMAN that time to the cause with graciousness. Sir The Greatest Attraction on the K. U. Campus! Both Work and Play Go On All Day At The Union Fountain Be One of the Gang - The Union Offers Relaxation And Fun for All- Follow the Crowd To The . . MEMORIAL UNION 'Ar THE JAYHAWKER hy Pat Penney THE Gllllll EARTH Q OUND TOWN: Paul Finck and Margaret Logan . . . Ken Knuth and Jeanice Allen . . . Faith Severson and Phil Hartley .... joan Harris and Vernon Pieron .... Jeanne Brown and Vincent McCabe. The merry whirl : Tom Buckley and Mazzie Lane . . . Alberta Cornwell and Bob johnson . . . Pat Dodge and Leonard Brown . . . Patty Glover and Bob Corber . . . Jeanne johnson and Bill Basham . . . Dick Nelson and Ann Young. We mw 'em with our own eyefz Marge Pollock with John Hawley . . . George CLardoD Darsie and Bunny,' Kline . . . Pudgy Faulkner and Marty Yingling . . Mary Ann McClure and Leon Thomas . . , jim Sanders and janet Taylor . . Bill Stewart and Marjorie Fadler. They my: You can lead a Delt to water-but why disappoint him? Dnz doer efzferylhing Cwell, mort everythingfjz Dottie Warren, Pi Phi, has joined forces with jane Woestemeyer, Gamma Phi, in the laundry business. The W girls are kept quite busy these muddy days washing Uthingsl' for Kirk Scott, Phi Delt, and Dan Chase, Beta. Cohin' and c0nrlin': Bertha Cummins and Norbert Schaefer . . . Don Albert and Bebe Horine . . . Stan Hobbs and Norma Whittaker . . . Andy Hiscox and Tom Conroy . . . Doris Bixby and Charles Cowan . . . Bob Burch and Mary Lou Ainsworth. Something new har heen adiieii: Don Cousins and jane Gillespie . . . Persis Snook and Ted Shafer . . . Bob Kunkle and Jane Miller . . . Liz Esterle and Bud Wantland . . . Tom Eberlin and Ann Cowan . . . jack Mercer and Marilyn Smart . . . Fred Daneke and Marge Beneke . . . Pete,' Reeder and joan Power. Pinch-hitlerr: Mike Nichols squires Shirley McGinniss, pinned to Sigma Chi, Kenny White, in the Pacific . . . Al Evans is seen about with Sue Diggs, pinned to frat brother, Bud Varbel, in the navy. Amoorin' or c0nf00Jin'.9: Sylvia Small, Delta Gam, the day after almost-steady Bill Kanaga, Phi Delt, had stepped out with Mary Morris, Kappa, decided to take Bill Weiser up on his offer to attend a Delt baseball game. Imagine Dainty's surprise when she arrived to find the game was with the Phi Delt's. And imagine Weiser's surprise when frat brothers escorted his almost-steady, Louise Hatch, Chi O, to the same game. Things were most uncomfortable for all concerned, except Lou, who never even saw Weiser. Weiser's guilty conscience led to an apology later that day, only to find out she'd never have known the dif. Ain't that just like a man? CLASSIFIED ADS Lori: Bill McGarry from Ruth Richmond . . . Leatha Sanford from Dewey Nemec . . . Elton Hoff from joy Godbehere. Found: Kathleen Jones by Willard Howland . . . Joan Hendrickson by Bunk Chase . . . Annette Etter by Dan Watson . . . Kate Roberts by Ralph Fleagle. Strayed: Bill Burgess from Liz Esterle to Martha Bonebrake . . . Charles Brodegard from joel Fant to Alamada Bollier . . . Bill Chestnut from joan Hen- QC0ntinned on Page 3089 ON MAIN JLIN 1945 Bill's Grill sk Foods Thai' Satisfy ik 1009 MASS. LAWRENCE KANSAS Across from the Courthouse A Thank You for Your Kind Patronage During the Past Year O Your Coke Dealers 0 O TOM BAILEY O DICK CARTER 1408 Tenn. Phone 443 Brownies Gar and Home Supply Dealers in Sure Winners Q GUODYEAR TIRES CAR SUPPLIES AND B. P. S, PAINTS 916 MASS. O PHONE 1630 ' 9 AT TENTH IN KANSAS CITY COMMENCEMENT AFTERMATI-I to mmf you through the Summer in style Whether youlre awaiting the draft, working or taking a crack at summer school a sport coat and slacks fills the bill for leisure or dress. Blue, tan, grey combi- nations. 33 to 59. Second floor. the cout Contrasting Solid Slacks .............. 1 Content 241 The Good Earth ............. 240 hy Pal Penney Now I-Iavc It Framed ......... 245 hy Ensign John Conard The Fifty-seventh ,Iayhawkcr ..... ..... 2 46-247 Book Exch angc .... ..... 2 48 Alumni Association . . . .... .249 Beauty Queens .......... 250-255 The Brighter Side of Life. . Spring .................. No Fringe on the Top ..... Time Out for Study ...... The ,Iayhawker Goes on a Steak Fry ............. Intramural Competition Men ................ by Earl Barney Women ...... . ...... hy Mary Turkington Track ............. .... by Earl Barney Carruth Poems ....... The Student's Chapel .... by Dolores Sulzman Artists .............. hy Liz Baker Senior Medios ...... .... Nu Sigma Nu . . . Phi Beta Pi . . . Phi Chi ......... Delta Sigma Bho- Pi Tau Sigma .. Delta Phi Delta- ,Iayhawker Staff ..... Sachem-lVIortar Board . . . . 256-257 258-259 260-261 262-263 264-265 . . . .266 . . . .267 268-269 ....270 ....271 ....272 273-274 ....275 ....276 ....277 ....278 ....279 ....280 Senior Alhum ........... 281-305 Four Years in Retrospect. . hy ,loaily Cates ....283 Footsteps to Follow ......, 286-287 A Faculty for Being Human ......... .... 2 90-291 Class pictures .... 292-305 'lllll JAYHAWKER LO0K AT . .. A CQINFERENCE As freshmen we didn't do much serious thinking about the University as a whole. Our parents sent us here, and we did as we were told, working during the week, playing on the Week-ends, believing that We were having a per- fectly wonderful time. But all along, we remember a faint undercurrent of dis- appointment, nothing we took time enough to recognize, nothing we probably could have put our finger on if we had taken the time. But still it was there. A trace of feeling that college wasn't exactly what we had expected. The buildings were bigger than high school, the people were older, there were more of them-but we could not catch the inner grandeur we had anticipated. We felt this way a little more when we were sophomores, and by the time we were juniors we had had time to think and to realize-something really was missing. Then one Saturday sitting on the lawn of the Lawrence country club and talking to the Chancellor as he chewed thoughtfully on a piece of grass, we realized what it was. We had missed, in a sense, just sitting there. Most of all perhaps we had missed the piece of grass. Sitting and talking was, of course, only symbolic of a number of things which had been unfolding as the day prog- ressed. Listening to the Chancellor speak earlier in the day we had realized that we lacked a sympathetic under- standing of the administrations problems. We found we had missed altogether wondering whether a University should lead or follow the trends of its state. We hadn't appreciated the fact that the administration shares some of our pet gripes such as the curbs on the Daily Kansan and the confusion of enrollment. In the discussion of traditions we found more things that were lacking. Not just the nightshirt parades, and the after-hours rallies and pep convocations, abandoned during the war. We realized that the important traditions we had been missing were deeper ones. Traditions of appreciation jx ig for scholastic excellence and integrity, intellect and scope. Traditions that instill a loyalty with depth. We realized that we had missed a pride in real leadership being too often inclined to regard as a leader the person who makes a hobby of collecting offices rather than of doing jobs well. We became conscious of having missed a certain spirit of progression. We listened to discussions of the point system, the honor system, the pre-enrollment system. Opin- ions varied-we did not reach a conclusion in our own minds as to the merits of each proposal. But we sensed that one of the things which had been missing most in our feeling was the very act of considering these things at all. In a specific sense we had missed just such a conference as the members of Sachem and Mortar board were holding. We had missed the opportunity to know our teachers as persons, to play softball with them, and to confer in our old clothes. In a broader interpretation we had lost sight of the University as our University. We had come to college in the first place with an idea of being one in a large group united on a common intel- lectual plane by a loyalty to a common purpose-that of profiting from associations with people who knewwhat we were anxious to learn. And then before we could help ourselves we had become entangled in smaller things. We became wrapped up in more exclusive groups, and we were taught that our loyalty lay with them. It is remarkable that a one day conference could have enabled us to see the mistake. Perhaps we had seen it already-but failing in any thought of remedy, had sup- pressed it. Now the conference itself offered a hopeful solution. With larger numbers of students and faculty members gradually being worked into such a day, with larger num- bers carrying its feeling back over the Hill into every house and every organization-gradually, we speculate, the thin place in the student's feeling will mend. 3 if Q rim Q-.J Top: Capt. Rolmrt Haggort prvscnts a captured Gm'- uum whistle to University sttulvnts. It replzu-ml thc lan-tory blast. Czfnlvr: Tlu- mul ol' an all-rluy 1-oulc-rvnc'0 ut tlu- voun- try Vlulb liurls faculty anfl Slll4l1'IllS still Smiling. Con- llt'l'l'llf'f' was pro-ju-t of Mortar lioarml. Saclu-ul. Bvlow: Roms Nlvlllurr' troulrlvs zu wary ralblrit for souu' lrlootl wliilc- Chris rrll0Ill23Sllt'iH'llI'l'Sl1lilH'llSlIl4'l0llf'll. uml Neil Lvglvr looks uf: N'll1ll.S nvxt. ,aw , mam! Top: ,lacquetta Shaw is introflllcml to an appmvial- tivo pzmol of juflgf-S at tlm Jayliawkvr beauty quvvu tcu. Cvulvrz l11 spitv of its llll'i'C party split and tlw lu-arty lIltll'IN'Illl0I1l t'zinlpzli,ui1. tlxf' Spring vlvvtioll was lzwlx- iug in Spirit. Poll xsorlxvrs were' pltu-ill zuul votvrs non- violvnt. Brflouw Pina Dlill-fll1tll0Z anfl Bolivar Nlurquvz luxu- zt goofl laugh ovvr lluf latest moron jokes. Pvrluzps llu-y'rv lunnicr in Spanish. Q- vww x A , , ,v AQ 1 f 50760714 UW HAVE l'I' FRAMED KC CAME here to get a diploma. The time was September, 1959. The place was room 211 Fraser. The speaker was my friend Dave Barlow, and the words were in response to a freshman rhetoric instructors question to the class, Why did you come to college? Dave had listened to the lofty reasons of his classmates, and he respected their sincerity. Yet he knew, and they knew, that in his seven words lay a bald truth applicable in some degree to every one of them. Dave got his diploma in May, 1943. He had it framed at Keeleris, as you, perhaps, will do. A few weeks later he was training to be a bombarclier in the Army Air Forces. Last month he was back in a Texas re-deployment center. He had seen war in Europe-38 missions over Germany in a B-24 Liberator, and in his pocket he carried a two-inch piece of flak which Army surgeons had removed from his shoulder. When I heard of Dave's return I wrote him a letter, told him I was doing an article for the commencement Jayhawker, and asked, with perhaps just a shade of sarcasm, whether his neatly framed diploma from the state U had given him great comfort while he flew over Ploesti and Berlin. And Dave wrote back- Dear john, Glad to hear from you again. You haven't forgotten that old crack about 'I came here to get a 'diplomaf have you? Well, that's what I went to college for-a diploma. I wanted to have a piece of paper to flash in employers' faces. I expected it to be a magic key to success. You know, I never had a chance to use that diploma as a persuader. I am afraid now that it wouldn't have been too effective. Piece of paper, piece of paper, piece of paper. Could any piece of paper be worth four years of work? I've thought on that, old buddy, and I've thought of the state U, and I've thought of Doc Wheeler and his 'gestal' psychology. Remember his teaching that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts? Now I'm using that to justify my respect for the diploma-or perhaps to give my diploma the value which it should carry. John, let that diploma be a symbol of the whole, and accept the fact that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. Then look at some of the parts I have been thinking of, and you will agree that my diploma is a pretty big thing. i M I 'V CCOntinued on Page 3105 Above: Not everyone who spent his afternoons in the jayhawker office officially worked there. For instance you won't find Buzz Hargis or Bill Chestnut or Carl Clark on the stall page. But they and those like them have con- tributed in their way, and any picture of an afternoon in the office would have been incomplete without them. To the regular office workers Csuch as Peggy O'Neil on the floor, Pat Williams at the deskb to the contribu- tors, the associates, the ad sellers, all pictured on page 279, the editor, business manager, and secretary will be forever indebted. Left: Mary Morrill, secretary for a semester and editor for a year and a half, hated most to see the last envelope of copy off on the bus for Topeka. The end of her work on this issue marked the end of a two year series of after- noons in the Jayhawker office. Beverly Bohan, business manager, showed remarkable stamina in surviving and seeing that the magazine survived, a year when enrollment was low and advertising was hard to get, when the cover contract was broken in May and an unplanned issue published. he Fut Sally Fitzpatrick was the faithful secretary who spent the year filing, calling, and typing, to be rewarded in the end with an appointment to the position of l946 Business lTlHI'l21gCI'. -Seventh Ja hawker We don't understand this triumphant feeling an editor is sup- posed to have when he leafs through his hnished product for the first time. We have dreaded the delivery of each of our four issues and have advanced painfully through its pages and down its columns-fearing and finding. We do understand, though, the deep-rooted feeling that an editor gets for his big metal desk and his worn swivel chair. They are his, monuments of his position, in the afternoons when the office is crowded, but it is really during the hours at night and the long Saturdays and Sundays when he works alone that he becomes so strangely a part of these two plain pieces of furniture. Although it may seem that he has done nothing spectacular at the chair and the desk - still his most creative efforts, his most satisfying hours are tied up in them-and he regrets leaving. But it is not one person who is leaving. It is a staff as a whole, to return next year only as individuals. And it is the staff as a whole which places this fifty-seventh volume on the long shelf to take its place with the past annuals of the University. Left: Earl Stanton, who took over as advertising manager after the first issue marked up one victory after another in his contract book. Advertisers found themselves paying for his personality. Below: The staffs two regular photographers, Bert Kintzel Cleftj and Charles Fisher, reliable, hard-working, and talented. i 1 . 'i . i Q Girls with file cases, Fred Ellsworth with a big idea, a secretary filling her tablet with dictation, a beautiful life-size portrait of Shirley Tholen, diamond jubilee queen,-any one of those would bring to mind the Alumni Association ollice. Faced with the mammoth task of keeping the addresses and vocational data of some 55,000 alumni up to date. publish- ing the Graduate Magazine. and being the Universitys ambassador, the Alumni olhce remains vigorous and elhcient. .4-P NORMA HENRY Coppo- sitej, a Kappa and a College senior from Wichita, is num- ber four, Gregory Peck's choice for queen. Runners up for the honor in the order of his selection are Virginia Larsen, Elizabeth Esterle, F r a n c e s Schloesser, Shirley Otter, and Marilyn Carlson. University men se- lected the candidates whose photographs went to Mr. Peck. Their selections were based on interviews With the prospec- tive queens as well as on pictures. GREGORY PECK, star of Keys of the Kingdomf' has been one of the most obliging beauty queen judges the jay- hawker has ever had. He called from Hollywood to say he was glad to accept the responsibility-and then took time off during the production of The Yearling in which he stars as Penny Baxter to scrutinize the pictures of fifteen Kansas women. The scene of his judging was 48 miles in the interior of the north Flor- ida scrub country where The Yearling is being hlmed. Apparently impressed with University women, Mr. Peck wired that his task was a grim one and chose six top pictures in- stead of the five requested. C..M,S.gt..,.. 7 S f il E X, . S W N r X T fel . R i iiliuiffizgzf-lsififil if Li 1 lx fag I... N , M. .,,,, ,,,, e ,. ginaztrrsiwlsmaitiikiilattfish, Wm at Fw.11afsixriiaiiiiiitiliiifst',ME at a.m,Lii Kazaa DL PD-'SGCALA no 16 asia .... ' . in in so 25 M A , . jlgf MARY Moaaxtts Pi ' f y tJMM'++MqKEHr'UW1VfRS s-taaaersce mas: :DEAR Miss aoaastt HUMBLY seams? THE FOLLOWlMG ssttcrsow or JAY HAWKER ataurv Queens THE WINNING Numara roua Fottowan av ELEVEN aims THREE FIFTEEN Two in THAT ORDER QT WAS A anim RESPQNSIBILITY THE umxvzasrrv or KANSAS Has THE agar Btautirut afats in THE aoata AM attuaalma Pxcruggg lumeniarstr Toasrntn WITH Pictuass ov MYSELF QAKQNG SELECNONS TAKEN .cm me 'fsaatsaa Location wx sxwea SPRINGS nomnafa W p GREGGRY PECK..-X U 'W-ffwesa-Q'. Q52 t 5 . . wi tw rum rm wr. 'W - nunaxrxc vr nmvfmf -MM:-was ,lf K ' W 1. Marilyn Carlson, a sophomore in thc Collvge and a Theta, Gregory P0f!k7S zulclml sixth place Winner. 2. Virginia Larson, a Chi Omega fl'0SllIIlZlIl and the first run- ner up. She lives on Quivera Lake in Kansas City and is in tho School of Fino Arts. 3. Elizaln-mlm lislcrlv, of Kansas City, NIO.. il Dm-ltai flilllllllil frvsh man in thc' Cullt-,gr anflthv jll1lfjt'.Siilil'li 4-lmivv. 4. Peggy Szlrlmlc-worn, a Pi Phi uml an Fine Arts soplimnore. i 5. Frances I.z1wi'1-1111-. of LiUVl'4'llf'4'. ax Thvtu and an Fino Arts sophu lll0I'C. 6. Barbara Burvroft, of Svutth-, NX ash., a Chi i,llll':I1l and il Coilvgc junior. l. Ruth Green, of Bcrryton, a junior in the School of Engineering and Archi- tccturc and a resident of Miller hull. 2. Nancy Slatcr, of Kansas City, Mo., il Kappa and a freshman in tho Collcgc. 3. ,lanct Taylor, of Topeka, a Chi Engineering and Architecture. 4. Frances Schloesser, of Fredonia, is a Kappa and a College senior. Omega and a freshman in the School of Gregory Peck's fourth place winner. She 5. Shirley Otter, a Gamma Phi and the judgds fifth ranking beauty. She is from Norton and a sophomore in the School of Fine Arts. 6. Norma Lutz, of Dodge City, a Theta and a junior in the Sehool ol' Fine Arts. 7. Alice Rose Shankland, of Kansas City, a Chi Ulnega and a College sopho- more. 8. Lois Bradstreet, of Topeka, a Kappa and a College freshman. Q' ,,q,,, 1 N Little Reno gambling tables kept a sizable crowd from the dance floor. The concession was a money making propo- sition, profits going, strangely enough, for the Danforth chapel fund. A dreamy number comes up on the record player at an I.S.A. dance in the lounge of the Memorial Union. A high percentage of Beta's illustrates the political acumen of the chapter. L F The marriage booth at the Union activities Little Reno party did a rushing business all evening in spite of cynics who stood on the sidelines scorning the man who would pay for a chance to kiss his date when intermission was com- ing up. 'PHE BHIGHTER HE summary of parties and partying always due about this 1 of year leads us to believe that l944-45 saw society out of its prosperity corner having been rounded by the socially inclined rr months ago. The University cooperated in the swing toward normalcy by ol ing the Union ball room, navy mess hall since '42, for three spat parties. The best of these was perhaps the K Club formal with Brown and Sentimental journey. In general social activities were still confined close to home. one sizable evacuation was a project of medical students for the tomarily high time beyond county and state lines. The medics proved to be good hosts at home even though they specialize morgue-like measures such as blood red punch in test tubes. At Corbin halls open house for the men of Top Army Air base, forty-five representatives of the corps enjoyed dancing, light refreshments, and a newed interest in the future, ,J ,Mer ,J , 1 Ill 0F LIFE Best student crowd of the year packed the Union ball room for Les Brown at the K Club dance. Gov- ,,,... ernor Andrew Schoeppel crowned the queen, Polly Staples, Delta Gamma, and congratulated her two attendants, liileen O'Ccnner, Theta, and Jane Gillespie, Pi Phi. Below: The queen dances with her date, Gordon Reynolds, chairman of the queen committee. nm, ft., ww, l 1' if f ,il if 7' Qfaiel. Independents selected Grace Piros, Miller hall to reign over their l.S.A. Sweetheart dance. At- tendants were Marv Olive Marshall fleft J, 1234 Oread, and Ruth Mitchell, Locksley hall. Out of the hodgepodge which has kept everyone happy. no one single type of party has emerged predominant. Parties have been of every kind and description - the Phi Gam Bowery Party and the Phi Psi shipwreck party concentrating on the bare facts, the Miller-Wzltkins Medicine show with Varga calendar interpreta- tions- fall parties, Christmas parties, mid-winter parties, spring parties, class parties, l.S.A. parties, Inter-Fraternity and Pan- Hellenic partiesfemore all together-and merrier. An assortment of revelations repaid the Phi Cams for trouble spent on their Bowery party at the country club. Particularly fortunate were Rens McClure, underneath left, and Tom Bailey Cderby in the hack rowi whose date, Barbara Winn, wore 19th century lingerie under a suggestion of black lace. Plll G Spring on the campus is just a little different from spring anywhere else. People are naturally expected to let themselves go somewhat during this season of the year. But on the Hill somewhat enjoys an extremely liberal connotation. Every effort is exerted to obtain complete relaxation. Every- one is very happy-and very oblivious to the fact that in addi- tion to vacation and freedom, the grass and the flowers are ominous heralds of that semi-annual terror--fmal week. ' '...a,g. L, Right: The relative de- sirability of a beer and a coke shoots up with the temperature. As the season progresses more and more couples join Armilda Lincoln, D. G., and Don McCaul, Phi Psi, in the back booths of the 'Hawk Exireme right: The ten- nis-coke date gains in popularity as variations of the ordinary winter coke date are sought. Maurice Miniard, Alpha Delt, plays with a Sig Alph who has the ad- vantage of doing his courting at home. 4 4,,.-f' alba Above: Softball is almost syn- onymous with spring. Among the standing games is that of the Theta's in the chapters back lot. Here Marion Hasty and Virginia Phipps are on the at bat shift. Left: Jeanne Atkinson, Chi O, puts in her two hours for the day on the Chi Omega sun deck with the accepted time passer, a movie magazine. Decks are luxuries, but front and back yards get the job done just as well. 1 i -Mi 3 E 4 E E 2? 5 4 i 2. Q. Zu E. fl El yr , . Jr-Q? ,Xl - .A I ww' ' Yer Nr ark! rf, L K A ,WE 7 ' aug' Below: Appearances in class become harder than usual to maintain. In spite of the weather Norma Jean Pyke, Corbin, attempts attention. Bill Hollis, Battenfeld, gives up com- pletely and relaxes into Okay, so I am asleepn comfort. Above: Potter lake is still the favorite spot for idyll activities during hours that are free and hours that aren't. Alice Ackerman, Alpha Chi, enjoys the moment whole Bob Ellsworth, Beta, uncomfortably remembers a neglected assignment. Left: The endless train up and down the Battenfeld steps is now coatless. With ice and snow things of the past, the line ceases to be single file. The better for an army lieutenant and two V-l2's to follow janey Hayes and Mary Louise Samson to the Kappa house. Above: Sunday evenings enter- tainment alone remains static and routine. Jody McCrory, Pi Phi, and Dordie Waitt, Phi Gam, rely on the movies, fol- lowed by addenda. own GE ww Tor I In front of most University houses there is the sagging hulk of a tired automobile gan automobile which long since earned its right to a place in the Happy Parking Ground, hut cannot escape from this world until its posterity appears. as Above: Louis Silk's convertible is considered only middle- aged, gives the Phi Psi chapter excellent service as long as its tires are changed frequently. Below: The Teke's get about in Hogan Cotherwise known as Red Dragoni' or Flamin' Mamieuj. Fraternity members shout Geranim0,' when embarking from the me- chine, always walk over the hood instead of going around. 4 W . Above: We insert the shining red convertible of Joyce Morgan, Locksley, as a cheery note in this list of obituaries lt is one of the few cars on the campus which can safely advertise Always room for one more. Below lefl: Kappa freshmen bought this horseless car- riage from the Sigma Chi's last fall for S590. ln the third v -w-up-f , 4. week it balked at the bottom of Gower drive, and shrewd Sigma Chi's bought it back for SSO. Car runs beautifully now, the exchange will go down in history as the swindle of 1945. Below righz: Bill Jenson, Phi Delt, has weekend privil- eges on the strip-down of Eugenia Hepworth, Pi Phi. Through the marriage of Bills brother and Eugenias sister, it's all in the family. gw, ii i i7 AM Sa. N :vi img? Top: To be congratulated on his powers of con- centration if only because he can sleep soundly with a study light shining in his face, George Waitt, Phi Gam, is a perfect example of the dreams-rf' This method of study requires elaborate prepara- tions-an afternoon downtown stocking up on foodstuffs and an extensive assortment of books and notebooks. With such paraphernalia before him, the dreamer can sink back, conscience clear, for a sound nights sleep. Left: The intellectual pool is a labor saving de- vice recommended when two or more students in a house are taking the same course. A few days before the examination the book to be studied is divided among the scholars. Each having read his portion, the students convene on the night before the quizz and exchange information. ight: Where A's re made. Lee lexander is a xypical example of lwhat less effective students have dubbed the grinder. Witli a l ood light, a traight chair and N desk, shoulders erect, arms re- laxed, hands quiet, the grinder, if we must call him that, gets m o r e done in less time than any other single variety of studier. A ,pave IME UTFUR 'l'llY KC OPE, I've got a big quizz tomorrowu means only one thing. That time has come when the student must deny himself the immediate joys of college life to concentrate on his long run pur- pose-passing. Although ways by which students attain or attempt to attain this worthy goal are about as numerous as the students themselves, there seem to be six main classifications of exertion-that of the dreamer, the intellectual pool, the contortionist, the couple, the file addict, and the true grinder. Below: Dick Hawkinson practices the technique of a true contortionist. Operating on the theory that extreme discomfort wards off sleep, the contortionist twists himself as out of shape as possible and trains a wakeful eye on the printed page. 4' luis? g, 6 3? i r l il, mms MM Above: File addict's pour through records of past examinations for hints of what to cram on. The true addict relies entirely on old quizzes and sports effortless intellect if given the proper exam. When a teacher fails to come through, the method is no more than a short cut to disaster. Below: Jeanne Harris and Sam Zweifel are among those who live by the maxim that two can learn twice as much as one. Chief talking point for this procedure is that attempts to study are at least steady. 1. The Phi Psi picnic started off Sunday, May 6, with a vice. After the kitchen window had been pried open, Earle Crawford crawled in to get the food, unwittingly locked up by the cooks. 3. The party takes to the woods via a collection of seven cars. The woods in this case has no proper name. Instead of more popular picnic grounds, Phi Psi's prefer private spots. The Do Not Trespass sign they ignored was four miles west of the Chi Omega house. 4. Legs Burgess advances to the fire while chief chef Ramsey yells at a straying mate. Lots of dogs in this pic- ture. 2. Several cases of coke are stacked. After a close roll call vote, prohibition passed the chapter, and the beer was re- turned to the cellar. Jayhawker publicity was a dominant argument for the drys. 'PHE JAYIIAWKER Gllll S ANYONE who has been on the Hill for even one reasonably respectable fre: weatherj week-end can tell you, there are two types of steak fries. First of all and preferred by the experts is the small fry of three of four couples with each entertaining a mutual understanding of what the evenings entertainment will be. The steak is usually bottled and the light of bon-fire incon- sequential. More suitable for some occasions, however, is the mass fry with its foundation rooted respectably in platonic friendships. This variety of picnic may offer the dubious advantage of being authorized Certain prerequisites are necessary for the well-being of both types of fries. These include a plentiful number of blankets Cnot necessarily selected for their warmthl , a car or cars, a bottle-opener, an assortment of gastronomical at- 5. Barefoot girl with cheek of ham 1Armilda Lincolnj stuffs a sandwich into her mouth while leveling an apprais- ing eye on Don McCaul, who is busy with both hands. 6. The baptismals started shortly after R. Atkinson made a speed run into Davy jones' locker after a fly ball. ln the end, Bill Ritt went down to a watery grave. 'PEAK FRY S S tractions which are almost sure not to include steak, and a broad and tolerant interest in wild life. When going on location there are such places as Lake Tongonoxie and Lone Star Lake, tritely played up as hshing spots by the Chamber of Commerce. For those who like to hit the open road and are optimistic about completing their activities and making it back to Lawrence by 12:30 there is Lake Linge. Other popular spots include still legitimate but off the record hide-aways such as the Sigma Nu back quartersf Hockum's Grove, and Browns Grove. Swimming, baseball, and boating fat least one person must keep his head above the side of the boatj precede the less vigorous activities. At the end of the evening, com- posure is regained by group singing. Then the hnal prob- lem is to round up the strays and get the girls home by clos- ing hours. 9. Scotts Bad Boy, Earle Crawford connived to get plaid blanket away from the McCaul-Lincoln trust and opened the darkening evening with a smooth explanation of reciprocity. Anne Scott, Theta freshman, listened. 7. Immersion was the penalty for complaining about a wet date. Here Al Evans and the Evil At harbor no re- spect for the fairer sex and settle the dust on Jeanne Brown. 8. The above picture represents what the Phi Psi's hope it will represent to parents back home-the mass platonic steak fry. Extra-curricular activities may be going on around the fringes. 10. Mutiny on the bounty. Dates enticed Phi Psi's out of the woods and into the brighly-lighted Theta sunporch. Gamma Phi Emily Stacy and Pi Phi Pat Penny have the pan-hellenic spirit. Displaying unusually poor form, Craw- ford has advanced no farther than hand-holding, with only 30 minutes to go. gyms? Hawkinson, Jenson, Nickell, Schwanzle, and McShane take the low hurdles in the intramural frackmeet. Phi Gam vs. Blanks with Bailey catching for The Fijii's by Earl Barney l 'l'llAlllUliAL FTER a hectic intramural basketball season in which a fine Beta team rebounded to take the title away from thirteen other contenders, organized houses turned to intramural track, handball, golf, and softball as an outlet for their energies. Rainy weather, which hindered every phase of the intra- mural program this spring, forced postponement of the track meet for a few days. The finals were run off on April 19, with Phi Delta Theta finishing in nrst place with a total of 48 and 3X5 points. Second place went to the Phi Psi's, while the Beta's Wound up in the show slot. The handball and golf tournaments started during the middle of April. In the handball doubles tourney, John McShane and john McGuckin, Phi Delt team, and jerry Simpson and Bill West, Beta team, have semi-final berths, while j. J. Wildgen and Bob Duboc, Sigma Chi, Burris Jones and Norval Jackson, Phi Psi, Frank Brosius and Buzz Hargis, Phi Gam, and Howard Joseph and Bob Neustrom, Beta, are the four quarter-finalists remaining. In the lower bracket of the golf tournament Bill Chestnut Monzinued on Page 3071 A runner comes home, while the ball is lost in the one out field which serves three diamonds. by Mary Turkinglon COMPll'I'l'I'I0 HERE were two opponents in intramural activities this spring - the opposing team and the weather, with the Weather holding the upper hand most of the time. Because of the persistant rains, intramural tennis doubles and softball could not meet their May 50, deadline and are just now pulling into the semi-finals. The I.W.W.'s still had one game to play against the A, O. Pi's as this issue of the jayhawker went to press, but by the seasons comparison, it would seem certain that the I.W.W.'s will win to meet Miller hall in the semi-finals. The Chi Omega's have won their division and will play Watkins hall, also a division winner. Miller hall made a clean sweep of its division and will play the Winner of the I,W.W.-A. O. Pi game. The championship is still anybody's guess with the two winning teams of last year back fighting. The Chi Omega's won the organized house cup and the I.W.W.'s were the All-University winners. In spite of the rain there are a number of outstanding and practiced batteries this season. Usually one or two good teams are the limit, but this spring there have been at least four. Most of these batteries came through to the semi-finals. The top three are Helen Bozarth, pitcher, and Violet Conard, catcher, Watkins fC0ntim4ed on Page 3132 PHOTOGRAPHS BY KINTZE L O'Leary, Snyder practice before a doubles match. THE JAYHAWKER lr if 'ff We Track Seasor RACK - the forgotten sport at K.U. in 1945! Although every known attempt was made to keep crimson and blue thinclad activities before the public, the squad hovered about one step from obscurity during the entire spring season. Spectators at the dual meets held in Memorial stadium this spring were practically nil. As a matter of fact, few students even know that the University of Kansas finished fifth in a field of five at the Big Six outdoor meet on May 19th at Lincoln. CNot that the fact is particularly pleasant to recal1.J And even a smaller number realizes that Leroy Robison's javelin heave of 168' 5M was the only first the Jayhawks took all day. Other K.U. men winning places in the meet were: Hudson, fifth in the mile rung Robison, third in the shot putg Danneberg, third in the 440-yard dashg Peck, fourth in the 100-yard dashg Jackson, fifth in the 120-yard high hurdlesg Robison, fourth in the discusg Danne- berg, fifth in the 220-yard dashg Peck, fifth in the broad jumpg Kansas, third in the mile relayg Sargent, tie for third in the high jump. Bill Bangert, Missouri weight man, tossed the shot put 52' 7Ms to shatter the old record of 52' M , set in 1945. Iowa State, although netting but two Hrsts, won the CConzinued on Page 3135 Top: Danneberg, Peck and Bauer brought in all three places for the 100-yard dash against Nebraska in a dual meet. Below left: In the same meet Sargent won the high jump. Below right: Robison won the javelin throw. Right: And Bauer heavecl the shot put for still another Kansas first. efV7335?s ' ,M 5 S W mum . -mmm N Q if My lfykfw- Ngggwifx '.50 '?' X T ,Q 270 Carruth P Tone Poem in B-Flat What's jazz? What is it? What the hell kick do you get out of that stuff? Huh? I want to know. Well, I can try to tell you if you listen. I can't write it down, page and paragraph number, and I can't tell you where to look it up, because it isn't there. I can try to give it to you, but you've got to listen, and work-and all of a sudden you . . . there it is! Come in on the start of it . . . there . . . See what you can understand. But get it all together, see, don't get the parts, because they aren't the it. The i1f'5 a man with a bunch of heads and twice as many legs and arms, but just one soul. Oh baby I'll love you fI'm talking to you, sir, you alonej Until the day I die CAnd in you I cover everything and everyone that ever is or was or will beb Oh baby I'll love you CEternal and forever, that I knowj Until the day I die CAll . . . it is the allness that I cannot understand- why should I tryj What did I do CThe things I know, I feelb To ever make you cry? QWhy should I try to show you what I know and still cannot explain? D I opened the door CThere is a vast, material emptinessj There weren't nobody home CThe man at the store told me that it was the only one of its kindj Baby why did you leave me CAnd if they take away the allj You know I'm all alone CTell me how to fill up a vacuum with oxygen, and not let any air in.J Now it's all me, my own feeling, improvisation of words, of music, of soul . . . but the longing remains, the long- ing that will not go, the pull of the sun by the golden chain that has the other end through my heart. Now I know about the people who talk about unattainable, I know infinity, and the bottomless pit . . . and for- ever trailing off to the endless, endless, endless . . . Guess I'll have to go off CTO fill the void, my God, l've got toj Lay me down to bed CCan you start it, get hold of it, help me, for God's sake fill it upj Guess I'll have to go off CNow it's starting, I can feel it nowj Lay me down to bed CFunny it doesn't seem to come from anywhere, just all every place at oncej Maybe next morning CYou know how a flash bulb goes offb You will iind me dead. Cjust light all of a sudden out of nowhere that fills everything . . . jack, that's if! J Oh there ain't no need QCarry me out, take me up with youj Feelin' sorry for me CNow I'm there, now I know, I feel . . . only it isn't I any morej Oh there ain't no need CThis is the what you get, but can't explainj THE JAYHAWKER ri e Poem C1 tell you, don't try, just let it take you, dematerialize into the universej 'Cause I'm happy now CDon't be anybody. . . just be, that's ith Happy as I can be. CThat's the everything . . . soul and life and death and happiness.J -David Bizttenfeld First Prize Remembrance Ghosts are all about the house tonight- Beating inutile palms against the pane, Twisting the shutters, with the wind and rain, Mingling with smoke in ancient, mystic rite- Ghosts of the past, awakened by the night, Dancing like fumes of wine within the brain, Rousing old passions, with a forgotten strain Of music. I become an acolyte Before the altar of my yesterdays, The past arises from the sepulcher- Old tears and joys before me it displays, And brings me gifts of amaranth and myrrh Whose bitterness is rendered more benign By mellowing years, the flawless anodyne. -Betty jean Nelron Second Prize The Piperas Song The-re's a sound in the air Not caused by the breeze- There's a whisper of death Not made by the leaves As they, shuddering, fall From the barren trees. Hark! Don't you hear it, feel it, fear it? Wild and weird and ghostly shrill, Chilling the hearts of all who hear it, It floats from glen and hill. There once was a town In a faraway land Which heard that wild song But not its demand As it flowed from the Pipe In the Piper's hand. Look! Do you see him, see him, see him, Tall and thin and queerly clad? There! Can't you see him, see him, see him. Dressed in his red and yellow plaid? Where now are the youth Of that faraway land- The youth who gave heed To the Piper's command? Alas! There remains No trace of their band. They tell us a story of Hamlin Town And a Piper piping shrill. They tell us a story of parents sad And a Portal under a Hill. And now through the world, Frow meadow and hill, Comes the sound of a Pipe That is calling shrill To the youth of all lands To follow it still. Hark! Don't you hear it, feel it, fear it? Weird and wild and piercing shrill, Freezing the blood of those who hear it, It calls to glen and hill. -Addie Egbert Third Prize THE THE CHAPEL, although less than half finished, has already taken its place along with the Shack, the law barn,' and Ad,l' so far as ac- quiring a name is concerned. Be- cause of its 90-person capacity, it is jovially called the pigeons roost -or just the Roostfy The purpose of the chapel is not, however, to serve as a hall for group services and ceremonies but rather to become a place of reverence where students may stop on their way across the campus to meditate, pray-or rest. It is to be for the individual use of each student. As Chancellor Malott explains, The chapel will serve as a center of em- phasis for Christian living for which this University has stood through- out its history. University authorities have sug- gested that the Danforth Chapel may become the little church around the corner for many KU. students. It is the right size for a small church wedding. 4 5 271 TEEE T 'CHAPEL CC PLACE of quiet with a spiritual and religious atmosphere, open at all times for . the personal use of KU. students. His belief in a need for such a place on a college campus has led William H. Danforth to construct chapels for many schools, includ- ing the University of Kansas. Fitted into the campus near the old lilac hedge, northeast of Fraser, the chapel is being built of native stone as supplies and materials are available. The Danforth Foundation, sponsoring the construction, was created by Mr. Danforth for whom the chapel has been named. Mr. Danforth, chairman of the board of the Ralston-Purina company of St. Louis, has established, in addition to chapels, religious camps and scholarships. An energetic man of 80 or more years, Mr. Danforth is a picture of his own philosophy. He believes that everything a person does should be something worthwhile - that every- thing in life isachallenge. His philosophy can be summarized in what he calls the checker- board plan. He has the four corners of each square lettered, P-M-S-R, meaning physical, mental, social, and religious. For each letter he has a slogan: stand tall, think tall, smile tall, and live tall. His latest book, I Dare You, is based on his four-corner philosophy. Contributors who are assisting the Danforth Foundation are John T. Stewart, graduate of 1911 from Wellington, and the Kansas University Endowment Association which will present funds from the Elizabeth M. Watkins estate. Stained glass windows will be provided through a gift of 552,000 from the University Pan-Hellenic council, and an electric organ will be the gift of Arthur B. Weaver, Law- rence. The architect for the building is Edward W. Tanner, Kansas City, who is giving his services as a memorial to his mother. Mr. Tanner is the first graduate of the Univer- sity's department of architecture. Recently faculty members contributed S686 to the fund to provide furniture for the chapel. Students, too, are contributing to the cause. The profits from last fall's Sour Owl edition have been turned over to the fund by the All Student Council. The Little Renol' dance, was sponsored by the Union Activities to help finance the chapel. Danforth Chapel was to have been ready for dedication by Commencement Day, but due to labor and material shortages Ceven German prisoners have been used to further its production? it will be finished sometime during the summer and will be open for students next fall. WHY?-Ta E'-t F 1 .,....-H-'if 'ff THE JAYHAWKER Alec Templeton A Hoch highlight, Alec Templeton time, produced a full house on Monday night, April 9. Said house enjoyed classical Bach, Chopin, Haydn, and Debussy, but the four- in-one improvisations, with the audience selecting the num- bers, proved most popular. People are still wondering how he combined Accentuate the Positive with Shostakovitch. At home in Greenwich, Connecticut, Templeton and wife Juliette live on their rambling two and one-half acre farm with their pet cat, Louis Armstrongfl Favorite hobby is to spend a day in New York zacking, Templeton term which means buying trinkets and miscellany for the Greenwich home. Lauritz Melchior Joseph Wilkins aptly calls Lauritz Melchior the biggest tenor alivefy A capacity crowd saw proof of the statement on Monday night, March l2, when the foremost Wagnerian heroic tenor of our day presented an outstanding concert for music lovers. The well-rounded program ran the gamut from classics to Scandinavian songs to Wagnerian arias to popular selec- tions. At the Met, rotund Melchior has sung the role of Tristan more than 150 times, and has appeared as Siegfried almost 200 times. A characteristic meal for the singer: appetizer, soup, beefsteak, potatoes, vegetables, salad, dessert, coffee, a quart of burgundy, and a Havana cigar. He loves beer. Sigmund Romber g Big, jovial, chain-smoking, Sigmund Romberg followed Templeton in the music week series, on Wednesday, April ll, when the concert goers spent an evening with the com- poser and his orchestra. Rombergs favorite pet is his Dalmatian, happily named Dacchari O'Micka Rombergf' But he has other hobbies. He beams when he tells about that 120-pound marling he caught in the Pacific not so long ago. Romberg has more than 15,000 copyrights on his work. Appropriately he was made an honorary citizen of Dallas in March, when town fathers named him the greatest living composer. Interviewr by Liz Baker JUNE 19115 'Zhi Lewis George Allen, Jr. ...,.. . Lewis Napier Bass, jr. .... . . . james J. Batty ....... Willard F. Bennett. . . Francis Joseph Bice,.. Francis Earl Bishop. . Hoyt Charles Blaylock. Wlalter Ray Bohnenblust ...... Hugh ShaeFfer Brady .... . Emil Maurice Childers ..., . . Earl Howard Clark ..... . . . Kansas City . .Pittsburg Kansas City . . .Webster . ,Plainville . . .Kiowa . . .Newton . .Belleville . . .Wichita .Humboldt .Hoisington ll lllll llllllll Carrell Kenneth Clawson ....... Enterprise Mary Catherine Colglazier .... Kansas City James Dennison Colt ......... Manhattan Forest Augustus Cornwell ...... El Dorado Robert Thomas Cotton ........ Manhattan Albert Emry Derrington. .Kansas City, Mo. Burleigh Eli DeTar .......... Joplin, Mo. William Grant Dixon ....,. Mound Valley Frank Andrew Dlabal .... ...... W ilson james Ray Doores ...... .... B ronaugh Dallas Dwight Dornan. . . .... Topeka Left to right-First row: Allen, Bass, Batty, Bennett, Bice, Bishop, Blaylock, Bohnenblust. Colt, Cornwell, Cotton, Derrington. Third row: DeTur, Dixon, Dlabal, Doores, Dornun, Drowns, Gibson, Gilliland, Gray, Grubb, Hanis, Hartford. Fifth rozr: Hartman, Henry, Hoover, lvy, Kaul, Bruce Vernon Drowns .... William Robert Durkee. Lyle Harris Edelblute.. Mary Eichhorn ........ Harold Ross Fields. . . David Marsh Gibson ..... Jack Melvin Gilliland .... .St. Joseph, Mo. . Kansas City, Mo. . . . . .Manhattan . . . .Dodge City . . . . . .Kingsdown Kansas City, Mo. Ft. Collins, Colo. Charles Lucien Gray, Il .......... Topeka Paul Hughston Grubb. .. ...... Galena Lawrence john Hanis ........ Kansas City John Jewel Hartford. . . . . . . .Wichita Second row: Brady, Clark, Clawson, Colglazier, Durkee, Edelblute. Fourth row: Eichhorn, Fields, Kochevar, Lance. Left to right-First rouf: Lovett, Matassarin, McCoy, McMinimy, Merriam, Morris, Mundy, Nabours. Second row: Neis, H. Nelson, J. Nel- son, R. Nelson, T. Nelson, Nicolay, O'Neil, Parker. Third row: Pebley, Peters, Phillips, Pumpelly, Robison, Rubbra, Schulz, Sheppard. Fourth row: Shuey, Silvers, Slentz, Smith, Stitt, Vincent, Voth, Wald. Fifth row: Walker, Wallace, Wherry, White, Wilder, Wilson, Wyatt. Gerald Vincent Hartmen ..... Victor George Henry, jr.. Virginia Davis Hoover. . . Henry Berry Ivy ...... Philip Gibbs Kaul .... Gerald john Kochevar .... john Foster Lance, Jr.. . . Paul Alex Lovett .... Helen Martin ,......... Benjamin Moise Matassarin. . Donald Edwin McCoy .... Donald jones McMinimy, Wallace Merriam ........ Merle Dodge Morris .... William Lowe Mundy .... Robert K. Nabours .... . . .Emporia . . . .Wichita . . . .Abilene . . .Lawrence .......Ho1ton Leavenworth . . .Pittsburg . . .Pittsburg ......Paola .Leavenworth . ..... Topeka . . . .Wichita .Kansas City . . . . .Topeka . . .Ellsworth . . . .Manhattan Delbert D. Neis ....... Harold Garwood Nelson .... Joseph Harley Nelson. . . Russell Alan Nelson .... Theodore Alan Nelson ...... Kenneth Shockey Nicolay Robert Heizer O'Neil ..... . joseph Warren Parker, Jr.. . . . Evelyn McColloch Pebley Dale Wfoodford Peters ....... Stephen Bailey Phillips. . Robert Allen Pumpelly.. Leonard Joseph Robison. . . . .Eudora . . .Marion . . .Chanute . . .Wichita .Phillipsburg .....Abilene . . . .Topeka . .Oskaloosa Kansas City .McPherson . .Hiawatha . . .Winheld .....Bison Jean Olive Rubbra ...... Kansas City, Mo. Millard E. Schulz ............ Greensburg Robert Glenn Sheppard .... . . Joplin, Moi Herbert Henry Shuey .... . Alvin Silvers ......... . . . .. . . .Mission .Kansas City Edwin Lawrence Slentz. . . ...... Wichita Dale Compton Smith .... Ronald Wayne Sritr .... . Terry Stuart Vincent ........ Henry W. Voth ....... . . Donald Marvin Wald ....... William Kirkpatrick Walker. Hobart Eugene Wallace .... Harry Lloyd Wherry. . . . Harry Melvin White ..... Lowell Edgar Wilder ...... . . .Neodesha . .Dodge City .Kansas City . . .Hillsboro Arkansas City . . .Cedarvale . . .Topeka . . .Sabetha . . .Lawrence . . .Fort Scott john Starks Wilson ...... Kansas City, Mo. William Martin Wyatt. . .Kansas City, Mo. JUNE 1945 275 George Boone .... Billy C. Busenbark ..... Robert Buechel. . . James P. Carey. . . Robert Cavitt .... Harold Clark. . . Franklin Close. . . Charles Cowan . . . Clarke Henry ..... Larry Arnspiger .... Frank Brosius .... james Calkins .... Sam Crow .... Left to right-First row: Passmore, Jackson, Tharp, Wildgen, Stewart, Shirer, Buechel, Busenbark, Weber. Second row: Swanson, Carey, Waterman Crow, Tice, Purinton, West. Third row: McClure, Nemec, Calkins, E. Schwartz, Cavitt, Nelson, Lessenden, D. Schwartz. IGNIA Preriden! . . . Robert Stewart Vice-President . . Clarke Henry Secretary . . Harold Clark Trearurer . . . Lew Purinton . . .Manhattan . . .Manhattan . . . . . . .Wichita . . .Pickens, S. C. ..........Wichita . . . . .Kansas City, Mo. Forestville, Calif. ........W1ch1ta . . . .Wichita . . . .Wellington .. . . .Wichita . . . ,Kansas City . . . .Topeka ACTIVES Donald Jackson. . . Glenn Lessenden. . Rensselaer McClure .... . .Cincinnati, Ohio . . , .Lawrence .... . . . .Lawrence Bentley Nelson ......... Kansas City, Mo. Robert Nelson. . . Jack Passmore . . . Lew Purinton .. Dean Schwartz .... Hampton Shirer. . . PLE Dewey Nemec . . . Edward Rodes. . . Jack Schroll ..... Eugene Schwartz. . . . . . . . .Tulsa, Okla. . . . .Concordia . . . .Osawatomie . . . .Blue Rapids . . . . .Topeka CES ... . . .Agenda . . .Mexico, Mo. . . . . .Hutchinson . . .Hoisington Robert Stewart .... Robert Stoffer. . . Richard Swanson . . Charles Tharp .... Christopher Thomas Wayne Tice ...... Richard Waterman. William West .... Miller Waugh ..... Jerome Wildgen. . . Robert Weber ..... Byron Yost . . . . . . .Wamego . . . .Topeka . . . . .Concordia . . .Parsons . . . .Pittsburg . . . . . .Kansas City North Haven, Me. . . . . .Wichita . . .Louisiana, Mo. Canon City, Colo. . . . . .Kansas City . . .Lawrence 276 THE JAYHAWKER Left to right-First row: Yoder, Adams, Wright, Goldasich, Miller, Jennison, Bittick, Nesselrode, Luckenbill. Second row: Rupper, Lance, Curts, Corder Good, Westfall, Kobler, Hardman, Tennant. Third row: Bridgens, Francisco, Weston, Gianokon, Bolton, Holt, Ott, Ostlund, Pretz. Fourth row: Foucher Sealy, Voth, Davis, Pogson, Harsha, Conroy. Fifth row: Strick, Brown, Bauer, Doughty, Klein, Naylor, Wahl, Hull. Sixth row: Patterson, Doering, Bailit Edwards, Somers, Jocks. Paul Adams .... Irving Bailit. . . Ernest Bauer. . . Paul Bittick ,... Victor Bolton .... Lester Bowles . . . James Bridgens. . . . Everett Brown .... Jack Clapper .... Thomas Conroy . . . . . Robert Corder . . . Calvin Curts. . . Charles Davis .... . . Robert Doering .... Clyde Doughty. . . Robert Edwards .... . . Gustave Eisemann ....... Henry Foucher ..... . Travis Brooks .... . lames Burwell ..., Archon Plll BETA Pl Vice-A rchon . Tremmer Secretary . . . . . .Clay Center .Brockton. Mass. .. . . .Benton, Ill. . . . . .Galena . . . .Abilene . . . . . .Lawrence . . . .Kansas City . . . .Kansas City . . .Lawrence . . .... Beloit .........Welda Kansas City, Mo. ........Galena . . . . .Goodrich . . . . .Hutchinson . .Alliance, Ohio Kansas City, Mo. . .Reedley, Calif. . . .Junction City . ...Kansas City . . . Don Miller . Edward Goldasich . William Harsha . Emerson Yoder ACTIVES Harry Gianakon. . Edward Goldasich Wendell Good. . . . . .Hutchinson . . . .Kansas City ........Perry William Harsha .... ........ T opeka Waldo Holt ..... Robert Hull .... Warren jacks . . . . . . .Kansas City ......Wichita .........Coats Harry Jennison ..... .... I ndependence Robert S. jones. . ........ Ulysses Chester Klein .... .... R edlands, Calif. Carl Kohler ....... .......... M Orland Paul Luckenbill. . Don Miller .... A. E. Naylor .... John Nesselrode . Roland Ostlund . John Ott ....... P L E Clarence Francisco .... Dennis Hardman Marvin Somers. . . . . . Kutztown, Penn. . . , .Kansas City . . . . .Scammon . . . .Kansas City . . . .Simpson . . . .Sabetha DGES . . . .Kansas City . . . . . .Frankfort .Conway Springs John Patterson. . George Pogson . Kenneth Powers James Pretz ........... . Edward Reynolds Leon Sealey ...... .... Ross Skinner. . . Robert Stevens . . . Frank Strick .... Dana Tompkins Donald Upp . . . Harold Voth ..... . Charles Wahl. . . Cad Westfall .... Robert Wright . Emerson Yoder . Samuel Zweifel. Dr. Daniel Tenenberg .... Robert Tennant . . . .Lawrence . ........ Pittsburg . . . . . .Lawrence Kansas City, Mo. . . . . . .Lawrence . . . .Provo, Utah Warren Rupper ........ .Kansas City, Mo. .......Delphos . . . .Oskaloosa . . . .Kansas City . . .Lawrence ......XWichita ........Topeka . .Louisiana, Mo. . . . . . . .Halstead . . . .Kansas City . . . . .Windom . .. .Luray . . .Lawrence . . .Pittsburg JUNE 19 4 5 277 pl -9 ' 0 0 1. 0. . Jw. ' A-.., . 6 J Xe H fi! Left to right-First row: Reed, Fury, Moore, Wilcox, Baker, North, Mallory, Utter, Coffey. Second row: Schmidt, Taylor, Winter, Holmgren, Marshall Gholson, Fox, Carlgren, Hands, Stockard, Arnold. Third row: Gasser, Stucky, Fowler, Miller, Santer, Hazen, Enns, Ferguson, Olson, Lohrentz, Moser, Miller C. Dean Baker Roy B. Coffey ..... James Enns . . . Dan Ferguson. james Fowler. . Richard Fox .... . Tex E. Fury .... Don Gholson, . Robert Hazen. Robert Holmgren ...... Herbert Arnold Richard Carlgren. . . Fred Gasser. . . Prefialenl . Vice-Preridenz Secretary . . Trearmer . Plll lllll OFFICERS . C. Dean Baker . Winton Wilcox . Kenneth Moore . Victor A. Mallory ACTIVES . . . .Minneapolis . . . . . .Hays . .... ..... . Newton Kansas City, Mo. Kansas City, Mo. .........Salina .......Salina . . . .Kansas City . . . .Kansas City .Kansas City, Mo. . . . .Parsons . . . .Concordia . . .Cherryvale Charles Hopper ............... Emporia Walter Lohrentz. . . . . . . . .McPherson Victor A. Mallory ......... Council Grove Bolivar Marquez .... . . . .Chitre, Panama john Marshall .... . . .Floral Park, N. Y. Dean Miller . . . Wilson Miller .... Kenneth Moore . . Ross Moser. . . P L E D Sebel Hands .... .........Abilene . . . .Kakeeney . . . . .Pratt . . . .Sabetha G E S . . . . .Garden City George Pierron ......... Kansas City, Mo. Raymond Schmidt ............... Canton Victor North . . . ..... Bethel Erwin Olson .... ........ L indsborg Angelo Pasano. Kansas City, Mo. James Reed ..... ............ S alina Floyd Santer .... .... M inneapolis Ted Shafer ..... Forrest Taylor. . . . .Great Bend . . . .Hill City Oscar Utter, Jr.. . . ..... Cherryvale Winton Wilcox .... .... I ndependence Calvert Winter .... Lawrence Joe Stockard .... .. .Lees Summit, Mo. Roland Stucky .... ..... M oundridge Otto Theel ..... . . .Leavenworth 278 THE .IAYHAWKICR llEL'I'A lllllll RHO . :ij new' 5 , Left to right-first row: Clyde Jacobs, Jean Moore, Leeta Marks, Sara Marks, secretary, James Crook, vice-president, Orville Roberts, president. Left to right-First row: Frank Davis, Charles Ball, Richard Nelson, Robert Miller, recording secretary, Daniel Arate, Robert Smith. Second row: Richard Riedel, Prof. R. S. Tait, James Simpson, president, Prof. E. S. Gray, Prof. Earl D. Hay, Prof. Robert W. McCloy. Third row: Eldon Luehring, vice-president, Stonsbury Stockton, Donald Cousins, Robert Neustrom, corresponding secretory, Leonard Brown. JUNE 1945 279 DELTAIWH DELTA Left to right-First row: Alberta White, Burnett Replogle, Helen Pepperell, Nancy Teichgraeber, Jean Satfell, Martina Washington, Frances Lawrence. Second row: Margaret O'Brien, Shirley Crawford, Barbara Barto, Julia Fields, Mary Frances Neidig, Kathleen O'Neill. Third row: Gladys Blue, Mildred Thomson, Dora Ann Brown, Annette Etter, Pauline Rankin, Lila Doughman. Not in picture: Phyllis Hyde, Jeanne Johnson, Joanne Johnson. JAYHAWKER TAFF Left to right-Front low: Charles Fisher, Mary Olive Marshall, Elaine Thalman, Beverly Bohan, business manager, Mary Morrill, editor, Sally Fitzpatrick, secretary, Betty Jo Everly, Bonnie Holden, John McLaughlin. Second row: Jeanne Brunine, Anne Scott, Anna Young, Meredith Gear, Marjorie Peet, Patricia Glover, Nancy Goering, Eleanor Churchill Mary Jane Waggoner, Barbara Neely. Third row: Billye Simmons, Mary Lou Shinkle, Mary Longenecker, Sue Jamieson, Sara Jayne Scott, Louise Schwartz, Elaine Wyman, Shirley McGinness, Nancy Miller. Fourth row: Emily Stacey, Margaret O'Neil, Jill Lauder- dale, Joan Harris, Judith Tihen, Mary Alford, Sue Blessington, Sara Heil, Dorothy Kintzel, Rosemary Ryan, Elaine Falconer. Fifth row: Elizabeth Baker, Joy Godbehere, Barbara Hatfner, R. J. Atkinson, Earl Barney, Dixie Gilliland, Jean O'Connor, Nancy Tomlinson. X ACHEM ln 1912 twelve upperclassmen of the University of Kansas organized Sachem as a senior men's honorary society. Every year since then this honor has been awarded to outstanding men students at the end of their junior year. Sachem selects men who satisfy the scholarship requirement of 1.5 on the basis of contributions to the University, superior leadership, and excellence in their particular field of endeavor. The names of the newly elected members of Sachem are announced annually at Honors Convocation. Members are--Fint row: Donald Alderson, Robert Buechel. Second row: Donald Cousins, Eldon Luehring. Third row: Dewey Nemec, Lew Purinton. Chief Sachem is Robert Buechel. MURTAR BUARD Election to Mortar Board, national honorary society for senior women, is one of the highest honors to be conferred on college women in America. Women are chosen for Mortar Board on the basis of notable service to their university, high scholarship, and distinguished leadership as evidenced by the record of their hrst three years in college. At the University of Kansas newly elected members are secretly tapped by the active Mortar Board chapter the night before the Honors Convocation of their junior year. Their names are revealed the follow-- ing morning when the new members are capped before the entire student body. Torch chapter at the University of Kansas is one of 78 Mortar Board chapters at larger universities and colleges of the United States. Mortar Board functions actively, giving service to the university in every pos- sible way, encouraging leadership through support to worthy activities, recognizing high scholarship, and acting as a cooperating board between faculty and students. Members are-Fin! row: Beverly Bohan, Joanne Johnson, Lonnie Kelley. Second row: Betty Leibbrand, Mary Olive Marshall, Hope Miller. Third row: Helen Pierson, Elizabeth Pile, Persis Snook. Fourth row: Ruth Tippin, Martha Ellen Woodward. President is Beverly Bohan. Senior Album r V,,, he jayhaWker's View of Putting Memories Together So many memories are fragmentary. Fleeting hits of places and people run- ning involuntarily and without sequence along the stream of consciousness. It is difficult to recall every event of a day-even harder to remember a Week. and almost impossible to place in order the events of a year. People and names melt into obscurity. Memories are fragmentary, and even the fragments tend to fade. Yet what is College hut such pieces of thought. It is an experience which is never repeated. An experience which lasts only for the life time of its memory. Annuals were made to help people remember. And the Jayhawker is an annual. If its pages help the graduate fit the pieces of his memory together into a lasting picture of the University, then the Jayhawker has accolnplished its purpose. :Z-7166 77210750 IAQW, ZAWQE MMM F Z J UUMMENUEMENT .Za C OUR years in the K.U. battle area will be rewarded on June 24th when more than 300 seniors march down the Hill to re- ceive their diplomas. Few furloughs will be granted before they shift into high and start up the rugged post-college hill. Itls the end of the beginning. Don Alderson, senior in the School of Business, and elected vice- president of the class of '45, is officiating as president since Joanne Johnsons graduation in February. Dehydrated into a one-day schedule, the usual gala pre-graduation activities will lose none of their appeal in the rush. Virginia Rader, in charge of the class breakfast, will devote her energies to fortifying seniors with the proper vitamins, that they may weather the day's events. The class history, signed and sealed, will be de- livered through the hands of Beverly Bohan, Carol Stuart, Don Cousins, and Elizabeth Baker-glamorized and orchestrated by Professor Allen Crafton. The what-will-become-of-whoml' department is headed by Ruth Tippin, in charge of the class prophecy. Baccalaureate services at ll a.m. will be the senior's last convocation, in Hoch before leaving the University. A After packing away their dog-eared books in the attic, seniors can now sit atop the family steamer trunk and review four years of alter- nating academic prosperity and peril with a few mental pats on the back and an occasional misty eye. The beginning was back in 1941 when everyone hummed and whistled the Chattanooga Choo-Choo, and waded through the year's first snow to hear Charlie Spivak at the Freshman Frolic K.U. beat Kansas State that year and students gave way to rebellion when the Monday following the victory was not designated as a holiday'-the first of two memorable riots. Later that fall the Jayhawkers suffered bitter reverses at the hands of M.U. at the Homecoming game. Midweeks averaged about 250 stags. Pearl Harbor-December 7th and a new atmosphere invaded the campus. The Sophomore Hop was dedicated to the men leaving school to go into the service, the Coed Volunteer Corps was organized, and the smallest graduating class in six years left K.U. that spring. When the class of '45 returned to the campus as sophomores, they found machinists mates occupying the west wing of Ad and the Union ballroom a mess hall. Name bands Jan Savitt and Jack Teagarden were supplemented with two new Hill bands, Johnnie Pope and Danny Bach- man. Homecoming decorations were ruled out and Nebraska dealt us a low blow with a 14-7 victory. Irate students sat out a strike in front of the Chancellor's office in Ad in a lusty complaint over the disappearance of their Christmas holidays in '42. That spring saw two combinations, socially-Danny Bachmanis and Johnnie Pope's bands became one, politically - the Men's Student Council and the Women's Self-Governing Association joined to form the first All Student Council. Gas rationing complicated the shoe ration- ing situation and students scaled the Hill on foot. K.U. was recruited into the accelerated Navy schedule in the fall of '43 when the first five week session was offered. The blue and khaki atmosphere prevaded the campus with the daily, Hup, two, three, four,' fC0nlinued to Page 3063 M675 and .ftbkawd ,Heaney llllllll YEAR , I N A W . . . ef ww ec! by ,IOADY CATES Q E E 5 E F i E E E E 5 f 5 1 5 3 E ABOVE. lrene Tice bids a last good-bye to Watson library. Although the reading rooms and stacks for once seemed warm and friendly, the steps were hardest to leave. OPPOSITE. Bill Buggies says a preliminary farewell to junior Katie Brown. The two have stopped halfway along the path through the woods to Harmon Co-op. BELOW. The senior officers are the only class officers with more than nominal jobs. Don Alderson, president, presided over all commencement plans and activities, While Betty Learned frightj , vice-presidentg and Janet Sloan, secretary-treasurer, acted in the capacities customary to their positions. . ij' zf FO0T TEP T0 F0 BOB BUECHEL graduates fron1 the College this year only to continue with books and classes as a freshman medic in the navy. He goes to Kansas City in November. Chief Sachem, Boh is secretary of the All Stu- dent Council, a member of the lnter-Fraternity council and a Ku Ku. Fraternity affiliations in- clude Delta Upsilon of which he is president, and Nu Sigma Nu. LLOW BEVERLY BOHAN was named outstanding senior in the advertising field of the journalism depart- ment this year to top of a sizable list of citations. She has been president of Chi Omega, is now president of Mortar Board and business manager of the Jayhawker. She detests Hill politics, hut nevertheless has al- ways been quite active in them. Paradoxically also, she is going to he a fashion coordinator immedi- ately following her graduaton-hut she hates cities. VIRGINIA RADER has always been one of the Hill dependables, but this year she definitely took her place among its leaders as the champion of the Inde- pendent Movement. A member of the first bull ses- sion in which the movement originated, she has been one of the main forces behind its growth. Virginia has majored in sociology, hates snobs, and writes lots of letters overseusaffall to the same person. gby ,lane Anderson DON ALDERSON started out to be a dentist but is graduating this spring in general business. He thinks he'll be usome kind of salesmanf, Don is another strong supporter of the Inde- pendent Movement. He Was president of I.S.A. last year and is now president of the senior class and a member of Saehem. He always wears saddle shoes and has a reputa- tion for disliking shows-even Betty Grable's. - wig 4 X X W fmt at ur . . its 1:2 gf ess Q-1-1 . . . the campus in the spring, any part of it- benches, paths, trees, ivy. Hundreds of picture post cards in color . . . moving if there's a breeze. . . . the campus at night, its lights in a fog, its iron gates . . . its masses of students, the processions he- fore and after convocation . . . . . . the Campus enveloped in its winter personality, its variety of entertainment with outdoors more in- vigorating, indoors more friendly. i X in IHPHIIIII . . . the excitement of an intramural game . . . the cool refuge of the Dine-A-Mite, the distance be- tween Friday night and classes in the late spring. HERE is no Word to describe the University as it appears from the stadium in the spring, suspended like a huge oil back drop. There is no Word to describe the Walk from the southeast door of Fraser past the library when it's flooded with late afternoon sun. No word to describe a surging group of students when one mind stops time to consider itself and them. There are no Words, yet these are the things We Want to remember . . . Amcumv If llll BEING HUMAN 'fm vA..,T.I --M, 1. Dr. Lowell Laudon. geology professor. was first to map three mountain ranges in Northwest Territory. They are named for his sons, Thomas, Richard, and Robert. 2. Prof. J. O. Jones, acting dean of the School of En- gineering got his masters degree in hydralic engineer- ing simply because the University needed someone to teach the course. But he's not sorry. 3. Miss Mary Larson is a recognized authority on parasitology. She also teaches Zoology, speaks Swedish as fluently as English. 4. Dr. C. P. Osborne. philosophy professor and a bachelor. has two theology degrees. was a sergeant in World Wzlr I. 5. Miss Florence Black. professor of mathematics. calls her car Algie Ann lshort for Algebraic Analyticj . One device in it folds out to make a camping bed. dai' 00 -'Il---1-an Senior Album 29' GP -IBS First Row AINswoRTI-I. AILEEN VIRGINIA. Kafzmr City, Mo. Psychology. Kappa Alpha Theta, Psi Chi, Women's Cvlee Club, C.V.C.' Deans Honor Roll. 1 ALDERSON, DONALD KEITH. Ejjzingham. Business. Sachem, Proc- tor, Carruth Hall, vice-president, president, Senior Class, presi- dent, l.S.A.g Inter-Hall Council. ANDERSON. ERNEST XVADDELL. Kfzrmzr City. Electrical Engineer- ing. American Institute of Electrical Engineers. ANDERSON, NORMA LEE. Wichita. Psychology. Pi Beta Phi, vice- president, Pi Beta Phi, Psi Chi, Psychology Club, C.V.C., Y.W.C.A., W.A.A. ARMEL, PATTY LOU. Lawrence. Political Science. Kappa Alpha Theta, secretary, Kappa Alpha Theta, C.V.C. BAKER, BARBARA JANE. ElDomd0. Psychology. Chi Omega, president, Psychology Club, W.A.A., Volleyball and Baseball Class Teams. Reading Off the Record. l I BAKER, ELIZABETH ANNI2. Larned. Journalism. Chi Omega, editor-in-chief, campus editor, news editor, University Daily Kansan, editor, Student Directory, president, Press Club, secre- tary, Quill Club, publicity chairman, Jay Janes, secretary, I.S.A., executive board, State-wide Activities, Dean's Honor Roll, Dra- matic Wcmrshopg A Cappella Choir, Kansan Board, Theta Sigma Phi, Jayhawker Staff, A.S.C. Second Row BAKER, LEE EDXVARD. Springfeld, Mo. Electrical Engineering. A.I.E.E., Sigma Tau, Dramatic Club, Mathematics Club, KEKU. BAKER, LOLITA LUCILE. Leavenuforllo. Pharmacy. Kappa Epsilon. BAGLEY, DEAN BURTON. Cheyenne, Wyo. Electrical Engineering. BARKER, MARGARET BELLE. Bucklin. Physical Education. W.A.A., Tau Sigma, Dean's Honor Roll, secretary-treasurer, Jolliffe Hall. BARNES, BONNIE JEAN. Lazrrence. Business. Secretary, Kappa Phi, secretary, Phi Chi Theta. BARNJUM, BARBARA. Ilalrread. Psychology. Alpha Chi Omega, rush captain, Alpha Chi Omega, president, W.I.G.S., Y.W.C.A., C.V.C., Harvey County chairman. BAUER, JOANNE WIILLIAMS. C1613 Cwzler. English. Pi Lambda Theta, Quill Club, Deanis Honor Roll, vice-president, Miller Hall, president, Jolliffe Hall, K. U. Dames. Third Row BAYLES, ROBERT RUSSELL. Lazrrezzre. Electrical Engineering, Phi Gamma Delta, A.l.E.E., Y.M.C.A., Varsity Tennis. BENEFIEI., WILLIAM WADSWORTII. Medicine Lodge. Medicine. Sigma Chi, Nu Sigma Nu. BIXBY. DORIS MARIE. Valley Cemer. Medicine. Delta Gamma, president. Delta Gamma, vice-president, A.S.C., treasurer, Y.W.C.A, president, Student Religious Council, executive board, State-wide Activities, Forums Board, Freshman, Medicine. BLACK, CARA JEAN. Lawrence. Political Science. Jay Janes. BLACK. CHARLES THOMAS. Latvrefzce. Civil Engineering. Phi Delta Theta, vice-president, Phi Delta Theta, recording secretary, Tau Beta Pi, treasurer, Sigma Tau, A.S.C.E. BLAKEMORE, T. JERRY. Liberal, Business. BOARDMAN, JEAN E. Larwrence. Physical Education. Tau Sigma, Jay Janes, Quack Club, C.V.C., W.A.A. 293 5' r First Row BOHAN, BEVERLY. Coffcyzfille. Journalism. Chi Omega, president, Chi Omega, president, Mortar Board, business manager, editorial associate, Jayhawker, editor, K. U. Calendar 1944, IQ45, pub- licity chairman, Theta Sigma Phi, editor, Y-Call, Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, State-wide Activities, Kansan Board, Press Club, Womenls Pan-Hellenic Council. BOHL. LELAND SHEAFF. Kanrar City. Engineering--Physics. Beta Theta Pi, Tau Beta Pi, Pi Mu Epsilon, Mathematics Club, Sum- merfield Scholar. BOONE, GEORGE FRANKLIN. Manhattan, Medicine. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Nu Sigma Nu. BOSSEMEYER, I-IARRIET LOUISE. Hatcbinion. English. Kappa Kappa Gamma, C.V.C., Student Union Activities, Y.W.C.A., State-wide Activities. BOSSI, ALICE. Aivbazzmr Citi. Business. Kappa Phi, Pi Chi Theta. BOTTS, T. R. illeadiifle, Mo. Mechanical Engineering. BOYCE, LEON. For! Scott. Civil Engineering. Second Row BRADLEY, IDABELLE. Blue Mound. Social Science. Student Reli- gious Council, Y.W.C.A., C.V.C., Wesley Foundation, Kappa Phi. IIRIZIJOUW, BETTY ANN. Kama: Cily, Mo. English. Pi Beta Phi, recording secretary, Pi Beta Phi, English Club, C.V.C., Home Economics Club. BREWSTER, DORIS JEAN. Lawrence. Geology. Sigma Kappa, treasurer, vice-president, Sigma Kappa, A Cappella Choir, C.V.C. BROsIUs, FRANK CLINGAN, JR. Wichiza. Medicine. Phi Gamma Delta, SCCICIHFY, Phi Gamma Delta, Intramural Board, A.S.C., secretary, Inter-Fraternity Council, Nu Sigma Nu, Inner Circle, Pachacamac. BROWN. ALICE Louisiz. Wichita. Economics, Chi Omega, Y.W.C.A., Jay Janes, Cheerleader, Assistant Head Cheerleader. BROWN, GENEVA GLENN, Hazchirziou. Spanish. Kappa Phi, Quill Club, El Ateneo, Dean's Chorus, Methodist Church Choir, Y.W.C.A. BROWN, NANCY JEAN. Bartlesville, Okla. Psychology. Kappa Alpha Theta, C.V.C., Psychology Clubg secretary, Psi Chi, Dean's Honor Roll, Jayhawker Staff, Nurse's Aide. Third Row BUCHELE. LUTHER H. Cedar Vale. Zoology. Jayhawk Co-op, Y.M.C.A., Zoology Club. an 'Pia BUECHEL, DONALD ROBERT. Wichira, Medicine. Delta Upsilong president, Delta Upsilong A.S.C., Sachem, Y.M.C.A. Cabinet, Inter-Fraternity Council. BURKHEAD, DONA LEE. Wichita. Bacteriology. Chi Omega, Intra- murals, Phi Sigma, W.A.A. CABLE, MARTHA LOU. Kansai Cily. Mathematics. Pi Beta Phi, pledge trainer, Pi Beta Phi, Pi Lambda Theta, Mathematics Club, C.V.C, W.A.A.g W.I.G.S., Intramurals. CALKINS, JAMES PHILLIP. Kanfay Cin, Mo. Medicine. Beta Theta Pi, Nu Sigma Nu, Inter-Fraternity Council. CAREY, BETTY FRANK. Kamar City. Bacteriology. Pi Beta Phi, recording secretary, Pi Beta Phi, Tau Sigma, Bacteriology Club, Zoology Club, Y.W.C.A.g C.V.C. CHAPIN, DOROTHY LEE. Medimie Lodge. English. Gamma Phi Beta, president, Gamma Phi Beta, secretary, Student Union Activities, Women's Pan-Hellenic Council, C.V.C.: Engineering Beauty Queen, Cheerleader. Blue jean. Senior Album 294 First Row CHASE, MAXIZY DANIEL. JR. Parrorzr. Mechanical Engineering. Beta Theta Pi, Varsity Football, treasurer, K Club. CHESTNUT, LORRAINE WILLIAM. Beloit. Business Administration. Phi Kappa Psi, president, Phi Kappa Psi, Football, lnter-Erater- nity Council, Jayhawker StaiT, K Club, State-wide Activities. CLICKNER, HELEN CHARLENE. Hutclairzrmr. Home Economics. Chi Omega, rush chairman, pledge trainer, Chi Omega, Home Economics Club, Y.W.C.A., C.V.C., Women's Pan-Hellenic Council. COCHENER, VIRGINIA. Kanter Ciry, Mo. Sociology. Delta Gammag C.V.C., Le Cercle Francais, Sociology Club, Bit and Spur Club, Y.W.C.A. COCI-IRAN, LOUISE RUSSEL. Lawrence. Sociology. Sigma Kappag Phi Beta Kappa, vice-president, Sociology Club. COCHREN, JUANITA JOY. lVbiting. Public School Music. Women's Glee Club, W.A.A., University Band, Methodist Church Choir. CODY, JEAN. Clay Cwzler. Psychology. Chi Omega, vice-president, Chi Omega, president, Psi Chi, Pi Lambda Theta, French Club, Y.W.C.A., captain, C.V.C., State-wide Activities, Dean's Honor Roll, Psychology Club. When our hearts were young and gay. Second Row CONROY, THOMAS H. Beloit. Zoology. Phi Beta Pi. CONWAY, RAMONA. Brouvzirrg, Mont. Sociology. Sociology Club, University Catholic Club. COOPER, PHYLLIS MAY. Sl. joseph, Mo. Psyscology. A Cappella Choir, Psychology Club, Y.W.C.A., l.S.A. COTTOM, MELVIN CLYDE. Lazrrerlce. Electrical Engineering. Phi Mu Alpha, University Band, University Orchestra, vice-president, secretary, A.I.E.E. COUSINS, DONALD. Wfasloirrglwz, D. C. Engineering. Phi Delta Theta, Tau Beta Pig Pi Tau Sigma, Sigma Tau, Theta Tau, A.S.C., Ku Ku Club, A.S.M.E., V-12 Dance Band, Sachem. CRAIG, BETTY JUNE. llficbita. Journalism. Chi Omega, adver- tising manager, University Daily Kansan, advertising assistant, Jayhawker Staff, C.V.C., Y.W.C.A., Student Union Activities. Ckocls, CATHERINA C. F. New York, N. Y. French. Tau Sigma, Nurses' Aide, Le Cercle Francais, El Ateneo. Third Row CUMMINS. BERT!-IA. Holvirnozl. Mathematics. Keeper of records. Pi Lambda Theta, Pi Mu Epsilon, l.S.A., Dean's Honor Roll, Gamma Delta, Watkins Hall Scholarship. DAVIS, FRANK C. Denver, Colo. Mechanical Engineering. Beta Theta Pi, Theta Tau, A.S.M.I2. DAVIS, HARRIET. Troy. Sociology, Sociology Club, C.V.C.,Y.W.C,A. DEARMOND, MELBA DEANIS. Kur1.ra.rCity, Mo. Speech and Drama. Alpha Delta Pi, Dramatic Workshcup, English Club, Spanish Club. DIZEM, NORMA JEANNETTE. Lauirem-e. Business. Alpha Omicron Pi, vice-president, Alpha Omicron Pi, C.V.C. DIZTLOR, ANN VUISZNEAUCKAS. Lazvrerzfe. Dietetics. Home Eco- nomics Club, president, Omicron Nu, Kappa Beta, Psychology Club, K. U. Dames, Dean's Honor Roll, Phi Beta Kappa. DIGGS, VIRGINIA SUE. Coffeyzfille. Psychology. Chi Omega, social chairman, Chi Omega, Y.W.C.A., W.A.A., executive board, State-wide Activities, University Orchestra, Psychology Club, Jayhawker Staff, Psi Chi. 295 'Bs First Row DOUGHMAN, LILA JEAN. Wichita. Design. Kappa Alpha Thetag president, Kappa Alpha Thetag Delta Phi Deltag C.V.C.g Jay- hawker Staiig Y.W.C.A.g Student Union Activitiesg Vlomens Pan-Hellenic Councilg Intramurals, University Daily Kansan. DUNKLEY, DORIS KATHRYN. Lawrence. Bacteriology. Alpha Omicron Pig treasurer, Alpha Omicron Pig Phi Beta Kappag Phi Sigmag president, secretary, W0men's Pan-Hellenic Councilg Bacteriology Clubg Fem-Medics. ECCLEFIELD, LORNA BELLE. Welda. Business. Kappa Phi, Phi Chi Thetag W.A.A. EGBERT, ALFRED L. Pleamiilon. Aeronautical Engineering. Sigma Taug Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences. EVERLY, BETTY JO. Garden City. Home Economics. Kappa Kappa Gammag Omicron Nug A Cappella Choirg Dramatic Workshopg Y.W.C.A.g C.V.C.g Home Economics Clubg editorial associate, Jayhawker. FANT, JOEL CHARLOTTE, Garden City. Journalism. Sigma Kappag secretary, Sigma Kappag treasurer. Theta Sigma Phig chairman, Kansan Board, editor-in-chief, University Daily Kan- sang publicity manager, University Band, Press Clubg C.V.C.g State-wide Activities. FAUBION, JEANNE SHERIUAN. Ktmmr City. Mo. History. Chi Ornegag Dramatic Workshtup, Y.W.C.A,, C.V.C.g El Ateneo. Second Row FERGUSON, DAN. Mifsiozi. Medicine, Phi Chi. FESLER, MARGARET. Sedan. Business. Alpha Chi Omega, secre- tary, publicity chairman, Alpha Chi Omegag University Bandg Y.W.C.A.g C.V.C.g Phi Chi Theta. FINCK, PAUL A. St. Charlet, Mo. Mechanical Engineering. Pi Kappa Alphag A.S.M.E. FINK, BETTY Lou. Beaumont, Tex. Chemistry. Quill Clubg Dra- matic Workshopg Y.W.C.A. FISHER, CHARLES LEO. Sulfizmm, Mo. Chemical Engineering. Pi Kappa Alpha, Tau Beta Pig Alpha Chi Sigmag photographer, Jayhawkerg A.I.Ch.E. FLEAGLE, RALPH CLAYTON. Laufreizce. Business. Delta Tau Deltag president, Delta Tau Deltag Inter-Fraternity Councilg Veteran's Executive Councilg Student Court. FRIESEN, EILEEN MARGARET. Cheney. Psychology. Alpha Chi Omegag song leader, Alpha Chi Omega, Y.W.C.A.g C.V.C.g Kappa Phi, Orchestrag Bridge Tournament. l 'mh,t Third Row FROHOFF, WILLIAM HAMILTON, JR. Sz. Louis, Mn. Aeronautical Engineering. Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences. FUCHS, JOHN R. Kimmst Cilj, Mo. Mechanical Engineering. Tri- angle. GENTRY, GERALDINE. Neoderbu. English. Alpha Omicton Pig vice-president, corresponding secretary, Alpha Omicron Pig C.V.C.g Y.W.C.A. GIESCH. JOHN ALBERT. Kama: City. Medicine. Phi Delta Thetag Phi Beta Pi. GILES, CLAIRE EILEEN. Abilene. Psychology. Alpha Chi Omegag C.V.C.g Home Economics Clubg Y.W.C.A.g Intramurals. GLAD, MARIANNE LYDIA. Pratt. English. Gamma Phi Betag presi- dent, Gamma Phi Betag Women's Pan-Hellenic Councilg Phi Beta Kappa, W.A.A.g Y.W.C.A.g Women's Glee Clubg Univer- sity Orchestra. GLOVIZR, INIYRTLIZ ESTHER. Hzflcliinrofz. Sociology. president, Sociology Club, Y,W.C.A. Keepers of the A's. 'JE Pun-nu-at-re ,mash fs. Senior Album 2- , 296 First Row GUBIQRT. CATHERINE DEE. B7'0Il'I1iI1,Q,AfIO7Il. Sociology. Sociology Club, University Catholic Club. GoI.oAsIcI-I. EIWUARD. Kaa1.m.iCi1y. Zoology. GORRILI., KATHERINE MAY. Lawrence. Journalism. Managing etlitor, University Daily Kansan, Kansan Board, Press Club, Jay Janes, executive board, State-wide Activities, Jayhawker Staff. GREGORY, EMADEE. Lmfingmn, Ill. Piano. Alpha Chi Omega. Kappa Phi, Y.W'.C.A., Summer Session Choir. GUILL, IDA VIRGINIA. Kumar Cily. Home Economics. Home Eco- nomics Club, Pi Lambda Theta. GIIsTAIfsoN. BONITA JOSEPHINE. Alarquezre. Business. Phi Chi Theta, Wfomens Glee Club, Y.W.C.A., Home Economics Club. HAIIN, JOYCE INlori1'icl1. Business. Phi Chi Theta, Pi Lambda Theta, l.S.A. Floored-but not bored. like Second Row HAINIES, XVILLIAM M.. JR. I.a1z're11ce, Chemical Engineering. Alpha Chi Sigma, A.I.Ch.E., Chemistry Club. HALL, BARBARA LOUISE. Kamar Cily, Mo. Psychology. Alpha Chi Omega, Nurses' Aide, C.V.C. HALL, ELIZABETH ANN. Kawai Cizy, Mo. Home Economics. Gamma Phi Beta. HALI., MARGARET PENIILETON. Oakley. Public School Music. Sigma Kappa, secretary, Sigma Kappa, XYf'omen's Glee Club, C.V.C.g Y.W.C.A., University Band, All Girl Band. HAMILTON, ROLLAND M. Winfield. Civil Engineering. Track, A.S.C.E. HAMMETT, ANNFLLA OLGA. Kawai Cizy, Mn. English. Alpha Chi Omega, corresponding secretary, Alpha Chi Omega, C.V.C., Press Club. HANNA, MARY TUIJOR. Lawrence. Business. Gamma Phi Beta, Y.W.C.A.g C.V.C., jayhawker Staff, Phi Chi Theta, Intramurals, El Ateneo. Third Row HARIIMAN, MRs. NORMA ASHLOCK. Neuron. Mathematics. Y.W.C.A., Phi Mu Epsilon, K. U. Dames, Mathematics Club. HARLING, MARY LOUISE. Tonganoxie. Sociology. Sociology Club, C.V.C. HARRIS, JEANNE MAURINE. Wellington. Economics. University Orchestra, A.S.C., Y.W.C.A., W.l.G.S. HARRISON, ALICE .IIEANE LEMON. Lazrrenre. Home Economics. Alpha Omicron Pi, Home Economics Club, Kappa Phi, K. U. Dames. HARTLEY, PHILIP B. Wfirbita. Civil Engineering. Delta Tau Delta, treasurer, Delta Tau Delta. HATCH, LOUISE JEWELL. Kansai City, Mo. Spanish. Chi Omega, president, vocations chairman. Chi Omega, president, El Ateneo, secretary, Pi Lambda Theta, Phi Beta Kappa, Y.W.C.A., C.V.C. HAWLEY, JOHN WOODS. Republican Cily. Aeronautical Engineer! ing. Phi Delta Theta, Track, K Club, Institute of the Aero- nautical Sciences, A.S.M.E., Inter-Fraternity Council. 297 sc rr First Row HAYFS, ALICE IVIARIIE. laitirefzce. Spanish. Sigma Kappa, vice- president, Sigma Kappa, El Ateneo, XWomen's Glee Club, Nurses' Aide. HAYS, LAVON IRENI3. Lamed. Accounting. HAZEN, KATHLEEN ANN. Tlaajyerr. Business. Phi Chi Theta. HENRY, CLARKE LATTA. Wiclaim. Medicine. Delta Upsilon, vice-president, Delta Upsilon, president, Nu Sigma Nu, Snow Zoology Club, president, Ku Ku Club, University Band, Inter- Fraternity Council, A.S.C., Student Union Activities, Y.M,C.A., Student-Faculty Medical School Committee, Inner Circle, Pacha- camac, editor, Sour Owl, Student Council Cabinet, student in- structor, Medical School. HENRY, NORMA. Wicbila. Bacteriology. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Y.W.C.A., C.V.C., Student Union Activities, Bacteriology Club, Zoology Club. HENSON, MARGARET FRANCES. Kalmar City, Mo. Bacteriology. Bacteriology Club, Kappa Phi. HERNDON, RUTII ELLEN. Omzzwa. Mathematics. Pi Lambda Theta, Mathematics Club. Second Row HEYLMAN, WARREN CUMMINGS. Spokane, Warh. Architectural Engineering. Phi Kappa Tau, Scarab, American Society of Test- ing Materials, Track. I-IOLLABAUGII, MARY Louise. Wichim. Zoology, Alpha Delta Pi, treasurer, Alpha Delta Pi, Fem-Medicsg Rifle Club. HOLLIS, DONALD RAY. Burbank, Calif. Architectural Engineering. Scarab, American Society of Testing Materials, A.S.A.E. HOLLIS, JEANNE. Orerlvrnok. Home Economics. Home Economics Club, A.S.C.g Pi Lambda Theta, Omicron Nu, Inter-Dorm Council. HOLT, WALDO SLY. Kumar Cilglh Mo. Zoology. Phi Beta Pi, Phi Sigma, Snow Zoology Club, Bailey Chemistry Club. HOOVER, RICHARD IVICGAFFIEY. Kumar City. Chemical Engineer- ing. Alpha Chi Sigma, Tau Beta Pi, Y.M,C.A. Cabinet, Summer- lield Scholar, A.I.Ch.E. HOPKINS, WANDA FAYI2. Cuffegrille. English. 5 .3 538.2 ,W 'UN Third Row HOWARD, ELAINE NADINE. McDm1altl. Sociology. Sociology Club, Y.W.C.A,, Latin Club. HUDSON, CECIL DONALD. Orkalooru. Pharmacy. President, Car- ruth Hall, Kappa Psi, Y.M.C.A., Inter-Hall Council. HUDSON, RICHARD ILEs. Kumar City, Mo. Civil Engineering. A.S.C.E., American Society of Testing Materials. HUGHES, EMMIETT LIONEL. Topeka. History. Kappa Alpha Psi, Masonic Lodge, American Legion. HUSTED, MARGARET HELEN. Salina. Sociology. Sociology Club, Women's Glee Club. IRISH, EDELBERT EUGENE. Ka11.i't1.r CIM. Mo. Aeronautical Engi- neering. Theta Tau, vice-president, I.A.S, ISE, CHARLES HENRY. Laztfence. Geological Engineering. Alpha Tau Omega, president, secretary, Alpha Tau Omega, manager, Blank's Intramural Sports, president, Pick and Shovel Club, Inter- Fraternity Council. Going with girls is expensive. Senior Album 298 First Row JACOBSON, LAVONE IRENE. Lazvrefzce. Physical Education. Presi- dent, W.A.A. JOHNSON, JEANNE. New London, Tex. Design. Delta Phi Delta. JOHNSON, JOANNE. Rosiclare, Ill. Bacteriology. Gamma Phi Beta, Mortar Board, Phi Sigma, president, Senior Class, A.S.C., treas- urer, vice-president, C.V.C., Jay Janes, chairman, Student Union Activities, Y.W.C.A. JOHNSON, MARGIE ANN. Salina. Speech and Drama. Dramatic Workshop, Y.W.C.A., English Club. JOHNSON, VIVIAN LORRAINE. Emeipiire. Spanish. I.S.A., treas- urer, Spanish Club, Deanis Honor Roll. JONES Beta, JONES Phi, HAZEL ELIZABETH. Omaha, Nebr. Business. Gamma Phi Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, Music Appreciation Club. MAXINE. Topeka. Biological Sciences. President, Kappa secretary-treasurer, Junior Class, A.S.C., W.E.C., Snow Zoology Club, I.S.A., Jay Janes, vice-president, P.W.C.L. Bayling Out. 1 i. .YnnL Au-mmm. -1-R------1---was-ua U-mn Second Row JUSTICE, DONNA JOAN. Buffalo. Public School Art. Jay Janes, Delta Phi Delta, Pi Lambda Theta, Fencing Club, W.A.A. KASS, ZENDRA YEITA. Topeka. Voice. A Cappella Choir, W.A.A., Y.W.C.A. KAY, MARGARET LOUISE. Dodge City. Violin. Orchestra, Mu Phi Epsilon. KELLER, CHARLES WALTER. Kama: City, Mo. Civil Engineering. Sigma Chi, president, Sigma Chi, Football, Track, A.S.C.E., K Club. KELLEY, LONNIE. Atwood. Spanish. President, Y.W.C.A., El Ateneo, Mortar Board, Pi Lambda Theta, University Band, Uni- versity Orchestra, Jay Janes, Dean's Honor Roll, Kappa Phi. KELLEY, SHIRLEY IRENE. Hope. English. Dramatic Workshop, Quill Club, Women's Glee Club, Pi Lambda Theta, colonel, C.V.C., Y.W.C.A., secretary, Miller Hall, National Collegiate Players, Dean's Honor Roll. KILE, BARBARA LOUISE. Hazrhimon. Mathematics. Delta Gamma, Women's Glee Club, Mathematics Club, Dramatic Workshop, Pi Lambda Theta. Third Row KILMARTIN, IRMA LEE HASTY. Wichita. Psychology. Kappa Kappa Gamma, rush captain, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Women's Pan-'Hellenic Council, W.A.A., Quack Club, Home Economics Club, Y.W.C.A., C.V.C., Psychology Club. KING, EUNICE. Hutchinson. Social Science. Pi Lambda Theta. KIRLIN, VIRGINIA ORR. Lawrence. Business Administration. Phi Chi Theta, Kappa Phi. KLINE, VIRGINIA IRENE. Emporia. Home Economics. Kappa Alpha Theta, Home Economics Club, C.V.C. KREHBIEI., MRS. KATHRYN HELEN. Moamiridge. Home Eco- nomics. Treasurer, Corbin Hall, secretary, Home Economics Club, A Cappella Choir, All Girl Band, Dean's Honor Roll, Pi Lambda Theta. KREIDER, MARGARET. Lawrence. Chemistry. Chi Omega, presi- dent, house manager, Chi Omega, secretary, vice-president, W.A.A., Y.W.C.A., treasurer, Student Union Activities, Iota Sigma Pi, Chemistry Club, quartermaster, C.V.C., Rifle Club. KUFAHL, KATHARINE ANN. Emporia. Piano. Chi Omega, A Cappella Choir, Tau Sigma, colonel, C.V.C., W.A.A., Y.W.C.A., Women's Glee Club, county chairman, State-Wide Activities, Mu Phi Epsilon. 299 First Row LAEEER, MARY LoUIsE. Wichita. Psychology. Kappa Kappa Gamma, house president, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Psychology Club, Entomology Club, president, Dramatic Workshop, Y.W.C.A. LIEARNED, BETTY L. Belmwrz, Marr. Chemistry. Gamma Phi Beta, Phi Beta Kappa, Y.XX7.C.A., C.V.C., Iota Sigma Pi. LEARNED, DON RANKIN. Belmom, Marr. Aeronautical Engineer- ing. Theta Tau, treasurer, vice-regent, Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Tau, American Society for Testing Materials, president, I.A.S. LEBOW, VICTOR SAMUEL. Wichita. Psychology. LEGLER, NEIL. L6dl'Ellll'07'!l9. Bacteriology. Chi Omega, Phi Beta Kappa. LIEIBBRAND, BETTY E. Laiwrelzce. Business. Delta Gamma, treas- urer, vice-president, Delta Gamma, Mortar Board, secretary, C.V.C., Y.W.C.A., Quack Club, Tau Sigma, Phi Chi Theta, manager, Book Exchange, Student Court. LEIGH, RUTH ELLEN. Lawrence. Business. Phi Chi Theta, presi- dent, Theta Epsilon, University Orchestra, Baptist Youth Fellow- ship, l.S.A., Y.W.C.A.. Second Row LILLARD, MARGARET' BUTLER. Kansai City. Home Economics. Kappa Kappa Gamma, president, Jay Janes, president, Omicron Nu, Home Economics Club, Mortar Board, W.A.A., chairman, Homecoming Committee, Women's Glee Club, C.V.C., State- wide Activities, president, Bit and Spur Club, Pi Lambda Theta. Lockwooo, 'HARRIIET PATRICIA. Atchison. Drawing and Painting. Pi Beta Phi, rush captain, Pi Beta Phi, Y.W.C.A., C.V.C., presi- dent, Friday Art Club, Intramurals. LUEHRING, ELDON GENE. Leazfenuorlh. Mechanical Engineering. Sigma Chi, Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, Sigma Tau, Sachem, A.S.M.E. MALIN, JANE VUOFFORD. Lawrence. Zoology. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Sigma, assistant librarian, business manager, Women's Glee Club. MARKS, LEETA NELLE. Valley Falls. Sociology. Delta Gamma, Nurses' Aide, Sociology Club, Psychology Club, Psi Chi, presi- dent, Delta Sigma Rho, Varsity Debate, Victory Speaking, Y.W.C.A., W.A.A., Dramatic Workshop. MARQUEZ. MAXIMINO A. Chitra, Republic of Panama. Pharmacy. Alpha Chi. Sigma, Kappa Psi. MARSHALL, JOHN ROBERT. Floral Park, N. Y. Medicine. Phi Chi, University Orchestra, University Band, jayhawker Staff. as flag Third Row MARSHALL, MARY OLIVE. Ottawa. Art. President, jay Janes, Mortar Board, jayhawker Artist, Y.W.C.A., Deans Honor Roll, A.S.C. MARTIN, PHYI.I.Is HELENE. Larcrwrce. Psychology. President. Kappa Beta, secretary-treasurer, Psychology Club. MATTLEY, KENNETH CHARLES. Wichita. Mechanical Engineer- ing. MAY, NELSON A. Lawrence. Engineering. Phi Gamma Delta, president, treasurer, Phi Gamma Delta, I.A.S., Inter-Fraternity Council. MCBEE, MARY ELIZABETH, lWiclJila. Bacteriology. Phi Sigma, Bacteriology Club. MCCANN, MARGARET CHARLEEN. Iola. Accounting. MCCLUGGAGE, ROBERTA SUE. Topeka. Speech and Drama. Gamma Phi Beta, president, W.A.A., president, Dramatic Work- shop, State-wide Activities, Tune in Yesterday , Ladies In Re- tirement , Nine Girls , Distinguished Service. The back bone of the band. I I Senior Album 300 First Row MCDONALD, BETTY JEAN. Wichita. Psychology. Psychology Club, vice-president, Psi Chi, Sociology Club. MCGILL, DORTHE MARILYN, Kawai' City, Mn. Journalism. Kappa Alpha Theta, historian, Kappa Alpha Theta, editor, managing editor, campus editor, society editor, University Daily Kansan, archives keeper, Theta Sigma Phi, secretary, Kansan Board, secre- tary, Press Club, advertising manager, K.U. Calendar, Y.W.C.A., C.V.C. MCMAIION, PATRICIA LUCILLE. Lawrence. Public School Music. Sigma Alpha Iota, secretary-treasurer, University Band, A Cap- pella Choir, University Orchestra, Kappa Phi, I.S.A. MEEK, YOLANDE CONSTANCE. Kansas Cizy, Mo. Piano. Delta Sigma Theta, Y.W.C.A. MERCER, EVELYN NADINE. Milmn. Secretarial Training. Phi Chi Theta, A.S.C., treasurer, W.E.C., Dramatic Workshop, A Cap- pella Choir, Jay Janes. MICI-IAELI5, CARL ISADORE. Topeka. Chemistry. Intramurals, Newman Club, Sigma Chi Sigma. MILLEII, HOPE CRITTENIIEN. Laurence. Public School Music. Mortar Board, Mu Phi Epsilon, Pi Lambda Theta, A Cappella Choir, University Band, University Orchestra, Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, W0lHCHlS Glee Club, Tau Sigma, A.S.C., Pi Kappa Lambda. Ladies in waiting. Aug. mv-. Qin Second Row MILLER, MARIAN IRENE. Erie. Public School Music. Gamma Phi Beta, song leader, Gamma Phi Beta, president, Tau Sigma, pro- gram chairman, Music Appreciation Club, A Cappella Choir, University Orchestra, C.V.C., Y.W.C.A., Jayhawker Staff, W.A.A. MILLER, ROBERT ALAN. Oakland, Calif. Mechanical Engineering. Sigma Nu, president, Sigma Nu, Football, Track, K Club, Pi Tau Sigma, A.S.M.E., Intramural Basketball. MODERT, RITA LEMOINE, Kawai City, Mo. Spanish. Pi Beta Phi, Le Cercle Francais, El Ateneo, W.A.A. MONTGOMERY, MARIAN ALICE. Kansai Cily, Mo. Business. Chi Omega, vice-president, Chi Omega, Phi Chi Theta, C.V.C., Y.W.C.A., Business School Honor Roll. MOORE, MARY MARGARET. Welfifzglorz. English. Gamma Phi Beta, treasurer, Gamma Phi Beta, Y.W.C.A., C.V.C., Kappa Phi. MOORHEAI7, ELMA ANN. Sabezha. English. Gamma Phi Beta, executive representative, literary exercises chairman, Gamma Phi Beta, Music Appreciation Club, C.V.C., Y.W.C.A., Intramurals. MORELANIJ, LEONA. Howard. Voice. A Cappella Choir. Third Row MORRII.L, FRANCES ANN. Hiaufazlaa. French. Kappa Kappa Gamma, vice-president, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Jay Janes, Pi Lambda Theta, Phi Beta Kappa, president, Le Cercle Francais, chairman, State-wide Activities, Entomology Club, Quill Club, Victory Speaker, Y.W.C.A. MORTON, V. MIGNON. Nnrlwzville. Business. Gamma Phi Beta, corresponding secretary, Gamma Phi Beta, secretary, district representative, commission leader, Y.W.C.A., vice-president, Phi Chi Theta, executive board, State-wide Activities, Dean's Honor Roll. MURRAY, JOAN. Iieringlorz. Sociology. University Band, C.V.C., I.S.A. NELSON, CHARLOTTE. Kawai City, Mo. Spanish. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Y.W.C.A., El Ateneo, Student Union Activities, Women's Glee Club, Nurses' Aide, C.V.C., Jayhawker Staff. NELSON, GLORIA JUNE. Kumar City, Spanish. Gamma Phi Beta, rush captain, activities chairman, Gamma Phi Beta, El Ateneo, W.A.A., C.V.C., XX!omen's Pan-Hellenic Council, advertising staff, Jayhawker, Y,W.C.A., Intramurals. NEMEC, DIEWITY GEORGE. Agenda. Pharmacy, Kappa Psi, Sachem, treasurer, A.S.C., president, Battenfeld Hall, president, Ku Ku Club, president, Inter-Hall Council, regent, Kappa Psi, P.S.G.L. Senate, Dean's'I-Ionor Roll, Intramurals. NETTELs, MARY CONSTANCE. Pimlmrg. Journalism. Chi Omega, secretary, Chi Omega, Quack Club, C.V.C., A Cappela Choir, W.A.A., Student Union Activities, Y.W.C.A., Jay Janes, Wtmmen's sports writer, University Daily Kansan, Intramurals. itll uv-fs. First Row NIZUSTROM, ROBERT TIIEOIIORE. Kawai Cizy. Mechanical Engi- neering. Beta Theta Pi, Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, A.S.M.E. NIEVILLE, NANCY. Kumar City, Mo. Home Economics. Kappa Alpha Theta, Home Economics Club, C.V.C. NIcIIoLs, DONNA JEAN. Pbillipiburg. Public School Music. President, song leader, Corbin Hall, secretary-treasurer, Inter- Dorm Council, secretary, WtJmen's Glee Club, l.S.A., C.V.C. ORR, PATRICIA LOUISI2. Izizfepemlence. Psychology. Kappa Kappa Gamma, C.V.C., Y.W.C.A., Student Union Activities, Womens Glee Club, Tau Sigma. OVERSTREET, MARGARET JEANNE. lveimm. Psychology. l.S.A.g Kappa Phi. PALMER, DONALD lNfARlON. Kansai City, Mo. Civil Engineering. A.S.C.E. PAsI.AY, LUCILLE ANNETTE. Lecompzmi. Botany. Phi Sigma, Quill Club. Second Row PATTERSON, MARGARET JO. Leon. Mathematics. Mathematics Club, Dean's Honor Roll, Kappa Phi. PAULETTE, GEORGIA WIGGINS, Greta Bend. English. Jay Janes, Quill Club, Dean's Honor Roll, A.S.C., Sour Owl Staff, KU Dames, Y.W.C.A. PEPPERELL, HELEN LOUISE. Wichita. Design. Gamma Phi Beta, vice-president, social chairman, Gamma Phi Beta, C.V.C., Y.W.C.A., Dramatic Workshop, secretary, Delta Phi Delta, Music Appreciation Club, Winter Sports Club. PERRY, DORADEEN. Coffeyville. Public School Music. Sigma Kappa, president, Sigma Kappa, Pi Lambda Theta, University Band, University Orchestra, Y.W.C.A., W.A.A. PETERS, LAVON MARIIE. Minizeapolii, Geology. l.S.A. PFOUTS. JOHN. Alchiiorz. Engineering. Theta Tau, Quill Club. PIIIELPS, HAROLD BARTLE. S411 Mateo, Calif. Civil Engineering. Alpha Phi Omega, A.S.C.E. Third Row PIERSON, HELEN GERALIJINE. Laznenre. Violin. Alpha Kappa Alpha, Lawrence Sunday Forum, concert master, vice-president, University Orchestra, Mu Phi Epsilon, Mortar Board, PILE, ELIZABETH ANN. Wiflfield. Business. Gamma Phi Beta, rush captain, pledge trainer, Gamma Phi Beta, vice-president, Freshman Class, president, Freshman Y.W.C.A., secretary, treas- urer, vice-president, Y.W.C.A., executive board, State-wide Ac- tivities, WoInen's Pan-Hellenic Council, Music Appreciation Club, C.V.C., Intramurals, president, Phi Chi Theta, vice-presi- dent, Mortar Board, W.S.G.A. Council. PILLER, PATRICIA. Great Bend. Entomology. Kappa Kappa Gamma, treasurer, Kappa Kappa Gamma, secretary-treasurer, Modern Choir, vice-president, president, Entomology Club, A Cappella Choir, Home Economics Club, Snow Zoology Club, Phi Sigma, Y.XV.C.A., Student Union Activities, chairman, State- wide Activities. POOL, WILMA LORIZNE. St. joiepfy, Illo. Sociology. University Orchestra, Sociology Club. PRENTICE, RUTH MARJORIE. Kwzmr City. Home Economics. Kappa Kappa Gamma, secretary, jay Janes, president, Home Economics Club, Omicron Nu, Pi Lambda Theta, A Cappella Choir, State-wide Activities, Y.W.C.A., Representative to Na- tional Home Economics Convention. PURINTON, LEW VUALLACE. Oiaziummie. Medicine. Nu Sigma Nu, Ku Ku Club. RADER, VIRGINIA RUTH. Howard. Sociology. jay Janes, vice- president, junior Class, A.S.C., A Cappella Choir, vice-president, W.E.C., State-wide Activities, Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, secretary-treas- urer, Sociology Club, 1.S.A. A grand buy for one dollar. Senior Album 302 QQ'-as rw tann- -ae First Row RAMSAY, ROBERT HENRY. Azclaimn. Aeronautical Engineering. Phi Gamma Delta, president, Phi Gamma Delta, advertising manager, business manager, Jayhawker, business manager, Sour Owl, SCCICEHIY, lnter-Fraternity Council, A.S.C., secretary, I.A.S., social committee, Student Union Activities, Y.M.C.A., R.O.T.C. RAMSEY, JACK A. Kamar City. Political Science. Phi Kappa Psi, treasurer, A.S.C., co-chairman, Young Republicans, The Gadfly, executive committee, The Veterans, treasurer, secretary, Phi Kappa Psi. ' REED, NANCY C. Grove, Okla. Business. Alpha Chi Omca, treasurer, Alpha Chi Omega, C.V.C., Nurses' Aide, Phi Chi Theta. REYNOLDS, MARY MARGARET. Iola. English. Chi Omega, chapter correspondent, Chi Omega, Dean's Honor Roll, Y.W.C.A., C.V.C., Sociology Club, Psychology Club, State-wide Activities, English Majors. RIGGS, PHYLLIS PENELOPE. Lawrence. Occupational Therapy. Jay Janes, treasurer, Occupational Therapy Club, president, I.S.A., Delta Phi Delta, Y.W.C.A. Angels in disguise ROBSON, WILL CARLETON. Lawrence. Pharmacy. Kappa Psi, assistant, Pharmacy, Dean's Honor Roll. ROWSEY, MARYLOUISE. Omaha, Nebr. journalism. Kappa Alpha Theta, vice-president, secretary, Kappa Alpha Theta, managing editor, University Daily Kansan, colonel, C.V.C., Intramurals, Student Union Activities, Kansan Board, Y.W.C.A., Politics. Second Row RUGGLES, WILLIAM LEE. Lawrence. Civil Engineering. Delta Upsilon, A.S.C.E. RUSSELL, RUTH ELIZABETH. Lawrence. Voice. Kappa Alpha Theta, Tau Sigma, treasurer, A Cappella Choir, University Or- chestra, Episcopal Church Choir. SAFFELL, MARY JEAN. junction City. Design. Pi Beta Phi, C.V.C., W.I.G.S., treasurer, Delta Phi Delta, Nurses' Aide, Flying. SCHELL, WILLIAM FONDREN. Wichita. Peroleum Engineering. Beta Theta Pi, A.I.M.E., Chemistry Club, Track, K Club. SCHERRER, PATRICIA ANN. Kansas City, Mo. Bacteriology. Sigma Kappa, president, vice-president, Sigma Kappa, colonel, C.V.C., vice-president, Wigs, Jay Janes, Y.W.C.A., Bacteriology Club, Zoology Club, A.S.C., Women's Pan-Hellenic Council. SCI-IIEBER, ELIZABETH ANN. Bonner Springr. Chemistry. Alpha Omicron Pi, corresponding secretary, Alpha Omicron Pi, Iota Sigma Pi. SCHLOESSER, FRANCES LYONA. Fredonia. Chemistry. Kappa Kappa Gamma, registrar, Kappa Kappa Gamma, W.A.A., Dra- matic Workshop, Y.W.C.A., Dean's Honor Roll. Third Row SCHNEITTER, HENRY EDWARD, JR. Sr. Joseph, Mo. Business. Sigma Chi, treasurer, Sigma Chi, Alpha Phi Omega, A.S.M.E. SCHROLL, JACK CLARE. Hutchinson. Zoology. Sigma Chi, presi- dent, vice-president, Sigma Chi, Nu Sigma Nu, Inter-Fraternity Council, Pachacamac. SCHULTZ, PAULINE MARTHA. Halma. Occupational Therapy. Secretary, Occupational Therapy Club, Intramurals. SEEVER, WARREN RORK, Eudora. Aeronautical Engineering. I.A.S., A.S.M.E. SELDE, VERNON. Davenpon, Walla. Mechanical Engineering. A.S.M.E. SHARP, MABELLE. Kansas City, Mo. Education. Alpha Kappa Alpha, Entomology Club. SHEPPARD, DORIS LILLIAN. Larneal. Business. Kappa Kappa Gamma, University Orchestra, C.V.C., Student Union Activities, Y.W.C.A. 303 First Row SHEWEY, MARY LOU. Blae Springs, Mo. Political Science. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Y.W.C.A., Student Union Activities, C.V.C., Political Science Club, Pi Sigma Alpha. SHIVE, EDISON BREWER. Independence. Engineering. Phi Gamma Delta, Intramurals, Varsity Tennis, K Club, A.S.M.E. SIEGERIST, WALTER LAURENZ. University City, Mo. Mechanical Engineering, chairman, A.S.M.E., Alpha Phi Omega, Theta Xi, chairman, Hob Nail Hop. SIMS, DEAN STRATTON. Miami, Okla. Journalism. Phi Kappa Psi, secretary, president, Phi Kappa Psi, Sigma Delta Chi, editor- in-chief, University Daily Kansan, Kansan Board, Sour Owl stalf, Jayhawker staff, Y.M.C.A., Press Club, El Ateneo, Inter-Fraternity Council. SINGER, PHYLLIS ELIZABETH. Parker. Spanish. E1 Ateneo, A Cappella Choir. SLOAN, JANET LEE. Kansas City, Mo. Psychology. Alpha Omicron Pi, president, Alpha Omicron Pi, secretary-treasurer, Senior Class, Occupational Therapy Club, W.A.A., Westminister Forum, Women's Pan-Hellenic Council. SLUSS, MIRA JEAN. Lawrence. Social Science. Alpha Delta Pi, secretary, Alpha Delta Pi, president, Pi Sigma Alpha, Kappa Phi, Y.W.C.A., Dean's Honor Roll, Pi Lambda Theta. Second Row SMITH, JOYCE. Kansas City. Bacteriology. l.S.A.g Quaclc Club, W.A.A., Bacteriology Club. SMITH, KELMA GRACE. Bigelow. Journalism. Alpha Omicron Pi, Secretary, Alpha Omicron Pig Y.W.'C.A., business manager, Summer Session Kansan, campus editor, advertising manager, University Daily Kansan, Kansan Board, advertising assistant, Jayhawker. SMITH, LAWRENCE R. Hoisington. Electrical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Tau, Theta Tau, Pi Mu Epsilon. SMITH, LORA ALMARY. Salina. Zoology. SMITH, MARY MARGARET. Colby. Piano. Chi Omega, song leader, Chi Omega, Y.W.C.A., C.V.C., Le Cercle Francais, A Cappella Choir. SNOOK, PERSIS ROSELLA. Wichita. Bacteriology. Treasurer, Jay Janes, president, P.W.C.L., Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, president, A.S.C., Mortar Board, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Sigma, Bacteriology Club, C.V.C., Student Union Activities, Dean's Honor Roll, Dramatic Workshop, Student Court. SNYDER, MAR JORIE GLENORII.. Winfield. Spaniila. Kappa Alpha Theta, treasurer, Kappa Alpha Theta, Nurses' Aide, C.V.C., El Ateneo, W.A.A. Third Row SOUTHALL, CAROLYN REID. Kansai City, Mo. Speech. Alpha Chi Omega, A Cappella Choir, Dramatic Workshop, Nine Girls. SPEARMAN, MARION MINERVA. Lawrence. Bacteriology. Alpha Kappa Alpha, Bacteriology Club, Zoology Club, Phi Sigma, A.S.C. SPRING, BETTY JOE. ElDorado. Home Economics. Alpha Delta Pi, Home Economics Club, Y.W.C.A. STARR, RUTH ANN. Topeka. Zoology. Dean's Honor Roll, Uni- versity Orchestra, University Band, Snow Zoology Club, finance committee, Y.W.C.A. STEWART, ROBERT DANIEL. Wamego. Medicine. Sigma Nu, president, Sigma Nu, president, Nu Sigma Nu, president, Inter- Fraternity Council, Dean's Choir, Men's Glee Club, Ku Ku Club. STEWART, WILLIAM Ross. Tacoma, Warn. Electrical Enginering. Alpha Kappa Lambda, president, Sigma Tau, A.I.E.E., Track. STOLL, MARION RUTH. Kantai City. Spanish. President, West- minster Hall, secretary, Westminster Foundation, El Ateneo, Student Religious Council. Stag bids-to cuptain's mast. Senior Album First Row STORMONT, HELEN M. Digbion. Business. Watkins Hall, Kappa Phi, Phi Chi Theta, Y.W.C.A. STRATTON, MARGARET GRANT. Lawrence. Home Economics. Kappa Alpha Theta, Tau Sigma, C.V.C., Y.W.C.A., Home Eco- nomics Club. STUART, CAROL LOUISE. Neofbo, Mo. journalism. Delta Gamma, activities chairman, social chairman, rush captain, Delta Gamma, Y.W.C,A., C.V.C., W.A.A., reporter, campus editor, University Daily Kansan, Jayhawker Staff, Kansan Board, Senior Class His- tory Committee, Senior Volleyball Team, president, WOmen's Pan-Hellenic Council. STUTZ, THELMA JANICE. Utica. Home Economics. Alpha Delta Pi, president, treasurer, Alpha Delta Pi, W.A.A., treasurer, Home Economics Club, WOmCHiS Pan-Hellenic Council. TALLEY, AUDREY ELAINE. Humboldt. Voice. President, A Cap- pella Choir. TEICHGRAEBER, NANCY ANNE. Emporia. Drawing and Painting. Kappa Alpha Theta, president, secretary, Delta Phi Delta, C.V.C., W.A.A., Intramurals, Student Union Activities. Fun on u small scale. 304 1- lar i i . HP' Lg '6'- TIBBETS, MARJORIE MAY. Kamar City, Mo. Psychology. Kappa Kappa Gamma, pledge trainer, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Y.W.C.A., Student Union Activities, Psychology Club, Home Economics Club, jayhawker Staff. Second Row TICE, IRENE HENSEL. Summerfield. Bacteriology. Bacteriology Club, Zoology Club, Jayhawk Flying Club, I.S.A.g Y.W.C.A., Kappa Beta, A.S.C. TICE, WAYNE KILMER. Kama: City. Medicine. Nu Sigma Nu, Snow Zoology Club. TIPPIN, RUTH ANN, Topeka. journalism. Mortar Board, presi- dent, Theta Sigma Phi, Kansan Board, University Daily Kansan Staff, Dean's Honor Roll. TODD, MARY ELIZABETH. Alcbifon. Economics. University Band, Dramatic Workshop. TUCKER, ROBERT GUILFORD. Minion. Education. Methodist Church Senate. TURNBULL, JEAN IRENE. Topeka. Education. University Band, University Orchestra, Y.W.C.A. TURNEY, DORIS MARIE. Edgerton, Mo. Violin. Womens Glee Club, Senior Recital, Kappa Beta, Church Choir, University Orchestra, Mu Phi Epsilon. Third Row UKENA, MARY JANE. Highland. Bacteriology. I.S.A., Bacteriology Club, Phi Sigma, C.V.C., Phi Beta Kappa. UTLEY, ELLEN MARIE. Batrtlefzfille, Okfa. Public School Music. President, Mu Phi Epsilon, Pi Lambda Theta, A Cappella Choir, I.S.A. VAN METEII, ORVILLE EVERETT. Sr. joreph, Mo. Petroleum Engi- neering. Tau Beta Pi, vice-president, Battenfeld Hall. WAGENFIEI.D, ELLEN RUTH. Sz. jorepla, Mo. Public School Mtisic. Pi Latnbda Theta, Mu Phi Epsilon, secretary, Wesley Foundation, Kappa Phi, Y.W.C.A., Hansel and Gtetel , I.S.A., A Cappella Choir. WASHINGTON,h1.ARTINA PEARL. Lawrence. Art Education. Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Phi Delta. WATERSTRAIJT, NONA MAURINE. Detroit. Mathematics. Presi- dent, secretary, Wesley Foundationg Jay Janes, Kappa Phi, presi- dent, Mathematics Club, Dean's Honor Roll, Pi Lambda Theta, Pi Mu Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappa. WEARY, DALE JELLISON. junczion Cay. Public School Music. Pi Beta Phi, song leader, Pi Beta Phi, Presbyterian and Methodist Church Choirs, A Cappella Choir, C.V.C., Y.W.C.A., A.S.C. 305 GN'-i First Row WEST, WILLIAM THOMAS. Wichita. Medicine. Beta Theta Pi, president, Beta Theta Pi. WHITE, ALBERTA RAYE. Lawrence. Design. Delta Sigma Theta, Y.W.C.A., Delta Phi Delta. WHITE, CLAUDE GRAHAME. Wiclaim. Chemical Engineering. Alpha Chi Sigma, Intramurals, Engineering Council, P.S.G.L., Freshman Basketball. WHYTE, DAVID PRITCHARD. Kansas City, Mo. Civil Engineering. Phi Delta Theta, A.S.C.E., Theta Tau, Inter-Fraternity Council. WICKERT, PHYLLIS MARY. Claflm. Dietetics. Jay Janes, Phi Lambda Theta, A.S.C., president, vice-president, Corbin Hall, I.S.A., Home Economics Club. WILDGIQN, JOHN JEROME. Canon Cizy. Colo. Zoology. Sigma Chi, Nu Sigma Nu, Phi Sigma, Ku Ku Club. WILLISON, JANE ANNIE. Neoderba. Secretarial Training. Phi Mu, Phi Chi Theta, Music Appreciation Club, Y.W.C.A., vice-presi- dent, Foster Hall. Second Row WINN, BARBARA GAY. Kmzsar City, Mo. Psychology. Pi Beta Phi, president, Pi Beta Phi, president, W.A,A., Dramatic Club, Tau Sigma, Y.W.C.A., Intramurals, Psychology Club. WITHERSPOON, JOHN GRIER. Kumar Ciry, Mo. Civil Engineer- ing. Kappa Sigma, grand master of ceremonies, Kappa Sigma, vice-president, Alpha Phi Omega. WITT, ROBERT RAY. Hays. Political Science. Pi Sigma Alpha, president, Battenfeld Hall, Inter-Hall Council, Dean's Honor Roll. WOERNER, GELDARD HARRY. Kumar City, Mo. Civil Engineering. Sigma Chi, A.S.C.E., American Society of Testing Materials. WOODS, STANLEY CRAWFORD. Caney. History. Sigma Nu. XXfOODW'i-KRD, MARTHA ELLEN, Cincinmzzi, Ohio. Economics. Kappa Alpha Theta, archivist, vice-president, Kappa Alpha Theta, W.A.A., ASC., Mortar Board, secretary-treasurer, presi- dent, Quack Club, C.V.C., cabinet member, Y.W.C.A. WORSLEY, SARAH JANE. Salim. Zoology. Delta Gamma, Home Economics Club, Zoology Club, Dramatic Workshop, Ento- mology Club, C.V,C, R Third Row XVRISTEN, ALLABELLE. Garden City. Bacteriology. Bacteriology Club. YERKEs, SARA ANN JONES. Garden Cizy. English. Alpha Omi- cron Pi, Pi Lambda Theta, University Orchestra, vice-president, Kappa Beta. ZARKER, KEITH EMERSON. Topeka. Chemical Engineering. Phi Delta Theta, Theta Tau, A.l,Ch.E, ZIMMERMAN, ANN LOUISE. Kumar Cizy, Mo. Speech and Drama. Gamma Phi Beta, Dramatic Workshop, Student Union Activi- ties, Entomology Club, Jayhawker Beauty Queen. ZIMMERMAN, EDWARD, Bzzrlirzgalrze. Psysics. ZIMMERMAN, MAURINE BLAIR. McPlaermr1. Physical Education. W.A.A., Tau Sigma, A Cappella Choir. Just sliding through. m Four Years in Retrospect fContinued from Page 2831 of the A.S.T.P., A.S.T.R.P., electricians mates, and Navy V-5 cadets installed in the organized houses throughout the year. The foot-dragging Club-foot Cutiel' hit the news and terrorized the female population before he was subdued and brought to justice. The Hrst woman dance manager and the first woman senior class president were in keeping with the leap year-war year theme. Summer school rated a full semester last year. Another short session and the fall semester began for the second time in November. The Navy V-12's up- held the military side of the K.U. scene after the departure of the Army, Elec- tricians Mates, and the V-5 cadets. Var- sity dances featured Don Counsins and his Navy band and a new queen was invented for the University War Bond dance. Though defeated by Kansas State and M.U., K.U. broke a forty- eight year jinx and marched on to vic- tory over Nebraska at the Homecoming game. The deaths of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and columnist Ernie Pyle within a week of each other left the nation in a state of saddened be- wilderment. The magnitude of the war caused a decline in social events while students hung on the words of the nearest radio commentator for news of V-E day. It arrived May Sth and with it the transfer of attention THE JAYHAWRER back to K.U. and the forthcoming V-S last arrived. day . . . for the senior victory has at The seniors have given to the Uni W Sun-loving, suds-loving play clothes for every extra-curricular activity on your calendar this summer! Fashions that breathe of out-of- doors smurtness and freedom . . . that help you to enjoy every leisure hour you have! fm N 43,1 If 5 S at of li 4 We invite you to see these new fashions if sronr SHOP - secouo FLOOR 1? if .-2222521 5251512 -:l:Pl:1:I. :1:1:1:1:f:2:f:2:f:f:2:1:2:21:5: ,: is:s':a'1:ze'a'a?2f...' s 1:2:14r:r:1- -:4:-:.:-z.:-z-9:-:..-4.-:-.ow-:4:-:-:-:ir1:21I-r..:rf1:1:111:1:1-11:::54:r:::1:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:f--5c:-:-::.1:,:,:1::z:: ,,:1:2zz:1:g:-1-zz:-:-1-13:-:-za:-:-:-5-:-1-:,:4:-:-:-:-za-:4:,:-:l -1:2151-:gzgzgw :g::::-:5,:,:1:g,:f -f va 4.4-:::::-:-:-:-:-:-:v:- :-gs -3:5-:-:-:+:.1:1:-z::1:,:::1:59,?A: waz.:-1-1-mass:-:-:-:-:-:a-1-:-Q:-:2s2:2:1:1:r5:1:1::s. .t:r:1:r:1:r:2:f:11f:-rr''-.a.-.:' 'szrzlfrzr-rival ,.g:1:2:2:2.f:2:2:f:2r2-'7'r'S-N zwzrziw '- ,-?E:fr:rE::2::s:1fa .-9:-24-: I-3-: I-I-Z-:V:fi-:fi-t45'.5:f:3'iZ3t5:15'5:5:' .5'i'f:f' 3 ' . a+:-1-1+ -za:-141' m:.:3.,,:...+..,.,H...,,.Z,c:,.,.,.:.:.:,:.:.:,1,.,,,.gg.,5+g.,.,.:.,.,.A.,Z.1.3.3.,.,.1.2.I.A.52,1.:i:,,.,.,.:.,,:.,.:.,.::x::..-----'... . .:-:-:-:-:+:-:-:-. --:aa .55-qz+m-5 'sgg5ggggggg. '-212s2eEzEs2:Za211sfz2z2gi523z2:igg:1-'wg . v.,.,,.,,,Eare,.,.,.,,:,,.:.:,:,:,. ,I,:.,,.,,,,,,:,:,.,,.A,,:,.,:, ...E .,1. .,.1.,.,.:.:,5:.4, U.-X sl.: .:ma,:,.:a:.,.,.,:,:,::::.::,:-- ::-:+aa.:-:.:- --r:-11:V:-:.:-1:-sm:-:-zz.:-:-r :-:4:-:A:-:,--:':-.- ,:.:-1 sf' 4 K. gi-',,x EEEEifQfEf555i5?Ei5f3. 555' '-E:E,EQEE:E:EQE,E' Efflfifflflfififf 555555, :5EgE' EgE5E5SEgEr1 'f -,Zf11E-.-- 3552 '4 '- 1:5:5:5:2-1+1g:r-' 5:5E3E3E5E5E5E3f 'I5E5EfE52rErErE'- 1E511E' ,.f5frE5E3E553f,'jI5 :.g.-.5.::q.'4.'1.:s,,.-,-.-. -.,14:-rr:-rf 1-zf.-:Q-' H '- ' ' ' ' f' ' . .':-:-:-:' , ,. V, ::s:r:::111:1:r:1:r:. :rzragr .'ssf1s1r:r:rfr::: f'f+f 'f'f'f E5fr'535E' 152555256 15232555 125-I if . .-311. .2E:2'f5I5ff-51252 1E5?5E2E5E2EIE5E5E2E2E2 1325?1:45-?i1E':2E1E1E1EIE1E1. .fi-I-3+ .-:AI-34' f'-:fZ-:- 2 '-I . I ' I .-:-:-:-. :-: :-. :-:-:-.- Uma A rt' SEED C ... .... . . iiiii ......s . s ..s f i T ctlicl U l l . sllzr' ... ...,.. ..... :f::4..1::.t::: rffff 'lfffifffff EIS in in ...wu.....a,...,g me NE 1945 versity plans and half the money for a at graduation time near Potter lake. It grove of crab trees to bloom each year will be a part of the post-War picnic THRIFT In partial eclipse for some years, thrift is once again find- ing public favor. Many people have offered schemes for security and financial independence without work or effort. None have been successful. The truth is, there is no substitute for plain, old-fashioned thrift. To those of you who are about to enter the business or pro- fessional world, we recommend that you carefully select a strong, conservative bank as a helpful partner in meeting the many complex problems ahead--and then, form the habit of saving regularly a part of your earnings. FIRST NATIONAL BANK A IN WICHITA Capital 8: Surplus 52,500,000 Member F.D.l.C. 307 grounds previously planned by the classes of '43 and '44, The gift com- mittee headed by Robert Buechel, initiated the dedication of the crab trees to members of the class of '45 who have been killed in action. Their names will be inscribed on a bronze plaque to be placed in the center of the flowering grove. Now packing up their memories and discarding their caps and gowns, lecture notes and lists of axioms, seniors leave their bobby socks and K.U. stickers to the underclassmen and be- gin again at the beginning. U Intramurals fContinued from Page 2662 has reached the semifinals, while R. J. Atkinson is the only quarter-finalist in the upper bracket. Both contestants are Phi Psi's. Men still in the running are Marsh Fryar, Chris Thomas, Jerry Simpson, Charles Aylward, jim Mc- Evers, Jack Miller, Kirk Scott, Eddie Brunk, Rudy Carl, and Frank Brosius. Even with the rain the spring soft- ball tournament has been one of the best in some years. Two leagues of seven teams each were organized in the first week of May, and games have been played on every good night since. Battenfeld, with only a game with a mediocre Sigma Nu team unplayed, has virtually cinched the A league title with five victories against one tie. Tom Saffell varsity moundsmari last spring, has been doing the chucking ,tiff X IN WICI-IITA . . 1451, LQ, X Q21 la I I WMW U T ME, f c ,mn FOR THE BES ? K W g ii i s , Q if - ,,,,,..,.,.... ...,. 4 i. ..,..- --ii L ef '21 ' , if-2 BROADWAY QQEMQMHMMTZZSZMMZ AT DOUGLAS 308 for the residence halls. In the B league, Blanks and Kappa Sigma lead with a game between the two still to be played. The top two entries in each league will meet for the championship when the season is completed. Other teams entered are Phi Delt, Beta, Delta Tau, Duke's Mixture, We Clean Everything You Wear But Your Shoes Lawrence Laundry and Dry Gleaners Phone 382 1001 Hampshire Congratulations and Best W'isl1cs 75? To the I945 Graduates -af 0arler's Slalionery 1025 Mass. Street Sigma Nu, and Oldham's Oldsters in the AU league, and Sigma Chi, Phi Psi, S.A.E., Pi K. A.g and Phi Gam in the B league. Good Earth fContinued from Page 2402 drickson to jane Atwood . . . John Mc- Guckin from the Gamma Phils to a Kappa. Wanted: Someone to appreciate Earle Crawford's talents . . . by the lo- cal males-more four-wheel personali- ties like Joyce Morgan . . . by the local females-more personalities. Stolen: Bob Bayles from Marian Miller by Gladys Blue. Perronnlrz Charles Magic Moffett has been bewitching a local 16-year old fem lately . . . Dean Smalley is getting around these days with Carolyn Brown, at the Pi Phi formal, with jean O'Con- mal, with Jean O'Connor, Theta, at the navy dance, and coking in the Union with Jane Topping, Alpha Delt. HIT PARADE The Same Old Story: Kathryn Zim- merman and Warren Heilman . . . Lennie Moe and jim Oliver . . . Leroy Library Robison and Patty CAdD Vance . . . Janie Hayes and Bill Schell . . . jim Sargent and Barb Haffner . . . Larry Smith and Bobbie Esmond . . . Emily Stacey and Jack Ramsey . . Bev Frizell and Bob Blackwell. THE JAYHAWKER Foster . . . Alice Wright's been taking them often lately, with Ens. Chuck Franski in the offing. Once to Chicago, and while he was on leave, many times to Topeka. Remember: Joe Turner and Poo McCleary . . . Rose Nell Curtis and Jim McCollem . . . joan Woodward and Kennedy Plumbing and Eleelrie Go. wi? ste -are 937 MASS. LAWRENCE KANSAS INSURED CABS BAGGAGE HANDLED C I T Y C A B Phone 3-200 24--Hour Service COURTEOUS DRIVERS Sentimental journey: Dick Williams makes weekly trips from Park college to the campus to see Charlotte Bartley, LAWRENCE KANSAS g Q THE GR T - BILLINGSLEY FRUIT COMPANY Wholesale Fruit and Produce WICHITA KANSAS JUNE 1945 Howard Joseph. The Lone I Long For: George Cox to Nancy. Manhattan Serenade: Gerry Shaw to Bud Eisenhower, K-State. Beer Barrel Polka: Sigma Chi's. Candy: V-l2's, More anal More: Joan Vickers and SENIORSI YOU WORKED HARD FOR THAT DIPLOMA LET US FRAME IT NOW... KEELER'S BOOK STORE I t's the Service That Counts! O Eldridge Pharmacy O 701 Mass. Phone 999 Dean Corder . . . Billie Hamilton and George Riding . . . Chuck Piroutek and Ginny Gorrill . . . Shirley Hargiss and Eugene Arnold . . . Bill Jenson and Norma Lutz . . . 'lCorky Child and Bill Douglas . . . Cathy Piller and Chuck Ball . . . Joan Wfoodward and Owen Peck. Holiday for Stringr: V-12 band. Corning in on a Wlrzg and a Prayer: Guess who? lShoalcl Care: Bill Frohoff, fugitive from a recent brush-off, declared vehe- mently that he was through with wimminn from then on. Is currently seen with a Theta and Joyce Morgan, of the red convertible. From One Love to Another: Bob Unger just can't decide between the Theta's, D. Gfs, and Gamma Phi's. l1f'J Alwayr Yon Czwoj : Jean Saffell and Jerry Wildgen . . . Chris Thomas and Barbara Barcroft . . . Grace Piros and Bob Witt . . . John Witherspocxn and Marietta Richardson . . . Marilyn Beck and Dick Laub Land she's en- gaged at thatlb . . . Carol Stuart and Bob Preciousl' Miller. I'nz Gonna See My Bahy: Dixie Gilliland . . . Mary Margaret Gaynor . . . Tassie Brooks . . . Patsy Nees. I Wlrh I Knew: Jody McCrory, Jim Burwell, and Dordie Waitt . . . Frances Lawrence, Bob Weber, and Bill Schafer. Time War: Mike Kuklenski and Ann Newcomer . . .gBill Nims and Patty Abbott . . . Margie Reich and OLDEST ESTABLISHED FINE JEWELERS IN KANSAS LEVITT JEWELRY COMPANY 227 E. DOUGLAS AVENUE WICHITA, KANSAS 309 Lynn Leigh . . . Bud Wantland and Lois Bradstreet. Once in a While: Earle Crawford and Anne Scott . . . Bev Stucker and Rens McClure . . . Chickl' Hall and Alice Shankland . . . Alison Jones and Joe Turner . . . Mike Nichols and Gerry Shaw. THREE TOP HITS Q - Kerry Cricket Minx Mode and Toni juniors ii? it 7117 J In ' 0 HSOH S PHONE 771 835 MASS. THE CHOCOLATE SHOP , 9II Kansas Avenue Topeka fDownsIairsl il? iff iff LUNCHES, DINNERS, PASTRIES, SPECIAL PARTIES :mf A 15 -'1 ia:-tl? .. 'Q AJ :f ra A ll ,f 1 310 Bring that FORD Back Home U Genuine Ford Parts TRAINED FORD MECHANICS O 'There's a FORD in Your Future Morgan-Mack Motor Co. 609 MASS. PHONE 277 aaww?.n ouu Now Have I+ Framed fContinued from Page 2451 The people of K.U.-those are the parts I think of first. People like genial, gentlemanly, Dean Henry Wer- ner, spellbinding, scholarly, Prof. Hil- den Gibson, casual Prof. Robert Cal- derwoodg friendly Dean Paul B. Law- son, hustling Alumni Secretary Fred Ellsworthg blustery but effective Coach Phog Allen, efficient, personal-service telephone operator 'Mary', good old ONLY A 3-MINUTE WALK TO ANY OF MY CUSTOMERS FROM THE CONTINENTAL -IT'S SO CENTRAL QN- ,u, . - 1 Q ,- X' If A F ILM!! F I. i 'lllil lmmfmz ' lwafafaj KANSAS cmr, Mo. THE JAYHAWKER campus cop 'George' and then A. D. Schick. And my girl up in Corbin hall. And the 'save the world' boys we used to meet in the 'Hawk at 10:50 on Fri- day nights for round-table discussions over a few good beers - Kelley, Keown, Harmon, Brownlee, Martin, Gilles, Peterson, Robinson, Haage, Duncan, Mitchelson, Kretzmeier, Kett- ner, Fluker-all those and more. And then there were all the good college hangouts. The Union fountain with good cokes and Pi Phi'sg the Cottage with cokes and sandwiches and Alpha Chi'sg the 'Mite' with good beer, a loud juke box, defense workers, and dancing on the patio, and the Pit where the boys gathered for evenings of male conversation and Budweiser. The un- official night games in Memorial sta- dium were good, too. 'KI remember how the mist hangs low in Marvin Grove early in the morning- how our shoes used to get wet from dew as we walked through the grove to band practice at 7:30. I remember the winters, too, when 14th Street was too icey for sensible motor- ists-I wrapped my old Model 'A' M iff ' -': ffql ,:,:,:,, -gg.::,:g,:,jsffE,:'EE,'E:'E'I'E:f:E:'i' 'WAY' 'j..5 lf . . .- ... 1. 1.1 -.1 I.. . 1 . .1 1.4.1-1-' wit if ., ,.,...,. . ,,.,, N . QQ: fm Q N-...a -in-----r ' X X WM xx ' Y ed F1 Cooflltlon . 5 2 Unenxh . y E e Gln O ...-. .4242-22525 1 ' if Irion eomli Nl I lvll 45 . ,... 'l 'l ll' l 5 A fl --rf+ SIFI lZllli'i il' QD a fc fsli i r l......... 1 ,-.i 'li'i'ililil liii' A A f T ., J H 'F ...... a JUNE 1945 Ford around a telephone pole one after- noon. And how the wind blew up the valley and sort of concentrated its coldest and strongest blast right there between Dyche Museum and Green Hall. I even had to buy an 'Overcoatf The Chem building-that everlast- ing odor, and the old joke 'If the chem lab is foul, it's Fowler across the streetf Then in spring there were the great iris beds and the rows of fragrant lilacs. Geraniums in front of Frank Strong Hall. I can still hear that steam whistle blowing at 20 minutes past the hour- and see the sidewalks immediately fill- ing with meandering streams of stu- dents. Speaking of whistles-the law- yers did well, too-especially on windy days. Then there were those tooth-and- toenail intramural football games,when the best player was always the man who had brought the most girls along to cheer. And Phog Allen's basketball teams every year played some thrillers in Hoch auditorium. Remember the time you and Greg and I took those five Corbin girls to Manhattan in the BEST OF ond LUCK CONGRATULATIONS to th G SENIOR CLASS of l945 JL, if T S- 1 .f'ilgf33 X 7' Lu ,sf ,pw f'.1e+z,Esg.g1 i f f -- S .-' -ig, eff . . ' 4 f -,QETSV Q-55-mei-,:-:E viii-up-1,,,.,f:ydl5-ling.,. l :1sf'ateL..- i ?'TT i Seite-z.. f 1 -. ,few - me 455' qfi x f,, L: ' I , igil 1- 1 ,I -1. r..,V'wl , , 1 X la. Q 5u.l.emx.Ig '- E: -Wy ,If 55.5 X3 xwx- Q ', , f ii, ir , , -. - ' A ..llli 'lulllll 'Mllll ll 'l e - . ai ' ,A ii use 12, 'SX X 1 : .1 XJEJN tgww. '-, :,, , te , ff' . p H 4 3 -2 1 -R A . t R - . ---- R --1 1151. ?fX 3 --- - 'Ax yi fx , II II COWBOY BRAND ,gf ,N 'E ff I ite To .Tn SHIPS FoR THE NAVY 4 jggf x 5, , Nxfi ll are in action on every invasion shore. These stanch ships are built in our Q X yx x W.-K is busy shipyords on the Kaw, a full thousand miles from salt water. We're Xi X building BOMBS FOR THE ARMY, too, to smash our enemies. Today Ni' Y- Victory is our first thought, our only aim. f L S 15 L, X g . . . . . me lgxs rs - is After victory, the results of our unique war production experience will be X it ,gg Q . -, N E xx available to our customers in many new and improved products of steel plate. BUY MORE WAR BONDS- fwu'n9- , S -ig- A' -x-X, X GDPVIIGITIOAQNAIKYNQ w 'COWBOY BRAND' THE OARBY 'i 3'Fcls CORPORATION ANDKEEPTHEM HARRY UARBY PLATE KANSAS CITY, ' KANSAS 312 Ford for the K.State game? Nothinl but a good time. Those things, john, make up about half of my diploma. The other half is composed of the practical and technical information I picked up majoring in journalism, plus a number of funda- mental concepts which I hadn't been ENJOY TOPS Fountain Service HIH3 I ni 'll H H lllll able to see from Dads 83-acre farm back in Nemaha County. ln my first sociology course I found among my outside reading this state- ment by Horace Greeley: 'For the true liberal in the country in which we live, there is but one country - the world, but one religion-love to God and man, one politician-to benefit and elevate the human familyf I thought Greeley must have just risen from a hearty meal when he wrote that, but it sounded good and I memorized the thing, intending to quote it on the next examination. I never found just the right place to slip that into an exam paper, but the thought has stayed with me. With the nausea of war still in my soul, I am praying for more of the men Horace Greeley calls 'true liberals' For to men who know but one country- the world, but one religion -love to FAMOUS FASHION CAMPUS CLOTHES ik' Up on Your College- Knowledge You Know Youill Find Them at Hinkel's. Fashion Heaclquarfers in Wichifa WICHITA, KANSAS THE .IAYHAWKER God and man, and but one political aim-to benefit and elevate the human family, there can never be need for war. Cooperation and production will forever replace conflict and destruction. Let us hope that the graduating en- gineers, lawyers, medics, pharmacists, students of business, fine arts, and the liberal arts of history, economics, po- litical science, languages, and diverse other subjects will see and meet the demands which society is placing upon them. Although the Universitys cur- riculum does not embrace all the paths of a living nation, every graduate is charged with the operation of his par- ticular wheel in the rather loosely- geared machine of the world. Well, john, l guess not all of that is KU.-talk. Some of it is war talk-a war-weary boy telling himself that from his alma mater are coming people who will spread over the globe with soft voices and keen minds, making inter- national understanding more than an empty phrase. That is my diploma now, and its frame. Dave. Compliments of THAT BALFOUR MAN Sorority and Fraternity jewelry, High School Class Rings and Pins Commencement Invitations As Close As Your Phone Victor 6855 JOHN ROONEY, District Manager 1002 Walnut L. G. Balfour Co. K. C., Mo. Make the Royal Your Downtown Meeting Place QUALITY FOOTWEAR For MEN AND WOMEN 1Men's Shopl 4Women's Shop! NUNN-BUSH DeLISO DIES ANK Eg,f,'2',i'Q'ONED KNICKERBOCKER FRMWS PARADISE FINE SHOES ARISTOCRATS Royal College Shop 837-39 MASS. PHONE 648 JUNE 1945 Track Season Closes With Jayhawlters Low fContinued from Page 26Hj meet with a total of 64V4 points. Finishing in the following order were Missouri, Oklahoma, Nebraska, and Kansas. Kansas State did not enter a team. Leroy Robison, consistent point win- ner in the weight events, was elected honorary 1945 captain by memLers of the squad. Robison is a sophomore V-l 2 in engineering from Lawrence. He placed in two events at the Drake re- lays, in addition to his lirst at Lincoln. He has also shown up well in the high jump in numerous dual meets. Other 1945 lettermen are Kenneth Danneberg, freshman engineer from Kansas City, Mo.g Rolland Hamilton, junior V-12 engineering from White- water, john Jackson, College sopho- more from Kansas City, Mo., Norval jackson, freshman engineer from Kan- sas City, Mo., Lynn Leigh, junior V-12 engineer from Burley, Ida., Harvey Morrow, sophomore V-12 engineer from Colorado Springs, Colo., Owen Peck, College sophomore from Kansas Yes F riends-- We still serve good food-and we have fairly good service con- sidering the manpower shortage during these troubled times - Therefore when you plan to dine out come in and we will be pleased to serve you. - Q .- De Luxe Cafe 711 Mass. LAWRENCE KANSAS Jayhawker Taxi The Oldest and Most Reliable PHONE 65 WE LEAD AND THE REST FOLLOW Cityg James Sargent, sophomore V-12 engineer from Wichita, and James Thomas, junior V-12 engineer from Bartlesville, Okla. As has been the case for the last two years, no one can tell just exactly who will be left on the Hill when the call comes from the track and field next spring. Prospects, however, are not necessarily dark. This year, with not a senior performer and most of his squad composed of V-12 men with restricted time for practice, Coach Ray Kanehl built up a team which won every home dual meet to give a creditable seasons performance. O Intramurals fConti11ued from Page 2672 hall, Lavone Jacobson, pitcher, and 313 The Rothenberger sisters have been teamed up since in grade school days when they played on mixed teams and defeated everything within playing dis- stance of Osborne. No team has been able to run up much of a score against this combination all season. Rose Curtis, Chi Omega pitcher, and TOPS IN PASTRIES D R A K E ' S 907 MASS PHONE 635 A Margaret Barker, catcher, I.W.W.g and . Iva Rothenberger, pitcher, Lucille 0 O Rothenberger, catcher for Miller hall. Geo. I rmes Co. Kansas' Largest and Finest Store EXCLUSIVE WICHITA HOME OF Adele Simpson Originals Shagmoor Coats Eisenberg Creations Hattie Carnegie Creations Philip Mangone Suits Handmacher Originals Kay Dunhill Dresses Gay Gibsons And Dozens of Other World Famous Garments and Accessories 314 Dona Burkhead, Chi Omega catcher would fall next in the parade and credit should also go to Lucille Land, pitcher for the A. D. Pi's and Maxine Gun- solly, Kappa pitcher, for their steady work on the mound this spring. Tennis doubles faced much the same situation as softball as far as the weather was concerned and as result are also in the semi-final boat. Lollie O'Leary and Marjorie Snyder, will play Barbara Heller and Carrie Arnold in a semi-final match. Lucille Land and Constance Markley are matched against Sue Diggs and Mimi Nettels with the winner moving into the semi-finals against Lavon Jacobson and Maurine Zimmerman. WE HAVE A WAR TO WIN AND WE ARE GOING TO WIN IT. Phone 19 f5,,vlEG.ea,..,,.s Hu-chants ol GOOD APPEARANCE 926 MASS. THE JAYHAWKER f' 1 Wf kvnm My Ah-h-h! A beautful moon, a silvery lagoon l . . . and Sir Walter Raleigh. i l J . , . - W cleaning, etc. Wnle today Brown A Williamson Tobacco Corporolion, Louuvulle l, Kentucky. Lawrence's BEST Service e-As Q ou. o LUBRICATION Q TIRES n BATTERIES PHONE 4 FOR SERVICE CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS Compliments of CLYDE NICHOLS IICXQII u X Q JUNE 1945 315 f 3100010 6-vlfw WZ .TV 'WW' ,f 'll ' f S. im N W TSW NIIIIINXIIII as A. W, A I! Y 5 A P . X x all I - Q x 6' X' JA -' 4-h. ill , 1 f jfir A fi REDDY KILOYIATT Your KANSA S CITY Q v.- A special salute to those honorably discharged veterans of World War ll. Wl1CH America's de- structive power once again becomes productive power . . . when walkie talkies become radios, wind tunnels, new refrigerators, and heated fly- ing suits, auto111atie hlankets, we hope you may he among the first to enjoy these peacetime con- veniences. For electric power has always meant greater economy, leisure and convenience, new and better ways of getting a joh done quickly! POWER 81 LIGHT COMPANY --rr v-.3 ww, .- ' 'K ' - - - S ..----' I :f .A i -,,.,. . V, f,---- sy' VQIV if -A .-.... .f eww.--'-Ma, ,.-. W- V A' AMERICA NOW V Fx' :XCR . -:fi-1v':: -..:,- ' ' P .,,. ,,.,.,f.,.,,,.,.,. ,.,. M we X 5 V V1 QiQe.,,,,.y 313' ' 'I 15225 0 4 0 3 'Zi I culu ': Q f ll I L E A M E R CA AT R 'Q -f 'iflmf a 'fm' aaaaa A ,U Wx 'F asian-rd ' 4A 1 I O. , ' ,j,.17'fL 'MZ I - f f GIIEIIIIDIIIIII IIIIES O, 2-2 i, J CONGRATULATIONS ON ANOTHER SUCCESSFUL YEAR . . . CIIIIPEII PRINTING UIINIPIINY, INC. PRINTERS OF THE JAYHAWKER I O C.V.Topping G.S.Ware The MQTOR-IN Firsl Ilalional Bank RUMSEV or FUNERAL HOME ' Lawrence, Kansas R I1 5' fl T R P asf if as The Student NVE SERVICE B k ALL MAKES OF CARS on Since I877 -.- boi INDIANA ik 7137 ik Phone 672 Skelly Products Phone 607 827 V+. Member F'D 'C' OUR HAT IS OFF To All the Men of Kcinscis Now in the Service Winter Chevrolet Company PHONE 77 LAWRENCE Coca-Cola is the answer to thirst that adds re- freshment. Your own experience tells you iust what to expect. Ice-cold Coke has the happy knack of making thirst a minor matter. . . refreshment your foremost feeling. And your own ex- perience will prove this fact: The only thing like Coca-Cola is Coca-Cola itself. -k I speak for Coca-Cola. l speak for Coke. Both mean the same thing...the real thing . . .'coming frog glgource, and well known to the community'. F KANSAS CITY COCA-CCLA BOTTLING COMPANY
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