M y-UUD-JUN Kl N-B SUP S Ml AM 11 Vkmuh r — mm RCHURCH A A HORCH A. 1 l l B 1 PMMIN IN OXfol urn. 1858 H H £ (3i . . - n I Nvis- Nanadi m nvi AUUmA M 44UCU Eg - lb si A ( i $ i O A limited edition by Robert S. McConnaughey, Editor Richard J. Biery, Business Manager UBLISHED AT THE INSTANCE OF THE JUNIORS OF NINETEEN THIRTY -SIX MIA HI LNIVEC§ITr OXFORD OHIO I VI NG T€ LE ACN LEARNING TC LIVE Hungry for knowledge and truth, not long ago we turned our steps toward the hallowed grounds and century-old buildings of old Miami. Here we spent long hours in the day and in the night seeking facts and theories — longing to know the meaning of names like Con- stantine, Benvenuto Cellini, Voltaire — learning to appreciate the grand mad symphony of Shakespeare ' s drama, and the coldly brilliant logic of Kant ' s philosophy. Dazzled by the magnificence of the world ' s knowledge spread before us, we became obsessed with lust for learning. We glutted ourselves with facts till our eyes and heads ached. We have known sometimes the torturing turmoil of indecision. We have felt the crushing weight of despair, the scorch of self-disgust at the end of a day which seems to have brought nothing, the utter inability to cope with so much knowledge, fairly engulfing us. But then there were times of rich happiness, and we knew the supreme bliss of complete mental and physical exhaustion, our task completed. And slowly as we matured, as we acquired a basis for comparative judgment, we began to realize truths far more vital than facts and figures. We learned something of the complexity of human personality — that people are not entirely good nor entirely bad — not wholly black nor wholly white — but an intermediate grey. Here before us unfolds life ' s tragi-comedy in miniature — reflections in the collegiate puddle of tragic ruin and magnificent success in the bud. Slowly knowledge resolves itself into distinguishable outlines of division. Slowly we learn the value of simplicity, of being one ' s self — we construct a philosophy, raze the structure, build another. Slowly we learn to live — acutely, richly, gloriously. mi i L : 1 J MiF K d BH F HK H. L TO HIM . . . who shares with you the joy of your petty successes . . . who sympathizes with you in your hour of defeat . . . who knows the pattern of your loves in fine detail . . . who lends you soap, socks, and shirts . . . but who curses at you when you borrow his new tie without asking him . . . him who is your stern critic . . . who teaches you much of how to live with others . . . your roommate. TO HER . . . who hopes that your first date with him will be a success . . . who reads your very thoughts and penetrates your little deceits . . . who lends you her earrings but rips a runner in your sheerest stockings she borrowed . . . who comforts you when you tell her tearfully that it ' s all over . . . who grins triumphantly when it appears it isn ' t . . . her in whom you confide your dearest secrets . . . your roommate. A world apart from the jangle and clamor of the commercial struggle ... a world of strong- walled buildings shaded by sturdy old trees . . . shadowed walks and quiet calm ... a place where learning and intellectual achieve- ment may live unmolested by the thunder and stench of industry . . . the scene of quest- ing experiment and exhaustive study, of striv- ing arts, crafts, and sciences . . . and still, a place where 2500 people live and love and play ... a social world jammed with young gaiety, laughter, and emotion ... a world where people sleep when their day is done. HIV y . Jg m% VL Thobe ' s fountain punctuates a Slant Walk ' s walk. Thursday crt ten means assembly at Bentc Time out for a dance at Oxford Hall. ' % ' ' 2! « fit;l3fr Inside McGuffey, where students learn to teach. .a ' ■■: .- ' ' ■■mnmm ' . j ALFRED H. UPHAM President of Miami University WILLIAM E. ALDERMAN Dean of the School of Liberal Arts THEODORE M. KRATT Dean of the School of Fine Arts HARRISON C. DALE Dean of the School of Business HEADS €r William E. Alderman, Ph. D., English, 203 Bent Read Bain, Ph, D., Sociology, 105 Harrison Loren Arthur Gates, A, M,, Speech, 123 Harrison =iussel Sherwood Potter, B. S,. Architecture, 405 McGuffey Arthur Thompson Evans, Ph. D., Botany, 229 Theodore Frederick Nermann, A. M., Music Edu- cation in School of Education, 157 McGuffey Harvey Clavton Brill, Ph. D., Chemistry, Hughes Edwin Smith Todd, Ph. D., Ec lohn Walter Heckert, Ph. D., Education, 250 Mc- Guffey Frances Gibson Richard, A. M., English in School of Education, 203 McGuffey mi CEPACTMENTS V illiam Henry Shideler, Ph. D., Geology, 109 Brice Charles Hart Handschin, Ph. D., German, 212 Harrison John DeWitt Schonwald, M D , Medical Dii Hospital Fred Campbell Whitcomb, B. S., Industrial Edu- cation, 100 Industrial Education Building Fred Latimer Hadsel, A. M., Latin, 213 Harrison Edgar Weld King, A. M., Library Science, Library William Elijah Anderson, Ph. D., Mathe Halbert Carl Christofferson, Ph. D., Mathe in School oi Education, 205 McGuffey Stephen Riggs Williams, Ph. D., Zoology, 200 Elizabeth Hamilton, LL. D., Dean of Women, 203 W. Wyhe Spencer, Ph. D., Philosophy, 419 Har- William E. Smhh, Ph. D., History, 218 Irvin HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS George L, Rider, A. B., Men ' s Physi- cal Education, 104 Withrow Court Raymond L. Edwards, Ph. D., Phys- ics, 123 Irvin Hall Arthur C. Wickenden, B. D., Ph. D., Religion, 106 Ogden Hall Theodore M. Kratt, Mus. D., Mus 320 McGulfey Hall C. Dale, A. M., Busii 208 Irvin Hall Margaret Everston Phillips, A. M., Women ' s Physical Education, Her- ron Hall Marshall Benjamin Davis, Ph. D., Physiology, 102 McGuffey Hall Leon P. Irvin, A. M., Romanic Lan- guages, 219 Harrison Hall Ernest J. Ashbaugh, Ph. D., Special Methods and School Adn tion, 220 McGuffey Hall Everett F. Patten, Ph. D., Psychology, 417 Harrison Hall BOARD OF TRUSTEES OFFICERS John Weld Peck, LL.B., LL.D. . . President David L. GaskiU, A.B Vice-President Wallace P. Roudebush, Sr., A. B Secretary Philip D. Shera, A, B. . , Treasurer MEMBERS George R. Eastman David L. Gaslcill Samuel W. Richey Leroy S. Galvin William G, Pickrel Robert H, Bishop C. Vivian Anderson Walter A, Fox Homer Gard Beverly O, Skinner Walter L. Tobey Lyle S. Evans Walter H Coles John W. Peck Frank R. Henry Carl E, Easier George M. Verity Larz R. Hammel J, Gilbert Welsh Robert P, Scripps Carl R, Greer Dviright Hinckley C. A, Wih lohn C. Wood Harold E. Neave Joseph W. Fichter J- Carl Custenborde I, Paul McNamara Hugh Nichols ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS Alfred H. Upham, LL, D, Ph. D Pre Elizabeth Hamilton, A. B-, Wallace P, Roudebush, Sr Edgar W. King, A. M, William C. Smyser, A. M Alpheus K, Morris, A. B. Dean of Women the Board of Trustees Librarian Registrar istant to the President William Clarence Ernest J, Halbert ORGANIZATION THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Ashbaugh, Ph. D THE DIVISION OF SECONDARY EDUCATION :, Christofferson THE DIVISION OF PRACTICAL ARTS Fred C. Whitcomb, B. S THE DIVISION OF ELEMENTARY EDUCATION John W. Heckert. Ph. D. THE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Harrison C, Dale, AM C. RoUin Niswonger, M. S., C. P. A THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS Theodore M, Kratt, Mus, D. Charles H. Handschin, Ph. D. Robert W. Edmiston, Ph D. GRADUATE STUDY EXTENSION COURSES THE S UMMER SESSION . Dean Assistant Dean Dean Chai man of Committee Chair man of Committee Ernest I. Ashbaugh, Ph D John D. Schonwald, M. D. Warren Simpson Thompson, Ph. D. Charles Simeon Bunger, A. M. Chairman of Committee University Hospital Medical Director . The Scripps Foundation Director William McGuffey Schools Principal That Miami graduates remember Miami is evident from the number of students who come here every year to attend the college that is their dad ' s or mother ' s alma mater. In 1935-1936 200 of these second generation stu- dents enrolled at Miami University. SECOND GENERATION STUDENTS iB o. J HS m% r ==s ■r, ,. GEORGE PANUSKA DOROTHY DALEY THOMAS KIRKUP SENICI CLASS OrriCECS George Panuska . . . this fair-haired Apollo defies the laws of nature and frequency distributions by being good at everything . . . besides the muscular coordination that makes him a trapeze artiste and a dependable gridder, his string of keys prove his prowess in matters academic ... as president of the Class of 1936, he led the movement to abolish senior exams . . . Tom Kirkup, whose activities as Liberal party boss belie his quiet manner and graying hair, serves modestly as first alternate gavel wielder . . . Dotty Daley, the woman who pays, writes in a neat hand the minutes of the annual meeting, and forms the outstanding exception to the current aphorism about beautiful blondes . . . SENIORS SENIORS ENIORS SENIORS g|ll. S :3f| TOP HOW (Left to right) NEVILLE ABBOTT. Mentor, B.S. Bus. Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Les Politiques ROBERT ALKE. New Richmond, A,B. Baseball, 1, 2: Basketball, 1, SARAH AMOS. Sidney, B.S. Delta Delta Delia; Chest Drive, 3, 4: Bi( Sister, 2, 3, Home Economics Club RICHARD ARMACOST, St, Bernard, A B. Phi Delta Theta; Phi Sigma; Miami Student 1, 2, 3; Press Club, 3, 4. MARIORIE ARNOLD. Oxford, A B Beta Pi Theta, Secretary 4; Delta Phi Alpha Choral Union, 1, 2, 4, Liberal Arts Club Miami Sisters, 4; Y.W.C.A. 1, 3. MYRON AUFRANCE, West Chester, B.F.A ARTHUR AURBACH. Cleveland, A.B. Zeta Beta Tau; Miami Chest, 4; Junio Y.M.C.A. 1. SECOND ROW (Leit to Right) HELEN AVERY. East Cleveland. B.S. Bus. Delta Gamma; Pan Hellenic, 3, 4; Combus; Botany Club, 1; Classical Club, 3; Y.W. C.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. ESTHER BACON. East Palestine, B.S. Ed. Kappa Delta Pi; Alpha Kappa Delta: W. A. A.; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Track, 3; Hockey, 1, 3, 4; Soccer, 2, 3, 4; Volleyball, 3; Miami Sister, 4. AB. LEWIS BALLINGER. Crs ■FA HELEN BARTHOLOMEW, Tifiin, B.S. Ed. Theta Upsilon; ■' M ' - Book, 1; W A A.. 1 2, 3, 4; Freshman Representative, 1; Treas- urer, 2; Junior Representative, 3; President 4; Soccer, 1, 2, 3, 4; Hockey, 3, 4; Archery 2, 3; Orchesis, 1, 2, 3. 4; Women ' s League 4: Track, 3; Miami Chest, 2, 3, 4; M- Association; Miami Sister, 2, 3; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Volleyball, 4; Recensio. 4; Women ' s Sports Editor, 3, 4. SYLVIA BAUSCH. Ross, B.S. Ed. Chi Omega; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Miami Sister, 2, 3, 4; Women ' s Interlraternity Council, 3, 4; President, 4; Women ' s League, 4; Home Economics Club, 4; Vice President, 4; Miami Chest. 2, 3, 4; Sopho- more Counselor, BOTTOM ROW (Left ROBERT BEERMAN. Sigma Nu; Delta Sic versity of Arizona; 1 B.S. Bus. Transfer, Uni- , University of WILLIAM BELL, Cleveland Heights, B.S. Bus. Sigma Nu; Delta Sigma Pi; Interfraternity Counci!, 4; Boxing, 1; Baseball, 1; Syndic; ROBERT BELOW. Lakewood, B. Arch. Delta Upsilon; Delta Phi Delta Treas 4; Cross Country, Track, 1; Sophoi Class President; Miami Chest, 2, 3. Track, 1: Basketball, 1, 2; Football Manager, 1, 2, 3, 4; Freshman Strut Chair- man; Chest Drive, 2, 3, 4; Captain, 4; Sophomore Sweater Committee; Big MARY ELLEN BIERY. Findlay, B.S. Delta Zeta, Alethenai; Big Sister; Chest; Speakers ' Bureau; Debate, SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS TOP ROW (Leil to Hight) JOHN BIGGS, Elyria, B S Bu ELEANOR BISSETT, Shaker Heights, BS, Ed, Sigma Delta Pi, Vice President, 4; Beta Pi Theta, Corresponding Secretary, 4; Kappa Delta Pi; Alethenai; Hockey, 1; Choral Union, 1, 2, 4, Freshman Y. SECOND ROW (Leit to Right) IMOGENS BOYER, Bradford, B.S. Ed. Beta Sigma Omicron; Kappa Delta Liberal Arts Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Soccer, Volleyball, 3; Big Sister, 2, 3, 4, HUGH BRADNER. Hamiltor Sigma Pi Sigma; Secreta Sigma. BOTTOM ROW (Left to Right) MARTHA BUESSER, Mansfield, B.S. Bus. Chi Omega; Alethenai; Student, 2; Miami Chest, 2, 3; Miami Sister, 2, 3; Y.W.C.A. JOHN BUSHMAN. Avon Lake, A.B. Delta Chi; Student, 1; Band, 1; Sophomc Sweater Committee; Junior Prom Co: LOWELL BUSLER, Piqua, Miami Chest, 3, 4; Captt Varsity Social Club, 3, HUGH BLACK, Kingston, A.B. Delta Kappa Epsilon; Omicron Delta Kap- pa; Phi Eta Sigma; Sigma Delta Pi; Student-Faculty Council, 3, 4; Pres. 4, Inter-fraternity Council, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Les Politiques; Disciplinary Board, 3; Miami Chest, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Quartet, I, 2. THELMA BLACK, Dayton, B. S. Ed. Kappa Delta Pi; Transfer, Dayton Teachers ' College. PHILIP BLICKENSDERFER, Oxford, A.l Phi Delta Theta MARIE BRAND, Roseville, B S. Ed. Theta Upsilon; Transfer, Wittenberg Col- GRACE BRONSON, Chicago Chi Omega; Comb ROGER BROWNE, Dayton, B S Bus. Delta Kappa Epsilon DAVID BUCHANAN, Newton Falls, A.B. Phi Delta Theta; Les Politiques, Secretary, 3; Treasurer, 4; Ye Merrie Players; Big Brother, 2, 3, 4; Chest Drive, 3; Economics Club, 4: Ph; Beta Kappa. MELVIN BOOTH, Hamilton JOHN BOWER, Lima, A.B ELLEN BUCHANAN, Mt. Sterling, B S. Ed. Delta Omicron; Kappa Delta Pi; Madrigal, 2, 3, 4; Band, !, 2; Big Sister, 3, 4; Choral Union, 2, 4; Miami Trio, 3, 4. SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS U£, : TOP ROW (Lell lo Right) CHARLES CAMPBELL, Ashland, B.S, Bus Phi Delta Theta; Omicron Delta Kappa: Delta Sigma Pi, Interfraternity Council. 3, 4,- Freshman Y Council, Vice President, 1: Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball. 1. 2. MARIORIE CARPENTER, Dayton. B,S Pi Delta Theta; Beta Pi Theta; Sigma Pi. Vice President. 3; Miami Sister. KAHL CASE, Croton, A.B. Phi Beta Kappa; Glee Club. 2. 3. 4; 1. 2. 3; Economics Club. 4. ELLEN CASTEEL, Norwood, A B. Y.W.C.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Big Sister. 4; I Service Club; Liberal Arts Club; Cla Club, 3; Junior Orchesis, 4: Current E 3. 4; Soccer. 2, DARRELL CAUDILL, lEANETTE CENFIELD, Chicago. Ill .B.S, Ed, Alpha Omicron Pi; Phi Sigma; Y.W.C.A.. 2, 3. 4; Transfer. DePauw University. SECOND ROW (Lett 2. 3; Stud 2, 3. 4; Mo KENNETH CLARK, Dayton, A.B. Phi Delta Theta; Phi Beta Kappa; Omit Delta Kappa; Alpha Kappa Delta; Pohtiques; Student-Faculty Council, 3 Y.M.C.A. Cabinet, 1, 3, 4; Disciplir CLARENCE CLINE, Ansonia, B.S. Ed. Basketball, 1, 2, 3; Baseball, 1; Tribe Miami, 2, 3. 4: Vice President, 3; Miami Chest, 3, 4. HAROLD COHEN. Wooster, B.S. Bus. Zeta Beta Tau; Interfraternity Council. 4, Recensio, 2. 3; Circulation Manager, 3; Sophomore Sweater Committee, Chairman. Miami Chest. 3, 4: Varsity Social Club, 4; Basketball. 1. IIM COLE. Richmond, Ind., B.S. Bus. Beta Theta Pi; Sigma Gamma Epsilon- Tribe Miami. 2, 3, 4; President. 4; Foot- ball. 2. 3. 4; Track, 2. 3. 4. BOTTOM ROW (Left RUTH COOK, Bay Village. BS. Ed iident, 4; Sophomore Women. Presi- t, 2; Secretary-Treasurer Class. 2; W. ., 2, 3. 4; Women ' s League. 2; Student- ulty Council, 3, 4; Miami Chest. 2, 3. 4; CYRIL CORUM, Lou ROBERT CHALMERS, NORMAN CRAFT, Dayt Beta Theta Pi; Chairma mittee; Track Manage Manage 4; Miami Chest. 2. 3; Recensio, ENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS TOP ROW (Left SECOND HOW (Le Sigma; Beta Pi Theta, President, 4; Cwen; Alethenai, Vice-President, 4; Mortar Board; Pan-Hellenic Council. 2, 3, 4; House Chair- man, 3; Women ' s League, 3. VIRGINIA CRAWFORD, Washington C. H., Liberal Arts Club. 1. 2, 3, 4; W.A.A, 2 3, 4; Hockey. 2, 3. 4; Track, 3; Soccer, I 3; Basketball, 3; Baseball, 2; Y.W.C.A. 1. 2, 3. 4; Miami Sister, 2, 3, 4; Miam BERTHA DAVISON, Middletown, A B. Beta Phi Alpha; Phi Sigma. Treasurer Liberal Arts Club; Soccer. 2; Pan-Helle 3. 4; Big Sister. 3. BOTTOM ROW (Lcit to Right) JOHN DUERR. Oxiord. A B HENRI DUMONT.ClevelandHeights.B.Arch. :.on; Beta Pi Theta. Secretary, 3; ■Fine Arts Ball Committee. 4. :;:• , Western Reserve University. DOROTHY DUNCAN, Lisbon, B S. Ed, Classical Club; YWCA,; Orchesis; Re- LLOYD DUTCHER, Lakevfood, B,S. Bus. MARGARET CULBERTSON. Ashland, B.F.A. Delta Phi Delta, President, 4; Alethenai, 1, 2, 3, 4; President, 3, Classical Club. 2, Soccer, 2; Miami Sistar, 2, 4; Y.W.C-A., 1 2, 3, 4; Cabinet, 4; Miami Chest, 2, 3, 4 Captain, 4; Stud Bishop Hail, Hou 1, 2, 3; Set IRENE CURRY, Canton Chora jse Chairman, Women, Presid I, 4; Fine Arts Be Stud 2, 3. DOROTHY DALEY. Steubenville, A.B, Delta Delta Delta; Student, 1, 2, 3, 4; Society Editor, 4; Press Club, 3, 4; Sec- retary-Treasurer, 4; Miami Chest, 3; Botany Club, 1; Big Sister, 3; Senior Class, Sec- retary-Treasurer; Y.W C A. JOHN DEAHDORFF, Middletown, B.S. Bus Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Sigma; Recensio, 3; Football Manager, i; Baseball Manager i, 2, 3; Head Manager, 3. RICHARD DELP. Canton, A B. Phi Kappa Tau; Phi Sigma; Alpha Kappa Delta; Big Brother, 4. JOHN DOME, Collinsville, A.B. ESTHER DRILL, Greenville, B S Ed- Phi Beta Kappa; Kappa Delta Pi, Vice President, 4; Alethenai, Secretary, 4, Hockey, I, 2, 3; Track, 1, 2, 3, Kappa Phi, President, 3; W.A.A SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS TOP ROW (Lelt lo Right) JOHN DuVALL. Oxford, B S. Ed, EARL EIFORT, Barbsrton. B,F,A, Delia Upsilon; Freshman Players Book, 3. Art Editor; 2; Student. 3, 4; fu Homecoming Commi Committee, 2, 3, 4. d. I; Big Brother, Prom Committee; 4; Fine Arts Ball LEONA ELEF, Dayton, B.S., Sec. Stud. Sigma Kappa; Combus. President, 4; Wo- men ' s League, 4; Miami Chest, 4; Miami LALAH EMERSON. Johnstown, B.S. Ed. Chi Omega; Student, 3, 4; Madrigal, 3, President, 4; Miami Modern Choir, Transfer, Denison University. GRACE ENGEl, Reading, B.S. Ed. Beta Sigma Omicron; Kappa Delta Pi; Liberal Arts; Miami Chest, 3, 4; Soccer, 1; Hockey, 2, 4; Debate, 2; Choral Union, 1, 2, 4; W.A.A., 3, 4; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Miami Sisters, 2. 3, 4. SECOND ROW (LeII lo Right) MARY JANE FALKNOR, Covington. B.S. Ed. Alpha Sigma Alpha, Social Chairman, 3; Kappa Delta Pi, Big Sister; Archery. JOSEPH FASO. Portland, N. Y., A.B. Phi Kappa Tau; Band, 1, 2; Big Brother, 4; Baseball, 1. EDITH FAUST, Middletown, B.S. Ed. Comitas; Eta Sigma Phi, President 4; Ye Merrie Players; Classical Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Miami Sisters. 3, 4; Miami Chest, 4; Soccer. 1; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 3. 4; Religious Council, Secretary-Tr e, B. Arch. Delta Phi De ROBERT FENN, Belle Sigma Alpha Epsilo: Recensio, 3, 4. DONALD FERGUSON, Cleveland Heights, B. Arch. Beta Thela Pi; Track. 1. 2. HARRY FINKELMAN, Middletown, A.B, Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; Omicron Delta Kappa; Les Pohliques, President, 4; Economics Club, 4; Miami Chest, 2, 3, 4; Captain, 3, 4; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet, 3, 4, Cross Country, 1; Religious Council, 2, Jewish Students ' Union, President, 2; Stu- dent, 2, 3; Big Brother, 4; Sophomore Hop Committee, Fisk Prize, 4. MAX FINK. Hamilton, B.S. Ed. Phi Eta Sigma; Kappa Phi Kappa, Treas- urer, 1; Kappa Delta Pi; Epsilon Pi Tau: Delta Phi Alpha. BOTTOM ROW (Lelt lo Right) FORD FISHER, Cincinnati, B.S. Delta Tau Delta, Delta Sigma ROBERT FISHER, Dayton, A.B. RUTH ANNA FISHER, Oxford, Ye Merrie Players; Speakers ' 4; Soccer, 2; Miami Chest, 1, Sister, 3; Artist Course Comn VERNA FLOETER, Lakewood, B.S. Ed. Beta Sigma Omicron; Delta Phi Delia; Y. W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Recensio, 3. 4; Choral Helle ; Senior Ball Committee. CATHERINE FOLTZ. North Canton, B.S. Ed. Delta Delta Delta; Kappa Delta Pi; Cwen; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; President Freshman Women; Secretary Junior Class; Big Sister, 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Soccer, 1, 2, 3. 4; Pan-Hellenic, 2, 3; Home Economics Club; Mortar Board, President; Neukom Trophy; Women ' s League, 1, 4. SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS TOP HOW (Lelt to Right) CHARLOTTE FREER. Dayton. B S. Ed. Delta Delta Delta, Student. 3, 4: Mic Chest, 2, 3; Home Economics Club. President, 4; Hockey, 1. SECOND ROW {Lelt to Right) WILLIAM FRIES, Dayton, B S Bu Phi Delta Theta; Student, 2, 3, Club, 4; Dayton-Miami Club. Trea Miami Chest, 2; Transier, Unive Dayton. OLIVE GILBERT. Loudonville. A.B. Beta Sigma Omicron; Beta Pi Theta; Pan- Hellenic. 2, 3. 4; Y.W.C.A., 2, 3, 4; Miami Sister. 2, 3, 4: Archery, 2, Student, 3. BOTTOM ROW (Lelt to Right) ELIZABETH GRILL, Lakewood, A.B, Tau Kappa Alpha; Phi Bete Kappa; Alpha Kappa Delta; Eta Sigmc Phi; Cwen. Presicfent; Mortar Board; Y W-C A , Cabinet, 3, 4; Religious Council 1; Vespers Committee, 3, 4 Women ' s League 2; Speaker ' s Bureau, 2 erion Stall, 3; Big Sister, 2, 3 Alethenai, Vice President, 3, Secre 2; Cla 2. 2, 3, Che: Team Ohi imi; Baseball, 1, Track, 1; Cross 3 Wesleyan. MERRILL GRODIN, Cleveland Hts-, B,S. Ed, Kappa Phi Kappa, Corresponding Sec- retSfy, 3, President, 4; Y,M,C,A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Campus Council of Religion, 3; Miami Chest. 3. 4; Heccnsio. 1, 2; Big Brother, 4, ANNA MARIE GANTNER. Dayton, B. Mus. Delta Omicron, President, 4; Alethenai, 2, 3, 4; Cwen, Orchestra, 1, 2, 3, 4; Miami Sister, 2, 3, 4; Miami Chest, 2, 4; Varsity Soccer, 1, 2, 3,; WA.A,, 3, 4. JACK GARBUTT. Lakewood, A,B. Phi Delta Theta; Phi Sigma; Sigma Gam- ma Epsilon, Vice President, 3, 4; Recensio, 2; Glee Club, 3, 4; Basketball Manager, 1, 2, Student. 3, WILLIAM GARDNER. HAYWARD GATCH, Milford, A.B. Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Pi Theta; Phi Sigma; Y.MC-A., Club, 4; Student, 4; Chess Club, CARL GILCREST, Kent, I Beta Theta Pi, Phi Sigma; Track, 2, 3, 4; Translsr, ELAINE GREENBERGER. Co MAYNARD GETZUG. Cir EDWIN K. GRIEST, Dayton, B.S. Bus. Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Sigma Pi; Miami Chest, 4; Syndic; Cross Country, 1. SENIORS SENIOR SENIORS TOP ROW (left to Right) EVERETT B. HALES, Columbia Slation. A. B Phi Ela Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Pi Siama; Mathematics Club, SAM HALTER. Oxford, B.S. Ed, Phi Delta Theta; Kappa Phi Kappa; Dellc Phi Alpha; Basketball. 1, 3, 4: Baseball, 1 2, 3, 4- Big Brother, 2- Tribe Miami. SIEGLINDE HANDSCHIN, O.xford, A.B Delia Delta Delta; Alpha Kappa Delta Lambda Tau; Alethenai; Recensio. 3; Cri terion Stall, 3; Senior Ball Committee. HIRAM HARDESTY, Paulding, A.l Sigma Nu. Phi Sigma; Transit Coilege. SECOND ROW (Left to Right) MILDRED HARMAN, Lakewood, B.S. Ed. Zela Tau Alpha; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Miami Chest, 2, 3; Pan-Hellenic Council, 2, 3, 4; Big Sister, 2, 3; Sophomore Hop Committee; Student-Faculty Council. JUNE HARPSTEH. Cairo, B S. Ed. Alpha Sigma Alpha; Kappa Delta Pi; Eta Sigma Phi; Mortar Board? House Chair- man, Oxford College, 3; Madrigal, 1, 2, 3, 4; Women ' s League Council, 3, 4, Liberal Arts Club, 2, 3, 4; President, 4; Y WCA , 1, 2, 3, 4; Cabinet. 3, 4; Classi- cal Club, 1, 2. 3, 4; President, 3.- Miami Sister, 2, 3, 4; Miami Chest, 2, 3, 4. lOHN HASTY. Oxford. B.S. Ed. ROBERT HEAMES. Niles, A.B Delta Kappa Epsilon; Basketball, I; Stu- dent, 1, 2; News Editor, 2; Symphony Orchestra, 1, 2, 3; Sophomore Hop Com- mittee Chairman; Varsity Social Club. CHARLES HEIMSCH, Dayton, A B. Phi Delta Theta; Phi Beta Kappa; Omicrol Delta Kappa, President 4; Phi Eta Sigma President, 3; Football, 1, 2, 3, 4; Golf, 2 3, 4; Phi Stoma; Basketball, 1; Track, I Freshman Y.M.C.A. Cabinet. LEE P. HENRICH. Massilon, B.S. Bus. Sigma Chi; Student-Faculty Council, 4. Football Manager, 1, 2; Wrestling Champ. BOTTOM ROW (Le!l VIRGINIA HENRY. O Cwen; Alethenai; Del 1. 3. 4; Choral Unioi Right) ord, B. Mus. t Omicron; Madrigal, WILLARD HENRY. Lees Creek, B.S. Ed Sigma Chi; Tribe Miami, 2, 3, 4; Inte fraternity FLORENCE HERBAUGH. Endic A B Class;;-!! Ciub, 4; Y.W.C.A., 4 Alpha Kappii Delta; Alithenai; Y.W.6 J 2, 3, 4; Secretary, 2; President, 3; Mia Chest, 2, 3, 4; Captain, 2; Women ' s Ge eral, 4; Cwen, Treasurer, 2; Mortar Board, Vice President, 4; Student-Faculty Council 4; Recensio, SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS 30TT0M ROW (Lett 2, 3, OHN KERGER. Ashtabula, B.S. Bus. Delta; Delta Sigma Pi; Fresh- TS, President, 1; Ye Merrie ' layers; Big Brother, 2. 3; Y.M,C,A., 4; :hest Drive. 4. Carlisle, B.S. Ed. TOP ROW (Lett to Right) HAROLD HOLLAND. Lakewood, B.S, Bus, Delta Upsilon; Cross Country, 1; Track, 1, 2, 4; Classical Club, 4, FLORABETH HOOPER. Chicago, 111., AS Zeta Tau Alpha; Classical Club; 4; Big Sister. 4; Transfer, Lewis Institute. FERNE HORNUNG. Oxford, B.S. Ed. Sigma Kappa. CHARLES HOUGH. Dayton, A B. Phi Sigma; Transfer, Wittenberg University. MARY HOVIS. Helena, B.S. Sec. Stud. Sigma Kappa; Combus, Treasurer. 4; Women ' s Pan-Hellenic Council, 3; Sec- retary, 3; Hecensio, 3; Baseball. 1; Soccer, 2; Cwen Oratorical Contest, 1; Big Sister, 2; Chest Drive, 2, 3; Debate, 1. KENT HOWARD. Niles, B.S. Ed. Phi Delta Theta; Football Manager, I. 2, 3. JAY HOWENSTINE. Elyria. A B. Phi Delta Theta; Omicron Delta Kappa; Phi Beta Kappa; Tau Kappa Alpha, Presi- dent, 4; Phi Eta Sigma; Debate, 2; Ye Merrie Players; Tennis, 2, 3. 4; Y Cabinet, 3, 4; Speaker ' s Bureau, 3, 4. SECOND ROW (Left to Right) HARVEY HUTTENLOCHER. Berlin Hts., RUTH IRWIN. Oxford, B.S. Ed. Phi Sigma; Kappa Delta Pi; Phi Beta Kappa; Transfer. Maryville College, Mary- ville, Tennessee. MARTHA JACOBY, Middlelown, B.S. Ed. Beta Phi Alpha; Cw en; Kappa Delta Pi. Secretary, 4; Delta Omicron; Mortar Board, Treasurer, 4; Big Sister. 2, 3, 4; Miami Chest, 3; Home Economics Club. 4. ALTABELLE lENSEN. Mt. Gilead, B.S. Ed. BYRON JILEK. Lakevi ' ood, A.B. Delta Kappa Epsilon. CARLYLE JONES, Newark, B.S. Bus. Sigma Chi; Omicron Delta Kappa; Deltc Sigma Pi; Student, I. 2. 3. 4; Managinc Press Club, 3. 4; Vice Varsity Social Club, 4; rip | ' B ' Page Thirty-Thri SENIORS ENIORS SENIORS SENIORl TOP ROW (Leit Staif, 3; Y.M.C.A., Freshman V. Executive Board, Cabinet; Big Brother, 2, 3, 4; Miami Chest, 2, Captain, 3. 4; Varsity Social Club, Vice President, 3; President, 4: Vice President Senior Class, PEARL B.S. Ed Sigma Kappa: Delta Phi Delta Cleveland Heights BEN KITCHEN, Middle RHODfl KLEMME, Portsmouth. A,B. Delta Phi Alpha; W.A.A., 2, 3, 4; Hockey, 1, 2, 3, 4; Soccer, 3, 4; Choral Union, 1, 2; Chest, 2, 3, 4; Miami Sister, 2, 3, 4. CLARENCE KOPPITCH, Cleveland, B.S. Ed Phi Kappa Tau; Kappa Phi Kappa; Epsilon Pi Tau, Secretary-Treasurer, 4; Phi Eta Sigma; Tribe Miami, 2, 3, 4; Track, 1, 2, PHYLLIS KHEUZWIESER, Youngstown, A.B Alpha Omicron Pi; Y.W.C.A., 2, 3, 4; Miami Sister, 4; Choral Union, 2; Miami Chest, 3; Pan-Hellenic Council, 4; Trans- fer, Youngstown College. CARL KUETHER, Hamilton, A.B. Phi Eta Sigma; Ye Merrie Players; -Faculty Council, 4 1, 2, 3, 4; Qu SECOND ROW (LeM to Right) MARIAN LAIRD. Newark, B.S. Ed, Sigma Delta Pi, Vice President, 3; Sec retary, 4; W.AA. 3, 4; Big Sister, ' Hockey, 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity, 2, 3; Baske ball, 2; Y.W.C.A., i, 2, 3, 4, SAM LANE, Cir Sigma Chi. WINTHROP LANE, Dayton, B.S, Delta Kappa Epsilon; Delta Senior Warden, 4. NICA LAVIE, France, A.B, Classical Club; French Club; Transfer, College of Pau, France. EDWARD LEDERMAN, Cleveland, A B. Phi Sigma. GWEN LEHMAN, Lakewood, A.B. Delta Zeta; Sigma Delta Pi, Treasurer, 2; Chest, 3; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Pan-Hellenic Council, 4; Freshman Dramatics. WILLIAM LEWIS. Ashtabula, B.S. Bus. Delta Upsilon; Senior Ball Committee. Phi BOTTOM ROW. (L PAUL LILES, Forest, NED LINEGAR. Oxford, A.B. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Y.M.C.A. Secretary 2; Vice President, 3; President, 4; Alph Kappa Delta, Secretary, 4; Omicron Delt Kappa, Secretary, 4; Les Politiques; Sigma; Miami Chest, 2, 3, 4; Captaii Men ' s General, 3; Varsity Debate Varsity Social Club, 4. CHARLES LONGSDORT, Cleveland, Bus. Baseball, JOHN W. LOOS. Orange, Delta Kappa Epsilon; D President, 4; Football, 1. Page Thirty -Four SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS BOTTOM HOW (Leil to Right) ROGER MILLER, Piqua, A.B. Bigma Gamma Epsilon; Phi Sigma, Re- ' s, 3; Cross Country, 1; Band, 1, 2; Orchestra, 1, 2, 3, 4; Big Brother, 4. RUSSELL MILLER, Cleveland, B.S. Bus. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football, 1, 2; Basketball, 1, 2- VIRGINIA MILLER, Lakewood, B.S. Bus, Combus, Student, 4; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 4. ALMA MOLITOR, Russell Point, B S. Ed. . S.gma Alpha,- Y.W.CA. Cabinet, 3, A. A,; Ye Meme Players; Big Sister, ;2, 3, 4; Chest, 2, 3, 4; Chest Captain, 3, ■4; Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Orchesis, 1, 2. 3, 4; Soccer, 1, 2, 3, 4; Volleyball, 2, 3, 4; lArchery Team, 3; Hockey, 1. MARIAN MONTGOMERY, Loveland,B.S. Ed. Kappa Delta Pi; Mortar Board; Y.W.CA., 1, 2, 3, 4; Secretary, 2; W.A A. 1, 2, 3, 4; jChoral Union, 4; Miami Sister, 2, 3, 4; Sophomore Counselor. TOP HOW (leil lOHN LUECKER. Evanston, 111 , B.S, Bus. Sigma Nu; Delta Sigma Pi; Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Football Manager, 1, Syndic; Hecensio, 1 3, Economics Club, 4. MARIAN MADDOCK, Cuyahoga Falls, A.B. Alpha Sigma Alpha; Student, 3, 4; Big Sister, 4; Transfer, Kent State University, HARVEY MAHLIG, Cleveland, B.S. Bus. Ye Merrie Players, Stage Manager, 2, 3, 4; Student, 1, 2; Art Editor, 2; Miami Chest, RAY MATHIAS, Cincinnati, B.S. Bus. Delta Sigma Pi, Basketball Manage CAROLYN MATTERN, Delta, A.B. Zeta Tau Alpha; Big Sister, 2; Sophomore Hop Committee; Classical Club, 4; Y.W.CA., 1, 2. RALPH W. McCABE, New Weston, B.S. Ed. Kappa Phi Kappa; Tribe Miami; Football, 2; Basketball, 3; Freshman Basketball Group, Coach, 3; Manager, Golf, 3, 4. PAUL McCREA, Bradford, B.S. Ed. Phi Mu Alpha; Kappa Phi Kappa; Orches- tra, 1, 2, 3, 4; Band, 1, 3, 4; Choral Union, 4. SECOND ROW (Left to Right) ALEX McINTYRE. Cincinnati, B.S. Bus. Delta Tau Delta; Basketball, 1; Track, 1; Delta Sigma Pi; Miami Chest, 3; Senior Ball Committee THOMAS McMANUS, Youngstown, B.S. Bus. Delta Upsilon. SAM MENDELSON, Youngstown, B.S. Bus. Zeta Beta Tau; Band, 1; Basketball, 1; Jewish Students ' Union, President, 3; Junior Prom Committee. JACK MESSENT, Ashtabula, B.S. Bus. Delta Upsilon; Interfraternity Council, 4; President, 4; Wrestling, 2; Football, 1. DOROTHY MESSLER, Dayton, A.B. Sigma Sigma Sigma; Student, 3, 4; Pan- Hellenic Council, 3; Junior Prom Com- mittee; Les Politiques, 3, 4; Y.W.CA, 1, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Phi. EDWARD MEYER, Troy, A.B. URSULA MEYERS, Oxford, B S. Ed. University Club, 4; Transfer, Wilberfo University. EMQ Page Thirty-Fiv SENIORS ENIORS SENIORS SENIORS m. TOP ROW (Lcfl lo Right) ELIZABETH MOOMAW, Greenfield, B S. Ed. Kappa Delta Pi; Big Sister. 2; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2. 3, 4; Oxford College Scholarship. 2: Home Economic Club. 4. JACK MOORE. Dayton. B S. Bus. Delta Tau Delta; Wrestling. 1; Dayton- Miami Club. 2. 3. 4; Vice President. 3; Student, 1. JUNE MOORE. Dayton. A.B. YWCA. 2. 3. 4; Big Sister. 3; Miami Chest. 3. 4; Transfer. Western College. MILDRED MOORE, Cumberland. B.S. Ed. Eta Sigma Phi; Classical Club; W A.A; Y.W.CA; Track. 1. 2. 3. 4. ROBERT MORRIS, Gomer, B S. Bus. Baseball. 1; Track. 2: Chest. 3, 4; Varsity Social Club. 4. WILFORD MORRIS, Oxford. A.B. Phi Delta Theta; Phi Mu Alpha. Secretary. 3; President. 4; Orchestra. 1, 2. 3; Glee Club, 1, 2. 3. 4; Sigma Pi Sigma. Vice President. 4. ESTHER MORRISON. Newark. A.B. Delta Gamma; Classical Club. 3; Botany Club. I; Y.W.CA. . 1. 2. SECOND ROW Right) VIRGINIA MOTZ, Ravenna. A.B. Chi Omega; Tau Kappa Alpha. Secretary- Treasurer, 4; Ye Merrie Players; Speakers ' Bureau, 3. 4; Transfer. Kent State Uni- versity; Debate. 2. ROBERT MUNRO. Indianapolis, Ind.. B.S. Bus. Phi Delta Theta; Golf Team, 2, 3. 4; Student. 3; Press Club. 3. 4; Tribe Miami. 3. 4; Varsity Social Club. 4. MERIAM MURH, Dayton. I Chi Omega; Soccer, 1, 2, : 2, 3, 4; W.A.A.; Big Siste Chest. 4. lACK MUTCHLER, Chillicothe. B.S. Bus. Delta Tau Delta; Football. 1. 2. 3, 4; Baseball, 3. 4; Wrestling, 1. 2; Classical Club. Secretary, 4. HELEN NEAL, Oxford. B.S. Ed. Zeta Tau Alpha; Delta Omicron; Madrigal Club. 2, 3; Girls ' Trio. 3; Transfer. Oberlin College. lAMES NEMASTIL, Cleveland, B.S. Ed. Epsilon Pi Tau. Vice President. 4; Kappa Phi Kappa; Band, 1. 2; Orchestra. 1. RONALD NESTOR, Pittsburgh. Penn.. B.S. BOTTOM ROW. (Left lo Right) RUTH NEU. Higginsport, B.S. Ed. Kappa Delta Pi; Choral Union. 4; M Chest. 4; Home Economics Club. 4; Tr ier. Wilmington College. FRED NOHRIS. Dayton. B.S. Bus. Delta Sigma Pi; Cross-Country, 1; T. Manager, 1. WILLIAM OHLY, Oberlin. A.B. Delta Kappa Epsilon; Football, Tribe Miami. SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS Ef ' mm BOTTOM HOW (Leil to Right) IDELLA PINDELL. Georgetown, B.S. Ed. ' Bela Kappa; Kappa Delta Pi; Beta Pi 3. Treasurer, 3, Liberal Arts Club, 2, Vice President, 4; Mathematics Club, 2. 3, 4; Secretary, 3. MYRA POPPE, Kettlersville, B.S. Ed. Sigma Sigma Sigma; Kappa Delta Pi, Kappa Phi, Secretary, 2; Vice President, 3; Liberal Arts Club, I, 2, 3, 4; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Classical Club, 2, 3; Choral Union, 2; Mathematics Club, 4. BROOKS POWELL. North Canton, A.B. Theta Pi; Basketball, 1; Sophomore Hop Committee; Miami Chest, 2, 4; Inter- LI LLIAN PRINDLE. Cleveland, B.S. Ed. Kappa Delta Pi; Home Economics Club, 4; Kappa Phi, Chaplain, 4; Transfer, TOP ROW (Left to Right) ALLAN ORAM, Toledo. A.B Beta Theta Pi; Phi Eta Sigma, Secretary- Treasurer, 2; Omicron Delta Kappa, Vice President, 4; Recensio, 1, 2, 3, 4; Business Manager, 3; Junior Class President; Home- coming Chairman, 4. JOHN OTIS. Cleveland, A.B. Phi Sigma, Football, 1, 2; Boxing. 1. 2. KATHLEEN OTOOLE, Cleveland. B.S. Ed. MADGEL OVERSTHEET. Newark. B.S, Ed. Sigma Kappa, Recensio. 2; Y.W.CA.: Big GEORGE PANUSKA. Cleveland, B.S. Bus Delta Tau Delta, Omicron Delta Kappa; Football, 1, 2, 3. 4; Track, 1. 2; Wrestling, 1, 2, 3; Tribe Miami, 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 1; HELEN PASERBEVIS, Conneaut. B.S. Ed- Transfer. Kent Stale University, Ohio Stat, University. SECOND ROW (Leit to Right) JOHN PEAHCE. Struthers. B.S. Bus Delta Tau Delta; Men ' s Chorus, Glee Club , I; German Club, 1, 2. MARY LOUISE PENCE. Jackson Center B. Mus Alpha Sigma Alpha; Chora! Union, 2; Y.W.C.A.. 3; Miami Sister, 2; Transfer Ohio Wesleyan University. ELIZABETH PENNINGTON, Library, Penn. ELIZABETH PERIN. Hillsboro, A.B. YWCA, 3, 4; Miami Chest, 3, 4; Miami Sister, 4, Soccer, 4; Transfer, Western College. GLADYS PETERS. Akron. A.B. Sigma Delta Pi; Classical Club, 4; Choral Union, I; Miami Sister, 2; Basketball, 1; Y W.CA., 4, WALTER PFEIFFER. Hamilton. B Arch. JOHN PICKEREL. Page Thirty-Seven SENIORS SENIORS ENIORS SENIOR SJ 1 TOP ROW (Leil Council, 4,- Student, 1, 2, 3, Feature Editor, 3; Y. M.C.A. Cabinet, 1, 2, 3, 4; Big Brother, .Ipha Sigma Baseball, 1. ANNA F. RANDOLPH, Maumee, B.S. Ed. Alpha Sigma Alpha; Beta Pi Theta; Cwen Mortar Board; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Cabinet 3; President, 4; Women ' s League, 3, 4 Secretary-Treasurer, 3; Liberal Arts Club 2, 3, 4; President, 3; Miami Sister, 2, 3, 4 Miami Chest, 3, 4. JO HAPP, Sabina. B,S. Bu JOHN HEBEH. Pittsburgh, Per Delta Sigma Pi, Secretary, Club, 4. Mortar Board Loy- olitiques. Secretary, Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, 1, 2, 3, 4; Miami Chest Captain, 2, 4; Women ' s General, 3; Alethenai, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tri-State International Relations Club, 3, 4; President 3, Vice- President, 4; Senior Ball Committee; Alpha Kappa Delta; Junior Prom Committee; Student-Faculty Council, 3. 4; Secretary- Treasurer, 3, 4; Sophomore Councilor; Pan- Hellenic Council, 2, 3, 4; Religious Coun- lident, 4; Liberal Ar Club; Big Sister, 3, 4; Y.W.C.A., 1, : 3, 4; Transfer, Wilmington College. SECOND ROW (Leit to Right) PAULINE REHMEHT, Troy, B.S. Ed. RUTH REMLE. Cincinnati, B.S. Ed. Alpha Sigma Alpha; Delta Phi Delta, Secretary, 4; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Miami Sister, 1, 2, 3, 4. ELIZABETH RICHARDS, Mi( lisbu B.S. Kappa Delta Pi; Phi Sigma; Alethenai, Treasurer, 4; Home Economics Club, 4; Theta Upsilon. SCOTT RICHARDS, Elmore, A.B. Transfer, Findlay College. HELEN RICHEY, Youngstown, A.B. Delta Zeta; Choral Union, 1; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Classical Club, 3, 4; Sopho- more Hockey Team; Miami Chest, 2. 3, 4; Captain, 3, 4; Speakers ' Bureau, 4; Big Sister, 2, 3; Pan-Hellenic, 3. CHARLES RIDENOUR, Lima, B.S. Bus. Miami Chest, 3, 4; Baseball, 1; Track, 2, 4. ISABELLE ROBBINS. Troy, B S. Ed. Chi Omega: Kappa Delta Pi; Liberal Arts Club, 2, 3, 4; Pan-Hellenic Council, 3, 4; Cwen; Mortar Board; Miami Chest. 3, 4; Miami Sister, 2, 3, 4; Home Economics Club; Women ' s League, 4. BOTTOM ROW (Left to Right) KATHLEEN ROBINSON. Shaker Hts.,B.S.Ed. Delta Delta Delta; Orchesis, 1, 2, 3, 4; W.A.A., 2, 3, 4: Press Club, 4; Student, 3, 4; Hockey, 1, 2, 3, 4; Captain. 1; Baskel- ROBERT S. ROGERS, Coshocton, B.S. Delta Chi; Student, 1; Sophomore Hop Committee; Varsity Social Club, 1; Si EILEEN ROSENDALE. We Ed. Beta Phi Alpha. LEWIS ROTH. Oxford, Freshman Players; Ye Sigma, President, DOROTHY ROTHENBERGER, Fr ENIORS SENIORS ENIORS SENIORS 30TT0M ROW (Left to Right) EANETTE SCHWEITZER. Cleveland Hts., 3.S, Ed )ig Sister. 2, 3: Y.W.C.A.. 2. Home Eco- Club. -RANCEIIA SEEIEY, Oak Harbor. B.F.A. Delta Zeta; Soccer. 2. 3, 4, Basketball, A. A. Beard. 4; Women ' s -eague, 4, Fresident; Miami Chest. 2. 3, 4; May Day Committee. 1; Pan- iellenic Council, 2: Big Sister. 2. 3; Union. 2; Sophomore Counselor; TOP ROW (Lett to Right) CHARLES ROUDEBUSH. Miliord, ROBERT RUBERG, Cir Football, 3. JOHN M. RUDYX, Cleveland, B.S Bus. Sigma Nu; Recensio. 1, 2; Miami Chest, THADDEUS RYTEL, Cleveland, E Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football, 1, Track, 1, 2; Basketball. 1: Tribe Miami Chest, 4: Big Brother. Arts Ball Committe ILENN SHAFFER. Columbu RUTH SABSTEDT, Lake W.A.A.: Hockey. 2. 3. GEORGE SAUER, Marietta, B.S. Bus. Phi Delta Theta: Transfer. Ohio Wesleyan University; Transfer. Marietta College. MARTHA LOUISE SAXE. Ellsworth, Pa., SECOND ROW (Left to Right) ROBERT SCHAUEH, Dayton, A Phi Kappa Tau; Football, 1. 2. 1; Wrestling, 1, 2. 3. CHARLOTTE SCHMIDT, North Kingsville. A.B. Zeta Tau Alpha; Delta Phi Alpha; Liberal Arts Club. 2. 3, 4; Miami Sisters, 2. 3; Miami Chest. 2; W.A.A., 2, 3, 4: W.A.A. Board, Secretary, 3; Class Hockey. 1, 2, 3; Class Baseball. 1. 2. 3, 4; Class Basket- ball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Senior Ball Committee. HERBERT F. SCHNEIDER, Rave Y.M.C.A., 1; Choral Union, 1, 2. censio, 1; Newman Club. 1, 2, 3, 4 President, 1; President, 2, 3; Re! Council, 1, 2, 3, 4; Vice President, I. W. SCHONWALD, Oxford, A.B. Phi Sigma; Football, 1; Basketball, 1, 3; Glee Club, 4; Big Brother, 2, 4; Miami Delta De 2, 3, 4; B Combus; Y.W.C.l b, 1; Alethenai, 2, m .Mit m M SENIORS ENIORS SENIORS SENIORS c o ,«!w JJU . - J X: TOP ROW (Leit BETTY SHERA, Middletown, B.S. Ed. Delta Delta Delta,- Kappa Delta Pi; Ale- thenoi, 2, 3,- Miami Chest, 3; Big Sister. 3, Student, 1, 2. MINNIE SHETLEH. Holcomb, N. Y., B.S. Ed. Trianon; Volley Ball, 2, 4; Y.W.C.A., 2, 3, 4; Big Sister, 4; Transfer, Buffalo State Teachers ' College. JAMES SHIDELER, Oxford, A.B. Phi Kappa Tau: Sigma Gamma Epsiion, President, 4; Phi Sigma; Freshman Y.M.C. A. Cabinet; Chest Drive, 2, 3, 4: Big Brother, 2, 3, 4; Chairman, 4; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet, 2, 3, 4; Interfraternily Council, 4. SECOND ROW (lelt Right) JAMES SHOLLENBAHGER, Sigma Chi; Les Pohtique; Club, 3, 4; Economics Club Chest, 2, 3, 4; Student, 1. A.B. Vars ROBERT SHULL, Shaker His., B.S. Bus. Delta Chi; Junior Prom Committee. EDWARD SILL, Cleveland, A. B. Sigma Chi; Sigma Gamma Epsiion, Secre- tary, 4; Big Brother, 2, 3, 4; Sophomore Hop Committee; Student, 4; Press Club, 4. NANCY SIMPKINSON, Piqua. B.S. Ed. Alpha Sigma Alpha; Sigma Delta Pi, Pres- ident, 2, 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa; Kappa Delta Pi; Mortar Board, Alumni Secretary; Liberal Arts Club, 2, 3, 4; Secretary, 3; Women ' s League, 3, 4; President Junior Women; Wells House Chairman, 4; Big Sister, 2, 3, 4; Miami Chest, 2, 3, 4; Madrigal, 3, 4; Pan-Hellenic, 2; Y.W.C.A., 4; Sophomore Hop Committee. EDWARD SKERRITT, Huntington, N. Y., A.B. Phi Sigma; Pageant, 2; Ye Merrie Players, 3, 4; Miami Union, 2, 3; Secretary, 3; Y.M.C.A., 3, 4; Student, 2, 3; Recensio. 3; Chemistry Club, 4; Transfer, Long Island University. CAROLINE SLACK. Liberty, Ind., B.S. Ed. Hockey, 1, 2; Basketball, 2, 3, 4; Track, 3; Archery, 3; W.A.A., 2, 3, 4. HERBERT SMITH. Coshocton, B.S. Ed. Epsiion Pi Tau; Kappa Phi Kappa. R. B. SMITH. Utica. B.S. Ed. Sigma Alpha Epsiion; Kappa Phi Kappa; Baseball, 1, 2; Band, 1, 2. LYNN SOMEHSHIELD. East Cleveland, B.S. 3; Y.M.C.A. Committee, 1. BERNARD SOSS, Euclid, B.S. Bus. Zeta Beta Tau; Track, 1; Boxing, 1; Varsity Social Club, 3; Recensio. 3; Religious Council, 3; Transfer, Western Reserve Uni- BOTTOM HOW ELWOOD A.B. SPOONAMORE, Cleveland, Sigma Chi; Omicron Delta Kaoca; Studen 1. 2, 3, 4; Exchange Editor, 1; ifev s Edito 2; Associate Editor, 3; Editor-in-Chief Publication Board. 4; Glee Club 1 Varsity Quartet, 2: Recensio. 2; Mian Press Club, 3, 4, President, 3, 4; Mian Chest, 2, 3, 4; Big Brother, 3, 4; Varsit Social Club, 4. MAGDALENE STARE. Chillicothe, B.S. Ed. ' Theta Upsilon; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Vic=-i President, 4; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Big Sister, 2. 3; Miami Chest, 2, 4; M Asso elation; Math Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Orchesis 2 3, 4; Hockey, 1, 3, 4; Socce r, 2, 3, 4; Vol- leyball, 3, 4; Track. 1. 3; Basketball, 1 2 3, 4; Baseball, 2, 3; Archery, 3. MARY HELEN STEED. Middletown, A.B. ' ■Delta Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Players, President, 4; Treasurer, 4; Mortar 4; Speake ' Sigma; Ye Merrie ALBERTA STEGEMILLER. Hamilton B S Sec. Stud- Combus; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Classical ENIORS SENIORS BOTTOM ROW (Leil VERNON WASS. Bar! GEORGE WATSON. Lakewood. A Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; 1 Alpha, President, 4; Les Pohtiqu ISest Miami Chest. Pan-Hellenic 4; YW.CA . ROBERT WEILAND. Hamilton, B.S. Bui Delta Tau Delta; Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Captain, 4; Inter-fraternity Council, rreasu rer, 4; ' ' ' l ' Club, ry-Treasurer, 4; Athletic , 3; Big Brother, 4; Senio MORTON WEINGART, Cleveland, B S. Bus Zeta Beta Tau; Football Manager, 1; Basketball Manager, 1, 2, 3; Tribe Miami, 3, 4; Sophomore Hop Committee; Student, 1, 2, 3, 4; Recensio Sports Editor, 3; Press Club, 3, 4; Senior Bail Committee. TOP ROW (Le MAHCIA STHENICK. Cuyahoga Falls, A B, Delta Zeta; Chest Drive, 3, 4; Big Sister, 2, 3, 4; Pan-Hellenic Council, 3, 4. Treas- urer, 4; Y.W.C A., 1, 2, 3, 4. EARL SWAFFORD, Oxford. A.B. Sigma Pi Sigma; M Book, 2, Assistant Editor; Math Club, 4. lOHN SYMES. Hamilton, A.B. FRANCES TALBOT. Youngstown, A.B. Zeta Tau Alpha; Eta Sigma Phi, Vice- President, 4; Student, 2, 3; Basketball. 1. 2, 3; Hockey, 1, 2, 3; Classical Club, Treasurer, 3; Big Sister, 3, 4; Miami Chest, 2, 3, 4; W.A.A., 2, 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa. MILTON TAYLOR. Delta Upsilon; Che I.S. Ed. -leader, 1, 2; Recensio. J, President, 4; Miami SECOND ROW (Left to Right) RUTH THAYER. Norwood, B.S Ed. Pi Kappa Sigma; W.A.A. , 1, 2. 3, 4, Board, 4; Senior Representative; Orchesis. 2, 3, 4; Choral Union, 1, 2; Botany Club. 1; Y. W.C.A., 1. 2. 3, 4; Miami Chest, 3, 4; Basketball, 1. 2. 3, 4; Baseball, 1, 2. 3. 4; Hockey. 1, 3, 4; Soccer. 2. 3, 4; Volley- ball, 3, 4; Track, 3, 4; Archery, 3, 4; Big WILLIAM A. THOMAS. Shake BRUNO TSCHISCHECK. Cleveland Hts.. B.S. Bus. HUGH VAN AUSDALL. Oxford. Phi Kappa Tau; Baseball, 1, Basketball. 1; Big Brother, 2. 3; Editor M Book. 2; Tribe Mia Chest, 2, 3; Syndic. G.EDGAR VAN BUREN, Mamaroneck, NY.. B.S, Bus. Beta Theta Pi; Recensio. 1, 2; Junior Prom Committee; Economics Club, 4; Miami Chest, 3, 4; Varsity Social Club. 4; Base- ball, I; Basketball, I; Football. 1; Cross Country, 2; Religious Council, 1, 2. ERNST VOLLBRECHT. Hamilton, B S. Ed- Delta Phi Delta; Delta Phi Alpha. H. FRANKLIN WALTZ, Wadsworth, A.B. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football Manager, 1, 2. 3; Announcer Public Address System, 4; Inter-fraternity Council, 4. Page Forty-One SENIORS SENIOR SENIORS SENIORS TOP ROW (Left to Right) JOHN WELLMAN, East Cleveland, A.B. Delta Kappa Epsilon: Football, 3. WILLABD WEHTH, Dayton, B.S. Bus. Delta Sigma Pi.- Phi Mu Alpha; Band, HELEN WHITEMAN, Georgetown, A.B. Chi Omega; Hockey. 1, 2, 3, 4; Basket- ball, 2, 4; Soccer, 2; W.A.A., 2, 3, 4; Y. W.C.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Classical Club, 4; Big EDWARD WIETCHA, YorkviUe, B S. Ed. RUTH WILEY, Cii Pi Kappa Sigma; 3, 4; Classical Club, 4; Pan-Hellenic Council, 2, 3; Big Sister, 2, 4. JOHN WILLETT, Cincinnati, A.B. Delta Chi; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Football, 1 DAVID WILLIAMS, Warren, B.S. Bus. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Freshman Dra- matics; Student-Faculty Council, 4; Box- ing, 1, 2; Inter-fraternity Cotincil, 4; Re- censio, I, 2, 3, 4, Editor, 3; Miami Chest, SECOND ROW (Left to Right) LAWRENCE WILLIAMS. Oxfor ROBERT WILLIAMS. Pierpont, A.B. ROBERT WISEMAN, Chillicothe, B.S. Ed. Delta Tau Delta; Football, 1, 2, 3; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4; Transfer, Ohio State University. ELIZABETH WITHHOW, Reily, B S Ed. Alpha Sigma Alpha; Kappa Delta Pi; Lib- eral Arts Club, 2, 3, 4; Pan-Hellenic Coun- cil, 4; Mathematics Club, 1, 2, 4; Secre- tary, 4: Choral Union, 1; W.A.A., 2, 3, 4; Baseball, 1, 2; Basketball, 2, 3; Volley- 3, 4. WILSON WRIGHT, Richmc Ed. Transfer, Earlham College. WILLIAM YECK. Akron, A.B. Sigma Nu; Omicron Delta Kappa; Miami Student, 1, 2, 3, 4, Assistant Manager, 3, Business Manager, 4; Ye Merrie Players; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet, 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary, 1; Miami Handbook, 2, 3, Business Manager, 2, 3: Miami Press Club, 3, 4; Miami Chest, 2, Captain, 3, Publicity Chairman, 4; Big Brother, 2, 3, 4. ELIZABETH YODER. Belle Center. B.S. Ed. BOTTOM ROW (Left to Right) ROBERT ZIPF, Mineral Ridge, A.B. Phi Kappa Tau; Phi Sigma; Varsity Soc Club, 4; Football, 2; Track, 2; Head Che NOVA ASHMAN. Gre Diploma. Y.W.C.A., 1, 2; W.A.A., Basketball, 1, 2; Baseball, 1. ELIZABETH ACKLEY. Painesvill Y.W.C.A , 1. 2. M. JANE ANDREWS. Camden AUDREY BOWER, Lev isburg, Diploma. e. Two-year Soccer, 1, 2; EACHERS COLLEGE TEACHERS COLLEGE . . . TEACHERS COLLEGE BOTTOM ROW (Left to Right) ELMA GORDON. Hamilton, Two-year Di- ploma. Y.WC A , 2. EVA GORDON. Hamilton, Two-year Di- Basketball, 2, Y.W.C.A., 2. IRMA HOLZER, Trenton. Two-year Di- E HOOCK. Cincinnati. Two-year Di- MARY ELLEN INWOOD, New Burlingto: Two-year Diploma. Volleyball, 1. TOP ROW (Lclt to Right) DOROTHY BROSEY, Hamilton. Two-year Diploma. Big Sister, 2; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2. DOROTHY CALDWELL, Hamilton, Two- year Diploma. MARGARET CAPRETTA. Geneva, Two- year Diploma. Soccer. 1. MABEL CARPENTER. Hamilton. Two-year Diploma JERRY COLLETTE. Van Wert. Two-year Diploma. Y.W.C.A., 2, Big Sister, 2. MARY CONSTANT. Felicity. Two-year Diploma. Choral Union. 1; Big Sister. 2; Y.W.C.A., MILDRED CORNELIUS. Peebles. Two-year Diploma. SECOND ROW (Lett to Right) LOIS CROSS. Hamilton. Two-year Di- MAHY E. DARLING. Cincinnati. Two-year Diploma. Choral Union, 2. MARGARET DEXTER. Dayton, Two-year Diploma. Y.W.C.A., 1, 2: Soccer, 1; Big Sister, 2. EMMOLAU DUMBOULD, Uhrichs Hockey, 1; Big Sister. 2. DOROTHY EVANS. Youngstown. Two-year Diploma. Hockey. 1; Kappa Phi. MARY FORD, Youngstown. Two-year Di- ploma. Alpha Sigma Alpha; Y.W.C.A.. 1. 2; Big GOODMAN, Canton. Two-year Di- Page Forty-Three TEACHERS COLLEGE TOP ROW (Left to Bight) SECOND ROW (Leit to Right) MAHION lACOT. Middletown, Two-year LUCILE LAMBERT, West Milton, Two-year Diploma. Diploma. YW.C A .1,2. ESTHER JOHNSON. WesI Liberly, Two- DOROTHY LAWRENCE, Arcanum, Two- year Diploma. year Diploma. Y.W.C.A., 2; Volleyball, 1; Big Sister, 2; Miami Religious Council, 1. Choral Union, 2, Madrigal, 2. Y.W.C.A., 2; Big Sister, 1; W.A.A., 1, 2; Soccer, 1; Basketball, 1; Baseball, 1. BETTY JONES. Canton. Two-year Diploma, Kappa Ph.. Treasurer, 2; Y.W.C A,, 1; Big VIRGINIA LITTLE, Miamisburg, Two-year Diploma. ELEANOR LOCKHART, Northiield, Sopho- Alpha Sigma Alpha. BOTTOM ROW (Lett to Right) Sister, 2 ANNA MAE KAMMERER. Hamilton, Two- year Diploma, EVELYN McClelland. Kanon, Two-year Diploma. Kappa Phi, Chaplain, 1, Publication Edi- tor, 2; Big Sister, 2, YW.CA., 2. EILEEN McMECHAN, Hamilton, Two-year ADA KELLY, Milford, Two-year Diploma, Big Sister, 2, BERTHA LONG. Oxtord, Two-year Di- ploma ROSAMOND LINCOLN. E Cleveland. Diploma. Alpha Sigma Alpha, Y.WC.A , 1, 2, Big Sister, 2. CLARA KERNS. Trenton. Two-year Di- ploma. CLELLA MEANS, Harrison, Two-year Di- ploma, MAHY MARGARET KRESS, Sardinia, Two year Diploma. Sophomore. Delta Gamma. MARILYN MRES, Cincinnati, Two-year Diploma. Big Sister, 2,- Y.W C.A , 1, 2. Choral Union, 1, 2; Big Sister, 2; Y W C.A 1. 2, MRS. GEORGIA MANN. Oxford. Two- year Diploma, VIRGINIA MITCHELL, Hamilton, Two- year Diploma. Page Forty-Four TEACHERS COLLEGE . . . TEACHERS COLLEGE . . . TEACHERS COLLEGE BOTTOM HOW (Lelt lo Right) ANNETTA SUTTON. Canton, Two-year Diplon-.a, Kappa Phi, Corresponding Secretary, 2. GLADYS WALSH. Mount Healthy, Two- lANE WATTERSON. Van Wert, Two-year Diploma MARY JANE WILLARD, London, Two-year Diploma Y W C A , 1, 2: Big Sister, 2, NANCY WILSON, Cambridge, Two-year Diploma Student, 1, 1, YW.CA., 1, 2; Big Sister, 2. TOP ROW (Lclt lo Right) MARY EDITH MORRIS. Ha MARGARET MULLEN. Conneaut, Two-year Diploma. Big Sister, 2. CLARISSA NEWMAN, Jefferson, Two-year Diploma. Hockey, 1, Basketball, 1, 2; Orchesis, 1, 2, W A A , 1, 2; Big Sister, 2. ROSEMARY NORRIS. Coshocton, Two-year Diploma Choral Union, 2; YW.CA., 1, 2: Big Sister, 2 RUTH NUNGESSER. Gallon. Two-year Diploma. W.A.A. MARJORIE PITSINGER, Dayton, Two-year Diploma, Soccer, 1; Big Sister, 2; W A.A., 1, 2. IRENE ROBERTS. Oxford, Two-year Di- SECOND ROW (Left to Right) ELOISE RUGGLES, Portsmouth, Two-year Diploma, Alpha Sigma Alpha MARGAR ET SCHNORRENBERG, Steuben- ville. Two-year Diploma. Alpha Sigma Alpha; Y.W.C.A., 1, 2; Big Sister, 2. IRENE SIMPSON. College Corner, Two- year Diploma MILDRED SPINDLEH, Hamilton, Two-year Diploma, Choral Union, 2; YW.CA,, 1, 2, Big Sister, 2. DORIS SPRINKEL, Troy, Two-year Di- ploma. Kappa Phi; Orchestra. 1, 2. lANE STEPHENS. Cleves, Two-year Di- ploma. JANET STUHLMUELLER, Hamilton. Two- year Diploma. Pi Delta Theta; Y.W.C A , 1, 2, Pan- Hellenic Council, 2, - 1 .1 ' FIRST ROW (Lett to Right): Howenstine. Jav. Foltz. Catharine. Panuska. George. SECOND ROW: Hill. Ruth. Linegar. Ned. Harpster. June. Oram. Allan. Simpkins THIRD ROW: Heimsch. Charles. Steed. Marv Helen, Jones. Carlvle. Randolph. nch. Ettie. Clark. Kenneth. Redman, Dorotha. Finkelman. Har Nancy. Yeck. William. Grill. EUzabeth. ne. Spoonamore. Elwood. Black. Hugh. Seeley. Francelia. $€ HC A CTIVE Names make news! Last year these people were voted the most newsworthy by President Upham, Mr. A. K. Morris, the deems of the four schools, the presi- dents of O. D. K. and Mortar Board, the chairman of the Student-Faculty Coun- cil, and the president of the Women ' s League. In addition to many other activities; Jay Howenstine made Phi Beta Kappa and was a three-year letter man in tennis . . . Catharine Foltz, president of Mortar Board, won the Neukom Trophy, and played basketball and soccer as they should be played . . . George Panuska, all-around athlete and an O. D. K., headed the senior class . . . Ettie Cranch was president of Beta Pi Theta and a Phi Bete in her junior year . . . Kenneth Clark, Phi Bete and O. D. K., was president of Alpha Kappa Delta . . . Dorotha Redman, Mortar Board, Phi Bete, and secretary of Les Politiques . . . Harry Finkelman, O. D. K., headed Les Politiques and was out for cross- country . . . Ruth Hill, a Mortar Board, was Y. W. President . . . Ned Linegar, vice-president, secretary, then president of Y. M. C. A. . . . June Harpster, mem- ber of Madrigal and Mortar Board . . . Allan Oram, business manager of the Recensio and president of his junior class . . . Nancy Simpkinson was president of Sigma Delta Pi and a Mortar Board . . . William Yeck, business manager of the Student and also of the Handbook . . . Elizabeth Grill, president of the Re- ligious Council and outstanding in the Speakers ' Bureau . . . Charles Heimsch was a football hero and cm O. D. K. . . . Mary Helen Steed, president of Ye Merrie Players, Phi Bete, and active in Y. W. . . . Carlyle Jones, news, associate, and managing editor of the Student . . . Ann Randolph, president of Y. W. C. A. Cabinet and a Mortar Board . . . Elwood Spoonamore was editor of the Student and a member of the Varsity Quartet . . . Hugh Black, chairman of Student- Faculty Council and a brother of Spoonamore in the Quartet . . . Francelia Seeley was president of the Women ' s League and a member of the Fine Arts Ball Committee. Picked by the same committee that chose the senior group, we here continue with the newsworthy Juniors, all of whom did any number of a number of things. This is the way they spent some of their time . . . Joe Shaw, assistant editor of the Recensio, dramatized too . . . Jeanne Long was house chairman at Oxford College and a member of Madrigal . . . Robert Mautz, who edited the Handbook, was made both O. D. K. and Phi Beta Kappa . . . Mary Jane Carothers played for Ye Merrie Players and spoke for the Speakers ' Bureau . . . Forrest Williams, co-chairman of the O. D. K. carnival and member of the Y Cabinet . . . Pearl Drews was literary editor of the Recensio and president of Alethenai . . . Betty Avery, chairman of Social Service for the Y. W. C. A. and a member of Delta Phi Delta . . . Harold Home, a heroic hero or a villainous villain for any man ' s play . . . Arline Chalker was treasurer of Y. W. C. A. and also of her sophomore class . , . Tim Hadsel did everything and made every- thing . . . Betty Hanson, secretary of the Y. W. C. A., and Women ' s Editor of the M Book . . . Jack Smith, a scholar, and associate editor of the Miami Student . . . Richard Erwine, an athlete and president of the junior class . . . Katherine Ascham was house chairman of West Hall and a member of the Y. W. C. A. cabinet . . . Robert McConnaughey edited this Miami Recensio . . . Elizabeth Seeley was a m.ember of the Student-Faculty Council and also of Delta Phi Delta . . . Richard Biery, the business manager of the Recensio . . . Irene Moore, social chairman of the Y. W. C. A. and secretary-treasurer of the Women ' s League Council. Ed. Note: And what ' s more, we think most of these are all right people in spite of the above. PECSCNALITIES FIRST ROW (Leit to Right): Joe Shaw Jeanne Long, Robert Mautz. Mary Jane Carothers. Forrest Williams. Pearl Drews. SECOND ROW Bettv Aver Harold Home Arline Chalker. Fred Hadsel. Bettie Hanson, Jack Smith THIRD ROW- Richard Erwine Katherine Ascham, Robert McConnaughey. Elizabeth Seeley, Richard Biery, Irene Moore. r? A xl fr DICE EHWINE JO STEINEB JLNICC CLASS orricEcs Dick Erwine ... an animated steam-roller on the gridiron ... is best described by his remark while leading the grand march at the Prom . . . Leaning over to the Queen, he whispered: Why all the fuss over me, a dumb athlete? ... In spite of this becoming modesty, he has a wealth of capabilities, and leads well the class that elevated him to its presidency ... Jim Eley likes to hunt and fish better than anything, accordingly goes a-gunning with the faculty yearly, and dreams of the day he will take Hippocrates ' Oath and practice medicine ... Jo Steiner ' s perpetual optimism led her to buy a minute-book for a Junior class meeting that was never held . . . had to be satisfied with banking the slim profit of the Prom . . . First Row (left to right): George Abell, Battle Creek. Mich; Thomas E. Adams, Jr., Delta Chi, Brook- ville, Ind-; Joe Anderson, Martins- ville. Ill; Herbert Arent, Delta Tau Delta, Hamilton; Robert Arnold, Phi Kappa Tau, Findlay; Katherine Ascham. Alpha Omicron Pi. Find- Second Row: Doris Aschbacher, Delta Zeta, Toledo; Betty Austin. Chi Omega, Pittsburgh. Pa.; Uarda Babb, Wilmington; Lucille Bailey. Alpha Omicron Pi, Greenville; Charles Bain, Lancaster; Virginia Ballard, Delta Gamma, Canton. Third Row: Dorothy Barkman, Beta Phi Alpha, Springfield; Betty Bar- teldt, Forest; Delbert Battcher, Beta Theta Pi, Lorain; Mary Beach, Theta Upsilon. Cincinnati; Oscar Beachler. Miamisburg; Elsie Belknap, Delta Deha Delta, Sher- rodsville. Fourth Row: Trevose W. Benney, Sigma Chi. Cold Spring Harbor. L. L, N. Y.; lustine Bettiker, Delta Gamma, Warren; Edward Biel- feldt, Thornton, 111.; Richard Biery, Findlay; Martha Billman, Hope, Ind.; Lena Bishop, Campbellsburg, Kentucky. Fifth Row: Philip Blaisdell, River- dale, Md.; Mary Jane Bolus, Mans- field; Frances Bovirden, Cleveland; Jean Bowman, Alpha Sigma Al- pha, Lima; Betty Bradley, Delta Zeta. Toledo; John E. Brannon, Cleves. Sixth Row: Robert Breitenstein, Delta Tau Delta, Cincinnati; Cyrus Brenneman, Beta Kappa. Lisbon; Dorothy Brooks. Alpha Omicron Pi, Middletown, Frank Browne, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Aurora; Jean Bruckmann, Cincinnati; Robert Bryson, Phi Delta Theta, Hagers- town, Ind. Seventh Row: Ohmer Bube. Day- ton; Isobel Bumbaugh. Lorain; Joe Burnett. Phi Kappa Tau, Bellefon- taine; Betty Bussert. Blanchester; Ellen Buyer. Mentor; Louise Cald- well. Oxford. Eighth Row: Martha Louise Calla- dine. Chi Omega. Warren; Eliza- beth Carnes. Gallipolis; Mary Jane Carothers, Alpha Omicron Pi, Chi- cago, 111; Maxine Carr, Antwerp; Betty Caughey, Chi Omega, Pitts- burgh, Pa.; Frances Cenfield, Al- pha Omicron Pi, Chicago, 111. « M f :t J L N I € C $ JUNIORS First How (left to right): Arline Chalker, Cincinnati; Paul Christ- man, Beta Theta Pi, Shaker Hts.; Aneita Cleary, Sigma Kappa, Montclair, N, J.; Jack Clemens, Beta Theta Pi, Youngstown; George Comienski, Cleveland; Perry Moore Cook, Phi Delta Theta, Mansfield. Second Row: George Conover, Middletown; Elva Corell, Blue Ash; John Cornwall, Beta Theta Pi, Lorain; Martin A. Coyle, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Hamilton; George Creel, Delta Upsilon, Uhrichsville; Robert Crone, Sigma Alpha Ep- silon, Hamilton. Third Row: Ray Cronin, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Elyria; Dale Cros- by, Phi Delta Theta, Bellevue; Howard Dawson, Delta Tau Delta, Bryan; Lois Dean, Delta Zeta; Madison, Tenn.; Lewis Dillon, Phi Delta Theta, Hamihon; John Diver, Middletown. Fourth Row: Pearl Drews, Akron; Mary Jean Drummond, Delta Delta Delta, Bellefontaine; Charles Dugan, Delta Upsilon, Cambridge; Caroline Dunbar, Alpha Omicron Pi, Worthington; Joe Dunker, Phi Kappa Tau, Norwood; Margaret Early, Sigma Kappa, Oxford. Fiith Row: Orville Edwards, Mid- dletown; William Eichman, Beta Theta Pi. Xenia; Walter Eitle, Sig- ma Nu, Lakewood; Howard Eley, Phi Kappa Tau, Union City, Ind.; James Eley, Lima; Rosalind Ellis, Theta Upsilon, Wilmington. Sixth Row: Mervin Emler, Phi Kappa Tau, Coshocton; Tom En- gelman, Sigma Nu, South Euclid; Richard Erwine, Beta Theta Pi, Steubenville; Howard Fangboner, Delta Upsilon, Fremont; Mary Anna Farley, Alpha Omicron Pi, Bellevue; William Ficken, Beta Theta Pi, Cincinnati. Seventh Row: Ted Foley, Phi Del- ta Theta, Akron; Robert Foltz, Phi Delta Theta, Marion; J. D. Fouts, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Dayton; Helen Friend, West Alexandria; Harold Funkhouser, Napoleon; Ruth Fussner, Theta Upsilon, Wil- loughby. Eighth Row: Clarence Gallagher, Phi Delta Theta, Columbus; Vivian Garrison, Arcanum; Olga Gazdik, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Harold Gilbert, Hamilton; Margaret Gilbert, Lons- dale, Pa.; Albert Gililland, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Kansas City, Mo. First Row (left to right): William Gisel, Jamestown, N. Y.; Owen Gleason, Elyria; Willord Gleason, Elyria; Martin Gordon, Middle- town; Tom Goslee, Sigma Chi, Cleveland; Earl Greene, Phi Delta Theta, Mansfield. Second Row: Rudolph Gries heimer, Chillicothe; David Guar nieri, Ashtabula; Betty Guilford Delta Zeta, Dayton; Robert Gump Trotwood; Doris Gutknecht, Sigma Kappa, Youngstown; Fred Had sel, Beta Theta Pi, Oxford. Third Row: Myra Hagerman, Beta Sigma Omicron, Dayton; Lucile Haisley, Terre Haute, Ind.; Frank Hale, Solon; Oliver Hall, Delta Tau Delta, Fort Thomas, Ky.; John Hamilton, Beta Theta Pi, Con- neaut; Ermal Hansen, Geraldine, Mont. Fourth Row: Bettie Hanson, Alpha Omicron Pi, Mansfield; Marjorie Ham, Versailles; William Harr, Phi Delta Theta, Hamilton; Ann Harris, Alpha Omicron Pi, Belle- vue; James Harris, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Portsmouth; Jane Harsha, Hillsboro. Fifth Row: Gordon Hart, Arcanum; Jeanne Hart, Delta Delta Delta, Hamilton; Robert Hayes, North Bend; Carl Heismann, College Corner; Robert Heisner, Sigma Chi, Lorain; Dave Hennage, Beta Theta Pi, Shaker Heights. Sixth Row: Richard Henry, Day- ton; Kathryn Hibbert, Zeta Tau Alpha, Xenia; Robert Higgins, Sigma Chi, Painesville; Edward Hill, Canton; Bill Hillenbrand, Cin- cinnati; Mary Jeanette Hinckley, Beta Sigma Omicron, Cleveland. Seventh How: Lester Hinkle, Sigma Delta Rho, Cincinnati; William Hoel, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Greenville; Robert Holmes, Phi Delta Theta, Canton; Margaret Homolya, Youngstown; Harold Home, Beta Theta Pi, Middle- town; Robert Horth, Delta Upsilon, Port Clinton. Eighth Row: Mary Hover, Alpha Sigma Alpha, Lima; William How- land, Sigma Chi, Portsmouth; Richard Hunter, Sigma Nu, Piqua; Lois Huntington, Zeta Tau Alpha, Toledo; Maurice Ittel, Hamilton; Rosemary Ja ckson, Delta Delta Delta, Circleville. m K ' ' ' • f rt k IhL J L N I C C $ J U N ■€ C $ First Row (left to right): Sue lanes. Delta Gamma, Sandusky; Herbert Jenkins, Lakewood; Flora luett, Williamstown, Ky.; Hubert Kapp, Delta Chi, Oxford; Sanford Katz, Pi Theta, Cleveland; Margaret Keene, Delta Gamma, Oxford. Second Row: Charles Kehm, Delta Tau Delta, Hamilton; June Ken- nedy, Delta Gamma, Cambridge; William Keslar, Delta Tau Delta, Akron; Melvin Knowlton, Massil- lon; Robert Kroner, Phi Delta Theta, Marion; Paul Krebs, Ham- Third Row: Roland Kruse, New Bremen; Maurice Landen, Beta Theta Pi, Norwood; Catherine Lan- dolf. Alpha Sigma Alpha, Chi- cago, 111.; William Lano, Delta Up- silon. Port Clinton; Alta Laub, Hicksville; Jane Lehmiller, Theta Upsilon, North Industry. Fourth Row: David Leshner, Pi Theta, Hamilton; Wayne Lewis, Delta Upsilon, East Cleveland; Rebeccc: Liggett, Ripley; Ruth Lig- gitt. Belle Center: Harriette Lin- coln, Delta Zeta, Woodstock; Rich- ard Lindemood, Utica. Fifth Row: Marian Lindsey, Sigma Kappa, WiUard; Lois Little, Zeta Tau Alpha, Fort Thomas, Ky,; Jack Llewellyn, Phi Delta Theta, Lake- wood; Richard Lodrick, Delta Tau Delta, Cleveland; Jeanne Long, Alpha Omicron Pi, Convoy; Isa- belle Longley, Delta Gamma, Chi- cago, 111. Sixth Row: Carl Looker, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Akron; Elena Luci, Cleveland; Freda Lust, Delta Zeta, Tiffin; Dorothy Lynd, Germantown; Robert Maish, Sigma Chi, Wyom- ing; Katharine Marshall, Delta Gamma, Lima. Seventh Row: Adabelle Martin, Toledo; Charlotte Martin, Theta Upsilon, Redwood Falls, Minn.; Earline Martin, Theta Upsilon, Redwood Falls, Minn.; Thomas Markley, Georgetown; Robert Matre, Delta Tau Delta, Hamilton; Robert Mautz, Beta Theta Pi, Marion. Eighth Row: Hugh Maxwell, Sig- ma Chi, Liberty, Ind.; Mary Max- well, Lisbon; Arthur Meifert, Sigma Chi, Lakewood; Allen Miller, Wadsworth; Charles Miller, East Orange, N. J.; Margaret Miller, Theta Upsilon, Lebanon. First Row (left to right): Wesley Miller, Delta Tau Delta, Cincin- nati; Eleanor Mitchell, Sigma Kappa, Shaker Heights; Alfred Minotti, Phi Kappa Tau, Youngs- town; Mary Minton, Chi Omega, Harrisburg, Pa.; Adelbert Moon, Phi Kappa Tau, Westfield, N. Y.- William Moos, Beta Theta Pi, Second How: Harold Morgenstern, Westfield, N. Y.; Evelyn Morta- shed, Pi Kappa Sigma, Harrison; Marjorie Mount, Delta Zeta, Ham- ilton; Richard Murphy, Sigma Al- pha Epsilon, Cleveland; Marie Murray, Delta Sigma Epsilon, Portsmouth; Betty MacAllister, Alpha Omicron Pi, Hopkinton, Third Row: Sedohr MacDonald, Sigma Kappa, Toledo; Mary Louise McAuliffe, Delta Sigma Epsilon, EucUd; Lorraine McCar- thy, Weehawken, N J.; Jeanne McClannmg, Zeta Tau Alpha, Ashtabula; Robert McConnau- ghey. Beta Theta Pi, Dayton; Ken- neth McFarland, Sigma Chi, St. Clc ille. Fourth Row: Jane McKinney Delta Zeta, Dayton; Thomas McNeal, Delta Upsilon, Cleveland; Gerald McNeal, Eaton; Howard Neil, Lon- don; Virginia Niswonger, Kappa Alpha Theta, Pitsburg, Richard Oakley, Delta Upsilon, Cleveland Heights. Fifth Row: Arthur Palmer, Napol- eon; Martha Paschold, Chi Omega, Edgeworth, Pa.; Edward Pegelow, Mattoon, 111.; Margaret Petry, Theta Upsilon, Evanston, III.; Alice Pettersen, Delta Delta Delta, Elmhurst, III.; Gordon Pil- mer. Phi Kappa Tau, Ashtabula. Sixth Row: Madlyn Pitts, Beta Sigma Omicron, Cleveland; Ed- ward Platell, Phi Kappa Tau, Cleveland; James Pontius, Phi Delta Theta, Orrville; Elizabeth Price, Delta Zeta, La Grange, III; Harry Price, Delta Upsilon, Forest; Walter Proper, Phi Delta Theta, Defiance. Seventh Row: Ray Pults, Delta Up- silon, College Corner; Margaret Raabe, Delta Gamma, Fort Jen- nings; Eugene Rausch, Delta Up- silon, Dover; Esther Raymond, Chi Omega, Cambridge; Russel Reaver, Woodville; Edward Red- lin, Cleveland Heights. Eighth Row: Margaret Reeves, Delta Gamma, Dover; Frank Reif- snider, Sigma Nu, Akron; Kather- ine Rhoads, Delta Gamma, Mans- field; Dorothy Richards, Zeta Tau Alpha, Steubenville; Jane Rich- ards, Delta Gamma, Lakewood; Irving Robinson, Pi Theta, Cleve- land. O P Pf J L) N I C R S J L N I C C S T- f ■. a f J A- O f f o f p p. 1 ,e«) ) :a r-iC r:. pr ' o , EPTf . f; ' p . v iLi First Row (left to right): Manuel Rodriguez, Delta Chi, Bridgeport, Conn.; Richard Rolfes, Delta Up- silon, Springfield; Fannie Roth- baum, Hamilton; Ruth Rothacher, Zeta Tau Alpha, Cleveland; Lee Rudman, Sigma Chi, Lebanon; Dorothy Sanderson, Sigma Kappa, Delta. Second Row: Bettie Saxbe. Delta Zeta, Urbana; Hugh Schwab, Sigma Nu, Toledo; Elizabeth See- ley, Delta Zeta, Oak Harbor; Frank Seller, Phi Delta Theta, Lakewood; foe Shaw, Delta Tau Delta, Lakewood; Nancy Shaw, Delta Delta Delta, Lakewood. Third Row: Carl Shellhouse, Phi Delta Theta, Oxford; Bill Shera, Beta Theta Pi, Middletown; Mar- tha Shilling, Pi Kappa Sigma, Springfield; Gilbert Simpson, Delta Tau Delta, East Liverpool; Inez Skinner, Beta Sigma Omi- cron, Jamestown, N. Y.; Virginia Sloat, Chi Omega, Sandusky. Fourth Row: Paul Smedley, Cleve- land; Richard Smeltzer, Spring- field; lack Smith, Phi Delta Theta, Dayton; Ralph Smith, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Minerva; Charles Snyder, Zanesville; Dave Sollars, Beta Theta Pi, Greenfield. Fifth Row: Julian Spencer, Phi Kappa Tau, Charleston, W. Va.; Mary Ellen Spencer, Cleveland Heights; Bud Spieler, Sigma Chi, Celina; John Spitler, Phi Delta Theta, Middletown; Frances Starkey, Cincinnati; Mary Lou Stebbins. Zeta Tau Alpha, Creston. Sixth Row: Josephine Steiner, Lima; Kay Steiner, Delta Gamma, Lodi; Don Stewart, Delta Upsilon, Cleveland Heights; Ellen Stewart, Delta Delta Delta, Columbus; Richard Stilley, Phi Kappa Tau, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Robert Stoer, Delta Upsilon, Cleveland Heights. Seventh Row: Mary Louise Stone, Beta Sigma Omicron, Cleveland Heights; William Storer, Phi Delta Theta, Middletown; Mildred Strain, Delta Gamma, Struthers; Ruth Sullenberger, Delta Gamma, Ox- ford; Cecil Swank, Trotwood; Ar- nold Swartz, Pi Theta, Brockton, Mass. Eighth Row: Robert Swedenborg, Ashtabula; Thomas Taylor. Phi Delta Theta, Akron; Charles Tem- pleton, Lima; Kenneth Thiele, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Dayton; Oliver Thomas, Sigma Chi, Wake- man; Marian Thompson, Sigma Kappa, Fort Thomas, Ky. First Row (left to right): Ruth Timme, Dayton; Ann Tinker Zeta Tau Alpha, Pocatello, Idaho; Mildred ToUey, New Rochelle, N. Y.; Frank Tomkutonis, Delta Up- silon, Calumet City, 111. Second Row: Wilson Trumbull, Delta Upsilon, Johnson City, N. Y.; Edward Van Boxel, Phi Delta Theta, Lakewood; Mary Waddell, North Baltimore; Raymond Wag- ner, Phi Kappa Tau, Cleveland. Third .How: Virginia Wagner, Lakewood; Bill Walter, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Cleveland Heights; Robert Walters, Beta Theta Pi, Dayton; Gene Watkins, Delta Chi, Lakewood. Fourth Row: Eileen Weikart, Springfield; Bob Whitaker, Sigma Chi, Lakev ood; J. P. White, Delta Tau Delta, Sandusky; Exley Wical, DeUa Tau Delta, Reesville. Filth How: Paul Wick, Bradiord; Forrest Williams, Dayton; Wini- fred Williams, Delta Delta Delta, Lakewood; Mary Wirtz. Hamilton. Sixth Row: Harold Wissman, New Bremen; Sylvester Witt, Beta Theta Pi, Akron; Judge Wolfe, Phi Delta Theta, Coshocton; Glen Wollen- haupt. Delta Tau Delta, Cin- Seventh Row: James Woodfill, Greensburg, Ind.; Mary Worman, Bridgeport, Conn.; Ford Worthing, Delta Upsilon, Mount Gilead; Bill Yaekle, Hamilton; Helen Yaekle, Hamilton. Eighth How: Paul Young, Seaman; Robert E. Young, Phi Kappa Tau, Portsmouth; Sylvia Young, West CarroUton; Albert Ziegler, Delta Tau Deha, Cincinnati; Mildred Zurbrick, Youngstown. E£i J L N ■C C $ TED HUNTER GRACE EMERSON sopuc viccc CLASS omcccs Ted Hunter . , . well known as the man who passes out free chewing gum, we can never remember whether it is Doublemint or Beechnut despite his calling attention to the brand when he gives it away . . . this sinecure contributes immeasurably to his already solid popularity, along with the fact that he appointed the committee that gave the best Sophomore Hop in years ... if that means anything . Grace Emerson . . . best remembered for her delicate charm . . . she accepts such honors as Freshman Strut Queen and secretary-treasurer of the sophomore class modestly, re- fusing to get cocky about any of them . . . now recovering from an accident, the class of ' 38 is left without an officer while the whole school feels acutely the temporary loss of a beloved personality . . . Page Fifty-Seven One of the most disheartening aspects of the collegiate scene is the sudden realization that it feels no different to be a sophomore than it did to be a freshman . . . When the freshman of only a summer ago wends his ioyous way back to the process of prodessing quam conspici (as the great Seal of the U. pedantically puts it) he is immersed in the same ignominy that obscured him in his yearling stage . . . only the crescendo of confidence that wells stronger in his own soul tells him that he is entering the somnambulistic chrysallis stage of educational development ... a worm no more, whispers the Inner Voice, and as he spins the skein of sophistication about his grubby self, he can settle down to his sophomore sleep with bright visions of the butterfly he will some day be . . . There is a saying am.ong sophomores that an item called Life is not all beer and skittles. As soon as a sadistic English professor pushes a cryptic volume of Chaucer into his hand to decipher, he becomes impressed with the Blinding Truth of this epigram, and wonders vaguely about what skittles are . . . Slowly he moves to maturity . . . gone are the nostalgic pongs of throwing off home bondage, and he wakes up to the migraine morning-after of adolescence. If he smokes a pipe, it is because he enjoys it, not just to be manly ... he learns to drink enjoyably, if at all. Of palaver and persiflage, he becomes a champion . . . talking for hours on the Nothingness of Nothing. Withal, he circles around somewhat on his emotional bed, and settles down to a quieter moral philosophy (in the interests of accuracy, sometimes unmoral . . .) $€[)H€MCCrE His co-ed counterpart goes through much the same birth-pangs of upperclass- consciousness . . . after a few weeks of watching the male element pass her obliviously by . . . intent on the greener and more lush specimens of fresh- man femininity, she sits back in the Social Swirl, mutters things about mascu- line disdain for smart girls, and, as a last resort, sets about to perfect her Technique . . . Whenever soph gals discuss Technique, they have a far meatier subject than the mundane setting of traps for males . . . the intricacies of hard-water shampoos, for instance, or how to make a fading summer tan compatible with a backless evening gown . . . with these common interests, cliques begin to harden, sorority walls begin to rear themselves . . . In the sophomore year comes the full bloom of Club Feeling . . . during rushing season, they comb the cottages for material, collecting unknowns to present enthusiastically to the juniors and seniors, exclaiming gleefully that they have sewed them up . . . when the cold disapproval of their elders is voiced about their protegees, they desert utterly the gush of formal dinners, do nothing further for their clans but fill the coffers and heckle those eventually pledged . . . As all classes are wont to do, the sophomores threw a Hop . . . this year, with Johnnie Hamp at the baton, they outdid previous years, and forced upper- classmen to admit the improbability of a social slump when the tassels are flipped and the torch of Seniority is thrown . . . CLASS WALTER SCHUTT MARTHA BLACKWELL rccsnAiAN CLASS orricEcs John Rupp ... his six-foot-four or thereabouts makes him outstanding in any group, and helps to make him one of those who have earned three or four numeral sweaters, and get only one . . . two weeks of his college career had not passed before he was slated for frosh prexy, and lol . . . he is . . . Walter Schutt ... a sober, hard-working vice- president . . . Martha Blackwell . . . when she appeared on the collegiate horizon, pessimistic seniors went forth to see whether she was as clever as rumour said . . . when she outwitted her party boss to gain the only office on her ticket, people called it beginner ' s luck, said it wouldn ' t last . . . but it will . . . Page Sixty-One il rCKHMAN The life of the freshmen is no bed of roses. Wo sooner do they arrive at this scene of learning, kiss Mother and Dad good-bye (and perhaps the girl next door) than they are herded into groups, walked through an interminable number of buildings until their legs ache, sent into the complexity of registration and payline, photo- graphed in the nude, subsequent to a rigorous physical examination, and then taken away to be shot again . . . this time holding slates containing their names, much in the manner a criminal is photographed before being sent to his cell. Inter- posed in this orientation process is a freshman mixer, where they are surrounded by the hard-scrubbed faces of their classmates, and the embarrassed giggles of embryo co-eds . . . For women the September scene opens with a bustle of hand-me-down luggage, squabbles over wardrobe space, and tearful petitions for a change of roommates ... a preliminary house-meeting, with a dissertation upon what Miami women do and don ' t do, this homily clouded somewhat by the freshman observation that most upperclass girls do most anything that pops into their sometimes pretty heads . . . Baskets of groceries, staple and fancy, arrive from lonesome parents, forming the basis for spreads that start the ankles and metathorax regions bulging . . . Soon the giddy preliminary whirl is over and with a faintly perceptible thud, the dull duty of starting to classes begins. Themes and assignments begin to come due just as the Greeks begin the nose around for the good boys . . . With a stilted air of cordiality, the representatives of the cryptic clans begin to sow the seeds of an ensuing rush season. A little impressed by the loftly sentiments and warm grins of these prototypes of collegiate perfection, freshmen begin to gather in little ses- sions to discuss the merits of Zeta Zeta against Phi Rho, and stop for a moment en route to classes to gawk jealously at the imposing edifices that house these mystic brotherhoods . . . Page Sixty-Two CLASS With incredible pokiness, the calendar rolls around to the date when they are permitted to enter the sacred portals of heart ' s desire to observe the wearers of bejewelled vests in their natural habitat, and to drink of the warm milk of fraternal affection. Day by day, they sink lower into the slough of indecision. Hectically they are rushed about, promised enduring social success and fraternal fellowship for the acceptance of a pledge button . . . until pledging day dawns . . . On this day of days there is much ado . . . fierce shaking of hands, and hearty congratulations. Convinced that he is a pretty fine fellow after all, and that he would fit in with the group, the ensnared frosh puts on the button with a joyous tear, and becomes, in the current vernacular, a neophyte . . . Little knowing the dismal fate that awaits him at the first pledge meeting, the fresh- man warms himself at the bright fire of his brothers, watches that flame burn itself to a faintly-glowing ember, and finally become a cold clinker of indifference. Indecorously he is ordered to mop floors, polish doorknobs, rake leaves, and deport himself generally as befits his mean position . . . Meanwhile, the co-eds fare but little better. They are sought out by pseudo-sophis- ticated Lady-Greeks in showy frocks and precariously tilted hats, driven uptown in rented cars, and deposited at luncheon tables to chat glibly over such lucid sub- jects as how they spent the summer, what men they have dated, and the effect of so much walking on their stocking allowances. A little too casually they are asked and instructed about sorority preferences, and left with a tacit understanding to turn Alpha Phi over seriously in their minds during the time of silence. On the third day they arise and troop gaily down High Street with their kin, resplendent in shiny buttons and no little pleased with life . . . Page Sixty-Three rCESHMAN Later, although never completely disillusioned, fair Miss Co-ed learns that besides going to teas and dances, being a sorority pledge also entails such loftly honors as shining shoes, washing stockings, and mailing laundry bags for the upperclass sistern . . . Slowly, like the mills of the gods, the political machines begin to grind. Petitions begin to be circulated and parties spring up like mushrooms after a spring rain. Independence is talked of and assembly speeches are ponderously delivered. When the smoke clears away, the upperclass political bosses have had their way, and freshman thought begins to center around the timely subject of grades . . . For, as Dad points out in his letters, grades are an important part of college life. Five-week ' s grades are abysmally low, but freshman contents himself with the suspicion that professors are trying to scare the inept students, and mutters to him- self that the whole system is unfair anyhow. At nine weeks he begins to think the faculty wasn ' t joking after all, makes out an ambitious study-schedule and proceeds to loaf just as systematically as ever . . . Even at meal-times, it ' s a dog ' s life. The random few that have been trained to eat slowly and quietly begin to waste away, all the time watching the more glut- tonous of their fellows wax fat and prosperous. Once in a while the pace slows down, usually when such unsavory dishes as the New Freshman Special lunch is served. This bane of the plate scrapers consists of soggy gray macaroni garnished with an odorous powder smelling more like the insole of a bedroom slipper than the cheese it portends to be . . . Page Sixty-Four «l CLASS Finally, after a more or less eventful Winter, Spring rolls around in the form of April sleet and rain. But when this lush season does finally arrive, textbooks gather dust on their shelves, forlorn and forgotten. The yearlings, awakening to the fact that women can become a major form of amusement and delight in a man ' s life, go forth confidently to conquer the more comely of their sister freshman, only to fmd, after a series of disappointments, that the more glamorous upperclassmen have already made their killings, leaving to the frosh nothing but the thin-lipped and the flat-chested. In most instances, either one of the two alternatives is followed . . . he takes what is left or stands dismally on High Street thumbing his way to the big city in search of diversion . . . All of this, we tell ourselves, is a port of the jerky process of education, which if it works in devious ways its wonders to perform, is no different from other great agencies working toward the elevation of mind, body and spirit . . . And if a great cry sounds from the wilderness, inquiring in doleful measure . . . Class of 1939, whyfore art thou? ... we can but answer for them that they are itinerants in the parade of Seekers after Truth, acting a great deal like those who have trod before, and as the yearlings will continue to act until the dark hazel shades of oblivion are drawn upon the American college forever . . . Page Sixty-Five Student organizations . . . sessions . . . keys . . . projects . . . initiations . . . banquets. The quiet thrill of the unspoken bond between members of a group slaving together to produce something greater than any one of the individuals. The collision of intellects and talents . . . the white heat engendered burning out impurities in the metal of personality. The embodiment of THE IDEAL . . . without which no m an ever ap- proached greatness Ilril II ' sl L K . V iKOtiMS ROBERT McCONNAUGHEY. Editor-in-Chiel RICHARD BIERY. Business Manager C E C E N $ ■€ EDITORIAL STAFF FRONT ROW (Left to Righl): Margarel McCune, Marjorie Mount, Mary Helmkamp, Lois Ward, Roberta Ende- broclc. Literary Editor SECOND ROW: Helen Park, Kay Bethke, Marian Lampe Kathenne Ascham loan Bollenbacher, Genevieve Lea, Aneita Cleary THIRD HOW: Adrian Mayer, Joe Shaw, Howard Davis, Hiram Stephenson, Robert McConnaughey, David WiUiams, Ted Foley. Page Sixty-Eight BUSINESS STAFF FRONT ROW (Left to Right): Ormi Hol- land, Martha Roudebush, Earl Shrader, Oscar Bsachler. Jane Harsha, Paula Neuman. SECOND ROW: Richard Biery. Irene Rankin, Ellen Slewarl, Betty Chis- holm, Myra Manley, Bob Redlm, John Spence. BACK HOW: Robert Ireland, Burt, Gartti Charle li 1 i iiki 4i Hl 1 ' $ T A p r Today the Recensio of 1936 is yours. Yesterday it was ours . . . ours to sweat over, to sleep with and play with, to swear at and laugh at . . . ours to fashion into a thing of life and beauty. We have done our best, hoping it would live for you . . . If you ever dropped into the Editorial and Business offices, this is probably about what you saw . . . McConnaughey busying him- self making layouts — writing copy, pasting pictures — in fact, put- ting his fingerprint somewhere on every page of the book . . . Biery, the little dynamo that made every subscription and adver- tising record of past years look diminutive, keeps the internal organization well-oiled and leaves before dinner to straighten out kinks of mandatory business with advertisers, etc. . . . Assistant Editor Joe Shaw holds down one end of the big desk answering ' phone calls — and making more . . . Across the way Assistant IVIanager Oscar Beachler, godfather to all accounting books — checking — checking — checking . . . Literary Editor Endebrock stares blankly into the eyes of L. C. Smith-Corona and pounds out superb honorary write-ups . . . Sports Editor Witt, the little giant, does practically a whole division by himself — even taking some of the pictures . . . Ray Paul, the camera and tripod of the staff, brings in some of the better feature pictures taken between trips to Los Angeles and South America . . . Thomas, another budding photographer and jack-of-all-trades, leaves with note- book under arm to clean up all the loose ends . . . Young Oram looks through books for ideas, while Slater racks his and everyone ' s brains for dirt to fill Tuffy ' s ad. The complete staff membership — those that gave so generously of their time and ability — is on Page 286, but this should give you a timely picture of the offices of the scissors and paste saga, the Recensio of nineteen-hundred thirty-six! Elwood Spoonamore, Editor-in-Chief (right) Carlyle Jones, Managing BUSINESS STAFF Under Manager Yeck, As- sistant Managers Mautz and Pontius have heaved the circulation to a new high of 3,300, diversified the no tional advertising, and in creased local space. Sopho mores Coulter, Harris, Kelley and Weisberger are the ad vertising sleuths, while Bookkeeper Reedy keeps graft at a minimum. A newly organized promo- tional staff has (they think) helped advertising by con- ducting surveys to deter- mine the potential buying power of Miami students. FRONT ROW (Leit Kellev SECOND THIRi) ROW: r loneE BACK ROW Van . ' us J I. ina.Lh Davidson, lames Pontii Lee Lawrence, Holph Velloney. Don Stuv! Longley. Dick Reske Right): Dove Shaelier, Art Corwin, Gordon Cooj ■■Dick Freeh, Kathleen Steiner, Susan Groglode Tom Hopkins, Karl Fox, Dick Reedy, Virginia Niswongsr, Martha Zehring, loe Romano, Assistant Mgr., Chauncey Beagle, Scott Hodges, Ned Walker, Paul Gleichaul, Robert Mgr., Those not in picture: Harold Coulter, Seymour Weisberger, Hardesty, Lucille Fleeter, Kay Robinson, Isabelle EDITORIAL STAFF BOTTOM ROW ILc Charles L. Die THIRD ROW: Edv SECOND ROW: (News Ed), Bob Willy b11. top ROW: Carlyle 1 Mayer, Louise Bovard, MIAMI STUDENT Pounding out yarns to fill sixty issues of the Miami Student, the oldest college newspaper west of the Alleghanies, is just part of the job of the local outfit of scoops working in the Irvin hall newsroom. Sure it was founded in 1826, says Editor-in-Chief Spoon- amore, but drop around any week night and you ' ll see the sheet going through its semi-weekly found- ing. News or no news, the sheet comes out, seems to be the motto and the problem. Junior As- sociate Editors Meifort and Smith, guided by Editor Spoonamore and Managing Editor Jones, act as co- ordinators of alternate issues of the sheet when they head the newsroom gang on desk nights. Sopho- more News Editors Witty, Horton, Booth, Dragoo and Mitchell aid in the direction of head writers, copy and proof readers, and the beat reporters that pound the slant walk and corridors for news. Sports Editor Baker has his problems in keeping the sport- ing bloods informed, while Daley breezes around to social functions reporting on how slick the band was and who wore what and why. Jones scans the news for the scanner fans, while Eifort and Fries somehow get the low-down for the dirt hounds. Page Seventy-One ROBERT MAUTZ. Editor FRANK REIFSNIDER, Business Manager Who ' s Who and What ' s What at Miami, wonders every freshman in response to the nev environ- ment . . . Ansvirer: The M Book ... In it: Prexy ' s greeting, and advice . . . The songs . . . The yells . . . The Traditions and the History . . . Freshman tips . . . Get acquainted . . . The v ell used campus map . . . Then the rules . . . No Fraternity for a while; consult the adviser; No cars, they are not necessary; Indicate Sorority preference on a card, Be in at ten, except on Saturdays; Observe study hours; Sign out; Watch your cuts ; Go to As- semblies; Wear red and white caps; Try to act like upperclassmen, as nearly as possible . . . Athletic victories . . , and defeats . . . and sched- ules . . . Intramural explanation . . . many varied, previously unheard of, organizations . . . How to be a Phi Bete . . . The Miami Chest . . . Names and addresses of the department heads whom, of course, you should beware ... a complete list of Miami campus Greek clubs . . . The Calendai (vacations and so forth) . . . more scholarship conscience material . . . and the staff. Editor Bob Mautz, Women ' s Editor Marion Best, Business Manager Frank Reifsnider, and Art Editor Earl Eifort have mixed talent and knowledge in order to condense Miami University, University of Uni- versities, into one small, potent, indian-headed book. 66 M ' C€Cr Page Seventy-Two STLDENT-rACLLTy C C U N C I L ... a government of the people, by the people, for the people . . . .such government the Student- Faculty Council gives Miami. Here students, members of the faculty, and members of the disciplinary board get together to decide who will chairman a dance, how to apportion the student activity fees, or what changes should be made in campus activities. This year the Council turned detective for awhile to investigate the rumor that too many unfair practices accompany exams. Probing, witnessing, cross - questioning convinced the Council that the rumor was really truth, and revealed that professors in charge have had eyes which have seen not enough. Now the Council is recommending stricter vigilance, or exams in which books and notes can be used. The Council ' s latest innovation in the last few months is a contact method of learning just what students ' wishes are. Every Thursday before as- sembly the chairman and the senior class presi- dent stand out on Benton steps to receive re- quests from the students for Student - Faculty Council consideration. A pretty democratic set- up, don ' t you think? Hugh Black is chairman, Kenneth Clark, vice-chairman; Dorotha F edman, secretary-treasurer. Page Seventy-Three When you read over a list of Y. M. C. A. activities on the Miami campus, you almost go into a mental tail- spin. There are so many of them that our Y must be as restless as a windshield wiper. If you ' re looking for a job, get one from the Y Student Employment Bureau. Buy your second-hand book from the Varsity Exchange. Get the low-down on college at the Fresh- man Camp. Meet Galsworthy in the Reading Room; go ping-pong batty in the Game Room. If you ' re a freshman, get acquainted at the Mixed Mixer (rather a mix-up, but still a good ideal), where you ' ll find up- perclassmen as persistent as a dripping tap in pairing you off with other frosh till you find one to your liking. And if you are a card to play at cards, look in on the bridge sessions. Or, if it ' s the latest step you want, try Y ' s social dancing classes. Then again, if you ' re an independent man of brawn and of muscle who can run, hop, jump, or throw things, make a dash for the intramural sports organized by this versatile Y Asso- ciation. Any of you can get mental uplift from the speeches of the outstanding speakers Y brings to the campus. Among them have been Leo Kozycki, Roger Baldwin and Harry Laidler. Those not in the picture: Herman Weinstein, Forrest Williams, Robert Mautz, Ralph Burdsall. TOP HOW (Lelt to Right): den, Harold Home, WUlia Shidele - - William Shera, Mervin Emler, Edward Pulf, Ned Linegar. Cromer, Fred Hadsel, George Comienski. Dr. Wicken- stine, Ice Walton, Carl Bair, Harry Finkelman, James Burton Berg, Thomas Richard Oaklt ' fJMi ' r ynCA CABINET Page Seventy-Four rWCA CABINET TOP BOW (Leit to Right): Bettie son Elizabeth Seeley, Marion Bei Rothbaum June Harpster, Ruth H Nancy Caughe 5ach, Nancy £ Randolph, Alma : Ascham, Margaret Culbe Gladys Buchanan, Fannie Elizabeth Grill, Mary Richards If you want to loaf, don ' t go to college. But potential loafers, including most of us, didn ' t take that advice. So we say, Ingenuity, thy name is woman, for who but the Miami Y. W. has started a club for those loaf- ingly inclined, or should we say reclined individuals who came to college in spite of everything. Not that loafers haven ' t loafed before in this town, but when a fellow couldn ' t borrow a penny toward a Saturday night date or a co-ed failed to get her man, each used to loaf in melancholy solitude. Now the man meets the maid at the Loafer ' s Club and both live happily ever after. In fact, so many men and maids are loafing together these Saturdays that headguarters have changed from Hepburn to the larger Wells recreation room. But all the rest of the week Y women are busy, too. They sell you candy bars at bedtime in the dorm; they supply you with that last-minute Christmas gift. They visit hospital inmates, and they look out for Ox- ford ' s less fortunate children. Remember the time you got a physical pick-up at a Varsity Tea and a spir- itual one at a Y Vesper Service? And don ' t forget Y ' s Sisterhood or the Current Events meetings where you learned that Oxford isn ' t the only town on the map. Oh, we could go on, but let ' s stop here to give the Y. W. C. A. an ever-blooming orchid. Those not in the picture: Irene Moore, Betty Avery, Winifred Williams. Page Seventy-Five SPEArECS EUREAU aiz, N Shaw, H Kichey, L Bailey SECOND ROW: D. Miller, M. J, Eley. THIRD ROW: W. Kolb, T. Foley, M. H. Steed, Prol. A. L. Gates, J, Galbraith, H. Risinger. LAST HOW: R. Mautz, E. Wallace, C. Diener, Hear ye, all who can speak, but do not. Remember the time you so wretchedly stumbled on the third line of your Friday afternoon piece and vowed that one day you would sway, bend — nay, break an audience with your eloquence? Why not join the Speakers ' Bureau to keep that vow? Or if you ' d rather be talked to, why not let Miami solve your speaker problem? Low on funds? All it takes is a penny postal- Service of the bureau is free. Want a special talk on a subject not listed? The bureau will put a competent speaker on the trail of such data and prepare him to talk on the topic you ' suggest. What more could you ask? This all began three years ago when Uncle Harry Williams whipped the Speakers ' Bureau into being so that orators in the bud might blossom out to a Webster quality. Now his Speakers use soap boxes all over the state to tell Men ' s Bible Classes or Mothers ' Clubs about Diamonds or being A Bum for a Day or the Fine Art of Living. As the Walrus said, The time has come to talk of many things — and to talk often, at the rate of sixty times per month for the Speakers ' Bureau. One engagement always leads to another, so good are Uncle Harry ' s students. Those not in the picture: Betty Beals, John Duerr, Ruthanne McCoy, Charles Cowles, John Ingram, John Johnson, Elizabeth MacAUister, Thomas E. Adams, Harold Bush, Anne Baldwin, William B. Hoel, Arline Chalker, Arthur Robinson, Ruth Tollman. Who ever heard of big sisters sticking up for their little sisters, or vice versa ' We didn ' t till we found six hundred sisters on this campus getting along beautifully. In fact, Big Sister ' s chief aim in life was to serve Little Sister, and Little Sister was accepting with thanks. It all began last spring when Fannie Rothbaum, biggest of the Big Sisters, called for recruits among Miami women. To every girl who answered she gave the name and address of a 1935-36 freshman. Then Big Sister sat down and dashed off a get-acquainted letter to Little Sister, offering to tell her any- thing she might want to know, within limits, of course. September came. Big Sisters met Little Sisters — just one big, happy family. After hellos Big Sister asked, Sis, how ' d you like to com.e to a tea with me? And all the Little Sisters were so taken with the Big Sisters that they said, Yesl The tea was different from ordinary teas — no fixed smiles, no stiff my deahs. The Little Sisters met upperclass women and learned a lot of things every co-ed likes to know. And then the Sisters played games together and finally got around to drinking tea. By five that evening the freshmen knew they liked Miami. The Big Sisters who arranged these teas were: Pearl Drews, Elizabeth Edgar, Edith Faust, Grace Gerber, Gwen Jenkins, June Kennedy, Catherine Landolf, Pearl Lertzman, Marian Montgomery, Jeanette Van Gilst, Margaret Weber, and Winifred Williams. IF , |ilv ™ MIAMI SISTEI S €AilCCCN DELTA I IPPA CHARLES HEIMSCH, President hi TOP ROW (Lett to Right) Clark Ke Charles Ho e SECOND Lmegar Ned Yeck William Black Hiigh Finkelman Ha THIRD Oram Allan Spoonamore Elwood Jones Carlyle Williams, ' Forrest. BOTTOM Hcrne, Harold, Hadsel. Fred, Mautz, Robert, MoConnaughey, Robert. Omicron Delta Kappa — the impressive title lor impressive men who rate Ripley by being able to do everything and do it well. Of course you know them as the Carnival Company, putting out funnier and freakier freaks for the benefit of a scholarship fund. And at the Hop they tapped Mr. A. K. Morris, honorary member, and new student O.D.K. ' s. With his badge and his inborn sense of direc- tion any one of these men makes a good guide for visitors to follow. Which reminds us that in January our O.D.K. ' s guided themselves to Cincy to dine and basketball- watch with the U. of C. chapter. A holiday due a bunch of fellows who mean it when they say, At your service! Members of Alpha Sigma Circle are Charles Heimsch, Kenneth Clark, Charles Campbell, E. Jay Howenstine, Ned Linegar, William Yeck, Hugh Black, Harry Finkelman, Allan Oram, Elwood Spoonamore, Carlyle Jones, Forrest Williams, Harold Home, Robert Mautz, and Robert Mc- Connaughey. Faculty members are President A. H. Upham, Mr. A. K. Morris, Prof. B. T. Sandefur, Prof. R. B. Sinclair, Dr. A. C. Wickenden, and Prof. J. R. Breitenbucher. AiCCTAC BCACD Here ' s a Mortar Board with as much kick as an out- board and stirring up as many waves — you know, on this sea of experience some call college. Quitting the metaphor and skipping the unnecessary introductions — you know these women — we are about to bat out a catalogue of what they do to make our life more worth the living. Shall we begin with your bedtime hour when sleep creeps upon you, but, curses, so do pang- ing pangs that arise from nothingness. Wish for a nibble or a snack. Presto — there ' s a Mortar Board at your pillow ready to fill the vacuity. One nickel is all she asks for two soft slices of Ward ' s cushioning a juicy pork center — otherwise known as the f-lAM SANDWICH. Now Mortar Boarders don ' t even measure up to a baker ' s dozen, but they do a lot more than bring you tidbit lullabies. Men, they designed and executed those Spinster Sprint boutonnieres — lovely things of fringed radish and scalloped bean — that made your hearts leap that Leap Year night. Women, at the Spring Style Show they spoke to you of skirts and sleeves, showed you the correct robes meant for your wardrobe. Versatile? Members crepe papered that Homecoming Queen float. And in May they led wondering high school youngsters over the broad, but crooked paths that hold our campus together. In con- clusion. Mortar Boards — individually and collectively — try to serve, to get cooperation between senior hon- oraries, and to keep up a democratic spirit among Miami women. If you are a co-ed your next question is: How be one of them? Leadership, scholarship, serv- ice, character — they give you the right combination. So if you ever were a Girl Scout, you have a good start. Catherine Foltz is president of Mortar Board, Ruth Hill, vice-president; Mary Helen Steed, secretary; Martha Jacoby, treasurer. i m ' rai ' ' Pf ,r m ffWli mlm ' - m wUM I • mMml M iJiLi FRONT ROW (Lelt to Right): Prof H C Chnslofierson Prof C N Webb Ruth Irwin E ary Helen Steed, Ettie Cranch, Frances Talbot, Pearl Drews Helen Reed Russell Reaver Prof C W Kreger SECOND ROW Margaret Weber, Nancy Simpkmson, Idella Pindell, Katherme Ascham, Miss Hazel Spyk=r Esther Drill Douglas Wmi oci THIRD HOW David Buchanan, Jay Howenstine, Mrs Mary Agnes Brady, Prof L, S Brady, Miss Mary Spieler, George Watson, Elizabeth Grill, Everett Hales, Prol. W. Valter. FOURTH ROW: Pres , A. H. Upham, Robert Mautz, Prof H C Brill, Prof H. L, Chace, Karl Case, Robert Evans, , Cyril Corum, Kenneth Clark, Fred Hadsel, Prof. W H. Shideler, Miller, Rudolph Griesheimer. LAST ROW: Prof R. W. Edmiston. PHI CETA rAPDA A NATION AL SCHOLASTIC HONORARY Bayta Battles Beeta! Scholars knowing all things else know not how to pronounce the name of their fraternity! Chapters throughout the nation ask: Phe Bayta Kahppa, Phy Beeta Kappa, or the old Phi Beta Kappa — which? Consistency and phonetic correctness demand either of the first two, but the Key Men can ' t decide. Anyway, you know whom we ' re talk- ing about. Miami Phe Baytes are now having the spring of their lives celebrating the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Chapter. Elec- tion of new members ... a progressive dinner at Oxford Col- lege with Dr. William S. Clark of Cincinnati as speaker . . . presentation of the scholarship cups and the junior tuition award . . . initiation of alumnal, honorary, and newly eligible members of Baccalaureate Sunday. Full schedule even for Phy Betes] Phi Betes are NOT ' social bores ' , says Dr. C. W. Young, Col- gate psychologist, who for years has spied upon Men of the Key and can tell you just how they tie their shoe-strings or what they talk about at a Junior Prom. And if all Phi Betes are anything like Miami Phi Betes, we agree with Dr. Young that they ' re about the finest bunch of college people you can find. We who are only casually dipping ourselves into aca- demic work and who do most of our thinking in quotation marks can ' t help admiring these 3.5 students with character and real personality. Those not in the picture: Harry Finkle- man and Helen Rose. A NATIONAL FRESHMAN SCHOLASTIC HONORARY Smoke gets into Freddie Freshman ' s eyes. As he takes a breath of Kool (?) air and puts a match to his Old Gold, he feels like a Spud and longs for a Camel to take him away. Where is he? That ' s an easy one — at the smoker Phi Eta Sigma gives for the freshman with a three point average But Freddie doesn ' t play background long. When he sees that these Phi Eta Sigmas aren ' t at all aw-full — just regular fellows, he knows he ' s made a Lucky Strike. And so the smoker changes into a real bull session with no need for a red flag to keep it going. Something new and different this year is a system of public pledging. At assembly one Thursday, those scholarly yearlings who could boast of a 3.5 semester average lined along the platform in the limelight of the morning sun, while approving Miamians looked on. Later, Miami ' s intellectual cream of the crop followed Emily Post through at least a couple of chapters at their initiation banquet at the New England Kitchen. That night freshmen hung the first pendant from their watch chains — a key that really means something. Congrats! Frank Oram is president; Bill Shaw, vice-president; Bill Cromer, secretary- treasurer. Members not m the picture are Robert Armstrong, Harold Coulter, Paul Davis, OrviUe Edwards, Allan Holaday, William Kolb, Owen Lynch, Raymond Martz, Irving Rose, Sid- ney Spector, Roger Williams, Joseph Kneisley, William Luns- ford, and Herbert Markley. PHI ETA SIGMA ii!|n?i,ft 1 FRONT ROW (lell to right Frank Wolf, A A Leminge SECOND ROW: A. H. Up! Dick Cannghl, Robert Var THIRD ROW: C. W. Kreger, Jack Davis, Dean Ashbaugh, Ed Wallace, Chauncey B eagle, Harold Kinkley, SprouU- ance Berger, Ralph Schumon, Bert Mansell, Bob Redlin, Richard Troester, Arthur Siegel, Robert Mautz, Frank Oram, Wilson Weis, Russell Reaver, Richard Stc Fred Hadsel, John Galbraith, Ted Pe Page Eighty-One FRONT ROW , , . Cranch, Gi Dorotha Redman, Elizabeth Gnll SECOND ROW: Betty Richards, Jean Ballmger, Vf Helen Steed, Irene Moore, THIRD ROW: Elinor Hall, Roberta Endebrock, Anna M Hill, lane Carroll, Betty Burrows BACK ROW: Betty Peoples, Virginia Henry, Kathryn Ri Ascham, Ur: Kershner ontner, Pearl Drews, Marian Lampe, Louise Margaret Weber, Elizabeth Seeley, Kather- ALETHEN Al A NATIONAL HONORARY LITERARY SOCIETY Words, in a word, are the why and wherefor of Alethenai women. All Alethenai like to read words, some of them want to write words, and others (being women) prefer to speak words. Just to prove that Miami graduates do get into print, Alethenai used as its 1935-36 theme song, Works of Miami Alumni. And you would be surprised to know how many there are — all kinds, from verses about the moon to disserta- tions on vocabulary. At one meeting the theme song skipped a beat when Mr. Walter Havighurst, Miami professor, not alumnus, gave selections from an essay he was writing on Mark Twain. Today Alethenai women still repeat a couple of funny Mississippi river stories they heard that afternoon. In February, the Student suggested co-sponsoring a literary con- test with Alethenai. The paper was to publish prize-winning entries; Alethenai had only to put up money for the prizes. And Alethenai did! — one club that carries its purpose beyond the by-laws. We wanted to find out who the lucky winners were, but the day of reckoning is a month away and English majors are still thumbing Thesauri while we are writing this. Pearl Drews is president; Ettie Cranch, vice-president; Esther Drill, secretary; Mary Helen Steed, treasurer. Those not in the picture are: Eleanor Bissett, Betty Caughey, Virginia Crawford, Esther Drill, Margaret Evans, Josephine Fisher, Sieglinde Handschin, Ruth Hill, Rosemary Jackson, Sue Janes, Eleanor Mitchell, Sarah Moomaw, Martha Louise Saxe, Marjorie Schwegler, Betty Shera, Nancy SoUiday, Olga Gazdik. Page Eighty-Two A NATIONAL FRENCH HONORARY SOCIETY Frenchy? Mais oui, oui. Parisian cales, women, wines, drama museums, even Parisian accents — Beta Pi Thetas know them all. But the remarkable thing is that these linguists have never really walked upon Joan of Arc soil. Without even the help of telescope or trumpet their minds ' eyes and ears show them everything in France. What is their method? Under their president, Ettie Cranch, they have met once a month to hear talks about French Canada, the basque country, and Carcas- sonne. Then they sponsored an evening of French music, and twice took the road to Cincinnati to see the picture, Le Pecheur d ' Islande, and later Cyrano do Bergerac, starring Walter Hampden as the great Gascon of the great nose. Two other films they brought to Oxford, Madame Bovary and a French version of The Late Sir Christopher Bean. In class, of course. Beta Pi Thetas get true local color and characteriza- tions through the written word of Hugo. Corneille, Dumas, or Beaumarchais. Good students, they always find the right word at the right time. And so they travel through France even now, but as soon as their ships come in, they will climb aboard and turn them out to the open sea again, headed for le beau pays. Incidentally, Beta Pi Theta is affiliated with L ' Alliance Francaise. Those members not in the picture are: Robert Armstrong, Eleanor Bissett, Marjorie Carpenter, Henri Dumont, Caroline Dunbar, Robert Fisher, David Gatch, Laura Williams. BETA PI THETA - V . } ill FRONT ROW (Ictt lo right): Eleno Luci, Belly Robins n, Ettie Cranch, Marjorie Arnold, lean E SECOND ROW; ■. ' ..■aired Wilhams, Olive Gilbert, Ma y Louise Stone, Helen Reed, Elva Corel THIRd ' rOW: ' Dorothy Rothenberger, Margaret G. Web Idella Pindell BACK ROW: Prof W. M Miller, Frank Oram, Prof. L, P r, Bessie Drake, Ursula Kershner, Anna R Irvin, Russell Reaver, Prof. L. Brady. Page Eighty-Thn CLASSICAL LANGUAGE SOCIETY Dead languages? Greek and Latin aren ' t for the Classical Club! Once a month these Classicists hold a quorum where they talk about life as Caesar ol Aristotle knew it. To start the year right, they traced the elegy from Greek- Roman antiquity to Shelley. Then discovering that this would be Horace ' s two thousandth birthday, they did a sketch of If Horace Lived Today in which Horace dashes down by limousine to his country villa for the week-end and pecks out a verse on his Remington. Next the Classicists tried a few canes Italiae and — lest they forget the Greeks — gave the Judgment of Paris. And then they compared Greek and Roman women, leaving May for a picnic in the B. G. with more food than Latin. Milton Taylor is president; Jeanne Long, vice-president; Jack Mutchler, secretary; Ruth Liggitt, treasurer. Those not in the picture are: Nica Lavie, Ethel Miller, Carolyn Mattern, Dorothy Nicol, Bill O ' Malley, Wayne Offenhauer, Betty Perin, Forrest Palmer, Harry Price, Martha Park, Jean Schwartz, Virginia Smith, Alberta Stegemiller, Jack Smith, Frances Talbot, Ruth Volz, Archie White, Helen Wagner, Sue Ware, Thelma Watkins, Elinor Hall, Martha Billman, Jeanne Crone, Ardyth Kern, Dorothy Smith, Lee Bratton, Anne Baldwin, Betty Biller, Jack Crotty, Virginia Craw- ford, Alice Farrington, Ann Hardy, Louise Hagenbuch, R. Horton, Harold Holland, Torrey Adams. FRONT ROW (left to right): Prof. F. L. HadssI, Jeanne Long, lane ,,-r-,.„.,, rj., Stnckler, Kathleen Steiner, Phyllis Corya, Edith F SECOND ROW: Rodger Cotter, Elizabeth Gnll. Helen Thatcher, Ruth Dowds. Betty Bussert , Rutl ■r .:. Wiley, John Hurlburt. THIRD BOW: -:n Loos. Florabeth Hooper, lean Frechtling, Dorothy McClung, Elizabeth Giedem: FOURTH ROW: Flc Liggitt, Katherine Bauer, Ruth FIFTH ROW: Charles Diener, Elsie Belknap, Billie Williams. Helen Whiteman. Gladys Peters, Inez S BACK ROW; lack Llewellyn, Tom Taylor, Jack Reber, Clarence Stewart, Perry Cook, Israel Hughe CLASSICAL CLLL Page Eighty-Four C C M C L $ Kay Richards, ha, Bettie Sax A NATIONAL SCHOOL OF BUSINESS HONORARY Time was when the fair young maid who invaded the sacred realm of higher education who looked upon with — well, to say the least, not quite the tol- erance which the modern Joe College bestows upon his contemporary, the vivacious Betty Co-ed. Betty breezed into college determined to make a niche that would earn for herself not only the tolerance of Joe and her professors, but the admiration as well. She dashed hither and yon, apparently with not a thought under her bobbed hair. But back of the frivolity and seeming aim- lessness was a purpose that was not to be defeated by a few amused and condescending smiles. Betty was organizing. She wanted contacts that would be beneficial when she set out to make a living for herself. And so she helped to form Combus, an honorary society for Co-eds in the School of Business administration which encourages women to attain high scholarship as well as high professional ideals. Combus brings successful business men and women to the campus to discuss the various aspects and possibilities of women in the working world. It also offers a scholarship to a senior girl. Leona Elef is president; Jane Strausbaugh, vice-president. Sue Janes, secretary; Mary Jane Hovis, treasurer. Members not in the picture are Mattie Lou Saxe, and Doris Aschbacher. Those recently elected are Carol Campbell, Marjorie Hostetler, Jane Marcum, Peggy McCune, Bernice Morris, Ruth Pfau, Jeannette Rodefeld, Marjorie Schwegler, Lucile Stow, Josephine Fisher and Margaret Goebel. Page Eighty-Five FRONT ROW (leil lo right): Elizabeth Smith, Emma jane Gammell, Grace Gerber, Virginia Waldo, SECOND ROW: Elinor Hall, Ursula Kershner, Roberta Endebrodc. Marthina McCoy, Helen McCord. THIRD ROW: Nancy Caughey. Eleanor D. Mitchell, Ruth Tollman, Marcella Smith, Carolyn Klein. C W E N A SOPHOMORE GIRLS HONORARY Long ago in Britain ruled the Cwens, ladies of feudal lands who stood out from among their Anglo-Saxon peoples and worked to make their subjects happy. Today at Miami rule fifteen modern Cwens, out- standing sophomores of the campus who on May Day win crown and sceptor for their character, lead- ership, and scholarship. Being a Cwen means being a grown-up Girl .Scout who does a dozen good turns daily. Since Cwens live as counsellors in freshman dormitories, opportunities for service are always knocking. During the year Cwens sell red roses and chocolate bars at the games, visit girls who room in cottages, and give teas and a dinner for freshman women of high scholastic standing. Now, the Miami Chapter is planning for a national convention to be held in Oxford nex t fall. Active Cwens of 1935-36 are: president, Grace Gerber, secretary, Ruth Tall- man; treasurer, Elizabeth Smith; Nancy Caughey, Helen McCord, Betty Miller, Elmor Hall, Marthina McCoy, Virginia Waldo, Caroline Klein, Roberta Endebrock, Ursula Kershner, Emma Jane Gammell, Eleanor Mitchell, and Marcella Smith. The honorary faculty members of Beta Chapter of Cwen are Dean Hamilton, Dean Emerson, and Mrs. Glos. Alumnal Cwens who have acted as advisers are Arlene Chalker, Pearl Drews, and Irene Moore. Page Eighty-Six A NATIONAL MUSICAL HONORARY Sister, do you sing? Sister, do you play? — a piccolo, a trombone, or a big bass viol — anything from a saw to a pazooka will do. These music majors keep their meetings in a major key — plaintive minors out- lawed. We found that out when we listened in on their last get-together. There they were — Gantner fingering a sweet potato, Cleary buzzing along on a fine-toothed comb, and pledge Burchinal taking the melody with a shiny kazoo. The after-beats came from a Drews tin pan and extra syncopation from a twenty-five cent drum. They called themselves an orchestra and really did My Mustache is Growing and It was my Last Cigar with something akin to pathos. In fact we were so affected we couldn ' t stay for refreshments. As we went out the front door we could hear Miss Cotner calling for an intermission to read some discordant answers her pupils sounded when they beat around the measure and failed to score (boners). But in September Delta Omicron put its sharps and flats m order at the reception for freshmen. Anna Marie Gantner is president, Edna Compton, vice-president; Pearl Drews, treasurer; Aneita Cleary, recording secretary; Virginia Henry, corresponding secretary. Those not in the picture: « Helen Neal, Marjorie Ham, Martha Jacoby, Dorothy Gram. DELTA € HICK€N rtii ' l-j l ■C ' i SECOND ROW: Elizabeth Edgar, Psarl Drews, Maxine Carr, Carol Harpster, Virginia Henry. THIRD ROW: Thelma Kessler, Belty Rieser, Mary Eleanor Schiewetz, Betty Edson, Aneita Clear: Page Eighty-Seven sow iei:  = a); Msraars: SCQHD 20W: ?S3rl sacs SOW: l?.-i«r- T I F3os53r,_po?ot 5y : rELTA PHI rCLTA A NATIONAL PROFESSIONAL ART SOCIETY biit don ' t csk us to lepeoi it This ver - -vmte-up, though, is aity in so iar as it is mads up oi lines and Sis up spats. Now if it had good form, and a little color, it TS ' ould be art That should give you a t ague idea oi the sort of thing Delta Phi Delta oppredates. Tisdcs a month members oi this honorary get to- gether to tali about the better things in life, and particularly the artistic. They eTTidsntly put qucdity beiOie quantity, but the maxim safety in numbers might pro e profitable to the ranks of their odd thir- teen. FoT a Tft-hile these artists tried to beautify o-or campus, but -when the bhae-green cattle guards stood rxm and the arndy -sfrappers persisted in so aesthet- ically bespotting the Unireisity lawns. Delta Phi Telta iezided th ' Ot their efforts -wreie completely mis- :::;- ' :ir;::e- i -e- - r:r.5:.-_:.:n -rr—crriina therein creating agonn — ims nine r;- : ; 5:r ; :rr a con- test sponsored by the mag cr:r.e 7r.- ve fust vrhat the piize is, or for that marsr, _: -j:er5 .s any piize, nobody sssmis to know, definiiely. lis art for art ' s sake, you know. May Iheir coveiB coTer them with laurels of adiie-ement! Moigaiet Culbeitson is rrssider.- ?.ro=r: Selr-vc treasuier; Ruth Remle, sec- re-.z .v l emrers r.r: :r. -Jie laciuie cne Ernest Voll- Page TaetitTT-TSghl AN INTERNATIONAL PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITY Meet these folk at Folker ' s, BIG BUSINESS MEN, future Rotarians they are — getting the luncheon habit along with their law of diminishing productiv- ity. Twice a month they taste tasty food and talk business. Nobody ever thinks of missing a session — meal tickets are free. And after the demand and supply forces have worked themselves out along the food lines. Delta Sigma Pis cross their legs, blow smoke rings, and talk about bringing speakers to the campus or exchange money-banking theories. Some of those theories sound as if they ' re worth re- peating, but, economically stupid, we ' re afraid to go into them here — might get our gold and silver mixed. Along about spring Delta Sigma Pi grows big-hearted, declares dividends, and reinvests earn- ings in a few thick business books which they put in the library. A few months ago these executives- to-be went to WLW to see how air waves are treated and packed for shipment. As befits an international professional fraternity, this honorary actually holds pledge meetings. And for the elder Delta Sigs there ' s an Employment Agency in Columbus that brings them into contact with pay checks. Jack Loos is president; J. D. Reber, secretary; Jack Tatro, treas- urer. Those not in the picture are Winthrup Lane, William Thomas, Richard Young, Ivan Baker, and Richard Stilley. DELTA SIS HA PI cer, Thiele, McConnaughey, Ghest, Smeltzer, Malhias, ter, Bam, Greber. Werth, Browne, Ramsay THIRD Kerger, Looker, McNeal, Tatro, FOURTH ROW: Liles, Prof I B Williams, Cromer, Beerman, Beynon, Norris, Prof. C. R. Nis A NATIONAL HONORARY EDUCATIONAL SOCIETY If you are a school teacher of the future who takes things seriously once in a while, you may wake up some morning to find you belong to Kappa Delta Pi, international education honorary. The first meeting was a business-tea party combination to get the members into the swing of things and start the ball of discussion rolling. A month later the Kappa ' s flipped into formality and dined at Oxford College with a master of toasts, Dean Ashbaugh, and a master of speeches, Dr. W. M. Aiken of Ohio State University. And then the teachers acted like their own riotous youngsters at a spelling bee where they faced the brilliant Kappa Phi Kappa outfit. Dean Ashbaugh dealt the words in this new kind of con- test called Trappers. If one Kappa Delt happened to misspell, his neighbor usually put the letters into their right order, that is, until the Dean asked for the abbreviation of number. Even Dr. Heckert ad- mitted, You ' ve got me there! Hazel Spyker is pres- ident; Esther Drill, vice-president, Martha Jacoby, secretary; H. C. Christofferson, treasurer; Clifford Rust, reporter; Helen E. Page, historian; Dean H. C. Minnich, counsellor. Those not in the picture are: Esther Drill, Myra Poppe, Nancy Simpkinson, Dor- othy Dougherty, and Betty Shera. rAPPA DELTA PI FRONT ROW (leit to right): E hrow, R. Williams, S. Young, R. Irv Pindell, E. Bacon, H. Reed, H. Sp Bissett, E. Buyer, P. Drews, E, G s, I. Falknor, M, Jacoby, L. Rob- .e, I. Harpster, E. Buchanan, K. Moomaw FOURTH ROW: Dr. ■indie, Professor Christolfe I, L. Schlu18r. MM FHONT ROW (left E Mortashed, R- Be Ellison, C. Farrar. Petticrew, O. Har . McManus, D. Thsler, D. E. Wood L. Bullock. A. Tinker, D. Sprinkel. BACK ROW: lap lones, H, Reed, F L luett, .r M M Kress I Frec htlina, R. Weiss, M. L. THIRD HOW: A Sutton, F. E, Kress, E. McClelland, FOURTH ROW: C, Cumpston, D. Messier, K. Stromberg, B. Sweet, T. Eshbaugh, V- Lodge, L. Carlwright, M- Poppe, rAPPA DM SOCIETY OF METHODIST WOMEN Anchors aweigh! Set your sails and your compass; gel out your old salt legs. The good ship Kappa Phi is out on its 1935-36 Exploratory cruise. This crew of Methodist women is traveling around the globe to see places, and people, too. They intend to look into foreign mission fields, world religious problems, and the secret of international good will. Nautical may- be, but never naughty, these girls know how to take their warning signals and their harbor lights. They go places, see things, and have a rollicking good time under Captain McManus without ever so much as grazing a whale ' s backbone or an iceberg ' s front porch. Davie Jones doesn ' t scare them, they point their spy glasses to the flying gulls and keep their spirits on top deck. They know an S O S, too, when they hear one and are quick to the rescue, be it a Miami woman caught in a whirlpool of home-sick- ness or another drowning from a spiritual upset. Why, Kappa Phi ' s log is just one long happy story of fair weather — no storm or mutiny. Kappa Phis work together, so that when six bells strike, all is well, and they sail on, shipmates forever. Helen Reed is president; Flora Juett, vice-president: Genevieve Dunlap, secretary; Betty Jones, treasurer. Those not in the picture are: Esther Drill, Dorothy Evans, Lillian Prindle, Eleanor Prech, Irene Simpson, Betty Bussert, Jean Goodman, Thelma Stewart, Jane McCormick, Evelyne Robinson. Page Ninety-One BOTTOM ROW (left to right): Professor Russel. Delbert Miller, Merrill Grodm, Willis Cobb, Ralph B Smith, SECOND ROW: Paul McCrea, Cecil Swank, Sam Halter, Howard Heldman, Max Fink. TOP HOW. Paul Worthman, Walter McRoberts, Louis I. Brown, William Y. Conrad, rAPPA PHI rAPPA A NATIONAL PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION HONORARY Some of these honorary meetings seem as long as a year in bed and just as dull — but not so with Kappa Phi Kappa ' s. All these educators in the bud are as fresh as a daisy and bob about as easily. Jimmy Russell, faculty sponsor, dances right along with them, cracking his puns between minutes and mo- tions until every business session becomes as interestmg as your new neighbor ' s Monday wash on the line. Oh, these fel- lows don ' t grin all the time either. They like a serious moment every twice in a while. So they ' re really mouse-like before speakers like Dean Minnich, Superintendent Williams, and Calvin Young. Hearing true stones of naughty boys and g irls gives meaning to their Dewey-Pestalozzi theories and makes them wonder just what they ' ll do when Johnny tries pea-shoot- ing his way through the French and Indian War. Kappa Phi Kappa, as you may realize by this time, is a national profes- sional educational fraternity — just as active as its nomencla- ture is long, thanks to President agitator Grodin. And here ' s what Kappa Phi Kappas confess: Kappa Phi Kappa gradually breaks the truth to us about the perils of teaching . . . especi- ally women teachers. But in spite of everything most of us fall for some blonde before we ' re sure of a pay check, or even know the difference between the individual and the social con- cept of education. Merrill Grodin is president; Willis Cobb, vice-president, Paul McCrea, secretary; Max Fink, treasurer. Members not in picture: Allen J. Hamburg, Robert K. Harris, Ralph McCreary, Clarence Koppitch, Paul Oram, Herbert Smith, and Clifford Rust. Page Ninety-Two A GOVERNMENT HONORARY Betting on the next president ' Then give an ear to Les Politi- ques. They hold a mock national political convention (Repub- lican, to make it interesting) where delegates representing every state from Maine to Montana tote signs over their should- ers. These students are checking on the candidates daily, from headlines down to the finest print, so eventually they ought to be able to pick their man, unless a dark horse gallops in ahead. Then, Miami has state support; what do Miamians do for the state? Not enough, decided Les Politiques last fall, so they set about to discover practical ways in which college students might further civic welfare. City officials, social work- ers, better-house-and-garden promoters . . . Les Politiques in- terviewed them all for suggestions. And then to get Miamians into action they organized a Civic Volunteer League, open to everybody on the campus with any civic spirit at all. Les Politiques lirst announced and explained the Volunteer League at their assembly program; now the club is a powerful reality, ready to do big things. Harry Finkleman is president of Les Politiques; Ken Clark, vice-president; Dorotha Redman, secre- tary; David Buchanan, treasurer. Those not in the picture: Hugh Black, George Comienski, Howard Eley, Jay Howenstine, Ben Kitchen, William Kolb, Ned Linegar, Dorothy Messier, Thomas Miller, George Watson, and Professor Cottrell. LES P€LITICLE$ )tha Redman, Mary Minton, Georgi- BOTTOM ROW (lelt lo right): Harry Finkleman, Kenneth C ana Shelhouse, Charles Strosnider, Robert Mautz. MIDDLE ROW: Neville Abbott. Frank Koehler, Karl Koehler, James ShoUenbarger, Ford Worthing, Charles Dugan, Robert Stoer TOP ROW: Prof French, lames Phillips, Owen Lynch. Paul Davis, Karl Zipf, Page Ninety-Thri AN HONORARY LITERARY SOCIETY ru- r::zr.r ' r.- upon tne lecst proTrocoticn to imagine a society -J-.-- :s r_r: pleading, yea — nnploriBg its menibers to pcn dues sc ioi connngeni expenses may be met Thai is characteristic oi oil societi you soy? Oh, you pessiioistsl We can readily 3 yoia have never heard of the Liberal Arts Cliib. Liberal Arts wcE oinganized to bring together girls interested in literary ond sodcd activities. But to be a m.ember you must have a B overage iinih an A or B in English, Oh, the money? Well, for years the thrifty liierory-ites saved the sheckles that came in OS du Finally someone declared, The time has come for us to celebrate. Fost-depressicn, you know . . . Walter Hampton was pla Tng C%-rano de fergeiac in CindnnatL Why not go? And so on the third of March these girls gave a last tweek to ibeir bonnets and climbed inside two roomy buses to nose their -.vrciy to the nose-famous hero. June Harpster is president of Liberal Arts: Idella PindeU, secretcny ; and Emma Jane Gom- meH, treasurer. Inose not in the picture are: Jean Bowman, Imogens Boyer, Helen Brennon. Dorothy Brooks, Kotheiine Browning Alda Buckley, Maxine Carr. Ccroline Dunbar, Eliza- beth Giedemon. Jane Morcum, Betty MiUer, Eleanor Mitchell. Ann Noll, Eleanor Prech, Helen Reed, Catherine Reid, Fanny Rothboum, Ellen Stewart, Thelma Watkins, Grace Wagner, Deris Vance, IsabeUe Robbins. Lud. Hchinsim. GcEnmell. Hcroster. Williams . mcld Tcylor. Rcmdebush. WiAro -. Goehe! THIBO HOW: ■• - - - FODBTH BOW: LICEI AL ACTS CLLC Page Ninety-Four PKI ML l Vr A A NATIONAL PBOFESSIC : Fgi mi sol ii M !ifi!a 4 P- ' Smar- r: Siaag CTa c; •: . fenm Mtanii- ®se:. lEto T- Ml 5 gE 2SanstF- !K« FRONT ROW (leit to right): Richard Biery, Mary Helen Steed. Dorothy Rothenberger, Ettie Cranch, Jane McKinney, Betty Richards, Roger E Miller ' John B. Garbutt, Bertha Davison, Mildred ToUey, June Hake, Dale SECOND ROW: Edward Sk. Crosby, Jack Diver. THIRD ROW: Nelson Kleinfeld Cyrus Brenneman, Edward Lederman, Clarence Gallagher, BACK ROW: Frank Hale, Charles Hough, Melvin Gorsuch, Dr. Shideler, Lewis Roth, John Otis PHI SIGMA A NATIONAL HONORARY BIOLOGICAL FRATERNITY We gasped slightly, to say the least, when, looking over Phi Sigma ' s program for the year we see such unintelligible topics as Why the Social Scientist Repudiates Instinct as an Explanation for Behavior and Some Aspects of the Fossil Record of Evolu- tion. From all indications this bunch must be a genuine clan of intellectuals. And they know not one thing, but any number of things, for fossils and behaviorism lead to The Walking Drug Store, Hybridization of Roses, and Aspects of Chemical Warfare. Evidently, moreover, they also do em- brace the lean closer to life method, because on the same page we see THE ANNUAL FIELD TRIP in red letters. That ' s the time when Phi Sigmas scru- tinize the rocks that scuff their shoes, the bugs that sting their cheeks, and the flowers that make their hearts grow fonder. At night when they stagger into Oxford they really feel as if they know the world in which they live. Lewis Roth is president; John Duerr, vice-president; Bertha Davison, treasurer; Ruth Hill, secretary. Excepting those you see in the picture, the broader knowledge bent membership includes: Mary Badertscher, Jeannette Cenfield, John Deardorff, Richard Delp, Charles Heimsch, Ned Line- gar, Herbert Nelson, Richard Armacost. Edwin Ash, William Carr, Carl Gilcrest, Hiram Hardesty, James Shideler, William Stickney, Herman Todhunter, Arch Lang, John Schonwald, Mary E. Yoder, Robert Zipf. Page Ninety-Six A NATIONAL SPANISH HONORARY First El Club Espanol, then La Terulia, now the Alpha Alpha chapter of Sigma Delta Pi — there you have the history of Miami ' s Spanish honorary in a sentence. Every other week its senoritas, with combs in hair, and its seignors, with sashes round- about, tango over to a meeting where they talk and act as true Spaniards do — sing a little Carmen, wave red rags, review Don Quixote, we suppose. One night Mr. Baker spoke to them of jumping beans, sunned faces, bulls, hot tamales — all things Mexican. Some of Sigma Delta Pi ' s meetings are open to the public, so even if you don ' t own an accent you may listen in. The thrill that comes once in a season is the Spanish Night with drama, danc- ing, and dithyramb to show Miami students that Spanish life is more than merely American life set in a warm place to ferment. For 1935-36 Nancy Simpkinson was president of Sigma Delta Pi, Eleanor Bissett, vice-president; Marian Laird, secre- tary; Georgiana Shelhouse, treasurer; Mary K. David and Joe Shaw, program committee. Other members not in the picture are: Marion Best, Jean Bruckmann, Carol Campbell, Archie Hendricks, Mar- jorie Hosteller, Sam Lane, Gwen Lehman, Frank Reifsnider, Franklin Seller, Marcella Smith, Lucile Stow, Edward Van Boxel, Mrs. A. T. Hansen, Jean Bowman. SIGMA DELTA [)| FRONT ROW (Left lo Right) Laird, Marian, Goebel, Margaret, Luc SECOND HOW Miller, Charles; Simpkinson, Nancy; Peters. Gladys; Mitch Joy; Brenneman, Cyrus. David, Mary Kay, Minton, Mary; Gnmm, Evelyn. or D.; Bissett, Eleanor; Shelhouse, Prof Harry; daCri Jones, Prof. Wil Page Ninety-Scve FHONT HOW (Left to Hight): R. Miller, Proi. R. Strete, J. Dusrr. F Seller. 1 L. Warner, T. Perin, R, Henry, J. Garbutt, H. Funkhouser, J. Luecker, C. Br! W. MacFarquhar, Prof. W. Shideler, A. Palmer, C. Passel, J. Shideler. SIGMA CAMAiA EP$IL€N A NATIONAL GEOLOGICAL FRATERNITY Puzzle, find the rock-finders on this page. Really, it ' s easy. Miami ' s geologists are all about you — Sigma Gamma Epsilons who know a fossil when they see one and are tickled to make the acquaint- ance. They get around, do these scientists. In fact, not so long ago Jack Garbutt, Bill MacFarquhar, and Frank Seller swallowed the lumps in their throats at the thought of not being home for Christmas, then bumped through three flat tires and six long days to a California national convention. A trip worth taking, they say, what with special specimen and notable notes. And the other charms of Hollywood? While they were gone, back home rocksters brought to the campus a three reel sound movie of those belching craters, Krakatoa and Mt. Vesuvius, that made us devoutly thankful for our more or less static strata. And there was a Sigma Gamma Epsilon smoker, too, but we couldn ' t cover that. In other moments, of course, these fellows talk of quartz, granite, limestone, or cobblestones and tear up the Oxford landscape looking for sample copies of early editions. James Shideler is president; Jack Garbutt, vice- president; Frank Seiler, secretary-treasurer; Robert Higgins, corresponding secretary. Those not in the picture are Bert Grove, John Deardorff, Frank Reif- snider. Page Ninety-Eight A NATIONAL HONORARY ORATORICAL FRATERNITY The time has come, the Tau Kaps said, to talk of many things — of shoes, and ships and sealing wax, of cabbages and kings. Really, you ' d think Lewis Carroll knew our versatile men and women of de- bate when he jingled that jingle, because it suits the Taus to a Tau. They talk on and on and on, but al- ways about something, and they do it so well you just have to stop and listen, even if you ' re on the way to an end-of-the-month assembly. And for that matter, you ' re apt to hear them when and if you do get a seat at the Thursday session, for these orators put on the Fisk competition every year. This time Harry Finkelman won top place, with Frank Oram and Dick Howard taking second honors. Now, if you have any speaking aspirations and if you ' re an upperclassman, just borrow a soap box from Thobe and proceed to show what you can do. If the Tau Kappa Alphas like the sound of your voice, you may be made one of them. New members are chosen from men ' s or women ' s debate teams or from various elimination oratorical contests between fraternities and dormitories. lay Howenstine is president; Virginia Motz, secretary-treasurer. Glen Schaeffer is the only member not in the picture. Mr. Harry Williams is the group adviser. TAU I APPA A L P U 4. Let ' s all sing like Madrigal sings — if only we could! You have to put your do re mi ' s where they belong in any kind of a scale to stand a chance of even getting to the first rehearsal! Out of one hundred and fifty contestants this year only fifty women lived through the tryouts. During the hour of Christmas Carols at Presser Hall, Madrigal sang divinely A Little Bit of Heaven — and quick like a sunbeam we knew that that was the concert itself. The club sang from the balcony to an audience that sat in dim candle-light, and if we hadn ' t known the carolers were Miami women, we might have thought the angels had again burst into song. And with white formals and silver voices they were just as angelic on March sixth. That was the night of their Spring Concert when fifty of them followed the lead of Miss Lyon. Oh Suzanna — did they sing! After that an Amer- ican Lullaby slipped drowsily into Nightfall. Then the interlude of violin obligate, organ accompaniment, and an Edgar-Buchanan duo for Bach- Gounod ' s Ave Maria. Followed by Miss Lyon ' s interpretation of some modern things. All of this led to the climax — music written by Joseph Clokey, Miami graduate of 1913. First the lovely A Bird Flew and A Snow Legend and then, it being March, you know, they ended telling us How Summer Came. When that was over we could almost smell June roses and see June moons. We actually did eat June ice cream — thanks to Madrigal ' s no admission spirit. Members of Madrigal not in the picture; Lolah Emerson, Virginia Craw- ford, Alice Shuey, Harriette Lincoln, Betty Wolfe, Nelda Lou Poling, Aneita Cleary. MADRIGAL FRONT ROW (Lcil to Ri B, McCall, K Stoudt. M C. Harpsler, I Gmham D Kern, I, Aborn, D La chinal, P. Tripplehorn, E. Ma E Edgar, R Grc Robert! iimpkmso Tallman, Kenned ' y, Weinberger, E. B . Long, R. Matthe Lyon, conductor. J Harwood, lan, V. Henry. L. Miller, H. Park, McConnaughey, G. Buchanan, :x fc ' Bmff ' 1 1 1 f f W-.I 1 1 1 ■w i , r 1. t i f| ? V f w FRONT ROW (Lell to Right): F Dulisy, I Ga-bult, P Ch ROW: W Schaeler, F Barr, C Bennett, P Blaisdell, W B Mansell, J. Spielman, K Le Ganl, R Hayes, R Freeh, m, H Schneider, W, M am, F Hadsel, W lun Richards, H Stephens ' K Case, C Co W, Schonwald BACK ROW: D Battche MEN ' S GLEE CLLC Gleeful? Who could be more that way than the Men ' s Glee Club? — Glee in their eyes and in their voices; these singers sing as if they like to. Recollect? Here are the men who made you and Dean Alderman, too, laugh a little, cry a little, and prick up your ears at a Vesper Service. While they kept to the middle of the road for miles and miles in a stretch without ever bumping into each other, you kept to the middle of your chair and wondered where this chorus had been all your life. Softly at Nightfall When Moonlight Comes Stealing — ah, that stole softly to your heart, and Wagner ' s Pilgrim Chorus was positively chill-provoking. Maybe right now There ' s a Song in the Air with the Men ' s Glee Club back of it. Tune your ear to an air wave and listen to them tune their voices to the plea, Wanted: a Wife. But really, they don ' t mean what they sing — yet, although some of the overly modest members do insist that they ' ve furnished a flat. And you ' d never suspect that if they didn ' t tell you. Last week the club toured Cincinnati, particularly Cincinnati high schools, where they firmly convinced a few hundred senior girls that Miami is the only college. Dean Kratt also captivated the audiences with whatever it is he captivates us. Now these men are lending their vocal support to Choral Union for its concert early in May. And they know how to f — no, take their parts. Before spring, however, they hope to minstrel-wander over roads to the North to show that part of the state what they can do. Those not in the picture: Hugh Black, Albert Coate, Jack Davis, Robert Eckhart John Hesse, Harold Puff. Page One Hundred and One AjL CRCHESTCA More spaghetti! Let ' s have more spaghetti! No, this isn ' t a hash-house in the wrong end of town — just Dean Theodore Kratt trying to get his orchestra to give its all to an opening chord. His players actually understand an order like that, too, and give him what he asks for, especially at concerts when they rise to new heights and take passages so fast and furiously that the audience thinks they ' re professional. That ' s the idea we got when we heard them at Vesper Services one Sunday. After the mighty Overture der Freischutz they took us into minuettish Mozart with swishing skirts and sparkling chandeliers. And then they skipped a few generations to 1930 to let us wander about in Henry Hadley ' s Enchanted Castle. The grand finale, Ballet Sylvia, that broke the Hadley spell, left us gasping for breath. We could only applaud, but we wanted to stamp and shout huzza the way New York would, you know. Speaking of New York, good words about the Miami orchestra have travelled that far, even to the ears of Mr. Walter Damrosch. To show his appreciation of the work Dean Kratt ' s musicians are doing he sent to Oxford the original score of Mendelsohn ' s Hymn of Praise. Last night for the first time the Orchestra and Choral Union rehearsed together the Fantasia from Tannhauser and the Hymn of Praise for the concert in May. Dean Kratt dropped his baton and almost fell off the stage while try- ing to direct singers and orchestra at the same time, but in the end he pushed back his pompadour and added Not bad! So, when the orchestra tunes up in May, it ought to be ready to give a lot of real spaghetti. Page One Hundred and Twc The 1935-36 band is the best band Miami has ever had. Mr. Nermann wanted to shout that sentence to the press, but he had to whisper it — Cooks and Duffey were in the room. At that, the statement was impressive and, we took it, true, for who would know better than Mr. Nermann if a flutist forgot to trill? But Mr. Nermann ' s flutist always trills on time, and his brass players politely stop puffing long enough to let that trill get across to the audience. Like the teams they play for, these men put the accent on cooperation, the soft pedal on individual glory. They love art for art ' s sake, you can tell that by the look in the tuba player ' s eye. And often they sacrifice for art. Once Cincinnati mud led them into a cold, slew, heavy movement, but while their feet plodded a largo, their fmgers danced an allegro. Cherry couldn ' t lift his knees very high, but he did lift his chin, and gunman Childs, Fields, Sergeant, remembered to pull the trigger of his little black gun. That was the signal for sevent y brass buttons, the cymbal player has a reputation for slicing off a set per game. You ' re most apt to know Nermann men for their marches — things of a 4 4 rhythm, I believe, with coda and refrain. The band dees blow them well, letting trumpets hang a melody on the drums ' firm foundation. But like all true musicians these men play classical, tee. If you have ever heard them do A Day in Venice you knew they have a real technique. This year the band inaugurated a concert series on the campus and later took the road to Hamilton and Middletown. But they came back! Those not in the picture are Julian Spencer and Vernon Fryburger. THE BAND (1) Kerge . the somnanbulistic villair. terrifies us in the Fall Frolic (2) Luc.:. Bai ey. a real star, backs dreamy r; mai iticist Richards vrh o turns big bus. nss s man in ' The G.  at Broxopp (3; Rut h Anna Fisher and Nancy Shaw vie for the hero ' s love - . . fly at each others thr oats in If I Were King (4) Mo e of the Mid-Ye ar — the villain Richards 1 ghts a losing duel (5) Mary Hel sn Steed, aloofly irresistible (6) som e real local colo from a tavern Backstage Director Loren Gal es mou Ids a hero in looks as well . (8) some of he celebrities— Steed (9) Home (10) Debernardi and Chr stman (11) Richo rds. FRONT ROW (Left to Right): Prof L, Brady, Mrs M. thers, L. Bailey, E Francis. SECOND ROW: H Home, Frot E. Skerritt, P Christman, Prof. H. N. Abegglen, THIRD ROW: I Kerger, L Roth, C. Miller, J. Cattell, A. G SprouU Brady, M. H. Steed. D. Miller. E. Faust, V. Molz M J Caro- V. K lones. Prof. A. L. Gates, J. Richards. C. Brenneman Howenstine. C. Kuether. D. Buchanan. W. Yeck. H. Mahlig. yc MEI I IE PL iyECS A DRAMATIC HONORARY SOCIETY Spotlights, pit orchestra, footlights, curtain calls, applause suggest — the glamor of the stage! For a quarter of a century Ye Merrie Players have felt the thrill of it right here on Miami ' s campus. Maybe even now a Cornell or Hampden-to-be is doing a bit of acting under Mr. Loren Gates. Ye Merrie Players play plays the year around: first the rollicking Fall Frolic, then a fall play — for us The Great Broxopp with its beans and better babies — leading to a climax, the mid-year play — this season, If I Were King of Cockleshells and murder — in conclusion, the commencement play. You know as well as we what excellent character portrayals Ye Merrie Players give — particularly Mary Helen Steed ' s Katherine, Deber- nardi ' s Louis XI, Ruth Anna Fisher ' s Huguetee, and Home ' s Francois. But there ' s more to any show than lines and gesture. Mahlig, head of the stage crew, designs model sets, mixes his paints, then builds a full grown balcony guaranteed to stay above any hero ' s head. Miller, electrician, stays close to the controls, ' phone clamped over his ears, the better to take orders from Mr. Gates. And while Edith Fausl, property mistress, assembles her beer mugs and rapiers and looks for the villain ' s cane, Lucile Bailey, as costumer, checks every piece of clothing in the seven big hampers. Other observations while interviewing: . . . the players giving a reception at Oxford College for Cornelia Otis Skinner . . . com- mittee considering new members three times each year: a fair point system for eligibility . . . nor do all parts in the productions go to Merrie Players; there ' s open competition, but of course this organization stands back of every project Mr. (Sates undertakes ... the actors taking time out for two initiation dinners, aftermaths of the big shows. The officers are Mary Helen Steed, president; Lucille Bailey, secretary. Those not in the picture are Ruth Anna Fisher, Alma Molitor, Frank Reifsnider, Nancy Shaw, John Ingram, and Ivan Baker. Page One Hundred MIAMI - MCTH EC In our more sober moments of contemplation our thoughts engulf us when we try to imagine how many young Greek fraternity pledges all over the country today who, diligently learning the history of their organization, are s aying to themselves, Founded at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. And when we think of the millions that went before them that learned the same thing, the significance of Miami ' s fraternity history affects us rather forcibly. Miami has mothered some of the strongest and most famous fraternities existing today. Among those that have gained nation-wide recognition are Beta Theta Pi, Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Chi, Phi Kappa Tau, Delta Zeta, Sigma Delta Rho, Delta Sigma Epsilon, and Pi Delta Theta. Beta Theta Pi, for instance, was born in Harrison Hall in 1839, Phi Delta Theta in North Dorm nine years later, and Sigma Chi over Byrne ' s Drug Store in 1855. These three formed the original Miami Triad, an alliance which exists today on every college campus where the three fraternities are active. The most common social recognition of this combine is an annual Spring dance, an institution that is regarded as one of the high spots on the social calendar both at Miami and on other campi. Two fraternities. Phi Delta Theta and Phi Kappa Tau have recognized Miami ' s distinctive position in the fraternity world and have established their national headquarters here in Oxford. NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS DELTA THETA T iU NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS €P PCATECNITIES TOP Wickeie Black, . BOTTQ Walkii. la Chi; Powell, Brooks, Beta Theta Pi; Bell, William, Sigma Nu; Harold, Pi Theta (Zeta Beta Tau). HOW Gene, Delta Chi; Weiland, Robert, Delta Tau Delta; Williams, David, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; lack, Delta Upsilon; Shideler, James, Phi Kappa Tau; Hinkle, Lester, Sigma Delta Rho. I N T E R F R A T E R N I T Y COUNCIL If this isn ' t a potent organization it should be — consisting of the presidents of every fraternity. This august body meets every time they feel a definite need for united action for mutual bene- fit. They decide that ten o ' clock is late enough for a fraternity man to keep a rushee on fraternity grounds, and that hot-boxing is unethical. Just to prove that they will keep their word, each fraternity posts a fifty-dollar bond. In addition to this sort of thing, they solve problems concerning homecoming decora- tions, fraternity aid in the O.D.K. carnival, and cooperative buy- ing for fraternity boarding clubs. lack Messent is president. Charles Campbell, Phi Delt head, is not in the picture. Dr. A. C. Wickenden and Dr. A. H. Upham are faculty advisers. Page One Hundred and Seven rCATECNITr LITE Rushing ... get out the stiff collars ... the semi-annual nightmare ... and the rules no one follows. This or that pledge has a good or bad attitude. Pledge work every Saturday morning. Paddling, and initiations which often mean something. Intra-mural games . . . Lets get that cup! When there ' s nothing else to do Monopoly rears its ugly head. Those bull sessions late into the morning . . . removing the hinges on the padlocked ice-box. The bathroom jammed every morning at 7:30 . . . Who swiped my tooth paste? Group study- ing before an exam . . . Porter and his wares. Open houses on the week-ends and their usual toll of pms planted. Spring ... and football in the side yard. House dances ... you slave for hours . . . 7:42 the water runs cold in the showers ... and the dance is over in a second ... it seems. The perenial drunk, scholar, legacy, wit, pessimist, musician, smooth boy, athlete ... it would not be a fraternity without them. C ET A ALPHA CHAPTER On the corner of Campus and High Streets live the Betas. Rich in tradition and local color stands the century-old chapter house . . . only a stone ' s throw from the campus or town. The Betas, they say, are still making history. There ' s Higgins, for instance, who ' s been there almost as long as the fraternity itself. He ' s never been known to run out of stories or repeat himself. Bill Moos . . . always with some kind of a racket . . . candy, scalp rubs or what have you. Eichman the smooth boy always camera-ing or writing letters. Clemens bumping his head again and Landen getting a malicious delight in writing the interim. Witt, working hard as ever . . . without getting any credit. Home yells at someone, almost shaking the house down. Gilcrest . . . that strong, silent, heart t hriller. Christman tears off a few scales on Sunday morning while the rest of the house sleeps — or tries to. Oram in love . . . everything is so — o — o beautiful. Van Buren . . . always about ten minutes late to wherever he ' s going. Bachelor Shaffer tries — futiley — to get lover Longsdorf to study. Prexy Powell initiating reforms. Craft goes crazy trying to get a band for the Senior Ball. Cory . . . O — o — o — h Mad . . . McConnaughey, the most absent-minded guy in the house, shaves with all his clothes on. Erwine long- ing for passionate romance. Shera Inc . . . efficiency expert. Brandt trying to study. The tower room inmates claim to be the cream. Cornwall wants to be called King. Somer . . . get smart. Battcher ... his records. The Battler Hamilton. Hadsel drops in between meetings of one sort or another. Everyone wonders where Dempsey ' s pin will go next. Gussie and George keeping the boys well fed. Ma Troth ... as ever the perfect housemother Get the shovels . . . here comes Sollars with a few overstretched tales from the Court House. Cockerill, a bad penny . . . back again to fill in the gaps between sessions. Debernardi looks weary ... he can ' t find the right kind of a woman. Redbird . . . tripping the light fantastic over chair and table. Don your shin guards . . . Junk is practicing his dip again. Hovey, between toots ... on the trombone . . . helping Miller with his homework . Meier and Slagle with their inevitable . . . what d ' ya say ? . Jetter . . . smoothing up and then settling down to an evening with the Esquire. What next Eisenhut . . . will it be Charley Chaplain, Ted Lewis, or the way it ' s done back at Shaw? Horrigan . . . I ' m going to Europe on a freighter . The cronies . . . Mills and Finn always cooking up some pet idea or system. Baker . . holding on the rim to keep from falling in love. Young Oram . . . boy, do I go over big in Wisconsin . When the dining room window flies open, emitting melo- dious victrola music . . . when the brothers sit on the front steps and watch the girls go by in the sunlight . . . when, in the evening the few yard seats are at a premium , . . then Spring has come to the Beta A. C. Page One Hundred T H ET A PI Higgins, Edward ' 36, Xe eland; Shalfer, Elwood land Heights, Craft. No FIRST HOW Powell, Brooks ' 36, North Canton Somershield, Lynn ' 36, East Cli Elyria; Dempsey, Jack ' 37, Cle SECOND ROW Ferguson. Don ' 36, Cleveland Heights; Eichman, Middletown; Mautz, Robert ' 37, Marion; Christmai Middletown; Hadsel, Fred ' 37, Oxford; Witt, Sylv THIRD ROW Ficken, William ' 37. Cincinnati; Landen. Maurice Cornwall. John ' 37. Lore ngsdorf, 36, Day Paul ' 37, Shake Ci Norwood; Cle: ' 37, Cent! John ' 37, Conneaut, Richard ' 37. Ste Greenfield; Robertson, rigan, Robert ' 38, Cle liam ' 38. College Con Slagl. FOURTH ROW Gilcrest. Carl ' 36. Kent; Sollars. David N Y,; Eisenhut. Warren ' 38. Cleveland. land; letter. Edward ' 38. Toledo; Toney FIFTH ROW Goodyear. William ' 38. Uhrichsville; Brandt, Charles ' 38. Chic Washington C. H.; Long, Paul ' 38, Convoy; Oram, Frank ' 38. Swaim. Edwin ' 38. Cincinnati. Baker. John ' 38. Hamilton. SIXTH ROW McNauahton, Jack ' 38, Columbus; Hovey, Harold ' 38, Oberlin; Heights ' Stephenson, Hiram ' 39, Jackson; Beagle, Chauncey T , . T vine, Donald ' 39, Steubenville ' 37, Shaker Heights; Arthur ' 39, Cleveland; Walk E r EPPT;! C) ,c e o p. o f W O DELTA MIAMI CHAPTER Set apart from others of their kind, and across the campus from all that is good, the youths of the Triangle-Cross fraternity enjoy a single-blessedness not without its charms. Remember the train schedules tacked up on the dormitory door, and the trains the boys take when they go up to bed? And Wass preferring to sleep in a chair with an open book in his hand? The dormitory always about ten degrees below the temperature outside. The late-at-night radio audiences down- stairs, more an institution than a habit, when the boys gang around every night to hear the dance-bands. And the different personalities — McDonald is superstitious — he states that there are reasons . . . Red-topped Thompson on the books most of the time . . . Rogers talks about how a Coshocton boy made good in Pittsburgh. Kapp, so quiet when he ' s around that no one knows he ' s there. Collins when he matches his New York accent with Northway ' s Hamilton drawl, and Kuzyk, the would-be diplomat, when he tries to out-talk Doc Bushman, the embryo psychiatrist. Jarvis, the best checker player in the house; and Rodriguez the Spaniard — he ' s going through school on Spanish courses . . . Brooks and his talent for drawing. By their phrases shall ye know them — Kramer with his 1 can get a date any time, wanna bet? Nestor, known to his correspondents as Just call me Sugar. Nelson; earned the cognomen Sure-thing through his exploits and enterprises in and around Oxford. Whip Watkins always to have an active meeting — he ' s the Prexy. Shull futilely maintains that dinner should be served at six sharp . . . Willett boosts Cincy at every opportunity. The bull-sessions to which Nestor and Rogers played hosts are almost a tradi- tion for the back room. Likewise the Reverend Shaeffer and his smooth be- fore-meals prayers and his ugly after-meals jokes. Jack Armstrong, naturally called the All- American Boy. And the perennial Vernie Wass, slinging hash at the Oxford Restaurant in his spare time. So goes life at the house of Delta Chi, sometimes happy, sometimes not so gay — but always cherished by the boys who wear the pin. Page One Hundred and Twelve C ti I FIRST ROW (Lelt to Right) Watkins, Gene ' 37, Lakewood: Rogers, Robert ' 36, Coshocton; Shull. Robert ' 36, Shaker Heights; Bushman, John ' 36, Avon Lake; Willelt, John ' 36, Cincinnati; Shaifer, Glenn ' 36, Columbus; Nestor, Ronald ' 36, Pittsburgh, Pa. SECOND ROW Rodriguez, Manuel ' 37, Bridgeport, Conn; Kapp, Hubert ' 37, Oxford; Brooks, Nelson ' 37 Niles; Adams, Thomas ' 37, Brookville, Ind.; Noithway, James ' 38, Hamilton; Armstrong, John ' 38, Troy; Collins, John ' 38, Binghamton, N- Y.; Kramer, Fred ' 38, Fort Thomas, Ky. THIRD ROW Thompson, Edward ' 38, Gallipolis; Kuzyk, Michael ' 38, Cleveland; Richardson, Thomas ' 39, Hamilton; Cook, Gordon ' 39, Cleveland Heights; Priest, James ' 39, Schenectady, N, Y.; Quick, Joseph ' 39, Hamilton; Klein, Robert ' 39, Niles; Lingham, Edward ' 39, Dayton; Taylor, Howard ' 39, Euclid. jyPy ' ) O f (TS Page One Hundred and Thii DELTA rAPPA KAPPA CHAPTER Flanked by the houses of the Cross and the Sword-and-Shield, the Deke Dicky Club lives serene, and enjoys an easy access to lower campus. This year will see the graduation of fifteen seniors, twelve of them with their pins some- where else than on their own chests. They will be missed — and so will the memories of this year which will not pass with time. Sophomores griping because there is a house ruling against planting their pins . . . Chamberlain and McCauley threatening mutiny. Loos trying to be the thirteenth senior to shed his pin. Ramsey studying hard — Wellman threat- ening to become a model man. And Dipsomaniac Smith cavorting daily at Heck ' s and every Sunday night in Scudder room. The annual spring picnics . . . with all the trimming. Glosser sings the praises of Hal Kemp. Ohly fights with Saxe all day and keeps his room-mate up all night telling him how marvelous she is. Dutcher and his bi-monthly trips to Evanston — he still retains his title of the luckiest man alive in any kind of a money game. Looker comes out of his shell and becomes one of the boys once in a while. Smith, Fouts and Thiele, half of their time is spent in Delaware — the other half is spent writing letters to same. Durbrow and Heames helping Bertha Emerson enforce her no-petting rules over in Wells. The usual singing of the blues by the seniors when they have to pay their ten-dollar diploma fee. Hunter peddling his Doublemint gum and getting poor response from brothers after Beechnut put out better samples . . . Snooky Barrow trying hard. Camp close behind. Jilek getting free room for being house man (?) . Thomas tries hard to impress the soph omores with the importance of respecting tradition and seniors. Weekly argument on Sunday between Temple, Heames, Ohly, Camp, Barrow Black and Smith as to which three are to wait table for dinner . . . usually begins about 12; 10. The usual rain for the Dicky Club spring formal. Booby and Brown Bomber embarrassing and entertaining guests in the living room. Scudder room every Saturday and Sunday night, and the usual scarcity of lights — mecca for every one in general. Mrs. Bly having everything under control. The lawn furniture saved with only small loss. Things the Dickys always have to bother them . . . woo pitchers . . . Phi Delts . . . radio blaring at two a. m. . . . dice . . . bull sessions . . . eight o ' clocks . . . pledge meetings . . . dates . . . hangovers . . . Delaware calling . . . dirty shirts . . . borrowers . . . exams . . . bouncers . . . debts . . . Thus life at the Deke Dicky house. Page One Hundred and Fourteen Ei:)$IL€N FIRST ROW (Left to Right) Black, Hugh ' 36, Kingston; Lane, Wmthrop ' 36, Dayton; Dulcher, Lloyd 36, Latewood; Durbrow, Lamonte ' 36, Cincinnati: Wellman, lohn ' 36, Cleveland, Loos, John ' 36, Orange, N. I : Browne, Roger ' 36. Dayton; Thomas, William -36, Shaker Heights. SECOND ROW Ramsay, Tod ' 36, Cleveland, Jilek, Byron ' 36, Lakevfood, Heomes, Robert ' 36, Niles; Ohly, ' Wilham ' 36, Oberlin; Gorsuch, Thomas ' 36, Oxford; Thiele, Kenneth ' 37, Dayton; Fouts, J. D. ' 37, Dayton; Cronin, Ray ' 37, Elyria. THIRD ROW Browne, Frank ' 37, Aurora; Looker, Carl ' 37, Akron; Smith, Ralph ' 37, M Cleveland Heights; Barrow, Robert ' 38, Cleveland Heights; Postlewaite, Hunter, Fred ' 33, Evanston, 111.; Camp, John ' 38. Lakewood. FOURTH HOW Chamberlain. loe ' 38. Dayton; Otto, lack ' 38, Dayton; Dowd, Roben ' 38, Lakewood; McCauley. Gordon ' 38. Lakewood; Smith. Leslie ' 38, Dayton; Switzer, ' William ' 38. Toledo; Coulter. Harold ' 38. Oxford; Kepler. Norman ' 38. Dayton; Spielman, John ' 38. Marietta. FIFTH ROW Lynch. Owen ' 38. Oak Park, 111.; Minton, David ' 38, Hamilton; Alexander. Fred ' 33. Dayton; Levering. James ' 39, Dayton; Runkle. Robert -39, Scarsdale, N. Y.; Meyers. John ' 39. Dayton; O ' Hara, Lloyd ' 39. Union; Randt, Robert ' 39. Lakewood; Adair. Richard ' 39, Xenia. Page One Hundred and Fifteen DELTA TAU GAMMA UPSILON CHAPTER Gamma Upsilon is the ofiicial designation of the local Delta Shelter on Tallawanda Road. The house is noted for its well-kept lawn and the fountain in the back, but the boys are known for a variety of reasons. Prexy Wetland, for instance, is a dance fiend, and almost any time the vie can be heard blaring forth the strains of No Strings as Peewee goes through some tap steps with White, Breity and Wical, who are taking Phys. Ed. 390 . . . Toar Wollenhaupt, Kehm and Panuska tear down the house with their handstands and flips . . . Taylor teaches Ballard, Coppel and Shaw some bridge in the cardroom after searching all over for a complete deck of cards — Kerger and Albrecht are playing euchre . . . Arent goes to bed — for it ' s ten o ' clock . . . Phillis, another boy from the ice box, stops studying long enough to say hello . . . Coach Greenfield agitates the boys about the practice on Tuesday . . . Coppel shows them how it is done . . . Ziegler does all the work and is surprised when he gets help . . . White takes time out from Folk Dancing to lead second semester rushing . . . Pledges Fogarty, G. Cooper and Eckstein drop in long enough to agitate everybody . . . Briar Hall defends Fort Thomas with the help of Petty . . . Jordan a la Esquire . . . Roberts sings for Notre Dame in his sleep . . . Sheldon is coming on nicely . . . Ten-point Matre . . . Moore resting for a whole year after first semester rushing . . . Look in the Delta Gam section for Maclntyre . . . Hageman is finding what it is all about — give him time . . . Cook drops in from the libe once in a while . . . Pieper and Rossiter are in the banking business when they can lure some of the guUibles over . . . and don ' t forget Rossiter ' s drawings . . . We saw Spohn once all year — Roth twice . . . Bull Dawson hikes down for meals . . . Richards struggles hard with the Glee Club so called . . . Wop Dela Motte does his best to keep Clark, Schatz, Fogarty and Sadlock out of trouble . . . Art Cooper and Lahodney try to look dignified as befits their positions . . . Barnum runs all the errands that Gallacher doesn ' t . . . Fullerton is the smart boy of the class . . . Olin is a good call boy . . . Geason should move in with Jordan and Roberts . . . The Chillicothe bunch uptown. Palmer, Wiseman, Mutchler and Chester are still in school, so we hear . . . Pledge Overly is another Chillicother . . . Norwood still has his hopes, but Kay holds out . . . Simpson planning innumerable trips to Columbus . . . Davis is the smooth egg of the bunch . . . Sharp, Fryeburger and Smith are fitting in nicely Lilley belies his name ... If you ' ll notice all the boys have ducked their caricatures — particularly Jordan, Matre and Shaw . . . That ' s the bunch in a few nutshells. Page One Hundred and Sixteen DELTA M FIRST ROW (leil to right) Weiland. Robert ' 36. Hamilton: Ballard, George ' SB, Evanston, 111.; Coppel, Wil Dayton: Fisher, Ford ' 36, Cincinnati; Kerger, John ' 36, Ashtabula; Mclnlyre, Ale Mutchler, Jack ' 36, Chillicothe; Norwood, John ' 36, Cincinnati, SECOND HOW Palmer, Forrest ' 36, Chillicothe; Panuska, George ' 36, Cleveland; Pieper, Harry ' 36, Dayton; Pearce, John ' 36, Struthers; Wise- man, Robert ' 36, Chillicothe, Ziegler, Albert 37, Cincinnati; Shaw. Joe ' 37, Lakewood: Simpson, Gilbert ' 37, East Liverpool: Arent, Herbert ' 37, Hamilton; Dawson, Howard ' 37, Bryan. THIRD ROW Hall, Oliver ' 37, Fort Thomas, Ky.; Kehm, Charles ' 37, Hamil J. P. ' 37, Sandusky; Wollenhaupt, Glen ' 37, Cincinnati: Lodri Wical, Exley ' 37, Reesville: Hageman, Fred ' 38, Dayton. FOURTH ROW Jordan, Nelson ' 38, Sandusky; Leon, Irving ' 38, Lakewood: Phillis, Avery ' 38, Warren; Richards, James ' 38, Dayton; Rob. Don ' 38, Bellefontaine; Rossiter, Richard ' 38, Dayton. FIFTH ROW Albrecht, Walter ' 38, Toledo; Kagey, Daniel ' 38, Greenville George ' 38, Cleveland Hts.; Chester, Bill ' 38, Norwood: Barnum, William ' 39, Lakewood; Cook, Ned ' 39, Bay Village. SIXTH ROW Cooper, Arthur ' 39, Lakewood; Cooper, Gordon ' 39, Youngstown; Eckstein, Thirl ' 39, Salem; Fogarty, George ' 39, Bulfalo, N. Y.; Fullerton, Robert ' 39, Lakewood: Gallacher, Douglas ' 39, Hamilton; Lahodny, George ' 39, Cleveland; Olin, Charles ' 39, Akron: Overly, Don ' 39, Chillicothe: Sadlock, Edmund ' 39, Belleville, N. J.; Schatz, Robert ' 39, Cincinnati. ., : • ,o r o :0 e.. r. ( gi -O o - B. 1 ill _3 4 ' Jk A. : ' ' c ii I Page One Hundred and Seventeen DELTA MIAMI CHAPTER It isn ' t every house that can boast of having three telephone connections, but the Vine Street gang can and do — and use the three to check up on each other. In the mornings — Modarelli telling the wake boy to come back in fifteen minutes . . . every one trying to snap out of the arms of Morpheus. The gales that come in through the dormitory windows . . . Dick Oakley snores so loud that the other boys can ' t sleep . . . pillows flying through the air. Peewee Rolfes, how did he get that name? The bull gatherings all end up in the penthouse. Dixie Creel persists in underestimating his grades. Below — Bills are due. Don Juan Stewart, the great lover. Pokey Tomkutonis polishing apples from C ' s to A ' s. Fangboner griping because his Junior Prom job wasn ' t a paying one. King Thompson with his bear coat. Worthing worrying about his girl ' s telegram which the brothers opened for him. Husky Petrich prac- ticing for his danse de ballet. There are three Thompsons in the house this year — several years ago there were three Taylors. McNeal, Cleaning and Pressing. Horton, charging it to R. B. Horton. Crotti — They can ' t kick me out of school. De Rosa — On to Ethiopia. Cotter — Rajah Foolem. The white shoes fluttering up the street at the first signs of spring. Dutch Holland developing his left arm on West and his right on the javelin. The click of poker chips from the game room before study hours. Effort looking for Guz. Morneweck trying to single out the monotones when the boys get together to sing. His I ' ll be damned, when Messent tells him he can ' t play the piano. Hazen Ephriam Morneweck — that name. The rush for the Plain Dealer after eleven o ' clock . . . hiding it under a cushion in the davenport during lunch time. Eifort and Price laughing at their own ugly jokes. Fleming going to bed early so he can think up some poetry. The discussion clubs every other Thurs- day night, with some prof as the feature of the evening. Open house — every one seeks out the chapter room with its one etching . . . looking at pictures. age One Hundred and Eighteen IJI)$IL€N FIRST ROW (Left to Riglit) Messent, lack ' 36, Ashtabula, Lewis, William ' 36, Ashtabula; Holland, Harold ' 36, Lakewood; Below, Robert ' 36, Lakewood; Dumont. Henri ' 36, Cleveland Heights; Eilort, Earl ' 36, Barberton; Taylor, Millon ' 36, Cincinnati; McManus. Thomas ' 36. Youngstown; Carr. William, Sp Ed., Richwood- SECOND ROW Creel, George ' 37, Uhrichsville: Dugan, Charles ' 37. Cambridge; Fangboner, !. Howard ' 37, Fremont; Oakley. Richard -37. Cleveland Heights; Pults. Ray ' 37, College Corner; Price, Harry -37. Forest. Rausch. Eugene ' 37. Dover; RoKes, C. Richard ' 37. Sprmglieid; Stewart. Donald ' 37. Cleveland Heights THIRD HOW Stoer, Robert ' 37, Cleveland Heights; Trumbull, Wilson ' 37. Johnson City. N Y,; Worthing. Ford ' 37, Mt Gilead; Horth. Robert ' 37. Port Clinton. Lano. William ' 37. Port Clinton; McNeal. Thomas ' 37. Cleveland; Tomkulonis. Frank ' 37. Calumet City. Ill,; Lewis, Wayne ' 37. East Cleveland; Hurlburt. John ' 38. lellerson FOURTH ROW Loeb. David ' 38. Ashtabula; Oppelt, Edwin ' 38. Lakewood, Benton, Neil ' 38. Edgewood. Pa.; Thompson. John ' 38. Pittsburgh. Pa.; Cotter. Rodger ' 38. Springfield; Crotty. Jack ' 38 . Sharonville; Fleming. James ' 38. Detroit. Mich.; Morton. Richard ' 38. Bedford; Harshman. Donald ' 38. Oxford FIFTH ROW Modarelli. James ' 38. Youngstown; Montville. Alfred ' 33. Middletown; Streeter. Clarence ' 38. Port Clinton; DeRosa. Ralph ' 38. Ashtabula; Deaton, Paul ' 39, Columbus; Memel. Scott ' 3 ' 39. Hamilton; Morris. Richard ' 39. Columbus; Snyder, Richard ' 39, Hamilton. ' .C f ,Cy O C C V HunclrccI and Nil PlHI DELTA OHIO ALPHA CHAPTER Situated in the end man position on fraternity row, the hall of habitation of Phi Delta Theta is in a singularly handy place — near the Gym, near Tuffy ' s, and across the street from the U. The Phi tribe is numerous, boasting luminaries and satellites and such among their ranks. Each of the boys has his own manner, but remember those jokes which Heimsch always has on the tip of his tongue, and Harr ' s I ' ve been discriminated against? Every time some one mentions a girl, Taylor says, Does she know me? Ask Pontius about the time he had a mountain lion in his yard, or ask Monroe about his golf score. The good comments and criticisms put out by Senator Clark. Armacost, either on his way out to Western or on his way back from there. Seller, happy over a raise in his dish-washing wages. Moose Thomas breaking so many dishes that he ' s practically working for nothing. Jack Smith boosting Guy Lombardo. Foley tearing his hair and trying to get enough rest durmg track season. Wolfe griping about the wastefulness about the house, and the need- less use of so much electricity. Crosby lamenting that both his girls sit in the same Psych class. Fries agitating for something or other. Howenstine ' s effi- ciency (?) in waiting table. Harr gets out a good prayer every once in a while. Witham floods the dining hall with music . . . The phonograph takes a beating after every meal, espe- cially the Hal Kemp records. The time the house was ransacked. Some one was always chasing Holmes for something. The big Thanksgiving celebration in Cincy. Kohler got back at the home town girls by planting his pin on Cobb. When Campbell graduates they will lose two boys, Charlie and his dad . . . trapping. Chorus Leader Garbuttski. Sauer, big game hunting in Yellowstone. Van Boxel, Boon and Tessie. Bryson . . . Betty . . . Columbia the Gem of the Ocean. Llewellyn . . . Betty Lou . . . You gotta be a football hero. Cook of the big ears, big feet and big dances. Mitzi Green. The competition between the first and second floor dormitories. Haymow Bair says, Gee zooie, fellas, as Warden does gymnastics on the furniture. The time Ross hit his head on the sink and had amnesia for several hours. Caricatures in the Rogues ' Gallery. The sideshow antics of the sophomores. Witty, Hartle, Reisinger and Baker. Seller ' s trip to Hollywood with Garbutt and Warden. Dillon and Taylor always arguing. Open Houses — the time when the light bills go down . . . everybody gets thirsty and has to go to the fountain in the stairway. — Life in the Phi Delt warren. Page One Hundred and Twenty THETA 4 FIRST HOW (Leit lo Right) Campbell, Charles ' 36, Ashland; Clark, Kenneth ' 36, Dayton; Fries, William ' 36, Dayton; Heimsch, Charles ' 36, Dayton; Howard, Kent ' 36, Niles; Howenstine, Jay ' 36, Elyria; Munro, Robert ' 36, Indianapolis, Ind ; Garbult, Jack ' 36, Lakewood; Sauer, George ' 36, Marietta; Morris, WUIord ' 36, Oxford; Armacost, Richard, ' 36, St. Bernard. SECOND HOW Blickensderfer, Philip ' 36, Oxford, Buchanan, David ' SB, Newton Falls; Bryson, Robert ' 37, Hagerslown, Ind.; Pontius, James ' 37, OrrviUe; Crosby, Dale ' 37, Bellevue; Dillon, Lewis ' 37, Hamilton; Foley, Theodore ' 37, Akron; Foltz, Robert ' 37, Marion; Gal- legher, Clarence ' 37, Columbus; Greene, Earl ' 37, Mansfield; Halter, Samuel ' 37, Oxford. THIRD ROW Harr, William ' 37, Hamilton; Holmes, Robert ' 38, Canton; Kroner, Robert ' 37, Marion; Llewellyn, Jack ' 37, Lakewood; Cook, Perry ' 37, Mansfield; Proper, Walter ' 37, Defiance; Seller, Frank ' 37, Lakewood; Shellhouse, Carl ' 37, Oxford; Storer, William ' 37, Middletown; Spitler, John ' 37, Middletown; Smith, Jack ' 37, Dayton. FOURTH ROW Taylor. Thomas ' 37, Akron; VanBoxel, Edward ' 37, Lakewood; Warden, George ' 38, Lakewood; Wolf, Judge ' 37, Coshocton; Witham, Stewart ' 38, Canton; Shrader, Earl ' 38, Pittsburgh. Pa., Scheible, Wilbur ' 38, Akron; Bair, Carl ' 38, Akron; Baker, John ' 38, McConnelsville; Barr, Fred ' 38, Dayton; Faison, Sherwood ' 38, Cincinnati; Harris, Richard ' 38, Ashtabula. FIFTH ROW Hartle, Robert ' 38, Lakewood; Hitchcock, Robert ' 38, Evanston, 111.; Jacques, Edward ' 38, Cleveland Heights; Kelley, Hoyt ' 38, Ashtabula; Nelson, Harry ' 38, Dayton; Bradshaw, Robert ' 38, Bexley; Possell, Charles ' 38, Indianapohs, Ind.; Pool, John ' 38, Dayton, Risinger, Harold ' 38, Alberta, Canada; Warren, Edward ' 38. Cleveland; Richards, Richard ' 38, Lakewood; Sutherland, Malcolm ' 38, Akron. SIXTH HOW Dick ' 38, Oxford; Witty, Robert nd; Ross, John ' 38, Troy. PLEDGES Throves, Bill ' 39 Fre Cambridge; Mcllyar, ' 39, K Stout, Tom ' 39, Fre ;s ' 39, Gallon; Herrr lit flft) ilE fL;it£ ' S 2££J2l Page One Hundred and Twenty-One PHI rAPPA ALPHA CHAPTER Way out at the end of Tallawanda is the Phi Tau iarm, the last outpost of civilization toward the open north country. But segregated as they are from all the refinements of life which the other fraternities boost, the farmer boys have their fun and good times, and personalities which go to make life for them. Chief Shideler and his little black book with its names and data for any and all occasions. Koppitch from the farm to the ranch and from the ranch to the farm. Brute Zipf dividing his time between Wells and his classes. Goon Spencer has tried all year, against great obstacles, to whip the Glee Club into shape. Snowshoe Platell fighting the fierce winds and trying to keep the house warm. The sandwich man and the midnight feeds. The late con- ferences and bull sessions. The library in Shideler ' s room. The great array of photographs of the fairer sex which crowd all the dressers. The atmosphere of aloofness from other fraternities on the campus . . . the many pseudo-intellectuals. Kolb, the senator from Dayton, political boss. Crunch Wagner, a good head- waiter. The all-afternoon treasure hunts which end up with an open house and food. Bob Young doing his best to snag some new pledges. About fifteen radios in the house — always with different programs. The out-vmtaged cars which make the rear of the house look like a second-hand car lot. Don Stuver with his continual questions. Hageman and his tall tales. Dick Delp and his Why. Goniph Herron infesting the house with his Irish-ness. Garibaldi Keim and his caustic wit. Van Ausdall and his Schick razor, playing hell with the radios. Wimp Schauer and his obtuseness. Open Houses ... the boys under the piano. The rush for the bathroom . . . standing room only . . . the notes left on the light cords . . . wake me at seven-forty-five . . . The thump of the bass notes from the radio shake the walls. The whole house looks like an editorial office when the Link is in process of conception. When there are pancakes for breakfast the group descends on the dining hall in a body. The beehive dorms — too hot in summer and too cold in the winter. — It ' s a great life in the country in the farm house. Page One Hundred Twenty-Two TAU FIRST ROW (leit to righl) Shideler, lames ' 36, Oxiord; Delp. Richard ' 36, Canton- Herron. Richard •36, Westlield. New York- Meyer, Edward ' 36. Troy; Hageman, Chester ' 36, Oberlin; Schauer. Robert ' 36, Dayton; Koppitch, Clarence ' 36, Cleveland; Van Ausdall, Hugh ' 36, Oxford; Zipf. Robert ' 36, Mineral Ridge. SECOND ROW Faso. Joseph ' 36, Portland, New York; Spieth, Robert ' 36, Bedford; Arnold, Robert ' 37, Findlay, Dunker, loseph ' 37, Norwood; Spencer. Julian ' 37, Charleston, West Virginia; Moon, Adelbert 37, Westfield, N Y., Emler, Mervin ' 37, Coshocton; Wagner, Ray ' 37, Cleveland; Young, Robert ' 37. Portsmouth THIRD ROW Minotti, Alfred ' 37, Youngstown; Platell, Edward ' 37, Cleveland; Burnett, Joseph ' 37, Bellefontaine; Eley, Howard ' 37, Union City, Ind.; Pilmer, Gordon ' 37, Ashtabula; Stilley, Richard ' 37, Pittsburgh, Pa ; Davis, Paul ' 38, Casstown; Spence, John ' 38, Cleveland Heights; Cook, Wendell ' 38, Toledo. FOURTH HOW Morrow. David 38, Cincinnati; Berger, France ' 38, Camden; Kolb, William ' 38, Dayton; Gohlke, James ' 38. Findlay. Walthers, Donald ' 38, Hamilton; Waite, Max ' 38, Westfield, N. Y.; Drake, David ' 38, Ripley; Becker, James ' 38, Lakewood; Stuver, Donald ' 38, Barberton. FIFTH ROW Cromer, William ' 38, Findlay; Lingler, Martin ' 38, Hamilton; McCreary. Ralph ' 38, Oxford; Honnerl, Sheldon ' 38. Mt. Healthy; Ehinger, Robert ' 38, Cleveland; White, Elroy ' 38. Washington C. H ; Heiland. Hugh ' 38, Trenton; Sanders, Maurice ' 38, Steubenville; Meder, Robert ' 39, Lakewood; Asbury, Charles ' 39, Hamilton SIXTH ROW Becker, William ' 39, Canton; Newburgh, Richard ' 39, Jamestown, N. Y.; Jones, Everett ' 39, Jamestown, N. Y.; Rehman, Neil ' 39, Lorain; Cntchlield, Richard ' 39, Barberton; Velloney, Ralph ' 39, Barberton; L ' Estrange, Jack ' 39, Lakewood; Keeling, Virgil ' 39, Mt, Healthy; Hopkins, Thomas ' 39, Ironton; Hetzler, Robert ' 39, Youngstown. P .e iT :.« p C p r% f p. f 0 ' p. o TT r1 Page One Hundred and Twenty-Ttir sieviA ALrhA. OHIO TAU CHAPTER Tc TBCsi i£ the jercie -se ifie zximpus fes Sg .SIbfc iias -sral prssazBah- ise 3srasiEi23=;ed ±x ' is 3ed aga., fee isnn ieason thni g3r- «ips n -upsjnnsros to Tipnn- ■' fe rrn g isrn sss a: Sgma Aikfes Igsflcci. . aa - riai n iox iferadsd Se isothsis icTPe Twisne ssr lbs irgic oa s as fe iiEbstbHr or uDt it sshiM he 3sm-iissd] ■rCcky ±snn s rsss -f fee ma— crrasnl aEdit-Kfe. 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I esoe., lu.i Lssd iyy ins Tin-zfete,. _ ' io: i:Lmjs zsvsr s-rrs rrmrm issH lass a3D fritnxnlH -IhgJIil CnHEiiry S irnrriit.i tjd rsiaiian Id iiifte x_-. _ ' . - Tnziflinr srfbr ■■v ' zrszS- iizi! — Qiv h i v i h i Hosl ia n • ' • i - ,- -jt=rT ' z- — ' - gsiET-iDj Jeaife in J i M F g mr JB -jz. — rjzfs . .. i ?=r- -j nj i tstce tez - - ' ' zsims 31 -wis SDILE T T rsn -wToiiag ii r-p n .LDs; sc_ ' : - ; s ene mnn ssisr teqeeei yna ,n: in ±DB Rtfi • ' n - - i !i ii rnH -v=.-t- r_ n.z:n ' - ::n n •th= ' sE st c zz g3=B — lifWEgs rrm f ' -i !- zz z A. rsmarn, msnnnESS en El SILC S , ISions. Sja rt J37,San iltoji:CSiUlijn8.aiJBStf37,:-5fc WJHonD 5S,.Hite;aoraBi.WJUinio 3 ,ffliiaE. Sorry jS,3rsaairanaaJs,Ihia;:tSnr«,atn . ISlKi c, 311;; KoKi3,3ijSKU 36,ni=BO;f Limn: Smifc, -Sbot S. , 3So7 n; Xi  te. KII J jS, iHmniittai. SBOzcn, Wiljarri , Sonauaty; SlBOPn, Ojcnflici :3e, Mfe .- ■WCilibmiE, SnSmni ® , Hii3s; %m Oaiin). Max SIGMA ALPHA CHAPTER The memorial of Alpha, once sacred and hallowed ground where the Original Seven allowed their brain-child to blossom forth, now remains more than a tradition of the past — a home reverberating with the shouts and sometimes atuned harmony of the shower-takers Sweetheart of Sigma Chi -ing, when the brothers are not riding someone. Kingfish Henry being told he ' s not doing right by Mauer this year, by ardent basketball fans . . . ShoUenbarger telling an uninterested group how he re- tained his most cherished possession — a wrist watch — in times of stress . . . and Leapy Henrich, Boss Tweed of the campus, sits in an easy chair, expounding the facts of life to Captain Maxwell, who naively takes it all in . . . and Leapy refusing any project without his 20 °4 cut . . . Trevey Benney in the arms of Morpheus . . . perpetually . . . the steady click of pool balls drifting up from the Bumming room where 29 point pledges study with the cues. The Monoply fad brought to the house — on the house — by Benney and Henrich, and nobody else knows how to play it . . . anything for a pair of dice . . . Headwaiter Maxwell trying to decide whose apples he will polish at the dinner tables . . . Co-eds taking the traditional beating in the fireside discussions ... at least the fire ' s pretty . . . Briner, the white hope of the Golden Gloves, turning out to be a white elephant . . . Fifty million dollars for a Bumming room, and all the amateur wrestling matches take place in the living room . . . the new cook all a-flutter in her new kitchen . . . Steward Whitaker fainting when a brother happens to like the meal — and says so . . . Badeye, Sucker Haine keeping the more foolish brothers in spending money. Meifert advising Two Beer Rudman in his romance with a sorority rush captain . . . our budding journalist seems to know more about love than he does about newspapers, yet he talks constantly of heads and make-up . . . which after all relate to both co-eds and newspapers . . . Don Blank trying to keep a card index of his every movement in life . . . Shepard trying to remem- ber what happened to his coat . . . yet insisting he ' s not foggy . . . Spook Heisner smiled once and immediately his name changed to Grief. Higgins trying out an atrocious dance, and contemplating hitting Jooss for a job . . . Spieler in the Saint ' s Rest, You telling ' em . . . and when Holland runs in from the sleeping porch to the Rest for the fourth time, begging the stayers up late to choke the radio, it really is time to go to bed. And so, with the endeared words of Dear Brothers, We Who Are United, the lads go on their way, with their White Crosses and their fraternity. Page One Hundred € li I m FIRST ROW (left to right) Henry, Willard ' 36, Lees Creek; Shollenbarger, lames ' 36, Ham; lones. Carlyle ' 36, Newark; Lane, Sam ' 35, Cincinnati; Sill, Edwc Trevose ' 37, Cold Spring Harbor. L. I., N Y. SECOND ROW Logan, Austin ' 36, Youngstown; Heisner, Robert ' 37, Lorain; Ho ' Maish, Robert ' 37, Wyoming; Maxwell, Hugh ' 37, Liberty, Ind-; Goslee, Thomas ' 37, Cleveland; ' Whitaker, Robert ' 37, Lakewood. THIRD ROV McFarland, Kenneth ' 37, Clairsville; Thomas. Oliver ' 37, -Wakei Blank. Donald ' 38, Wapakoneta; Briner. Robert ' 38, Cleveland, Haine. Jack ' 38. Geneva; Roahen. Dan ' 38. Springlield, Shepard, Bruce ' 38, Chnstiansburg; Rapp, lohn ' 38, Batavia, Hohn, James ' 39, Dayton; Bern wick, Howard ' 39, Jamestown, N. Y ; Gander, Fred ' 39, Cambridge; Harding, Richard ' 39, Cine Fort Thomas; Howell, Richard ' 39, Xenia; Jackson, J, G. ' 39, averly, SIXTH ROW srt ' 39, RushviUe, Ind.; h Jsser, Arthur ' 39, Wapako Spetnage!, Theodore ' 39, Robert ' 39 Gallip Juinn, Jack ' 39, Bro cothe, Bachmeyer, iball, Oliver ' 39, Cleveland; Pidgeon, Charles ' 39, Wil I Y ; Saxbe, John ' 39, Urbana; Whelan, John ' 39. Rich Fort Thomas, Ky, ___ T. S] Twenty-Seven SIGMA EP S I L O N N U CHAPTER Fire, iire, fire . . . The Sigma Nu ' s probably claim that they are sending their members into the world fired with enthusiasm. At least old man fire visited the local chapter first at Church Street, next gutted Thobe ' s mansion, and early one morning a couple of years ago gave the boys an excuse for re- modeling their present house. At present a varied crew twists the radio dial to get Germany (via Schenec- tady, N. Y.). Prexy Bell, the man who left the music to go ' round and ' round (swing) is being shown up by the tunes that the versatile Cory, his musical successor, scribbles out whenever he can push Smith (Smythe) from his inse- cure seat at the piano. It ' s a wonder to all just how Hunter consistently drags down straight A ' s and still finds time to tell all the boys how he attended school with the Mills Brothers and to play Business in F with his brother trumpeter Goon Reifsnider. Doubledrool spends most of his time worrying about bills, those unpaid or the Yeck, who does his worrying about Student rates, brand new dates, and three room-mates. Beerman (3.2%) and Hardesty pitch it on the intramural field, too, where Wally Eitle (who shifted the tax for an A) hopes for a tug-of-war series where Schuman and Fox (beef trusts) would be in their element. Schwab, the only man in the house who can sleep on sofas in cold weather and not wake up corrigated, has been kept awake ' till the wee hours while Yaphammer Rudyk gets three days ahead on his letters to Cleveland. Doc Jache the weasel holds the monoply on unrelated facts and unfinished arguments, Byard on Realsilk salesmen, dance bands and varied social functions, and Farkas on refusing dates to the Gold Digger ' s Ball. But the whole house gets together when following Nixon in a cheer for the Scotts who have proven invaluable to all. Typical goings on are . . . Vulture ' s Club ... the Yellow Peril, Jr. dishing out dirt . . . butch night . . . few pin plantings as cigars are expected . . . bob sled parties ... the mysterious Arthur Shell . . . And it is as such that we see the boys of the White Star who hold down the corner lot in new Fraternity Square. Page One Hundred and Twenty-Eight N L FIRST ROW (Left to Right) Bell, William ' 36, Cleveland Heights; Beerman, Robert ' 36, Toledo, Luecker, John ' 36, Evanston, III; Yeck, William ' 36, Akron, Hardesty, Hiram ' 36, Paulding; Rudyk, John -36, Cleveland; Schneider, Herbert ' 36, Ravenna; Byard, Bryce ' 36, Hamilton; Nixon, Keller ' 38, SandyviUe, SECOND ROW Hunter, Richard ' 37, Piqua; Schwab, Hugh ' 37, Toledo; Reiisnider, Frank ' 37, Akron; Eitle, Walter ' 37, Lakewood; Engelman, Thomas ' 37, South Euclid; Swanson, Herbert ' 38, Cleveland; Reedy, Richard ' 38, Barberton; Fox, Karl ' 38, Akron; Fell, Eugene ' 38, Elyria, THIRD HOW Ireland, Robert ' 38, Hamilton; lache, Fred ' 38, Dayton; Hartwell, Paul ' 38, Geneva; Smith, Warmg ' 38, Cleveland Heights; Votav , Galen ' 38, Ravenna; Walter, George ' 38, Ravenna; Strickland, Robert ' 38, Cleveland Heights; Schuman, Ralph ' 38, Cleveland Heights; Cory, Norman ' 38, Hamilton. FOURTH ROW Farkas, Robert ' 38, Cleveland; Hodges, Scott ' 39, Oak Park, 111,; Sprinkle, James ' 39, Kings Mills, Shaeffer, David ' 39, Canton; Scott, Arthur ' 39, Oxford; Leininger, Albert ' 39, Findlay; Kirstein, Bernard ' 39, Parkersburg, W. Va.; McGough, Kent ' 39, Lima; Arey, George ' 38, Cincinnati. ZETA BETA ALPHA PHI CHAPTER Happy though isolated, fraternity means as much to the boys of Zeta Beta Tou as it does to the fraternity man in the heart of fraternity row. Memories of fraternity life will find their way to the minds of these boys for many years to come. Probably the most important will be the feeling of hope and excite- ment circulating throughout the house over the question and subsequent decision in favor of going national. Mort Weingart ' s infallible memory has become a sort of by-word. Sandy Katz and his sax. Levinson and Aurbach in perpetual argument. Schwartz ' main topic of conversation lives out at Western. Weisberger on the horn. The seven-thirty quiet hour. The bear rug. Irv Robinson the expert hash- slinger. Marv Rubin and all his troubles. Leshner the card player. Sid Levin- son spending m.ost of his time on the books. Weiss being conspicuous in those Russian pajamas. Weisberger still troubled by the ghost of the Sophomore Hop. Jack Rose trying to borrow something most of the time. Mendelson and his weekly trips to Hamilton . . . The indoor baseball practices. Leshner ' s naps every Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. Harold Cohen enthusiastic about golf. Nate Strauss super-salesman. Reis talking about Baby , the flame in Cincy. Pledges worrying about when the eight-foot paddles are to be used. The time someone tried to get away with the new cup. Dormitory windows being broken to let the late-comers into the house. Page One Hundred and Thirty T A L TOP ROW (Left lo Bight) Cohen, Harold (Pi Theta) ' 36, Woosle Samuel ' 36, Youngstown; Strauss, Nathc Cleveland, SECOND ROW Soss, Bernard (Pi Theta) ' 36, Euclid; Leshner, David ' 37, Hamilton; Robinson, Irving ' 37, Cleveland; Swartz, Arnold ' 37, Brockton, Mass.; Katz, Saniord ' 37, Cleveland. BOTTOM ROW Reis, Robert ' 38, Cincinnati; ' Weisberger, Seymour ' 38, Barberton; Weiss, Benjamin ' 38, Cleveland; Gariinkel, Charles ' 39, Cleveland; Strauss, Benjamin ' 39. Hamilton. J J idikSUM LATE PLECeCS AND STCAT GCEELS Tau Delia; Lennard, Ge ' 39, Ind-, Phi Kappa Tau Robert ' ' 39, Elyria, Delia Kappa ' Epsilo Bom. Henry -39, Barllesville, Okla., Sigma Gildersle ve John ' 39. Hudson, Sigma Chi: Puil, Edward ' 36, Nswporl. Ky., Alpha Kap Lester ' 37, Clncmnali, Sigma Delta Rho; Caudill. Darrell. Middletown, Sigma Delta Virginia ' 37, Pitsburg , Kappa Alpha Theta. Afraid of making up their minds the wrong wa-y, these men deferred pledging last fall. But after a month or two the-y decided that whither one ' s roommate went thither one ought to follow, or that this bunch really had one be-eautiful house, or that that crowd offered the best looking pin. Furthermore, these students remembered that the ' y who hesitate too long ma-y be ignored — all of which led them to sa-y Yes at the end of the first semes- ter. Now each of them is a -youngster in a big, happy family, having lots of fun with the brothers, and working, too, what with a three months ' handicap and lists of founders, chapters, Greek letters, etc., to learn. And you will notice that some stray Greeks have strayed among them. These men and women have come to Miami from other campuses where they belong to brotherhoods and sisterhoods not represented in Oxford. As transfer stu- dents they soon caught the Miami spirit, but they remain loyal to their own sororities and fraternities. The late pledges are Howard Davis, George Lennard, James Barnes, Robert Better, Henry Born, and John Gildersleeve. The stray Greeks are Edward Puff, Lester Hinkle, Darrell Caudill, and Virginia Niswonger. Page One Hundred and Thirty-Two Friendly rivals are these members of Pan Hellenic Council, representative upperclassmen from every sorority on the campus. How to rush, when to rush, whom to rush — Pan Hell decides the answers to those questions. And as they say it shall be done, so is it done. Sometimes they have to handle not-so-pleasant-problems that con- cern Seagram evils, football boo ' s , or exam coopera- tion. Once a season Pan Hell pours a tea for all Miami pledges where the youngsters have a chance to get ac- quainted and to learn a little about each other ' s organiza- tions. In March the Council tried something new and different — a Pan Hellenic dance at Oxford College where Bob Martin gave of his rhythm and melody to Deltas, Betas, Chis, and all the rest. These Greek letter women have the right cooperative spirit; without it Miami sorori- ties could not be what they are. Those not in the picture are: Sylvia Bausch, Kay Hibbert, Helen Avery, Kit Rhoads, Gretchen Heingartner, Belle Sweely, Marjorie Carpenter, Jean Frechtling, Marian Lampe, Crystal Hayman, Ettie Cranch, Phyllis Kreuzwieser, Caroline Dunbar, June Cook, Nancy Smipkinson, Catherine Landolf, Bertha Davidson, Dorothy Barkman, Marian Fricke, Isabelle Robbins, Mary Jean Drummond, Margaret Weber, Edna Bimeler. TOP ROW (Le; Pitts, Madlyn; Gilbert, Olive; Floeter, Verna; Petry, Margaret: Strenick, m: Redman, Dorotha; Hartman, Mary Ellen; Withrow, Elizabeth; Thayer, Kreilick, Janet; Calladine, Martha Louise; Steed, Mary Helen; McCord, Helen. PANHELLENIC CCUNCIL Page One Hundred and Thirty-Three SCCCCITy LIFE Rushing— that ' s the word for it , . . scrambling, with dignity, of course, and in one ' s smartest outfit, in and out of rented Maxwells from breakfasts to luncheons, to teas to dinners . , . a hayride now and then to break the strain— all this to capture the smoother gals . . . some really inspiring song and ceremony . . . pressure, too . , . pledging brings on an aftermath of shoeshining, laundry bag mailing, rug sweeping, learning the seven obligation, the three- fold purpose and taking them seriously— more or less, arty little paddles almost too pretty for what we suppose they are intended . . . weekly meetings in Harrison . . . taking it at a round table . . . agitation for a Pan Hell building on the campus . . . Homecoming: each sis- terhood trying to float a float; this year Zeta Tau Alpha cleaning up all other competition with its Old Dutch ... the sorority smg: notes worth noting ... tea dances more famous for black velvet than tea . . . spring formals that you wait all year for . . . Fleshman-Wain: Of course we look the way they say we do . . . initiation: the pin, impressive corollary politics and all that go along ... no trouble selecting the man or woman to honor with your X . . . and the beauty contests — so many pretty faces and so well distributed . . . dues due . . jellying an afternoon away ... at the Carnival . . . confessing you ' re a freak, after all . pledges building up a three story banquet for less active actives ... a coat of arms-ish plaque ... it never happened before: Pan Hellenic dance, a glorified League of Nations affair. We put a repeat sign after it . . , all this in the omnibus of sorority life. i ' ' ' M I 41. -iW m m ALPHA CMICKCN PI OMEGA CHAPTER Dunbar, of the Oxford shoes and cheaters . . . Hardy kindergarten-ing with a set of jacks . . . Long alias Vac gathering all the dirt . . . Kreuzwieser prac- ticing making eyes at a picture . . . Hanson purling . . . The two Millers . . . Harris and Fran Cenfield, en route to the show-house . . . Edgar singing such a high C that she gets dizzy ... A new Smith-Tallman invention — a silencer for Oxford College ' s third floor . . . Thompson nearing the exclamation point . . Bollinger stepping the latest terpischores for Dahlstrom and Ricker . . . Giffin sketching Cook . . . Phyl Hoffman laughing — at the sketch or the sketcher? . . . Weyman horsing around in boots and saddles and stuff . . . looking for someone to ride with . . . Bailey and Carothers Kate Cornell-ing in Harrison . . . Lindamood whistling for Helmkamp, a woman who comes when she ' s called . . . Matthews, L. Miller, and Mitchell harmonizing Melancholy Baby in a corner ... I. Fisher and H. Hoffman tit-tat-toeing in a corner . . . Lang and James hanging the ever-dying butcher . . . Shakespeare comes to life ... J. Cenfield teaching botany . . . McAllister Demosthening an S. S. B. speech to McAllister . . . Finkbone paging through a long letter . . . Ascham telling how to make straight A ' s . . . Noakes trying to look indifferent . . . Davis and Baldwin learn how to spell sacriligious . . . Booth talking at length about the short length of girls ' dresses . . . Liggett and Rush — May we leave early? . . . Farley stamps approval on the non-babbling, ever-warbling Brooks . . . Page One Hundred and Thirty-Si: $ C R € C I Ty FIRST ROW (Left to Right) Long. Jeanne ' 37, Convoy; Cenfield, leanette ' 36, Chicago, 111,; Hardy, Frances ' 36, Lakewood; Kreuzwieser, Phyllis ' 36, Youngstown; Ascham, Katherine ' 37, Findlay; Bailey, Lucille ' 37, Greenville; Brooks, Dorothy ' 37, Middletown; Corolhers, Mary Jane ' 37, Chicago, 111 ; Ceniield, Frances ' 37, Chicago, 111. SECOND ROW Dunbar, Caroline ' 37, Worthington; Farley, Mary Anna ' 37, Bellevue; Hanson, Bettie ' 37, Manslield; Harris, Ann ' 37, Bellevue; MacAllister, Betty ' 37, Hopkinton. Iowa; Baldwin, Madeline ' 38, Dayton; Ballinger, lean ' 38, Greenville; Baum, Ethel ' 38, Cleveland Heights, Becker, Lots ' 38, Oxlord, THIRD ROW Booth, Muriel ' 38, Baltimore, Md,: Cook, lune ' 38, Dupont, Ind ; Davis, Rebecca ' 38, Hamilton; Edgar, Elizabeth ' 38, Wauseon; Finkbone, lean ' 38, Middletown; Fisher, Josephine ' 38, Camden; GiHin, Mar tha ' 38, Manslield; James, Anne ' 38, Canton; Kline, Martha ' 38, Dayton. FOURTH ROW Lang, Wilma ' 38, New Albany, Ind.; Miller, Leolyn ' 38, East Cleveland; Mitchell, Eleanor ' 38, Lebanon; Rankin, Irene ' 38, Zanesville; Rice, Marilyn ' 38, Zanesville, Roudebush. Martha ' 38, Brookville; Smith, Elizabeth ' 38, Worthington; Stucky, Dorothy ' 38, ' Woodburn, Ind.; Tollman, Ruth ' 38, Canal Winchester. FIFTH ROW Thompson, Willa Jane ' 38, Washington Court House; Vogt, Isabella ' 38. Dayton; Weyman. Virginia ' 38, Middletown; Blair, Jane ' 39, Girard; Dohlstrom, Shirly ' 3S, Youngstown; Daniels, Edith ' 39, New Rochelle, New York; Fisher, Harriet ' 39, Union City, ind.; Helmkomp, Mary ' 39, Dover; Hollman, PhyUis ' 39, Paulding. BOTTOM ROW Keller, Betty ' 39, Canton; Liggett, Louise ' 39, Gahon, Lindemood, Eileen ' 39, Dover; Matthews, Ruth ' 39, Chagrin Falls; Miller, Dorothy ' 39, Urbana; Miller, Marian ' 39, Lakewood; Noakes, Judy ' 39, Lakewood; Ricker, Muriel ' 39, GaUon; Rush, Mary ' 39, Greenville; Thomas, Marion ' 39, Washington. D. C. « ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA ALPHA CHAPTER Nancy Simpkinson hurrying to another meeting of some sort or other . . . Mary Lou Hubbard doing her interpretive dances . . . Hilda Winemiller and Doris Rohn trying to write freshman themes . . . Ruth Prottengeier in her red coat, complaining about chemistry . . . Landolf and the diamond on her left hand . . . Betty frown- ing over a lesson plan for tomorrow . . . Winnie Huston eating chocolates . . . Mitzi teaching the infants over in McGuffey . . . Elizabeth trudging out to Presser most of the time . . . Edith Coughlin chasing a hockey ball around . . . Betty Nellis — dream- ing . . . Juanita Jacobs getting ready for a date . . . Remle dream- ing about her third-graders . . . Geisler and Pence playing bridge . Mary Hover trying to finish knitting that sweater . . . The Nordley sisters . . . Molitor in a Dayton V-8 . . . Page One Hundred ALPIHA $€CCCITy FIRST ROW (Left to Right) Simpkinson, Nancy ' 36. Piqua; Giesler, Ruth ' 36, Portsmouth; Harpster, June ' 36, Cairo; Molilor, Alma ' 36, Russell Point; Pence, Mary Louise ' 36, Jackson Center; Remle, Ruth ' 36, Cincinnati; Falknor, Mary Jane ' 36, Covington; Withrow, EUzabeth, Special. Reily; Bowman, Jean ' 37, Lima. SECOND HOW Hover, Mary ' 37, Lima; Landoll, Catherine ' 37, Chicago, 111.; Ford, Mary ' 38, Youngs- town; Lookhart. Eleanor ' 38, Norlhiield; McMechan, Eileen ' 38, Hamilton; Schnorrenberg, Margaret ' 38, Sieubenville; Hartman, Mary Ellen 38, Geneva; Hubbard, Mary Lou ' 38, Youngstown; Huston, Winifred ' 38, Dayton. THIRD ROW Jacobs, Juanita ' 39, Lima; Morris, Elizabeth ' 39, Gomer; Nellis, Betty ' 39, Lima; Protten- geier, Ruth ' 39, Lima;; Rohn, Doris ' 39, Lima; Winemiller, Hilda ' 39. Lima; Bartels, Frances ' 39, Bellaire; Guthery, Esther ' 39, La Rue; Harpster, Carol ' 39, Cairo. . .N 4. M wem . Page One Hundred and Thirty- CETA PHI ALDHA UPSILON CHAPTER Cliffy Williams late to class . . . Dottie Barkman needs a rest after the strenuous days of rushing . . . Bud Davison uses phytopath- ology principles and is re-elected prexy . . . To-and-fro Fricke spends just another week-end at home . . . Hill and Jacoby off with their boy-friends somewhere . . . The Chirstmas party goes over with a bang . . . the three little pigs from Morris casa- Kinder, Cunningham, and Heide, tumble into the sandwiches and indulge at the sisterhood ' s expense . . . The undecided Waldo just simply can ' t make up her mind as to the right man! . . . Dolohan swipes cookies to prove her love for a someone . . Lucille Stow packing away the facts and formulae . . . Rosendale learns while she teaches . . . Unger late again . . . giving excuses about setting up tables . . . Farrar insists upon giving her vocal chords a good work-out in public . . . Berky playing basketball . , . Billy Ohl — two-timing perhaps? . . . Elliot treading the rural routes . . . Page One Hundred and Forty $ € C € C I Ty FIRST ROW (Leit to Righl) Davison, Bertha ' 36. Middletown; Elliott, Maxine ' 36, Oxforc Ruth ' 36, Hamilton; Jacoby, Martha ' 36, Middletown; Ros. Eileen ' 36, West MiUgrove. SECOND HOW kman, Dorothy ' 37, Springfield; Fricke, Marian ' 38, Dayto ma ' 39, Cleveland; Stow, Lucile ' 38, Chicago, IlL; Ungei West Alexandria; Waldo, Virginia ' 38, Dayton. THIRD ROW Williams, Laura ' 38, Oxford- Bowman, Mildred ' 39. Gen Cunningham, Betty ' 39, Swanlon; Farrar, Charme ' 39, Londo Alice ' 39, Springfield; Kinder, Ruth ' 39, Troy, CCTA SieHA ALPHA XI CHAPTER Just around the corner, Bishop first and third, the Beta Sigs get together. Heck with gold buttons across the bosom like a general . . . Hagermon never week-ending in Oxford . . . Gilbert with her tasty tales of duck, turkey, and baked fish, tomato sauced . . . Pitts trying to decide which man to love . . . Artist Fleeter embar- rassing Dean Hamilton with her studies of nudes . . . Dot begin- ning a laborious epistle — My Darling . . . Engel trimming rough edges off the underwear and waffles that her freshies constract . . . Boyer reeling around the Reserve room because a man said he came in just to look at her . . . Ike and Mary Louise pell-melling in Wells . . . Kulka being dignified prexy of the pledge class and skipping sorority for important dates . . . Hinck- ley trying to settle everybody ' s problems . . . Hosteller, her frown- ing assistant . . . Page One Hundred €MICC€N $CC€CITy FIRST ROW (Left to Right) Gilbert, Ohve ' 36. Loudo Daugherty, Dorothy ' 36, Bat. Verna ' 36, Lakewood. SECOND ROW (Left to Bight) Hagerman, Myra ' 37, Doyion; Hinckley, Mary Jeonette ' 37, Cleveland, Pitts, Madlyn ' 37, Cleveland; Skinner, Inez ' 37, lamestown, N. Y.; Stone, Mary Louise ' 37, Cleveland Heights; Hostetler, Marjorie ' 38, TfflRD ROW (Left to Right) Young, Catherine ' 38, Lancaster; Eberly, K Lucille ' 39, Lakewood; Heck, Helen ' 39, Dayl. land; Shields. Mary ' 39. Akron. cm CMEGA SIGMA ALPHA CHAPTER Tee Robbins small and brainy as they come, studying again . . . Sylvia Bausch either at Pan-Hellenic meeting or anxiously awaiting the coming of week- ends . . . Lalah Emerson starting songs . . . Minton and Motz, mighty little atoms, putting on skits . . . Martha Lou Calladine, artist and pledge mistress . , . Betty and Nancy Caughey knitting wherever they go . . . Sloat secretory- ing over in Benton . . . The Breinig twins — even their sorority sisters can ' t tell them apart . . . Jane Bringman in a fog, all by herself . . . David and Kelly — their two-piano ar- rangements . . . Murr carrying the keys to the Ford . . . Ruth Kaiser dividing her time between Dean Ashbaugh ' s office and the tables . . . Lillian Bratton meeting that D. U. in the libe . . . Helen Whiteman, the quiet Eastern person . . . Esther Raymond, basket-bailer in her spare time, being hard pressed to gel to Presser before the bell . . . Janet Kreilick having troubles with her chemistry . . . Anderson and Loftus drooling away their time in the Purity . . . Joe Frey — in the smoking room mostly . . . Genevieve Lea tussling with Economics . . . Jeanne Biddle being a sophisticated lady . . . Mollie Blair getting around . . . Frances Schultz keeping up the scholastic average for the sisterhood . . . Virginia Blinn wearing sweater, skirt and anklets to Sunday dinners . . . Charlotte Bloker, her poetry . . . Alice Martin keeping the pledges under control. One Hundred and Forty-Four $ € C C C I TT TOP ROW (left to right) Robbins, Isabelle ' 36. Trc ' 36, Mansfield; Emerson, Whiteman, Helen ' 36, Georgetown; Austin, Betty ' 37, Pittsburgh, Pa. SECOND ROW Calladine, Martha Louise ' 37, Warren; Caughey, Betty ' 37, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Minton, Mary ' 37, Harrisburg.Pa.; Paschold, Martha ' 37, Edgeworlh, Pa.; Raymond, Esther ' 37, Cambridge; Sloat, ' Virginia ' 37, Sandusky; Anderson, Grace ' 38, Hardin, 111.; Austin, Anita ' 38, Dayton; Benham, Cora •38, Cleveland; Bratlon, Lilhan ' 38, Cincinnati. THIRD ROW B-einig, Eli2 . ,. Caughey, Nancy ' 38, Pittsburgh, Pa.; David, ... ._, . _ ._, Dorothy ' 38, Gates Mills; Kaiser, Ruth ' 38, Elyria; Kelly, Kathryn ' 38, Lima; Kreilick, Janet ■33, Fr. Martin, Betty ' 38, Toledo; Park. He ' s le ' 39, Wy oming; Blair, Mollie ' 39, Cle Heights, Blinn, Virginia ' 39, Cincinnati; Bloker, Charlotte ' 39, Lindsey; FIFTH ROW slen ' 39, Fort Thomas, Ky,; Reich, Cora May ' 39, Salem; Schullz, France ' s ' 39. Dayton; Stilson, Virginia ' 39, Gibsonburg; Veil, Virginia ' 39. Wapakonela; Ward, Lois ' 39, Batavia, N. Y., -Way, Peggy ' 39, Oak Park, 111.; -Weimer, Ellen Louise ' 39, Dayto Page One Hundred and F.., DELTA DELTA DELTA DELTA BETA CHAPTER Kay Foltz, as usual, keeping her date waiting . . . Rosemary Jackson getting the giggles . . . Mary Helen Steed rushing to play practice with Nancy Shaw . . . Daley and Freer worrying over their society column . . . Mattie Lou Saxe wondering if Bill will call . . . Bettie Pennington on her way to Heck ' s at four . . . Pru dy Wright pondering over her practice teaching . . . Helen Sheets seen entering McGuffey with ten books and three notebooks . . . Mitzi Kerr and Dottie Rothenberger waiting to hear from Sally Amos — way out on the Atlantic . , . Virginia Reiff holding hands . . . Pud Thompson diddling away her time while her Phi Deh studies . . . Betty Shera studying like mad . . . Ruth Cook going to the gym — any gym at all will do . . . Ellen Stewart being considerate and unselfish to everyone . . . Jean Hart and Wmnie Williams arguing over nothing . . . Ruth Ann Warner tying ribbons in her hair . . . Grace Wagner sitting on tables and breaking them thusly . . . Mary Jean Drummond perpetually dropping her pencils, books, purses, anything . . . Ginny Crawford in Tuffy ' s with booth ants . . . Peg and Sig dropping hairpins . . . Susan Groglode staring into space . . . Kay Brown carries on for Fleshman- Wain . . . Jane McConnaughey trying to work in another date with Paul . . . Ethel Miller tries to convince the Hepburn Hail girls . . . Tessie Taggert blush- ing again . . . Dottie Miller asking those inevitable questions . . . Gerry Hayner always play- ing Santa Claus . . . Margery Lee adheres to a few nice South American cus- toms . . . Betty White tries to dope out a new way to wear her hair . . . Micky Goebel studies till three o ' clock in the morning . . . Gwen Jenkins being busy with her studies is much like — Grace Gerber, who is never seen without a book in her hand . . . The same can ' t be said about Lib by Ericson. Jane Marcum and Betty Beals trying hard to keep their switches on . . . Jane SoUen- barger having definite ideas and sticking to them . . . Betsy Gottran trying to remember very important things ... Kit Gram with her cohorts, Danis, Smith, and Glass, tearing to the Commons for food and then tearing back to the libe — to study? . . . Libby Van Gilst succeeds in scorching the dress she made in Home Ec. . . . and Grace Wagner being silly. Page One Hundred and Forty-Six $€C€CITy s, Sarah ' 36, Sidney, Foltz, Kay ' 36, North Canton; Crawford. Virginia ' 36, hy ' 35, Steubenville; Freer, Charlotte ' 36, Dayton; Handschin, Sieghnde 36, Library, Pa.; Robinson, Kay ' 36, Shaker Heights; Rolhenberger, Dorothy Pa.; Sheets, Helen ' 36, Middletown; Shera, Betty ' SB, Middletown Belknap, Elsie ' 37, SherrodsviUe; Drummond, Mary Jean ' 37, Belle Jackson, Rosemary ' 37, Circleville; Fetters ' ' ' ' ' ' •37, Elmhurst, 111.; TOP ROW (left lo right) Cook, Ruth ' 36, Bay Village; Am Washington C. H.; Daley, Dor ■36, Oxlord; Pennington, Betty ' ' 36, Frankfort, Ind. SECOND ROW Saxe. Martha Louise ' 36, Ellsv Steed, Mary Helen ' 36, Middle (onlame; Hart, Jeanne ' 37, Ham Shaw, Nancy ' 37, Lakewood. THIRD ROW Stewart, Ellen ' 37, Columbus; -Williams, Winifred ' 37, Lakewood; Beals, Betty ' 38, Findlay; Brown, Kathleen ' 38, East Liverpool. Gerber. Grace ' 38, North Canton; Qoebel, Margaret ' 38, Lakewood; Groglode, Susan ' 38, East Liverpool; Hitchcock, Alison ' 38, Detroit, Mich.; Jenkins, Gwen ' 38, Oxford; Kerr, Dolores ' 38, Sidney; Marcum, Jane ' 38, Hamilton. FOURTH ROW McConnaughey, lane ' 38, Dayton; Miller, Dorothy ' 38, Dayton; Miller, Ethel ' 38, Dayton; Morris, Bernice ' 38. Kalamazoo, Mich.; Pfau, Ruth ' 38, Warren; Reiff, Virginia ' 38, Dayton; Smith, Barbara ' 38, Oxlord ' ' - ' ' ■Taggart, Harriet ' 38, Springfield; Thomson, Rosemary ' 38 ' 38, Steubenville; Warne Anne ' 38, Westfield, Andrews, Mc Eleanor ' 39, Eas .XTy rpool; Gram, Katherine SIXTH ROW Hillman, Vivian ' 39. Dayton; Larason. Argentina. S. A.; McLean, Marijane Library, Pa.; Rogers, Jean ' 39, Warren; Ky.; Wiley, Betty ' 39, Dayton; lache, Gladys ' 39, Dayto Page One Hundred and Forty -Sev DELTA eAMMA ALPHA OMICRON CHAPTER Ed. Note: Warning! If you believe the pernicious pun to be as pernicious as we, you had better turn right over to the neict page. We believe, however, that there is some good in every evil, so if you are one of those persons who secretly derives a moHgnant joy from that perverted form of humor, p.epaie Helen Avery — she ' s got Averything. Kit Flhoads — all Rhoads lead to . . . Jane Richards — she ' s singing Heames of praise now. Betty Sampsell — she Delt a hard blow. Martie Keene — Keene? Just ask Metzger. Myra Manley — yet really such a lady. Virginia Arlene Smith — we like her, D. U.? Eleanor Oakley — everything is Oakley-dokey now. Ann Noonan — morning, Noonan, night. Roxy Lincoln — a strong Lincoln any chain. Betty Wolfe — here ' s a ' Wolfe you ' d like at your door. Ruth Sullenberger — ' twould be a ruthless trick if we left her out. Sue Janes — another one of those Janes. Betty Chisholm — Chis- holm, sweet home. Jerry Kasch — welcome anytime. Nancy Riley — Riley she ' s a good kid. Isabel Longley — twasn ' t Longley fell for her. Anita Schuster — she can ' t what Schuster be. Groveline Crawford — pass the Grovey, please. Jean Snell — a little quicker than a Snell. Natalie Hardesty — it isn ' t Hardesty she ' s smooth. Mary Bissett — this is the Bisset we could do. Polly Reeves — she g ' Reeves for North Carolina. Beverly Johns — Beverly this blank. Justine Bettiker — Justine angel. Kay Marshall — what Marshall we say? Katherine Bethke — Purdue or not Purdue, that is the question. Eloise Carpenter — and that isn ' t awl. Betsy and Mary Elizabeth Davis — blonde and brunette, but both are fair. Jean Burchinal — she ' s musical, but we won ' t harp on that. Page One Hundred and Forty-Eight $ c c € c I yy FIRST ROW dell to righl) •37, Oxiord: Sti Katherine ' 37, Lima; Longl t ' 37. Oxford, lanes. Sue Jennings, Steiner. Kay 38, Lodi. ards, Jane ' 37, La ' .;ewood, Ballard, Virc SECOND ROW Reeves, Margaret ' 37, Dover; Marshall June ' 37, Cambridge; Keene, Margar( Cleveland; Raobe, Margaret ' 38, For THIRD HOW: Chisholm, Betty ' 38, Cleveland Heights; Heingartner, Gretchen ' 38, Canton; Johns, Beverly ' 38, Garrs Ind.; Kasch, Geraldine ' 38, Dayton; Manley, Myra ' 38, Cincinnati; McCoy, Ruthanne ' 38, ' WilmingK Preston, Ruth ' 38, Detroit, Mich.; Riley, Nancy ' 33, Canton; Robinson, Betty ' 38, Shaker Heights; Smi Virginia Anne ' 38, Cleveland Heights. FOURTH ROW Smith, Virginia Arlene ' 38, Shaker Heights; Adams, Mary ' 39, Cincinnati; Bethke, Kath Blackv ell, Martha ' 39, Newark: Burchmal, le einbicker, Clare ' 38, Cleveland; ' Wolle, Betty ' 38, Auroro ne ' 39, Chicago, III.; Bissetl, Mary ' 39, Shaker HeighlE ' 39, Dayton. Carpenter, Eloise ' 39, Chicago. 111.; Crawlord ROW , Betsy isser, Lucille ' 39, :leanor ' 39, Shake 39, Lancaster. [Vis, Mary Elizabeth ' 39, Freeport, :elina; Johnson, Muriel ' 39, Coldw Heights; Remke, Marjorie Y Hardesty, Natalie ' 39, Lake- h McLean, Betty ' 39, Waverly; Snell Jean ' 39, Salem; Stoudt, m f ' f t Page One Hundred and Forty-Nine DELTA SIGMA EP$IL€N ALPHA CHAPTER Pauline Keller, dog-lover and design artist par excellence, spending most of her time in the library or working on her art and speech assignments ... or knitting in meetings . . . her fondness for singing and using that gift of gab of which she has such a plenty . . . Josephine Corso, the quiet little persuader — and another artist-person . . . her drawling dislike of Botany . . . doing her work well and without glory . . . Mary Louise McAuliffe putting in a deal of hours over at Herron . . . says everything is swell . . . practically paid off the mortgage on the new show . . . Alice Kindig — education keeping her at McGuffey all day . . . trying to out- run the seven-minutes bell . . . her infectious laugh . . . Gertrude Slutterbeck the quiet new pledge not saying much but taking it all in . . . Letha Arrants — majoring in Latin — her infectious laugh . . . such a shorty . . . Elaine Kneisley spending a lot of time out-of-doors . . . she of the brown eyes . . . being quiet in company . . . Grace Stevens saving herself a lot of drudgery with her ready tongue . . . Marie Murray . . . embryonic chemist lives at the chemistry build- ing when she ' s not at home in Wells . . . Page One Hundred and Fifty §€C€CITy FIRST ROW dell to right) Murray, Mane ' 37, Portsmouth, McAulille. Mary Louise ' 37, Euclid, Corso, Josephine ' 38, Oxford; Keller, Pauline ' 38, New Albany, Ind. SECOND ROW Arrants, Letha ' 39, Lima; Kindig, Alice ' 39, Germantown; Kneisley, Elaine ' 39, Blanchester: Stevens, Grace ' 39, Greoniield. Page One Hundred and Fifty-One DELTA ZCTA ALPHA CHAPTER Lehman, the sophisticated lady. Pledge-mistress Richey. Altabelle Jensen . . . violets. Mary Ellen Biery looking for the little bungalow in the future. Saxbe the million dollar gal. Lincoln — ' I ' ve got rhythm. ' E. Seeley, the tall beauty. Margie Mount, Beta sweetheart. Lois Dean and her southern accent. Gam- mell who loves Omar Khayam. Boring, the Gracie Allen of Delta Zeta. Ramsen trying to grow up. Sweeley trying not to go into the Purity. J. Carroll — unaccustomed as I am to public speaking . . . Osborn — double trouble. Doris Aschbacher — it runs in the family. Guilford trying hard to be the Betty Co-ed of Miami. Thatcher and Pierce always on the go. Marthina making her violin cry. Shorty Sharick. Osborn Phi Betes. M. Saxbe and the Xenia gas stations. Bucher the red-head. Bradley — no strings and no connections. Brook — she bubbles all over. Gildersleeve and her accent on youth. Lust — a little bit independent. Evans being young and healthy. Cobb jeweled by a Phi. Dreamy-eyes Pierce. Farquhar still being true to the home-town boy. Bennett and her smile. Fran Seeley in league with the Women ' s League. Strenick looking like a page from Vogue. Little Girl Metzger. West, in love. Taylor, another red-head. Whitney sweet and lovely. Griffith alv ays without a care. Malcolm, with a bounty of pep and vigor. Kershner living for love. Mathes — If 1 could have my way. Jan Johnson and her patter. Coghill making the wheels go around. Page One Hundred and Fifty-Two $ € c € c I yy FIRST ROW (leit to right) Lehman, Gwen ' 36, Lakewood; Biery, Mary Ellen SB, Findlay; Jensen, Altabelle ' 36, Mt. Gilead; Richey, Helen ' 36, Youngstown; Seeley, Francelia ' 36, Oak Harbor; Strenick, Marcia ' 36, Cuyahoga Falls; Aschbacher, Dons ' 37, Toledo; Dean, Lois ' 37, Madison, Tenn.; Guiliord, Betty ' 37, Dayton; Lincoln, SECOND ROW Mount, Marjone ' 37, Hamilton; McKinney, Jane ' 37, Dayton; Price, Elizabeth ' 37, La Grange, III.; Saxbe, Betlie ' 37, Urbana; Seeley, Elizabeth ' 37, Oak Harbor; Bradley, Betty ' 38, Toledo; Lust, Freda ' 38, Tiifin; Carroll, Jane ' 38, Miamisburg; Evans, Shirley ' 38, Cincinnati; Farquhar, Betty ' 38, Wilmington. THIRD ROW Gommell, Emma Jane ' 38, Cleveland Heights; Johnson, Jan ' 38, Lorain; Kershner, Ursula ' 38, Spnngiield; Mathes, Zella ' 38, Toledo; McCoy, Marlhina ' 38, SpringI.eld; Metzger, Winilred ' 38, Dayton; Osborn, lane ' 38, Dayton; Pearce, Evelyn ' 38, Steubenville; Purman, Irma ' 38, Lakewood, Ramsen, Jane ' 38, Baltimore, Md.; Holland, Ormi ' 38, Toronto. FOURTH ROW Sharick, Betty ' 38, Forest Hills, L. I., N. Y.; Sv eely, Belle ' 38, La Grange, III.; Taylor, Virginia ' 38, Bellelontaine; Thatcher, Helen ' 38, Steubenville; Welsheimer, Phoebe ' 38, Urbana; West, Helen ' 33, Bellelontaine; Whitney, Margaret ' 38, Mt, Gilead; Zehring, Martha ' 38, Germantown; Aschbacher, Martha 39, Toledo; Bennett, Rose Mary ' 39, Oak Harbor; Breaden, Eileen ' 39, Dayton. FIFTH ROW Brooke, Marion ' 39, Rochdale, Poughkeepsie, N. Y-; Bucher, Virginia ' 39, Dayton; Cobbe, Ruth ' 39, Cleve- land Heights; Coghill, Mary Ann ' 39, Dayton; Gildersleeve, Jane ' 39, Hudson; Hansgen, Mary Louise ' 39, Portsmouth, Lee, Virginia ' 39, Youngstown; Malcolm, Mary Kathryn ' 39, Portsmouth; Osborn, Lydic Dayton; Rodeleld, Frc ' ■- • - ■■■BSi,£ ' :£EP Page One Hundred and Fifty-Thr PI DELTA THETA ALPHA CHAPTER Marjorie Carpenter and Janet Stuhlmueller carrying the torch the first and second semester . . . Lucy Van Ness social-chair-man-ing — thinking of setting up as Mrs. Glos ' shadow . . . driving back and forth to Brookville every day . . . Dottie Campbell and the big brown eyes . . . Mary Margaret Smith has a flair for cold fudge sundaes . . . her vote goes for nice bouncy chaise lounges in the libe . . . Violet Lehman and her puns and whimsical grin . . . Ann Wilkin- son zooming into Hamilton for a little relaxation on week-ends . . . Marian Lampe fancying herself quite a typist . . . the click-click of her toes and the click-click of her knitting needles . . . Ruth Johnson, an efficiency expert with a yen for darning things in meeting . . . Jean Frechtling fluttering between Harrison and West Hall with arms full of posters and stuff arty . . . Mary Lous Ellison bidding to be the sweetest of the flock . . . Johnson and Carpenter tussling with parliamentary palaver in meetings . . . Page One Hundred and Fifty-Four $€CCRITy FIRST HOW (left to right) Carpenter, Mariorie ' 36, Dayton; Ellison. Mary Lou ' aS, London; Frechtling, Jean ' 38, Hamilton; Lampe, Marian ' 38, Hamilton; Stuhl- mueiler, Janet ' 36, Hamilton. SECOND HOW ■Van Ness Lucy 38 BrookvUle Ind Campbell Dorothy ' 39, Newark; Lehman Violet 39 Vandalia Smith Marv Margaret ' 39, Hamilton; Wilkinson Ann Louise 39 Hamilton 4 X ■1. . Page One Hundred PI rAPPA SIGMA ETA CHAPTER Musically minded Margaret Shilling . . . Muff writing humorous papers . . . her pet ambition is to run a dog pound when she leaves school . . . Martha Shilling another bad penny . . . she ' s art minded . . . pretty good with a draw- ing pencil herself . . . forever making smart cracks about some perfectly good, serious, remark . . . Evelyn Mortashed singing in Madrigal . . . leads all the sorority singing . . . they still remember a nice little ditty she wrote when she was a freshman . . . Ruth Wiley interested in her math — the only one in the group so inclined . . . specially loves astronomy and stargazingd) Social chairman putting out a nice party every once in a while . . . Betty Garvey being mostly peppy, pert, and pretty . . . unanimously wants to play and have fun rather than study . . . Ruth Thayer winning her letter and jacket and still trying to be on as many teams as possible . . . never in when you want to find her . . . Psyche Line talking, talking, talkmg . . . faster, faster, faster. Page One Hundred and Fifty-Six $ € C C C I Ty FIRST ROW (left to right) Thayer. Ruth -36. Norwood; Wiley. Rulh 36. Cmcinnali. Mortashed. Evelyn ' 37. Harrison. SECOND HOW Shilhng. Margaret, Soph. T. C-, Springfield: ShiUing, Martha, Soph. T. C. Spnngiield; Line, Psyche ' 39, Palmer, Mass. Page One Hundred and Fifty-Seven sieMA rAPPA ALPHA IOTA CHAPTER Eleanor Mitchell trying to sleep as late as possible and still not be late for breakfast . . . Kirschner and Aneita Cleary sleeping through eight o ' clocks . . . Cerneitta Frye wishing she hadn ' t taken her last cut . . . Mary Hovis and Lee Elef rushing conscientiously to make those eighters . . . Cleary mushing out to Presser with a violin case under her arm . . . Sanderson trying to collect all the bills . . . Cushman working on a poster at the Y room . . . Alfredo Dembsey and Margaret Moore clashing over the cultural advantages of Cleveland vs. Cincy . . . Mitchell and Musser decide to eat breakfast up town again . . . Dorothy Lind- sey frets over an English theme in the libe . . . Redman suddenly remembers a meeting or two where she ' s supposed to be among those present . . . Scotty Sanderson and Lindsey wage a room-mate ' s battle over the respective merits of their boy friends . . . Musser and Mitchell at Folkers most of the time . . . Sedohr MacDonald admits in her quiet way that she likes Miami better than Reserve . . . Chris Hayman pores over her Ec. and dreams of vacation . . . Elly Mitchell keeps her date waiting for the first time . . . Martha Milstead wonders where all the smooth men are . . . Jeanne Roof is seen danc- ing all the latest steps . . . Aide Buckley m her new formal . . . Elef selling tickets hand-over-fist for a dance in Dayton . . . Martha Rinehart saying she doesn ' t go to Middletown very often . , . Saunders trying out for a play . . . Margaret Early telling the hairdresser she wan ' .s a new and glamorous hair set for an important dance . . . Feme I-lornung starting for Columbus to see the old flame . . . Ann Logan diligently cleaning an active ' s room and wondering if DePauw is like this . . . Dembsey combing the corridors for a tennis partner . . . Hovis as usual, in the Business office . . . Kirschner, from, her regal dignity, telling the boys a joke . . . Martha Jane Ryan stepping out to a date in a real Cow coat . . . Page One Hundred and Fifty-Eight $€C€CITy FIRST HOW (leil to right) Redman, Dorotha ' 36, Coshocton; Ele Kirschner, Pearl ' 36, Cleveland Height SECOND HOW Early, Margaret ' 36, WiUard; MacDonald, Gutknecht, Dons ' 36, Youngstown; Lindsey, Marian ' 37, ' 37, Toledo; Sanderson, Dorothy ' 37, Delta. Thompson, Mitchell, Eleanor ' 37, Shaker Heights Buckley, Alda ' 38, Lakewood; Haynam. Crystal ' 38, Shaker Heights; Rinehart, Martha ' 38, West Ale; Saunders, Ruth ' 38, Dayton; Sunderman, Sunny FOUHTH HOW Lindsey, Dorothy ' 39, Willard; 39, Norwood, Musser, Janet Berneitta ' 39, Castalia; Cushr Cleveland. ilstead, Mart ha ' 39, Ft. Thomas, Ky.; Mo 8, Mellsville; Harrison, Elynor ' 39, Gin n, Margaret ' 39, Miami, Fla.; Dembsey Page One Hundred and Fifty Nin THETA UP$IL€N MU CHAPTER Helen Bartholomew thinking about Wesleyan and her W. A. A. . . . Mary- Beach being chronically late to classes . . . Marie Brand just being quiet . . . Magdalene Stark worrying about her practice teaching and her math . . . Rosalind Ellis and her basket ball . . . Elizabeth Grill with her poetry and esthesia . . . Charlotte and Earline Martin harmonizing on some song or other. Margaret Petry and her interest in the Sigma Nu ' s . . . Helen McCord and that silly giggle of hers . . . Kay Lytle doing whatever she does, well . . . Hulda Heller and her mannish clothes . . . Ruth Fussner — her main interest in phys-ed . . . Marie Noyes always with a date . . . Ann Ballentine — every one gets a kick out of her. Margaret Wagner and her personality . , . Rose Krejci and her smooth dances ... La Vada McMurry working hard m all those activities . . . Wilma Starkey — so very frank . . . Margaret Miller with her sparkler, knitting, knitting, knitting . . . Jane Lehmiller — another one betrothed . . . Betty Brown going Martin- ville way . . . Page One Hundred and Sixty $ € K € C ■Ty FIRST ROW (Le« to Right) Cranch, Ettie ' 36, Lakewood: Barlholome ' 36, Lakswood, Richards, Elizabeth ' 36, I Cincinnati; Ellis, Rosalind ' 37. Wilmington SECOND ROW (Lett to Right) Ma (Lett to Rig utn ' 37, Willoughby; Lehn ■tin, Earlme ' 37, Redwooi 11,, Brown, Betty ' 38, Marl Fall) lane ' 37, North Industry; Martin, Charlotte ' 37, Redwood Falls 3, Minn.; Miller, Margaret ' 37, Lebanon; Petty, Margaret ' 37 s; Fuller, Hattie ' 38, Perrysburg, THIRD ROW (Left to Right) Hall, Elinor ' 38, Blanchester; Heller, : Poland; Schwegler, Marjone ' 38, Cle ' ville; Ballentine, Ann ' 39, Springfield, FOURTH HOW (LcJt to Right) Burkey, Arlene ' 39, Baltic; Denison, Phyllis ' 39, Canal Fulton; Krejci, ' 39, Cleveland; Kuhlman, ZETA TAL ALPHA BETA DELTA CHAPTER Betty Lou Hudec — equestrienne . Mary Lou Stebbins on the hop-skip-and- jump athletically and otherwise . . . Betty Eller with her red hair and ready grin . . . Dotty Richards, Gracie Allen of the sorority . . . Kay Hibbert, float- designer de-luxe . . . Brainy Carolyn Mattern on the books . . . Fran Talbot versifying and skipping back and forth to Athens for sundry week-ends . . . Hidy-ho ' s coming from Charlotte Schmidt, basket-shooter par excellence . . . Lois Little and her Kentucky accent and peppy smiles . . . Art-conscious Florabeth Hooper blown all the way to Oxford from the windy city . . . Jeanne McClanning counting and dressing figures . . . Rothacher — maybe she can really act . . . Idaho Tinker longing for home-state spuds and Cincy sym- phonies . . . Millie Harmon, the brunette with the platinum-blonde outlook on life . . . more power to her . . . Jeanette Rodefeld preferring food and books . . . Arno dancing and speaking as the Spanish senoritas are supposed to . . . Margaret Hibbert playing and writing notes . . . Queen Weber, loving cup and all . . . Helen Neal . . . violets . . . being called teacher by little folks over in Indiana . . . Miriam Dreher putting on a swell banquet . . . Elizabeth Reber, who could sit by a fire to cook and spin but doesn ' t . . . Jean Smith, potential efficiency expert, neat as a pin about her belongings . , , Lois Strange piano-ing for pleasure and reading to relax . . . McDonald stick-to-it-ive about money and friends . . . Edna Bimeler, she of the Woodbury complexion . . . Lois Huntington calculating about something or other . . . Kemp saying things in no unusual way . . . Page One Hundred and Sixty-Two $ € p € c I xy FIRST ROW (LeII to Right) Weber, Margaret ' 36, Wauseon; Harman, Mildred ' 36, Lakewood; ■36, Oxford: Hooper, Florabeth ' 36, Chicago, 111.; Schmidt. Charlo ■35. Youngstown. SECOND HOW (Lelt to Right) Hibbert, Kathryn ' 37, Xenia: Huntington, Lois ' 37, Toledo, Little, Lois 37, Fort Thomas, Ky , McClanning, Jeanne ' Zl , Ashtabula; Richards, Dorothy ' 37. Steubenville: Rothacher. Ruth ' 37. Cleveland; Tinker, Ann ■37, Pocatello, Idaho. THIRD ROW (Lett to Right) Rodefeld, leannette 37, Richmond, Ind.; Arno, Evelyn 38, Toledo, Bimeler, Edna ' 38, Zoar; Eller, Betty ' 38, Greenville; Stebbins, Mary Lou ' 38, Creston; Kemp, Dorothea ■38. Dayton; McDonald, Frances ' 38, Oxford. FOURTH ROW (Left to Right) Smith, Jean ■SS, Lima; Dreher, Minari. 3 ' , Euclid Hibbert Margaret J9 Xcnia Hudec Betty Lou 3 ' ) Canton; Reber, Elizabeth ' 39, Loveland Set ' le Gertrude 39 Middletown b-ranae Lois 39 Lima IP The impact of a smashing wall of flesh ... a fleet halfback slashing around end while the crowd rises ... a roar swelling from thousands of throats . . . the sharp crack of a vicious tackle . . . blood oozing from a battered face . . . the joyous ring of Harrison ' s bell, the screaming headlines of a bright-hued extra. The scurry- ing beat of rubber soles on hard wood ... a sudden strain and the following swish of leather through white cords . . . the beautiful grace of flexing muscles. The stink of stale sweat ... a tingling cold shower . . . the tranquility of com- plete physical exhaustion Lo 1 1 i % MIAMI UNIVECSITy GEORGE L. RIDER George L. Rider, athletic director, guides the destinies of Miami ath- letics. It is mainly through his ef- forts that athletics at Miami have reached a high level among the col- leges in this section of the country. One of the founders of the Buckeye Conference, Coach Rider has played an important role in the develop- ment of this association. Coach Rider is also mentor of the track and cross- country squads. He has shown par- ticular ability in taking green, inex- perienced men and making cham- pions or point v inners of them. The Miami track teams always place near the top of the conference, and the cross-country teams are usually among the leading teams of the state. FRANK S. WILTON Frank S. Wilton has made a fine showing during his four years at Miami. As head coach of football and baseball. Coach Wilton has es- tablished himself as one of the youngest and most able coaches in the Buckeye. COACHING STArr Dit, as he is known to his friends and proteges, is as- sistant Athletic Director and coach of freshman football, basketball, and track. His excellent freshman teams year after year are proof enough of his ability. In Mr. Rider ' s absence, Coach Ditmer steps in as Athletic Director and head track coach. As cage mentor. Coach Mauer molded his green squad mto one of the most successful combines seen on the Miami hardwood in recent years. Because of his greatly improved team. Coach Mauer was chosen on the mythi- cal all-coaches all-Ohio team for 1935-36. When off the basketball floor, he devotes his time to developing Miami ' s ace flankmen on the gridiron and teaching the fundamentals of the game to the freshman baseball squad. A newcomer to the Redskin coaching staff, Elwood Wilson stepped in and was responsible for the development of Miami ' s strong forward wall last fall. He also coaches wrestling and this spring is handling freshman track. Under the watchful eye of Jay Colville, Miami ' s athletes are rubbed, baked, bandaged, and made fit for further combat. Putting aside the liniment. Jay furthers his train- ing duties by taking the squad of leather-pushers under his care. FRONT HOW (Left to Right) Weiland, Robert: Landen, Maurice. Cornwall, John, Munro, Robert: SECOND ROW Weingart, Mc Koppitch, Clarei THIRD ROW Heimsch, Charley; Llewellyn, lack; Panuska, George; Campbell, Charles; Taylor, TTiomas; White, I. TI IEE MIAMI ins of Tribe Miami are athletes who boast a varsity award in any one of a number of sports. Not unlike most organizations, they have a specific reason for being — but whether they keep that pur- pose in the backs of their minds or pigeon-hole it in the dusty archives of the past we don ' t know. Anyway, as we were going t o say, the Tribe claims to promote clean athletics and good feeling between its members and teams of other schools. But as active athletes these are surprisingly inactive when it comes to Tribe Miami. The Tribe meets often enough to elect officers, that ' s all. Oh, yes, these fellows sit together on the front row at basketball games and meet once a winter to have their pictures taken. But because the Redskins do little to improve athletics on the campus, men know the Tribe largely as a letterman ' s honorary. And once a spring these athletes cast aside their various uniforms to get acquainted on a hay-ride. So we say the Tribe must be thriving on the sustenance of an arrow-head key and a few wisps of hay. But don ' t accuse the Tribe of taking life easy. Remember, it brings us scalps from green fields and hardwood floors. Page One Hundred rCCTCALL SEASCN CHEERLEADERS FRONT ROW P€CTCALL SCLAD On the gridiron, as in all major sports, Miami ' s teams compete in the Buckeye Intercol- legiate Athletic Conference. The conference, founded in 1925, is composed of Miami, Cincinnati, Ohio Wesleyan, Ohio University, Marshall, and Dayton, and is recognized for its fine teams and keen competitive spirit. An exponent of the Warner system, Coach Wilton has the reputation of producing de- ceptive, fighting, hard-hitting teams that figure prominently in the yearly race for the Buckeye championship. FIRST ROW (Left to Bighl) Stickney, Assistant Coach: McClain. Sparke: SECOND ROW Wagner, Jordan; Erwine. Ohly: Eichenauer; Brinker. THIRD ROW Wilton, Coach; Wilson, Assistant Coach; Rylel; Campbe Scheible; Waile; Cronin; Hern; Hurlburl almer; Heimsch; Panuska; Keslar; Swaim; Kagey. ; Slagle; McClellan; Tomkutonis; Meier; Penrocf; W Wollenhaupt; Walker; Hoghe; Martin, ; Rodriquez; Brassier; Cole; Leov. FOURTH ROW dinger; Llewelli-n; Or ' Lindemood; Doughman; Barrow; Miller, r %-• ' % ' ' ' - ' !J. 2 i|pSy ' ' «  ' SS - .V v :-tl What a season! One of the most hectic gridiron seasons of past years saw the Redskins appearing like champions one week only to falter into a lethargy the next. The season opener with Eastern Kentucky State Teachers College resulted in a 33-7 win for the Redskins. Within five plays after the opening kickoff, Petrich plunged over the goal line for the Redskins initial tally. Petrich ' s line smashes and Cole ' s thirty-five-yard run on an end around play were the features of the march. Slagle, substituting for Petrich, drove over from the five -yard stripe for the second score. Breitenstein, breaking away for several long runs, twisted his way to the two-yard mark where Slagle again scored. In the second half, Heimsch advanced the ball to the three-yard line and on the follow- ing play Eisenhut went over without being touched. Cole ' s recovery of a Kentucky fumble and several GEORGE PANUSKA Page One Hundred and Seventy U ;- ■M off-tackle smashes by Petrich placed Miami deep in the Kentuckian ' s territory. Ohly taking a shovel pass from Petrich raced the remaining ten yards to score. The Redskins ran up nineteen first downs to Kentucky ' s none. Trekking to Cleveland the following week, an aggressive Miami team found little opposition in Case ' s highly touted Rough Riders. After a slow start, Miami got underway and Slagle pushed over two touchdowns in the second frame. The Riders came back to force the play in the third, but a fourth quarter rally on the part of the Wiltonmen, with Ohly scoring, completely sub- merged Case ' s hopes making the score 21-6. In the first Buckeye Conference game of the season, Ohio Wesleyan downed the Tribe 8-0 in an unimpressive game with neither team showing expected form. The game featured the outstanding line play of Meier, Panuska, and Brinker. CHARLES HEIMSCH BOB BHEITENSTEIN Page One Hundred and Seventy-One I f • The Blue Flashes of John Carroll were next to invade the Redskin camp. Petrich with three touchdowns led the Miami onslaught. Runs by Breitenstein, Heimsch, and Petrich placed the ball on the one-yard line where Petrich plunged over for the first score. Within three minutes, Petrich had again crossed the goal line. On a fake pass Petrich made forty-four yards and three plays later tallied again. A thirty-five-yard pass, Llewellyn to Matre, resulted in Miami ' s final score. The outstanding work of Breitenstein in converting four points after touchdown, one from the twenty-yard stripe, was the feature of the game. Before an enthusiastic homecoming crowd, a spark of the early season Redskin team blazed forth to down a fighting Marshall aggregation, 20-13. With Wagner and Petrich scoring in the first and Petrich going over in the third after a fourteen- yard run, Miami was able to successfully withstand the second and fourth period rallies of the Thundering Herd. lACK LLEWELLYN Page One Hundred and Seventy-Two The Tribe next journeyed to Athens and were handed a 20-0 setback at the hands of the conference champion Bobcat team of Ohio University. Ohio ' s large and powerful team ran roughshod over the Redskins and dominated the play throughout the entire game. The sterling defensive play of Erwine and Meier, Miami tackles, was the outstanding feature of the Redskin ' s play. The Big Reds routed Adrian, the Michigan league champs, 59-0. The Reds, scoring at will, tallied in every period. Breiten- stein, on several long and spectacular runs, led the Miami attack with four touchdowns. With every play working to perfection, Ohly scored twice and Cole, Mutchler, and Clinger crossed the last stripe once. The Redskins then traveled to Dayton to resume connections with the Buckeye ' s newest member after a lapse of some seven years. In the early stages of the game, Llewellyn passed to Cole for the CHUCK CAMPBELL TED RYTEL ART PALMER Page One Hundred and Seventy-Thp Redskin ' s lone tally. Doubling the yardage, running up twice as many first downs and outplaying the Flyers in every department, the tribe lacked the necessary drive within the twenty-yard line and were unable to take advantage of several scoring opportunities. In the second half, MacDonough pulled exactly the same play that had scored for Miami and tossed a pass to the waiting arms of Zotkiewicz who scored. The Dayton line was easily penetrated in midfield but took on the semblance of a stone wall in scoring territory. With but three minutes to go, Miami started a drive from their forty- nine which carried them to the Dayton ten, where MacDonough intercepted a Tribe pass to stop the threat and put an end to Miami ' s touchdown hopes. In the annual Thanksgiving day classic at BEN EICHENAUER HOWARD BRINKER Page One Hundred and Seventy -Four Cincinnati, played in a sea of mud, the Redskins were nosed out by an 8-7 score. Cincinnati capital- ized on two blocked punts in the second quarter to gain the victory, one resulting in a touchdown and the other a safety. The brilliant broken-field running of Breitenstein led the Redskins in a fourth quarter rally. On entering the game, Slagle shot a shovel pass to Breitenstein who cavorted off tackle, reversed his field, and ran from his own forty-five to Cincinnati ' s eighteen. On the next play with Slagle again feeding the ball, Breitenstein slanted off tackle once more and outran the Cincinnati secondary to the goal line and converted the extra point a few minutes later. The game ended with Miami in the midst of another purge, which would have likely brought about the winning score. WEBSTER MEIER CHUCK SLAGLE JAKE WAGNER Page One Hundred and Seventy-Five M m: FIRST ROW: Butler, Blackburi SECOND ROW: Lahodny, Cro- THIRD ROW: Assisiant Coach Wisem. Kusel, Cain, Clark, Cooper, Haaer, FOURTH ROW: Reske, Irwin, Aiken, Leu Gaible, Slagle, Finger, Adair, Drake, Loewer, Smith, Seres, Mattiso II. Williams, Fogarty, Sadlock, Davis, Gleason, Schillig, Rowe, Camero ' ' ■- - • • - ■■Teagu Voelker, O ' Malley, Keays. ;. Daum, Price, Pidgeon, Hern t, Kaylor, Bigler, Friedman, , Rupp, Metzger, Gillespie, Olin, McDonnell, Hii FRESHMAN FOOTBALL Coach Ditmer ' s squad of yearling football men proved to be one of the most versatile in recent years. A wealth of talent was had, which after a season of Dit ' s careful tutelage should be of great aid in the building of next year ' s varsity. In accordance with the Buckeye Conference rules, freshman teams do not take part in game competition. The entire season is devoted to the development of fundamentals and scrimmaging with the varsity. To keep the freshman gridders mentally alert in the class room as well as on the gridiron, their grades must be to the satisfaction of Coach Ditmer before numeral awards are made. The following men received numeral sweaters: Hern, Crowell, Levering, Petrone, Clark, Keeling, Lahodny, Price, Rupp, Fogarty, Teague, Pidgeon, Ellison, Hoyman, Putnam, Sadlock, Mills, Rowe, Smith, Williams, Cameron, Metzger, Butler, and Kusel. Numerals only were awarded the following: Dechant, Kaylor, Campbell, Erwine, Gleason, Friedman, Jenkins, Daum, Wolcott, Mattison, Voelker, Schillig, Hader, and Slagle. VARSITY Miami 33 — Eastern Ky. Teachers 7 Miami 21 — Case 6 Miami — Ohio Wesleyan 8 Miami 28— John Carroll 12 Miami 20— Marshall 13 RESULTS Miami 0— Ohio U. 20 Miami 59— Adrian Miami 6 — Dayton 6 Miami 7 — Cincinnati 8 Page One Hundred and Seventy-Six CASrETCALL A fast break and another two points lor Miami, but not sufficient to keep tlie Bear- cats from victory. In tlie fmal twenty seconds of the game, played at Cincin- nati, the Bearcat captain dropped a shot from the middle of the floor which proved to be the margin of victory in the 36-34 win. In the return engagement at Withrow Court, the Redskin cagers avenged the earlier defeat by outscoring their rivals in a 28-23 victory. It was in this game that the Redskins reached top form. Every man played well and as a team dazzled the Bearcats with their close guarding, accurate passing, and ex- cellent shooting. This was our real Miami team and Coach Mauer and the players much praise for the victory. Page One Hundred and Seventy-Seven PETE ROBERTS TOM TAYIOR BOB BRYSON CHUCK SLAGLE SAM HALTER B A $ r E T The greatly improved 1935-36 cagers neatly slipped the ball of victory through the hoop to finish the season with a plurality of wins over losses. In the season ' s premier, the Redskins faced a strong Wilmington team and won 35-19. With little effort, Miami handed Georgetown a 49-21 setback in their second encounter. The air-tight defense of the Miami team held the visitors to a lone field goal. Traveling South, the team defeated Vanderbilt 34-22 in a hard-fought game. The strenuous effects of the trip proved to be too much for the Rekskins, for losses to Indiana, 41-15, and Ball State, 29-22, occurred before their return to Oxford. Return- ing to the hardwood after the Christmas vacation, Miami easily defeated the Covington Y in a warm-up game. The Dayton Flyers were the next victims. The Redskins pulled the game out First Row: Ray, Taylor, Nan- ovsky, Myer, Roberts, Cro- mer, Slagle, Tomkutonis. Second Row: Mauer, coach; Hern, Martin, Stark, Foster, Lester, Sailer, Mgr. Back Row; Bryson, Corn- WILLARD HENRY MEL KNOWLTON BOB WEILAND JOHN CORNWALL c of the fire in the closing minutes to gain the 34-29 victory. Re- turning to a familiar floor, the Redskins suffered their final home defeat at the hands of the powerful Ohio U. team— 33-28. A strong Ohio Wesleyan quintet next eked out a 33-26 win for the Tribe ' s second Buckeye loss. Bryson aided Miami resume its interrupted win streak by leading a last half rally which brought a 26-15 victory over Dayton. In their return engagement with the Bishops, Miami met the Wesleyan aggregation at their best and were on the short end of a 42-29 score. With Bryson and Knowl- ton hitting from the corners, the Redskins outscored Marshal! 44-37. The same two men again led the Miami attack the next week-end at Huntington to down the Herd 46-32. Ohio U. took the Redskin s to the count of 39-23 in a rather uninteresting game. First Row: Strauss, C y, Siegle, Sunshine, . :;ritchlield, Taurman, O ' Hara Second How: Kelso. Smith, Riddle, M a t t h e s , Vail, McGinnis, Mills, Barger, Gander, Woodard. Third_How: Mullikin. Whe- Bishop, Meyers, Weiss, Winspear. First Row: Thomas, Knowl- lon. Smith, Lewis, Alexan- der, Alston. Van Ausdali, Wood, Grine, Willetl THE VARSITY SQUAD THE 1935 CASEEALL Hitting in the pinches and snapping out of their belated stan, the Redskin nine slugged, slid and fielded their way into second place Buckeye honors. Traveling to Bloomington, the Redskins opened the season with Indiana. The Big Ten opponents proved too much for the Miami team and when the game was called on account of rain in the seventh the score stood 7-0 in favor of the Hoosiers. The Indiana trip was dominated by unfavorable play- ing conditions causing the scheduled game with Hanover to be cancelled and accounting for the team ' s unimpressive showing in their initial game. By a score of 8-2 the Miami team fell before the hard-hitting aggregation of the Dayton Flyers. Ross with two hits out of four trips to the plate led the Redskin ' s belated attack. At Ohio Wesleyan, the Tribe again ran into trouble which resulted in their coming out on the short end of a 5-3 score. This defeat was the Redskin ' s first loss of the season in Buckeye competition. Taking to the road again, the Tribe traveled to Huntington to meet Marshall. Rallying in the late innings, the Herd scored five runs to snatch the victory by a score of 13-11, Greene, Grine, and Alston garnered three hits each during the game. Alston ' s single and two homeruns led the way for Miami. Behind the dazzling two-hit pitching of Alexander, Miami blanked Ohio Wesleyan 3-0 for their first win of the season. The Tribe scored early when Alston got hold of a Bishop delivery and singled to center. Lewis then layed a hit between second and short. Willett, following, hit a Texas-leaguer to center scoring % 1 Willett Hugh ' LETTER MEN First H nw: S evenson mgr Heldma n H r well, Sillert Borger Hun Second Row: Porter. Forbes Worthmgton, Heis- Kagey, Mau r. coach. Third low; Faike, Passa Wilhn ins, Bonniville Martin, tiise ihut, Thornton RT--. ' rf- THE FRESHMAN SQUAD SEA§CN IN KEVIEW Alston and Lewis. After stealing second Willett took home on several erratic tosses by the Bishop infield. Alexander held the visitors hitless until the eighth inning. The Redskin nine amassed ten hits and downed Marshall 9-5 in the Herd ' s first defeat of the season. A hard-hit triple by Ross in the eighth with bases full was the deciding point of the game. The batting of Ross, pitching of Thomas and the base running of Willett were featured in the victory. Ohio University was next to invade Oxford and fell 2-0 before the four hit pitching of Alexander. This victory was the second shut-out performance of the Redskin hurler for the season. The fielding of Knowlton who handled seven chances perfectly was the outstanding defensive performance for the Redskins. Dayton again defeated Miami in their second encounter. With the Flyers giving Corbett excellent support, Dayton took the Tribe to the count of 7-3. Corbett in winning his fifth consecu- tive game allowed but two hits and struck out eleven Miami batters. After ten innings of scoreless ball, Alston came through with an eleventh inning homerun to bring a 1-0 victory to the Redskins over Hanover. In the first game of a double header with Cincinnati, Alexander again pitched shut-out ball and al- lowed the Bearcats only two hits. This 2-G victory brought second place Buckeye honors to Miami. Cincinnati evened the count by eking out a 1-0 victory in the second gome. LETTER MEN T C A c r Wietz. assl coach- Third Row: VARSITY SQUAD RESULTS Miami 80 Butler 51 Miami 65 Ohio U. 66 Miami 73V2 Ohio Wesleyan 571 2 Miami 84V2 Cincimiati 46V2 Buckeye Conierence — Ohio U. 771 2 Miami 63 Ohio Wesleyan, Cincinnati Page One Hundred ,.t3i P BOTTOM ROW Koppitch, Art Dav Exley Wical, Ted Foley, Boyce Hatfield, Bob Wilkes, Amsden Oln THE 1935 SPRING SEASON Under the guidance of Coach George L. Rider, Miami ' s track teams have come to be recognized as among the outstanding teams in this section of the country. During the past ten years, Miami ' s Rider coached teams have won the Buckeye Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championship six times and have been three times winner of second place honors. With this enviable record and having developed several men of national prominence, the ability of Coach Rider has been recognized and his knowl- edge of handling trackmen so respected that he has been appointed as one of the American track coaches for the 1936 Olympic Games. T R A C TRIBULATIONS AND TRIUMPHS Early spring days found the Tribe with the best prospects in years and another Buckeye crown seemed inevitable. Disaster, however, lurked on the sidelines. After ineligibilities and injury had taken their toll. Coach Rider was left with a squad made up almost entirely of new and inexperienced men. The cinder- men had their first taste of competition at the Butler Indoor Relays where they were pitted against the cream of the middlewest tracksters. Against this top- notch opposition the medley relay team of Oliver, Cole, Wical and Hatfield placed a good third behind Butler and Kansas State. In early April, the Tribe track hopes skidded when Oliver pulled a tendon which forced him to remain on the sidelines for the rest of the year. In the opening dual meet, the Redskins scalped Butler 80-51. Jim Cole led the scoring with three firsts, a second, and a great anchor lap on the winning relay for a total of 191 4 points. Thompson annexed firsts in the shot and discus events and Jones won the javelin, and placed second in the shot and low hurdles. Wical and Foley turned in the surprise performance of the afiernoon when they beat out the Butler veterans in the half. During the norit week Cole pulled a leg muscle which kept him on the sidelines until the Buckeye. Al- though winning nine of the fifteen events, the Redskins dropped a close 66-65 decision to Ohio U. In tossing the spear 191 ' IOV4 Pete Jones reached his peak of the season and established a new stadium and university record in the javelin. In the next meet, Miami took Ohio Wesleyan 73V2-57y2 making clean sweeps in four events and winning five others. Running in their first night meet, the Tribe handed Cincinnati a 841 2-461 2 setback on the Bearcat ' s home track. Barghoorn took individual honors with thirteen points. The meet was featured by the half which found Wical nosed out by inches to suffer his first defeat of the year. Page One Hundred Wilkes, running the fastest two mile race of his career, broke the tape in 9:50.9 to sweep home to an outstanding victory. Miami ' s relay teams of Davis, Koppitch, Foley, and Damon barely won in a thrilling finish. In the Buckeye meet at Athens, the Redskins dropped their crown to Ohio University, but in spite of being handicapped by early season mishaps man- aged to finish a good second with 63 points. Although well represented, Miami was unable to do better than three first places. Jim Kimpel topped off three years of active participation in the pole vault by soaring over the bar to first place and the championship. This event was marked by the keen competition offered by Armbrust, of Ohio, high point man of the meet, who gained second place after having his pole snap in one of the later stages of the duel. Landen performing like a veteran, in his first Buckeye meet, took fourth place. Roudebush lacked that final kick and lost his Buckeye crown in the high jump. The finals in the event saw him in a close second place. Damon ran off with a first in the quarter and was followed closely by Cole. This meet was the first in which Cole had competed since early in the season and although handicapped by heavy bandages and a stiff leg he performed remarkably well. Running in their usual good form, the crack Miami mile relay team easily won the final event of the meet. Davis, Koppitch, Damon, and Cole came close to the Buckeye record and completed the season without a defeat. Much credit is due Coach Rider for rounding his green squad into form for the unexpected change in events left him with one of the darkest outlooks in years, and the season ' s record speaks for itself. THE FRESHMAN SQUAD FIRST HOW Roberts, Hem, Doughman, Lyjich, Pieil, Wingl SECOND ROW Dunker, mgr,; Hudson, Farkus. Howard, F THIRD ROW McCIellan, Markley, Geason. Black Mills Bu FOURTH ROW Risinger, Wolf, Smith, Wells. Kuzyk Burt MiKinlev FIFTH ROW Hood ' si: Hammel Gohlke. Miller Cook, Guckes, Bush, Foster, E Oppelt, Blank, Theobald. ' roege, mgr-,- Jetter, mgr. tK CROSS C€LNTCy SCLAD The grueling grind of cross-country- was started with a green squad which had the most successful season since 1932 by virtue of their five victories and a lone defeat. Miami romped over Ohio Wesleyan in the opener 15-45. (In cross-country the low score wins). The following weekends found the Red- skins trouncing Earlham and Ball State by identical scores of 20-38. At Oberlin, the harriers met their only setbacks of the year, 37-21, against the veteran Ohio Conference champions. The squad then trekked to Muncie and repeated their win over Ball State, this time 21-37. In the last meet of the sea- son the Redskins edged out a highly favored Butler outfit by the close score 27-29. Although no Buckeye championship was held this year, the Redskins can claim the unofficial title by virtue of their 15-45 trouncing of Ohio Wesleyan. Page One Hundred and Eighty-Si: r ?t H J y J B c X I N e Uppercuts and short-arm jabs are traded night- ly during the winter season by the would-be pugilists under the direction of Trainer Colville. After the Golden Gloves tourney at Dayton in which several Miamians reached the final round and Jerry Williams went on to Chicago, the champions of the school were decided at the annual sports carnival. Deckman, Kuzic, Todhunter, Hyde, Gleason, Richilanno, and Williams were crowned champions of their respective weights. The grunt and groan artists workout under the supervision of Coach Wilson and Art Palmer. Ballard, Panuska, Camp, and Armstrong re- tained their crowns while Canright, Black- burn, Hammel, and Thumm won for the first time. VC ESTLI N G Lell to Right: Larsen, Wag- ner, Armstrong, McClain, Thomson, Copeland, Hun- ter, Griffin, Blackburn, La- hodney, R e d 1 i n, Barnum. Wrestling: Snyder, down; Panuska, riding. TENNIS lay Howenstine (E. J.] Keep your eye on the ball! Swing a little easier! Brush up on that backhand! In such manner Coach Baker rounded his candidates for the 1935 Tennis team into shape for the sports second season in inter- collegiate competition. Opening with West- ern State Teachers College of Michigan, Miami was outclassed in every match and suffered a 7-0 defeat. The netters won their first match from Ohio Wesleyan. Kase, Howenstine, Bacon, and Merkel won and brought home the 6-2 decision. With the victory hanging on the outcome of the doubles, Miami came through to win the doubles and the 4-2 match from Ohio U. Again, Western State Teachers took the Redskins, this time by a 5-2 score. Against Wesleyan, Kase and Bacon again decided the outcome of the 4-3 match by their dou- bles game. Cincinnati ' s power drives brought a 5-2 victory for the Bearcats in the first match and in the return meeting out- aced the Redskins 6-1. The final match brought a 6-1 win over Dayton and second place Buckeye honors. Charles Heim: eCLT Swinging into the opening match, the Miami par chasers landed in the rough and lost 15-3 to Cincinnati. With Dayton favored to win, Heimsch dropped a putt on the last green to bring home the S ' a-SVa victory. The Tribe handed in a seventy-eight av- erage score which was good for a 15y2-2y2 victory over Ohio Wesleyan. Ohio State caught the Redskins off stride and handed them a 1 5-3 setback. The Tribe niblick swingers came back to hand Dayton an liy2-6 ' 2 defeat. Repeating their 15-3 win, Cincinnati had little trouble in their return en- gagement with the Tribe. In the last two matches, Wesleyan lost 14-4 and Ohio State tied lOVa-lOVz- Climaxing a season of four wins, three losses, and one tie the team finished third in the State Intercollegiate tournament. Page One Hundred an INTRA A quarter of a century of intramural sports is the proud claim of Miami and associate professor Tom Van Voorhis. During this time Van, as he is known to everyone, h as developed an intramural system that ranks second to none. The program that has evolved from a few limited contests is separated into three main divisions — fall, winter, and spring. At the beginning of each sea- son, the teams representing the various groups wishing to participate are divided into leagues. So enthusiastic has been the response during the past years that it has been necessary to form a second division in the leagues to take care of all the teams and to offer all the opportunity to take part in some sport. Trophy cups are awarded the winning teams and individual medals are given those who excel along lines where personal skill is required. Such a variance of sports is offered that all forms of recreation from track meets to bowling and ping-pong are included. Outdoor sports are featured during the fall season. Organized touch football, playground ball, tennis, golf, and a track meet are offered as a means of re- laxation for all. Within Withrow Court, basketball, volleyball, handball, ping- pong, foul shooting, boxing, wrestling, gymnastics, and fencing complete the winter schedule. The climax of the indoor season is the annual sports carnival in which the various champions are determined. The spring season finds the center of activity on Cook field where volleyball, and baseball are featured and on the tennis courts and golf course. Since the main purpose of the program is to provide a means for every man in school to participate in some sport, it has been arranged that those fresh- men not making the varsity squad will have an opportunity to play at their chosen sport. Freshman league teams are organized and each member of the winning team is awarded an intramural medal. A corps of students under the direction of Van takes care of the officiating. Page One Hundred and Ninety A maximum participation trophy is awarded annually to the group taking most active part in the intramural program during the year. Points toward this coveted award are offered for actual participation in sporting events and for officiating. It was the batting as well as the battling Betas that came through to cop the spring baseball championship. By downing the Delts in the final game they completed the season without a defeat and took undisputed claim to the title. The volleyball teams were divided into two divisions, and after an exception- ally close season the Delts defeated the Z. B. T. ' s to win in division one. The second division cup went to the Delta Chis when their hot spikes proved to be too much for the Delts. Celebrating the opening of the new village pool, a strong independent team copped first honors in the swimming meet. The fall season opened with Softball. The Betas were victorious in the National league as were the Z. B. T. ' s in the American. In the play off, the Z. B. T. ' s took the Betas to a 5-2 count in one of the better games of the season. Incle- ment weather delayed the touch football program and when the Betas and Phi Delts did reach the finals, the game ended in a tie. This marked the third Beta championship in as many years and the cup is now permanently theirs. The Phi Delts were also awarded a trophy. The winter volleyball champion- ship found the Delts forging ahead to win the title after defeating all comers in both leagues and divisions. In the winter basketball race. Phi Kappa Tau went through the season undefeated and nosed out the Phi Delts in the final game to gain the school championship and conclude the winter season. M L C A L INTRAMURAL SEASON RESUME VOLLEYBALL— Spring, 1935 Delts , , Sig Alphs Phi Delts D U.s . Dekes Chi; Division 2 W. Sig AlphG Sig Chis Phi Dehs Dekes 3 ! Nation al League, D Z. B. T ' s Betas Delt Chis Sig Nus Phi Taus Y. M. C. A, W. 5 4 3 2 1 Division 2 Deh Chis Betas Z. B. T. ' s Sig Nus Phi Taus Y. M. C. A.. W. 5 4 3 1 BASEBALL— Spring, 1935 Delts Phi Delts Sig Alphs D. U. ' s Sig Chis Dekes . Y. M. C. Delt Chis P hi Taus National League .333 .250 .000 Sig Alphs . 5 Y. M. C. A. 4 1 Delt Chis 3 2 Z. B. T. ' s 1 3 Sig Nus 1 3 Phi Delts . 5 National League. Divisic W. L Delts . , 5 D. U.s 4 1 Betas . 1 2 Dekes . . 1 2 Phi Taus . 1 3 Sig Chis . 4 Division 2 W. L Delts . 5 Phi Taus . 3 1 D. U. ' s . 2 3 Dekes . 1 2 Betas ... I 2 Sig Chis 4 TOUCHFOOTBALL Am  rican League W, L Phi Delts 5 Z. B. T. ' s 1 1 Y. M. C. A. Sig Alphs . 1 2 Sig Nus . 1 2 Delt Chis 3 Na ional League W. L. Betas 4 1 Delts 3 2 Phi Taus 2 2 Dekes 2 2 D. Us 2 3 Sig Chis 1 4 BASKETBALL— Winter, 1935-36 SOFT BALL— Fall, 1935 Phi Taus Ogden Y. M. C. Betas . . Sig Alphs W. Pet. 1.000 .750 .400 Z. B. T.-s. . 5 Sig Nus .. 3 2 Delt Chis . 2 2 Phi Delts . 1 3 Sig Alphs .1 3 Y. M. C. A. 1 3 National League W. L. Betas 5 1 Dekes . . Sig Chis . 2 2 Phi Taus . 2 3 Delts 1 3 D. U. ' s . 1 4 VOLLEYBALL— Fall, 1935 American Leagu Delt Chis Sig Nus Z. B. T. ' s Y. M. C. Phi Delts Sig Alphs Division L. Pet. .833 .667 .500 .400 .250 .200 Z. B. T. ' s Sig Delts Betas . . Ogden Phi Taus Sig Alphs Phi Delts Delts D. U. ' s Sig Nus Delt Chis Dekes Phi Delts Sig Chis Delts . Dekes Sig Nus D. U. ' s . Delt Chis League Division W. L. . 6 6 2 5 2 2 4 2 4 1 5 1 5 Division 2 W. L. 6 1 6 2 5 2 3 3 . 2 4 Pet. .857 .750 Page One Hundred and Ninety-Two V€MEN ' $ ATHLETICS Page One Hundred and Ninety-Three LEFT TO RIGHT; Margaret A. Shaw, A. M.. Physical Educati Margaret E. Phillips. A. M.. Associate Professor of Physical Educali Director of Physical Education for Worn Margery Horton, M. S., Assistant Professor of Physical Educatii WOMEN Sports, sportsmanship, scholarship — W. A. A. is on the campus to promote them. Affiliated with a national organization, this Women ' s Athletic Association is as active as its title is long. But first as to the official set-up. A Board elected by popular vote issues rules and regulations — the kind that you like to fol- low. For advice, of course, members of the Board often consult the gym teachers. In the corner above you see all the W. A. A. awards in one picture. How do you get one or several ? 300 points win W. A. A. membership, 500 are worth class numerals; it takes 1000 for a block M and 1500 for that jumsy white jacket. To a few lucky seniors go cups, Highest Awards. How do you get the points? By class participation, extra-class work, hiking, bicycling, riding, observing health rules, or belonging to Orchesis. And then there are the general awards to class teams that win tournaments, and the Phillips Cup presented by Miss Phillips to the senior girl whom she considers is most outstanding for service, good sportsmanship, and interest in campus affairs. O A R D TOP ROW (Left to Right): Han Alice bhuey Rebecca Liggett Elizabeth Breinig BOTTOM BOW: Magdalene Stark Ruth Thayer Helen Bartholome Leolyn Miller i ff hf Soon W. A. A. ' s will be crooning, Oh, we want to go back to that little gray shack on the Tallawanda, for they are concocting a cozy, comfy cabin two miles north of Oxford where overnight hikers will overnight and play girls will play . . . But W. A. A. is the author of another thing or ten. To be specific: resurfaced tennis courts ... a recreation room in Herron where women can bat around and shuffle boards . . . the Barn Dance for women and men, too ... a Hare versus Hound chase ... the posture contest when every Miami woman wishes she were a member of S. S. S. (straight spine society). This spring Margaret Weber and Rose Mary Bennett stood tallest in their sports, afternoon, spectator and evening outfits . . . the news about framing and camping from off-campus campers comes to you through the courtesy of W. A. A. , . . hot dogs that you run after in the middles of football games bear a W. A. A. license . . . group hikes at sun-up or moon-up ... W. A. A. backing for the elaborate Dance Drama presented by Orchesis. Ruth Liggett, newly elected ' 36- ' 37 president of the Women ' s Athletic Association, attended the national convention at Indianapolis where she collected a big bagful of peppy-mint notions that should add a few more yards to the length of the W. A. A. activity list. Now with a hop, skip, jump, let ' s make a one page dash to women athletes in action. WOMEN ' S ATHLETIC O C I A T I O N FRONT ROW (Lelt Ruth Williams Mary Stark Dorothy Walker Peggy Rees Virginia Balla ' edy SECOND ROW: Marian Laird Rhoda Klemme Esther Bacon Hildred Byrkett Edith Turk Mary Lou Hubbard McAu Katl Mary Lou THIRD ROW: Elva Corell Dorothy Dougherty Grace Engel Marjone Pitsinger Alice Hoock lane Lehmiller Margaret Reeves Charlotte Martin FOURTH ROW: Hulda Heller Frances Starkey Elizabeth Withrow De Light Morton BACK ROW: Ruth Nungesser Caroline Slack Marian Montgomery TELE T€ fCK H ( 1 ) We point our arrow to the girls who stand tall and shoot straight from the shoulder, right to the heart. Poise personified. Nor is it as easy as it looks. (2) Five more darts about to dart into a bull ' s eye. Step aside, ye lovers of life. (3) She ' s coming across. It ' s Thayer, dragging a tape behind her. (4) Shoot, Robinhood couldn ' t do more. Bowing on bended kneel (5) Careful Thayer, don ' t break that plate. Notice Helen Hasselbach reaching for the moon in broad daylight. (6) Shuey is out, but gracefully so. (7) Captain Thayer presents her champion batters. Class 1936. (8) It ' s all a matter of standing broad. Leap, Graf, leap. (9) Bingo! Morton cracks a single. (10) And now for a glimpse of Orchesis, national interpretive dancing group under the direction of Miss Grace Clapp. Here is Helen Bartholomew in a scene from Lotus Land. (11) Juggler of Notre Dame as presented at the Christmas Vespers. (12) Cochran and Hubbard in harmony. (13) Bartholomew again, this time in Conflict of Power. (14) Tiny Heller exulting over Helen Bartholomew. Scenes even more beautiful than these made the Dance Drama by Orchesis a not too far away rival of the professional. -«« CHAMPIONS €f ACTICN (1) The soccer champions, class of 1936, looking much nicer than their title sounds. (2) Girls who know how to play drop the basketball — through the hoop. Independent Champions. (3) Hockey players who made their goal — the championship. (4) The captains who led where it paid to follow: Molitor, soccer; Seeley, Delta Zeta basketball, Thayer, independent basketball; and hockey; Osborn, volley ball; Farley, archery. (5) You can tell by looking at them that these women arch. (6) The volley ball varsity team. (7) Delta Zeta basketball players, the ' 36 sorority champions. (8) Volley ball champs, the Class of ' 39. (9) Bishop Hepburn Varsities demonstrating at the Demonstration. A good shot of one of their good shots. (10) A little more of the same thing. To satisfy your curiosity, the Bishops had most of the balls in their basket. Incidentally, there were three basketball tournaments: independent, sorority, and class teams. The independent winner plays the sorority winner. Varsity teams are chos en from the best class teams. This year the class champions were the sophomores. INVCLVINe THE AESTHETIC (1) Glimpses of the Girls ' Gym Demonstration. In reality this was a singing pyramid to the tune of How do you do, every body, how do you do? (2) Allan, up and going, is out of sight, as is Tiny Heller who ' s at the bottom of it all. (3) Fency this! The parry, the attack — then, foiled again. (4) From now on we ' re speaking of the rhythmic modern dance, meaning beautiful movement with or without music. It ' s a matter of angular line, if you can figure that out. Not Orchesis, but class groups whose chief aim is to develop poise, not to interpret. So, inspired by anythmg from Rhapsody in Blue to that Wealthy Widow Serenade or Chopin ' s Preludes, these women smoothly respond. It looks graceful, flowing, and effortless, but you who have tried know that it is good exercise. Who ever thought that women were now sissies should try doing one of these deceptive dances. If he is not in excellent physical condition he will soon wilt and lie panting on the floor, and the next morning will arise with lusty creaks in all joints. He will also arise with much greater respect for the stamina as well as the rhythm of the so called weaker sex. PieUCINe V€ HEN (1) Gymnastics. You can ' t do these unless you ' re well balanced. Agility here, but creakiness a few days later. A little Continental or early twentieth century-ish perhaps, but good for any young thing. (2) Setting: Western and, of course, at the end of a swimming pool. Dorothy Walker is about to let Leolyn Miller go up in the air in one of those daringly different dives. In the background Miss Horton sees to it that everything clicks. (3) Oh, carry me back in half or half a dozen ways. To the left a rippling sample of the head carry, then the cross chest, and at the right a tired swimmer being picked up. Swimming is open only to physical educa- tion majors. This year for the first time, they have the opportunity to pass Life Saving exam- inations. (4) Now, if you look very closely, you ' ll see fifteen girls on fifteen bicycles ready to go. Another day you might find them hiking, skating, or horsing around the countryside. W. A. A. supplies the skates and two wheelers, but has never gotten ' round to growing horses. ■: T ' t m Playtime for the University . . . young minds bodies seek relief from eye-wearying books and musty-aired rooms resounding with droning lec- tures . . . Saturday night ... the expectant air of the campus at seven p. m a thousand showers swish in preparing the University for its date . . . Momentous class dances with famed orchestras playing their expensive strains . . . dancing bodies, now swinging to the beat of throbbing rhythm, now swaying to dreamy melody . . . lazy afternoons strolling on shadowed paths . . . talking of nothing . . . tasting of love Page Two Hundred and Four jDj ' .. BHHBK I M mI2P BwL ' r . Bk B- ' . ■■■■BKt T Bi IH f % 1 ■jy aC Mr i 0 iir Page Two Hundred and Five .4 3, r f n K 4 MATTIE LCL SAXE Page Two Hundred and Eight Page Two Hundred and Nine AiAPy JANE CAKOTIiECS Page Two Hundred and Ten y Page Two Hundred and Eleve ETHEL MILLED Page Two Hundred and Twelv Page Two Hundred and Thirteen AiACr HELEN STEEE Page Two Hundred and Fourteen 3 ■J j H m b tfHp HHj 1p s ' Page Two Hundred and Fifteen BETXy SAMPSELL Page Two Hundred and Sixteen Page Two Hundred and Seventh ELIZABETH SEELEy Page Two Hundred and Page Two Hundred and Nineteen More of the more beautiful . . . just to prove to those who do not kno v Miami vomen as we do that we have many, many more of every type . . . make a wish and here she is. They are . . . above: Esther Morrison Martha Aschbacher lanet Kreilick Margaret Early Martha Zehring Center: Isabelle Vogt Dorothy Gram Below: Sieglinde Handschin Dorothy Daley lane Strausbaugh Martha Blackwell Katharine Gram THE SENICC FRONT ROW, tight); Charlotte Schm Seiglinde Handschi Dorotha Redm Vema Fleeter 3W Robert Rogers Lowell Busier Robert Weiland William Thorn: Alex Mclntyre William Lewis Morton Weingart Wahoo, wahoo, get a gander of the words about to follow if you care to go back to that long, lovely evening last April when everything went per schedule except the rain and that went elsewhere, i. e. Old Hawkins (Negro for Old Man Weather) played the taxi drivers in Oxford a trashy trick . . . Duke Ellington on the campus with his colored band, the first since McKinney ' s Cotton Pickers . , . Duke ' s a smart boy: once when he was Edward Ken- nedy he refused a scholarship to Pratt Institute — which turned out to be just as well . . . and his Ivy Anderson, best-dressed colored woman in America, who got just what she asked for — namely, vanilla ice cream . . . Gud-dy gud-dy for her! . . . Lots of light on the subject that night; corollary — an empty balcony . . . Duke ' s men played music alright, alright, but they didn ' t use any. Learn a piece, then throw it away — it ' s that a-way . . . Some of the band graduated from Wilberforce — a pretty slick bunch . . . Didn ' t you like those bass players? There used to be a third, but he didn ' t have the love of music . . . was too utterly too, too mer- cenary, so they let him go. Maybe that explains the mystery of the vacant chair ... A good tromboner, and we make no bones about it (got that idea from a Hosack greeting card — 5c) . . . which reminds us that Mr. Hosack was there with his little black camera to take your picture. How those printed silks did stand out from the crowd . . . E A L L The Ellington outfit offered all that it ' s famous for: Stormy Weather and Ebony Rhapsody plus Duke ' s own inspiring inspirations — Solitude, Black and Tan Fantasy, Sophisti- cated Lady, and Mood Indigo . , . This is the first Negro band to tuck the beat of African tom-toms into dance music ... A queenless evening and a grand evening without that kind of a march , . . When asked what jive was ( All the Jive is Gone ) the bass fiddler twittered: Jive is prevarication. Like if you act like Napoleon. Get it ? . . . Those who came late missed the gold of an Indian Head against the black, and were sorry . . . Why did Mr. Folker go to bed so early and make us walk across the street? . . . The band hadn ' t played on a better stand in six months, so you see where Miami stands when it comes to stands . . . Duke EUy is a patient fellow — almost signed his life away . . . intoxicating gardenia (don ' t get us wrong) . . . the decorations were a scintillating symphony in tan and orange . . . Oh, and Ivy just didn ' t know where to hang that corsage . . . more people at that Ball than ever be- fore in Ball history: 608 couples this year, 607 last year . . . we couldn ' t help feeling skittish on that skiddish floor, meaning that the boards were o. k. . . . and Ellington ' s men wore suits that suited them and us . . . nor can we omit the Owls who intermitted smoothly ... on that whole floor there might have been two men dressed alike . . . well, we could snatch snatches for another inch or two, but you were there . . . add your in- dividual touches — the curl in her hair, the light in her eye, etc. . . . Let our last word be a reminder of who set this big Ball rolling: Chairman — Jack Craft, Features — Verna Floeter, Wil- liam Thomas, Alex Mclntyre; Publicity — Morton Weingart, Dor- otha Redman, Lowell Busier, Robert Rogers; Decorations — Sieglinde Handschin, William Lewis, Robert Wetland. THE JLNICC For the Junior Prom it was a night late in February, with hours from nine through midnight even unto two and a half in the morning . . . silver slippers in the snow and a couple of formals there, too . . . enough to take your breath away — that setting . . . Who said this is where big boys play ball? . . . glittering, glim- mering, glistening, gleaming, phosphorescent background for a platform on high . . . higher still a round rainbow swung slowly, tracing bits of colored shadow between our feet . . . The light, faint as that of an early dawn or a late twilight . . . heaven, almost . . . and, we ' re writing up to that — heavenly music from one they call the Old Left Hander, alias Joe Sanders . . . from Tennessee, Alabama, Dartmouth to us, with rhythmic melody and melodic rhythm we can ' t forget . . . there were scores of tunes (naturally) — among them Moon Over Miami (naturally) . . . and for local color a Sanders arrange- ment of Good-bye and Thanks Again — sweet harmony that one of our own boys, Norman Cory, brought to earth for us . . . came the coronation with a truly queenly queen — Eliza- beth Seeley, who shared her throne with Dick Erwine . . . an- other grand march when half of us marched grandly and another half just looked on grandly from a balcony that, in- cidentally, never did see the lights that night . . . not to omit JOE SANDERS. The Ole Left Hander, otherwise known as Joe Sanders, in action . . . with him you see Barbara Parks, a woman who really sang . . . which is more than we can say for Joe, who, you remember, couldn ' t even say Good evening in anything cibove a whisper . . . but there ' s something to being able to caress the keys with a lead pencil curled between the fingers ... Joe did that little thing and got results that satisfied, as did all his results . . . which added up to a musical night worth nothing in your diary . . . may the Old Left Hander take the path that leads to Oxford again, one day . . . f n- P C C H the intermission when our Owls came out to hoot and toot as no other night owls can . . . look out, Joe, here ' s competition . . . with their accent on your favorite tune and an after-beat that punctuated ours . . . but the Old Left-Hander came back with a willowy baton in that world-famous iist ... a baton thai found a long, long chain of college melodies, some peppy, others sweet-sounding, silvery things . . . they say Joe ' s men didn ' t know from one measure to another which song was next on the list — strange how they all melted their tones and keys into the same pattern at the same time . . . And while they were sharping their f ' s and flatting their e ' s in came the committee, after time out at Dr. Krueger ' s home . . . really, they deserved to have a party thrown at them . . . What ' s that? — the Old Left-Hander paging Tom Stout! Seems as if Tommy has an uncle who once made music for Joe . . . step right up there, Tom ... by gum, so this is what the world looks like a few hours before it wakes up . . . more music, more dancing — then suddenly nothing at all . . . another Promenade makes history . . . how we ' d like to shake that Old Left-Hander ' s old left hand . . . and so to bed . . . but the melody lingers on . . . even now, can ' t you hear the music go- ing round and round and round . . . that dance is no thing of the past after all . . . H U N Queen Elizabeth . . . regal, stately . . . with all the poise, the dignity court life demands . . . orchids, yes, orchids — Lib had them in the plural! ... a queen crowning that was the crowning event of the evening . . . Joe and Betty, make way for the Queen; don ' t you see, she ' s smihng at you . . . presenting Miss Elizabeth Seely, loveliest of the more lovely Junior women! Prom Committee SEATED (Lelt to Right); t argaret Petry William MacDonald STANDING: J. Howard Fongboner Robeit Matre Albert Ziegler Committee Members John Cornwall Madlvn Pitts Mary Elizabeth Gary Leonard Freeman $€t)HCM€CE At this Sophomore Hop, we hopped to Johnny Hamp and liked it. Words fail unless we fortify ourselves with a long, strong dash and, dash it all, be trite with — smooth. Everything, floor included, was just that way. A lot of saxo- phone, mellow and lyric, following the melody . . . wailing trombone . . . once in a while the sigh of a steel guitar ... a swirl of rhythm . . . there ' s a voice in the air . . . Kay Kernan ' s . . . enough to make us sentimental . . . goal posts at either end, willowy, but striking, in Denninson ' s red and white (one box of thumb tacks did it all — an economical committee) . . . bumping elbows with the honored guests of the evening. Redskin football heroes, Mutchler, Panuska, Ohly, Cole, Campbell, Heimsch, Petrich and Rytel . . . and those fast cross- country men, not cross at all . . . for local color a canvas quarterback backing the orchestra, making what we ' d call an aerial attack. SEYMOUR WEISBERGER. Chairma JOHNNY HAMP Here ' s Johnny Hamp Jiimself, feeling fine after a two months ' engagement at Chicago ' s Edgewater Beach Hotel. What does he like? Golf and old time pieces. In spare moments Johnny teaches new tricks to his wire-haired terrier, Skip It — who can sing low to impersonate Bing Crosby and high for Morton Downey. H € P Intermission sneaks up on us all too soon. The multitude pushes EN MASSE over to Tuffy ' s as usual . . . Eleven o ' clock climax: Tom Slater pattering WLW quality patter while we turned out partners to the left for a Grand March . . . King Heimsch, Queen Johnson leading, the rest of us thirty-two abreast ... an impressive coronation, for once . . . then ODK, national service honorary, doing its formal tapping when Mr. A. K. Morris, Ken Clark, Charles Campbell, Carlyle Jones, Bill Yeck, Robert Mautz, Forrest Williams, Robert McConnaughey and Harold Home stood out from the crowd . . . more music, more dancing till the clock struck twelve — signal for the Cinderellas to call it a night ... so ended a happy Hop worth repeating . . . Prom-Ball competition with its big name band . . . Who made it? — Seymour Weisberger was chair- man, William Barker, tickets; Robert Reis, programs, Roberta Ende- brock, Catherine Young, chaperones; William Beynon, John Collins, Frances McDonald, decorations, Robert Brown, John Armstrong, Hop King election; Neil Renlon, publicity; Ruth Saunders, coronation. THE KING AND QUEEN The women ' s choice: Charles Heimsch, star quarterback, and for this night the king of the campus . . . with him his queen, Dorothy Johnson, really regal, even without a crown. But there was a golden crown for Heimsch ' s head, and a red velvet robe for his shoulders. Remember how he smiled upon us from his lofty throne? . . . and we noticed the queen ' s smile, too. Long live the Sophomore Hop King and Queen of 1935-36! STANDING (Lett lo Right; Robert Brown Robert Reis Wilham Barker Beynon THE rKESHMAN After a Freshman Strut as this turned out to be, we generously give ' 36 freshmen permission to strut . . . real music and, for a change, fair weather . . . Strut snaps snapped while strutting: What? No smoking here? Poor things, turned out into the sweet March air . . . let ' s light one ... A formal majority with an otherwise minority — as usual ... A preponderance of freshmen with scatterings of up- perclassmen who came grudgingly . . . and were forced to admit that they liked it — even better than the more austere Hop and Prom . . . and what ' s more . . . vicariously delighting in some of the fresh- men ' s naive piquancy . . . Art Morgan, straight from the Hall of Mirrors, Netherland Plaza ... to us, taking his eleven-piece band through medleys of swing song . . . another steel guitar throwing its own slurs . . . exotic — rapturous . . . that blue and silver background smacking of stars and all things heavenly . . . old Herron with a new dress didn ' t know exactly how to act . . . Intermissions at nine-thirty and again at ten-thirty . . . otherwise music, except for time out again at eleven . . . the usual stampede for coats . . . outside, cars lined up from Ogden to the Sigma Chi house. Back up the winding stairs again . . . out of the wire-mesh cage and onto the floor . . . The bass player stepping on a floor that wasn ' t a floor after all finds himself taken down a notch or two . . . name your number ... a medley of old ones? . . . our specialty . . . The evening races onward . . . some begin to seek out chairs to sit out this dance or that . . . more patter in the Phil Harris manner with a song by the leader. Some . . . their first formal . . . begin to take it like old veterans . . . downstairs for another drink of water . . . liiif m M ■ffH 1 [- ' :. ; Tf ' STRUT Preparation for a royal coronation ... a double phalanx forms diagonally across the floor ... a twelve-foot aisle between. A spotlight focuses at the opposite end of the floor ... all heads are turned . . . who is the queen ' Finally a blast of trumpets ... a pause . . . more trumpets . . , another pause . . . this one longer . . . trumpets again . . . still no queen . . . Morgan ' s watch a little ahead of the times . . . finally the procession comes down the aisle . . . upon reach ing the throne Strut Chairman Ellison presents President Upham ... he in turn crowning Queen Edna the First with a crown that almost missed its destination — (half audible: never did see one of these things that fit ) . . . The lovely maids in waiting: Mary Lou Hansgen, Martha Ashbacher, Martha Fulmer, and Nan Stewart . . . Hold every- thing: just a little more dazzling Recensio light. Like Jimmy Walker, we ' re getting used to it . . . Slowly, dancing resumes. All that a dance should be . . . orchids to Chair- man Tom Ellison and the committee — John Fine- frock, Kenneth Jones, Burton Palmer, Arthur Scott, Robert Sharp and Virgil Keeling — who almost crippled themselves carting the stage through town. |HH B - v p Kb Hh i J QUEEN AND ESCORT May we present Queen Edna the iirst — in every day liie, Edna Holdt, and her escort, Sherwood Faison . . . quaen over what?— the ' 36 Freshman Strut . . . regal that night in white silk and tomato red crepe ... a swish and a swirl bangs, likeable ones . . . smiling carrying calla lilies . . . sweet peas upon her head . . . trumpets, cor- onation, title: a perfect combination meant for this partic- ular Ireshman girl — so voted the men of the campus and, less officially, the women too . . . lohn Finefrock BACK HOW: Burton Palmer Arthur Scott Robert Sharp Virgil Keeling No Saturday classes, but a classy Varsity — many ' s the week day you read that happy little reminder, and many ' s the Satur- day you took its hint. Why, without Varsities, Miami would all too often be finding herself all dressed up with no place to go. As it is, Tommy Kirkup and his committee whisper a few magic words and — presto — there you have McGuffey turned into a plaza: a band ready to go. One night, if you had any luck at all, you walked off with a Vogue-ish compact, a train of Camels, or was it a Williams outfit de luxe? And either you had big, fat balloons to prick into oblivion, or long, thin strips of colored paper to wind around your neck. Along about March came some real decorations — sparkling, dazzling, brilliant, glamorous effects, inherited from the Prom and proud of their origin. Form and color enough to overshadow any horizontal bar or caged window. Right here you see Chairman Kirkup and Mary Helen Steed on their way to that big something new — a formal Varsity which, incidentally, we nominate for repetition. Other extra-specials in- cluded the sweet Valentine affair and the two-in-one Home- coming Dance, where, if you didn ' t like one band, you tried another. V A C $ ■T r After that the Liberals sponsored a no-war hop, a night when we just couldn ' t quarrel. But any Varsity satisfied, when you finally pulled your coat or somebody else ' s out of the check- room you always said Righto! to a good time was had by all. Members not in the pic- ture are: Robert Morris, William Dakin, James Shollenbarger, Robert Munro, Robert Wetland, Robert Zipf, Harvey Altfeld, Robert Rogers and James Eley. $€CIAL CLLC n SECOND ROW: Ford Worthing. Bryce Byard, Lowell Busier, Wesley Miller, Leonard Freeman. BOTTOM ROW: Thomas Kirkup, Jack Loos, Ned Linegar, Robert Buol, Richard Biery. CEPAINTINS THE yCAC 1) The wandering geologists return to sleeping Oxford. (2) Back again! We ' re glad this job comes only twice a year. (3) Classes start . . . one of those necessary evils. (4) Governor Davey speaks. Were we thrilled. (5) Pep meeting . . . night before homecoming . . . what a mob. (6) The conniving Sig Alphs cop a first. (7) The flip of a coin flips the Betas into second place. (8) A bird ' s-eye . . . the parade of the floats. (9) What ... a female Neptune? (10) Just try to find your sisters and your cousins and your uncles and your aunts. (11) Anybody wanna buy a duck? (12) A ducky couple! Saxe and Oram. (13) Where, oh where, has that little ball gone ' ? (14) M- -drop-the- ' kerchief t on the list. (15) Chesty, these Chesters who came out on top. (16) And they called it a Promenade! (17) Broxopp blessing babies with bigger, beanier beans. (18) Reviewing the Red Cap Revue. (19) Oxford as seen from College Corners at midnight. (20) Judging from this, students make the Student. (21) Delta Chi puts an intramural ball where it belongs. (22) Worth living for from one hour to another — between book sun and air. (23) X marks the .Spot, so even the freshmen can vote. (24) For hours on one leg, just to serve you. (25) Six, five, four, three, two, one. (26) Fall and the man with a rake, times three. (27) Paradox: standing still while rushing. (28) Keg, girls, and horn a la Sigma Chi. ((29) When it comes to the end of a perfect day . . . I « WITfl CAMECA AND TCIPCD (1) Delta Zeta tees off for her autumn tea dance on a floor that had punch, and when we say punch we mean punch. (2) Later, on the other side of town, a vimmy, vigorous varsity team tries to put all its balls in one basket — Orchesis couldn ' t do it more gracefully. (3) As for the rest of the world, meet it at Purity afterwards, the place has its attractions, as our picture shows — Little Boy Gensemer, go blow your flute. (4) With the shades of one night comes a melodrama that takes you in its power. Gold, gold — more gold; gomg, going — MAD! Ah, foiled again; it ' s only Kerger, Carothers and Richards Fall Frolicing. (5) And if you ' re an M man, you bank on an M banquet for food — and speeches. Poor Mr, Wilton, did you have a busy day? Somebody must have missed his train. (6) And to satisfy souls Helen Jepson sings sweet songs, soft and slow. (7) Why, here ' s a glimpse of that notorious Phi Tau dinner dance you somehow missed; we ' d say they knew an Eastman was on the premises. Is it the food or the atmosphere, Shirl? (8) And for the end of the page, the end of 1935 when the Commons, gone co-ed, gave an uncommon Christ- mas banquet. Santa, didn ' t they let you in on that dinner ' ? . . . W: i% ri3€Ai PALL TC WINTER (1) Yum yum, get a taste of the 1936 Fine Arts Ball, gone Gilbert-Sullivan . . . We ' ve got a little list of everybody here — sweet little Buttercup, the deadly Dick Dead- Eye, Cocoa, Pooh Bah, all on speaking terms even with the LORD HIGH EXECU- TIONER (otherwise George Hoxie), who turns a big wig to the camera he loves so well . . . bloody blood and crossbones, what have we here? (2) Penzance Pirate Hayes looking daggers and pointing swords at his cowering victim. Funny, those women aren ' t afraid. (3) Gobs of gobs and other folks being floored by a floor show — odd audience! (4) A study in saxophone — sorry, this isn ' t a talkie. (5) Dean Kratt asks, How am I doin ' ? Be-eautifully! Take a gander at a baton that knows Beethoven and Ellmgton, too. (6) That girl from Japan, Kay Robinson, steps tinily— one little piggy went to market. (7) Just four outdoor girls— no, they ' re not left out in the cold. (8) Fisher lets its lights throw a little light on math and ec. You guessed it — January. (9) Geograph ers discover this world isn ' t such a small place, after all. Oh, well, what you don ' t know Dr. McConnell does. (10) Here ' s a sign to make your heart grow warmer . . . TUCU WINTER AND SPRING (I) Blazes, blazes everywhere, but not enough to warm us. A forest fire in Oxford, when The Elms and the thermometer hit a new low together. Bring on ear-muffs and non-freeze water. (2) I-ce where you won ' t get a drink this morning. The Foun- tain Beautiful — for once. Don ' t take it away! (3) Falling thermometers! We can ' t count that low. Anyway, it ' s cold. (4) Checking out. Accommodating, these cashiers: Pay at EITHER window . . . (5) A Survey of West. You can ' t fool us, Jan. (6) Another Western shot: the pajama party where she who sleeps least and yells loudest is the best all- ' round girl. Here ' s Bill Lutz calling for some of that circular music that you heard more than once on New Year ' s Eve last. (7) Joos natty, spotty diplomats rolling their logs. Result: WAR. (8) Sweets to the sweet — (we had to be trite, just once). These lacy cuffs and collars added frills and heart-throbs to the dance at East. Why, there would have been room for you and me! (9) Other Valen- tines celebrating similarly, but elsewhere — New Freshman Dormitory. (10) Foot- falls at nightfall in the snowfall toward the little home light brother keeps burning at Ogden — this shot calls for a poem, but, gosh, we never could write verse . . . (II) What a melody from catgut and horsehair can do to us Miamians. It ' s the Ole Left-Hander handing out the kind of rhythm a Promenade calls for . . . Sloat, you look AWFUL smooth . . . I AM WSP f iBSjgJ B iV tr ' i ' • • ' .At |8 H| H . m vi dt T I B iK9wH h ' lT r- ' j w K K It i ' -ff - • ' ■■' f l KH THE EVENTS €E THE yEAK (1) Thirteen girls on as many bicycles plus one man on one bicycle liU this picture, but Universal Newsreel was interested only in the lirst thirteen. We wonder, can they ride? (2) Somebody sprinted to the Spinsters ' Sprint in this horsy shindig — no three of its wheels are just alike. Too bad, the heater did not heat. (3) D. K. E. Pledge Dance. What else can we say? Use your eyes and your imagination. (4) Just another Varsity. By Wrigley, there ' s Biery out on the floor with a bit of Chicago. (5) Candidates for Strut Queen — that is, all except one. He must be somebody else important. (6) Which will it be. Park Avenue or the Water Works? A glance behind that lamp shows who has the real monopoly. (7) You ' re lib-le to have signed one of those white cards yourself, once upon a time. (8) Just to show how Freshmen Strutters strut, and ex-freshmen, too. (9) Exactly the same as number eight, only different, with the accent on Edna Holdt, who is only a few inches from being a queen, officially. (The crown suited her, but it did not fit.) (10) Cornelia Otis Skinner, a few min- utes before the maid took her afternoon off. Of course, baby, we ' ll be perfectly alright . . . gtsy, gtsy, gtsy . . . AT MIAMI (1) Hello, Waring . . . No? . . . Sounded a lot like him when Christman got his boys together at the Triad Intermission . . . The Beta Loving Cup, The Phi Delt Bungalow, The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi, and a bounteous burst of applause ... It was on a par with that swingy Rudy Bundy music ... (2) From the announcers stand we could shoot only a small section of the Carnival Crowd . . . 800 tickets sold at the door, and the seller nearly passed out . . . T ' was really an ODK Circus ... (3) For a penny a dance, Owl Freeman and the rest of the birds wafted waves of wonderful melody to the ears of the Carnivalers . , . even then made money ... (4) Come one, come alll Right this way . . . Dragoo became very blue in the face but lasted the whole evening (Which was an ac- complishment) ... (5) Originality at its highest brought unfortunate girls on a thrilling trip down to earth after they climbed the stairs in Hell ' s Half Acher ... (6) Balmy breezes turn torrid and books are left in for- gotten corners . . . Only a couple of weeks left . . . Heat . . . out to the pool to put on a coat of tan and wash off a coat of a year ' s accumulated learning ... So long — Heads! And heads it was. The Delts once more predicted and helped pave the way for another Redskin victory. D. U. ' s bright eyed chief welcoynes the brother alumni for a share of the Homecoming festivities. A cordial greeting to you all ' from West Virginia. Once more the Phi Taus cope for honors in the annual Homecoming Celebrations. o 1 k e r ' i 2k. ■' There ' s only one thing certain about the girl friend — she ' ll want to end the date with a bite to eat at FOLKER ' S. SODAS COKES SANDWICHES Just the thing to top off that mid-nite lunch, brought Mfwi a to you through our m L m. excellent service. ...---- ' ' ' - ' ' ' rich creamy del ic i u s The Aristocrat of Ice Creams served at The recognized dining room of MIAMI students and OXFORD residents. FOLKER ' S COLONIAL TEA ROOM Phone 55 Phone 90 STUDENTS! For your picnic or mid-nite lunch needs GO TO HORNUNG ' S FOOD MARKET FRATERNITIES— Finest foods at lowest prices with FREE DELIVERY SERVICE It pays to buy quality coal from a reliable company PHONE 4 1 Stephenson Coal Company It takes only 13 muscles of the face to make a s frown, so why over-work??? ... an easier w let us take care of you ... we see a lot of que students go - . . With happy care matches blossom and ■. . take Jack Smith ing in our third bootl had Jack : old school :ind their birth here and prosper rhomson who started their first pitch- the time the two lovers reached the Phi Delt pin . . . while across in one n is pitching woo with his steady heart r is only half as bad since his sister Sally , the most recent affair to grow to great that of Ossie Sauer and Dot Daley . . . it took Sauer from 10:00 A. M. to 1;00 P. M. to sell Dotty on the finer points of his big Phi Delt pin (without getting stuck in the end) . . . we hope them the best, and may this one stay put for a long . . . and since Leapy Chin Music Henrich w up-town beer joints we see and hear more and noise . . . Jack Kerger, following in the footsteps Homer Abegglen, in the fine parts of the drammer, enjoys his regular ' ' . ™ ., . gQQ j.ypg Qf coffee to his heart in his pocket- the Windy City he can of Sun Tan only interest was geo specialty, Pin-Planting sword and shield . . . Why is it that the their pins out???? . . . This reminds us until a few weeks ago it seemed that his . . but now he has gone back to his iden ... The girls the his chin and Snell is the un from the ranch always perk up quite a bi the spring, fresh air. ' and the budding of the trees seems to enha them . . but Rancherette Johnson seemed bright unusually early this year ... we wonder if McConnaughey ' s pin wasn ' t the reason??? . . . an orchid to Bob Weiland . . . Simpson and Henr ' enjoy their morn- ing coffees . . Simpson seems lost now that his steady heart-beat is gone ... in the Student we see where the Freshman appreciate blondes . . . nevertheless. Kraner seems to disagree ... we see Coch ran taking the place of Hake . . Too bad girls . . . John Dome has turned all of his attention to one spot this year . . . you have read a lot of stories agnifying powers of certain fair damsels, but this year we drawn in the dark (One of Tuff ' Dog Eyes Ballard continues to carry . his latest gripe and song is that in ■urgers for three cents a dozen . . student ng the best of them ave all and whom she ' formed a club, and your oddities, and nd Butch Shrader . . . Walt nother helloing everyone . . . unning against Mayor Pulley wonder if Bill Fries w talks in his sleep and hif veet young Hearty Walker Id think he was and Daley have Bill Fries, Leapy ith Ted Foley leaving Sue Groglode who types from the Student Editor ' s time we go to press Jack Loos is still flirting here and there trying to put his pin on anyone who will take it ... he is now a member of our Tuffy ' s for breakfast at ten club and enjoys a toasted roll every morning, at least he gulps them down like a seal eating fish . . . and speaking of fish, there are several suckers who persist in dating out on the ranch . . . this list includes the Phi Tau chapter ... the DKE ' s bid to the world of fame and sports has now entered the fields of love Bill Ohly and Mattie Lou Saxe (Ex-Goebel heartbeat) have their ups and downs in one of our booths every morning, usually patching things up by class time . . . you have often wondered if a Phi Beta gal did anything but have her nose in a book but we found out that Frances Talbot enjoys working out crossword puzzles with Gilbert ... P. Moore Cook has something besides y one young lady that would , . Delta Gamma Blackwell seems to be able wanted . . the boys that are now has-beens quite aptly chosen the name Suckers Club ems she has taken the decided inter-fraternity attitude . . . started she has had a pin, or offers, from every house on the . . D. U. Seale started the mad rush and they proceed in this — AI Oram, Lynn Somershield, Russ Miller, J. Lleyellyn, J. Loos, Henrick, and we wonder how George Panuska will uuiiie uuL . . . more power to you Martha . . . From Delt to Deke in one jump might be the phrasing of the famous Purman-Durbrow ro- mance . . summer school here is a grand time . . . after our able columnist Eifort had mentioned the activities of the Tuffy ' s For Breakfast at Ten club. Ellen Stewart was quite peeved because she claims to be a charter member of the original breakfast club . . . and a motley crew are they; Adabelle Martin, Bettie Saxbe, Eleana Luci, Winnie Williams, Ellen Stewart, Betty Guilford, Isobel Bumbaugh, Louise McKinley, Ed Murray, Bob Saylor, Bob Higgins, and Bryce Byard are the actives of the strongly organized club . . - the following ummond, Lucy Brabson, Jean absent they Hart pledges: Joe Burnett. Mary Jean They meet every morning . . . when - . . they must have discipline . . , itil he refused to do his pledge duty Leapy Henrich told ; Rieff billing he 1 m affair that started here a leights . . . Heames has his ng to keep his DKE pin on the Mar - Jean Drummond, o be reaching great i ith Richards try- nce they occupy the pin has been kept in its place on the Bishop front the Western Front . . . Jack Llewellyn has his pin on Rodebaugh of the ranch while Boon Van Boxel is that way with Dottie Miller of our own campus . . . We are always glad to see Wednesday night roll around because Wednesday night here is Tri-Delt night . . . Prexy Ruth Cook is always leading the pack . . . Her con- geniality and pleasantness is enjoyed by all . . . For three years we have been watching for Jack Moore to plant his big golden square ... it now has happened, and he has very wisely chosen his destination to rest in the hands of the very charming Mitzie Kerr . . . Bill Hough is said to be spending his time Pitch- ing Pennies . . . w hile Armacost spends his time walking between here and the ranch with Gorman . . . They seem quite provoked when steals their back booth . . . Panuska tells us he is still madly with Rihm ... we sometimes wonder ... A funny :) Barrett booth In the back . . . Man the gun! . . . Toot 1 ■re comes Ducky Drake and his Phi Tau pirates . . . What will here next dance? . . . Why nor honor their old reliables with dance depicting the life on a ranch? . . . Lew Dillon has taken over the reign of Brother Munro . . Lew and Mickey Goebel are quite that way about each other . . . she always has wanted to see more of Phi Delt boys . . .no more Delt interruptions we hope . . . The D. XI. ' s still contend that they are the only ones that can rightfully wear white shoes the year ' round . . . Walton and Baker settling eriy called themselves the Tuffy ' s For Breakfast at Ten club, but now— since their recent invasion of the better Cincinnati joints, they call them- selves the Why Go to College club . . . Milt Taylor, Kay Steiner, Jack Loos, Ginny Niswonger, Tommy McManus, Jean Burchinal, Bob Heames, Jane Richards, Izzy Longley and Hamilton comprise the romantic group . . . Johnny and e along with the unsteady help of predict that before long the girls will vay yc -- ■big Joe Burnett hovering Joe occupied for fear he can ' t get up ... In spite of his many moss-covered stories, we enjoy the frequent visits of Charlie Heimsch . . . The Deke House has been nursing a plague of scarl et fever . . . When Prexy Black was sent home a village physician was summoned to watch over the boys until the return of their able leader . . . Now that Johnny Spielman has his Deke pin he is undecided as what afraid it grounded out Western way ... In the midst of all the clam- and bustle of this busy college life, and especially after a dance Izzey have broken the Heames and Richards . . . be wearing all of the pins . . . Make here comes Mary Jane Carothers with her new find. Delt Richards . Who laughed when we brought up the location of Chicago, the North and South ' ??? . . . opposite us we see Ned Linegar and Ruth Hill ar- ranging the affairs of the campus . . . Charley Campbell is certainly a serious young man since he was crowned king of the Phi Delts . . . we do not blame— nor do we envy him his job . . . from the same roost we see Weazel Harris and Walt Proper drooling over a strong one . another romance that has been nursed to great heights here is that of Charley Hough and Myra Manley . . . Tri Delts. Crawford and Robinson enter, amble to a booth, and then — boys watch out . . . Hold your seats girls!! . . . here comes the inimitable T. T. Taylor with his three able stooges. Harr, Holmes and Pontius . . . from the same lodge we have the small but capable ' ..... ripping over each other. Swift enters ler to give us courage to carry on ... he ... he just enjoys his coffee letting the Joe Shaw tells us that he has the front reserved ... he and Sharick are just too. too craaazy about each other . . . Why are McKinley and Koplin always staring into space? . . . Are they dreaming of the future? ... Is Sigma Chi Higgins try- ing to stop the deluge of Beta pins? . . . Anyhow we are glad to see the cross taking the place of the oblong among Bumbaugh ' s proud possessions . . . but we do think it was nice the way Higgins treats his former rival . . . Mclntyre is still the tops with Sampsell ... we hope that Sampsell ' s heart-beat from home doesn ' t blow into town again unexpectedly and cause that young lady to take another night walk all by herself ... It is not too healthy . . . Happy was the scene the night of the Freshman Strut, when Queen Edna the first entered on the arm of Faison . . . amongst the throng of admirers we were at- tempting to please Holdt and Faison ... in spite of her glory and all the excitement. Edna was still the same lovable person . . . here ' s a toast to the Faison-Holdt match and the Temple-Freer case . . . Dave and Charlotte have been our friends for so long . . . they are much different than our Ox-town weather . . . they are always the same - . . fair for us not to mention the famous ' affair of Red Herron and Jean Van Ausdall . . . this was a funny affair . . . last year Jean ' s best friend was the heart beat of Red. but now we find Jean in there pitching . . . every minute that Red is not busy working we see them in the back booth ... We are glad to see Judgey-Wudgey Wolfe and Stooey- Wooey Stewart smooth up their little differences . . . Ellen is just too craaazy about her new man . . . now that basketball is over. Dead- Eye Bryson has lost his fame . . . nevertheless the girls still think he is too-o cute ... We are not to be out-done by the Student prognosti- cators . . . We contend that by the time this book reaches you that Phi Delt Passell will have presented the lovely bit of pulchritude from student Mia Pontius ed for Strut Qu Mitzie, for we know Luvey bad been proud We wonder whether Brabson or Ridenour v l finally conquer Don Williamson ... at this time it is a pretty close race . . . his indifference keeps them both in mid air . . . Speaking of funny things we see here . . .the boy that regularly has his roll a la-mode and coffee . . . Here comes Cuz Rolphes — Cuz ambles in about this time every nite on his way home from the library . . . easy Prexy Bill Bell of the Sigma Nu mad house has decided to c Bill spent every possil his time amongst the grounds . . . Last ye ment in Hamilton . . . now he is sharing aidens of Miami . . . Rudyk of the lodge . . What would his steady in Cleveland making the rounds? ... he never stays low Delta Zeta Richev seems to be the stop Delta Zetas queen. Elizabeth Seeley, ' think if she could see hii anyone place long, but righ certainly deserving of her recent honors ' . . - What is wrong with Deke Postlewaite? . . . last year he was one of the most popular men on the campus . . . and if Toar Wollenhaupt of the same clan ever gets mad — look out . . . our vote for the most consistent goes to Glen . . . One that is missed by us all is none other than Tom Murphy . . . Brig- ham Young and Johnny Brannon always help us close . . . when they have about decided to turn their charms to Morpheus in comes Skerritt frothing at the mouth . . . Brooklyn ' s bid to Miami ' i leaves no doubt in the minds of our dear neighbor; Witty and composing stories together Herb Arent has arranged ' Eleanor Mitchell of the Student are now . . confidential stories so I am told . . . schedule so that he does not have a class Tuesdays. Thursdays or Saturdays ... he decided that he had not been spending enough time at the Delt house . . . Andy Wertz and his problem child . . . they will appreciate 2 problems . . . Our Congrats go to Bob Reis and his boys ... we are glad to see Zeta Beta Tau installed here oe Jordan of the Delt crew ... one fine lad . . . No, it is not a picture of the real fiesta, but the Spanish Moss from the Cypress Swamps furnished an unusual setting for Beta ' s Fall Formal. Don ' t let the big bold keg scare you — it is only part of the setting for the unique Sigma Chi ' s Novelty Dance. The fiddlers from McGonigle added to the atmosphere. The lassies had to call and have their dates freed from jail before contijuiing to swing at the Phi Delt Prison Dance. The bars were needed before the evening was over. 1 Be a smoothie to the ' nth degree! . . . let us help you complete your wardrobe with our snappy line . . . . . . hats too . . Clever . . Clothes Hop in, Brother! YouHl he safe with us INSURE our passengers. We The Neu Taxi Co COMPLETE GARAGE AND STORAGE SERVICE Batteries Gas Oil Tires Greasing 104 West High E. C. Wright, Mgr. Phone 1 44 The Oxford Hardware Co 40 West High Street Hardware and Electrical Contractors nationally known products plus local service A COMBINATION HARD TO BEAT everything for the fraternity Phone 64 o — : — o We Dehver . HIGH GRADE ...ECONOMICAL : O . . . SLOW BURNING vJOv MIAMI VALLEY LUMBER CO, B. 0. R. R. OXFORD, OHIO THE OXFORD RESTAURANT ' ' Oxford ' s Finest Restaurant ' ' where you are a stranger but once DELICIOUS MEALS plus FINE SERVICE catering especially to Miami students 21 years of serince to Miavu students THE PURITY where everyone meets Following the crowd to the PURITY has become a tradition with Miami students FOUNTAIN SERVICE SANDWICHES LUNCHES The Sig sanctuary, the ' place where the hison and the hrai e romp under the white cross. Time marches on , and tht D. K. E. boys bridge a feu generations. Do not be frightened jor it is only the humble expression of the Phi Diddle Daddle boys in their effort to depict a battle royal. new •oxford •theatre I e c t i V e f il in entertainment •phone 494 Fort Hamilton Foods ' Good Food Ask the men who eat it. For bal- anced meals and balanced budgets, Fort Hamilton Foods are among the finer things in life. The E. H. Frechtling Co. Exclusive Distributers 429 High Street Hamilton, Ohii Oxford Lumber Company JUST A GOOD PLACE TO BUY BUILDING MATERIALS SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS 14 N. Beech Phone 36 Do you knit — ? NEEDLES — and — YARN Hose Dresses Lingerie Millinery FINKBINE ' S 5 W. Hicjh Street Phone 21S2 THE L. B. WOESTE, DECORATORS decorations for: Parties Dances Shows Conventions Expositions Booths Floats 218 Post Sq. Cherry 5337 CINCINNATI, OHIO GIVE GIFTS THAT ARE DirrECENT! Tliey will be remembered . . . so will you ACT eiTT SHCP PHCT€ STLDIC MODERN LIGHTING UP-TO-DATE POSING EXPERT RETOUCHING PROFESSIONAL FINISHING Combined With Experience Student Supplies 35-37 E. High St. Phone 48 Howdy caineraman! Jininiie Shollenbarger and Gracey Anderson leaving behind a fine evening ' s entertainment. r -Aw Heck! Saner and Fries A insisted on staying around, so ■■: : ■:■' here is the usual jour o ' clock P.A ' ers. r V Solution jor the gloomy Sunday afternoons — up High Street to Johnny ' s for gum and on to the cinema. Folker ' s affords our Literary Editor. Roberta Endebrock. a quiet rendezvous for calm meditation? ?????? JOHN MINNIS DRUG STORE ' ' y o « r D r u g i s f ' ' THE REAL STUDENTS ' FRIEND AND RIGHT IN THE SAME STORE Your J e IV € I e r MALCOLM ROLLMAN THE NEW ENGLAND KITCHEN -delicious food served in an atmosphere of quiet charm and sunny surroundings TEA LUNCHEON DINNER BANQUETS Managev ent Mr. Mrs. R. E. Gosnell HELLO! Yes we have that design, and too, we have all of the latest styles that university men prefer, PETRI ' S Men ' s Shop OXFORD, OHIO at the Junior Protti Joe Sanders and the lovely Barbara Parks Universally favored at college dances throughout the country, the inimitable J€E SANDERS f ie ole left hander and his NIGHT HAWrS CINCINNATI ' S the and regal loveliness AMERICA ' S of J, miami ' s finest prom queen ORCHESTRAS enhanced at a moinents or a month ' s notice The MUSICIANS ' LEAGUE 205 EAST SIXTH ST. CHERRY 7174 MELROSE 2063 by the beauty of Bert Keller ' s Flowers distinctive arrangeynents in jlowers FRATERNITIES! We specialize on • PROGRAMS •ANNOUNCEMENTS •SMALL PUBLICATIONS AMERICAN PRINTING COMPANY TRAaiED 116 N. Monument Hamilton, Ohio LET US TAKE CARE OF YOUR NEEDS Quality and Service that cannot be found elsewhere LE.MERZ PHARMACY In The Center Oj Town SATISFIED? I ' ll say I am! This shirt is really clean for once. It ' s the best job I ' ve had since I ' ve been in school. WE COLLECT and DELIVER THE OXFORD LAUNDRY Just Like Hon Next to Folkers Washing STEVE ' S PLACE the students call it. al- though its windows bear the legend College Inn . But who ever heard of students calling anything by its real name if they really like it. A nickname is as much a sign of esteem for a store as it is for a person, and the students have placed their stamp of appi-oval upon the College Inn by nicknaming it. t h e COLLEGE INN BREAKFASTS LUNCHES DINNERS Free Delivery Nearest the Campus Phone 345 THERE is more GO than STOP in the cars that we service. T H F BOURNE GARAGE General Motors Dealer South Main and Walnut Phone 5270 DRESS like a KING in clothes that have been cleaned in that superior way by the College Cleaners Free Delivery High and Poplar Phone 13 THE GIANT AND THE DWARF by Thomas Kent UURING recent months, public utilities have come in for more than their share of bruis- ing. Verbal bricks have been hurled at them from all directions. Bouquets have been few and far between. Really, if you were to believe all you ' ve heard, you ' d say the electric bill must be the people ' s biggest burden. But face the facts and figures and what do you see. That the cost of electricity has come down- down — steadily down for the last twenty years. Today, your electric light bill takes but a small I)art of your income. More than likely it is one of the smallest items in your household budget. Then what ' s all the shouting about? You have reason to ask. For beside the nation ' s domestic electric light bill stands a colossus that dwarfs it. A giant that dips deeper and deeper into your pockets — stealthily takes approximate- ly one-fourth of all you earn . . . takes it in the form of visible and invisible assessments. This giant is the nation ' s bill for taxes — and it has grown bigger and bigger year by year. No wonder you wonder, why doesn ' t someone attack the giant instead of the dwarf? Especially when you reaUze that the country ' s tax bill is greater than the total expenditure for food — twice the annual purcheises for clothing. Five times as much as that for coal and oil. And less s =i- than six per cent of this lax bill would pay for all the electricity used in the homes of America I The national bill for domestic electricity is less than that for cigarettes. Less than the bill for amusements or hair dressing and cosmetics. Yet reformers and headline hunters would ha- rangue you into believing that the ISation ' s domes- tic electric bill has assumed terrific proportions. Published by The Union Gas Electric Company What! No pictures of the hack booths at Tuffy ' s. Draw one , is heard above the din oj the crowd just returning from another Miami victory. That George ' s idea, following the crowd . . . is becoining a tradition is certainly proven in this snap taken at the Purity on one Saturday evening. Reber ' s Campus Owls call us to the Coffee House, hut not for coffee. You may dine and dance to the Owls every afternoon. ' t pfiys to look ivelV Say, Bud, take a friendly tip and get smoothed up at the ARGONNE BARBER SHOP our BEAUTY PARLOR in charge of Christine and Mary Expert Operators ' Beauty without Extravagance NICK ROSS, Prop. 19 E. High Phone 4 The STEWART PRESS College and Fraternity PRINTING The Heyman- Fisher Co. The Quality Shop Hamilton, Ohio Hamiltcni ' s Smartest Style Shop For Men and Women Society Brand Clothes Knit-Tex Top Coats Worsted-Tex Suits Stetson Hats Knox Hats FOR MEN . . . Dunlap Hats Arrow Shirts Arrow Underwear Vassar Underwear Hickok Belts and Braces Wilson Bros. Products FOR WOMEN . . . Silk Lingerie Smart Hand Bags Artcraft Silk Hosiery ' Kerchiefs McCallum Silk Hosiery Costume Jewelry Robes and Gowns •7 it ' s jrom Heyman-Fisher. it ' s RIGHT The Heyman -Fisher Co. Third and High Hamilton, Ohio 30 minutes from O.xford RAYMOND G. WISECUP Moving and Hauling LICENSED TRUCKING ' Next to the Postoffice OXFORD, OHIO Oxford Terminal 709 S, Main Phone Oxford 497 Cincinnati Terminal Front and Smith Phone Cherry 6420 Shot at sun — random — between classes . . . Anderson, the astronomer; H. H. Beneke, a straight thinker; El Rus- sell; Novelist Havighurst; More Business. Pop Shearmai Doc ' ' Van Tassel: Geologist Sandefur: Constitutional White Uncle Harry ' W ' dliams; Linguist Barr; Howard — student of History: Nationully known economist. Todd: ' Wilson, definite article . Books kr ' =:) STUDENTS ' SUPPLIES ATHLETIC GOODS MIAMI CO-OP S r O R E Just Ojf The Campus DEPENDABILITY . . . That is what we represent . . . That is what we are known for. It is traditional with us. May we prove it to you? Student Supplies Cosmetics Toiletries Tobacco Supplies J. C. BYRNE CUT RATE DRUG STORE 20 East High Street CORSO Fruit Market White Villa Grocers ' ' Pledged to Quality ' ' 109 W. High Phone 284 CORSAGES CUT FLOWERS POTTED PLANTS Flowers Wired Anywhere Visitors Welcome UNIVERS ITY GREENHOUSES Fisher Hall Grounds Phone 343 PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY The Dentists of Oxford extend their compHments and services to the students of Miami University F. T. BAUMGARTNER Dentist Farmers Bank Building Phone 502 PAUL W. TAYLOR Dentist 26 West High Street Phone 58 ROB ' T S. BARKLEY Dentist 5 E. Church Street Phone 150 A. M. RAMSEY X-Ray High Street Phone 331 ROB ' T P. MOSBAUGH Dentist 123 E. High Street Phone 234 CARMIN ' S SERVICE STATION MODERN SERVICE plus QUALITY MERCHANDISE East High Street Phone 371 YOU ' RE RIGHT! SUNSHINE LUNCH DELICIOUS STEAKS and HAMBURGERS Next to Oxford Theater For Real Ice Cream ASK FOR FRECHTLING ' S for ft n y s o c i a I f it n c t i o n ICE CREAM, CAKES, PIES, DECORATED NOVELTIES OF ALL KINDS Produced under Seal Test System of Laboratory Protection FRECHTLING DAIRY COMPANY Hamilton — Phone 3790 Cincinnati— Main 0900 H.LAUBER CO. RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT 7-9-11 East Court St. ffl ;. CINCINNATI, 0. a j) What! No -39 on Oxford ' s water tower. Dee Humherger watches one of the few male culinary students mix it iLp. Ma Meyers, iji her usual carefid manner, sees that we snijj our sniffles away. The impressing portals of Ogden Hall — the bachelor ' s paradise. Presenting Booby , the D. K. E. that flunked out at semesters. The long and short of Miami — to even things tip they agreed to be room mates. ' Our Meats Satisff HOLLMEYER and SONS MEAT MARKET FRATERNITIES! Come to us For Your Needs Quality at Reasonable Prices Beech and High Streets Phone Tables the most essential articles in a home, lend themselves to a great variety of useful and decorative purposes, such as complements to sofas and chairs. See the many reproductions of authentic periods now being displayed on our floor at moderate prices. We gladly offer our assistance ir planning your decorative scheme. FURNITURE — RUGS DRAPERIES LAMPS and SHADES PICTURES and FRAMING GIFTS The Dolle-Glosh Co INTERIOR FURNISHINGS 120 East Fourth Street Cincinnati, Ohio Oxford, Ohio RELAX yourself in one of our easy chairs EIKENBERY-McFALL CO. Furniture of Quality ESTIMATES GLADLY GIVEN Phone 42 Too had girls, but you should knoiv that this is a bad spot for you. Too much competition from the ranch. Watch that finger! It shows to go that some girls do not mind cameramen. Sorry girls, but we coidd not make a picture that big. The girls at Oxford College wanted to be pictured in their formals — so. here you are. Hold It! It is always a sad sight when the ten o ' clock signal is given. A visitor once said of this same scene, You woidd think they were leaving for good. SERVICE BY EXCELLENTLY COURTEOUS PERSONNEL THE G€LD COLLAC CAr E Hamilton ' s Finest Restaurant 319 High Street 98 ' c Sanitary State Inspection The DEAN and KITE Company CHINA GLASS DINNER WARE Walnut and Pearl Streets Cincinnati, Ohio CLASS RINGS AND PINS CLUB, SOCIETY, AND FRATERNITY EMBLEMS MEDALS, CUPS, AND TROPHIES DIAMONDS AND JEWELRY Makers Of The Distinctive RECENSIO KEYS THE MILLER JEWELRY COMPANY Emblem Manufacturers THOMAS E. RYAN, Sales Mgr. 809 Walnut Street Cincinnati, Ohio Music with a orids Memory NAME ORCHESTRAS WILLIAMSON Entertainment Bureau Inc. Hotel Sinton — Cincinnati Main 3132 East 2800 K;=; es , m f B V K Fl 1 ' r ' 1 9 W w IF i F T By i T H - t 1 1 ' I V - V - Ti ' U ■' Ort n _ j 1 ]| , . ' • jy w m. ' - . !■' Afl r!J T a H JP HT - . 1 P_  Ij ' iPn iP ' teiBP ' i ' ' J HH m t IPHI [ J w Vf Jl ImT ' in Ir r J ■if 1 II ' 1 PJ LP ■L-y r , 91 J -. Vw-v- l F i£ w i J % 3 HpHiJ 1 ■IF i B ■H|[ K. ;= V ' H ' 1 - ' H r v r ' ' = 9 f iB 1 ' ' H Cm mm if t J B ' ' 1 fc JKi jHjr jr [ 4 £1 ■' ' i !■vIH ' ' iI FH Bl r 1. ff Bl „ l B i B i 1 W ' H f ' J y. - J ■M mMfT vl k ' ' SSSMhT ' H i M r S_ _ ij|l 1b H B JStL K flS. f _ ii Md ' 3 Ip, F IBS 1 fl f - .. 1 H nl E ' r B ' It W mTM ' 3 ; J !.:? _ J .A It .V 1. i lJ ki ' ' 9- Oty -Town Co u ntry 1921 -1936 T IFTEEN YK ' VRS of safe, dependable ser -ice to Oxford residents and es- pecially Miami students is our record, one of which we are justifiably proud. First begun when bus transportation was in its infancy we have since been able to expand and consistently improve our rapid transit facilities. Many times in past years Wiltonmen and Gloomy Gus s basket bailers have enjoyed trips under our service. WNED BY MRS. JOHN ZIEPFEL and operated by ME. IL ELEY SIMPKINS. our bus line has terminals at the HALSTEAD BAKERY. OXFORD, OHIO, and at the UNION ' BUS TERMINAL. HAMILTON. OHIO. TELEPHONE Oxford 2 Hamilton 791 Hamilton --Oxford Bus Line Top Row — Real jriends. Scottie and Prexy . . . Mr. Ralph Strete . . . Prof, da Cruz . . . Herr Haiidschin . . . Dr. A. C. Wickenden . . . Mr. C. T. Jenkins. Fourth Row— Wells Hall Second Row — A Sub-zero casualty . . . Keejer from Miayni . . . Why men go West . . . Down the Old Slaiit Walk . Third Row — Girl gy7nnasts . . . A freshman salute . . . Not Hitler . . . Our friends, Jivi Ross and Dad Wolf. Enuf said . . . Bishop. CHAS. A. MEYER A. J. MEYER Louis Meyer Company Quality Vegetables Cincinnati, Ohio RECEIVERS DISTRIBUTERS Eat FISH for Health Imported SEAPLANE FILLETS Fresh Delicious Fish! Boned! Cut hito Steaks! Cellophane Wrapper! Try It! TH E NEW FISHERI ES COMPANY 324 W. Sixth St. Cincinnati, Ohio Food Is The First Essential To Existence USE ROSE BRAND BUTTER Mamifactured by THE MERCHANTS CREAMERY COMPANY Cincinnati, Ohio Vt ■. 1i w m. 5 |fe s; After One Hundred Years of Service — Old South Dorm is Remodeled to Keep Pace with New Miami — Remodeling and Repairs by R. BURTON CHILD general contractor FINDLAY, OHIO ' Portraits of Quality HOSACKS Photo Finishing — School Supplies — Gifts — Greeting Cards — Rental Library YIE:AIR, ' IR.(DIU; ID §a TII SirAVCIKD? 1936 SLS MCW TLE UEC ThL FRI SAT 12 3 4 5 6 7 6 9 10 M S2 13 14 15 16 17 16 19 2C 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 26 a29 50 51 -•t r- ' Mf - i¥m - For ] Iatchless Flavor — For Superior Quality — For Every Dav Satisfaction n (rroceries (uid ( (iiint ' d Foods Quality- There is a superior quality ... a flavorful, healthful su- perioritj- ... a distinctiveness about White Villa Famous Foods. Throughout the world the finest fruits, vegetables, coffee, etc, are carefully selected and set aside for White Villa products. You ' ll find them in the finest hotels and restaurants, on dining cars where quahtj- is paramount . . . and in the homes where meals are most dehghtful. Each year the White Villa feme grows in hundreds and thousands of homes. The finest foods you can buy. WHITK MLLA t (I III O It WHOLESALE MERCHANTS The Crosset Company Vegetables and Fruit CINCINNATI, OHIO F.PERRONECo, Wholesale Commission Merchants We handle fancy California fruit and N. F. jumbo bananas only Compliments of OHIO STANDARD TELEPHONE CO. Telephone PArkway 0523 248 W. Sixth St. Cincinnati, Ohio EDW. W. HILL Secretary IN THE JULY, 1902, issue of THE ENGRAVER AND ELECTRO- TYPER a two-page article announced the formation of a new organization. The message began with the statement, The Photo-engraving firm of great promise is that of the Jahn and Olher Engraving Co. This prophecy was a truism, borne out with the passing of the years, each one of which recorded an orderly and steady growth. More skilled men were developed within the organization, newer ma- chines and cameras replaced equipment as fast as they became obsolete, and on five occasions it became necessary to find larger quarters until at present the firm occupies its own modern, fire- proof building. Parallel with this unceasing expansion there came an ever-widening clientele, whose increasing patronage eventually placed the Jahn Oilier Engraving Co. in the position of unquestioned leadership. For many years we have been the largest School Annual engravers in America; and in the commercial field we serve a distinguished group of the most progressive national advertisers. To us, this measure of success calls for no laurel wreath. Rather, we accept it as a solemn responsibility, realizing fully that the pace- maker not only sets the standards of quality and service for the in- dustry, but must sustain them by his accomplishments. Ours is a simple formula: Ambition, honesty and integrity, con- stant hard work, keeping abreast of improvements, building a loyal capable organization, and treating our customers as fairly as we expect them to treat us. All these factors have become welded into a fixed policy, and it will remain constant — unalterable — as the years continue their phan- tom march. JAHN CLLIEC ENGCAVINe CC 811 West Washington Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois yCiJCCECEN$l€ because it is bound in a Molloy-Made cover, will continue to be a source of satisfaction to you throughout the years. As a monu- ment to the student body, it merits a perm- anent foundation. The cover design — and the choice of the Molloy Plant to produce it — testify to the good taste and sound judgment of the Edi- torial and Business staffs. ' A good book deserves a Molloy-Made cover ' ' THE DAVID J. M€LL€y PLANT The S. K. Smith Company Chicago, Illinois THE OXFORD PRINTING CO. Printers and Publishers Phone 120 12 Park Place Oxford, Ohio Our company is proud to have heen chosev again as printers of your yearbook. We hope oxir efforts have pleased you. ACVECTISINe CIKECTCCy AUTOMOBILE DEALERS Bourne Garage 260 Carmin ' s Service Station 266 BARBER SHOP Argonne 263 BOOK STORES Hosack Studio 276 Miami Co-Op - 265 Snyder ' s Art and Gift Shop 255 BUILDERS SUPPLIES Miami Valley Lumber Co 250 Oxford Lumber Co 254 BUS LINES Hamilton-Oxford Bus Line 273 CLEANERS AND DYERS College Cleaners 260 CLOTHIERS Heyman-Fisher Co 263 Petri ' s Men ' s Shop 257 COAL DEALERS Miami Valley Lumber Co 250 The Stephenson Co 246 CONFECTIONERS College Inn 260 Folker ' s 245 Gold Dollar Cafe 271 Oxford Restaurant 251 Purity 251 Tufty ' s 247 CONTRACTORS R. Burton Child 276 COVER MANUFACTURERS David J. MoUoy Plant 281 CREAMERIES AND DAIRIES Frechtling Dairy Co 267 Merchants Creamery Co 275 DECORATORS Woeste Decorating Co 254 DENTISTS Barkley, Robert S 266 Baumgartner, Fred J 266 Mosbaugh, R. P 266 Ramsey. A. M 266 Taylor, Paul 266 DRESS SHOPS Finkbine ' s Hat Shop 254 Ye Village Shoppe ..249 DRUG STORES Byrne ' s Drug Store 265 Merz Drug Store 259 Minnis Drug Store 257 ENGRAVERS Jahn and Oilier 279 ENTERTAINMENT Joe Sanders 258 Musicians League 259 New Oxford Theater 253 Williamson Entertainment Bureau 271 FLORISTS Bert Keller ' s Flowers 259 University Greenhouses 265 FOOD RETAILERS Meats and Groceries Corso ' s 265 Hollmeyer and Sons 269 Hornung ' s Market 246 FOOD WHOLESALERS Butter Frechtling Dairy Co 267 Merchants Creamery Co 275 Fruits F. Perrone Co 278 Groceries E. H. Frechtling Co 254 White Villa Foods, Inc 277 Meats New Fisheries Co 275 Vegetables The Crosset Co 278 Louis Meyer Co 275 FURNITURE Dolle-Glosh Co 269 Eikenbery-McFall Co 269 GARAGES AND SERVICE STATIONS Bourne Garage 260 Carmin ' s Service Station 266 Neu-Taxi Co 249 GIFT SHOPS Hosack Studio 276 Snyder ' s Art and Gift Shop 255 HARDWARE DEALER Oxford Hardware Co 250 HAT SHOP Finkbine Hat Shop 254 ICE COMPANY The Stephenson Co 246 ICE CREAM COMPANIES Folker ' s 245 Frechtling Dairy Co 267 JEWELRY Miller Jewelry Co 271 LAUNDRIES Oxford Laundry Co 260 LUMBER DEALERS Miami Valley Lumber Co 250 Oxford Lumber Co 254 MUSIC Joe Sanders 258 Musician ' s League 259 Williamson Entertainment Bureau 271 PHOTOGRAPHERS Hosack Studio 276 Snyder ' s Photo Studio 255 W. Carson Webb 280 PRINTERS American Printing Co 259 Oxford Printing Co 282 Stewart Press 263 RESTAURANTS College Inn 260 Folker ' s 245 Gold Dollar Cafe 271 New England Kitchen 257 Oxford Restaurant 251 Purity 251 Sunshine Lunch 267 RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT Dean and Kite Co 271 H. Lauber Co 267 STUDENT SUPPLIES Hosack Studio 276 Miami Co-op 265 Snyder ' s Art Gift Shop 255 TAXI COMPANIES Neu Taxi 249 TEA ROOMS Folker ' s 245 New England Kitchen 257 THEATERS New Oxford Theater 253 TRANSPORTATION Hamilton-Oxford Bus Line 273 Neu Taxi Co 249 Wisecup ' s Express 263 TRUCKING Wisecup ' s Express 263 UTH ITIES Ohio Standard Telephone Co 278 Union Gas and Electric Co 261 WATCH REPAIR Malcolm Rollman 257 The bachelors at Ogden brea, rules for one night and hav an exchange dinner loith th girls jrom Wells Hall. The craze carries on to the dining hall. The girls at Hepburn really take their knitting seriously. The soup ' s on to have my pictu Recensio. but I just hao In the 1 CECEN$i€ PERSONNEL EDITCI IAL STArr Assistant Editor.. Editor Robert McConnaughey .Joe Shaw Literary Editor Roberta Endebrock Men ' s Sports Editor Sylvester Witt Women ' s Sports Editor Helen Bartholomew Photography: Raymond Paul Literar.v Staff: Elizabeth Adams Al GiliUand William Fries Jack Smith Anne Baldwin Betty Beals Robert Fenn Art Staff: Robert Hayes, Editor Dorothy Boring Alice Farington Publicity: Martha GifFin Lillian Bratton Walter Pfeifter Dick Thomas Joan Bollenbacher Marjorie Mount Hiram Stephenson Kay Bethke General Staff: Helen Park George Edwards John Pool Gordon Cook Margaret McCune Genevieve Lea Lois Ward Lydia Osborn Howard Davis Katharine Ascham CL§INESS STArr sistai t Managei Oscar Beachler Statistician ....Jane Harsha Accounting: John Spence Herbert Swan Advertising: Myra Manley Betty Chisholr Frank Oram Garth Slater Robert Ireland Ormi Rolland Robert Reis John Burt James Mautz Robert Redlin Dorothy Duncan Advertising Art Stall Kay Kelley Irene Ellen Rankin Stewart General Staff: Paula L. Neuman Marjorie Saxbe Martha Roudebush Charles Garfii Earl Shrader kel Adviser R. J. Godfather Harold McGinnis F. Mann AESENT ECCM S€K€)CITy AND rC lTECNITy PANEES Alpha Omicroii Pi Alta Laub Jeanne Aborn Jacqueline Ballus Hazel Hoffman Geraldine Thomas Wllma Virtue Alpha Sigma Alpha Anne Randolph Edith Coughlin Thelma Jacobs Marjorie Nordlie Mary Nordlie Alice Williams Martha Pera Beta Phi Alpha Henrietta Berk Clara Wiekley Virginia Dolohan Arm Hardy Ann North Margaret Kautz Beta Sigma Omicron Lois Kirkland Norma Stucker Beta Theta Pi Pete Jones Webster Meier George Van Buren Frank Blackburn George Montgomery John Rupp Jacob Wagner John Woodburn John Bentz George Campbell William Gailev Edmond Gates Paul Gleichauf Dale Henry Jack Holloway John James William McCaguc Homer Myers Gene Pet ' rone Crowell Sherwood Lane Kalev Russel Sla ' gle Chi Omega onica B-nefiel Jrraine Heath me Jessup ary Jane Penhallow ildred Zurbrick Victor Gallese John Wueste Robert Larson John Grant Wilbur Corlett Delta Delta Delta Prudence Wright Peg Evans Ruth Dowds Jean Glass Kathleen Smith Gertie Ann Pennington Betsy Gottron Noreen Bontrager Lucille Brabson Virginia Shartle Gerry McLean Delta Gamma Betty Sampsell Jane Strausbaugh Grace Emerson Sally Lincoln Betty Mundhenk Martha Rau Delta Kappa Epsiloi David Temple Robert Glosser William Hough Robert Loewer Allen Roudebush William Petit Edward Loewer William Stark Robert Belter Earl Faulhaber George Harley Malcolm Cam ' eron Edward Postlewait Richard Gardner Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon Joseph Petrich Raymond Rav Walter Erion John Eckels Henry Rogowski Everett Thompson Joseph Heekin Charles Matthes Frank Metzger William Stillson Frank Morse Robert Williams Charles Hitzfield Robert Irwin David Cherry John Jones Charles Deckman Walter Schultz Craig Lovett Allen Bramkamp James Dillon Dorothy Boring Caroline Brinkerho Marianna Bushong Betty Jane Skillmar Margot Wrenn Phi Delta Theta Harry Bates David Kohler Joseph Neiser William Seni Joseph Walton Joseph Williamson Richard Canright Louis Heald Donald Hyde Ray Lowry Irwin Putnam Phi Kappa Tau Robert Chapman Robert B. Martin Ray Ballard James Burnap Harold Bush James Flint Donald Foster Howard Heldman Harry Hunter Paul Oram Kenneth Penrod Edwin Wallace Carter Woolsey Elmer Arnold David Cissna Walter Coe Howard Boardman Bert Mansell Chauncey Beagle Wilson Ford Thomas Ellison Bernard Rape Alden McDaniel Carl Stencer Clifford Alexander Robert Martin James Furst Sigma Alpha Epsilon Robert Buol Robert A. Martin Ralph Siggins Merle Coolev Richard Snyder Paul Orvos Charles dinger Samuel McLean Roy Thumm William Sparkes Carl Winters Earl Giles Percy Haythorne Edward Lingham James Lanyon John Dechant Scott Motter Gabe Szabo Kent Little Jerome Haas Earl Purdy Michael McKinney Thomas Stump Rollin Reynolds Harold Co ' stello Robert Blaine Leonard Seger Glenn Warner Sigma Chi Watson Kruzeski Earl Husler Edward Young Roger Griffith Carl Heismann Robert Wagner John Horton Donald Creviston Robert Lang William Hilton John Gildersleeve David Dunning Cody Murray Arthur Hall Howard Taylor Henry Bom Sigma Kappa Martha Ryan Ardyth Kern Jayne Tingwall Marilyn Brown Hattie Fuller Sigma Nu Joseph Anderson George Johnston Richard Brenner Alfred Lindstrom John Finefrock Joseph Randle William Hagenbuch Edward Roberts David Sprinkle Arthur Corwin Eugene Readnower Kenneth Jones Paul Wick Edward Pegelow William Becker Theta Upsilon Mary K. Richards Wilma Starkey Zcta Beta Tau (Pi Theta) Sidney Levinson Harvey Altfeld Irving Rose Marvin Rubin Carl Allen Lawrence Frommer Robert Glick Harry Green Solomon Herman Solomon Mantel Robert Sunshine Harold Bamett Alvin Haas Zeta Tau Alpha Edith Allan Harriet Morris Genevieve Drenr Catherine Hughe PERSONAL DICECTCCy A Brown. Betty J 161 Beegle. Ruth M .91 Brown. Kathleen A 133. 147 Abbott, Neville 26. 93 . 98 Beerman. Robert K. . 25 89 29 Browne. Frank W 50. 89. 115 Aborn. Jeanne Allison Belknap. Elsie L Browne. Roger R 27, 115 Browning. A. Katherine ... 94, 195 .149 Bell Robert G 11 Bruckmann. Jean A 50 Bell. William H Adams. Thomas E. Jr 50. 113 Bube Ohmer Adams, Torrey C ...84 88. 119 Buchanan. David L Benham. Cora I Albrecht, Walter H .117 Buchanan. Ellen 27 87 90 100 Alderman Jane E 16S. 147 .145 181 Bennett. Rose M Benney. Trevose W .50. 101 127 Buchanan. Gladys J Bucher. Virginia F 75. 103 153 Aldrich, Eunice J Alexander, Clifford A Alexander, Fred C .115 -.26 125 Buesser Martha Berg. Burton C. ... 26 74. Alke, Robert Bullock. Julia L. ... Amos, Sarah Nancy .26. 147 .145 Best. Marion E 123. 186 .75 149 Bumbaugh. Isobel R Buol. Robert D 50 Anderson, Joseph E Bethke. Katherine G. Bettiker. Justine F. ... ..68. Andrews, Marian Van V .117 Andrews, (Martha) Jane Arent. Herbert Arey, George W .50. 117 .129 .50 Burnett. Joseph W Burrows. Betty M Biddle. Jeanne F. ... Bielfeldt. Edward E. . Biery. Mary E. . Armacost, Richard R 185. 186 27 113 Armstrong. John D lO.-i. 187 Biggs. John R Bigler. John L Billman. Martha Bimeler. Edna L Bishop. Don H Bishop. Lena L 96. 231 Bushman. John G Armstrong. Robert G Arno, Evelyn M .81. ....26 100 163 . 94 ...50. n 76 84 BuEhong. Robert E 127 Arnold, Marjorie Bussert. Betty 50. 68 .84. 103. 151 123 137 7. 90. 79 97 Butler. Russell H. Arrants. Letha F Asbury, Charles W Ascham, Katherine Buyer. Ellen P Byard. Bryce 50, 90 27, 129. 231 Bissett. Mary H Byrkett. Hildred R 195 Aschbacher, Martha F .153 78. 115 Ash. Edwin E ...96 c Blackburn. Frank G. 176. 187 Blackwell. Martha E. 49 Aufrance, Myron A Aurbach, Arthur B ...26 131 137. .50. 145 101 • Blaisdcll. Phillip H Caldwell. Dorothy E 43 Blank. Donald 127 185 Caldwell. Louise W 50. 71 Austin, Betty 50 Blickensderfer. Philip ..27. 121 Caldwell. Wilbur 125 Blinn. Virginia W 145 145 Calladino. Martha L Cameron. Malcolm C Camp. John W .50, 133, 145, 186 85. 149 Bloker. Charlotte A. Bollenbacher. Joan K 115, 185 B Bolus. Marjorie D. ... .70 Campbell. Carol A 27 Bolus. Mary J .50 Campbell. Charles H Booth. Melvin H 28. 39. 78, 121, 168, 169 Babb. Uarda L ...50 Booth. Murial M Campbell. Dorothy A Bachmeyer, Roy W .127 Borger. Donald L 81 Campbell. George W 176, 179 Bacon, Elizabeth Esther .. 26 90, 195 Born. Henry A Canright. Richard B Badertscher. Mary E 2S. 50 96, 104 Bovard. Louise V Capretta. Margaret Bailey, Lucille 50 76, ...50 137 Bowden. Frances M. Bower. Audrey O. ... .50 Carnes. Elizabeth Bain. Charles E Carothers. Mary J 50 . 76, 94, 104, 137 Bair. Carl H ..74. 121 Bower. John E .27 Carpenter. K. Eloise 149 Baker. John B 111 Bowman. Jean Car penter. Mabel B Baker. John R .71. 121 Boyer. Imogene B 27 94. 43 Carpenter. Marjorie K 28, 155 Baldwin. Madeline A 26, 117 Bradley. Bettv J 153 Carr. Maxine L Carr. (T.) Lyle 50 87 94 100 Ballard. George Bradner. Hugh Ballard. Virginia 50. 149. 195 Bradshaw. Robe rt O. . 21 Carr. William D 96. 119 Ballentine, Ann .161 Brady. Mrs. Mary A. Seard Carroll. Jane Ballinger. Jean ..82. 137 Brand. Marie H Carter. Herman V Ballinger. Lewis ...26 Brandt. Bruce Barger. Homer J 179 Brandt. Charles H. ... jl Case. Karl E 28. 80, 101 Barker. William E E:: 82. 125 141 132 Brannon. John E Bratton. Lillian .53. 03 45 53 Barkman. Dorothy G Castetter. Rosemari T Cattell. James P Barns. James F Breaden. T. Eileen Barnum. Jack P 117. 187 Breinig. Elizabeth A. 145 94 CaudiU. Darrell 28, 132 Barr. Frederick G .95, 121 Breinig. Margaret L. . 45 Caughey. Bettv 50, 145 Barrow. W. Robert 115. 169. 185 Breitenstein. Robert L. 50. 117. 168. Caughey. Nancy B rteldt. Mary E ..50 Brennan. Helen F. ... Cavitt, Edward L 139 Brenneman. Cyrus E. 50. 96. 97 98, 04 Cenfield. Frances C 50, 137 Bartholomew. Helen .26. 16L 194. 195 Bressler. Woodrow ... Cenfield. Jeanette I Battcher. Delbert J .50. 101. 111. 182 Briggs. Laura G Chadwick. Howard E Bauer. Mary K ..84 Briner. Robert H 127 87 Chalker. Arline M 51. 86 Baum. Ethel Mae 137 Bringman. M. Jane ... 45 Chalmers. Robert L 28 Bausch. Sylvia .26. 145 Brinker. Howard L. .. Chamberlain. Joseph D. Beach. Mary J 50 75. 161 Brodrick. Hermon S. 03 Chamberlain. Rolland S. .. 101 Beachler. Oscar ...50 68 Bronson. Grace 27 45 Chave. Mary A 71 Beagle. Chauncey M 70 81. 111 Brooke. Marion G. ... 53 103 Heals. Betty 147 Brooks. Dorothy E. ... 50, 94. 100, 37 Chester. William E Becker. James E 123 Brooks. Nelson H 13 Childs. Raymond S 28. 95. 103 P C 12 $ C N A L D I C E C T C K y (continued) Chisholm. Betty Christman. Paul C. Church. Melba R Clark .Kenneth 28. Clark. Richard B Cleary. Aneita F Clemens. Jack R Cline. Clarence E Clinger, Charles B Cobb. Willis B Cobbe. Ruth E Coghill. Mary A Cohen. Bernard R Cohen. Harold Cole. Jim A Collette. Jerry M Collins. John J Colville. Frederic V. ... Comienski. George F. Compton. Edna Conger. Russel Conklin, William D Conover. George H Conrad. William Y Constant. Mary F Cook. Gordon H Cook. June M Cook. Ned Cook. Perry M Cook, Ruth J Cook. Wendell S Cookes. George T Cool. Albert Coombs. Mary E Cooper. Arthur E Cooper. Gordon S Copeland. John A Coppel. Wilbur R Cordray. Dale G Corell. Elva Cornelius. Mildred B Cornette. Thomas E Cornwall. John R Corso. Josephine J. Corum. Cyril J Corwin. Arthur R Cory. Norman R Corya. Phyllis Cotter, Rodger B Coulter. Harold M Cowles. Charles H Coyle, Martin A Craft. Norman J Cranch. Ettie Crawford. Ellen L Crawford. Grovaline Crawford. Virginia J Creel. George R Critchfield. Richard E. .. Cromer. William E 74. 8 Crone. Jeanne A Crone, Robert A , Cronin, Ray C Crosby. F. Dale Cross. Lois V Crotty. John J Crouse. William F Crowell, William B Culbertson. Margaret Cumpston. Cristine Cunningham. Betty Louis Cushman. Margaret V Dahlstrom. Shirly M. Dakin. Francis W Daley, Dorothy Daniels, Edith Danis. Elizabeth Darling, Mary E Darling. Mitchell W. 51. 101. 104. Ill 145 74. 78, 80, 93. 121 117, 176 51, 68, 87, 159 127, 181 ..51, 74. 182. 186 28. 87 ..51. Ill, 168. 178 51. 125 28. 111. 22. ' 5 .29. 73. 79. 96. 161 Daugherty. Dorothy Daum. Joy David. Ernest L David. Mary Kay Davidson. Ralph Davis. Betsy Davis. Howard A Davis. Jack W Davis. Rebecca Davis. Mary E Davis. Paul M Davis. Robert C Davison. Bertha Dawson. Howard P. Dean. Lois M DeardoriT. John A. Deaton. Paul D Debernarde. Arthur ... Dechant. John W Delp. Richard T Dembsey. Alfreda Dempsey. Jack Denison. Phyllis DeRosa. Ralph Jr Dexter. Margaret Dickinson. Jane L Diebel. Duane Diener. Charles L Dillon. Lewis A Diver. John J Dome. John E Donohoe. James Doughman. Weldon H. Dowd. Robert F , Dowds. Ruth R Dragoo. Harry W Drake. David L Dreher. Miriam G Dresback. William Drews. Pearl A Drill. Esther Drummond. Mary Jean Duerr. John C Duffey. Frank M Dugan. Charles F Dumbould. Emmolau V. Dumont. Henri A Dunbar. Caroline K Duncan. Dorothy A Duning. David W Dunker. Joseph K Dunlap. Genevieve E. ., Durbrow. Lamonte Dutcher. Lloyd E DuVall. John L Duvall. Marilee H Eakin. Donald W Early. Margaret Eberly. Mary V Eckels. John L Eckstein. Thirl M Edgar. Elizabeth H Edson. Elizabeth M Edwards. George J Edwards. Jean A Edwards. Orville H Ehinger. Robert L Eichenauer. Benjamin W. Eichman. William L Eifort. Earl H Eisenhut. Warren B , Eitle. Walter G Elef. Leona Eley. Howard G Eley. James S Eller. Betty J ElUott. Maxine Ellis. John H Ellis. Rosalind ..29. 94. 143. 195 ..68. 71. 76. 132 .76. 81. 93. 123 127 29. 96. 141 51. 117 51. 153 29. 96, 125, 180 ..71. 76. 84 51, 121 51, 96 51. 93. 119. 182. 186 I. 89. 129 I. 85. 159 123. 189 Ellison. Mary Lou ... Ellison. Thomas W. . Ellison .Tiknon A Emerson. Lalah P Emler. Mervin G Endebrock. Roberta I Engel. Grace M Engelman. Thomas .... Erwine. Donald T Erwine. Richard E Eshbaugh, Thelma M. Euverard. Maynard R. Evans. Dorothy M Evans. Robert Evans. Shirley W Faison. Sherwood Badge Falke. Leo Joseph Falknor. Mary Jane Fangboner. J. Howard .... Farkas. Robert E Farley. Mary Anna Farquhar, Betty Farrar, Charme E Farrington. Alice V Faso. Joseph Faulhaber, Earl C Faulk. Eleanor A Faust. Edith Fell. Eugene A Fenn. Robert P Ferguson. Don A Fessenden. James A Ficken. William L Finefrock. John H Finger. Robert W Fink. Max G. L Finkbone. Jean Finkelman. Harry O Finn. Wm. Wallace Fisher. Ford Fisher. Harriet E Fisher. James M Fisher. Josephine Fisher. Robert D Fisher. Ruth Anna Fleming. James M Floeter. Lucille M Fleeter. Vema E Fogarty. George A Foley. Theodore T 30. 51. 71. 76. Foltz. Catherine M Foltz. Robert W Forbes. Jack G Ford. James P Ford. Mary M Ford. Wilson L Foster. Donald S Fouts. John D Fox. Karl M Frame. Robert C Freeh. Richard R Frechtling. Jean R Freeman. Leonard J Freer. Charlotte R Frey. Josephine J Fricke. Marian L Friedman. Samuel W Friend. Helen L . ,91, 155 .179. 229 ...30. 145 51 ,. 74. 123 68. 82 . 86 1. 90 . 94, 143. ....51. ..111. 195 129 176 ..51. 111, 168. Frie H. Froehle. Charles W. ... Fryburger. Vernon R. Frye. Berneitta H Fuldauer. Alan F Fuller. Hattie-Caroline Fuller. Louis Richard Fullerton. Robert V. .. Funkhouser. Harold J. Fussner. Ruth E .30. 74, 78, 93 PEI3S€N 1L DICECTOCy (continued) G Gaible, Frank A 176 Galbraith, John S 71. 76. 81. 185 Gallacher. Douglas S 117 Gallagher. Clarence M 51. 96. 121 Gammell. Emma Jane 86. 94. 153 Gander. Fred H 127. 179 Gantner. Anna M 31. 82. 87 Garbutt. John B 31. 98. 119 Gardner. William H 31 Garfinkel. Charles S 68, 131 Garretson. Emily J 145 Garrison. Vivian E 51. 82 Gatch. Hayward D 31, 80 Gates. Edmond N 71 Gazdik. Olga S 51. 82. 85 Geason. Willard B 125. 185. 186 Gensemer. David D 103 Gerber. Grace E 82. 86. 147 Gctzug. Maynard 31 Giedeman. Elizabeth C 84. 90, 94 Giesler. Ruth L 31, 139 Giffin. Martha M 137 Gilbert. Harold E 51 Gilbert, Olive E 31. 133. 143 Gilcrest. Carl W 31. 96. Ill Gildersleeve. Betty Jane 153 Gildersleeve, John S 132 Gililland. B. Albert 51, 125 Gillespie. Grant F 176 Gisel. William G 52 Gleason. Owen H 52 Gleason. Robert W 176 Gleason, Wilford J 52 Gleichauf. Paul W 70 Goacher. Robert 74 Goebel. Margaret M 94. 97. 147 Gohlke, James R 123, 185, 186 Goodman, Jean E 43. 91 Goodyear. William U 103. Ill Gordon. Elma D 43 Gordon. Eva D 43 Gordon. Martin J 52 Gorsuch. Melvin T 31. 96. 115 Goslee. Thomas W 52. 127 Graf, Margaret 195 Graham, Jeanne E 100 Gram, Dorothy H 71, 87. 145 Gram. Katherine A 141 Graves. Freda F 91 Greber. Arlin W. H 89 Greenberger. Elaine 31 Greene. Earl C 52, 121, 180 Greenfield, William D 31, 117 Gries, George A 103 Griesheimer, Rudolph N 52, 80, 103 Griest, Edwin K 31, 80, 89 Griffin, Robert E 187 Grill, Elizabeth 31, 75, 76, 80, 99, 161 Grimm, Evelyn L 82, 97 Grine, Arnold F 31, 168, 180, 186 Grodin, Merrill A 92 Grodin, Wilbur A 31 Groglode. Susan J 70. 71, 147 Gross, Glenn M 95, 101 Gross, Robert R 71 Gross, Mrs. Ruth S 100 Grove, Bert E 125 Guarnieri. David C 52 Guilford, Betty M 52, 153 Gump, Robert G 52 Guthery, Esther 139 Gutknecht. Doris C 52, 159 H Haase, Robert Paul 127 Hader, George 176 Hadsel, Fred L 52, 74, 78, 80, 81. 95. Ill Hageman. Chester J 31, 123 Hageman, Fred F 117 Hagenbuch, Louise H 31, 84 Hagerman, Myra J 52, 143 Hahn, James L 127 Haine, Jack R 127 Haines, Byron M 32 Haisley, Lucile 52 Hake, June 96 Halbedel, Harold S 103 Hale, Frank C 52, 96 Hales, Everett B 32, 80 Hall, Elinor C 82, 84. 86. 161 Hall. Oliver S 52. 117 Halter. Sam L. ., 32. 92. 121. 178. 180 Hamburg. Allen J 92 Hamilton. John D 52. Ill Hammel. Clifford 185 Handschin. Sieglinde 32. 82. 147. 223 Hann. Olga E 91 Hansen. Ermal H 52 Hansgen. Mary L 153 Hanson. Bettie 52. 73. 75. 85. 137 Hardesty. (F.) Natalie 149 Hardesty. Hiram H 32. 96. 129 Harding. Richard 127 Hardy. Ann V 84 Hardy. Frances M 32. 137 Harley. George H 179 Harlow. Hewitt C 37 Harman. Mildred E 32. 73. 163 Harn. Marjorie Jane 52. 87 Harpster. Carol L 80. 87. 100. 139 Harpster. June L. .32. 75. 79. 84, 94, 100, 139 Harr, William H 52, 121 Har: Mar 137 Harris, James J 52, 125 Harris, Richard C 70, 81, 121 Harris, Robert K 92 Harrison, Elynor A 159 Harsha, Jane 52, 68. 85. 194. 195 Harshman. Don M 119 Hart. Gordon D 52 Hart. Jeanne 52. 147 Hartle. Robert 1 121 Hartman. Mary Ellen 133. 139 Hartwell. Paul 129 Harwood. Jean Louise 100 Hayes, Robert 52, 88, 101 Haynam, Crystal 159 Hayner, Jerry M 147 Heames, Robert J 32. 115. 231 Heath. Marjorie Ann 71 Heck. Helen L 143 Heide. Alice L 141 Heiland. Hugh G 123 Heimsch. Chas. Jr 32. 80. 96, 121, 168, 169, 189 Heingartner, Gretchen Ann 149 Heis, Forest R 179 Heisman, Alice 32 Heismann, Carl A 52, 181 Heisner, Robert W 52, 127 Heisser, Lucille E 149 Heldman, Howard W 92, 181 Heller, Hulda F 161, 195 Helmkamp, Mary M 68, 137 Hennage, Dave 52, 111 Henrich, Lee P 32. 73. 127 Henry. George L 185. 186 Henry. Richard W 52. 89. 98 Henry. Virginia 32. 82. 87, 100 Henry, Willard M 32. 107, 127, 168, 178 Herbaugh, Florence M 32, 84 Hermann, G, Gordon 121 Hern, Roy D 169, 178, 185 Hern, Samuel 176, 179 Herron, Richard W 32, 123 Hesse, John L 186 Hetzler, Robert H 123 Hibbert, Margaret L 163 Hibshman, Howard W 127 Hick, Evelyn Mae 145 Higgins, Edward L Ill Higgins, Robert 52, 98, Hill, Edward C Hill, Ruth M 32, 73, 75, 79, 82, Hillenbrand, William R Hillman, Vivian Hinckley, Mary J Hinkel, Robert A 125, Hinkle, Lester D 52, 107, Hitchcock, Alison D. S Hitchcock, Robert B Hodges. W. Scott 70. Hoel. William B 52. Hoffman. Phyllis I Hoghe. Harold H Holaday. Allan G. Holland. Edmund J Holland. Harold E 33. 84. Holmes. Robert L 52, Holzer. Irma P Homolya, Margaret J Honnert. Sheldon E Hoock, Alice E 43, Hooper, F 33, 84, Hopkins, George T 95, Hopkins. Thomas J 70. Home. Harold H 52. 74. 78. 104. Hornung. (Viola) F 33, Horrigan, Robert C Horth, Robert 52, Horton, John L Horton, Richard B Hosteller, Marjorie L Hough, Charles E 33, Hover. Mary L 52. Hovey. Harold E Hovis. Mary J 33. 85. Howard. Kent A 33. Howard. Richard A 76, 103, 185, Howard, Wilma E Howell, (Sydney) E Howell, Richard A. ..., Howenstine. (E.) Jay III 33, 74, 76, 78, 80, 99, 104, 121, Howland. William L 52, Hoyman. Ray W Hubbard. Mary L 139, Hudec, Betty L Hudson, Bert T Hughes, Israel W Hunter, Fred R 115, 181, Hunter, Richard E 52, 80, 103, Huntington, Lois M Hurlburt, John E 84, 119, 169, Huston, Nancy L Huston, Winifred J Huttenlocher. Harvey H Hyde. Donald C inner. Paul R 33 Inwood. Mary E Ireland. Robert E 68 129 Irwin, Robert C 176 Irwin, Ruth F 33 80 90 Ittel, Maurice W 52 90 Jache. Fred V Jache. Gladys M Jackson. J. G Jackson. Rosemarv Jacobs, Juanita M Jacobs. Marjorie F Jacoby. Martha B Jacot, Marion E Jacques, Edward James. Alice A Janes. Sue A. 31 37 70 90 92 141 IDECSCNAL CICECTCCy (contimied) Jenkins. Herbert N. Jenkins. Howard J. Jensen. Altabelle .... Jetter. Edward H Johns. Beverly .... Johnson. Esther B. Johnson. Janice J. Johnson. Muriel E Johnston. Robert F Johnstone. P. Oli-v Jones. Betty Jones. Carlyle H. Jones. Everett O. .. Jones. Howard M. Jones. Kenneth L. Jordan. Nelson H. Juett. Flora L Junk. William K Kagey. Daniel F Kaiser. Richard G Kaiser. Ruth M Kammerer. Anna Mae Kapp. Hubert E Karstaedt. Mary L Kasch. Geraldine K Katz. Sanford R Kaylor. William L Keays. Robert W Keeling. Virgil C 123 Keene. Margaret B Kehm. Charles H Keller, Betty M Keller. Pauline K Kelley. R. Hoyt Kelly. Ada M Kelly. Katheryn E Kelso. Hubert H Kemp. Dorothea M Kennedy. June Anne Kennedy. Margaret L Kepler. Norman ' Kerger. John M. Kern. Dorothy M Kerns. Clara M Kerr. Dolores Kershner. Ursula S Keslar. William A Kessler. Thelma V Kimball. Oliver G Kinder. Ruth A Kindig. Alice L Kinker, Robert W Kinkley. Harold V Kinner. Grace M Kirkup. Thomas J 9. 3 Kirschner. Pearl M Kirstein. Bernard Kitchen. Ben M Klein. Carolyn L Klein, Robert F Kleinfelder. Nelson Klemme. Rhoda L Kline. Martha Louise Kneisley. E. Elaine Kneisley. Joseph W Knowlton. Melvin 53. 78 Koehler, Frank W Koehler. Karl W Koeppel. Thomas M Kolb. William L Koogler. Helen E Koppitch, Claren Korte. Ernest W Kossow. Fred ] Kramer. Fred V Kraner. Robert Krebs. Paul H. 33. 89. 104. 117 H. .. 34. 92. 123 168. 1 1 1 ...53, 1 Kreilick. Janet A 133. 145 Krejci. Rose 161 Kress. Flora E 91 Kress. Mary M 44, 91 Kreuzwieser, Phyllis E 34. 137 Kruse. Clarence E 103 Kruse. Roland R 53. 76. 103 Kuether. Carl A 34. 73, 101, 104 Kuhlman. Lucile F 161 Kulka. Ruth M 143 Kusel. Norman 176 Kuzyk. Michael H 113. 185 L Lahodny. George L 117. 176. 187 Laird. Marian 34. 90. 97. 195 Lambert. Lucile M 44 Lampe. Marian R 68. 82. 155 Landen. Maurice E 53. 111. 168, 182 Landolf. Catherine 53. 139. 255 Lan Sam Owe .34. 127 Lane. Winthrop D 34, Lang. Arch Lang. Wilma V- 94, Lano, William R 53, Larason. Permelia J Larsen, Robert P Lathram, Leslie W Laub. Alta Lavie. Nica J Lawrence. Dorothy L 44. 100 Lea. Genevieve A. 68 Lederman. Edward 3 ' Lee. Margaret V Lee. Virginia LeGant. Karl M Lehman. Gwen E 34, Lehman. Violet E Lehmiller. Jane M 53. 161 Leininger. Albert A 81 Lennard. George M Leon. Irving S 74 Leow. Richard E 169 Leshner. David 53 Lester. Gerald W 127 L ' Estrange. John H Leuzzi. Dominick T Levering. James S 115 Lewis, Gilbert R Lewis. Wayne H 53. 119 Lewis. William B 34, 119 Liggett. M. Louise Liggett. Rebecca E 53 Liggett. William N 70 Liggitt. Ruth M 53. 84 Liles. Paul R 3. Lincoln, Harriette V 53, Lincoln. Rosamond 44, Lindamood. H. Eileen Lindemood. Richard R 53 Lindsey. Dorothy F 71 Lindsey. Marian W 53. 133, Line. Psyche V Linegar. D. Ned 34. 74. 78, 96. 125, Lingham. Edward T Lingler. Martin A 123, Little. Harry H Little. Kent M Little. Lois 1 53, Little, Virginia M, J Llewellyn. Jack W 53. 84. 121. 168, Lockhart. Eleanor L 44, Lodge, Fannie V 91, Lodrick, Richard F 53, Loeb, David L Loeftler. Grace V Loewer. Edward J Loftus. Mary C Logan, Austin C 34. Long. Bertha E Long. Jeanne C 53. 84. 90, 94. 100. Long. Paul R 95. 103. Long. Ruth L Longley. Isabelle M 53. 100. 133. Longsdorf. Charles W 34. Longstreth. A. Jean Looker. Carl R 53. 89. Loos. F. Beverly 91. Loos. John W 34. 84. 89, Luci. Elena L 53. 94, Luecker. John T 35. 89. 98. Lunsford. William Lust. Freda M 53. Lutz. Tom R. Lynch. Owen M 81. 93. 115. Lynd. Dorothy L Lvtle. K. Alaire M ..53. 98, MacAlIister. Mary E. MacDonald, Sedohr J, MacDonald. William F. MacFarquhar. Wm MacQueen, James R. ... Maddock. Marion L Mahlig. Harvey W Maish. Robert W Malcolm. Mary K Manley. Myra 68, Mann, Mrs. Georgia L Mansell. Bert E 81, Marcum. Jane H 94, Markley. Herbert E 81 Markley. Thomas M Marshall. Katharine A 53, Martin. Adabelle Mart in. Alice E Martin. Betty Martin. Charlotte J 53. 100. 161 Martin. Earline L 53. 100, Martin, Robert A Martin. Robert D Martin. Robert H Martz. Raymond W Mathes. Zella M Mathias, Ray K 3: Matre. Robert M 53. 117. 168, Mattern. Carolyn 35, Matthes, Charles Matthews. Ruth 100, Mattison. Herbert D Mautz. James 68, Mautz, Robert B 53, 70, 76. 78. 80. 81. 93. Maxwell. Hugh P 53, Mayer, Adrian McAulifEe, Mary L 54. 151, McCabe, Ralph W McCall, Betty McCarthy, Lorraine McCauley. Gordon T McClain. William 169, McClanning. Jeanne 54, McClellan. Carlyle W 169, McClelland, Evelyn M 4- McClung, Dorothy J McConnaughey. (Sara I Jane 84. 100, McConnaughey, Robert ,54. 68. 78. 89, McCord. Helen L 74, 86. 133, McCormick. Jane M McCoy. Gayle M McCoy, Marthina 86. 94, McCoy. Ruthanne McCrea, Paul M 35. 92. 95. McCreary, Ralph L 92. McCune. Margaret M 68. 8; McDonald. Frances A McDonnell. Robert W 125. McFarland, Kenneth 54, 127. McGinnis, Fred T McGough. Kent B 103. McGrew. Jean C PERSONAL CIRCCTOKy (continued) Mcllyar, James D 121. 179 Mclntyie. Alex 35, 89. 117 McKinley. C. Virrell 185 McKinney. Jane 54. 94. 96. 153 McLean. Elizabeth L 100, 149 McLean. H. Bain 127 McLean, Marijane 147 McManus. Elaine N 91 McManus. Thomas H 35. 119 McMechan. Eileen F 44. 139 McMurray, I. LaVada 161 McNaughton, E. Jack Ill McNeal. Thomas C 54, 119 McNeal, Walter G 54, 89 McNelly. Bill 90 McRoberts, Walter C 92 Means. Clella M 44 Meder. Robert J 123. 169 Meek. Sara C 161 Mehas. Andrew G 169 Meier, Webster B 169. 185 Meifert, Arthur W 53. 71, 127 Mellen, Mary E 147 Memel, Scott E 119 Mendelson. Samuel E 35, 131 Messent, Jack E 35, 107, 119 Messier, Dorothy M 35, 91 Metzger, Charles 176 Metzger, Winifred J 153 Meyer, Edward F 35, 123 Meyer, Paul L 117 Meyers, John W 115, 179 Meyers, Ursula M 35 Miles, Marilyn 44 Miller, Allen R 53 Miller, Betty 86, 94 Miller, Charles F Miller, Dorothy Miller, Dorothy Miller, Ethel B 147 Miller, Helen L 94 Miller, John O Ill, 169, 185 Miller, Leolyn J 100, 137, 194 Miller, Margaret E 53, 161 Miller, Marian F 137 Miller, Roger E 35, 96, 98, 186 Miller, Russell E 35, 125 Miller, Virginia L 35 Miller, Wesley B 54, 231 Mills, Robert W Ill, 185 Mills, Stephen D 179 Milstead, Martha W 159 Minotti, Alfred J 54, 123 Minton, David W 115. 185 Minton. Mary E 54. 97, 145 Mitchell, Eleanor D 82, 85, 86. 137 Mitchell. G. Eleanor 54, 71, 94, 97, 159 Mitchell, Helen V 159 Mitchell, Virginia C 44 Modarelli, James M 119 Mohler, Joseph H 119 Molitor, Alma M 35, 75, 139 Montgomery, Dorothy 90 Montgomery, George T 101 Montgomery, Marian E 35, 79, 90, 195 Montville, Alfred H 119 ..53, 97, 104 ,76, 104, 147 Moomaw, Sarah L, Moon, Adelbert E. Moore, Irene L Moore, Jack G Moore, June A Moore, Margaret O. Moore, Mildred C. .. Moore, Roger Moos, William E Morgenstern, J. H, Morris, Bernice P. Morris, Elizabeth J, Morris, Mary E Morris, Richard T, Morris, Robert J, , Morris, Wilford E. . 36. 82, 90 54, 123 ..82, 84, 86, 99 Morrison, Esther L Morrow, David B Mortashed. Evelyn L 51. 91. Morton. DeLight M Moser. Richard J Motz. Virginia L 36. 76. 99. Mount, Marjorie A 54 Mowry, Robert S Mullen, Margaret L Mullikin, Sprague Munro, Robert D 36, 121, Murphy, Esther J Murphy, Richard T Mur: Murray, Me ,,,51, 125 .36, 145 ,,,54, 151 .103, 127 N Nanovsky, John Neal, Helen E Neil, Howard L Nellis, Elizabeth M, .,, Nelson, Herbert H, „, Nelson, N, Harry Nestor, Ronald G Neu, Ruth A Neuman, Paula L Newgurgh, Richard W ,36, 95, 121 Niswonger, Virginia V :,i 70, 132 Nixon, Donald A 125 Nixon, Keller E 129, 169 Noakes, Judy E 137 Noll, Anna Mary 94 Norris, Fred D 36,89 Norris, Rosemary 45 Northway, James E 113 Norwood, John E 36, 117 Noyes, Marie D 161 Nungesser, Ruth E 45, 195 Oakley, Eleanor 149 Oakley, Richard H 54, 119 Oblinger, Richard E 74, 103 O ' Brien, Helen M 145 Offenhauer, Wayne B 36 O ' Hara, Lloyd H 115, 179 OhI, Wilma M 141 Ohiy, William N 36, 115, 168, 169 Olin, Charles R 117, 176 O ' Malley, William J 176 Oppelt, Edwin P 119 Oram, Allan S 37, 78, 111 Oram, Frank H 68, 81, 111 Oram, Paul A 92, 185 Orvos, Paul J 169 Osborn, Jane E 153 Osborn, Lydia P 153 Otis, John 37, 96 O ' Toole, Kathleen 37 Otto, Jack 115 Overly, Donald J 117 Overstreet, Madgel D 37, 159 P Page, George H 176 Page, Helen 90 Palmer, Arthur H 54, 98, 169 Palmer, Burton M 229 Palmer, Forrest E 37, 117 Panuska, George H 9, 37, 117, 168, 169, 187 Park, Helen K 68, 100, 145 Paschold, Martha G 54, 71, 145 Paserbevis, Helen A 37 Passel, Charles F 98, 121 Paterson, Janet W 100 Pearce, Evelyn L 153 Pearce, John F 117 Pease, Philo 125 Pogelow, Edward J 54 Pence, Mary L 37, 139 Pennington, Elizabeth L 37, 147 Pennington, G, Ann 147 Penrod, Kenneth E 169 Peoples, Mary E 82 Perin, C, Theodore 81, 98 Peri F, Elii ,.37 Perry. Robert H 117 Peters. Gladys M 37. 84. 97 Petrich. Joseph F 168. 169 Petrone. Gene J 176 Petry. Margaret K 54, 133, 161, 255 Pettersen, Alice E 51, 147 Petticrew, Betty J 91 Petty, William G 117 Pfau, Ruth A 94, 147 Pfeiffer, Walter C 37 Pfeil, Elmer C 185 Phillips, James K 93 Phillis, W. Avery 117 Pickerel, John S 37 Pidgeon, Charles H 127, 176, 179 Pieper, G. Harry 37, 117 Pilmer, Gordon A 54, 123 Pindell, Idella 37, 74, 80, 90 Pitsinger, Marjorie 45, 195 Pitts, Madlyn 51. 133. 143 Platell. Edward 54. 123 Pontius. James 54. 70. 121 Pool. John 121 Poppe. Myra 37. 90. 91. 94 Porter, Cyrus 181 Postlewaite, William 73, 89, 115 Powell, Brooks 37, 107, 111 Prech, Eleanor 91,94 Preston, Ruth 149 Price, Elizabeth 54, 153 Price, Harry 54, 119 Price, Roger 176 Priest, James 113 Prindle, Lillian 37, 90, 91 Pringle, Arthur 125 Proper, Walter 54, 121 Prottengeier, Ruth 139 Puff, Edward 38, 74, 132 Puff, Harold 95 Pults, Ray 54, 119 Purman, Irma 153 Putnam, Irwin 176 Q Quick. Joseph 113 Quinn. Jack 127 R Raabe, Margaret R 54, 149 Ramers, Delmer J 125 Ramsay, Thomas R 38, 89, 115 Ramsen, Jane C 153 Randolph, Anna Florine 38, 75, 79, 94 Randt, Robert J 115 Rankin, Irene 68, 137 Rapp, Jo 38 Rapp, John U 127 Rausch, Eugene F 54, 119 Ray, Raymond 178 Raymond, Esther M 54, 145 Raymond, Robert 121 Reaver, J. Russell 54, 80, 81 Reber, Elizabeth E 163 Reber, John D 38, 84, 89 Redlin, Edward C 168, 186 Redlin, Robert W 51. 68. 81. 187 Redman, Dorotha G 38, 75, 79, 80, 82, 93, 133, 159, 223 PECSCNAL DICCCT€Cy (continued) Reed. Helen R 38. 80. 90. 91 Reedy. Richard M 70. Rees. Evelyn R Reeves. Margaret A 54. 149. Rehman. Neil E Rehmert. Pauline Reich. Cora May Reichel. Kathryn Reid. Catherine C Reiff. Virginia L Reifsnider. Frank 54. 74. Reis, Robert W 68. Remke. Marjorie E Remle. Ruth C 38. 88. Renton. Neil H Reske. Richard ' ■Rhoads. Katherine L 54. Rice. Marilyn T Richards. B. James 90. 104. Richards. Dorothy 4. Richards. Elizabeth 38. 82. 96. Richards. Jane F 54. 133. Richards. John W _■_• Richards. Mary K ' =, Richards. Scott T Richardson. Thomas J Richey. Helen H 38, 76. Ricker. Muriel M Riddle. Joseph 1 ' ' Ridenour. Charles M Rieser. Betty E Riley. Nancy H Rinehart. Martha E Risinger. Harold 76. 121. Roahen. Dan C - ■Robbins. Isabella 38. 79. 90. 94. Roberts. Elmer W 1 8. Roberts. Irene E Roberts. Robert F Robertson. J. Edward 89. Robertson. Joyce Robinson. Betty R 94. Robinson. Evelyne E Robinson. Irving D 54. 131. Robinson. Kathleen F 38. Rodeteld. Frances E Rodeteld. Jeannette A Rodriguez. Manuel 55. 113. Rogers. Jean Dudley Rogers. Robert S 38. 113. Rohn. Doris Rolfes. Richard 55. Holland. Ormi 68. Romano. Joe Roof. Jeanne M Root. Gilpin C Rose. Irving J Rosendale. Eileen E 38. Ross. John W Rossiter. Richard R Roth. John F Roth. Lewis 38. 96, Rothacher. Ruth G 55, Rothbaum. Fannie 55. 75, Rothe. WiUiam R Rothenberger. Dorothy 38. 96. Roudebush. Charles 39. Roudebush. Katherine Roudebush. Martha J 68. Rowe. E. Keith Ruberg. J. Robert Rubin. Marvin L ' 1. Rudman. Lee 55. Rudyk. John M 39. Ruggles. Eloise Runkle. Robert L Rupp. John C 176. Rush. M. Florence Rust. Clifford 90. Ryan. William A 103, Rytel Thaddeus C 39, 125, 168, s Smedley. Paul Clifford 5 Smeltzer. Richard S 55 . 89, 10 Sampsell, Betty ,.,85 Smith. Elizabeth Jean 86 . 94. 13 Sanders, Maurice ,123 Smith. Frances Jean 16 Sanderson. Dorothy 55. 159 Smith. George Bancroft .125, 18 39 40. 9 Sauer Georee . ,.. 39. 121 .159 Smith. Leslie Leonard Jr. . Smith. Marcella Ehzabeth .... Saunders. Ruth ...86. 16 Saxbe, Bettie 55, 83. 133. 153 Smith. Mary Margaret IS Saxbe, John M ,127 Smith. Ralph B ...40. 12 Saxbe. Marjorie .153 Saxe. Martha Lou 39. 147 Smith. Robert Halard ,176. 17 Schaefer. Norman ,127 Smith. (Russell) Jack 55 . 71. 12 .103 .117 Schauer. (Joseph) Robert Scheible. Wilbur 123 121. 169 Smucker. Paul Hi ghnam 12 Schiewetz. Mary E ,,.,87 Snell. Jean Elizabeth Schillig. Robert .176 Snyder. Charles Clifford 5 Schmidt Charlotte E 39. 94, 163. 195. Ssyder. Irene . .9 Schmitt. Edward Carl Snyder. Richard Sollars. (Charles! David SoUenberger. Jane Louise . SoUiday. Nancy Yates 55. 119. 18 Schneider. Herbert F Schnorrenberg. Margaret Jane . 39. 129 45. 139 8 Schonwald. William Somershield. Lynn Edward ...40, 11 Schultz. Frances L 84. 145 Spain. Nita Maxine 8 Schuman. Ralph H Sparkes. WiUiam N .169. 18 Schwab. C. Hugh Spector. Sidney 8 Schwegler. Marjorie 82. Spence. John Jackson ...68. 12 Schweitzer. Jeanette Florence Spencer. JuUan Lindsey 55 . 95, 12 Scott. James Arthur Spencer. Mary Ellen 55, 9 Seeley. Ehzabeth 55. 7. Spetnagel. Theodore Scott 12 Seeley. Franceha Spieler. August Joseph Jr. ... ...55, 12 Seller. Frank C =5. Spielman. John Bridge ,101, 11 Seres. James Joseph Settle. Gertrude May .163 Spindler. Mildred Marie 4 Settle. James Earl Spitler. John F .55. 12 Shaeffer. David Wills u Spoonamore. Elwood Byrns .. Sprinkel. Doris Eloise 40 . 78. 12 45. 9 Shaffer, Elwood 39. 111 Sprinkle. James Henry Sproull. A. Gray Sharick, Betty Marion ,153 ...81. 10 Sharp, Robert Wilhamson Spyker. Hazel 9 Shartle. Richard Byron Stark. Mary Magdalene 40. 161. 194, 19 Shaw, Joseph Monroe 55. 6S Stark. William David 17; Shaw. Nancy Tazewell Starkey. Frances Helen ,55, 19, Shaw. William Henry Stebbins. Marv Lou .55, 16 Sheets. Helen Katherine Steed. Mary Helen., .40, 76, 79. 96. 104. 13: Stegemiller, A. Alberta Steinbicker. Clare Marie Shelhouse. Georgiana Elinor 93. 94 :. 97 14! Shellhouse. Carl Virgil Steiner, Josephine Elizabeth 55. 9 Shepard. W. Bruce Steiner. Kathleen 55 . 70. 81 . 84. 141 Stephens, Jane Whitney 68 101. 11 15 Shera. WilUam C 55. 74. 111 ,,..40 Stevens, Ida Grace Stevens, Robert M Stewart, Clarence Albert .... Shideler. James H 40. 74. 96. 98. 107. 123 8 ' Shilling. Margaret Rossetta ,157 Stewart. Don Harry 55. 91 Shilling. Martha Ruth Stewart. Ellen Regina ...55, 68, . 94. 14 ' Shollenbarger. James David .40. 93. Stewart. (Margaret) Nan 14 ' Shrader. Earl Calvin ,68, 121, Stewart. Thelma Kathryn ,. 9 Shuey. Alice Bosler Shull. Robert Earl ::::4o: ' 113 Stilley. Richard Alfred ,55. 12; Siegel. Arthur Samuel Siegle. Joseph Darrel 141 .179 Stoer. Robert Henrv 55, 93. 11! Stone. Mary Louise Storer. William Elroy Stoudt. Florence Katherine 40, 127 55 12 Simpkinson. Nancy Jean 100. 14! Stout. (Paul) Richard 55. 117 Simpson, Irene Elizabeth 45 . 91 Stow. Mary Lucile 141 Singer. Herbert Lenard Strain. Mildred Leila 55, I4i Skerritt. Edward George ...40. 96. 104 Strange. Lois Irene 16: Skinner. Inez Elizabeth 143 Strauss. Ben J Strauss. Nathan ; Slagle. Charles R Ill, : 169. 178. 181 41, 131 Slagle. Russell Brandau .176 Streeter. Clarence Hurd Hi Slater. Garth Braden ...68 Strenick. Marcia Eileen 41 i;i3. 15; Sloat. Virginia Anne 55. 145 Strickland. Robert Royal .12; PECSCNAL DICCCTCCy (continued ) Strickler. (Alma) Edna 84 Stromberg. Kathryn Lois 91 Strosnider. Charles 93 Struthers. John Pearce 37 Stucky, Dorothy Marie 137 Stuhlmueller, Janet Kathryn 48, 153 Stuver. Donald Arthur 123 Sullenberger. Ruth Elinor 55. 149 Sunderman. Gertrude Rose 159 Sunshine. Robert Douglas 179 Sutherland. Malcolm Reed 95. 103. 121 Sutton. Annetta Jane 45. 91 Swafford. Earl 41 Swain. Edwin 116. 169. 181 Swank. (Howard) Cecil 55. 97. 103 Swanson. Herbert John 68. 129 Swartz. Arnold 55, 131 Swedenborg. Robert Bergman 55 Sweely. Belle 153 Sweet. Barbara Rex 91 Switzer, (Donald) William 115 Symes, John Harold 41 Taggart. Harriet E 74. Talbot. Frances I 41, 80, Tallman, Ruth E 86, 100, Tatro, Jack Taurman, Jack Taylor. Donald 55. Taylor. Howard P Taylor. Luther S Taylor. Milton F 41, 84, Taylor, Thomas W 84, 121, 168, Taylor, Virginia 1 94, Teague. Robert N Templeton, Charles Thatcher. Helen E 84. 94. Thayer. E. Ruth 41. 133. 157. Thiele, Kenneth W 55, 89, Thomas. Bertha E Thomas. C. Oliver 55, 127, Thomas, Marion W Thomas. Richard E 81, Thomas. William A 41. 115. Thompson. George E Thompson. John H Thompson. Marion R 55. Thompson. Willa J Thomson. Donald M Thomson. Rosemary K Thraves. William F Tilton. Margaret E Timme. Ruth L 56, Tinker. (E.) Ann 56, 91. Todhunter, Herman H 96, Tolley, Mildred G 56, Tomkutonis, Frank 56. 119. 169. Toney. William E 93. Tripplehorn. Phyllis Trisler. Dorothy Troester. J. Richard Trumbull. Wilson C 56. Tschischeck. Frank 41, Tullis, Marjol L Turk. Edith u Unger. Janet L White. J. Elroy Whil J. P. Vail. Lloyd E Van Ausdal. Robert Van Ausdall. Hugh i Van Boxel. Edward Van Buren. George 1 56. 121 Van Dor Van Gilst. Elizabeth Van Horn. Irma V. Van Lehn. Albert M. Van Ness. Lucy M. . Veil. Virginia J Velloney. Ralph C. . Voelker. Robert Vogt. Isabelle Vollbrecht. Ernst ... Votaw. Galen F w 100. 147 .168. 169 ..123. 169 Waddell. Mary E Waggener. Roy Wagner. Grace L Wagner. Helen M Wagner. Jacob F Wagner. Jacob M Wagner. Raymond C Wagner, Virginia K Waite, Max A Waldo, Virginia W 86, 94, 141 Walker, Carl K 169 Walker, Dorothy M 195 Walker, Fred R 95, 103 Walker. Ned L 70. Ill Wallace. Edwin G 76. 81 Walsh. Gladys G 45 Walter. George A 89. 129 Walter. William B 56. 115 Walters. Robert A 56. 111. 123 Walton. Joseph G 74 Waltz. H. Franklin 41. 125 Ward. Lois J 68. 145 Warden. George W 121 Ware. (M.) Susanne 84 Warner. Lawrence A 98 Warner. Ruth A 147 Warren. Edward P 121 Warren. Herbert B 176 Wass. Vernon C 41 Watkins. (F.) Thelma ,S4. 94 Watkins. IW.) Gene . .(l, 11)7, 113 Watson. George H, .. Watterson. Jane E. Way. Peggy J Weaver. Robert D. Weber. Margaret G. Weikart. Eileen I Weiland. Robert G. 23. 4 ..41. 80. 82. 163. 195 82. 107. 117. 168. 178 Weimer. Ellen L 145 Weinberger. Helen V 100 Weingart. Morton W 41. 71. 131. 168. 223 Weis. Wilson E 81 Weisberger. Seymour S 131 Weiss. Benjamin J 103. 131. 179 Weiss. Ruby E 91 Wellman. John 42. 115 Welsheimer, Phoebe M 153 Werth. Willard F 42. 89. 95 West. Helen L 153 Weyman. Virginia P 137 Whelan. John G 127. 179 Whitaker. Robert W 56. 127 White. Betty J 147 Whiteman. Helen E. . Whitney. Margaret L Wical. Exley E Wick. W. Paul Wiepking. Karl C- Wietcha. Edward Wiley. Betty J Wiley. Ruth E Wilkinson. Ann L .56. 117. 168. 176 ..42, 84. 157 John P. . 45 113. 180 Williams. David M 42. 68. 73. 107. 125 Williams. Forrest E 56. 78. 89. 168 Williams. Homer 186 Williams. Jerome J 176 Williams .Laura C 94. 141 Williams. Lawrence A 42 Williams. M. Richard 125 WiUiams. Robert S 42 WiUiams. Roger D 81 Williams. Ruth M 90. 195 Williams. Winifred 36, 84. 94. 100. 147 WiUiamson. Joe E 185 Wilson. Mary E 161 Wilson. Nancy 45 Winemiller. Hilda 139 Winglewich. Paul K 185. 186 Winspear. Robert W 179 Winters. Carl J 169. 185 Wirtz. Mary A 56 Wiseman. Robert W 42. 117. 176 Wissman. Harold W 56 Witham. Stewart 93. 101. 121 Withrow. Elizabeth 42. 195 Withrow. F. Elizabeth ...90. 94. 133. 139. 195 Witt. Sylvester F 56. 93. Ill Witty. Robert W 71. 121 Wolcott. James F 176 Wolf. Frank J 81. 185 Wolfe. Betty M 149 Wolfe. Judge E 56. 121 Wollam. William T 101 Wollenhaupt. Glen J 56. 117. 169 Wood. Dorothy E 88, 91 Woodard, James H 179 Woodburn, John A 103. 179 WoodfiU, James 56 Worman, Mary C 56 Worthing, Ford B 56, 119, 231 Worthman, Paul 92 Wright, J. Wilson 42 Y Yaekle. Helen M 56 Yaekle. William A 56 Yeck. William S...42, 46. 70, 74, 78, 104, 129 Yoder. M. Elizabeth 42. 96 Young. Catherine J 143 Young. Margaret E 147 Young. Paul 56 Young. Robert E 56. 123 Young. Sylvia 56. 90 z Zehring. Martha J 70, 71, 153 Ziegler, Albert F 56, 117. 255 Zimmerman. Loran S 181 Zipf. Karl A 93 Zipf. Robert E 42. 96. 123. 169 Zurbrick. Mildred E 56, 88 IS] Yeflft OF ' -bs - t foftT Wi ' rJCi - I  T FLOOR Room - t %i ej (ill - ( 5-6 - ' c JUaJI VV d t = ' '   « - Z 3 auL i o ALTOGCAPHS
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.