Ohio University - Athena Yearbook (Athens, OH) - Class of 1940 Page 1 of 230
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566 GROOM STREET ' =r--M AMBOY. N. J. 7 -== At Athens, Ohio r J . COPYRIGHT 1940 Arthur W. Sherman, Editor John S. Todd, Bus. Mgr. tlt z_J On the horn! . . . Sure, It ' s a date! FRATERNITY FRIENDS gather in their tradition-steeped chap- ter rooms, enjoy frequent bull sessions. (Phi Kappa brothers Devitt, Maher, Margoles, Ko- walski, Bellan.) . ? ■'  v SPORTS FRIENDS Carl Olt, Harry McSherry, and John Shafer enjoy mapping out -%. their teamwork ideas. JK FACULTY FRIEND Hiram Roy ■|r Wilson, grand old man of Ohio University, is a sympathetic adviser. With him is Robert L. Wertman. BOY FRIENDS and GIRL FRIENDS work and play together on Ohio ' s beautiful campus. Typical is this couple strolling under the McGuffey elms in springtime. ACTIVITY FRIENDS Sam Downer, Professor C. N. Mac- kinnon, and Bill Benkert. JUST FRIENDS are Eleanor Schulz, Mary Elizabeth Lasher, and Clyde Davis. i 1 h.e j msldeni MOST students think of Ohio University ' s President Herman G. James as a scholarly recluse. The few able to break through the red- tape barriers to see him have found him to be a mem with a sense of humor and charming personality. James entered college at sixteen, was grad- uated in three years with a Phi Bete key. At that time, he didn ' t want to teach. When his mother suggested the ministry, he chose peda- gogy as the lesser of two evils, went on to graduate study. During his senior year, James played the great lover in an Elizabethan drama. The story of his off-stage romance is short. His roommate got him a blind date: that was 31 years ago, and he has been going steady with the girl ever smce. OU ' s president is a good violinist, but prefers to play the cello in a string quartet. His favorite composers are Brahms, Beethoven, Mozart, and Bach. James plays an excellent contract bridge game, enjoys chess and gardening. His secret hobby is short-story writing, but this is the least successful of his activities. He likes plays, not movies. He doesn ' t like Clark Gable or Nelson Eddy because all the women are crazy about them. Favorite actress, Mae West. James ' big aim for Ohio University is to gat and keep the best teachers available. Much of his detailed work is governed by his memo- writing executive secretary, Irene L. Devlin, who was this year made assistant to the president. -HERMAN G. JAMES AND GRANDSON I have just received another petition from the students— EXECUTIVE Committee mem- bers are Dr. W. S. Gamerts- felder, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences and of the Graduate College . . . windows of philosophy. Professor C. C. Robinson, chairman of the Execu- tive Committee, College of Fine Arts. . . organ interludes. Dr. James R. Patrick, associate dean of men . . . sophisticated think- ing. Dr. Frank B. Dilley, regis- trar . . . My predictions are. Dr. Thomas C. McCracken, provost, dean of the College of Education . . . taciturn. Professor A. H. Arm- bruster, dean of the College of Commerce . . . business man. Dr. W. M. Young, dean of the Col- lege of Applied Science . . . en- gineer. Dr. Irma E. Voigt, dean of women . . . Here, Ladyl Miss Irene L. Devlin, assistant to the president . . . Would you like to see the president? Athena ' s artists sketched cam- pus landmarks, (page 13, top) Super Hall, Edwin Watts Chubb Library, Science Hall, (bottom) Wilson Hall, Manasseh Cutler Hall, McGuffey Hall, Ewing Hall, (page 12) Alumni Memorial Au- ditorium, Ellis Hall. Say, who called this meeting . . . ? Athena assembles galaxy of adminis- trators for unique pictorial group IN a library corner, more university administrators gathered for Athena ' s insistent photographers, (front left) Brushwielder L. C. Mitchell . . . director, School of Painting and Allied Arts . . . paints to please the masses, not other artists. Grace Steininger . . . director. School of Home Economics . . . her girls keep house for themselves in the home ec practice house next to the president ' s residence. Anne C. Keating . . . bibliophile . . . sweet . . . coopera- tive . . . her library system is target of gripes against pink slips . (back row) Colonel T. F. McNeill, Infantry, U. S. A. . . . command- ant, Ohio University ' s ROTC cadets . . . firm . . . respected. Einar A. Hansen . . . director of the university ' s summer sessions . . . smart dresser . . . efficient. Robert Gates Dawes . . . Philadelphia scion . . . director. School of Dramatic Art . . . for the University Theatre . . . wants to remodel Ewing Auditorium, make it a first class playhouse. George Starr Lasher . . . messiest desk in the university . . . director. School of Journalism . . . writes in a steep backhand . . . chairman. Committee on Student Publications. 14 TWTEDICINEMAN George N. Burger (left) . . . director, University -L J-Health Service . . . M. D. . . . competent. James E. Householder . . . associate dean of men ... has charge of NYA, co-ops, other student self-help services . . . sits on Interfraternity Council meet- ings. Victor Whitehouse . . . 2.89 in Ohioan ' s Grade Your Pro- fessors poll . . . associate dean of men. Musclebuilder Ossian C. Bird . . . Doc . . . director of Physical Welfare. George C. Parks . . . treasurer and business manager of the university . . . ultra-strict budgeteer. B. T. Grover . . . propaganda . . . director of public relations . . . black cigars . . . voice booms through the philosophy department ' s Wilson Hall class- rooms . . . good will for alma mater . . . former coach of basketball . . . Butch. J. Floyd Dixon . . . brings education to your door . . . director of the university ' s extension classes . . . chain-store erudition. Clark E. Williams alumni secretary ... the Ohio Alumnus ... has a file of photo-engravings used in student publications from their beginnings. 15 Friendly Ohio greets the Class of ' 43 REGISTRATION DAY, La- Vaughn Keplar (second irom right) waited her turn at Chubb Library. Then she checked her class schedule. Dean Voigt approved a minor change in LaVaughn ' s schedule. Dr. H. H. Roseberry gave her a card for each of her classes. LaVaughn spent an hour in tedious writing, chief gripe of registerites. The task completed, she was besieged by salesmen. Next day, she paid her fees in Ewing. Afterwards, she relaxed with Herman Wren and Dean Heydick in the new Student Grill. V I 16 DEAN Irma E. Voigt and Lady greet freshman women in the famous backyard garden (upper left) . . . Campus newcomers crowd the fresh- man mixer . . . Freda Simerka and Charles Weber coke at Registration Hop. DR. BURGER examines all freshmen during the first few weeks of school . . . Logan ' s sell thousands of books . . . Dr. Porter, psychology chairman, fa- tigues students with his college ability tests. 17 Freshmen: class 18 WITH the scarlet of the maples comes the green of the fresh- man . . . enviable in that they are seeing the beauty of the campus for the first time, through unaccustomed eyes . . . keenly thrilling to its color and sweep, even as the jaded seniors once did. The pungent odor of burning leaves rouses nostalgia in the hearts of the new-comers . . . though the hectic, happy-go-lucky first days of college leave little time for homesickness. The rush of registration merges into the confusion of finding the many classrooms. Someone helps out a bewildered freshie and an- other fine friendship has begun. Eagerly the first and most glorious football game is anticipated, and rightly so, for no matter what it ' s like, in memory it is a magnificent affair . . . bands blaring, banners gayly beckoning, and a scarlet airplane touch- ing up the post-card sapphire of the cloudless sky ... in memory we always win that first game by a huge margin. The victory celebration adds another to our college memories. The first dance . . . eagerly little Miss Freshman arrays herself in glamorous bib-and-tuck, anxiously awaits her buzzer signal, hurriedly skips downstairs, happily sallies forth with the blind date which the kind junior arranged for her. I oi nineteen forty-three SURPRISING, how many blind dates grow into nice little love affairs! More classes, and Freshman learns to his sorrow that this sure is different from high school . . . assignments and more assignments . . . then the shock of the first grades ... a low, grinding sound, audible all over the campus . . . the fresh- man settling down to hard work. The thrill of belonging felt at the first convocation, when the student body gathers together. The gradually diminishing flow of letters home . . . the joyous discovery that college professors are exactly as presented by radio comedians . . . the long walks . . . the first sight of the asylum grounds . . . and all its implications and complications . . . And with all these experiences behind him, by the time Thanksgiving vacation rolls around the green has pretty well worn off. The freshman becomes a campus citizen, having found his interests and formed friendships, and perhaps having begun to realize the opportunities offered him for self-improvement if he wishes seriously to participate in the life of the college. 19 Campus government dominated by CAC MOST potent student governing body is Campus Af- fairs Committee, which a short time ago declared itself an executive committee of the university, respon- sible to the president. Before this, the meetings were open to the student body. Saul Cohen (see page 188) is the only non-member who attended every CAC meet- ing this year until the sessions were closed. Cohen declares: This secrecy looks suspicious. . .CAC should guarantee that no shrewd tricks be used to circumvent justice. CAC has complete power in regulating extra-curricular activities, administers $3.50 per student of the A.L.E. fee. (Remainder of the $10 per year per student goes to pay for the football stadium). Much criticism has been brought against the committee this year, v ith charges of undemocratic administration predominant. Significant was the Town Hall session on campus democracy (see page 62). CAC is made up of five students, six faculty members, is chairmanned by Dean Voigt. Sub-committees of CAC are the Men ' s and Women ' s Selection Boards, who select class officers, dance chair- men, others. Voigt heads the women ' s board, Dean Whitehouse, the men ' s. Also under the CAC is the Committee on Student Publications, headed by Professor George Starr Lasher, which names the editors and business managers of the three student publications. The committee hears monthly reports from the publications, advises their executives on policy. All officers chosen by this committee and the selections boards must be approved by CAC. New this year is the Student Grill Committee, another CAC sub-group, which plans policies of the grill, has Whitehouse as its chairman. 20 CAMPUS AFFAIRS COMMITTEE Faulstich, Frazer, Dean Voigt, B. T. Grover, F. S. Gullum, Louden, G. A. Lash. Downer, F. Justin, Dean Whitehouse. SELECTION BOARDS First Row: Mullett, L. Miller, Sher- man, Christman, Kerr, Tucker, Meschan, Wiegman, Stone. Sec- ond Row: Dean Whitehouse, Dean Voigt, Coen. COMMITTEE ON STUDENT PUBLICATIONS R. F. Beckert, Barber, Gadus, K. H. Krauskopf, G. S. Lasher. STUDENT GRILL COMMITTEE Frazer. B. Smith. Jones. L. J. Otis, Dean Voigt, Dean Whitehouse, Lady. 21 p 9 , f Back Row: Downer, C. N. Mackinnon, Wiegman, Wert- man. Barber, Benkert, Eddy. Sherman, Jolly. Center: Zook, Frozer. Absent: Lauden. Mortar Board SELECTING its members for leadership, character, and scholarship. Mortar Board recognizes outstand- ing senior women on Awards Day. This year the group is taking over the YWCA ' s vocational guidance pro- gram. Each member serves as big sister to an out- standing sophomore woman. Mortar Board has 74 chapters nationally. mm First Row: Lindsey, M. L. Os- qood. Fuetterer, Liebeimon, Francis, Myers, KilUnen. Sec- ond Row: Perry, Davis, Decker. 22 Torch STRONG among Ohio University traditions is Torch, senior men ' s honorary. Since 1913, when it was originated by Professor Mackinnon, its Tap Day has been anticipated by all students when they gather to see the selections made. Members, dressed in black robes and carrying the torch of leadership and charac- ter, slap chosen neophytes on the back, hand them the torch. The annual Torch Sing for fraternities (see page 71) is sponsored by this group. Tucker, Agnesi, Nelson. Gadus. Stone, Simerka, McHale. Man- eggie. Worstall, Komui. Faul- stich. Dean Voigt, Meschon, E. A. Wroy, Cottrell. Phoenix LATE one Thursday evening in May a group of coeds will be found at the Hotel Berry demonstrat- ing what the well-dressed girl wears for her beauty rest. They will be the Phoenix selections, called out of their homes in pajamas, curlers, and hairpins for the traditional midnight luncheon. Phoenix, junior women ' s honorary, makes its selections on the basis of scholarship and activities, annually honors Mortar Board with a dinner. 23 Plaskoif, Dunlea. Fuller, Kish. Keys, Shafer, O ' Brien, Lockard, Johnson. Seated: Kerr, Asher, Gam, Frazer, Wiegel, W. Evans, Zoworski. R. Evans, Piazza, Hetzler, Stewart, Snyder, Ben- kert. Standing: Stickney, Jolly, Rabinovilz. Quisenberry, Boguski, Roska, Potter, Cohen, Greenwood. Perrine, Ibel, Riley, Bennett, Ayres, Carr, Gamble. 24 J Club FOR the first time in history, J Club selected two independent men for membership. On the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, thirteen junior men, prominent in activities, were inducted under the McGuffey Elms. Selections are announced on Homecoming Day (see page 45). The purpose of this group is purely social. J Club annually gives a scholarship key to the junior man with the highest average for five semesters at Ohio University. Green Key DROPPING its national affiliation with Blue Key, a fraternity men ' s honorary, and organ- izing a local service men ' s honorary, the aim of Green Key is to publicize the University to prospective students and to make undergradu- ates aware of the cultural advantages offered on the campus. Selection for memberships are based on activities, scholarship and character. Phi Eta Sigma WHILE drinking coffee at their bi-weekly breakfast meetings, Phi Eta Sigma members discuss problems on the Ohio University campus. It is an honorary organization recognizing freshman men with a 2.5 average. This year their project has been to tutor every Wednesday night those students who need help. After initiation in April, the old actives serve as counsellors to Phi Eta Sigma. The group had a weiner roast for members and their dates, and a stag party at the Student Union for new pledges. 25 : Sy?iKf ts?3U( Every Coed is in Women ' s League EVERY coed is automatically a member of Women ' s League, which began its program this year with the traditional Fresh- man Mixer party to introduce incoming women to each other and to upperclassmen. In October was the Leader ' s Rally for officers of all women ' s organizations. December saw the party for transfer students, which was the first of the annual College Nights. Also in December was the tea for graduate students. Women ' s League was co-sponsor of the OU Revue, the voca- tional guidance sessions, and the appearance of Madame La Bastille at convocation. Top league social event was the leap year Coed Prom, instigated and financed by women. Most elaborate function of the league is the annual Mothers ' Weekend late in April. On the program was the opera, Bohemian Girl, financed by the League, staged by Choregi, and presented by the Men ' s and Women ' s Glee Clubs. Men ' s Union House of Delegates was entertained at the Athens Country Club. (page 27, top left) WOMEN ' S LEAGUE SENATE. First Row: Faulstich, Tucker, Kuchenrither, Wheaton, M. Davis. Second Davis. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, (top right) First Row: Tucker, Algeo. Second Row: Panarites, Propp, Riggie, Ziegler. L. Field, Lanier, Fulmer, Davis. Second Row: Dean Voigt, Johns, First Row: Painter, Robertson, Frost, Cottrell, High, Killinen. Robertson, Blankner, Wager, (center) First Row: Perry, S. L. Simon, M. L. Osgood. Informal pictures were taken at the Coed the guests of the women. Kamuf, Vilt, Robertson, Blankner, Row: Cooper. Killinen. Palmer, H. Ireland, Harkabus, Barklow, Lott, (right center) First Row: Roberts, Palmer, Faulstich, Kamuf. (bottom) Second Row: Kuchenrither, Lipka, Jones, Beck, Poltorf. Second Row: Prom. At this dance the men were 26 Politics make strange bedfellows Two-year dream of Men ' s Union President Sam Downer came true this year with the House of Delegates. This governing body, elected by all Ohio University men, was started to forward demo- cracy on the campus, and to train men for campus offices. Among accomplishments for the year is a short-term loan fund for men students. Partially due to Downer ' s unhappy stay in the University Hospital, several improvements were added, including two console radios and four magazine subscriptions. Downer calls the House a group of well-selected men coopera- ting in the first step of a movement toward student participation in campus government. (page 26, lop left) HOUSE OF DELEGATES: Kalal, McBride, CanzonetU, Hamilton, Wertman. Talbol, Kursel, O ' Brien, Welch, Gober, Ross, Hecht, Ringer. Absent: Todd, Keig. (lower left) Campus men vote for their House of Delegates representatives, (lower right) MEN ' S UNION OFFICERS: Finnie, Downer, Cohen, Keys. Y WC.A MEMBERS of the YWCA met at sewing bees preceding Christmas to prepare gifts for the Old Folks ' Home and the In- firmary. Toys were purchased for needy children. The sale of poinsettias brought added funds. For the students, Dickens ' Christmas Carol was presented. Services were held on Palm Sunday and Good Friday. (lop left) YWCA President Betty Hartford at work in her ofiice. Athena editors and cameramen accompanied YWCA social workers on one of their weekly visits, snapped these pictures. Martha Jones entertaining children at the Carbondale School, (bottom) Mary Ricker and Martha Jones join the children in a qame. SOCIAL workers of the Y are found in many fields. The children of surround- ing towns form an important unit of the Y program. Local shut-ins and patients at the hospital are visited by Y girls, and colored children and inmates of the Athens County Children ' s Home are benefited by their work. (top) EXECUTIVE COUNCIL. First Row: Comes, Francis, Dean Voigt, Decker, Journay, Harllord, Potior!, Stone, Gadus, Second Row: Lindsey, Hill, Meschan, Aqnesi, Sberna, Meyers, Nelson, Macchione. (center) CABINET. First Row: McCulloch, Wheaton, Maxwell, E. A. Wray, Weymueller, Ames, Brown, Stone, Killinen, Spidell, Frost. Second Row: Reeser, Mullett, Hallner, Jones, Lieberman. BIGGEST undertaking of the year was sponsorship of the Prep Follies (see page 109), annual skit show. The Follies were competitive this year, and a cup was presented to the winning Alpha Gamma Delta pledges. Purpose of the Follies is to promote friendship among sorority pledges, and to swell the YWCA budget. (bottom) SUB-CABINET. First Row: Earnhart, Axx, Kunkel, Kent, Pejeau. Second Row: Davis, Fuetterer, Lloyd, Pottorf, Ricker, Hooper, Beck. Morrison, Lasher, Baker. Iv ' l ' . ' B •■Religion in student life FREQUENTLY underestimated is the religious life of the student. Athens ministers consider collegians an important group in their congregations, are remarkably helpful to them. The 1940 Athena presents for the first time in Ohio U ' s yearbook, the men in the pulpits: John W. Danford, Methodist, new to the campus this year; R. G. Purrington, Episcopalian; Fred D. Luchs, Presbyterian; Neil J. Crawford, Christian; E. Winston Jones, new Methodist Wesley Foundation minister; and W. C. Dowd, Catholic. The Campus Religious Council correlates the work of the var- ious denominations, brings outstanding speakers to the campus. Members of the council are (top right): Reed, Nelson, M. Shannon (Presbyterian director of student work), Dalton, French, Maurer, Jasper. 30 Student church groups back frequent social functions VARIED social programs sponsored by the churches of Athens spell good times for over five hundred university students who are affiliated with them. Most popular of the Methodist Church Wesley Foun- dation social functions are the monthly Pop-Inn sup- pers. Weekly open houses every Friday night provide varied entertainment including ping-pong, folk dancing, group games, and light refreshments. A take-off on the international situations was the theme of the Presbyterian Westminster Fellowship ' s War Party . A Kid Cupid Party celebrated Valentine ' s Day, while a Skeptic Santa party at Christmas revealed a long list of reasons for not believing in old Saint Nick. Once a month Westminster Fellowship and Wes- ley Foundation hold a joint dance at Rufus Putnam ballroom. The Friendship Class for college students is the nucleus of social affairs at the Christian Church. By their party-a-month system, the young people get together regularly. The Catholic Newman Club, in its second year on the campus, has a mixer once each month for members. Dancing, games, and eats constitute the evening ' s activities. First Row: Hartaicm, Burns, Myers, Alqeo, Craun, Johnson, Donaldson, I. W. Daniord, Mrs. Donford, E. W. Jones, Sherman. Second Row: Smith. Nicholson. Haley. Jasper. Irvine, Maurer. First Row: Powell, Jasper. John- son. Chapman. Puqh. Haley. Manter. Mook. Duqcm, Ald- ridge. Second Row: Teets, Smith. Houston, Harkness, Manter. Note. Harry. Hess. Holycross. Cover. Third Row: Brown. Stretch. Miller, KuU, Irvine, Neaqle. Maurer, Close, McGee. First Row: Frashure. Taylor. Hook. Pickens. Wilson. Second Row: Alqeo. Marks. Bamhart. Tinqle. Beebe. Morgan. N. Arn- old. Palmer. Gruey. Third Row: Donaldson, H. Ferguson. Min- nameyer, Clark, F. Hartman. Allen. D. Harlman. Yaw. R- Arnold, Boydslon. Patton, Mil- ler, Chard. Snilf. Brown. Bur- ton. Mahlood. Sproull. Fourth How: Fox. Tucker. Dinney. Myers. Brelsford. Bums. Sute. bach. Scott. Kern. Russell. Purviance. Parks. Kincade. Shindeldecker. Gosnell. Finster- wald. Stanhagen, Mclnlire, Flower, FuUeviler. Ireland. Fri. Hadden. F. Pickens. 32 Wesley Foundation INTRODUCED to Ohio University a decade ago, Wesley J-Foundation nationally serves some 50,000 students in 70 colleges and universities, encourages students in practical Christian citizenship. Wesley Foundation Student Council is its governing body at Ohio University, coordinates and plans various functions of the group. Delta Sigma Chi DELTA SIGMA CHI, local Methodist men ' s club, this year replaced Phi Tau Theta, national organization of last year. The group discusses significant religious problems in freguent bull sessions. Social program included a roller skating party. Hobo Hike, and many open houses. Kappa Phi NATIONAL Methodist club for college women is Kappa Phi, whose members support a diversified religious and social program. At Christmas time, the entire school at Sand Ridge was adopted by members and each child presented with gifts. Other events for the year included a Lenten Feast, dance, and Mother ' s Day breakfast. 33 Westminster Fellowship To relate students on the campus to the church is the purpose of Westminster Fellowship, Presbyterian organ- ization for students. Outstanding event of the year is the Lenten supper in the Upper Room. Every Wednesday Fire- side Fellowship Hour is observed when members gather to discuss religious topics of the day. Phi Chi Delta WITH 75 members backing the motto leaders in the church tomorrow, Phi Chi Delta is an important part of the Presbyterian Church. At Christmas time they adopted all the children at the Children ' s Home, treated them to gifts, entertainment, and a delicious dinner. Top social event is the Spring Formal. Kappa Beta AT CHRISTMAS TIME members of Kappa Beta, girls ' club of the Christian Church, sewed doll clothes and made over toys for poor children of Athens. Most important social event of the year was the Winter Initiation Banquet at Logan, Ohio. In the fall. Kappa Beta had an old-fashioned hay ride. 34 First Row: Dunn, Lancaster, Frit2, Meister, McElfresh Thompson. Greenlees, Reid, Sinclair, M. Shannon, Smith Dalton. Second Row: Pot- torf. McGuire, Jacobs, Rick ey. Snare, Underhill, Wade Smith, Perry, Packard, Kerch, Wilson, Cox. Third Row: Ulrich, Collins, Brahm Beach, Gruber, Anderson, Godfrey, Thompson. Mel cher, McConnaughey, Park, Shank, Moneggie, Cook Brown. Fourth Row Schultze, Engleman, Wil- son. Hamilton, Dill, Propp Robinson, Peterson, Fore- man, Houf, Smith. Fitts. First Row: Panarites, Wade, Snare, Propp, Underhill, Shaw, Ford, Lama. Second Row: M. Shannon, McCon- naughey, Shank, Mann, Simerka. Third Row: Fitts, Smith, Higgle, Vamer, Tharp, Burson, Anderson, Forsyth. Fourth Row: Kimpton, Hunt, Smith, Brown, Parks. First Row: Keller, Axx, Small, Robinson. Second Row: Zieqler, Sarver, Rees- er, Beebe, Edlemon, Smith. Third Row: Piatt, Homm, Hall, Wiland, Higgins, Mc- Bride, Eisen, Cable. 35 Traditionally successful is I DON PEDEN ' S (top left) name symbolizes athletics at Ohio University. Widely known in sport ' s circles as the Little Magician , Peden has never experienced a losing | season since 1924 when he took over the job as head coach of football. William Herbert (top center), all-Ohio guard on , the 1924 OU grid eleven and holder of records in the quarter mile and low hurdles, is head coach of the track ' team. Russell Crane (top right), graduated from Illinois in | 1930 as an all-American guard, came to Ohio U in 1938 as assistant coach in football and track. Bobcat football season THE infectious smile of W. J. Dutch Trautwein (top left), along with Peden ' s black hat, is a major cog in the ath- letic machine at Ohio U. Last season Dutch took over the Bobcat cage team. Harold E. Wise (top center) is one of Ohio U ' s favorite sons who returned to the university in 1937 as coach. Thor Olson (top right), shown shaking hands with Paul Kalivoda, heavyweight wrestler, takes care of the bumps and bruises of the athletes. Former middleweight champion of the world, Olson is also the Bobcat wrestling coach. 4 •1 4 Lensman George Ryan haunted the varsity locker room for several days last fall, pro- duced this photo series on the varsity players. In various states of deshabille are (top) Shafer, Kuhner, Bass, Siegel, Snyder, Krohmer, Haider- man, (center) Kridel, Floasin, Crabtree, Supance, Stearns. (bottom row) Rufus, Barzan, Schminky, Repicky, Kaylor, Paton, Wolff, Scholes, Schmidt, and Elliott are getting ready for the showers. 38 (center row) Simmons, Szalay, Roosevelt, Zahrndt, Kluga, Fick. Parker and Wertman are study- Peden and his boys had a ing philosophy on page 42. merry time accommodating the Athena. Looking at the lens are (top row) Herrel, Supance, Trudeau, Frost, Sberna, Robbins, Welch. (bottom row) Hocker, Parker, Blackhurst, Harrison, Ivary, Schminky, Shafer, Repicky, Siegel, Osborne, Janiak, Szalay, Risaliti, Gerding, Livingston. 39 JJ. owiecowiivi ALMA MATER was glorified, wor- shipped, and toasted in this year ' s boisterous Homecoming celebration. Visiting alumni and friends swelled Athens ' population, crowded Greek- letter houses, overflowed local hotels. New name for the session was Peden Day, in honor of Coach Don C. Peden ' s fifteenth year of winning football at Ohio U. Campus chroniclers in the OU Post cartooned the fracas as a cyclone, with Peden Day, George Hall, floats, Dayton, and SEOTA thrown together. Dance-of-the-weekend was the Var- sity O presentation in the Men ' s Gym with George Hall and his orchestra. Winners in the colorful float and house decorations contests were the Men ' s Dorm, Pi Beta Phi, Alpha Delta Pi, and Delta Tau Delta. Dayton was defeated 14-0 in football. Over 3,000 teacher-dele- gates to the Southeastern Ohio Educa- tion Association meetings on the same weekend helped boost Athens ' popula- tion to 20,000. Head man among the students for the alumni heyday was Men ' s Union Presi- dent Samuel F. Downer (right), shown greeting Mr. H. J. Dickerson, national president of the Ohio University Alumni Association. Downer and his organiza- tion coordinated the pageantry, music, and football that make Homecoming an unpredictable medley of hearty senti- ment, warm friendships, and good spirits. Homecoming presents an elab- orate float parade, fraternities and so- rorities with carnival-like house decor- ations, dinners, dances, gridfest, and a prominent Athens ' welcome mat. 40 Homecoming ' s kaleido- scope of friendship and fun is here captured pic- torially. (top center) the annual Torch Homecoming Dinner, (top right) Pi Beta Phi ' s winning float. (second row) members of Torch lead the spectacular parade. Lensman Dan Grigg photographs crowds from the Athena car. (center row) Men ' s Dorm ' s prize-winning float. Below it, Delta Tau Delta ' s entry, (at right) the Theta Chi house gets a false front. (fourth row) Lucky Eleven is Alpha Gam- ma Delta ' s float motto. At right is President Herman G. James, snapped at the Peden Day dinner. (bottom row) Delta Tau Delta ' s cup- winning house decoration. Alpha Delta Pi ' s horse-and-buggy was second-best float. (bottom right) Peden receives a green jinx carved by John Rood, noted Athens sculptor. Attracted by these events, visitors swelled Athens ' population to nearly 20,000. 1 fECf j. )fiD SHOP Football at Ohio TOUGHEST task confront- ing mentor Don Peden at the beginning of the 1939 football season was to re- build the Bobcat line, shat- tered by graduation. How- ard Wertman, end, Burnice Crabtree, tackle, and War- ren Parker, guard, were the only returning lettermen. It looked, at least on paper, that for the first time in his 16 years at Ohio, Peden was in for a losing season. But Ohio fooled the experts, won six out of nine games. Three Bobcat players were placed on the all-Ohio eleven: Quarterback Dan Risaliti, End Howard Wert- man, and Center Frank Sza- lay. Risaliti also received honorable mention on the Little all- American team selected annually by Colli- er ' s News Bureau of Chicago. Western State Teachers 14 Ohio 7 Butler 12 Ohio 7 Western Reserve 12 Ohio 14 Ohio Wesleyan 12 Ohio 7 Xavier 6 Ohio.... 20 Dayton Ohio.... 14 Morris Harvey 13 Ohio 14 Miami 7 Ohio.... 20 Michigan W. State Teachers 6 Ohio 13 •.a !. i y 42 We beat Reserve! OHIO beat Reserve! In a thrill-a-minute fourth quarter, Ohio University- snapped the 13 game Vi in- ning streak of the suppos- edly unbeatable Western Reserve Redcats, 14-12. It was a game in which there were no individual stars: every man on the field that day was out to win. Dan Risaliti, who threw the first touchdown pass to Snyder, punted the ball like he never had before. Howard Wert- man, in the dying minutes of the last quarter, partially blocked a Reserve pass, and ran 40 yards for the final Ohio touchdown. John Za- hrndt kicked the two extra points that put the Bobcats ahead for keeps, after two runs of 90, 95 yards in the last quarter were good for touchdowns on the Reserve side of the ledger. 43 « t s s t u V«! r  LLyJ S f « s Band, cheerleaders add to grid color AMAZING to football friends was the Ohio University marching band this year, when it sizzled on the gridiron between halves with precision drills, peppy music. New feature were short-skirted flag twirlers Norma Van Dervort, Amelia Cox, Adelaide Grodeck, and Eunice Cooker. High- stepping William Smith was drum major, Ruth Lewis and Gertrude Kissner were majorettes. The four part harmony glee club, made up of bandsmen, was a regular feature of football games. One Saturday Bandmaster Curtis W. Janssen gave spectators something to sway about when he presented a swing concert. In picture opposite, members of Blue Key (page 25) are in- ducting Janssen as an honorary member of the club. The 100-piece band traveled to Charleston, West Virginia for the Morris Harvey game. Their annual concert in Mem- orial Auditorium is a highspot of Mothers ' Weekend. FORTY-FOUR feet of fun, and 1,037 pounds of pep epitomize Ohio University ' s cheering crew. Head Cheerleader Joseph LaMonica increased this year ' s squad from six to eight, developed showmanly routines for his assist- ants. Newest addition to cheering formations was truckin, used on several of the yells. Prominent in this was Marjorie Helman, late of the Aquastage and OU Revue. 44 Varsity O VARSITY O was successful in promoting the annual Home- coming Dance with George Hall and his band. Tempta- tions of 1939 , potpourri of entertainment by members of the club, was staged on the Athena stage for two successful nights. Another is planned for this year. Highlight of the Varsity O year was the acquisition of a real, live bobcat (see page 205) presented as a gift by honorary member Bob Cros- by, prominent band leader. To foster spirit on the campus, the club has held pep rallies prior to grid games, and aided in promoting the Freshman Mixer. o (counter clockwise): Shafer, Welch, Krohmer, Kalivoda, Ott, Hirsimaki, Blickensderfer, McSherry, Kaylor, Crabtree. Wierzboroski, Halderman, Doubler, Scholes, Janiak, Dienzer, Coen, Snyder, Werlman. u (left column): Hicks, Jo)inson. Szalay, BaumlioUz, Engleman, Za)irndt. Supance, Benkert, Hyslop. u (front row): A. H. Rhoads, W. J. Trautwein, D. Peden. u (right column); Parker, Risaliti, Swaykus. Farroni, Anderson, Kasputis, Robbins, Coe. 45 HARLEM aristocrat Duke Ellington swung out 1 1 Iwith hot jive for cadets and their dates at this year ' s Military Ball. Colored spotlights and modernistic lighting effects were decorations. Company sponsors and commanders formally opened the dance with the trooping of the colors. To prove that the ROTC can march as well as swing, Scabbard and Blade (page 49) presented a drill before intermis- sion. At midnight, Virginia Pride was named honorary colonel. The cape and hat symbolic of her office were placed on her head by retiring colonel Mary Robertson, after she had been escorted through the arch of crossed sabers to the band stand. Souvenirs for the girls were small gold pins in the shape of the state of Ohio, with crossed sabers and the letters OU ' 40. Programs were green in the shape of military hats. 46 Military Science TYPICAL of state-supported universi- ties is the Reserve Officers ' Training Corps, established under the National Defense Act of 1920 and introduced to the Ohio University campus as a voluntary course for academic credit in 1935. According to the agreement with the federal government, once the usual two- year course is entered upon in the ROTC, its completion becomes a reguisite for graduation. An advanced course is available to those who complete the first two years with certain military and scholastic merit. At the end of four years in the ROTC, including a minor session at Fort Knox, Kentucky, students become eligible for commissions in the Officers ' Reserve Corps of the United States Army. Collegiate spice is added to the military training by company sponsors and the military colonel — coeds chosen for beauty and popularity. The Ohio U corps highlights its year with two public reviews, one in the fall and another in the spring. Demonstrations and examples of students ' work are given for the inspector who visits the campus each year. The corps sponsors the annual Military Ball. 47 Military - ■■•-:.-- i ' i ' i;.i.T.- j.:-S Societies 11 48 Scabbard and Blade SCABBARD and Blade is a national honorary military society open to undergraduate ROTC cadet officers. The Ohio Uni- versity chapter is an outgrowth of the Officers ' Club founded on the campus in 1938 to foster better fellowship among cadet officers. In 1939, they petitioned Scabbard and Blade for membership, and the chapter was installed in July at Fort Knox, Kentucky. First formal pledging of the group was a highspot of the Military Ball. At the close of last semester, eleven men were initiated to augment the charter membership. The company participated in campus Armistice Day ceremonies, and in a ceremony in commemoration of stu- dents who died in the last war. Scabbard and Blade and Pershing Rifles held a joint open house in March. They also held a combined meeting at which Lieutenant Colonel Perry L. Baldwin showed motion pictures taken at posts where he has been stationed, both at home and abroad. First Row: Galloway, Van Orne, Burns. Second Row: Krukosk, Ogg, Bierman, Durst, Mook, Black, Engle, Colonel McNeill. Wooley, Neal, Whitcomb, Eddy, Baldy, Zeigler, Frazer, Gayley. WHEN General John J. Pershing was a cavalry lieutenant at the University of Nebraska, he founded in 1892 the Varsity Rifles. In 1895 he was transferred and the group renamed them- selves Pershing Rifles in his honor. In 1925 it became a national organization, and in 1937 it was installed on the OU campus by members of the chapter from Ohio State. ROTC members outstanding in leadership and military ability are eligible for pledging. Elimina- tions are made from the pledge class by written examinations, intensive drill, and interviews by the executive committee of the company. Activities of the chapter include ushering at football games, intramural sports, dedication ceremonies, floor show at Military • Ball, Memorial Day exercises, activities of Mothers ' Weekend, and I holding of smokers, open houses, fall and spring drills, annual ! formal dance, others. Robert E. Nye was decorated as the best ' drilled pledge of 1939. ] I First Row: Major Baldwin, Durst, sponsor; Hummel, Durst, Zeigler, Bierman. Second Row: Amon, i Caran, Pearson, Woodruff. Popham, Heinzi, Reed, Tracy, Rardin, West, Kinkaid, Wiley, Metzger, I Kenney, Boak, Mason, Turner, Peck, Long, Blazer, Covert, Erwin, White, Blank, Norris, Gray, | Volenik, Mohan, Franzolino, Tharp. Third Row: Gartenberg, Stamm, Glass. Menuez, Mote. Maple, i Wall, Risberg, Czech, Swinehart, Rodgers. Van Behren, Myers, Festerly, Pairan, Ridge, Wiley, ! Price, Nye, Dickson, Graham, Jones, Abaugh, Peid, Skidmore, Settle, McConnell, Hornby, Ashby. I Richman. ; Pershing Rifles 49 Class of nineteen forty-tw J CLASSES at Ohio U do very little, have practically no class spirit. This year ' s lull is probably an interlude between the egg-throwing, soap-box political rah-rah days ended a few years ago, and the more orderly campus government system now evolving. Of the 847 sophomores, this group represents a good percentage; they are all that turned out for Athena ' s portrayal of class life. Sophomore Class President David Carr headed a Sophomore Swing committee which presented a dance in the Men ' s Gym. First Row: Joan Parks, Genevieve Mahfood, Dixie Perkins, Dora Funari, Olga Yaroshuk, Rita Ogle, Mari- lyn Gillespie, Mary Patton, Dorothy McBride, Clara Sberna, Olga Pawlyshyn, Lillian Rusnak, Betty Deuch- ler, Helen Pritchard, Betty Piatt, Rita Durst, Clarissa Palmer, Virginia Neuffer, Helen Alex. Second Row: Betty Allen, Emily Zuck, Bob Durbin, James Secrest, Irving Licht, Joe Marra, Dave Carr, Max so - ' ' J!i9  iaiii ji£4!j«S .:. 1 ' v ssie;. ' isJi-tJt! von the frosh-soph tug Wenger, Betty Jo Johnson, Beatrice Kunpel, Fern Beebe, Norma Arnold, Doris Abel. Third Row: Marjorie Griffith, Gene Attwood, Betty Gailey, Mary Elizabeth Lasher, Sue Woolley, Eleanor Schulz, Doris Cole, Ruth Ryan, Betty Browne, Anne Davis, Marjorie Lyons, Maxine Ricker, Lois Rice, Dick Thompson, Jack Eisenhut, Fred Swearingen, Ted Evans, Earl Hooper, Mildred Yeager. Fourth Row: Mildred Dean, Ruth Ormsby, Wayne Ketne ' r, Charles Perrins, Norman Ofslager, Virginia Glover, Rosemary Dieringer, Margaret Fries, Mary Byers, Lowell McCoy, Dudley Glick, Emery Gall, Bob Werner, Bob Morgan, Harriet Musgrave. Fifth Row: Al Frindt, Bob Lehman, Francis Brown, Charles Cieri, Leo Boguski, Jack McMahon, Morton Gartenberg, Al Carlson, Harry Doherty, Cecil Dunlap, John Puckett, Sherman Woodruff, Henry Wiley. Sixth Row: Howard Scott, Dick Rudolph, Harry Pybus, Paul Poznanovich, Phil Sovetts. 51 )5 it 10 a tet ifet? ££ . • todc U Q talc Q Up WW • • 52 BELLRINGER Howett governs the daily schedules of 3200 students, 200 faculty members. Every hour during the school day he sounds the century-old, 500-pound bell in the tovi er of Cutler Hall. Extremely proud is Howett of the bell, the Cutler clock, university traditions, his accurate rope-pulling. Athena ' s cameramen take you in- side the classrooms Howett so assid- uously regulates, show you stu- dents and faculty at work. DRILLIANT scholarship -L- ' comes from behind an orange crate in the business law classes of Gerald O. Dykstra. He and his wife have collaborated on a law book, both have LL.B. de- grees. Typical of the com- merce department is his dy- namic lecturing technique, Mussolini-ish gestures. Dyk- stra is a crisp, factual mach- ine gun when he speaks. ■pHE water goes round and -L round and only Clark knows where it will come out. Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering George W. Clark tests his new plastic- composition device to dem- onstrate hydrostatics, water currents. Clark him- self doesn ' t quite understand everything his machine will show. MOST unique stance in Ellis Hall is that of Asso- ciate Professor of Sociology E. A. Taylor. The leg position here captured for posterity is typical. Bonus to his sociol- ogy classes are frequent hints on marital relations. When not a lecture hall terpsichorean, he directs 4-H Club activities. 53 . . . continued . . . THE personal interest in students so essential to good pedagogy is here typi- fied by the home ec depart- ment ' s Mariam Morse, here helping a student use a loom.. DR. J. P. PORTER shows a chart in the Journal of Applied Psychology, which he edits, to seminar students. Mrs. Porter is curator of his home museum, is witty, lovable. CHINA-BORN W. J. Smith lectures to his far east class with actual Oriental battle swords. Dr. Frederick H. Krecker, zoologist, takes time out at his office with companions. GIRLS in the home eco- nomics practice house figure out why the cakes fell. Psychologist Harvey C. Leh- man is recognized for opti- mum age studies in voca- tions. . . . continued . . . PROFESSOR of Agricul- ture W. F. Copeland in the department ' s office libra- ry. Copeland is well-liked, easy-going, teaches Evolu- tion and Heredity, Gene- tics. ART students study cera- mics under Miss Cather- ine Bedford, assistant profes- sor of design. L. C. Mitchell, director of the School of Painting and Allied Arts, teaches by doing. EMINENT Emmett Rowles directs physiology experi- ments. Astute historian Wal- ter C. Richardson exhibits his collection of English newspaper placards herald- ing the present war. VOICE technician Gifford Blyton tests a child in his speech clinic. Residents of the home ec practice house are their own housekeepers (see also page 54). First Row: Cofhnan. Nelson, Corey. Thomas, Brienza, Gru- ey. Second Row: Adamson, Mekedis, Hamilton. Quigley, Monks, Macchione, Witzberger, Beck. Panarites. Third Row: H. R. lolUlfe, M. Brokaw, V. D. Hill. First Row: Hanna, Gillette, Fiske, Allen, Yaroshuk, House, H, Reese. M. T. Noss, McKib- ben, Harvey. C. Leete, I. A. Hess, Mrs. M, A. Hockenberry, K. Myers, Preston, Morgan, McCuUough. Second Row: Het- zler, L, Ondis, Mrs. C, Mat- hews, Mrs, I. A. Hess. Mrs. L. Tyroler. Funari, Purviance, Dean Whitehouse, Lockard, Mrs, M, G, Noss, Stewart, Wiegman, Houf, Einheit, Mrs, Whitehouse, Witsberger, Tyro- ler, Third Row: Pace, Dunn, Blake, Cote, Dr. C, GuUette. Judge Tyroler, Davis. First How: E. H. Mueller, P, G, Krauss, Messner, Rickert, Oelze, G:odeck, I, A. Hess. Second Row: C. Perrine. M. Perrine. Snyder. G. Einheil. E. Einheit, Elliott, Third Row: Breinick, Houl, Cross, Reed, Keefer, Giveriz, Sharif, Chap- man, Knight, Belden, Be nnett, Fourth Row: Zucker, Dickson, Druesedow, White, Myers, Vanaman, Lomberti, Dunlap, Ellis, Dais, 56 Eta Sigma Phi CLASSICAL languages honorary is Eta Sigma Phi, which de- voted its program this year to the study of Greek life and customs. Each year the Ohio U chapter awards a plaque to the student with the highest Latin grades in each school from which a senior Eta Sigma Phi graduated. In May all high school stu- dents who come to Athens for the competitive scholarship tests in Latin are entertained with a tea. L ' Alliance Francaise OUTSTANDING accomplishment of L ' Al- liance Francaise this year was the organization of a group of aspirants into Le Cercle Francois, whose members will later join the senior organization. The group brought Mayerling, celebrated French motion picture to the campus last fall. This March, they presented their annual French play. The emi nent French lecturer, Laurent F. M. Sibuet, spoke before the club in March. Initiation services of L ' Alliance were fol- lowed by formal banquets both semesters. Lcrte in the spring, they held a picnic at the home of Miss Mary T. Noss. Der Deutsche Verein NOT only for honor students, but for anyone interested in the language, literature, and life of Germany, is Der Deutsche Verein, linguistic, cultural, and social group. Nearly 100 members learn much of German music, drama, and literature at their bi- weekly meetings. Many of the group ' s programs are open to the public. Two musical evenings with the Capehart, one folk- dancing program, two potato-puppet shows, and a group sing comprise their more important sessions. A jolly Christmas party was the social peak of last semester, and the annual spring picnic of this term. 57 First Row: Cunningham, J. R. Gentry, A. C. Anderson. H. C. Lehman, J. P. Porter, Roska. Second Row: Weber, Smith, Maiden, McKinven, f. L, Cable, Slavitt, C. Andrews, Morgan, Agnesi, P. D. Palmer, G. R. Griffiths, Rabinovitz, Sherman, J. H. Roach. Kappa Delta Pi NEW aspects and problems in education are discussed at the semi-monthly meetings of Kappa Delta Pi, national educa- tion honorary. Faculty members are well represented in the group ' s membership, and they, together with the members and outside speakers contribute to the educational sessions which the organization holds. They also sponsor dinners, social evenings, and other recreational functions. Beta Psi JUST two years old is Beta Psi, local honorary accounting fraternity established March, 1938. Its purpose is to reward pro- ficient students for commendable work, and to stimulate interest and cooperation in accounting. At Beta Psi ' s twice-monthly meet- ings, accounting authorities address the group and members gi ve specialized reports. The organization publishes monthly the Beta Psi Journal. 58 Psi Chi MOST aptly named Greek group is Psi Chi, national honorary society in psychology. Notable is the club ' s list of guest speak- ers, which this year included Dr. Ward C. Halstead, brain special- ist; Dr. Ralph Brown of the Federal Narcotics Hospital at Lexing- ton, Kentucky; Mr. Herman A. Copeland of International Business Machines Corporation; and Dr. C. H. Creed of the Athens State Hospital. Psi Chi held several joint meetings with Zoology Club. Annually, an award is given to the student with the highest grades in psychology. Firs! Row: Bidders, Chapman. Bednasz, Lindsey. Second Row: Senff, Agnesi, Mrs. Kent, Reese, A. Mumma, Purviance, Kem. Third Row: Dean McCracken, Moriarty, Marlatt, Grimsley, Cottrell, Pickens, (in picture by mistake), Faulstich. Fourth Row: Dugan, Humphrey, Low- ry, Knisely, Entwistle. First Row: Manler. Fairchild. Van Orne, Rittersbaugh, Franklin. Second Row: David- son. Weimer, Mekedis, Givertz, Battisla, Slusser, Blumenthal, Horning, Finnie, Stickney, L. J. Otis, Evans. Nye. 59 ouie. evuie SHOW of the year was the OU Revue, brilliant, pre- cedent-setting musical extravaganza conceived and produced by John McKinven December 8 and 9 in Memorial Auditorium. As remarkable as the stage spectacle itself v as the show ' s extensive state and national publicity program. : (above, left) Tm-can xylophonist Bill Smith; Tops in taps Anita Gottleih; Petty Girl Marge Helman; the dance chorus; publicizers Robert Wertman (state and national), Trudy Dickerson, (photo- graphy), William Dunlea, (director of the campaign); Duke of Court Street Alex Torok. For set-builder Jack Knisely, see page 188. (page 60) Impresario John McKinven; bolero team Roger Crow and Armetta Morrison; revue chorus and show girls beginning the finale routine, with revol- ving stage; Gail Shellenberger does cos- tume measurements for Marjorie Mulloy; composer and musical director Verne Smolik; the Revue ' s scenery and lighting crew relax at Broughton ' s. 61 I was asked to speak HOTTEST open-to-the public bull session of the year came when Town Hall picked six outstanding students to discover, de- lineate, and discuss democracy on the OU campus. Most surpris- ing bombshell in an explosive evening came when Women ' s League President Lois Faulstich rose from the floor during the questioning-by-the-audience period, took four minutes defending the league against a speaker ' s attack. (center, opposite page). Faulstich rises to the attack. One observer applauds, another gives the Bronx cheer. The at- tentive, note-taking audience in Music Hall was one of the largest ever to attend Town Hall. Scheduled speak- ers on Is There Democracy on the OU Campus? were Dick Barber, James Isaacs, Sam Downer, Frank Lauden, Dick Engleman, and Howard Kahn. TOWN HALL ' S programs are chairmanned by Monroe Berko- witz, offer four to six speakers on topics of current interest. A moderator introduces them, presides over the question-and-ans- wer periods in which audiences participate. Among the subjects discussed this year were: What Are the Democracies Fighting For? , What Can Be Done About the Relief Situation in Ohio? , Is Domestic Propaganda Threatening Our Democracy? and several others. Official title of the forum is Town Meeting of Ohio University, but Town Hall is used more because it fits the publicity posters better. 62 63 Co-ops glorify the American hamburger . . . MANAGERS of Ohio University ' s unique cooperative housing units are (above, left to right) Richard Engleman, Frank Shackleton, Charles Coen, Glenn Margard. Co-ops serve some 210 men on the campus, provide low-cost housing for needy students. A room is $1.50 per week, board averages $2.75. In 1932, eighteen men, seeking to lower their college expenses through cooperative buying and working, moved together into a house, formed the nucleus of Pearl Cottage. A year later, the university became interested in the group, established more co-op houses with Associate Dean of Men James E. Householder as general manager. Dunkle, Hoover, and Palmer were originated. Cable was added in 1937. New on the campus is the Methodist co-op, opened last Septem- ber. Originated and managed by Thomas Maurer, it is sponsored by the Wesley Foundation, houses 22, boards 26. Work in the co-ops is organized into shifts. Each man works a week, has a week off. Duties include waiting table or washing dishes. Food is plain, plentiful. Economy is accomplished by serving only light breakfasts, disguising hamburger. Soup ' s on! 64 i yT V. e TOP; Campus famed for their cooking and good humor are Mrs. Newcome (right) and Mrs. Savely of Cable co-op. Not pictured is Mrs. Flossie Bolin, co-op dietician who daily visits each house. (second) Typical of other men ' s rooms on the cam- pus is this one in Dunkle. (third) Hoover residents, like other co-op men, take turns at waiting table, working in the kitchen, washing dishes. (bottom) Listening to phonograph records dur- ing one of Ohio U ' s tradi- tional bull session-relaxa- tion periods are Palmer men. Co-ops are not unique on the Ohio cam- pus, help collegians al- most everywhere. 65 BOYD HALL COUNCIL First Row: Joumay. Walls, Neuifer, G. Jenkins, Cemyar. Second Row: Thomas, Hopkins, W. Rigqs. Weaver. Skala. Harrold. D ABY DORMITORY of the campus is Boyd Hall, -L- ' smallest of the four halls. At the Winter Formal couples danced among shiny black and white pen- guins magically transformed from wastepaper bask- ets. A blue ceiling studded with silver stars and balloons added to the cool Arctic atmosphere. The grand march wound from the Women ' s Gym to Boyd and through its halls. The formal Christmas dinner and party found among the guests a former OU student now a missionary in Africa. Modern Santa clad in a red satin evening dress distributed gifts to all. Boyd Hall joined the carolers during the Christ- mas season. Valentine ' s Day brought the annual high tea with guests from the faculty. Miss Riggs, who, after thirty years of service will resign at the end of the year, entertained all the girls at informal coffee hours in her parlor. Boyd welcomed guests from other dormitories at exchange dinners. 66 ouuah HOWARD HALL ' S House Council had a busy year making rules and planning social events. To aid in the administration of justice, a constitution for the dormitory was written. Frequent open houses made for a friendly atmosphere. In the early fall, freshmen entertained their respective advisers at a formal dinner. The Winter Formal found Howard Hall trans- formed with tall candelabra and pine trees for the Christmas Season. In the second semester, Howard joined Lindley, Boyd, and Men ' s Dorm in a series of exchange dinners. March social highlight was a pie dance in the dormitory ' s dining and recreation rooms. Popular is the coffee party idea, at which coffee and other refreshments are served in the lounge after dinner on Sunday. HOWARD HALL COUNCIL First Row: Brown, Reinicke. Charters, Cottrell, Robertson. Second Row: Bowman, Short, Weimer, M, M. Wilson, Den- ner, Harrington, L. Field, Third Row; Robertson, Paste, Browne. 67 MISSPELLED is Lindley HalL The dormitory ' s name should have been Lindly, but the sculp- tor who chiselled the keystone erroneously put in an e. The misspelling has become accepted. Lindleyites are proud of their new lounge, largest and most luxurious on the campus. Girls living in the new wing had to sleep on mattresses laid on the floors until their beds arrived several weeks after the second semester had started. During the previous semester, Lindley residents took their meals at Howard Hall while the dining room was being en- larged in their own building. To acquaint the girls with the new kitchen, a Scullery Scamp er was held. In February, the tradi- tional George Washington Cherry Pie Dance opened the rejuvenated dorm ' s social season. LINDLEY HALL COUNCIL First Row: Alter. Fuetterer. Clarke, Dressier, KiUinen. Second Row: Zook. Perry. Lewis, Essman. M. L. Osqood. Beck, McCord, D. C. Reece. 68 MENS DORMITORY COUNCIL Von Behren, Thomas, Carl- son, Miner, Sauers,Kennan, W. Jones, Marra, Apple, Kinney. NEARLY complete is the long-planned Men ' s Dormitory quadrangle, with two new wings add- ed this year. When finished, it will contain six units. Dana and Evans Halls were built two years ago, Cordy and Dunkle were completed this spring. Dorm men are proud of their ultra-modern lounge, which is readily convertible for billiards, ping-pong, other recreations. The dorm this year won the Homecoming Float Contest with Just a Link in a Big Chain, a theme based on The Village Blacksmith. Men carried a giant green chain of Ohio U Football victories. This season, three novelty dances, two formals, and numerous open houses were features of dorm social functions. The unit is the only independent entry in this year ' s Torch Sing. en s 12). ormitori J 69 tnterfraternity council -L is one of the most productive organized bull sessions on the campus. Under the genial chair- manship of Pi K A President James Isaacs, the presidents of the eleven fraternities meet week- ly to hash out problems, hatch out ideas. The group this year plans to introduce Greek Week as a regular bi-annual event to more closely coordinate frater- nities. The Interfraternity Ball this year featured Ina Ray Hutton and her orchestra. First Row: Snyder, Jolly, Piazza, Isaacs, Zaworski, Stickney, Rabinovitz, Stewart. Second Row: Slus- ser, Frazer, Kerr. 70 [na Rae Hutton . . . Interfraternity Council 71 SIMULATING eastern fraternities, Theta Chi this March introduced the weekend house party idea to Ohio University. Theta Chis moved them- selves and their belongings out of the chapter house for three days, while dates took over, lived in the house for the weekend. Highspots of the house party: Mixed dinner Friday evening, followed by open house. Saturday afternoon, skating party, treasure hunt, open house, buffet supper. Saturday evening, formal dance at the Athens Country Club with Jimmy James and his orchestra. Sunday, Theta Chis took their dates to church, wound things up with a two- hour banquet. Theta Chi ' s third floor dormitory is too cold in the winter, the house is too far from the campus. kela L kl 72 fT) o ( o r - ■o n r § k - y - ft. C (r o O cs. C C rs ) ■- ' f r r. f%cs rs r rs A Ok O . I ri fsssi iX- .. Z First Row: Oden Libbey Albert Carlson Herbert Stickney Carl Miller John McGrath Glen Neal Ira Livingston James Male Richard Evans Robert McWhorter A allace Judd Walter Fairchild Dean Heydick Ronald Van Orne William Fraedrich Homer Schild William Simmons Jack Hurley Fred Chester Arnold Mason George Collins Sixth Row: Richard Hine George Stowell Fourth Row: Charles Hornby Robert Enyeart William Gray Richard Meek Second Row; Thomas Redding Seventh Row: John Sharp Robert Book Alvin Edwards Frank Loew George Ryan Jack Hayes Robert Reading Harry Bower George Reid John Fairchild Faculty Members: Herman Wren John Heller E. E. Ray Howard Wertman Harold Festerly Roy H. Paynter Leslie White Robert Lehman Emmett Rowles Robert Wiegand Jack Parry George W. Starcher Robert Johnson Fifth Row: George Starr Lasher William Baldwin Kenneth Weitzel Victor Whitehouse Third Row: James Dante Thorwald Olson William Dunlea Pete Hlinka L. C. Stoats Robert Wertman Robert Humphrey W, W. Wiggin 73 First Row: Robert E. Slusser John D. Sirbu Vernon W. Deinzer John M. Taber Howard R. Sturm John W. Shafer Richard W. Flowers Gustave Saridakis James J. Friel Carl Ott Second Row: Robert Walsh Jack Ashby Eli Hirsimaki Robert Lowther Earl Watkins John Wilder Robert Tebow Bernard Osborne Dole Wendler Wilbur Ptak Third Row: Harold Talbott Harold Thomas Ernest Mobley George Jadelis Fourth Row: Eugene Huhtala James Grieves William Alshuk Faculty Members: James O. Stephen J. E. Thackrey avi c aooa ipp LARGEST group of fraternity initiates on the cam- pus this year was Tau Kappa Epsilon ' s class of 22. Social highlights included a costume party on Hallowe ' en with a Monte Carlo theme. Features were a roulette wheel, blackjack, bingo, and cider and donuts. The Post-exam Dance followed. Blue- book decorations, band members wearing dunce- caps, and examinations in jumpin ' jive portrayed the theme of the occasion. Valentine ' s Day brought another dance, with a huge heart on the roof of the house illuminated by floodlights. Most unigue social function of the year was the Barn Dance, with girls dressed as milk- maids called for in horse-and-buggy by their rustic swains from TKE, clad in farmer garb. The house is made into a replica of a typical barn yard for this function. Climax of their social season is the Round Up, combination alumni weekend and dinner dance at the Athens Country Club. 75 AMONG the most outstanding Greek group dances is the Sigma Pi Carnival (page 173), spirited Mardi Gras fracas which has become a tradition of the Ohio campus. This year, Sig Pis turned the Berry Ballroom into a midway with canvas drops extolling Ali-Ben Baldy the Terrible Turk, Patrician Follies, and Madame Sweet- ney. World ' s Largest Woman. At grand march time, fraters and dates romped through the hotel lobby into Court Street to tie up traffic, returned to receive Charlie McCarthy programs and cupie doll favors. Jimmy Franck ' s orchestra blasted over the carnival noises. The only fraternity on fraternity row continued its practice of rewarding high scholarship among their members with a ten-dollar check for a B aver- age, 25 dollars for a straight A. This year the Sig Pis inaugurated a series of bridge tournaments with sororities. -.J lawia r i 76 ' O o o f . 1 , 0 : o r,: f Q C f f! o r! r First Row: Robert Snyder John Todd Donald Rittersbaugh Olen Fulmer William Benkert Robert Stilgenbauer William Fifner Robert Arndt Max Wenger Paul Pairan Second Row: Rodney Main Paul Baldy Harry Burgy Donald Cowan Richard Eddy Harold Peters Francis Baldy Kenneth Deal George G. Foster Frank Kuncel Third Row: Richard Linke Robert Pancoast Adrian Pilliod Robert Rickenbacker Samuel Robinson Max Sechrist Donald Taylor John Woods David Carr Alex Ellerman Fourth Row: Jack Fouche Gordon Koons William Kuhner Dalton Lamp William Mechem Richard Pancoast Max Robertson Lowell Thomas Frank Ayres Jock Gleoson Fifth Row: Roy Klopfenstine William Bacon Warren Cooper Harry Dennis Charles Fulks Dyson Hanna Adolph Kritz R. McConnaughey Jack Moore Robert Owens Sixth Row: Frederick W. Payne Richard Reiter Raymond Scheel William Schofield Robert Shoemaker Seventh Row: Frederick Schuler Frederic Wagner Henry Wall Paul Wick Harry Wilson Faculty Members: Ralph F. Beckert W. H. Fenzel Allen R. Kresge Albert C. Gubitz A. H. Rhoads 77 First Row: James Isaacs Professor Anderson Lewis Sutherland Clifton Turner R. C. Scouten James Bryan Norman Hutcheson Ray Johnson Walter Pahner Richard Nye Second Row: Harvey Kocher Robert Hetzler Philip Smith Stanley J. Obloy Richard Frazier Rev. Neil Crawford Robert Whitford Norman Krieger William McQuiston Eli Floasin Third Row: Robert Banner Fred Greiner Carl Ish Charles Herrel John M. Fox Richard Chapman William MacNamara Lambert DePompei John Dickson James Anderson Fourth Row: Dean Chatlain Charles Bushman Paul Davis Russell Beck Wallace Croxford William Smart Wyatt Chadwell Francis Brown Charles Zech LeMoine Covin Fifth Row: William Kruspe Haydn Richards Richard Nagle William McGaffney William Williams Sixth Row: Joe Zokrasek Frank Miller William Siebert Woodrow West Robert Reese Seventh Row: Richard Schroeder Harold Schloss Walter Cronburg Edwin Gove Robert Welsh Faculty Member: Amos C. Anderson :M aM dC ' h f s f ( . r ( , o: f f o - ' - f c € r ! . O O. .D O f . (T f . W r r r r r n o. c . aooa ipp MOST phenomenal fraternity development this year was by Pi Kappa Alpha. Two years ago, the group had some 30 members, this year has almost 65, maximum number permitted by the university ' s new membership limitation plan. Spearhead of Pi K A ' s advance has been James Isaacs, now in his third year as president. Isaacs has a three-point scholastic average, heads the Interfraternity Council, is prophet and saviour of the only fraternity house on sorority row. The chapter missed out on the Men ' s Union cup for best decorated house during Homecoming, although their display was one of the best. Frus- trated, they bought a cup of their own, inscribed it Homecoming, ' 39, proudly show it on their mantle. Pi K A ' s top social event was the Winter Formal at the Hotel Berry, with Dick Stabile and his orches- tra. Unusual is the Pi K A system of electing officers each semester rather than annually. The Ohio U chapter this year celebrated its tenth anniversary on the campus. 79 WIZARDS at fraternity house finance are the Phi Kappa Taus, according to statements made to the Athena by President Claude Stewart. Two years ago the Phi Taus remodelled their house, built a big addition. The mortgage came to approximately $25,000. Head magician Stewart reveals the mortgage is now entirely paid off. Other Phi Tau hocus pocus came this year when their newly-rejuvenated house and yard were transformed into a farm for their Hill Billy Hop, and when they made a replica of their chapter house veranda to place in the Hotel Berry for their Winter Formal. Imported band for the dance was the Wilberforce Collegians, who played southern jive. The Phi Tau Glee Club went in for classics and Fred Waring arrangements this spring. aiA 80 ■First Row: Claude Stewart David Hyslop W. Byron Exelby Carl Wiegel Ernest J. Webster James Galloway John P. Bums Robert Barrett John E. Durst Albert J. Watt Second Row: T. Wilkins Weber Clemmer Ralston John Gillivan Allan Gillivan Bruce DeMar Roscoe Menuez Edgar Swinehart Richard Jewell David Loquer Sherwood Jones Third Row: Robert Sassaman Earle Franz Robert Swearingen Thomas Evans Francis C. Bean R. J. Cook Raymond Ralston John Jewell Burrell Gulp J. W. Sellers Fourth Row: Paul Puckstein Lloyd Johnson Raymond Anweiler Robert O. Drake William Duvendeck William Rowland Dale Miller William Sennett Richard Am on Fred Ortner Filth Row: Lorin Bash Sixth Row: Robert Risberg Seventh Row: William Rauch Faculty Members: Rush Elliott Vincent Jukes James E. Householder H. L. Dunlap B. T. Grover 81 First Row: Charles Cieri R. Drexel MacTavish Anthony Fiasco (Faculty Adviser) Donald Scranton Thomas Brennan John Krispinsky Edmund Zaworski Second Row: John Bellan William Kowolski William Maher John Repicky William Devitt Joseph Rufus John Hasselbach Daniel Horan George Margoles Murray Craig William Noss John Byrne Joseph McKenna Third Row: Roger Cote William Forquer Fourth Row: Theodore Kochowski George McDonald Faculty Member: James R. Patrick •yWO ANNIVERSARIES were celebrated by Phi -L Kappa this year, as they commemorated their tenth year on the campus, fiftieth year as a national. For their traditional Province Ball, the chapters at Ohio State, University of Cincinnati, and Ohio U migrated to Newport, Kentucky, this spring. Home- coming saw the group celebrating at the house under the influence of a World ' s Fair theme for their house decorations and for their dance programs. The chapter boasts of three men in varsity football, and several in debate and speech. The Phi Kaps are organizing alumni clubs for their local chapter in New Haven, Conn., New York City, Youngstown, and Pittsburgh. At their Winter Formal in February they presented dates with wooden- covered, crested picture albums. Rex Koons played in the Hotel Berry before a white and black musical backdrop, with notes spelling out the fraternity letters. Actives defeated the pledges in their annual touch football game. 83 RUMOR from the Phi Epsilon Pis credit them with a new house in 194 1 . This year they added to their present building a new chapter room for active meetings, excluding pledges from its sac- redness. Prominent in bringing Hillel to the cam- pus, the Phi Eps also arranged holiday services for all Jewish students this year. Homecoming kept the group busy preparing for their Winter Formal the same weekend, and dec- orating themselves in iodine, bandage, adhesive tape, and wrecked airplanes for their float. Each year, the Phi Eps pick an outstanding Jewish girl to honor on a plaque, select a freshman and a sophomore who are outstanding in all- around activities. Pledges annually give the actives a banquet before Christmas, present them with gifts to suit their personalities. i L DSiion r i r 84 First Row: David Rabinovitz Sam Greenblatt Emil Kustin Seymour Solomon Stanley Lipmon Milton Moskowitz Henry Shorr Arthur Perlstein Eugene Rosner Seymour Mitchell Second Row: Stanley Liss Abraham Vinarsky Marvin Goldhamer Sylvan Cohen Morton C. Gartenberg Joy Sogg Herbert Bernsweig Daniel Morgenstein Leon Chizner Philip Roth Third Row: Wallace Hodes Jerome Maziroff Leonard Aronoff Albe rt Richman Philip Perlstein Harvey Speilholz William Fleischer Stanley Kass Leonard Kovarsky Raymond Cohen Fourth Row: Harvey Mandell Martin Joachim Philip Frank Melvin Sachs Burton Levine Milton Cohen a J (f a f : r fs fs. r fy 0. o f! D . Oi c o o : ' First Row: Fred Frazer R. Samuel Long Charles Gaskell Martin Hecht Kenneth Leighton Robert Coe Richard Hayes Carl McDonald Harold Snow- Donald Potter Second Row: Norman Ofslager James C. Hall William A. Braster George Glass C. Ritter Collett Robert W. Davis Ernest Kish Robert Finnie Charles Crawford Theodore Alfred Third Row: Thomas Benham Gerard Novario Bill Robishaw Lee McDonald William McEndree Jack Price William Brown James Chapman Charles Furr Charles Fischer Fourth Row: James Nutt Carl Wilson Jack Mundee Frank Cunningham Earl Brownlee Richard Baughman Joseph Brammer George Gilham DeWayne Osborne Jack Rogers Filth Row: Dan Grigg Jack Fischer Fred Lemr Robert Daggett Sixth Row: Robert Wheat Jack Fulton Joseph Chapman Seventh Row: Carlton Asher John Bailey John DeMolet Faculty Member: J. B. Harrison O, f Q. f O ' o r% 3 ■■e =111 n e c f ( Q e f f i:s rs: f , o. I ki .Ujeita keta PHI DELTA THETA has the largest pledge class in its history this year. They are planning a new- annex in the near future. The Phi Delts opened their social season last fall with a picnic on East Hill, dancing at the house afterwards. A feature of their social program was the annual swimming party for rushees. Outstanding event was the Winter Formal Dinner Dance at the Berry. Favors were photograph albums bearing the picture of the house and the fraternity crest. Pledges gave Sunday teas for five sororities, starting a new fraternity tradition. For the second consecutive year the Phi Delts have won the doughnut dunking contest sponsored by the Ohioan at the Athena theater. June first will be ' their Spring Formal, climaxing the social year of the fraternity at the Country Club. Most unique of their affairs is the Hill Billy Dance, with prizes awarded for the best, costumes, and barn dancing a highspot of the program. During the intermission they ran around the streets in costumes. 87 PUPCHEN is a dog with a fraternity built around him. He made history when Delta Tau Delta nominated him for king of the Junior Prom, again when the Delts opened their social season with a dance at the Athens Armory in Mascot Pupchen ' s honor. The Delts have taken the Homecoming House Decoration Trophy seven times out of eight, the all-intramural cup nine years out of ten. In Decem- ber, the chapter adopted a little town boy and are paying all of his expenses. Their Winter Formal featured Charlie Barnet ' s band; Barnet himself arrived late after an automobile breakdown, play- ed overtime. Six men from the Ohio U chapter went to the national convention (Karnea) at Denver and Estes Park, Colorado, for two weeks last summer. Their entire group migrated to Columbus for a division conference with their chapters from Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio. JJ)eiia aui.=Jjeita , 88 First Row: Robert Jolly Charles Martindil Richard Barber Charles Blank James Bartlett Robert Chose Clyde Davis Charles Emory William Evans Jack Fishlock Second Row: Charles Loftus Jack Pritchard Eugene Rogers Bonner Poushey W. Emerson Houf Harry Davis Stephen Fuller Frank Gerchow Burdette McVay Robert Ligett Third Row: Robert Perkins Rex Potter Warren McClure Thomas Morgan William Howard Karl Schmidt John Dengel John O ' Brien Dwight Riley William MacNamara Fourth Row: Martin Camahan Eugene Sample Max Byrd Leonard Farmer Donald Davis Loren Swedenborg Ross Alkire Richard Wassink George Timberlake Douglas Reid Fifth Row: Ted Evans Wayne Ketner Elmore Kilian Richard Foster Robert Drake William Kursel Richard Soliday James Clark Don Coovert Grant Ohl Sixth Row: Les McMillin Russell Younce Homer Von Behren DeForest Murch Ted Sprague Seventh Row: Thomas Wager Charles Watkins Harlan Hosch Jack Clark Robert Zehring Faculty Members: Thomas N. Hoover William H. Herbert Frank B. GuUum Hiram R. Wilson n £? n o a P w f ry o e : it? a ] c? • - ' f cy ffT ' t T% a First Row: Paul Kerr Carl Danner Richard Brenberger Paul W. Smith William Compton Roger Jones Jr. Tracy Hartman James Gayley Armitt Spohn John Reed Second Row: Robert A. Gam Robert DeFrance Howard Mead Samuel F. Downer William T. Simpson Joseph Bell Morton Pry David Hamilton Lawrence Milligan James Barton Third Row: Richard Gibbs John Lockard Harry Akers John Kline Richard Lawrence Robert O. Richardson Sylvester Johnson Myers Faulkner William Brown Myron Thompson Fourth Row: William Schwane William Merkel Frank Baumholtz Robert Ford Howard Duff Jack Biddison Richard Thompson Neil Sharkey John M. Jones George Fehndrick Fifth Row: Edwin Maddy Paul Davies Hughey Backenstoe Albert L. Lloyd James Ryan Robert Wilson Frederick Kittle Phil Swanson Samuel Hoffman Stanley Ruf Sixth Row: Robert Finley Charles Wilson Robert Kenney Brinton Darlington Bud Burke Harry Price Gene Sanders Seventh Row: Richard Smith Randall Guthrie Vernon Otey Richard Sponseller William French Joseph Boggs George Calvin o o. f i f f o r f o rs p, f r o fy ' : n o A i ill: tt 4J M 4 A : ' J O f t Jrk Md L dik J ' Mi - A 1 . c : n rs o f a Q. 5 : f Q r r?v o o Ma r IlTi keta j l As the oldest fraternity on the Ohio University- campus, the Beta Theta Pis will commemorate their centennial next year. The Beta mantle boasts a handsome gold loving cup this year, representing their topnotch achieve- ment: against the competition of nine other promi- nent colleges of the state, they were victorious in the Ohio State Interfraternity Sing contest at Witten- berg last May. It is the first time that this cup has been awarded to a fraternity on our campus. If the Betas can win it two more times, the trophy will become a permanent fixture of their house. Second place in intramurals and a new high in the scholarship average of their pledges are other noteworthy accomplishments. Socially, the Betas enjoyed a well-rounded season, with hayride party in the fall, a Hallowe ' en costume party, the traditional Christmas serenade, climaxing with the Spring Formal at which their dates were recipients of bracelets, necklaces, and compacts featuring the fraternity crest. 91 INSTIGATING a new social service program, Alpha Phi Delta acts as host to one child from the Athens County Children ' s Home each weekend. Alpha Phi Delt members from Ohio State, Western Reserve, and Kent were entertained at the district convention in Athens. A formal dinner at the Berry climaxed the conclave. The traditional Spring Formal was held at the Athens Country Club. Purple-tasseled, bronze-plated programs were distinctive favors. Adopting the West Point technique of don ' t lay hands on a pledge, the Alpha Phi Delts are using psychological tor- ment during Hell Week. Interesting is the fact that nearly every member of the local chapter is studying pre-med or pre-law. 92 a A First Row: Jerome C. Piazza Carmen Sberna Edward Sciano Thomas J. Colamonico Charles DeSio Anthony Palermo Frank S. Puzzo Anthony Piazza Daniel M. Varalli Joseph Soviero Faculty Members: Lewis A. Ondis Paul J. DeSio Second Row: Dan Risaliti Rocco DeMart Frank Tirella Anthony Cavallaro Joseph Catanzaro Joe Marra Frank Curcio Eugene Bevelacqua Pasquale Casanova Peter Albanese 93 A e - o  e = ' =; - ®o °- nP ' ' o - -;4 -.v? o 5-!; ! :- ' O l, ,otv e f -5. li V® ,s ' -0. ' -j arj i (top): Head Basketball Coach W. J. Dutch Trautwein is shown with the basketball squad in a pre-game dis- cussion before the final road trip of the season. To his left is Assistant Coach Harold Wise. 94 7 ■' y A ' Sq v, oi-o;- e (Ijasmtbail (bottom) Baumholtz misses a left hand shot in the Dayton game. Daytonites Sweifel and Westendorf follow in. Blickensderfer (arm showing) and Snyder are ready to retrieve the ball for Ohio. 95 GAMES AT HOME Marietta College 22 Ohio Western State Teachers .... 40 Ohio Wabash 29 Ohio Xavier University 37 Ohio Ohio Wesleyan 40 Ohio Western Reserve 33 Ohio University of Cincinnati .... 48 Ohio Muskingum College 37 Ohio Miami 32 Ohio Dayton University 44 Ohio 71 60 42 48 35 50 60 49 41 62 LEFT: Part of the cheering crowd at the Western Reserve game played at Athens watch Ohio outplay a fight- ing Redcat scoring machine to make a comeback after their mid-season slump. Right: Ohio Forward Vern Deinzer and Center Pete Lalich collide while fighting for the ball in the Miami game. Rung (number 17) Miami ' s all-around ath- lete, finally gained possession of the ball. Ohio staged a nerve-racking last- half rally to win this game, 41-32. Fans like action . . 96 Won 19. lost 6 LEFT: Baumholtz and two Dayton players fight for the free ball as Char- les Blickensderfer (extreme left) and Harry MacSherry (third from left) close in. Playing its sloppiest ball of the sea- son, Ohio managed to win, 42-34. Right: His Varsity O brothers looking on from the sidelines, Ohio Center Blickensder- fer gets the tip in the Muskingum game. Ohio coasted to a 49-37 win, the fifth straight after a mid-season slump. GAMES AWAY University of Buffalo 23 Ohio 78 Scran ton University 45 Ohio 50 University of Baltimore 44 Ohio 67 VillanovG 49 Ohio 44 Saint Joseph ' s 39 Ohio 59 Dayton University 34 Ohio 42 Toledo University 63 Ohio 50 Western State Teachers 43 Ohio 42 Marietta College 28 Ohio 52 Miami 31 Ohio 51 Xavier University 34 Ohio 39 Ohio Wesleyon 40 Ohio 39 University of Cincinnati ... .38 Ohio 60 Duquesne 52 Ohio 40 Washington Jefferson ... .49 Ohio 46 Mermen, matmen OHIO University ' s swimming team had the most successful season in its history with seven wins and three losses. Prospects for next year ' s swim team look even better than those of the group Jack Rhoads coached this year, with most of the veterans returning and many good men coming up from the freshman squad. The season ' s record included victories over Fenn, Western Reserve, Akron, Concord State Teach- ers, Cincinnati, Wittenberg, Grove City. Losses were to Kenyon, Ohio Wesleyan, and Washington and Jeffer- son. Wrestling Coach Thor Olson ' s musclemen came through their season with four wins, three losses. Ohio opened with a win over Case, then lost to Ohio State ' s Big Ten team. Findlay, Washington and Jefferson, and Akron were defeated. Other losses were to Waynesburg and Kent State. Ohio made a season total of 137 points to their opponent ' s 85. 98 mfl sLa k. TiBH CONQUERING a highly-touted Phi Delta Theta eleven, Delta Tau Delta won the Intramural Touch Football Fraternity League championship, 6-0. A later- al pass behind the line of scrimmage from Delt signal- caller Jack Pritchard to Harlan Hosch, who threw a long pass to Tommy Morgan, was good for the lone score of the game. Beta Theta Pi automatically placed in third position by losing in the fraternity elimination tournament. Blue Blazers copped the top spot in the Independent- Dormitory Touch Football League, winning from Dun- kle, 12-6. Fred Novak tossed a touchdown pass to Jeff Rundell for the first Blazer score, with Tom Carroll throwing a short pass to Novak for the second tally. Intramural footballers 99 Class of nineteen forty-onei OF a class of 608 juniors, this group came down to the stadium for their class picture. Like all classes at Ohio U, the juniors show a temporary lack of spirit. Their biggest function is the Junior Promenade which they nominally back. President of the group this year is William Dunlea. Juniors are generally on the up- swing of campus life, having recovered from the tradi- tional sophomore slump and preparing for their biggest — senior — year. From this group comes the major percentage of executives and administrators of campus offices and publications. Possibly a colle- gian ' s greatest development comes in his third year, when he is making the transition into the topmost undergraduate ranks. 100 ire next year ' s seniors First Row: Dorothy Wagner, Olga Jakobey, Kathryn Davis, Dorothy Koh- ler, Leona Cernyar, Jean Weaver, Kathleen Scott, Anna Rose Albrink, Janet Maxwell, Fay Pickens, Kathryn Bailey, Bernice Betzing, Nadine Butler, Betty Mahan, Dorothy Klohs, Irene Groh, Ruby Sproull, Mary Elliot. Second Row: Eleanor Einheit, Zelma Lee Coon, Bette Stevens, Doris Gosnell, Beth Greenlees, Ruth Greenlees, Ruth Shertzer, Caryl Walls, Beth Cable, Myrna Berringer, Mary Pottorf, Virginia Brownson, Catherine Perry, Doris Kill- inen, Betty Wade. Third Row: Sam Bye, Bill Dunlea, Bill Baldwin, Oden Libbey, Tom Red- ding, Ed Durst, Dorothy Arnold, Earl Kerman, Jack Hurley, Bob Kinney, Saul Cohen, Betty Parge. Fourth Row: Earl Brownlee, Bill McEndree, Don Potter, Bill Rose, Ed Kasputis, Martin Fisch, Norman O ' Hara, Tom Barrett, Harry Krumbiegel, Ken- neth Deal, Arnold Warger, Bill Radford. Fifth Row: LaVerne Siembt, Bob Sauer, Norman Doctorow, Melvin Sachs, Larry Weinberg, Leo Wilderman, Jim Friel, William Povtak, Ed Craun, Frank Dumanski, Dick Gibbs. 101 • . • . M CHOICE shots from Athena ' s portfolio on the 1940 Junior Prom include: (in circles) Prom Queen Mary Jane Beeler, Alpha Gamma Delta, and King Tommy Carroll, independent. Gathered around the central table at the pre-prom dinner are (from lower left, clock- wise) Prom Chairman Reuben Plaskoff and date Frances Kierstead, Prom Maestro Kay Kyser and fea- tured members of his company Ginny Simms, Sully Mason, Harry Babbitt, Ish Kabibble. Students migrated to the station to meet Kyser when he arrived by train from Cincinnati, (center) Kyser during the 30-minute broadcast from the prom over a national network of the Columbia Broadcasting System, (lower right) Ginny Simms and Plaskoff. 102 ■pVENIN ' folks, how y ' all? Kay Kyser, his orchestra, his Kollege of Musical Knowledge, Ginny Simms, Harry Babbitt, Sassy Sully Mason, and Ish Kabibble headlined the 1940 Junior Prom in the Men ' s Gym. A record-breaker was the prom attendance figure of 750 couples. Students formed a parade at noon to welcome Kyser and his company to Athens. He and his featured artists then spent the afternoon personally autograph- ing all the programs for the dan ce. Before the prom itself, Kyser and his company were feted at a formal dinner in the Berry. Climax came at midnight with a half-hour broadcast over a coast-to-coast hook-up. HECTIC is the life of a prom chairman in the weeks preceding his dance. Most proms have been in March, but when Kay Kyser ' s celebrated combine was offered to the campus for January 26, the prom- moter ' s work was rushed six weeks ahead. In the Athena office, receiving de- tails of Kyser ' s program, are Chairman Plaskoff and com- mittee members Rose, Stiner, Milligan, and Sberna. Exhib- iting poster drafts (lower pic- ture) is Prom Publicity Direct- or William Dunlea, with com- mitteemen Robertson, Mc- Clure, Gray, Dickerson, and Hooper. Junior Prom 103 Habit: the magic A new day May I see your books? Ten minutes Toasted rolls ore iavorites Athena reflects a cross-section of daily lives and friendships ' T ' HE friendly throb of university -1- life as it really is presents a colorfully varied routine of classes, activities, functions of living. Stu- dents no longer find themselves closely regulated and supervised as they were in pre-college days, but find a pleasant transition be- tween parental shelter and ulti- mate personal freedom. The 1940 Athena here presents photograph- ic sketches from its portfolio of what goes on. Top corner, Here we go again! First in strip, students catch break- fast at Carl ' s Lunch. Second, half of one ' s academic work comes from books, the other half from profs. Third, a rest between classes is helpful. Fourth, downtown Athens is a cross-section of southeastern Ohio life. Fifth, University Bus driv- er, C. J. Ailstock enjoys his work of taking education students to Ath- ens schools for teaching practice. 104 flywheel of society OH to the Plains jnnission This Athens Newman Club TRIPLE purpose of Newman Club is social, educational, and religious development for Roman Catholic stu- dents. The organization brought President McLairy of the Aquinas Institute in Columbus to a convocation, spon- sored the first all-campus dance after Christmas recess. The group has had several supper parties, a roller skat- ing party, monthly receives Communion in a body. First Row: Benkert, W. G, Dowd. McCuUouqh, Harkabus, Corbitt, Mundee Second How: McMenemy, Dursl, Palrylow, Biaschak. Alam, Chuff, Segale, Margoles, Cinco. Third Row: W Eddy, Christmann, Noss, Carney, Byrne, Bellan, 1. Kochowski, Fourth Row: Palrick, Gall, Kucharski, Paulus, Toth, Sheridan, Lavelle, McDonald. Filth How: F. Baldy, Krilz, R. Eddy, P. Baldy, Daaqett, Lamberti. Craiq. 105 . continued . . A campus institution is Sam Downer with his omni- present supply of Beech Nut products. Downer is employ- ed to visit housing units, give away Beech Nut gum and mints. Petitions are freguently cir- culated to initiate changes in campus government or to make requests of celebrities. This one is a giant postcard to Prom-maestro Kay Kyser. Post Editor Franklyn K. Louden empties P. O. Box 94 five times daily. Mr. L. F. Lausche (left) and Mr. J. E. Smith check the steam gen- erators which supply cur- rent to the university. Checking their daily mail at the special university ex- change in EwJng Hall are Dr. Rush Elliott, Dr. Franklin C. Potter, Dr. E. B. Smith, and Mr. H. H. Peckham. su 106 continued University Night Watch- man Dale Hart (left) turns over his clock to compatriot Ernest C. Pritts. Watchmen nightly check all windows and doors in every campus building. Nightly curfew to couples on dates during school nights is the B and O Streamliner, here pulling out of the Ath- ens station. The locomotive whistles at 9:40 and 9:50 p.m. Favorite campus pastime is candy ankling, in which most eds and coeds daily indulge. This group in the Hotel Berry is similar to those in hangouts all over Athens. Sandwichmen start out promptly at 10 p. m., call on all housing units with food, soft drinks, candy, do a flou- rishing business refreshing tired students and daters. 107 PANHELLENIC Council integrat- es sorority affairs at its informal meetings, frames and executes rushing rules, issues a bo oklet of information for prospective women students. Top all-sorority social event is the Panhellenic Formal, one of the earliest black tie affairs of the fall. The council sponsors an early morning May Day Sing, this year inaugurated a system of monthly exchange dinners. Pledge groups compete in the Prep Follies, annual skit show. First Row: Allen, Myers, Smith, Murphy, Rice, Rardin, Wheaton, Rose, Mayes, Nelson, Taylor, Worstall. Second Row: First seven are alumnae sponsors. Wager on right. 108 CO (0 a •i-i CO o CO O 0) o ' o Neophyte . . . Panhellenic Council . 109 fS? imm i sm i I iNLv ?? r i . ' « ' £.iVbin VTrtr-T; , ' «-■Co ' - ' si ' ■{.at ADJUDGED the most progressive chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha, the Ohio University chapter was a- warded a silver bowl by the Grand Chapter. Zetas lead the Ohio campus in scholarship with a group average for last semester of 1.8. In cooperation with other chapters, they main- tain a health center at Currin, Virginia. Unique was the Zeta sponsored ballet, Pinocchio, the group ' s outstanding campus project for the year. Costumed Zetas and sailor-dates hornpiped at a pledge dance honoring the actives. Wooden-backed programs in shield form were given at the Winter Formal; decorations were in Zeta colors. The chapter this year landscaped their front yard and back garden. Their glee club was one of many such Greek groups to stimulate caroling this year. ia aiA y4wka r 112 V .N «;.. , v Vi :  ' .-??- J? A.3 First Row: Doris Abel Betty Ames Helen Barklow Ruth Beck Patience Brandle Mcrrtha Boyd Second Row: Shirley Buzard Mary Anne Coughlin Beth Cable Jane Dressel Lois Faulstich Blanche Fitz Third Row: Betty Freyburger Constance Glass Mary K. Graham Harriet June Ludine Lamb Mary Jane Love Fourth Row: Ruth Ellen Lindsey Dorothy McClure Martha Meister Cathryn Melcher Mary K. Metz Betty Zone Miller Filth Row: Vera Myers Janet Nierman Sara Dell Parks Mary Quigley Alice Rardin Dorothy Reid Sixth Row: Joan Simmons Betty St one Angela Strakol Margaret Thompson Caryl Walls Barbara Williams Seventh Row: Mary Allen Rosemary Austin Jean Burnside Eighth Row: Virginia Buzard Eleanor Davis Norine Fichtelman Ninth Row: Norma Gibbs Betty Harrington Mary Louise Lipphardt Tenth Row: lane Merrill Dorothy Myers Peggy Sutton Faculty Members: Constance Andrews Julia L. Cable Irene Withom Elsie Druggan First Row: Marjorie Wheaton Helen Mayes Constance Reese Betty Barger Kathleen Elder Gloria Gammoge Second Row; Jane Henneberger Mary Ann McKay Virginia Mullett Helen Dale Rennechar Julia Vineyard Barbara Brenner Third Row: Martha lones Elsie Jane Knapp Patty Mackinnon Esta Maxwell Ruth Mayes Janis Moulton Fourth Row: Sara Carolyn Murdock Virginia Pride Margaret Raines Mary Robertson Jane Stephenson Annette Stuber Fifth Row: Gene Attwood Doris Bach Helen Baker Dorothy Brazel Mary Dressier Jean Finsterwald Sixth Row: Betty Gailey Jane Hay leane Houf Mary Elizabeth Lasher Alice Mechem Eleanor Schulz Seventh Row: Sue WooUey Catherine Barger Patricia Cuyler Lois Eldridge Betty Fulton Ila Keiser Eighth Row: Ramono Knerr Shirley Knight Alice Maccombs Ninth Row: Anna Margaret Morrison Eleanor Peckham Vera Jo Robertson Tenth Row: Helen Stratton Marjorie Wilmer Elizabeth Wood Faculty Members: Constance G. Leete Virginia F. Harger . eia OLDEST sorority on the campus is Pi Beta Phi, which celebrated in September its fiftieth year at Ohio U. The president of the grand chapter and officers of the province attended the Golden Jubilee celebration. Aug- menting the chapter ' s anniversary was the national organ- ization ' s Diamond Jubilee, observed by local Pi Phis and their guests with a banquet at the Berry. Actives and pledges revolved at the pledge dance, where each guest represented the title of his favorite re- cording. Actual records were the decorations. For the Winter Formal, the Pi Phi house was moved to the Berry, where each guest passed through a replica of their blue and white door. Again a feature of the year ' s program was the Pi Phi Wedding, at which a freshman pledge was symbolically married to the sorority. First place for the most beautiful float was awarded them at Homecoming (see top page 41). 115 BIGGEST event in Phi Mu history this year was amalgamation with Alpha Theta Delta, re- cently dissolved as a national. The local chapter took in several town alumnae of the other organization, formed an alumnae council to act in an advisory capacity in addition to the group of patronesses. Distinguished guests at the Phi Mu house were National President Alice Miller in Novem- ber, and National Field Secretary Rena Cox in March. Highlight of their social season was the Winter Formal, for which the house was embel- lished with cotton snowdrifts in windows, holly at doors, mistletoe in archways, and the glow of candlelight over all. Keynote of Phi Mu entertainment is informality. Novel parties were enjoyed for Valentine ' s Day and St. Patrick ' s Day. 116 3 (■-} 3 S J L i 5 § S 1 First Row: Catherine Rice Aurea McKay Virginia Larkin Mary Pottorf Virginia Davis Eva Jean Palmer Second Row: Ruth Ann Carlson Harriet Holcomb Myma Berringer Virginia Barden Virginia Glover Rosemary Dieringer Third Row: Dorotha Smith Virginia Boydston Carolyn Burton Irene Kelly Nan Whipple Ruth Gilford Fourth Row: Virginia Moloney Faculty Member: Leona Hughes 117 %: 7 £ 4 ' 3 4 1 First Row: Marjorie Taylor Virginia Rose Ann Barrett Edith Wulf Kathryn Halbedel Janet Rutherford Second Row: Helen Tobey Margaret Dunlap Helen Paris Gertrude Gadus Mary Lou Hornstein Katherine Hull Third Row: Eleanor Hutson Marjorie McElhiney Mary Ellen Mock Lois Wise Jean Wright Marjorie Colvig Fourth Row: Margaretta Eckis Barbara Hooper Bette Anne Home Phyllis Logan Jeanne Ronk Dorothy Schilling Fifth Row: Gene Comstock Suzanne Danford Virginia Gall Arlene Gamertsfelder Dorothy Miller Susan Paste Sixth Row: Virginia Porter Janet Maxwell Ruth Alice Miller Helen Stellwagon Amelia Cox Marian Hooper Seventh Row: Doris McKasson Ann Patton Joanne Bozman Jean Chapman Jean Day ion Betty Houck Eighth Row: Betty Kent Ethel Krumm Vivian Lichty Ninth Row: Margaret McBride Madelon O ' Brien Betty Rous Tenth Row: Margie Thomas Irene Wood K m Ly vneaa SINGULAR among Ohio U sorority projects is the Chi Omega economics prize, awarded to the coed with the most outstanding record in economics. The group followed a current campus trend in eliminat- ing the usually stoogy grand march from their Winter Formal program. Cueing members on How to Win Jobs and Influence People, Lena Madison Phillips, president of the International Business and Professional Women ' s Federation, addressed the local chapter when she visited Athens in October. Chi Omega took first place in the intersorority bowling match as the ball and pins craze swept the country. Chi Omega Alumnae furnished a children ' s ward in the Shelter- ing Arms Hospital. At their Eleusian banquet in the spring, the local chapter feted one member from each of the eight Ohio chapters of the sorority. 119 THE disputes you ' ve heard about the Al- pha Xi quill this, year mean one thing — a new- sign on the house. Na- tional office had to be consulted to gain per- mission for a huge, light- ed quill sign to compete with the sororities up the street, who boast new neon displays. Year in, year out. Alpha Xis sing their way to fame, and their winning of the sorority song contest (page 109) is an old story now. This year. Alpha Xis also won fraternal approval and freshman pledges with occasional serenades. Perhaps the nicest, least publicized Alpha Xi party is the Christmas treat for pledges with stockings full of candy and ice-cream Santa Clauses. The Winter Formal is one of the most fun-packed sorority dances of the winter season. Rex Koon ' s orchestra berhythmed dancers in a quill-decorated atmosphere. The Rose Dance late in May culminates their social season. y wka A l =J elia T 120 First Row: Betty Worstall Martha Wilson Elaine Beeler Marie Davis Marilyn Francis Esther Hafner Second Ro w: Janice Nelson Alice Ellermcm Betty Hartford Idamae Manzler Eileen McDougall Barbara Nelson Third Row: Hannah Snyder Jennie Uhl Beth Pearce Arlyne Demmy Ethelyn Dossett Geraldine Hoffman Fourth Row: Jean McFadden Rosemary Novario Hope Spidell Esther Stiner Jeanne Woolard Catherine Perry Fifth Row: Corinne Decker Virginia Darlington Dorothy Dasbach Jane Jones Shirley Jones Patricia Mayer Sixth Row: Leona Sneller Jane Williams Bettinell Blankner Katherine Lovell Nelle Foster Marjorie Griffith Seventh Row: Rachel Winterrowd Jane Hancock Helen Hess Carol Hopkins Eighth Row: Lois Lane Ulah Anne Lewis Jeanne O ' Brien Ninth Row: Virginia Brownson Phyllis Schween Mabel Snyder Tenth Row: Dorothy Spahman Barbara Wliitman First Row: Jean Murphy Mary Jane Beeler Helen Miller Mary Wagner Jean Lanich Helen Fiser Second Row; Helen Haskins Marjorie Helman Alicia Smith Adeline Lewellyn Jeanne Wilson Eleanore Woodworth Third Row: Bette Stevens Mary Lee Burriss Annobelle Weymueller Barbara Remsen Gail Shellenberger Evelyn Morgenstem Fourth Row; Ruth Ormsby Betty Botes Marcella Vilt Virginia Morris Mildred Yeager Ethel Short Fifth Row: Alice Howell Edith Kenny Marian Schroeder Mildred Dean Sara Glazier Phyllis Jacobs Sixth Row: Marjorie Mulloy Janet Taylor Eleanor Pontius Jeanne Taylor Dorian Beck Alice Carpenter Seventh Row: Kay Draper Jeanne Remsen Betty Finley Anne McCray Virginia Henry Marjorie Heitman Eighth Row: Virginia Davidson Mary Gibson Ninth Row; Eleanor Franz Frances Sullivan Tenth Row: Marjorie Slutte Faculty Member: Greta A. Lash awiwia J elia RIDING high on the beauty of Mary Jane Beeler, Alpha Gamma Delta pocketed another crown this year: Junior Prom queenship. All of which proved to envious sororities that the Queen of Queens still reigns supreme (page 102). The Prom further served Alpha Gams as inspiration for their winning Prep Follies skit, a glorified, glamor galaxy slightly resembling Kay Kyser ' s Kollege of Musical Know- ledge. Eye-opener was this year ' s pledge treat to actives, a dance to which each she and he came dressed as his or her own suppressed desire. Still pondering a possible use for the storage room over their garage. Alpha Gams let the matter ride another year, were content with new dining room furniture. Gum-chewing sophomores in the chapter still prefer Dr. Paul Kendall ' s sophomore literature class, still occupy most of the first row. 123 ASK any A D Pi what she thinks of horses and her expression will speak for itself. Clever was their Homecoming float, but pledges had to substitute for frisky horses which broke a- way minutes before the parade. However, the old-fashioned carriage, exhibiting the motto Ohio U Goes Dating, won second place in the Homecoming Float Contest (page 41). The Alpha Delta Pi Pledge Dance in the Sub- marine Ballroom featured the music of El Ebbe. For the annual Sweetheart Formal in February, decorations followed a Valentine theme. Jimmy Littler supplied palpitating melody. Located on University Terrace just across the street from the campus, A D Pis can catch a few extra minutes of sleep before classes. New drapes and carpeting throughout the house continued the rejuvenating program be- gun when the chapter moved into its new house last year. . Mipka Jelta j- l T 124 af? t Bi First Row: Virginia Wager Winifred Heaiy Elizabeth Story Eleanor Medicus Ruth Nelson Pearl Crosby Second Row: Mary E. McCuUoch Avonelle Sheward Freda Simerka Evelyn Wise Alice Lafferty Doris Allen Third Row: Betty Brewer Caroline Evans Jeanne Thomas Betty White Mary Frances Guides Eleanor Diehl Fourth Row: Carol Krumling Emily Watkins Betty Jane Ward Ruthanne McCune Ellen Green Jeannette Edwards Fifth Row: Gretchen Cartun Nellie Perkins Wanda Maye Jaynes Merle Abele Jeane Westerfield Lucille Banasik Sixth Row: Frances Ann Gray First Row: Norma Kutler Ruth Simon Jeanne Hydovitz Ruth Rosner Rita Slavitt Selma Goldman Second Row: Ruth Patner Fannie Simon Madyline E. Lichtenstein Marjorie Gottleib Estelle Gottleib Pearl Silverman Third Row: Marjorie Semenow Annette Yunosoff Muriel Bernstein Charlotte Androphy Bernice Sosnow Jean Sharif Fourth Row: Helen Ruth Piatt Ellen Jeanne Neurad Vc oujer NEWEST addition to the women ' s social groups on the campus is Tower, which moved into its house on South College this September. Entering into sorority intramurals for the first time, the group took first place in the tennis and badminton matches. A successful social season with a Song Title Party, scavenger hunt, and Winter Formal, ended with the traditional Farewell Senior Banquet and Formal in May. Setting a new precedent in scholarship requ irements, Tower demands a 1.3 average for initiation. Tower girls treated their sisters to sweets and smokes, upholding the custom of giving cigarettes and candy when going steady. Something new and different during Piell Week was the privileges given to the pledge who had written the best song about an active. The songs were not for publication. Tower, with Phi Epsilon Pi, was active in bringing Hillel to the campus. Hillel, a national Jewish cultural and educa- tional organization is an extension of the Ohio State branch with Rabbi Kaplan as its education director. 127 Typical ol iniormal winter sports at Ohio U is this boy-girl snow fight Women (at right) enjoy modern dance, Knd it allows them individuality of expression. Roller skating is popular when spring comes, and wheeled frolics through Athens are pleasant Among the more vigorous women ' s sports is basketball. First How: Wiener, Liccardi, Demmy. Wright Second How: Barklow, Bell, Haas, A. Marting. Gilchrest, Rob- ertson Chilton. Third How: Engel, Lipka, Mayes, Dres- seL Dance Club NEW feature of Dance Club, formerly an all-women ' s organization, is the men ' s group added this year. The com- bined club made its first appearance on the program for Mothers ' Weekend. Mod- ern dance is considered a creative art, provides the individual great opportuni- ties for self expression. 128 Women ' s Athletic Association OVER 300 coeds are members of the Women ' s Athletic Association, local group which promotes extra-curricular women ' s sports, encourages work, personality, and fun-making among its constituents. Their greatest pride is the cabin, an off-the-campus landmark of Ohio University. Located at Mechanics- burg, the cabin is used for weekend outings, is avail- able to campus women ' s groups. WAA this year sponsored the Dad ' s Day Dance in place of their traditional Homecoming Carnival. In September, a mass meeting and mixer were held for freshman women. At its spring and winter banquets, WAA rewards members who are outstanding in sports activities. The group also prepares and sponsors the intramural programs for sororities and women ' s dormitories. Pictured below are members of the popular curricu- lar classes in folk-dancing, and the Chi Omega championship bowling team. At right is the WAA Executive Board, which governs and plans the organi- zation ' s activities. First Row: Graham. Lipka. Chilton, Reid. Second Row: Brownson, Mayes, Eckis, Bell. j W f ) When glows the evening star O ' er Hocking streaming, Then come my thoughts from far, Back to thee dreaming; I see thy ancient halls Sacred to learning. Hearing thy tender calls, For thee I ' m yearning. Come then loved friends and all. List to her mystic call, Alma Mater, my dear. My loved Ohio! —Edwin Walts Chubb O may I join the Choir Invisible SOON our graduating seniors will march from the shelter of McGuffey ' s Elms into a ruthless world to fight the good fight. A chosen few, because they have been a vital academic influence, are members of Edwin Watts Chubb ' s Choir Invisible. When he retired in 1936 as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, Chubb spoke a message to posterity that was recorded on an imperishable metal phonograph disc that rests now in the library archives. Laud- ing choice spirits that enhance the joy of teaching, Chubb described these inspiring students as wholesome, sincere, intellec- tually keen, and concluded: 1 bring my crown of wild olives as a votive offering to the students living and dead, scattered from Maine to Oregon, who are the chosen few belonging to the ' Choir Invisible, whose music is the gladness of the world ' . Now 75, world-renowned Dean Chubb is seen freguently on the campus, a sprightly, scholarly inspiration to those chosen few whose names will be emblazoned on fame ' s immortal scroll. ' See George Eliot ' s O May I Join the Choir Invisible. Dean Edwin Walts Cliubb t: , dA AJM ' M Mary I. Agnesi Maynard I. Aldridqe Doris I. Allen BSEd BSEd BSHEc Harold B. Anders Robert H. Anderson BSCE BFAPAA 1 Activities of seniors are listed on page 207fi Winiired Healy, well-known senior, takes time out to add her name to the attic wall at a local emporium. For further details of her daily life see The 1938 Athena, page BS. Raymond H. Baer BSI Margaret Hair BSEd Paul A. Baldy BSC Richard L. Barber Richard t. Barbor AB BSCE Earl C. Barnes BSEE Mary l. Baker BSEd 132 Virginia C. Becker BSEd Albert Beckermcm BSC loseph F. Bell BSEd Richard C. Below BSC James Bortlett BSC William J. Benkert BSI dMs Robert S. Bishop Emit J. Biskup BSEd BFAPAA Hugh K. Black BSC Bruce R. Blake Mary Louise Blaschak AB AB Leon Blumenthal BSC Martha H. Bowman BS ji . Mtk Fay J. Brown lames K. Brydon John P. Bums RSIE Virginia Mullett, gay and personable, always has a hiendly hello . Unusually versatile, Virginia is at home on the stage, the athletic field, or in a sorority meeting. i y Heiman Burstein BSI Rulh E. Butz Mae B. Chapman Virginia N. Christman BSEd BSEd BSEd Nicholas L. Chuli BSEd Rudy J. Cinco George H. Clemmer Russell Clough BSC eSEd BSC Robert W. Coe Margaret E. Cook BSC BSHEc I 133 Frances H. Cooper BSHEc Jean E. Cottiell Donald R. Cowan Herbert F. Cowgill BSEd BSC AB B. Dcrrrel Crobtree Faith Lewis Crabtree leonneUe Cranmer BSEd AB BSEd M Jeanne Ruhl and Bob Enyearl became husband and wife one weekend this spring. Charming and witty are this couple who keep the Ohioon editors inside a strict budget. WiUiam R. Culbertson Carl E. Danner BSC BSC Robert W. Davis BSC I S. Norman Crawford Chester W. Cromwell Pearl E. Crosby BSEE AB BSEd TWO T%C)jk Henry J. DeHoog Arlyne P. Demmy AB BSEd 134 Elizabeth H. Dickinson Samuel F. Downer John Dutfy Jr. BSHEc BSC BSA C. Wayne Dugan Margaret M. Dunlop BSEd BSEd c Elmer P. Dunn GeoHrey B. Dunn Richard W. Eddy BSEd B3C BG Richard E. Ekleberry Alice L. Ellerman BSC AB Dafydd W. Evans AS Richard F. Evans Waller T. Foirchild BSC BSC Delt Jim Barllett spends his spare nickels in listening to recorded jive. With about twenty-five nickelodians in town, stu- dents have no trouble finding musical enlerlainmenl. Lois FauIsUch George S. Fawcett John E. Fawcett Ann-Marie Fay BSEd BSC BSI . AB O ' f Leslie E. Foreman BSC Clement A. Fralt Stanley A. Francis William G. Fraedrich William E. Franklin BSEd 3S BSC BSC Ruth L. Fuller 135 Leonard D. Garfield BSC Ralph E. Gamer BSC Virginia E. Rose, Athena editor ' s assis- tant, may often be found at a local bowling alley when not working on the yearbook. She ' s a high scorer on the Chi O team. Ruth Gillespie BSEd Morris J. Givertz BSC Gertrude A. Gadus BSHEc rs M M MA 1 Betty L. Goodrich Mary K. Graham BSSS BSEd Lewis H. Gray BSEd Sam 5. Greenblall Helen K. Grimsley BSC BSEd 136 Herbert Grossman BSEd Leonard Grossman BSEd Sara M. Gruey BSL ' d Jeonette W. Haas BSEd Ruth K. Haqen BSHEc Donald W. Haley BSEd Elma Hall BSEd Helen Harohus BSEd Pout I. Harclerode Mildred L. Horkobus BSEE BSEd Frances J. Hortman BSHEc Edna E. Henrich AB Dean A. Heydick BSC Tim Galloway ond Bob Engle. big boys in the ROTC, check over uniionns in the moth-balled room in Carnegie Hall base- ment ROTC headquarters are finally adequate. Gloria L. Hintz BSHEc Eli N. Hirsimoki BSC 1 (y Harriett L. Holcomb BSEd 137 C Carrie M. Hunt BSSS iecmne Hydovitz ESSS David J. Hyslop BSC Edward B. Jackson BSCE Mary M. John AB Paul B. Ken BSC James B. Johnson BS Sig Pi Don Rittersbaugh sells Carl Dan- ner a pack of cigarettes over the Berry counter. Berry alone sells 175 packs a day, mostly to men. Camels seem to be preferred. Robert B. Johnson AB George R. Jolly AB Betty L. Journoy BSEd idiMtJk Carl F. Juringus BSEE Edilh Kamul AB Shirley M. Karch AB Sam L. Kasimov BSC D. Myrtle Keller BS ' mh kk 138 Harold G. Kelley BSEE Dorothy J. Kemplon BSHEc John E. Knout BSEE Allen H. Knisley BSEd Robert J. Krukosk BS Sarah J. Kuchenrither Hamilton C. Laing Jean M. Lanich BS BSC BS diM Franklyn K. Louden Curt Leben BSI BS William R. LeMosters Charles R. Lewis BSC BSJ Peter N. Librizzi Mari A. Liccardi BSEE BSEd Marie M. Loesch Senior Ball Chairman Charlie Loftus is g3£fj snapped in a characleristic pose at the Berry Hotel. Coca-Cola and milk are the two drinks preferred most by Ohio University eds and coeds. Franklin E. Loew BSEd lanet Mackinnon AB I. Warren McCIure BSC Vula C. McCoy BSEd Mary E. McCuUoch BSEd Eileen C. McDouqall BSEd Rosemary McHale BSJ Vincent G. McKee BSC Louise A. McMoins BSEd 139 I Q - .« ' ' ■2 j l- ' ' Ik M Mary E. McMIllen Edith M. Manegqie Glenn R. Morgard Florine E. Marlalt Thomas Maurer AB BSI BS BSEd AB .,aa..i s ' it Raymond F. Maxwell Robert W. Maxwell Martha C. Melster BSEd AB AB Sioady palron oi the Student Grill is amiable Associate Editor Jack Wiegman who has served the Athena ior tour years. His photographic memory for names has been a Uie-saver to many editors. Florence Meschan AB Franklin P. Miller BSEd 140 Frank C. Moore BSEd Beatrice L. Morgcm BSEd Glen C. Neal B3C Barbara J. Nelson Frances J. Nelson AB BSEd Ruth L. Nelson AB Elizabeth B. Nicholson AB Angelo C. Orsillo BSEd DeWayne O. Osborne BSC Eva I- Palmer BSEd Edith Maneggle and Fred Frazer pouse at the Berry to talk over student govern- ment problems. Frazer, campus big shot, is an admirable fellow. Roommates Moneggie and McHale ore members of the fourth estate. . Unastasia I. Ponmilea Waller J. Patrylow BSEd BSC Arnold P. Paulk BS Harry F. Paulus Milton Poushter BSC BSEd .1 Andrew H. Pavlish AB Elizabeth T. Peorce Edward G. Peatlie BSEd BS Jean C. Peony BSSS Harold S. Peters BSEd Ml Miss Katherine Von Hamm, Bureau of Appointments supervisor, gives Rose- mary McHale a lead for a job. Modem personnel methods are a characteristic of the efficient bureau. Frank S. Puzzo AB David Rabinovitz AB E. Arundel Ralph AB 142 Ovid S. Ray Robert M. Reading Catherine L. Rice A 8 BSC BSEd Don L. Rittersbaugh BSC Ruth F. Rothrock BS Robert £. Rowland AB Jeanne E. Ruhl BFA leanette Y. Saddle BS Ruth M. Rosner BS Earl L. Schemenauer BSC di dM Ati Emde C. Schuize Hoy C. Scouten Frank Senzik Arthur W. Sherman Avonelle L. Sheward AB BSC BSCE AB BSEd I. Victor Shulmon Evelyn Mae Sidders Freda M. Simerka BSC BSEd BSHEc Ruth M. Simon AB Billy T. Simpson BS Virginia E. Skola Alpha Gam Helen Haskins helps Butch BSHEc Grover push Ohio U by suggesting Bobcat stickers to Les White. Like many university students, Helen works at Logan ' s during rush periods. Florence R. Smith BSHEc Harry C. Smith AB Helen R. Smith AB cn Robert H. Smith BSEd Willard H. Smith AB Robert T. Snyder BSC Joseph A. Soviero AB John C. Sparlci BSC 143 Wk k Anthony N. Spina Raymond I. Sponsler Sophie M. Stecbbardt Bertha E, Steinmeyer H. Douglas Stevens BS BSC AB BSEd BSEE Herbert H. SBckney Robert J. Stilgenbauer W. Stuart StoU BSC BSCE BSCE ( n II ■h Jean Coltrell, Howard Hall president, signs out for a formal dance. Ultra- efficient Dean of Women Irma E. Voigl has a constant check on all coeds ' hours. Belly L. Stone AB Robert S. Stone BSCE George W. Stowell BSJ Janet Stratemeyer BSEd Caroline Sturm BSHEc Emil Supance BSC Roberta E. Swindell Adolph C. Szafran BSJ BS 144 Moriorie J. Taylor Frank R. Terront BSEd BSEE Seldon W. Terranl Margaret A. Thompson WiUiom B. Tbompser. 1 BS BSSS BSC 1 lohn TomstTom BSEE Alex D. Toiok BSEd Eloise W. Tucker AB Evelyn M. Turner BSEd Betty W. Undeihill Ronald W. VanOme Julia Ann Vineyard Alice A. Warther BSC BS AB Charles E. Weber AB Vivian M. Weimer BSEd Mariorie E. Wheaton AB Phi Bele Leona Pickard candy ankles consistently with Dick Brenberqer, Beta treasurer. Candy ankling is chief after- noon pastime in the spring and fall (see paqe 107). ( ro ?fP o Jik h L fAk .-i Robert H. Wheaton BSC Leslie I. White BSC Robert Wiegand AB Jack A. Wiegman AB Lois Marie Wise BSHEc WMm !! Robert W. Wonner Agnes Jean Wright Frank Richard Young BSC BSEd AB Harry F. ZiroU BSC 145 146 I Kenneth W. Brown BSEd X£ ' M Sherley Buzard BSHEd Alma F. CcirUon BFA Under the glass oi Dean ol Women Irma E. Voiqt ' s desk- top is a copy oi thi3 picture. The coed triumvirate heads the three major women ' s groups. Women ' s League, YWCA. WAA. (League ' s president Faulslich, YWCA ' s Hartford, WAA ' s Graham.) Bob L. Chase AB Stephen J. Czarnecki BSC Robert M. Daggett BSC Carolyn T. Fisher BSEd Fred J. Frozer BS fs o V C-- ' l Mm hg k k I Robert A. Gam BSA Clarence E. Hayes Robert H. Hetzler Frederic M. Krecker Howard William Meac BS AB AB BSC Senior Class President Donovan Zook attends to Mr. L. C. Staols. debate coach and associate professor of dramatic art and speech. Staats maintains an elaborate system of charts featuring outstanding speakers. Zook ' s principal function is to deliver a Senior Day address. Marceil E. Pockard BSEd Mary Jean Pickens Virginia E. Ros BSEd AB Helen D. Rennechar Doran A. Sauers, Jr. BSEd BSEE ... Worstall Donovan Q. Zook 53 AB Phi Beta Kappa . . . most significant honorary Alpha of Virginia Established December 5, 1776 Lambda of Ohio Installed April 26, 1929 Officers President R. L. Morton Vice President Edith Wray Secretary Raymer McQuiston Treasurer Charlotte E. LaTourrette A. C. Anderson A. H. Armbruster Carl Denbow F. B. Dilley L. P. Eblin Rush Elliott J. P. Emery R. A. Foster Carl A. Frey Faculty Members A. C. Gubitz J. A. Hess H. G. James H. J. Jeddeloh Charlotte LaTourrette Raymer McOuiston R. L. Morton J. R, Patrick J. P. Porter Emmett Rowles T. C. Scott A. B. Sias G. W. Starcher A. T. Volwiler G. T. Wilkinson H. R. Wilson T. M. Wolfe Edith Wray Graduate Members Bernard Witsberger Anna E. Munmia Norman Keig Undergraduate Members Elected April 12, 1939 Donovan Zook Elected November 6, 1939 Stanley Arthur Francis Dorothy Anne Purviance Florence Meschan Edwin Arundel Ralph Barbara Jane Nelson Robert Hov ard Smith Leona Mabel Pickard Eloise Willis Tucker Elected April 16, 1940 Elizabeth Barbara Bednasz Glenn Richard Margard Saul Cohen Emden Charles Schulze G. Darwin Cunningham Frank Carl Urban Stephen Herbert Fuller Donald Zucker 148 Cutler Hall Oldest building designed for higher education in Northwest Territory Early drawing of Cutler Hal), when W was known as College Edifice and housed cadavers. Manasseh Cutler was responsible for the land grant on which Ohio University was established. In 1939. Cutler Hall was dedi- cated as a monument to higher education in the Northwest Terri- tory. OUTSTANDING monu- ment to early education in America is Ohio Univer- sity ' s celebrated Cutler Hall, oldest building for higher learning in the Northwest Territory. Manasseh Cutler, Revolutionary War chap- lain, persuaded Congress in 1787 to set aside two town- ships in Ohio for a univer- sity. General Rufus Putnam surveyed the lands in 1795, and a building was author- ized in 1812. This was con- structed in 1816-18, and was called College Edifice. When East and West Wings were added in 1835-39, the name was changed to Cen- ter College, and still later was changed to Cutler Hall. Early in Cutler Hall ' s his- tory, it housed cadavers used by the anatomy depart- ment. A common prank of former collegians was to sneak the bodies out on Hallowe ' en and hide them on the campus. This de- partment later moved to East Wing. (The wings are now known as Wilson and McGuffey Halls.) The old college building — where Enfield and Stewart Oft found me ensconced in the cupola cool; While I glanced now and then, ' mid the study of true art. At the names graven there by the pocket edge-tool; Oh, time has diminished the strength of my spirit; The visions of youth are my glories no more; But still one estate from thee I inherit. The old right of way to the stars and their lore. From Alhens, Ohio by W. D. Emerson. Class of 1833 Historian Thomas N. Hoover points out signiHcant features ot Cutler Halt to undergraduates. Editor Arthur W. Sherman , ' -li i (lefl) Assistanls V. Rose. R. Mayes. I. Ashby, B. Hooper, E. Tucker, and A. Frindt work out a problem with Editor Sherman, (right) Copy- writers M. Robertson, L. Pickaid. R. Wilcox, C. McBride, E. Beebe, and D. Foster. (left) Associate Editor Jack Wiegman, encyclopedia of names and faces. Assistant Editor William Dun- lea, authority on words, (circle, at left) Morton Gartenberq. assistant editor, in charge of organi- zations, Greek pictures, (below) Mounting pictures is Assistant Editor Dick Thompson, in charge of layouts and mounting. (at typewriter) Office staff members H. Hol- comb, C. Cochran, and Class Editor Marceil Packard, (directly below) Copywriters G. Hoffman, N. Kutler, J. Haas, F. Gray, M. L. Hornstein. THE 1940 Athena, with a staff of over one hundred workers, has endeavored to present a book that would be unique, satisfying and stimulating in its arrange- ment of material, format, pictures, and art. This book portraying friendship is presented to the students of Ohio U by this staff. (above) Organizations contracts slaif: D. Blank, R. Slilgenbouer, B. Bloke. N. Foster. F. Ayres, R. Werner. Absent: B. Browne. M. Cox. J. Houf. B. Hooper, (circles, at right) Contracts Manager Robert Greenwood, who beat all records. Photog- rapher George Ryan (at file) photographed football (above) Advertising staff. Standing: C. Evans. O. Hegel. R. Perkins. W. Kursel, R. Cohen, N. OHara, R. Werner. Seated: B. Ward. I. Thomas, C. Kmmling. I. Edwards, (below) Art staff. B. Smith, K. Milligan (features). M. Liccardi. W. Gray. V. Larkin. H. Sorrick. ' ' (right) Sales staff: (in Iront) R. Risberg. First Row: G. Foster, F. Ti-el- la. M. Wenqsr, E, Schulz. F. Orlnsr, S. WooUey. B, Gailey. Second Row: P. Pairan, R. Alkire, R. Sweoringen. F. Ayres. (circle at right) Adver- tising Manager John Dengel. who beat pre- vious records. (above) P. McGoogan, J. Hayes, and S. Knight in the oflice. {circle, above right) Sales Manager Dick Linke managed a complete sell-out. (bottom center. 1 to r) George Margoles, artist; Eli Munas, cartoonist; Wesley Roads, sketcher o! houses, pins, (at right) Propaganda Director Messick and staii members F. Tirella and G. Timblin. (top left) Weinberg, Horn, Dunlea, Licht, Dick- erson, Gibbs. (center left) Darby, Lloyd, Lasher, Maneggie, Thompson, Averigean. (bottom left) Lockard, Rose, Foster, Fawcett, Ash, Sample, (top center) Sports Editor Benkert with Dana Kelly, (bottom center) Lindsey, Balfour, Owens, Pairan, McGrath. (top right) Post streamliner Louden checks layout at Lawhead ' s print shop, (bottom right) Associate Editors Edwards and McKinven, Robertson, Mahrer, News Editor Cavallaro, and Associate Editor Wertman Poststyle the news. 152 Ohio. l HluenUUf, Podi NOBLE guinea pig of campus journa- lism this year was the Ohio Univer- sity Post. Years ahead of its time, the Post at first baffled students accustomed to conventional newspapers, late in the year achieved gradual and belated approval from readers. Brilliantly edited by Frank Louden, the Post got its new name (formerly Green and White) and format last Sep- tember, was cleanlined, reduced to tabloid size, acclaimed by prominent newspaper editors as one of the most progressive journals in American coL leges. The Post ' s new editorial policy included more pictures and cartoons than before, more features on campus personalities, news of fraternities, so- rorities, university affairs, dances, pro- jects, and departments. Post Business Manager Katherine Hull is the first coed ever to hold the position. (left) Circulation Manager Gilliland. (top center) Miller, Shoemaker, Klopfen- stine, Evans, (bottom center) Cohen, Heydick, Wenger, Advertising Manager Carr, Alice Mechem, William Mechem. (right) Business Manager Hull makes a deposit at the Students ' General Fund. VUJ9 W (top) In the press room at Woody ' s (Athens Printing Co.) are Associate Editors Robert Wertman and WiUiam Dunlea, who supervise the Ohioan ' s copy and makeup, (right) Associate Editors Rosemary McHale (women), Kurly MilHgan (art), and John Dengel (music). (upper left) Business Manager Robert Enyeart, who keeps seven editors inside a strict budget, and Collections Man- ager Jeanne Ruhl. (lower left) Associate Editors William Rose (sports) and Trudy Dickerson (photography). Unique among college magazines is the Ohioan ' s board of seven editors, who each month elect a chairman, jointly edit and produce the monthly journal. First three of the year ' s seven issues were edited by Howard Kahn, who resigned when the December issue was put to bed. The Ohioan ' s work was then departmentalized, and the seven editors took over. Innova- tions were their widespread use of color in the magazine, extensive picture cov- erage of life on the Ohio campus, terse, highly condensed, candid writing. Most notable of the Ohioan ' s articles was the Grade Your Professor poll featured in the February issue. Students gave letter grades and criticisms of pro- fessors, whose point averages were then published. Ohioan followed this with a poll allowing professors to name the best apple polishers among the students. OHIOAN staff members are: (top left) McDonald, Wiegle, Lemr, Finley, Weber, Mechem, Ruhl, Sheldon; (top center) Bower, Slusser, Chatlain, Kreckel, Dickson, Hopkins; (top right) Heller, Barden, Heydick, Pontius, Eller- man, Thomas; (bottom left) Howard Kahn, editor during the first semester; Shulman, Darlington, Thompson; (bot- tom, third) Martineau, Edwards, Pry, Ward, Margoles; (bottom right) Rey- nolds, Wagner, Demmy, Merkle. 155 Sigma Delta Chi NATIONAL men ' s honorary journalism fra- ternity is Sigma Delta Chi, which this year brought Jimmy Franck ' s orchestra, top OSU campus band, to Athens for the annual Press Cotillion in the Men ' s Gym. The group began the year with one member and three pledges, boosted its membership to nine actives and 15 pledges in time to continue its existence here. Tony Sarg ' s famous marionette show was brought to Memorial Auditorium by the group in April. Sigma Rho LOCAL honorary group for women journa- lism students is Sigma Rho. The group featured a caricature studio at the Press Cotillion, where dancers could be sketched by campus cartoonists. They cooperated with Sigma Delta Chi on a raffle during March. Prominent speakers from the Athens Messen- ger and other journalists addressed meetings of Sigma Rho this year. Delta Phi Delta ART appreciation is promoted on the campus by Delta Phi Delta, national art honorary. Ohio U ' s Iota chapter, installed in 1922, sponsors periodic exhibits, this year is producing an ex- hibition for the gallery in Edwin Watts Chubb Library, which will include work of Delta Phi Delta members and other students. Early in the fall, the organization gave a tea for freshman arts majors to acquaint them with the depart- ment. First Row: G. S. Lasher, R. W. Wild, Benkert, Rose, Poushey, Duckwall, Lewis, Slois, Eiforl. Gilliland, Linke, Spohn, Puc- kett, Poiron, Finley, Sample. Second Row: Foster, Fleischer, Eells, Fawcett, Shockleton, Gayer. Short, McHale, Strakol, Glass, Maneggie, Reed, Lasher, Hull. First Row: MilUgan, Miller, Biskup, E. M. Way, I. M. Work, Nicholson. Second Row: Mun- GS, H. WilHs, C. E. Bedford, Leonhart, Booth. 157 Standing: Duvendeck, Packard. Medicus, McCuUoch. Hoyle. Snyder, Cable. Gates, Spidell, Hamilton, Rosner. J. P. Wilson. Brelsford. Seated: Samson, Frashure, Foster. Abel. Home Ec Club, Phi Upsilon Omicron To bring instructors and students together outside the classroom and increase personal and professional knowl- edge of home economics is the purpose of the Home Econom- ics Club. Main project of the group this year was the keeping of a monthly budget by each member. Results were tallied with the budgets of other home economics organizations in the country and compiled for a report on the average spending of the college girl for the National Association of Home Eco- nomics Clubs ' convention in Cleveland. In April, the members of the Athens group attended the State Home Economics Clubs ' meeting at Ohio State Univer- sity in Columbus. A mother and daughter tea was presented for Mothers ' Weekend. An introductory tea at the beginning of the year honored the club ' s two new sponsors, Dr. Grace Steininger and Dr. Wilhelmina E. Jacobson. PRIMARY purpose of Phi Upsilon Omicron is to create a more wide- spread interest in home economics. This national, professional home eco- nomics fraternity bases membership upon scholarship, leadership, person- ality, and professional attitude. An important part of its yearly program is planning menus, preparing food, and serving tea and luncheons for various campus organizations. 158 Kindergarten _v- l W ' PHE Kindergarten-Primary Club was Jrrimary L 1UD l established in 1910 to develop inter- est and acquaint students with the early phase of teaching. In the fall, a tea was held for new members. The members made popcorn balls at their Christmas party, enjoyed a roller skating party in January. The club met once a month to discuss educational topics, and hear guest speakers. Principal speakers included Mrs. Evelyn Luchs, who spoke on Education in Europe, and Miss Dorothy Porterfield, librarian, who discussed children ' s books. Membership in the organization is open to anyone in the field of kindergarten-primary education. tli f- ' l. In Front; F. Cooper, Neigler, Buzard. R. Cooper. Skala. First Row: Shindeldecker. Haller. Ireland, Darlington. Williams. Wise. Mock. Klohs. Arnold. Second Row: Greenlees, War- ren, Sturm, Keller, Smith. Simerka. Hartman, Tingle, Dickinson. Ov ens, Davis, Browne, Gilchrist, Clark, Grib- ble, Mahan. Huck, Kempton, Stone. Allen. First Row; Hintz, Heldman, R. Cooper, Clark, Allen, McEl- henie. Frost, Reed. Snyder, Cook. Second Row: Seltzer, Wakim, Bowman. F. Cooper, Booth, Dosselt. Gadus, Owens, Uhl, Vamei. Skala. 159 . ' i% L , ifcf V ' MUSIC... Mr. Wil- liam R. Longstreet instructs crack student pianist Newman Powell . . .Mary Elizabeth Ellis, L. C. M i t c h e 1 1, a n d George Clark frolic in the faculty operetta lo- lanthe . . .Ohio Univer- sity Choir. . .Band Spon- sor Jane Dressel . . . The dynamic Concert Band at Cutler Hall ' s dedica- tion . . . String bass sec- tion of the University Or- chestra engrossed in Bach. X Li  v.V ;t l m v Music Instructor Grace M. Morley works with pupils at Rufus Putnam School. . . Mr. Allen R. Kresge illustrates a problem in harmony . . .Conductor of the Uni- versity Orchestra De- Forest Ingerham and Mr. J. E. Thackrey ex- amine a new score . . . Visiting organist Porter Heaps thrilled students at his public recital . . . Allegro ma non troppo. Glee Clubs INSTEAD of making their usual radio broadcast over WLW, the Men ' s and Women ' s Glee Clubs this year collaborated with the University Orchestra on Bohemian Girl . The Women ' s Glee Club gives a formal recital each spring, often sings in and around Athens. Tuxedo-clad glee-men gave a formal concert in Memorial Audi- torium in February. University Orchestra Unique in being composed of both faculty and student members, University Orchestra specializes in musicianship. This year it played for Bohemian Girl , gave a formal concert. Brilliant concert artists thrill campus OUTSTANDING musical events of the year are the several concerts presented by the Com- munity Concert Association, to which every student contributes through the A.L.E. fee. The concerts this season began with Igor Gorin, and included the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Robert Cassadesus, and Angna Enters. Dynamic Russian-born baritone Igor Gorin showed remarkable humor, unusual dramatic ability in his October concert. In November, the Cincinnati Symphony, directed by famed Eugene Goossens packed Memorial Auditorium for a sensa- tionally triumphant presentation. February brought sedate French master pianist Robert Cassadesus, (top left) Baritone Igor Gorin; whose program was almost entirely French num- (top right) Eugene Goossens, _ j unique concert was that of dance-mime conductor of the Cincinnati Sym- „ „, ,, . ,,, rp, i i_ ±- , r . n 1 (.X Angna Enters, One Woman theater who capti- phony Orchestra; (lower left) 1111,1 Dance-mime Angna Enters; vated, astonished, amused, and delighted her (lower right) Pianist Robert Cos- entranced audience, sadesus. 165 First Row: Flesher, Puckett, To- bias, Dwinell, Monter. Frische, Second Row: C. W. Jonssen, Whecrton, Evans, Withum W e n d 1 e r, S t o w e. K. E, Witzler. Third Row: McVicker Pritchard, Reed, Perrine, Ken ney, Thomas, Pace, Baesel, McMahon. Standing: Flesher, Pahner, Wheaton, Flanagan, Powell, T. Evans, W. Evans. Kittle, O ' Brien, Curtis, Squires, Col- lins, Wendell, Hlinka. At piano: Robert Casadesus. First Row: Stratemeyer, Wen- dellcen. Lama. Second Row: Lovell, Taylor. Marlatt, Cough- lin, McKay, Crawford. Third Row: Segale, Buchanan, Gro- deck, Christman. 166 Kappa Kappa Psi NATIONAL bandsmen ' s fraternity is Kappa Kappa Psi, whose chapter on the Ohio campus sets a good example for the rest of the band. It has helped in building the band into one of Ohio ' s best. The group presented the Band Dance last fall, where its sponsor, Jane Dressel, was introduced. Kay Kyser became an honorary member of the fraternity at the Junior Prom. Kappa Kappa Psi members must have a good knowledge and interest in music. Phi Mu Alpha PROFESSIONAL fellowship for those actively interested in music is provided by Phi Mu Alpha, men ' s honorary music fraternity. During the year a series of parties and dances was held in McGuffey Hall. April 28 was the annual initiation banquet at the Hotel Berry. In March, Phi Mu Alpha presented a joint recital with Sigma Alpha Iota and Kappa Kappa Psi to further coopera- tion between the musical clubs on the campus. Sigma Alpha Iota EACH month private musicales are held by Sigma Alpha Iota, national music honorary for women. Cooperating with the Women ' s Glee Club, the group brought promising young violinist Arthur Tavochnick to the campus in October. Each senior member gave a public recital in her chosen field during the latter part of this semester. At Christmas time, the club concluded its caroling program with breakfast at Dean Voigt ' s home. 167 u niuev ' sit Vk i eaiey ' NyfOST highly touted - ' - J- dramatic presenta- tion of a year plentifully subjected to high-powered publicity and promotion was the world premier of Dr. John Erskine ' s new play, Henry Disarms, produced April 24 and 25 under the supervision of Dr. Robert Gates Dawes, director of the School of Dramatic Art. It was pleasant to have a premier here, and the stu- dents producing it did an excellent job. But the Ers- kine drama wasn ' t particularly outstanding or remarkable. (top left) Dawes and Er- skine at rehearsal. The mildly interesting play re- ceived the University The- ater ' s best efforts in pro- duction, acting, staging. (second) The cast in cos- tume, (third) Miss Mary Florence Hyde applies make-up to a Henry Dis- arms actress, (fourth) Famed Athens artist John Rood, who designed the novel sets. II ik- University Theater mem- bers diligently applied themselves and the facili- ties of the dramatic depart- ment in preparing and presenting the Erskine premier. Erskine personal- ly assisted in the casting and directing. But many critics of the play felt that he failed to put into it the satire and humor preva- lent in his novels. (top pictures, right) Mr. Vincent Jukes, instructor in dramatic art and speech, works on the fragmen- tary realism settings de- signed for Henry Dis- arms. (third) Miss Mary Arbenz with Bill Smith and Jack Fulton, character actors in Henry Disarms. The plot was concerned with Hen- ry Thoreau and Walden Pond. (fourth) Crack stage elec- trician Earl Kerman man- ipulates the switchboard for the play ' s lighting ef- fects, (fifth) Dramatic Art Instructor Charles Rowan checks rigging. • • piau oj ike uea Debaters Members of the first squads of tfie Men ' s and Women ' s De- bating Teams are pictured here with one of their trophies. First row: Fuller, Lindsey, Stevenson, Fuetterer, Davis, Wilson, Nelson, L. C. Stoats, Zook, Lieberman. Second Row: Schultz, Myers. Thespians Athena photographers attended the Choregi reception following formal initiation, (top left) Tripp, Mullett, Cromwell, Lyons, E. House, Plaskoff. (top right) Torok, Fay, Meister, Gray, Scipione, Harris, Pickard, Clark, (bottom left) Reid, Terrant, Eakin, R. Miner, Demmy, Moskowitz, Laf- ferty, Resch. (bottom right) Gas- kins, Hagen, Wiegman, Carson, Biskup. Choregi T_rONORARY invitational dramatics society is Choregi, com- ■' - ■' - posed of a score of outstanding campus thespians directed by Mr. Vincent Jukes. The group this year presented Dickens ' Christmas Carol in December, sponsored the Men ' s and Wo- men ' s Poetry Interpretation Contests and the Women ' s Prose Inter- pretation Contest. Choregi took charge of the Dramatics Day for high schoo l seniors, and the formal reception for the premier here of John Erskine ' s Henry Disarms. 170 Convocations, convocators SURPRISE of the year was the unexpected last-minute convoca- tion booking in October of H. V. Kahenborn (lower right), famed radio news commentator, who brought intimate information on the war in Europe. Rev. Harold Cooke Phillips (top right) convorated in November during a two-day Religious Emphasis program, was followed in the same month by Madame LaBastille (top, third) with a lecture on Latin American life and culture. In January, Fay Cooper-Cole (top left) debunked race superiority preach- ments. February brought Henry C. Wolfe (top, second), author of The German Octopus , to take up the European situation where Kahenborn left off. In March, Mitchell Darling (bottom left), blind but not unseeing, keynoted the job seekers sessions. Many other interesting speakers not pictured here were also on the convoca- tion schedule. Twas a grand dance, the Band Dance, all and sundry having said so. — OUPost. ThetaChi ' s barn frolic at the Armory was typical of the fall season. Dane e-of-t h e-year for 1939 w a s t h e Military Ball, where Duke Elling- ton divided his time be- tween swing and auto- graphs. Livestock is a barn dance feature. ii Let ' s Dance! FAVORITE extra-curricular activity at Ohio University is ball- room dancing. Practically every student participates, nearly every one has a different style of terpsichore. Jitterbuggery had its share of the limelight this season, but campus maestro Rex Koons noted a definite change toward more conservative social behavior. Unusually rich was the year ' s schedule of name bands, with Duke Ellington, Kay Kyser, and Larry Clinton playing on the campus. Publicity stunters for all-campus dances had a boom year, among other things dropped free tickets from airplanes, played records over telephones, blasted the campus with loud- speaker ballyhoo. 172 V -p THIS year many of Ohio U ' s numerous dances, especially those of Greek groups, had unusual themes. Typical of the movement toward novelty was the Pi Beta Phi come-dressed-as-your-favorite- phonograph-record-dance. University band members took a postman ' s holiday, enjoyed the music of Shively- Yates and their orchestra at the annual Band Dance. Highspot of the evening was the presentation of the new band sponsor (a species of campus queen). Former sponsor Virginia Mullett is here complimenting new band sponsor Jane Dressel (right). Nearly every organized housing unit and large extra-curricular group likes to have at least one formal dance per year, frequent- ly has two. Pictured at right are frolickers at the Men ' s Dorm Winter Formal, which came near enough Valentine ' s Day to have a hearts and snow theme. By passing through the mammoth heart, dancers get mistletoe privileges. Important all-campus formal was the Military Ball, at which Duke Ellington pleased a packed Men ' s Gym. At the Sigma Pi Carnival, confetti rained for three hours. Sig Pis and dates romped through Athens streets at intermission. (left) two opponents ol Ohio come down the stretch in the mile relay, (right) Eli Hirsi- maki, blond Bobcat shot-putter, heaves the 16-pound oval for a first place in the meet with Cincinnati and Dayton. Ohio Wesleyan 53 Ohio 78 West Virginia 46V2 Ohio 79y2 Muskingum 29V2 Ohio. . . 100 2 Miami 96 ' 2 Ohio 34 2 Dayton ... 28 Vi Cincinnati . . 30 Ohio ... 1 02 2 (left) Leo Wilderman broad jumps in the Miami meet, (right) a West Virginia 100- yard dash man. (bottom, left) Start of the dash, (bottom, right) An Ohio Wesleyan pole- vaulter clears the bar to win this event against Ohio. 174 Track, 1939 BOASTING three wins and only one loss, Ohio University ' s track team was this year one of the best in the school ' s history. Winning three out of the four dual meets and placing first in the triangular meet, the Bobcats showed strength in all events. Setting stadium records, Waldo Terrel established a new mark in the high hurdles, and Si Johnson and Tod Mulone tied in the 100-yard dash at ten-seconds flat. High point man for this season was Waldo Terrel with a total of 67 ' 2 points from vic- tories in both the high and low hurdles and in the broad jump. In second place was shot-putter and discus-thrower Ed Kasputis with 51 points. Anderson and Johnson, mile and dash men respectively, tied for third place with 35 points each. Graduation is takng many veterans, but new track material shows great promise for next year. ■■Wr First Row: Rogers, White, Cunningham. J. Hirsimaki. Hoover, Powell, Terrel, McDonald, Malone. Second Row: W. H. Herbert, R. Crane, E, Hirsimaki, Anderson, Krumbiegel, Stewart, Kasputis, Supance, Johnson, Sugar. Third Row: T. Olson, Craun, Green, Mekedis, Dumanski. Hicks, Risaliti, Fn- elman. U % jf k ' r. , ' S Raqueteers, 1939 WHEN the 1939 tennis season was over for the Ohio University netters, it w as officially over for Le Vaughn Steinhauser, Edmund Tracey Hartmcn, and Ben Laskin. These men were lost to this year ' s squad because of graduation. Returning to form the nucleus of Coach Dana Kelly ' s squad for this year are Bill Rose, letterman and number two man last season, Glenn Engelke, who saw enough service to earn a letter, and Herman Burstein. Last season ' s record of five victories and six losses can readily be accounted for when one looks at the schedule. In the victory column went triumphs against Marietta twice, Youngstown College, Capital Univer- sity, and Dayton University. In the loss side of the season ' s record were defeats at the hands of Western Reserve University, Ohio State University, Western State Teachers of Michigan, Ohio Wesleyan, and two stinging losses to the high-powered Miami University courtsters. Hartinan Laskin Rose Steinhauser D. Kelly 176 First Row: Monlgomery, Kish, Wierby, Baumholtz, Doubler, Farroni, Carroll, Gruber, Smith. Second Row: H. Wise, Novak, Frey, Haynes, Coen, Havrilla. Gander, Maiden, Swaykus, Peer, D. C. Peden. Baseball, 1939 LED by the sluggi ng of Ernie Havrilla, Ohio Univer- sity ' s baseball team closed its 1939 season with a record of eleven wins and nine losses. The slugging of the Bobcats was an impressive feature. In 20 games 178 runs were scored, averaging 8.9 runs per game. The leaders in the clubbing department were: Hav- rilla with an average of .406, Wierby was next with a .320 average, Charles Coen was a close third with .311, and Kish and Baumholtz in the order named with .281 and .271 averages respectively. The team batting average was .275. Fielding honors were taken by Fred Novak, who came through the season without an error, Havrilla was next with .956, and Baumholtz had a neat .925 average. Farroni, Montgomery, and Coen had .916, .912, and .902 averages in the order named. 177 Top left, Sig Pi Harry Wilson reaches for the resin as Bill Kuhner (seated, hands crossed) watches. Sigma Pi placed third in the fraternity intramural bowling league after beating Phi Kappa in the play- offs. (upper center) Ted Evans anxiously waits for a re- turn ball from one of the many entrants in the Men ' s Union paddle tennis tournament. Evans was nosed out by Herman Burstein in this match. Bill Rose won the tourney. (upper right) Bill Ensminger and Alice Ellerman take the rope across the Athens State Hospital pond for the annual freshman-sophomore tug-o-war, won this year by the freshmen, who showed remarkable spirit and force. The caption on page 50 should read Class of nineteen forty-three won the frosh-soph tug-o-war. 178 Intramurals INTRAMURAL events this year J- were colorful, spirited. Delta Tau Delta copped the fraternity touch football championship, and the Blue Blazers won in the independent-dormitory league. In the dormitory basketball league. Cable upset pre-season dope, beat last year ' s Dunkle Duke champs. The Buckeyes won in the independent league. Pi Kappa Alpha took the bowling title after a heated playoff series with Phi Kappa Tau. Pi Kappa Alpha ' s both A and B teams took volleyball championships. The Invincibles were head men in the independent volleyball league. OPPOSITE page (lower left) Joseph P. Trepp (left) and Carl J. House, (lower right) Delta Tau Delta players rejoice after winning both the class A and B intramural basketball championships. This page (top) an action photo of the annual frosh- soph tug-o-war. Theoretically, sophomores should dunk the less experienced freshmen, but this year the upperclassmen were soaked in the asylum pond. (bottom) Carl Nessley, one of the few three-pointers in the Ohioan Grade Your Professors Poll, instructs a student on the horizontal bars. Tumbling and ap- paratus feats were demonstrated between halves of home basketball games. 179 COEDS enjoy showing their she- woman hardiness at the WAA Cabin. One group brings in wood while another waits for dinner. Sarah Hatcher, associate professor of physical welfare, checks the archery poise of her students. Rob- in Hoodettes delight in target prac- tice. Girls limbering on apparatus get bodily exercise similar to that in swimming. Charlotte LaTourrette, instructor in physical welfare, as- sists. Students learn national customs, enjoy more fun and play than in most courses for credit in the folk dancing sessions, many of them mixed. 180 ANOTHER scene in the WAA Cabin at Mechanicsburg, a mile and a quarter from the cam- pus. Coeds enjoy listening to the cabin radio. Women ' s Sports The oversized bathtub in the base- ment of the Women ' s Gym limits Ohio U ' s aquatic activities, but be- ginning swimmers have expert supervision. Again the WAA Cabin is the set- ting for a coed outing. Girls frolic on the hillside, toast luscious marshmallows in the open fire. Well-equipped courts are provided for badminton, one of the many varied sports available in women ' s physical welfare activities. 181 CHnet ret cz i ynn The short and sunny mojiths of spring are here. The air is soft ; the goldai tongues of hells Coni ' erse through all the quiet days; the dells Are green and mystery-filled ; the floivers appear. In every laugh, soft and happy like the spring, In every gentle face, in smiling eyes, In gayety — in all these, friendship lies, So confident and light, a precious thing. A friendship and the spring are much the same In constancy and beauty. Friaxds are made And seldom lost, though oftm parted hmg. And so with this warm spring, which lately came; It will returri; and should a friendship fade Sometime 171 spring it shall again groiv strotig. 183 Pto ' 5 Paij • • THE day begins at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Donald E. Church when dog Rusty wakes son Russell. Church ' s live on Pine Place, Rusty sleeps in a basket beside Russell ' s bed. University freshman Bob Sanders lives with the Church ' s, earns room and board helping at meal-times. Mrs. Church ]s an excellent cook with orig- inal ideas, prepares all the meals. Dr. Church and Russell leave for school. In the classroom he straightens out an ambiguous test question. His courses m business statistic s are usu- ally crowded, his attitude is informal. Dr. Church ' s assistant. Bob Miner (left) enjoys a good joke with Church and Dr. Glen Parker, economics in- structor, in their Ewing Hall office. Genial, nonchalant Dr. Church is well- liked. 184 • • Pt. (2kutclt Qt at TIME out for lunch. Dr. Church leaves Ewing Hall with faculty friends Mr. E. E. Ray, Dr. Carl Denbow, and Dr. Carl O. Hanson. Afternoons are usually spent at home or in the library. Dr. and Mrs. Church often study together. He received his Ph.D. from Michigan last year, she holds an A.M. in psychology from Ohio U. Before dinner, Russ and his dad run off a few chemistry experiments. Dad finds something interesting under the microscope. He is devoted to his son and wife, spends most of his time with them. The Doctor carves one of Mrs. C ' s de- licious roasts; Russell likes lots of milk. At the Sig Pi Carnival, the Church ' s mingle with students, enjoy themselves immensely. 185 I 11 - ou tkeu look FACULTY friends gather for a short bull session. Major C. H. Plank, Sgt. Sampselle, Dr. J. B. Harrison, Mr. Ray- mer McQuiston. (right) Dr. W. A. Matheny, professor of botany and cur- ator of the museum. Mr. Lawrence Goldberg, technical as- sistant in zoology, and Dr. Margaret T. Hampel. (upper right) Instructors Dor- othy Seabaugh, Josephine V. Snook, Sybil Gilmore, Doris Sponseller. (lower right) Mr. Evan L Jones, Dr. Darrell B. Green, Dr. Carl O. Hanson, Dr. F. L. Shoemaker. Misses Virginia F. Harger, Florence Wagner, Alice E. Lagerstrom, at the steps below Ewing Hall, (right) Instruc- tors Don W. Paden, E. F. MacDonald, Edward H. Davidson. Faculty men off duty are Mr. A. W. Boetticher (nearly cut off at the edge). Dr. Herschel T. Gier, Mr. F. Theodore Paige, Mr. Neil Thomas, Dr. J. B. Heidler, Dr. William H. Kirchner, Mr. Thomas N. Hoover, (right) Mr. W. H. Fenzel. 186 Itltout a book U i ANOTHER informal session includes Dr. Edward F. Wilsey, Mr. E. H. Gaylord, Mr. O. E. McClure, Mr. Don B. Miller, Dr. Clyde E. Cooper, Major Perry L. Baldwin, (right) Dr. Edward C. Class. Dr. Francis P. Bundy. (right) Dr. Carl A. Frey, Dr. R. A. Foster, Mr. John E. Ed- wards, Dr. Oliver Martin, Mr. M. T. Ver- million. In addition to their many casual meetings, faculty members have several formal social functions of their own each year. The Faculty Club pool room provides recreation for the men of the faculty. Mr. Thomas Larrick, Dr. A. B. Sias, Mr. Raymond M. Slutz (a former faculty man) at billiards, (right) Dr. Donald Roberts. Dr. Wilhelmina E. Jacobson. (right) Bridge players in front are Dr. Gaige B. Paulsen, Mr. Gifford Blyton, Dr. T. C. Scott. In back. Dr. H. R. lolliffe. Dr. Edwin T. Hellebrandt, Dr. Lewis A. Ondis, Professor C. N. Mackinnon, Dr. Frank B. Dilley. 187 loo Lata to cLa55l ' ku High water GRADUATING seniors will have two floods to remember. The ones in the spring of ' 37, and the spring of ' 40. Overflowing waters of the Hocking River covered the south road into Athens. Trucks pulled cars through the flood. Personalities Saul Cohen, who has nearly a straight- A average spends much time in the library, where Miss Amy Allen assists him in finding books. As members of Phi Eta Sigma, Cohen and Greenwood investigated the library situation. Esthetic set-builder Arvin Knisely (far right) attends Capehart concerts daily. He often lies flat on the floor to enjoy them more fully. 188 Cy iC nainQQt5 BIGGEST event of the year for the OU Engineers was their 1940 Engineers Ball, chairmanned by Harold Anders, and backed by every engineer on the campus. Cramer, Stoll, E. F. Wilsey, Algeo, Croun, Barnes, Gahm, Russ, Paine, Jackson, McCune, Conrad, Catanzaro, Morrison. Larry Clinton and his celebrated or- chestra highlighted the Engineers Ball, as transit wielders bid for campus social honors. Dance profits went into a loan fund to be available for needy senior engineers. Front Row: Nagel, Ogg. Stone, Stilgenbauer, Anders. Back Row: Senzik, Sauers. Hood, Bonhart, Crawford. Prospective freshman engineers are assigned club members as big brothers to advise them. The group has several picnics, an annual smoker. Speakers, motion pictures, and other campus groups are featured at meetings of the organization. 189 CLOSE PERSOIV AL COOI EIIATIOi between the members of the Athena Staff and E. Gayle Fitzsimmons, Indeco service representative, has made it possible to produce some outstanding Athenas for the last several years. The 1940 Athena, with Art Sherman guiding its editorial destinies, and John Todd controlling the purse strings, shows the result of a happy combination of good fellows with a de- sire to do a good piece of work. It is a privilege to be associ- ated with the production of this book. INDIANAPOLIS ENGRAVING COMPANY, INC. INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA (SjJujyi OhJL jymj SuinJim iM. of Qjj,ayOilmDf A. aM(( S dujot HiMjjmj 190 dvetu et Acme Dry Cleaners Antorietto ' s Athens Lumber Co. Athens Printing Co. Athens Steam Laundry- Bank ' s F. J. Beasley Co. J. L. Beckley Son The Bennett Co. Blackmores Booty ' s Broughton ' s Burnett and Smith Co. Burr, Patterson and Auld Co. Cedar Point-on-Lake Erie Coca Cola College Inn Columbus So. Ohio Elec. Co. Connett ' s Greenhouse Cornell ' s Cornwell and Co. W. B. Drake Fred R. Beasley The Gray Printing Co. Paul C. Gillilan Hotel Berry Imperial Ice Cream Co. Indianapolis Engraving Co. Kingsport Press, Inc. Kroger Grocery Baking Co. The Lamborn Studio Logan ' s Mechem Shoe Co. Milldeck Shoe Store Ohio Beauty Shop Ohio Dry Cleaners Rilla Dress Shop Sportland Recreation The C. D. Shafer Co. J. J. Sisler Stack ' s Cash Market Stedman ' s Summer ' s Sunnybank ' s Taylor ' s Store University Dress Shop Wheaton Hardware Co. Wonder Bar Woodworth ' s Wyckoff ' s Beauty Parlor The Zenner Co. W. B. DRAKE, JEWELER (juality A tTc j.i K jA-e 3 NortK Court Street Robert L. Wertman, Athena crilic, is a stickler for style in publications. This wild look is the result of a recent brain storm on The Choir Invisible. THE COLLEGE inn Restaurant Open Day and Night Try Our Home Cooking and Pastries ATHENS, OHIO Clean, Neat Clothing . . the result of sending your cleaning and pressing work to us DIAL 586 for prompt service 32 West Union Street ACME DRY CLEANERS CEDAR POINT- ON -LAKE ERIE The Finest Vacation Resort on the Great Lakes 1940 Season . . . Early in June to Labor Day DANCING nightly in beautiful new Ballroom to nationally known Name Bands . ALL SPORTS, including Tennis, Boating, Fishing, Golf, Bridle Paths, etc. • SWIMMING . . . You ' ll thrill over its superb, white sandy beach. • VACATIONS . . . One thousand comfortable outside rooms at Hotel Breakers. Moderate rates. Excellent meals. Easily reached via Ohio Route 2, U.S. 6. On Lake Erie, midway between Toledo and Cleveland. Rail and bus connections at Sandusky. Steamers from Cleveland and Detroit. Cedar Point-on-Lake Erie, Sandusky, Ohio Doc Kinney visits the A;heiia oliice daily, ccUects dirt and wastepaper, leaves with a friendly smile. No staff could function properly without him • CANDy • CIGARETTE BOOTY ' S — NEXT TO ECA T CAIl — BLACKMORES FOOD . . FUN . . AND FROLIC 44 S. Court Street THE ATHENS LUMBER COMPANY Since 1890 Athens Ohio Manual Training Lumber School Decorating Supplies OUR BEST . . TO Tin: IMTILK x TIO S OF OHIO rxivi:K iT ATHENS PRINTING CO. Printers of The Ohioan 93 E. Mill Sg. AlllC ' llN. oil Ml LOGAN ' S AT THE GATE UJflV OF THE CflmPUS BOWL Shopping at Logan ' s has been an Ohio University tradition for over tv enty years. For books, supplies, and gifts, come to Logan ' s. LOGAN ' S ATHENS, OHIO for Fun tMMtii H €ilih on Four new Brunswick Ten-Pin Alleys and Four Duck-Pin Alleys. tit SPORTLAXD Ri:C REATIOX 90 North Court Street Compliments of Jm IifiL Long famous as the most outstanding dollar store in Athens. TAYLORS STORE COURT STREET Francis Tirella, Athena ' s top salesman, is on the bail. Besides selling more Athenas than any other sales- man, Tirella helped considerably with propaganda. Complete Fountain Service • Cigarettes • Popcorn • Candy Before or After the Show Drop In to NEXT TO THE ATHENA THEATRE Burnett- Smith Styles particularly for par- ticular voung men. Go to Burnett - Smith for the latest in clothing, shoes, and haberdashery. Kuppeiiheimer Griffon J. P. Smith Wilson Brothers Beau Brummel  (frr..R«« ' Burnett-Smith Home of Good Clothes JoumaHsts Smiley and Harris are well-known to stu- dents in the School of Journalism who have their laboratory work with these men at the Messenger. GRflDUflTES . . . ti Your parents will want to stay at the Berry during graduation week. Phone us now for reservations. They will like our restaurant too . . . PHONE 578 ' i nr Kxffll ' nt ' t ' in l trirtiiis The Ijawwuham Studia Ask for BANK ' S by Name ICE CREAM and DAIRY PRODUCTS BANK ' S 73 East State St. St vie 111 snoe. ' tor men aiul women for an ' occasion [ O X. L oiirt Snoe Store sfsiii© la. ©siagiLii A Quarter Century of Dependable Service FORD - MERCURY - LINCOLN-ZEPHYR J(A, QioiPuibu QolkqiabL . . . or jnv rV omen s wear to fit any h I e occasion come to the tiliiircliifi ■|oi C lothes ol (Quality 63 South Court Street Becbley ' s . . . the store for Universit y men . . . OFFER Hart, Schoffner (f Morx and Varsity Town Clothes Florsheim and Freemon Shoes Stetson and Stylepark Hats Arrow Shirts Beau Brummel Ties Interwoven Socks J. L. Beckley 6 Son ; Un Si B FRATERNHY BADGES, lJ| ' B ' ml H DANCE FAX ' ORS AND F B k H PROGRAMS, RINGS, Bf ' Hl Ej GIFTS, TROPHIES furnlsnea by America s oldest manufacturing fraternltv jewelers Mr. Lawrence Goldberg, technical assistant in zoology, spends many hours in research work as do other faculty members, (inset) Esophagus of a reptile. BUR PAllERSON AND AI ' f .D CO. FLOWERS FoT SummeT, Winter, Spring, and Foil W ' atcK lor MEL WELSH, BURR-PAT man wKo visits Ohio U. regularly SUNNYBANK ' S TEDMA A Meal without Meat is a Meal Incomplete ' nsurhassed lor COualitv and Flavor THE STEDMAN COMPANY ATHENS, OHIO U. S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED ESTABLISHMENT No. u6 Dean J. R. Patrick and Prof. A. H. Marquis in academic procession. Dr. Patrick, professor of psychology, fias served this past year as an associate dean of men. We ' re still operating on the same stand- ard we started with over seventy years ago. The best in all lines Benrus Gruen — Hamilton watches — Gorham 1847 Com- munity Silver Sheaffer pens Seth Thomas clocks and other fine merchandise. CORNWELL It s an art — aiul a science The art ol suiting the right hair style to an inaiviaiial s leatures, ana the science ol knowing how to set anci ■wave hair. l_onie in ana be convinced yckoff s iBeanity irarlor MARIE VVYCKOFF KATHLEEN LONG 38 W. WASHINGTON ST. DIAL 677 TRe Cream of All Ice Creams l- )  L- :l ;v:-ir-.; H H wl l F ' ' d ■1 L ignts are Inenas ol stuoents and townspeople . . . y Q vant stiinents and townspeople to oe Iriena.s ol tne COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY Athens ' Only Complete Department Store i N N E R ' S W FATON ARDWARE PLUMBING-HEATING 32 SOUTH COURT STREET i ZI CORNELL ' FEATURE WOMEN ' S WEAR CORNELL ' S S IN THE MODERN MODE DRESSES HOSIERY SWEATERS COSTUME JEWELRY S. COURT ST. ONLY AT KROGER ' S CAN YOU PURCHASE COUNTRY CLUB FINER FOODS Summer ' s holds the record for having the newest and best recordings in town. All musical needs may be filled at MER ' S SISLER DRY GOODS •Window shades •Mohawk broadloom carpets •Venetian blinds 42 S. Court Athens, Ohio The PAUSE at Howard Hall Coca-Cola in Bottles  Attention ! ! lUHEn VOU lUHHT THE BEST flSK VOUR GROCER FOR LEADWAY FOOD PRODUCTS LIAPWAY FQQPS, INC.. CHICA©0 Wholesale Distributors The C. D. Shafer Company Athens Nelsonvllle ■GLikouah ipecialtu out iiaecialtii petmanent urairina - ure te nil I tretu ptoua a A out teputation not ine nine it in all ijtti o Iteautu aidi Phone 904 1 7 W. Union St. VCCDWCCTH $ Distinctive College Footwear and Women ' s Sportswear on Court Street Dr. C. L. Dow, associate professor of geography and geology, is in charge of the OU Weather Bureau. His batting average on prediction is very high. The finest, most modern, and most complete store of its kind in Athens lioi iiK alsi nti ' irouiqnCovi 3 Ice Cream Dairy Products 55 Years ' Friendship with Ohio University People Prove Our ReUabiUty cX Oi). QonnsdL Qo. ' Southeastern Ohio ' s Oldest Florist l VanJie ' i at 24 W. UNION STREET Athens Steam Laundry Quality Laundering combined with speedy service Phone 834 76 A . Court St. Bob Swift, Athens Airport instructor, is shown here with one of the students in the new fHght training course sponsored by the Civil Aeronautics Authority. Ohio We clean clothes cleaner 66 N. COURT ATHENS, OHIO Call 617 r€€i vrAC 6 .V ... of style, ' .rJ HH distinction - - and quality. 1 Bl ftlftl. .- % - mm for t le dis- Rita Burns and Dorothy Michael are important cogs in Ihe work at the dean of men ' s office. Miss Bums knows most of the men students enrolled at OU. criminating student . . . Don ' t Lose Contact! ■Subscribe to the MECHEM ffkbo lAnivsiAAihf fioAt SHOE COMPANY 14 SOUTH COURT STREET Student tri-weekly publication KINGSPORl tkc PRESS, . . . ixvj i 1 INC. CON PAN ' ♦ • This book is bound in a Millers and Wholesalers Kingskraft Cover manu- Grocers factured by the Kingsport • Press, Inc., Kingsport, Tenn., producers of fine 93 W. Union St. covers for all purposes. Athens, Ohio Omen, the bobcat, has left Ohio University for the Cleveland Zoo. The 1940 Athena sponsored a series of camera hikes last fall for campus shutterbugs. IR THE BEST IN QUALITY FOODS STACK ' S CASH MARKET Patronize the STUDENT GRILL Operated and supported by Ohio University students. Bennett s have a reputation in Athens . . . for the finest in ice-cream and all dairy products. For your next order . . . phone BENNETT ' S 76 E. State Phone 880 • Since 1892, THE ATHENA, Ohio University ' s Yearbook, has given students, and alumni a picture of each school year bound in one complete volume. THOUSANDS have leafed the pages of past volumes THOUSANDS are leafing the pages of this volume THOUSANDS more will leaf the pages of future volumes . . . Join the parade! Be a subscriber to ' Le =d-tlt Ohio UniiiersUy ' s Official Student Yearbook ' ena college parade You ' ll find Rilla ' s clothes an inspiration to your creative efforts. Soft colors - - exquisite textures - - step in Rilla ' s and ask. to see the new clothes - - then feel the difference . RILLA DRESS SHOP 74 WEST UNION STREET Complete Satisfaction in Service . . . Economy . . . Quality at Gillilaii is Jewelry oat L tiiUecA Thomas R. Biddle Chairman E. C. Eikenberry Vice Chairman George C. Parks Secretary T. H. Biddle Evan J. Jones Thomas R. Biddle . . Fred W. Crow E. C. Eikenberry. . . Charles D. Hopkins. Arthur C. Johnson. . Thomas J. Davis. . . . . . . .Athens . . . .Athens . .Pomeroy . .Camden . . . .Athens .Columbus .Cincinnati Charles E. Holzer Gallipolis Gordon K. Bush Athens F. F. Young Lowell J. O. Mc Williams Cleveland George G. Hunter Ironton Earl C. Shively Columbus James E. Kinnison Canton E. N. Dietrich, Director of Education (Ex Officio) I .. - - H. J. Dickerson, ' 11 President Willis H. Edmund, ' 28 Vice President William H. Fenzel, ' 18 Treasurer Clark E. Williams, ' 21 Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Dr. W. F. Copeland, ' 02 Mrs. Olive Cameron Murch, ' 16 Ralph F. Beckert, ' 23 Wilma L. Wyne, ' 25 Edwin E. Higgins, ' 25 H. J. Dickerson 206 s. entct 1 1 VI I Li ej Key To Degrees (tndicated under individual portraits) AB Bachelor of Arts BFADA Bachelor of Fine Arts in Dramatic Art BFAM Bachelor of Fine Arts in Music BFAPAA Bachelor of Fine Arts in Paintinq and Allied Arts BS Bachelor of Science BSA Bachelor of Science in Agriculture BSAE Bachelor of Sc ence in Architectural Engineering BSCE Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering BSC Bachelor of Science in Commerce BSEd Bachelor of Science in Education BSEE Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering BSHEc Bachelor of Science in Home Economics BSIE Bachelor of Science in Industrial Engineering BSJ Bachelor of Science in Journalism BSSS Bachelor of Science in Secretarial Studies MA Master of Arts MEd Master of Education MFA Master of Fine Arts MS Master of Science Mary J. Agnesi, Youngslown. Mortar Board 4, vice president 4; Psi Chi 2. 3, 4, vice president 4; Kappa Delta Pi 3, 4; Alpha Kappa Delta 3, 4; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4, sub-cabinet 2, cabinet 3. council 4; Senior Women ' s Council 4; Boyd Hall House Council 2, 3. Maynard J. Aldridge, Baltic. Phi Tau Theta 3, pledge president 3; Delta Sigma Chi 4, president 4. Doris L. Allen, Cleveland. Home Economics Club 3, 4, president 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron 3, 4, chaplain 4; Zoology Club 3; Western Reserve University 1; Senior Women ' s Council 4. Harold B. Anders. Jackson. Pi Epsilon Mu 2, 3, 4, president 3; O U Engineers 2, 3, 4, treasurer 3, president 4; OU Flying Bobcats 4. Robert H. Anderson. Newark. Track 2, 3, 4; Cross Country 2, 4; Varsity O 4; QUIA. Louise Anton, Monongahela, Pa. Robert L. Arrington, Gallipolis. Carlton R. Asher, Lima. Phi Delta Theta 3, 4, vice president 4; Junior Class president 3; J Club 3; Blue Key 3, 4; L ' AUiance Fran- caise 1, 2; Green White 1, 2; University Theater 1, 2; Senior Ball Committee 4; Student Union Committee 2. Raymond H. Baer, Sharon, Pa. Margaret Hair, Steubenville. WAA 1, 2, 3. 4; Flying O 2, 3, presi- dent 4; Dance Club 2, 3, 4; YWCA 1, 2, 3. 4; Lindley Hall athletic manager 4. Mary L. Baker, New Matamoras. YWCA; Kindergarten-Primary Club; WAA; Lindley Hall Freshman Advisory Committee. Paul A. Baldy. Rendville. Sigma Pi 2, 3, 4; Pershing Rifles 1. 2; Officers Club 3; Scabbard and Blade 4; Military Ball Committee 3; Newman Club 4. Richard L. Barber, North East, Pa. Green White 1, 2; University Band 2. 3, 4; Delta Tau Delta 2, 3, 4; Ohioan 1, 2, 3; Der Deutsche Verein 3, 4; Philosophy Club 2, 3, 4, vice president 3, 4; J Club 3, 4; Torch 4. Richard L. Barbor, Wellington. Pi Epsilon Mu 2, 3, 4; Football 1: OU Engineers 2, 3, 4. Betty Borger, Piketon. Pi Beta Phi 2, 3, 4, treasurer 3; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4; WAA 1, 2; Athena 3. Earl C. Barnes, Brilliant. Freshman Debate 1; Wrestling 2; OU Engineers 2, 3, 4. treasurer 4; Pi Epsilon Mu 2, 3, 4, vice president 3. 4; AIEE 3, 4, president 4. James Bartlett, Clarksburg, W. Va. Delta Tau Delta 2, 3, 4, secretary 4; Men ' s Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Phi Mu Alpha 2, 3; University Choir 2, 3; Wesley Foundation 1. 2, 3; Phi Tau Theta 1, 2, 3; Wesley Players 1, 2: Green White 2, 3; Ohio University Post 4; Campus Activities Board 3. Virginia C. Becker. Ridgefield Park. N. J. Albert Bcckerman, Canton. Hillel Club 4, vice president 4. Joseph F. Bell, Circleville. Beta Theta Pi 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramural Manager 3; Beta Pi 4, president 4; Hygeia Club 1, 2, 3, secretary 2, president 3; Delta Pi Alpha 2. 3, vice president 3; Pi Chi Epsilon 2, 3, 4; Football 1. Richard C. Below, Lakewood. William J. Benkert. Piqua. Green White 1, 2, 3; Ohio University Post 4. sports editor 4; Athena 2. 3; Sigma Delta Chi 2, 3, 4, presi- dent 4; Pershing Rifles 1, 2: Newman Club 3, 4. treasurer 3, 4; I Club 3, 4; Blue Key 3, 4; Torch 4; Senior Baseball Manager; Junior Prom Committee 3; Varsity O; Sigma Pi 1.2, 3, 4, herald 3. first counselor 4, Emerald correspondent, historian. Robert Stewart Bishop. Johnstown. Kappa Alpha Beta 4. Emil J. Biskup, Cleveland. Delta Phi Delta 2, 3, 4, president 4; Choregi 4; Men ' s Glee Club 3, 4; Playshop 3; Freshman Track 1; Pershing Rifles 1. Hugh K. Black. New Martinsville, W. Va. Beta Psi 3; Kappa Kappa Psi 1, 2; Scabbard and Blade 4; University Band 1. 2, 3, 4, treasurer 4, Bruce R. Blake, Caldwell. French Club 1, 2, 3, 4, president 3; Classical Club 4; OUIA 3, 4; Playshop 1, 2, 3; Hispanic Club 3, 4; Wesley Players 1, 2, 3, 4; Phi Tau Theta 1, 2; Athena 4. Mary Louise Blaschok, Toronto. Eta Sigma Phi; Reserve Dance Club; YWCA; WAA; Classical Club; Woman ' s League Assembly 3: Newrmn Club. Leon Blumenthal. New London, Conn. Beta Psi 4; Hillel Club 4. Martha H. Bowman, Chesterhill. Phi Upsilon Omicron 3, 4, marshal 3; Home Economics Club 3, 4. Martha J. Boyd, Lakewood. Zeta Tau Alpha I, 2, 3, 4, treasurer 4; Kappa Phi 1, 2. 3; YWCA 1. 2. 3; WAA 1, 2, 3; Zoology Club 3. Fay June Brown. Dayton. Kenneth W. Brown, Clearfield, Pa. Ohio State University 3. James K. Brydon, Erie, Pa. Beta Psi 3. 4. John P. Bums. East Akron. Phi Kappa Tau 3, 4; Scabbard and Blade 4. first sergeant 4; Officers Club 3: OU Engineers 2, 3; Rifle Team 4. Herman Burstein, Cleveland. Green White 2, 3; Ohio University Post 4; Ohioan 3, 4. Ruth E. BuU. Richwood. YWCA; Education Club; OU 4-H Club. Helen Sherley Buzard. Youngslown. Rockford Colleqe for Women 1; Home Economics Club 2. 4; YWCA 2; Zeta Tau Alpha 2, 3, 4, social chairman 3, house manager 3, guard 4. Alma Ftirbee Carlson. Middleboume, W. Va. Mae Belle Chapman. Ridgeway. YWCA 3, 4; WAA 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi 3. 4; Wesley Players 1, 2. Bob L. Chase, Akron. Delta Tau Delta 1, 2, 3, 4; OU Chemistry Society I; Zoology Club 1. Virginia N. Christmon, Steubenville. Sigma Alpha lota 2, 3, 4, president 4; Women ' s Selection Board 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1; University Choir 1, 2, 4; Kappa Phi 1. 2, 3, 4; Wesley Foundation Council 4; Senior Women ' s Council 4. Nickolas L. Chuli, Frankfort, N. Y. Beta Psi 3, 4. Rudy Joe Cinco, Euclid. Beta Psi 3, 4; Newman Club 3, 4. George H. Clemmer, Antwerp. Epsilon Pi Tau 3, 4, vice president 4; Industrial Arts Club 3, 4, secretary 4; Wrestling 1. Russell Clough, Cleveland. Beta Psi 4; OUIA 4; Cross Country 2; Palmer Cooperative Unit 2, 3, 4, vice president 3, president 4. Robert W. Coe, Athens. Football Manager 1, 2, 3. 4; Varsity O 4; Phi Delta Theta 2, 3, 4; Junior Prom Committee 3; Senior Ball Commillee 4. Margaret E, Cook. Girard, Pa. Western Reserve University 1; Phi Upsilon Omicron 4; Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4; Zoology Club 3. 4; Senior Women ' s Council 4. Frances H. Cooper, Youngslown. Women ' s League Senate 3, 4, vice president 4; Senior Women ' s Council 4; Women ' s League Assembly 2; Phi Upsilon Omicron 3, 4; Home Economics Club 2. 3, 4; Hillel 4, treasurer 4; WAA 3. Ruth Cooper, Youngstown. Phi Upsilon Omicron 2, 3, 4, vice president 3, president 4; Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3, 4; WAA 1, 2, 3; Kindergarten Primary Club 1; Women ' s League Assembly 4; Hillel 4; ASU 1. Jean E. Cottrell. Canton. Moriar Board 4, treasurer 4; Howard Hall 3, 4, treasurer 3, president 4; Kappa Delta Pi 4; Varsity O 4; YWCA 1. 2. 3. 4, cabinet 3; Flying O 3. president 3; Hockey Club 2. 3, president 3; WAA 1, 2, 3, 4. Donald R. Cowan. Canton. Intramural Manager 1, 2, 3, 4; Athena 1, 2, 3; Green White 2, 3, assistant circulation manager 2, 3. Herbert F. Cowgill, Crestline. Band 1, 2; Der Deutsche Verein 3; Zoology Club 4- B. Dorrel Crabtree. Wilkesville. Football 2, 3, 4; Varsity O 3, 4. Faith Lewis Crabtree, Tiffin. Phi Mu 2, 3, 4, assistant treasurer 2, 3. Jeannette Cranmer, Nelsonville. S. Norman Crawford, Midland, Pa. Radio Club 1, 2, 3, 4. president 3; OU Engineers 2, 3; AIEE 2. 3. 4; Newman Club 4. Chester W. CromwelL Dayton. Choregi 1. 2, 3, 4, president 4; Playshop 1, 2, 3. 4; Wesley Players 3, 4; OUIA 3, 4; Hoover Cottaqe. social chairman 4; ASU 1. Pearl Elizabeth Crosby, Cleveland. Kent State University; Alpha Delta Pi: Home Economics Club; YWCA. William R. Culbertson. Byesville. Beta Psi 2, 3, 4, vice president 4. 207 ( i eniot IC (CONTINUED) Stephen J. Czamecki, Cleveland. Robert M. Daggett, Athens. Phi Delta Theta 2, 3, 4; Scabbard and Blade 4: Newman Club 3, 4; Officers Club 3. Carl E. Dcmner, Marion. G reen White 1; Ohioan 1; Freshman Baseball Manager 1; Junior Prom Committee 3; Beta Theta Pi 2, 3. 4, vice president 4. Robert Wayne Davis. Athens. Phi Delta Theta 2, 3. 4. Henry James DeHoog, Grand Rapids, Mich. Der Deutsche Verein 4; OU Chemislry Society 4. Arlyne P. Deirnny, Lititz, Pa. Alpha Xi Delta 2, 3, 4. Journal cor- respondent 4; Green White 1, 2, 3: Ohio University Post 4; Tau Kappa Alpha pledge 4; Ohioan 4; Flying O Club 2, 3, 4; Dance Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Hockey Club 2, 3, secretary 2; Playshop; University Theater; Debate 3, 4; Oratory 3, 4; WAA; YWCA. Elizabeth Hazel Dickinson, West Hartford, Conn. University of Arkansas 1, 2. Samuel F. Downer, Monongahela, Pa. Men ' s Union, president 4; Beta Pi 4; Torch, president 4; Junior Prom Chairman 3; Beta Psi; Campus Affairs Committee 4; Episcopal Student Club, president 2; Beta Theta Pi. John Duffy, Jr., Coming. C. Wayne Dugan, McConnelsville. Phi Tau Theta 3; Delta Sigma Chi 4; OU 4-H Club 4: Kappa Delta Pi 4. Margaret Morcella Dunlap, Athens. Chi Omega 1,2. 3, 4; YWCA 1, 4; WAA 2. 3, 4. Elmer P. Dunn, Crooksville. Elementary Education Club 4, vice president 4. Geoffrey B. Dunn, Dayton. Richard W. Eddy, Athens. OU Chemistry Society 1, 2, 3, 4. presi- dent 4; Pershing Rifles 1, 2; Scabbard and Blade 3, 4; Military Ball 3, chairman 4; Torch 4; Newman Club 3, 4; Sigma Pi 4. Richard E. Ekleberry, Bucyrus. Alice L. Ellerman, Piqua. Alpha Xi Delta 1, 2, 3, 4. president 3; Phoenix 3; Women ' s League Senate 2; Women ' s League Repre- sentative 3; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4; WAA 1, 2, 3, 4; Dolphin Club 1, 2, 3, 4, president 3, 4. Steve Emory, Stockdale. Athena 1; Green White 2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Democratic Club 1, 2, 3; Delta Tau Delta 1. 2, 3, 4. Robert Engle, Tiffin. Cheerleader 1; Debate 2, 3; Pershing Rifles 1, 2, 3, 4: Scabbard and Blade 3, 4; Tau Kappa Alpha 3, 4; Ohioan 1, 2; ROTC 1. 2, 3, 4, Captain 3, Lt. Colonel 4. Robert Enyeait, Dayton. Athena 1, 2; Green 5 White 1; Ohioan 1, 2, 3, 4, Advertising Manager 3, Business Manager 4; Hispanic Club 1, 2; Intramural Manager 1, 2, 3; Theta Chi 1, 2, 3, 4. D. William Evans, Akron. Men ' s Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4, president 2, 4; University Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Phi Mu Alpha, treasurer 2, president 3, vice president 4; Delta Tau Delta 1, 2, 3, 4; Westminster Fellowship 1. 2, 3, chairman executive committee 3; Varsity Quartet 4; Ohio University Post 4; Blue Key 3, 4; Der Deutsche Verein 3, 4. Richard F. Evans, North Canton. Beta Psi 2, 3, 4, treasurer 2, 3; Swimming Team 2, 3, 4; Green White 1, 2, 3; Blue Key 3, 4. secretary; J Club, treasurer; Theta Chi 1, 2, 3, 4, secretary 4; Junior Prom Committee. Walter T. Fairchild, Cambridge. Theta Chi 1, 2, 3, 4. treasurer 4; Band I. 2; Beta Psi 2. 3, 4, secretary 4. Lois Faulstich, Royal Oak, Mich. Zeta Tau Alpha, treasurer 3. secretary 4; Kappa Delta Pi, president 4, Women ' s League, presi- dent 4; Mortar Board; Phoenix; Sophomore Award; YWCA, executive council 2; Senior Women ' s Council 4. George S. Fowcett Orrville. Band 3. John E. Fowcett. Orrville. Ohio State University 1; Marching Band 2, 3; Newman Club 4; Sigma Delta Chi; OU Post 4. Ann-Marie Fay. Lakewood. Ohioan 1, 2; Green White 2; Play- shop 4; University Theater 4; YWCA. Carolyn T. Fisher, Confield. Delta Phi Delta 3, 4; Phi Chi Delta 2, 3, 4; Westminster Fellowship, cabinet 2, 3. Blanche Fitz. Bridgeport, Conn. Zeta Tau Alpha; YWCA 4, sub- cabinet 4; YWCA Choir 3; WAA; L ' Alliance Francaise 4. Leslie E. Foreman. McArthur. Der Deutsche Verein 1; Westminster Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4, cabinet 2, 3, 4; Officers Club 3; Scabbard and Blade 4; Pi Chi Epsilon. John M. Fox. Youngstown. Pi Kappa Alpha, vice president 2, 3; Track Manager 1, 2, 3. William G. Fraedrich, Nelsonville. Football Manager 1. 2, 3; Hispanic Club 1, 2; Theta Chi, executive committee 3. librarian 4; Intramural Football 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4. Clement A. Frak, Oil City, Pa. Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Orchestra 2, 3, 4. Stanley A. Francis, Clarington. Phi Eta Sigma 1; OU Chemistry Society 1. 2, 3, 4, vice president 4; Phi Beta Kappa 4; J Club, honorary member 4; Der Deutsche Verein 4. William E. Franklin, Cleveland. Beta Psi 2. 3, 4. Fred J. Frozer, Bellefontaine. Phi Eta Sigma 1; Phi Delta Theta 2, 3, 4, secretary 2, president 4; Blue Key, treasurer 4; J Club 3; Scabbard and Blade; Football Manager 1; Campus Affairs Commit- tee 4; OU Theater; Playshop; Choregi; Westminster Fellowship, treasurer 3; Der Deutsche Verein; Zoology Club; Interiratemity Council, treasurer 4; Military Ball Committee 3, 4; Torch 4. Ruth L. FuUer, Frankfort. YWCA 1; Eta Sigma Phi 2, 3, 4. Ruth Fulmer, Marietta. YWCA 2, 3, 4, sub-cabinet 2, cabinet 3, 4; University 4-H Club, vice president 4, Gertrude A. Gadus. Cleveland. YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4, cabinet 3, executive council 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron 2, 3, 4, vice president 4; Junior Prom Committee 3; Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3; Senior Ball Committee 4; Mortar Board 4, secretary 4; Chi Omega; Committee on Student Publications 4. W. Leroy Gohm, Cove. Pi Epsilon Mu 2. 3, 4; AIEE 1, 2, 3, 4, secretary- treasurer 4; Pi Chi Epsilon 2, 3, 4; OU Engineers 3, 4, recording secretary 4; OU Radio Club 2, 3, 4. William R. Gorber. Middleport. Newman Club 3, 4. Leonard D. Garfield, Belmont, Mass. Play Shop 1, 2; Choregi 3, 4. Robert A. Gam, Helena. Beta Theta Pi; Blue Key 3, 4; Scabbard and Blade 3, 4; Military Ball Committee 4. Ralph E. Gamer, Canton. Intramural Wrestling Champion 1; Varsity Wrestling 2, 3; Cross Country 2; Flying Bobcats 4. Gordon F. Garry. Cincinnati. Alpha Tau Omega; University of Cincinnati 1 , 2. Emest H. Gorzieri. Totowa, N. J. University Symphony Orchestra 1, 2, 3. 4: Westminster Fellowship 3; ROTC Staff 4. Phyllis A. Germann, Van Wert. University Choir 1, 2, 4; Home Economics Club 1, 2. Ruth Gillespie, Sutton. W. Va. WAA 3, 4; YWCA 3; Fairmont College I, 2. Morris J. Givertz. Cleveland. Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Psi 3, 4; Freshman Baseball Manager 1; Green White 2, 3; Der Deutsche Verein 2. 3. Betty Lee Goodrich, Shaker Heights. Mary K. Graham, Shaker Heights. WAA 1, 2, 3, 4, president 4 Senior Women ' s Council 4; Newman Club 3. 4; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4, Outing Club 1, 2. 3, president 2; Flying O 3, 4; Hockey Club 2, 3, 4, Dormitory Athletic Manager 2, 3; WAA Homecoming Carnival Manager 3; Zeta Tau Alpha 2, 3, 4; Varsity O 4. Lewis H. Gray. Toronto. Industrial Arts Club 1, 2, 3, 4, treasurer 3, president 4; Epsilon Pi Tau 3, 4, vice president 3, president 4. Sam S. Greenblatt. Cleveland. Phi Epsilon Pi 1,2, 3, 4; Men ' s Glee Club 1. 2, 3, 4; Philosophy Club 1, 2. 3, 4; Hillel Club 4, president 4. Helen K. Grimsley, Lakemore. YWCA 1; WAA 2; Kappa Delta Pi 4. Herbert Grossman, New York, N. Y. Football Manager 1; Zoology Club 1; Hillel 4; OUIA 3, 4, social committee 4; OU Revue Sales Staff 4. Leonard Grossman, New York, N. Y. Football Manager 1; Zoology Club 1; Hillel 4; OUIA 3, 4, social committee 4; OU Revue Sales Statt 4. Sara M. Gruey, Conneaut. Kappa Phi 1, 2, 3. 4; Eta Sigma Phi 4. Jeanette W. Haas. Cleveland. WAA Board 1, 2, secretary 3; Dolphin Club 1, 2, 3; Dance Club 1, 2, vice president 3, president 4; Women ' s League Senate 3; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4; Athena 4. Ruth K. Hagen, South Webster. Choregi 3, 4; Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4. Donald W. Haley, Brewster. Wesley Foundation Student Council 4; Phi Tau Theta 3; Delia Sigma Chi 4. Elma HalL Ewington. WAA 1,2, 3, 4, assistant treasurer 3; YWCA 1, 2; Kappa Beta 1, 2, 3, 4, vice president 2, corresponding secretary 3; Quadrangle Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Theta Upsilon 2, 3. Helen Harahus. Senecaville. YWCA 3, 4; WAA 1, 4; Reserve Dance Club 4; Home Economics Club 1. Paul I. Harclerode, Ebensburg, Pa. OU Engineers 2, 3, 4; AIEE 4. Mildred L. Harkabus. Youngstown. Newman Club 3, 4, secretary 3, 4; Housing Unit President 2, 3. 4; WAA 4; Student Public Relations Commitlee 2. Mary B. Harrison, Andover. Women ' s Glee Club 1; YWCA 1; Westminster Fellowship 1, 2. 3, 4; Phi Chi Delta 3, 4; University Choir 2, 3; Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4. Mary E. Harrold, Willoughby. WAA 1, 2. 3, 4; Flying O 3, 4; Boyd Hall 3, 4, athletic manager 3, president 4, Betty Hartford, Lakewood. YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4, vice president 3, president 4; WAA 1, 2, 3, 4, outing manager 2, board 3; Athena 1, 3, associate literary editor 3; Lindley Hall House Council, sec- retary 2, vice president 3; Ouill Club 3, 4; Alpha Kappa Delta 3, 4; Green While 1, 2; Alpha Xi Delta 1, 2, 3, 4, pledge master 4. Frances J. Hartman, Athens. Kappa Phi 1, 2, 3, 4; Wesley Players 1, 2, 3, 4; Home Economics Club 3. 4; YWCA 1; WAA 1. 208 . cftiat Clarence E. Hayes, Cleveland. OU Chemistry Society 2, 3, 4; Student Affiliate of the American Chemical Society 4; Theta Chi 1, 2, 3; Men ' s Drolodies I; Green White 2, 3, advertising manager 3. Edna E. Henrich, Massillon. Newman Club 3, 4; YWCA 1, 2; Women ' s League Assembly 4. , , Robert H. Hetzler, Youngstown. Pi Kappa Alpha 1, 2, 3, 4; Blue Key 3; L ' Alliance Francaise 2, 3; Boxing 1, 2; Tennis 1, 2. Dean A. Heydick, Cleveland. Theta Chi; OU Post 3, 4: Ohioan 3, 4, exchange editor 4. Earl A. Hicks. Cleveland. Cross Country 2, 3, 4; Track 1, 2. 3, 4; Varsity O 3, 4, president 4. Richard Hine, Cleveland. Hispanic Club 1; Theta Chi 1, 2, 3, 4. social chairman 2, intramural manager 4. Gloria L. Hintz. Nelsonville. WAA, cabin board 4; Flying O. secretary 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron; Senior Women ' s Council 4. Eli N. Hirsimaki, Conneaut. Tau Kappa Epsilon; Varsity O 2, 3, 4, secretary 4, Radio Club 1. 2. 4: Varsity Track 2, 3. 4, Harriett L. Holcomb, Wheeling, W. Va. Elementary Education Club 3, 4. president 4; Phi Mu; WAA 2, 3, 4; YWCA 1, 2; Athena 2, 4. Lyle E. Hood, Canfield. Radio Club 2, 3, 4, President 4; AIEE 3. 4; OU Engineers 2, 3, 4. Howard K. Hoskinson, Mineral Ridge. K nt State University 1 . 2. W. Emerson Houf, Athens. Delta Tau Delta 1, 2, 3, 4- Swimming Team 2, 4; Men ' s Glee Club 2, 3, 4. business manager 4; Der Deutsche Verein 4. Eileen F. House, Batesville. Classical Club 2, 3, 4. treasurer 2, publicity manager 3; Choregi 2, 3, 4, secretary 3, treasurer 4; Senior Women ' s Council 4; Tau Kappa Alpha 4; YWCA 2. 3. 4; French Play 3, 4; L ' Alliance Francaise 4; Women ' s League Assembly 2. Irene House. Batesville. YWCA 1, 2. Carrie Morgan Hunt, New London, Pennsylvania. Westminster Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4. cabinet 4; Phi Chi Delta 1, 2, 3, 4, secretary 4; Boyd Hail House Council 2; YWCA; WAA; Outing Club. Jeanne S. Hydovitz, Braddock, Pa. Tower 3, 4, secretary 3, 4; Women ' s League Assembly 3; Hillel 4; YWCA 1; WAA 1, 2. 4. David John Hyslop, Geneva. Senior Basketball Manager 4; Phi Kappa Tau, vice president 3, 4; Varsity O 4. Edward B. Jackson, Malta. OU Engineers Club 2, 3, 4; Sigma Delta Chi 3, 4: Zoology Club 4. Mary Martha Jahn. Marietta. Grace Johnson, Dayton. Green White 1. 2, 3; Philosophy Club 2, 3, 4, secretary 4; Sigma Rho 3, 4, vice president 4. James B. Johnson, Johnstown. OU Chemistry Society 2, 3, 4; Zoology Club 4. Robert B. Johnson. Newark. Theta Chi 2. 3, 4; L ' Alliance Francaise 1.2, 3, 4; Hispanic Club 1; Cercle Francaise 4, president. George Robert JoUy, Youngstown. Delta Tau: Delta 1, 2, 3, 4, president 4; Blue Key, president 4; Torch 4; J Club 3; Phi Etc Sigma 1; Athena 3, advertising manager 3; Ihterfratern.ty Council 4, Betty L. Journey, Lakew ood. YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4, office executive 3, ireasurer 4; L ' Alliance Francaise 1, 2, 3, social chairman 3; Phi Chi Delta 2. 3, treasurer 3; Westminster Fellowship 2, 3, cobinet 3; Boyd Hall, cabinet 2. treasurer 3, house council 4. Carl F. Juringus, E. Cleveland. Varsity Debate 1, 2, 3; Playshop 1; Westminster Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; OU Engineers 4. Edith Kamuf. Cleveland. Women ' s League Senate 2. 3, 4, social chairman 3, secretary 4; Der Deutsche Verein 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club, business manager 4; Phoenix, president 3; Mortar Board 4. Shirley M. Karch, North Olmsted. Der Deutsche Verein 1, 2; Athena 3; Women ' s Glee Club 4; Phi Chi Delta 3, 4; Westminster Fellowship 1, 2, 3. 4; YWCA, cabinet 3; WAA 1. 2; Riflery Team 3. Sam L. Kasimov, Cleveland. Hillel Club 4. -:.-i.t , • D. Myrtle Keller. Athens. Home Economics Club 3; Kappa Beta 2, 3, secretary 2; Quadrangle Club 4. ; . ■■. Harold G. Kelley, Athens. OU Engineers 3. 4; AIEE 2. 3, 4; Radio Club 1. 2, 3, 4. Dorothy J. Kempton, Mount Vernon. Phi Chi Delta 3, 4. vice president 4; Senior Women ' s Council 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron 3, 4; Home Economics Club, program chairman 4; Westminster Fellow- ship 2, 3, 4; WAA 1, 2; YWCA 1, 2, 3; OU Chemistry Society 2. Paul B. Kerr. Hicksville. Ohioan 2. 3: Athena 2; University Choir 2, 3; Men ' s :Se)ect ion Board 4; Junior Prom Committee 3; Beta Theta Pi 1, 2, 3. ,4. secretary 2.. president 3. 4; Campus Acliv.ties Board 3; 1. Club 3: Blue Key 3, 4; Men ' s Glee Club I, 2. 3; Interfraternity Council 3. 4: Phi Mu Alpha 2, 3. John EUiott. Knaul, Qincinnati. Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4; Pi Epsilion Mu 2. 3, 4; OU Engineers 2, 3, 4; AIEE 3. 4; QUIA. 4; Flying Bobcats 4. Allen H. Knisley, Bainbridge. Industrial Arts Club 1, 2, 3, 4, presi- dent 3; Freshman Track 1; Epsilon Pi Tau 3, 4, treasurer 4; Uni- versity Band 1; Kappa Delta Pi 4. Frederic M. Krecker, Athens. Westminster Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; Tau Kappa Epsilon 1 , 2, 3; Pi Chi Epsilon 1. 2, 3, 4; Quill Club 4. Robert J. Krukosk, Garfield Heights. Scabbard and Blade 4. Sarah J. Kuchenrither. Elyria. WAA 1; Newman Club 3, 4, Senate 4; President of Organized Housing Unit 4. Hamilton C. Loing, Cleveland. Der Deutsche Verein 1; Westminster Fellowship 3, 4; Pi Chi Epsilon 2, 3, treasurer 3. Jean M. Lanich. Indiana. Pa. YWCA 3. 4; Alpha Gamma Delta. Franklyn K. Louden, Lakewood. Green White 1, 2, 3, associate editor 2. 3; OU Post 4, editor 4; Phi Eta Sigma 2; Kappa Tau Alpha 4; Campus Affairs Committee 4; Torch 4. Curt Leben. Athens. Kappa Alpha Beta 2, 3. 4; Newman Club 3, 4; OUIA 4. William R. LeMasters, Richwood. Men ' s Glee Club 1, 2; University Choir 2, 3. Charles R. Lewis, Middleport. Phi Eta Sigma 1, 2; Sigma Delta Chi 4. Ruth A. Lewis, Athens. WAA 1, 2, 3, 4; Reserve Club 2; Der Deutsche Verein 1, 2; Hockey Club 3, 4; Flying O 3, 4; Drum Majorette 3, 4; Dance Club 2, 3. 4. Peter N. Librizzi, Passaic. N. J. Radio Club 1. 2, 3. 4, vice president 3; OU Engmeers 2, 3. 4. social chairman 4; AIEE 2, 3. 4, vice chairman 3; Track 2. 3; Pi Epsilon Mu 1, 2, 3, 4. Mari A. Liccordi, Cleveland. Dance Club 1, 2. 3, 4, secretary 3; WAA 1, 2, 3; Athena 4; Senior Women ' s Council 4; OU Post 4. Marie M. Loesch. Mansfield. YWCA 1. 2, 3, 4; WAA 4; Lindley Hall House Council 2. 3, secretary 3. Franklin E. Loew, Cleveland. Theta Chi; Delta Pi Alpha 2, 3, 4; Beta Pi 4, treasurer 4; Hygeia Club 2. 3, 4; L ' Alliance Francaise 2, 3; Speech Club 2. 3. Janet Mackinnon, Athens. Pi Beta Phi; Ohioan 2; Alpha Kappa Delta; YWCA. J. Warren McClure, Athens. Military Ball Committee 3; Junior Prom Committee 3; Green Whit e 2; OU Post 3; Delta Tau Delta; Student Grill Committee 4. Lois McCoy, Athens. Olivet College 1,2, 3; Women ' s Glee Club 4; WAA 4, Vula C. McCoy, Congo. Mary E. McCulloch, Point Pleasant. W. Va. Alpha Deha Pi 1, 2, 3, 4; Kindergarien-Primary Club 1, 2, 3, 4, publicity chairman 3; YWCA 1, 2. 3. 4, sub-cabinet 1, 2, cabinet 3, 4. Eileen C. McDougalL Youngstown. Alpha Xi Delta; YWCA; Newmnn Club 3, 4, vice president 3, 4. Rosemary M. McHale, New Philadelphia. Mortar Board 4; Phoenix 3; Green White 1, 2. 3; Sigma Rho 2. 3, 4; YWCA 1, 2. 3; West- minster Fellowship 1, 2. 3; Phi Chi Delta 1, 2, 3; Junior Prom Committee 3. Vincent G. McKes, Lancaster. Louise A. McMains, Fleming. WAA 4; Kappa Phi 1. 2; Senior Woman ' s Council 4: OU 4-H Club 4; Wesley Foundation 1, 2, 3, 4. Mary Estelle McMillen. Cadiz. Edith Madelynn Maneggie, Cleveland. Sigma Rho 2, 3, 4, president 3; Wesiminster Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4. vice president 3, cabinet 4; Phoenix 3, treasurer 3; Mortar Board 4; Women ' s League Senate 2. 3; Green While 1, 2. 3; Ohio University Post 4; Senior Women ' s Council 4; WAA 1; YWCA 1, 2. 3. cabinet 2; Phi Chi Dslta 2, 3, h:slorian 3. Glenn R. Margard, Sandusky. Athena 1; Der Deutsche Verein 2, 3; Industrial Arts Club 1, 2, 3, vice president 3; Zoology Club 2. 3, treasurer 2, president 3; Palmer Hall, manager 3; OUIA 3; Phi Beta Kappa 4. Florine E. Marlatt, Newcomerslown. Kappa Delta Pi 3, 4; Sigma Alpha Iota 3, 4, secretary 4. Thomas Mourer. Cleveland Heights. Wesley Foundation, president 4; Method.st Student Movement of Ohio, president 4; Campus Religious Council 2, 4; National Methodist Youth Council 4; Delta Sigma Chi 3, 4, chaplain 3. 4; Wesley Co-op House, manager 4. Raymond F. Maxwsll, Glouster. University Choir 3, 4. Robert W. Maxwell, Cleveland. Pershing Rifles 1, 2: Men ' s Glee Club 1.3, 4. Howard William Mead, Cleveland. Phi Eta Sigma 1; Beta Psi; Swimming 1; German Club 1; Beta Theta Pi, rushing chairman 4. prerident of senior board 4. Martha C. Meister, Athens. Zeta Tau Alpha 1. 2, 3, 4, social chair- man 2; Tau Kappa Alpha 2, 3, 4; Varsity Debate 2; Philosophy Club 3. 4; Phi Chi Delta 1, 2. 3, 4; WAA 1, 2; Westminster Fellow- ship 1, 2, 3, 4, president 3. council chairman 4; YWCA, cabinet 2; Athens Rehgious Council 3. 209 $ enLat c t -cuvul VL LLC (CONTINUED) Florence Meschon, Cleveland. Alpha Kappa Delta; Tau Kappa Alpha: Choreqi; Phoenix; Mortar Board; Y ' WCA. executive council; Women ' s Selection Board; Town Hall Commitlee; ASU; Philosophy Club; Der Deutsche Verein; Phi Beta Kappa. Betty Z. Miller. Zanesville. Zeta Tau Alpha; Delta Phi Delta; Women ' s League Senate; YWCA, cabinet; Freshman Art Award. Franklin P. Miller, Cleveland. Band 1, 2, 3, 4; OUIA. Melvin E. Miller. Cleveland. Der Deutsche Verein 2. Martha Alice Minnameyer, Athens. Kappa Phi 1, 2, 3. 4, vice president 4; Wesley Foundation 1. 2, 3, 4, corresponding secretary 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi 4. Mary Ellen Mock, Hamilton. Miami University 1, 2; YWCA 3. 4; WAA 4; Chi Omega; Home Economics Club 3, 4. Tarxan X. Monda, Canton. Mary Monks, Logan. Phi Chi Delia; Eta Sigma Phi, president 4; Senior Women ' s Council. Frank C. Moore, Lancaster. Alpha Kappa Delta 3, 4; Philosophy Club 4. Beatrice L. Morgan, Thurman. WAA, cabin board 4; Outing Club; Wesley Foundation, student council 4; Kappa Phi; Women ' s League. Virginia R. MuUetl, Youngstown. OYO Girls Orchestra 1; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4. sub-cabinet 3, cabinet 4; Director of Prep Follies 4; WAA 1, 2, 3, 4, carnival booth chairman 2, social chairman 3, board 3, delegate to national convention 2; Pi Beta Phi 1, 2, 3, 4, activities chairman 2, social chairman 3, 4; Reserve Dance Club 1; Modem Dance Club 1, 2, 3, 4, vice president 4; OU Band Sponsor 3; Playshop 2, 3, 4; Women ' s Selection Board 4; Ohioan 2, 3; Swimming Club 1, 2, 3; Flying O 2, 3. 4. Eli R. Munas, Powhatan Point. Delta Phi Delta 3, 4; Westminster Fellowship 3, 4; Pi Chi Epsilon 4; Athena 4. Florence Mildred Myers, Athens. Senior Women ' s Gjiincil 4; Wesley Foundation Student Council 4; Kappa Phi 3, 4. Glen C. Neal, Akron. Varsity Baseball, manager 1; Pershing Rifles 1, 2, 3. 4; Officers Club 3; Scabbard and Blade 4; Band 1, 2; Rifle Club 4; Theta Chi 1, 2, 3, 4. secretary 3, vice president 4. Barbara J, Nelson, Troy. Phi Beta Kappa 4; Alpha Xi Delta; Intercollegiate Debate 1, 2, 3, 4; Mortar Board 4. president 4; Kappa Delta Pi 3, 4; Tau Kappa Alpha 2, 3, 4; YWCA, executive council 4; Women ' s League Senate 4; Panhellenic Council 4; Quill Club 3, 4; Philosophy Club 2, 3, 4. Frances J. Nelson, London. Ruth L. Nelson, Montpelier. Vt. Alpha Delta Pi 3, 4; Eta Sigma Phi 2, 3. 4. Elizabeth B. fncholson. Athens. Evonston Collegiate Institute 1, 2; Delia Phi Delta 3. 4; YWCA 3; Der Deutsche Verein 3. Robert H, Nicholson, Athens. Evanston Collegiate Institute 1, 2; Zoology Club 4; Wesley Foundation 3, 4, supper chairman 4; Der Deutsche Verein 3. Richard P. Nye, Mansfield. Campus Affairs Board 2; Beta Psi 3, 4, treasurer 3, 4; Student Grill, treasurer 4; Baseball Manager 1; Pi Kappa Alpha; Ohioan 1. Stanley J. O bloy, Cleveland. Phi Eta Sigma 1; Pi Epsilon Mu 2, 3. 4: OU Engineers 2, 3, 4; Radio Club 2. 3; Flying Bobcats 4; AIEE2, 3. 4. Angelo C. Orsillo. Rayland. Epsilon Pi Tau 3, 4; Choregi 2, 3, 4; Industrial Arts Club 1, 2, 3. 4. DeWoyne O. Osborne. Youngstown. Phi Delta Theta; Beta Psl 2, 3, 4; Pershing Rifles 1. 2; Pi Chi Epsilon 1, 2, 3. 4; treasurer 2, 4; Tau Kappa Alpha 1. Marceil E. Packard, Canton, Pa. Bethany College 1; Senior Wo- men ' s Council 4; Symphony Orchestra 2, 3, 4; Athena 4, class editor 4; YWCA 2, 3, 4; Kindergarten-Primary Club 2, 3. 4; West- minster Fellowship 3, 4. Eva J. Palmer, Belmont. Phi Mu, social chairman 4; YWCA 1; WAA 2, 3, 4; Alhena 2; Kindergarten-Primary Club 1.2, 3, 4. Anastasia J. Panoriles, Uion, N. Y. Eta Sigma Phi 3, 4; Classical Club 3, 4; YWCA 3. 4; WAA 3, 4; Outing Club 3, 4; Hockey Club 3, 4; Flying O 3, 4; Phi Sigma Epsilon 3, 4, social chairman; Tau Kappa Alpha pledge 3, 4; Zoology Club 3; Phi Chi Delta 3. 4; Episcopal Students ' Club 3, 4; Syracuse University 1, 2. Walter J. Patrylow, Kenilworth, N. I. University Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Men ' s Glee Club 1, 3, 4; Newman Club 2. 3. 4; Tennis 1, 2, 3, 4; Swimming 1, 4; Delta Sigma Chi 4. Arnold P. Paulk, Cleveland. Varsity Football 1, 2; OU Chemistry Society 2, 3, 4; Der Deutsche Verein 3, 4; Wrestling 1. Harry F. Paulus, Cleveland. Varsity Basketball 2; Newman Club 3, 4. Milton Paushter. New Rochelle, N. Y. Philosophy Club; Pre-Low Club; Intramural Baseball and Basketball Manager 2, 3. Andrew H. Parlith, Cleveland. Play Shop 1, 3; L ' AUiance Francolso 4; Alpha Lambda Chi 1. Elisabeth T. Peorce, Narberth. Pa. University Choir 1, 2. 3, 4, president 4; Hispanic Club 1; YWCA 1, 2, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1; Alpha Xi Delta. Edward G. Peattie, Cleveland. OU Chemistry Society 1, 2, 3, 4; American Chemical Society 4; Cross Country 1, 2. Jean C. Penny, Napoleon. L ' AlUance Francaise 2, 3, 4; WAA 1, 2, 3; Reserve Dance Club 2. Harold S. Peters, Massillon. Sigma Pi 3, 4; Wooster College 2; Men ' s Dormitory Council 2. Cecil A. PiaiL Springfield. Epsilon Pi Tau; Industrial Arts Club, treasurer 4; Football 1, 2; Track 1, 2; Wrestling 1, Leona M. Pickard, Glouster. Phi Chi Delta 1, 2, 3, 4, president 3; Ouill Club 2, 3, 4, secretary 3; Westminster Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4, cabinet 2, 3; YWCA; L ' Alliance Francaise 3, 4; Athena 3, 4; OU Post 4; Senior Women ' s Council 4; Phi Beta Kappa 4; Kappa Delta Pi 4; Choregi 3, 4. Mary J. PIckons, Columbus. WAA 1 . 2; Kappa Delta Pi 4. Robert C. Plant Calowell. Phi Tau Theta 1. 2; Wesley Foundation 1, 2, student council 2; Pre-Law Club 1. Pearl A. Powell. Wihnington. WAA 3, 4; Senior 4-H Club 4; Senior Women ' s Council 4. Ruth E. Powell, Athens. Dolphin Club 1, 2, 3, 4, secretary 3; WAA 1, 2, 3, 4: YWCA 1. 2; Dance Club 4. Mary A, Propp. Beech Hill, W. Va. YWCA; WAA; Westminster Fellowship; Phi Chi Delta; Senior Women ' s Council 4; Women ' s League Assembly 4. Wilbur F. Ptak. Parma Heights. Ohio State University 1, 2; Tau Kappa Epsilon. Dorothy A. Purvionce, Broadacre. Phi Beta Kappa 4; Kappa DeUa Pi 3, 4, secietary 4; Kappa Phi, cabinet 4; L ' Alliance Francaise 2, 3, 4; Classical Club 2, 3. 4, social chairman 3; Eta Sigma Phi; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4, choir 2; Women ' s League Housing Council 2, 3; Senior Women ' s Council 4; Wesle y Players; Wesley Foundation; Women ' s League Scholarship Award 3. Frank S. Pusso, Mingo lunction. Der Deutsche Verein 1. 2; Zoology Club 2, 3; Philosophy Club 4; Newman Club 4; Wrestling 1, 2, 3, 4; Alpha Phi Delta 1, 2, 3, 4; Classical Club 4. Darid RobinOTiti, Cleveland. Phi Epsilon Pi 2, 3, 4, vice president 3, president 4; Blue Key 3, 4; Alpha Kappa Delta 3, 4, president 4; Psi Chi 3, 4, treasurer 4; Interfratemity Council 4, secretary 4; Philosophy Club 4; University Orchestra 2, 3, 4, secretary 3; University String Quartet 2, 3; Hillel Foundation 4; Ohio Valley Student Sociology Society 3, 4, treasurer 3, 4. E. Arundel Ralph, Cleveland. Green White; Ouill Club. Chan- cellor; ASU; Playshop: Town Hall Committee; Wrestling; Swim- ming; Phi Beta Kappa 4. Orid 5. Ray Blanchester. Freshman Debate 1; Kappa Delta Pi 4. Robert M. Reading, Athens. Theta Chi; Band 1, 2, 3, 4. Helen D. Rennechor. Uhrichsville. Wooster College 1; Pi Beta Phi; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 4. Catherine L. Rice, Massillon. Campus Orchestra 1; University Symphony Orchestra 1, 2; Classical Club 1, 2, 3; Phi Mu 1,2. 3. 4, president 4. Don L Rittersbaugh, Canton. Sigma Pi, vice president 4; Beta Psi, president 4. Virginia E. Rose. Shaker Heights. Senior Women ' s Council 4; L ' Alliance Francaise 3, 4; Chi Omega 1. 2, 3, 4, vice president 4; YWCA 1, 2. 3; Athena 3, 4. Ruth M. Rosner, Wilkes-Barre. Pa. Bucknell University Jr. College 1, 2; Tower 3. 4. treasurer 3, 4; Kindergarten-Primary Club 3, 4, vice president 4; YWCA. Ruth F. Rothrock. Middleport. Marshall College 1, 2, 3; Kappa Phi 4; Home Economics Club 4. Robert E. Rowland, Wooster. L ' Alliance Francaise 3, 4; Intramural Basketball 1; OUIA 3. Jeanne E. Ruhl, Columbus. Pi Beta Phi; Ohioan 3, 4, collection manager 3; YWCA 1, 2; WAA I. 2. leanette Y. Saddle, Youngstown. YWCA 1, 2. 3, 4, sub-cabinet 3, cabinet 4; Boyd Hall House Council 3; OU Chemistry Society 4; Zoology Club 3. 4. Doran A. Souers, Brilli::nt. OU Engineers; AIEE; Pershing Rifles 1 , 2, 3, First Lieutenant 3. Earl L. Schemenauer, Sandusky. Band 1, 2, 3, 4. Emde Charles Schulze, East Cleveland. Phi Eta Sigma; Varsity Debate 2, 3, 4; Tau Kappa Alpha; Der Deutsche Verein 1; Phi Beta Kappa 4. Roy C. Scouten. Mansfield. Pi Kappa Alpha, president 3; J Club Junior Prom Committee 3; Ohioan 2; Beta Psi 2; Track Manager 1, 2, 3; Interfratemity Council 3. 210 s. enio t Sarah S«ltK«r, Cleveland. Phi Upsilon Omicron 3, 4; Home Eco- nomics Club 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi 4. Frank Senxik, Youngstown. OU Engineers; Freshman Football. Arthur W, Sherman. Lakewood. Oberlin College 1; Phi Tau Theta 2, 3, secretary 3; Pershing Rifles 2; Der Deutsche Verein 2; Wesley Foundation 2, 3, 4, music chairman 3, vice president 4; Athena 2, 3, 4, assistant editor 2, associate editor 3, editor 4; Men ' s Selec- tion Board 4; Senior Day Committee 4; Psi Chi 2, 3, 4. president 4; Torch 4. Avonell L. Sheward, Beaver. University Theater 3; Choregi 3; YWCA 3; Playshop 3; WAA 3; Kappa Phi 4; Wesley Players 3; Tau Kappa Alpha 4; Alpha Delta Pi 4; Reserve Club 1; Quill Club 1. J. Victor Shulmon, Cleveland Heights. Tennis 2. 3. 4; Ohioan 3, 4; OU Post 4: Beta Psi 3, 4. Evelyn Mae Siddert. New Marshfield. Kappa Delta Pi 4; Classical Club 1, 2, 3. 4; YWCA 1, 2, 4; Senior Women ' s Council 4. Freda M. Simerka, Cleveland. Quill Club 1, 2, 3, 4, president, treasurer; Alpha Delta Pi 2, 3, 4, treasurer; Phoenix; Mortar Board, editor; Phi Chi Delta 1, 2, 3, 4, social chairman; Flying O Club; Home Economics Club; YWCA; WAA; Fencing Manager 1, 2, 3, 4. Huth M. Simon, Brooklyn, N. Y. New York University 1, 2; Women ' s League Senate 3; Der Deutsche Verein; WAA; Tower 4, vice presi- dent 4; Women ' s League Assembly; WAA; Hillel, secretary. BUIy T. Simpion, Dennison. Beta Theta Pi 1, 2, 3. 4; Scabbard and Blade 4; Cadet Officers Club 3; Football Manager 1. 2. Virginia E. Skala, Chippewa Lake. WAA 1, 2. 3. 4; YWCA 1. 2; Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4; Boyd Hall House Council 4, social chairman; Phi Upsilon Omicron 4; Women ' s Glee Club 2, 3, 4. Rita Slaritt, New York City. WAA 1. 2. 4; YWCA 1. 2; Psi Chi 4; Alpha Kappa Delta 2, 3, 4; L ' AUiance Francaise 2; Tower 3, 4. Robert E. Slusier. Dalton. Beta Psi 2, 3, 4; Ohioan 3, 4; OU Post 2, 3. 4; Blue Key 3. 4; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Campus Activities Board 2, 3; Tau Kappa Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4, president 3, 4; Interfratemity Council 3, 4. Florence R. Smith, Athens. Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4; Phi Upsilon Omicron 4; Phi Chi Delta 1, 2, 3, 4, secretary 2, vice- president 3, president 4; Westminster Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4, cabinet 2,3,4; WAA 1,2. Harry C. Smith, Clay, W. Va. University Band; Psi Chi 4. Helen R. Smith, Uhrichsville. Quill Club; Westminster Fellowship: Elementary Education Club; OU Post; YWCA. Mary H. Smith, McArthur. Home Economics Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Phi 1, 2. 3, 4: YWCA 1, 2, 3. 4. Robert Howard Smith, Holloway. Phi Beta Kappa 4; Kappa Delta Pi 4; Phi Eta Sigma 1, 2, 3, 4; Phi Tau Theta 1, 2; Delta Tau Delta 1, 2; Basketball 1, 2; Cross Country 1, 2. Willard H. Smith, Athens. Robert T. Snyder, Columbus. Sigma Pi, president, secretory; Interfratemity Council; Blue Key; Basketball Manager 1, 2, 3; Athena 1, 2, 3; Ohioan 1, 2. Joseph A. SoTiero, Red Bank, N. J. John C. Spark , Strasburg. Phi Eta Sigma; Beta Psi 2, 3, 4. Anthony N. Spina, Frankfort, N. Y. OU Chemistry Society; Newman Club; University Orchestra. Raymond J. Sponsler. Ashland. Sophie M. Stechbordt, Newark, N. J. Der Deutsche Verein 2; ASU 2, 3, 4, treasurer 3, secretary 4; Alpha Kappa Delta, vice president 4; Athens Peace Committee 3; Elementary Club 4. Bertha Ellen Steinmeyer, New Marshfield. H. Douglas Stevens. Cambridge. Pi Epsilon Mu 3, 4; Phi Eta Sigma 1. 2. Louise Helen Stewart Nitro W. Va. L ' AUiance Francaise, secretary; Dolphin Club: Reserve; YWCA. Herbert H. Stickney, Cleveland. Green White 1, 2, 3; Beta Psi 3, 4; Theta Chi 1,2, 3, 4, president 4; Blue Key 3, 4; Ohioan 1, 2. Robert J. Stilgenbauer. Lorain. Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Senior Swim- ming Manager 3; OU Engineers 2, 3, 4; Pi Epsilon Mu 2, 3, 4, president 4: Campus Activity Board 3; Sigma Pi 1,2, 3, 4; Athena 1. 2. 3, 4. W. Stuart Stoll, Cuyahoga Falls. OU Engineers 3, 4; Beta Psi 4; Phi Kappa Tau 1. Betty L. Stone, Piqua. YWCA, secretary 3, vice president 4; WAA; Varsity Debate; Tau Kappa Alpha; Alpha Kappa Delta, secretary 2, 3; Mortar Board; Senior Women ' s Council; Zeta Tau Alpha; Women ' s Selection Board. Robert S. Stone. Belpre. OU Engineers Club. George W. Stowell, Akron. Band 1, 2; Newman Club 4; Theta Chi; Sigma Delta Chi, pledge 4. Janet Stratemeyer, Norwood. University Orchestra; Band; Sigma Alpha Iota; Boyd Hall, music director. Lydia Caroline Sturm. Shinnston, W. Va. Home Economics Club 4; 4-H Club 4: University Choir 4; Kappa Phi 4. Emil W. Supance, Euclid. Track 2, 3, 4; Varsity O 2, 3, 4. Roberta E. Swindell, Athens. Sigma Rho; Quill Club; OU Post 4. Adolph C. Szoiron, Cleveland. Green White, circulation staff; OU Chemistry Society 2. Mariorie J. Taylor, Cambridge. YWCA 1, 2; WAA 1, 2; Women ' s Glee Club 2, 3, 4, president 4; Sigma Alpha Iota 3, 4; Chi Omega 1, 2, 3, 4, president 4. Frank R. Terront Cleveland. Phi Eta Sigma 1, 2; AlEE 1, 2, 3. 4; Playshop 3: University Theater 3, 4; Choregi 3, 4; Radio Club 4. Seldon W. Terrant Cleveland. Philosophy Club 3; Der Deutsche Verein 2, 3, 4; OU Chemistry Society 3, 4. Margaret A. Thompson. Athens. YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4; WAA 4; OU Post 4; Zela Tau Alpha. William B. Thompson, Amesvitle. OUIA 4; 4-H Club, president. John Tomstrom, E. Cleveland. Pi Epsilon Mu 2, 3, 4; OU Engineers 2, 3. 4: AIEE 3, 4; ASU 3. 4. Alex D. Torok, Youngstown. Playshop 1, 2, 3, 4; University Theater 1, 2, 3, 4; Choregi 2, 3, 4, president 3, vice president 4. Eloise W. Tucker, Centerburg. Women ' s Selection Board 4; Senior Women ' s Council 4; OU Chemistry Society 2, 3, 4; Der Deutsche Verein 1, 2, 3; Mortar Board 4; Phi Beta Kappa 4; Zoology Club 3, 4, vice president; Women ' s Glee Club 2, 3, 4, president 3; Phi Zeta 3, 4; Athena 3, 4; Kappa Phi 2, 3, 4; Women ' s League Senate 4, Evelyn M. Turner. Pomeroy. Betty W. Underbill, Boston, Mass. Phi Chi Delta; Westminster Fellowship; YWCA. Ronald W. Van Ome, Glen Ridge, N. J. Theta Chi 1, 2, 3, 4; University Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Pershing Rifles 1, 2, 3, 4; Scabbard and Blade 3. 4, First Lieutenant 4; Beta Psi 3, 4; Sv imming 1, 2, 3, 4. Julia Ann Vineyard, Spencer, W. Va. Athena 3; Philosophy Club 4: YWCA 2, 3, 4; Pi Beta Phi. Alice A. Warther, Dover. YWCA; Der Deutsche Verein; Hispanic Club. Charles E. Weber. Rochester, N. Y. Freshman Swimming; OUIA; Newman Club; Psi Chi 4; OU Chemistry Society 4; Sociology Club. Vivian M. Weimer. Marion. Hiram College 1, 2; WAA; Howard Hall House Council, treasurer; Senior Women ' s Council. Mariorie E. Wheaton, Athens. Pi Beta Phi 1, 2, 3, 4, vice president 3, president 4; Delta Phi Delta 2, 3, 4, vice president 3, 4; YWCA 3, 4, cabinet 3, 4; Green White 3; Athena 3; Junior Prom Com- mittee 3; WAA 1. 2, 3; Reserve Dance Club 2; Student Center Committee 4; Women ' s League Senate 4; Panhellenic Council 3, 4. Robert H. Wheaton, Athens. Der Deutsche Verein 1, 2; Radio Club 1, 2; Beta Theta Pi. Leslie I. White, Summit, N. J. Hispanic Club 1; Thela Chi; Athena 1. Bob Wiegand. Toledo. Wrestling 2, 3, 4; Theta Chi 2, 4; Delta Phi Delta 4. Jack A. Wiegman, East Cleveland. Torch 4; Athena 1, 2, 3, 4, feature editor 2; Hterary editor 3; associate editor 4; Green White 1, 2, 3; Playshop 1. 2, 3, 4; Choregi 1, 2, 3. 4; L ' AlUance Francaise 1, 2, 3, 4, treasurer 3; Phi Tau Theta 1, 2, 3; Quill Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Men ' s Selection Board 4; Senior Ball Committee 4; Wesley Foundation 1. 2, 3; Men ' s Dormitory, social committee 3, 4. Lois Wise. East Cleveland. Women ' s League Senate, treasurer 2, 3; Chi Omega 1, 2, 3, 4; Home Economics Club, secretary 3, 4; YWCA I; WAA 1; Athena 3, 4. Robort W. Wonner. Salem. Betty Worstall, Steubenville. Alpha Xi Delta, vice president 3, president 4; Mortar Board; Senior Women ' s Council 4; WAA; Intramural Board 3; Athena 2; Senior Ball Committee 4. Agnes Jean Wright New Philadelphia. Chi Omega, social chair- man 3; YWCA 1; Delta Phi Delta 3, 4; Dance Club 2, 3, 4. Edith F. Wull, Lakewood. Hispanic Club 1, 2, 3, 4, treasurer 3, 4; YWCA 1, 2; Women ' s League Activities Committee 3; Chi Omega. treasurer 3, 4. Frank Richard Young, Lowell. German Club 3; Zoology Club 3, 4; OU Chemistry Society 4. Harry F. ZiroH, Polana. Spanish Club; Newman Club. Donovan Q. Zook, Akron. Senior Class President; Concerl Band 2. 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa 3, 4; Symphony Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Torch 3, 4, secretary treasurer 4; Campus Orchestra 1; Tau Kappa Alpha 1, 2, 3, 4, president 3; Men ' s Activities Board 2; Phi Eta Sigma 1, 2, president 2; Philosophy Club 2, 3, 4; Campus Affairs Com- mittee 3; Varsity Debate 1, 2, 3, 4; Dramatic Art 4; St udent Public Relations Committee 2. 211 aca Itu ndi tMembers of the faculty and administration who received the bachelor of arts degree (or its equiva- lent) from Ohio University. Allen, Amy 188 Anderson, Amos C 58, 78 Andrews. Constance 58 Arbenz, Mary H 169 Annbmster, A. H 13 B Baldwin, Perry L 48, 187 tBeckerl, Ralph F 21 Bedford, Catharine E 55, 157 Bird, O. C 15 Ely ton, Gilford 55, 187 tBoetticher, A. W 186 tBrokaw, Mary K 56 Bundy, Francis P 187 Burger, George N 15. 17 tBuras, Rita E 204 C tCable, Julia L 58 Church, Donald E 184, 185 Clark, George W 53 Class, Edward C 187 Clippinger, Donald R 160 Cooper, Clyde E 187 tCopeland, W. F 55 Crane, Russell J 36. 175 D Davidson. Edward H 186 Dawes, Robert G 14 Denbow, Carl 185 tDevlin, Irene L 13 Dilley, Frank B 12, 187 Dixon. I. F 15 Dow, C. L 202 tDunlap. H. L 160 Dykstra. Gerald 53 E fEblin, Lawrence P 160 tEdwards, John E 187 Eisen, Agnes L 35 tElliotl, Rush 106 Ellis, Mary E 162 F tFenzel, W. H 186 Field, Louise 27, 67 Foster, R. A 187 tFrey. Carl A 187 Gamerlsfelder, W. S 12, 171 Gaylord, E. H 187 Gentry, J. R 58 Gier, Herschel. T 186 Gilraore, Sybil 1 86 tGoldberg, Lawrence 186, 198 tGoldsberry, Blaine 41 Green, Darrell B 186 tGriffiths. George R 58, 162 tGrover, B. T 15, 21 tGullum, Frank B 21 H Hampel. Margaret T 186 Hansen, Einar A 14 Hanson. Carl 185. 186 Harger, Virginia F 1 86 tHarris, C. H 195 Harrison, J. B 186 Halcher, Sarah 180 Heidler, I. B 186 Hellebrandt, Edwin T 187 tHerbert, William H 36, 175 Hess. John A 56 Hill, Victor D 56 tHoover, Thomas N 149. 186 tHouse, Carl J 178 tHouseholder, James E 15 Hoyle, Dorothy 1 58 Humphrey, H. W 59 Hyde, Mary F 168 Ingerham, DeForest V 1 62 I Jacobson, Wilhelmina E 187 James, Herman G 10, 41 Janssen, Curtis W 45, 166 Jenkins, Gwendolyn 66 Joliffe, H. R 56, 187 t Jones, Evan J 1 86 Jones, Mrs. Sara L 27 Jones, Wayne 69 tJukes, Vincent 169 Justin. Florence 21 K Keating, Anne C 14 Kellner. Ann M 180 Kelly, Dana 152, 176 Kent, Mrs. Lenore 59 Kinison. Chas. R 160 Kirchner, WilUam H 186 Krauskopf. Karl H 21 Krauss. Paul G 56 Krecker. Frederick H 54 Kresge. Allen R 162 L Lagerstrom. Alice E 186 Larrick. Thomas 187 tLash, Greta A 21 Lasher. George S 14, 21, 157 LaTourretle, Charlotte E. .. . 180 Lausche, Luveme F 106, 1 60 tLeete, Constance G 56 Lehman, Harvey C 54, 58 tLongslreet. Wm. R 162 M MacDonald. E. F 186 Mackinnon, C. N 9.22, 187 MacTavish, R. D 82 Marquis, R. H 199 Martin, Oliver 187 Marling, Alice 128 tMatheny, W. A 186 tMcClure, O. E 187 McCracken, Thomas C 13, 59 McNeill, Thomas F,..14, 46, 48 McOuiston, Raymer 186 Melcher, Casper F 105 Michael. Dorothy N 204 Miller. Don D 187 Miller, Lila 21 tMiner, Robert 145. 170. 184 Mitchell, L, C 14. 55 Morley, Grace M 1 62 Morse. Mariam S 54 tMorton. J. R 160 Mueller. Eugen H 3. 56 Mumma. Anna E 59 N Nessley. Carl 178 Noss. Mary T 56 O Olmstead. Merritt E 47 tOlson. Thorwald 37, 1 75 Ondis. Lewis A 56. 187 Osgood. Margaret L..22. 27. 68 Otis. Lamar J 21 P Paden. Don W 186 Paige, F. Theodore 160, 186 Palmer. Patricia D 58 Parker, Glen 184 tParks. George C 15 Patrick, James R 12, 199 Paulsen. Gaige B 187 Peckham, H. H 106 Peden, Don C 36, 4 1 , 44, 1 77 Peterson, Philip L 164 Plank, Clyde H 186 Porter, James P 54, 58 Potter, Franklin C 106 R tRay, E. E 184 Reece, Dorothy C 68 tResch, Albert C 170 tRhoads, A. H 44 Richardson, Walter C 55 Riggs, Willanna 66 Roach, James H. L 54, 58 Roberts, Donald 187 Ro binson, C. C 12 Roseberry, H, Hewell 16 Rowan. Charles 169 tRowles. Emmett 55 S Sampselle, Jack B 186 Scott, Thurmon C 187 Seabaugh, Dorothy 186 Shoemaker, F. L , . 186 Sias, A. B 187 tSmiley, Wm. F 195 Smith, E. B 106 Smith, Wilfred J 54 Snook, Josephine V 1 86 tSponseller, Doris 186 tStaats, L. C 147, 170 Steininger, Grace 14 Stephan, James 1 60 T Taylor, E. A 53 Thackrey, J, E 162 tThomas, Neil D 186 Trautwein, W. J 37, 44. 94 Trepp, Joseph P 178 V Van Hamm, Katharine 135 tVermillion, M. T 187 Voigt, Irma E. 13, 16. 17. 21, 23, 27, 29, 171 W Wagner, Florence E. . ' . 186 Way. Edna M 157 Whitehouse. Victor 15. 21. 56 Wild, Raymond W 157 tWilliams. Clark E 15 Willi s, Hazel 157 Wilsey, Edward F 187 fWilson, Hiram R 7 Wilson, Janet P 1 58 Wilson, Margaret M 67 tWise. Harold E 37, 94 Witzler, Karl E 166 tWork, Isabelle M 157 Wray, Edith A 17, 23, 29 Y Young, Wm. M 13 J tudent ndex The number m parenthesis following the name indicates the student ' s classification in the university. 1 — freshman, 2 — sophomore, 3 — junior, 4 — senior, MA or MEd — graduate student. Abel, Doris L. (2) 50, 113 Abel, George L. (1) —.18 Abele. Merle G. (1) 68, 125 Adamson, Ruth M. (2) 56 Agnesi, Mary J. (4) _... 23, 29 58 59 132 Aikln, Ben F. (1) 18 Akers, Harry A. (3) 90 Alam. Sadie J. (2) 105 Albanese. Peter (2) 93 Albrink. Anna R. (3) 164 Aldridge, Maynard J. (4) 32. 132 Alex, Helen (2) 50 Alfred. Theodore C. (3) 86 Algeo. Leona G. (3) 27. 31. 32. 164 Alkire. Abraham R. Jr. (2) 89. 151 Allen. Betty L. (2) 32, 50. 56 Allen, Doris J. (2) 109. 111. 125 Allen. Doris L. (4) 132, 159 Allen. Martha E. (1) 18 Allen. Mary G. (1) 113 Alshuk. William J. (1) 74 Alter. Mary E. (1) 68 Ames. Betty R. (2) 29. 113 Amon. Richard T. (1) 18. 81 Anders, Harold B. (4) 53, 132, 160 Anderson, Dorothy J. (2) 35 Anderson, Robert H. (4) 44. 55. 132. 175 Anderson, Ruth E. (3) 55 Anderson, W. James (1) 78 Androphy. Charlotte E. (2) -126 Anton. Emil P. (2) 132 Anweiler. Raymond P. (1) —-81 Apple, Robert E. ( 1 ) 18, 69 Ardman, Benjamin (1) 18 212 Armbrust, Lawrence W. (2) ..50 Arndl, Robert K. (3) -- 77, 160 Arnold, Norma R. (2) 32. 50, 159 Arnold. Rulh C. (1) 18, 32 Aronoff. Leonard (1) 18, 85 Arringlon, Robert (4) 132 Ash, Ila G. (2) 110, 152 Ashby, lack A. (1) -48, 74, 150 Asher, Carlton R. (41 24. 86, 132 Attwood, Gene L. (2) ....50. 114 Austin, Rosemary M. (1) 68, 113, 129 Averigean, Eli P. (I) 152 Axx, Flora I. (1) 29. 35 Ayres, Frank W. (1) 18, 24, 77. 151, 164 B Bach. Doris E. (2) 41, 114 Badkenstoe, Hughey W. (2) 90, 164 Bacon, William E. (1) 18. 77 Baer, Raymond H. (4) 132 Baesel. Dean E. (2) 166 Bailey, John E. (2) 86 Bain. Virginia A. (1) 18 Hair, Anna M. (4) 132 Baker, Helen F. (2) 29, 114 Baker, Mary L. (4) 132 Baldwin, William H. (3) 73 Baldy. Francis T. (3) 77, 105 Baldy, Paul A. (4) -- 27, 46, 48, 77, 104. 105, 132 Balfour, Esther {U 18. 152 Banasik, Lucille A. (1)..-.18, 125 Banks. Richard P. (1) 18 Banks, Velva I. (2) 16 Banner, Robert G. (3) 78 Barber. Richard L. (4) 21, 22, 41, 63, 89. 132 Barbieri. Joseph P. (1) 162 Barbor. Richard L. (4) 132 Barden, Virginia A. (2) 117, 155 Barger, Betty (4) ...18. 114, 146 Barger. Catherine D. (I) 114 Barklow, Helen L. (2) 27, 113, 128 Barnes, Earl C. (4) 132, 160 Barnharl, Ruth E. (2) 32 Barr, Elizabeth A. (1) 18 Barr, Sarah R. (1) 18 Barrett, Ann M. (3) 118 Barrett, Robert I. (41 46. 81 Bartlett, Edith I. (1) 18, 67 Barllett, James W., Jr. (4) - 89, 132, 135 Barton, James R. (31 90 Barzan, Joe (21 38 Bash, Lorin E. ( 1 ) —81 Bashein. Richard W. ( 1 ) -.18 Baskey, Robert E. (1) 18 Bass. Isadore Jr. (3) 38, 160 Bales, Betty I. (1) 122 Battista, Frank I. (3) 59 Baughman. Richard F. (3) 86 Baumholtz, Frank C. (3) 44, 90, 94, 97, 177 Beach, Mary C. CI) 35 Bean, Francis (1) 81 Beck. Dorian L. (11 122 Beck, Edith R. (11 56 Beck, Russell C. (I) 78 Beck, Rulh M. (2) 27. 29, 68, 113, 164 Becker, Virginia C. (2) 132 Beckerman. Albert (4) 132 Bednasz. Elizabeth B. (31 .59 Beebe, Ernestine D. (I) 18. 32. 150 Beebe, Feme M. (2) 35, 50 Beeler, Elaine S. (4).-.-3, 41, 121 Beeler, John H. (3) 162, 164 Beeler, Mary I. (3) 102, 122 Belden, Jane L. (1) 18, 56 Bell, Bettie M. (3) 128, 129 Bell, Joseph F, (41 90. 132 Bellan, John S. (3)... 6. 82, 105 Below. Richard C. (4)--.. 132 Benham, Thomas W. ( 1 ) 86 Benkerl, William J. (4) 9, 22, 24, 41, 44. 77, 105. 132, 152, 157 Bennett, Paul L. (2) 24. 56 Bernstein, Muriel S. (21 -.126 Bernzweig, Herbert (2) 85 Berringer, Myrna J. (2) 117 Berry, Frances E. (2) 164 Berry, Lewis E. (11 — 18 Bevelacqua. Eugene B. (l)--93 Biddison, Jack C. (2) 90 Bielski, Casimir M. (1) 168 Bierman, Roy (3) 48 Bigelow, Jack (1) 26 Bingham, Vivian Y. (1) 18 Bingman, Charles E. (1) 50 Bishop. Robert S. (41 . 133 Biskup, Emil J. (4) 133, 157, 164, 170 Bladk, Hugh K. (4) 48, 133 BlackhursI, Fredrick A. (31 -.39 Blake. Bruce R. (4) 56. 133, 151 Blank. Charles J. (41 -- 89 Blank, Donald F. (21 -..48. 151 Blankner, Bettinell (21-- 21, 121 Blaschak. Mary L. (4) ' 54, 105, 133 Blazer, James S. (2) 48 Blickensderfer, Charles R. (3)-.-- J 41. 44. 95, 97 Blumenthal, Leon (4) .. 59, 133 Boak, Robert E. (21 48. 73, 150 Boggs, Joseph D. (3) 90 Boguski, Leo H. (21 -.24, 50 Bohnger, Mariorie P. (1) 18 Booth, eien C. (4) 55, 159 Booth, George W. (4) ... 55, 157 Bower, Harry F. (21 73. 155 Bowman, Martha H. (4) 133, 159 Bowman, Mary L. (2) 67 Boyd, Martha I. (41 107, 113, 133 Boydslon, Virginia (1) 18,32,117 Bozman Joanne H. (1) 118 Braham, Roscoe R. (21 ..35. 164 Brammer, Joseph O. (2) 86 Brandle, Patience A. (21 113, 164 Braster. William A. ( 1 ) 86 Braunstein, Howard (1) 16 Brazel. Dorothy (2) 17,41. 114 Breinich. Mathias J. (21 55 Brelsford, Elizabeth J. (2) 32, 158 Brenberger, Richard W. (4) 90, 145 Brennan, Thomas J. (3) - 82, 160, 164 Brenner, Barbara I. (3) 114, 160 Brewer, Betty J. (3) 125 Brienza, Hannah (41 55 Brookman, Carl M. (11 18 Broome, Lorna J. (1) 68 Brophy, James S. (3) 160 Brown, Barbara L. (1) ...29, 67 Brown, Betty L. (31 67 Brown, Fay J. (4) 133 Brown. Francis D. (2) 50, 78 Brown, Harold C. (21 32 Brown, Kenneth W. (4) 146 Brown, Laura D. (31 35, 164 Brown, Luella E. (3) 32 Brown, V«lliam F. (31 90 Brown. William H. { 1 ) 86 Browne, Betty A. (21 50. 67, 159 Brownlee, Earl R. (2) 86 Brownson. Virginia M. (31 121, 129 Bryan, James B. (4) 78 Bryant, Charles W. (1) 18 Bryant. Thomas R. (11 18 Brydon, James K. (4) 133 B uchanan. Eileen K. (11 166 Buckey, Deloris L (1) 18 Burgy, Harry M. (4) 77 Burke, Bud M. (1) 90 Burns, eeanor A. (3) 32 Burns. John P. (41 46,48, 81, 133 Eurnside Myrtle I. (1) 113 Burriss, Mary L. (3) 122 Burson. Mary E. (1) 35 Burstein. Herman (41 -..63, 133 Burton, Carolyn G, (1) 18, 32, 117 Bushman, Alfred C. (2) 78 Buiz, Ruth E. (41 133 Buzard, Helen S. (41 107, 113, 146. 159 Buzard, Virginia K. (1) 113 Byers, Mary E. (11 50 Byrd. Hugh M. (21 89 Byrne, John J, (11 .-il8. 82, 105 C Cable, Beth A. (3) 35, 113, 158 Caldwell, Sara L. (1) 18 Calvin. George T. (11 90 Cannell, Belly N. (1) 18 Cannon, Anna J. (1) 164 Canzoneiti, Andrew J. (2) ■-26 Caran, Robert (1) 18, 48 Carlson, Alma F, (4) 146 Carlson, N. Albert (2) 50, 69, 73 Carlson, Ruth A, (4) 117 Carnahan, Martin F. (2) .89 Carnes, Kathryn A. (31 29, 104, 110 Carney, John A, (O 105 Carpenter, Alice G. (1) -122 Carr, Don R. (11 18 Carr, John D. (21 24, 50, 77. 153, 160 Carroll, Thomas (3) 102, 177 Carson, Freda I. (1) 18 Carson, Virginia G. (31 170 Carlun, Grelechen F. (2) 125, 197 Casanova, Rasquale J. (11 93 Cashman, Maurice D. (11 18 Calanzaro, Joseph (2) 93 Cavallaro, Anthony W. (3) 93, 152 Gavin, LeMoine F, (1) ....18. 78 Cecil, Warren F. (1) 18 Cekulka, Virginia M. (I) 18 Cernyar, Leona M. (31 66 Chadwell, Wyall F. (1)..-.18, 78 Cham, Edward I. (2) 160 Chandler. Faye E, (1) IB Chapman, James H. (2) 86 Chapman, Jean (11 -.18. 56, 118 Chapman, Joseph F. (11 86 Chapman. Mae B. (4) -...59, 133 —student d Hid eye Chapman, Richard L. (3) 32, 78 Chard, Florence J. (1) ...-18, 32 Charters, Janet E. (3) 67 Chase, Robert L. (4) 89, 146 Chatlain, Dean F. (2) 78, 155 Cheney, Barbara D. (1) ..18, 68 Chester. Henry (3) 164 Chesmar. Geraldine A. (1) ..-18 Chester, Betty F. (1) 18 Chester, Frederick J. (31 73 Childs, Shirley J. (11 -...18 Chilton, Lois L. (3) 128, 129 Chizner, Leom (3) 85 Christman, Nellie V. (4) - 21, 133, 162, 166 Christmann, Marjorie A. (11 --- 18 105 Chuff, Nick L. (41 105, 133 Cieri, Charles A. (21 SO, 82 Cinco, Rudolph L (4) ...105, 133 Clark, Isabel (3) 32, 54, 159 Qark, lames P. (1) 89 Qark, John F. (3) 3 Clark, John W. (1) 26. 89 Claris, Murl W, (11 18 Clark, Thomas P. (31 —168, 170 Clarke, Barbara A. (3) 68 Clemmer, George H. (4) 133, 160 Close. James F. (3) 32 Qough, Walter R. (4) 133 Cochran, Catherine A. (21—150 Cochran, Miriam J, (1) 18 Coe, Robert W. (4) 44, 86, 133 Coen, Charles B. (31 21, 44, 64, 177 Coffman, Ashby (2) 56 Cohen, Milton (1) 18, 85 Cohen, Raymond P. (3) 85, 153, 151 Cohen, Saul (3) 24, 138 Cohen, Sylvan H. (21 26, 85 Cokonougher, Betty J. (1) ....18 Colamonico, Thomas J. (2).-- 93 Cole, Doris Rodgers (2) 50 Collett, Charles R. (2) 86 Collins, George F. (2) 35, 73, 166 Colvig, Mariorie R. (31 118 Compton, John W. (4) 90 Comstock, Gene F. (21 118 Conrad, Earl W, (1) 18 Cook, Bernice L. (2) 45 Cook, Margaret E. (4) ..133, 159 Cook. Mildred (21 35 Cook. Robert J. (11 81 Cooke, Mariorie L. (21 150. 164 Cooper, Frances H. (4) - 27, 134, 159 Cooper, Nora R. (1) - 18 Cooper, Ruth (4) 134, 159 Cooper, Warren W. (1) 77 Coovert, Donald L. (11 89 Corbitt, Dorothy M. (1) 45, 105 Corell. William H., Jr. (1) 18 Corey. LeNore (3) - 56 C ornell, Millicent L. (1) 18 Coss, Laura Ann (1) 18 Cote, Roger L. (1) 18, 56, 82 Colterman, C. K. (11 18 Cottrell, Jean E. (4) — 17, 22, 27, 59, 67, 134, 144 213 Liia.ent c a eye (continued) Coughlin, Mary Anne (3) - _..+ 113, 166 Cover, CTarence B. (1) 18, 32, 164 Covert, Robert B. (1) -48 Cowan, Donald R. (4) ..-77, 134 Cowgill, Herbert F. (4) 134 Cox, Amelia M. (2) 118 Cox, Robert E 18, 35 Crabtree, Burnice D. (4) 38, 44, 134 Crabtree, Faith L. (4) 134 Craig, Murray N. (1) 18, 82, 105, 150 Cranmer, Jeannette (4) 134 Craun, Edwin P. (3) k-175 Craun, Harriet P. (2) 32 Crawford, Charles H. (1) 86 Cravrford, lean C. (1) 152, 166 Crawford, Samuel N. (4) 134 Crawford, Woodrow W. (1)....I8 Crites, George B. (1) 164 Cromwell, Chester W. (4) 134. 170 Cronburg, Walter E. (2) 78 Crosby, Pearl E. (4) ....125, 134 Cross, Vance E. (1) 18, 56 Crow, Roger C. (3) 61 Croxford, Wallace D. (1) 78 Croy, Janet M. (4) 139 Culberlson, William R. (4) ..134 Gulp, Burrell C. (1) 18. 81 Cunningham, Frank A. (3) i... 86, 175 Cunningham, George D. (2) 58 Cunningham, Robert H. (1).-164 Curcio, Frank E. (1) 93 Curtis, Gene M. (1) J66 Cuyler, Patricia I. (1) 114 Czarnecki, Stephen I. (4) ...146 D Daggett, Robert M. (4) 86, 105. 146 Dais, Dana R. (3) 56 Dalton. Ralph L. (4) 30, 35 Danford, Suzanne (2) 118 Danner, Carl E. (4) 90,134,138 Danner, Paula A. (4) .55, 67 Dante, lames J. (3) 73 Darby, Edwin W. (2) k...l52 Darlington, Brinton T. 0) ...90 Darlington, Virginia M. (2) 17, 41, 121, 155, 159 Darr Ruth D. (3) 107 Dasbach, Dorothy L. (2) 121 Daugneaux, Richard G. (1) ....18 Davidson, Virginia A. (1) ....122 Davidson, WTlliam J. (2) 59 Davies, Daniel P. (2) 90 Davis, Anne L. (2) 50, 159 Davis, Qyde H. (4) ....9, 89, 134 Davis, Donald G. (1) 18 Davis, Donald P. (2) 89, 170 Davis, Heanor J. (11 18, 29, 113 Davis, Eugene F. (1) r]8 Davis, Harriet (2) 27 Davis, Harry J. (3) 89 Davis, Helen V. (3) 164 Davis, John P. (2) 78 Davis, Marie E. (3) 22, 27, 29, 121 Davis, Mary E. (1) 18 Davis, Robert W. (3) 86 Davis, Virginia M. (4) 117 Dayton, lean L. (1) 118 DeFrance, Robert N. (3) 90 DeHoog, Henry I. (4) 134 DeLong, Vivian M. (1) 18 DeMar, Bruce (2) 81 DeMart, Rocco (3) 93 DeMolet, John P. (1) 86 DePompei, Lambert N. (2) ...78 DeSio, Charles M, (2) 93 Deal, Kenneth M. (3) 77 Dean, Mildred (2) 50, 122 Decker, Elizabeth C. (3) 22, 29, 67, 121 Deinzer, Vernon W. (3) 44, 74, 94 Dembe, Harold N. (1) 18 Demmy, Arlyne P. (4) 121, 128, 134, 155, 170 Dengel, John E. (3) 89, 151, 154 Dennis, Harry S. {1)..-.18, 63, 77 Deuchler, Elizabeth C. (2) ... 50 Devitt, William M. (2) 6, 82 Diokerson, Trudy (3) 60, 103, 150, 152, 154 Dickinson, Elizabeth H. (4) 134, 159 Dickson, lohn C. Ir. (2) 48, 56, 78, 155 Diehl, Eleanor E. (1) 125 Diehl, Roger 61 Dieringer, Rosemary (1) 50, 117 Dill, Wesley H (3) 35, 55 Divich, Sophia (1) 18 Doak, Mary Lee (1) 18 Doctorow, Norman (3) ....L...164 Doherty, Harry A. (2) 50 Donaldson, Bonnie B. (3) 32 Dorsey, Frances M. (1) 16 Dossett, Ethelyn G. (3) 12 ' I, 159 Doubler, Ralph D. (3) 44, 177 Downer. Samuel F. (4) 9, 16, 21, 22, 26, 40, 63, 90, 106, 134 Drake, Robert O. fl) 18, 81, 89 Draper, Kay I. (0 -.18, 122 Dressel. lane E. (2) 111, 113, 128 Dressier, Mary E. (2) 68, 114 Dreusedow, Donald (31 56, 160 Dudkwall, Heber C. (4) 157 Duff, Howard B. (1) 90 Duffy, John ( 3) _ 134 Dugan, Charles W, (4) 32, 59, 134 Dumanski, Frank M. (3) 175 Dunlap, Cecil U. O) 50, 56 Dunlap. Margaret M. (4) 118, 134 Dunlap, Robert C. ( 18 Dunlea, William P. f3) 24, 60, 73, 103, 150, 152, 154 Dunn, Elmer P. f4) ....135 Dunn, letlrey B. ( ' 4) 135 Durbin, Robert F. ( ' 2 ' ) 50 Durst. John E. f3) -■• 48, 81 Durst, Rita K, (2) ....48, 50, 105 Duvendeck, Elizabeth C. (3) 158 Duvendeck, William W. (1) 18, 69, 81 Dwinell, William S. (1) 166 Dworkin. Ethel (1) 16 E Eakin, lane E. (3) 170 Earnhart, Margaret L. (3) -..29, 54 Eckis, Margaretta A. (3) 118, 128, 129 Eddy, Richard W. (4) 22, 41, 46, 48, 77, 105, 135, 160 ' Eddy, William I. ( 1 ) ...-105, 164 Edleman, Dorothy A. (1) 18, 35 Edwards, Alvin T. (1) 73 Edwards, George P. (3) 152 Edwards, leannette P. (2) -.. 125, 151, 155 Eells, Byron R. (3) 157 Eitort, Harold (2) 157 Einheil, Eleanor G. (3) 54, 56, 160 Bnheit, Gertrude E, (1) -.18, 56 Eisen, Marvin P. (1) 18 Eisenhut, lack S. (1) 26, 50 Ekleberry, Richard E. (4) 96, 135 Elam, Warren (3) 162 Elder, Kathleen J. (4) 114 Eldridge, Lois A. (1) 18, 41, 114 Ellerman, Alexander (2) 77, 155 Dlerman, Alice L. (4) 3, 55, 121, 135 Oliott, Alice L. (1) 18, 56 Elliot, Cameron C. (2) ...26, 38 Ellis, Qarice L. (1) 18 ElHs, David G. (1) 56 Elson, Leo I. (1) 104 Emory, Charles M. .-(4) 89, 135 Engel. Margaret I. (2) 128 Engelman, Richard H. (4) 35, 44, 63, 64, 175 Engle, Robert T. (4) 48, 135, 137 Ensminger, William C. (3) 3 Entvidstle, Harry G. (MA) ....59 Enyeart, Robert A. (4) 16, 73, 134, 135, 154 Erwin lames O. (1) 18, 48 Essman, Martha Ann (2) 68 Evans, Bruce E. (2) 50, 89, 162 Evans, Caroline L (2) ..125, 151 Evans. Dafydd W. (4) 24, 89, 135, 162, 164, 166 Evans, Richard F. (4) - .-24, 59, 73, 135, 153 Evans, Thomas R. (2) 81, 164, 166 Everhart. Richard K. (1) 164 Exelby, William B. (4 ' ) ..., 81 F Fairchild, John E. (2) 59, 73 Fairchild, Walter T. (4) 73, 135 Faris, Helen I. (4) 118 Farmer. Leonard H. (2) 89 Farroni, Raymond J. (3) 44, 177 Faulkner, Myers C. (3) 90 Faulslich, Otta L (4) 17, 21, 23, 27, 59, 53. 107. 113, 135, 146 Fawcelt, George S. (4) 135 Fawcett, John E. (4 135, 152, 157 Fay, Ann M. (4) 135, 170 Federer, Edna L. (2) 50 Fehndrick. George A. (2) 90 Ferguson, Helen (FA-Sp) 32 Festerly, Harold B. (2) ...A%. 73 Fetter, Russell M. (1) ...- 18 Fechtelman, Norine H. (1) 18, 67, 113 Fidk, Paul L. (2) J9 Fifner, William R. (3) ..- 77 Finefrock, Norma I. (1) ..-- 18 Finkelman, Joseph A. (1) 18 Finley, Betty V. (3) 122 Finley, Edward J, (2) 157 Finley, Robert M. (1) 18, 59, 90, 102, 155 Finney, Ethel L. (1) 18 Finsterwald. Sara I. (2) 114 Finnie, Robert J, (3) 26, 59, 86 Finsterwald, Virginia F, (1)....32 Fisch, Martin S. (3) 46 Fischer, Charles H. (2) 86 Fischer, Jack M. (2) 86 Fiser, Helen L. (4) 122 Fisher, Carolyn T. (4) 146 Fishlock, Jack (3) 89 Fitts, Sarah M. (2) 35, 164 Fitz. Blanche (4) 113, 146 Flanagan, David C, (2) 162, 188 Heischer, H. W. (3) 85, 157 Fleming, Robert M. (1) 17 nesher. Leon G. (3) ...166 Floasin, Elh (3) 78 Flower, Alice M. (1) 32 Flowers. Richard W. (2) 74 Fohl, Mary E. (1) 18 Ford, Alice R. (1) 18, 35 Ford, Robert A. (3) 3, 90 Ford, William H. (1) 18 Foreman, Leslie E. (4) — 35. 46, 135 Forguer, William K. (1) .18, 82 Forsyth, Ruth M. (2) 35, 164 Foster, George G. (3) -. 77, 151, 162 Foster, Nellie S. (1) -. 121, 151, 158. 162 Foster, Richard M. (2) _ 89, 150, 152, 157 Fouche, John A. (1) 77 Fox, John Milton (4) ...78, 146 Fox, Virgene (1) 32 Fraedrich, William G. (4) ..73, 136 Frak, Qemert A. (4) 135 Francis, Marilyn A. (3) 22, 29, 121, 152, 164 Francis, Stanley A. (4)..135, 150 Frank, Philip (2) 27, 85 Franklin, William E. (4) 59, 135 Franz, Earle W. (2) 81 Franz, Heanor R. (1) 122 Franzoline, Anthony L. (1) 18.48 Frasca, Anthony G. (2) 82 Erasure, Evelyn I. (2). .-32, 158 Frazer, Fred J. (4) 21, 22, 24. 41, 48, 85, 141 146, 158 Frazier, Richard C. (3) 78 French, Betty K. (2) 30, 55 French. William C. (11 90 Freyburger, Elizabeth J. (3) 113 Fri, Lois P. (3) 32 Friel, lames J. (0 74 Fries, Margaret E. (2) 50 Frindt, Albert A. (2) 50, 150 Fritz, John ]. (11 18, 35 Frost, Jeanne E. (2) 17, 27, 29, 159 Frost, Kenneth D. (4) 39 Fruend, Esther C. (21 129 Fuetterer, Theresa J. (3) 22, 29, 68, 170 Fulks . Charles H. (1) 77 214 Fuller. Ruth L. (4) 135 Fuller, Stephen H. (3) 24. 89, 170 Fulmer, Olen C. (4) 77, 104 Fulmer, Ruth (4) 27, 136 Fulton, Betty J. (1) 114 Fulton. lohn C. (3) 86, 168 Funari, Dora (2) 50, 56 Furr, Charles C. (4) 86 a Gadus, Gertrude A. (4) -21, 23, 29, 118, 136, 159 Gahm, Wallace L. (4) ..136, 160 Galley, Elizabeth M. (2) 41, 50, 114, 151 Gall, Emery E. (2) 50, 105 Gall, Virginia (2) 118 Galloway, James V. (4) 48, 81, 137 Gamble. Edward H. (2) 24 Gamertsfelder, Arlene I. (2) - 110. 118. 164 Gammage. Gloria (3) 114 Garber, Ruth E. (1) 18 Garber. William R. (4) 136 Garfield, Leonard D. (4) 136 Garn. Robert A. (4) 24, 46, 90, 146 Garner, Ralph E. (3) 136 Garry, Gordon F. (4) 136 Gartenberg, Morton C. (2) .... 48. 50, 85, 150 Garvin, lack H. (1) 18 Garzieri. Ernest H. (4) .....-.-136 Gaskell. Charles L. (2) 86 Gaskins, Francis D. (4) - 61, 168, 170 Gales, Helen R. (3) 158 Gaull. Dorothy E. (1) 18 Gaver. Virginia M. (I) 18 Gayley, lames A. (3) 46. 48, 90 George. Mabel O. (1) 18 Gerchow. Frank W. (3) 89 Gerding. Elmer E. (2) 39 Germann, Phyllis A. (4) 136, 162 Geyer, George G. (3) 157 Gibbs. Norma M. (I) 18, 113, 152 Gibbs, Richard J. (3) .--90 Gibson, Mary A. (1) .---122, 162 Gilford. Lillian R. (1) 117 Gilchrist. Grace E. (3) 128, 159 Gilham. Warren G. (1) 86 Gillespie. E. M. (2) 50 Gillespie. Ruth, R. (4) ..128, 136 Gilhland. Ray W. (3) -153. 157 GiUivan. Allan O. (2) 81 GilHvan, lohn D. (1) 81 Givertz. Esther (2) 56 Givertz. Morris (4) 59, 136 Glass. Constance H. (2) 113, 157 Glass, George S. d) 18. 48, 86 Glazier, Sara M. (2) 122 Gleason, John C. (2) 31. 77 Glick, Dudley H. (2) 50, 164 Glover, Mary R. (1) -- 18 Glover, Virginia (2) 50, 117 Gober, Chester C. (3) 26 Godfrey. Edgar C. (3) 35 Goetz. Albert I. (2) 164 Gold, Evelyn L. (I) 164 Goldhamer. Marvin E. (2) 85 Goldman. Saul (1) 18 Goldman. Selma (2) 126 Goodman. Mamie R. (2)........ 164 Goodrich. Elizabeth (4) .—.-136 Gosnell, Doris E. (3) 32 Gottlieb, Anita I. (1) 60 Gottlieb, Estella S. (2) 126 Gottlieb, Marjorie S. (2) 126 Gove, Edwin P. (2) -.-78 Graham. Mary K. (4) 107, 113, 129, 136, 146 Graham, Robert W. (1) --16. 48 Graves. Lawrence W. (1) 16 Gray, Frances A. (I) 108, 125, 150 Gray, Lewis H. (4) 136, 160 Gray, William R. (3) 48, 73, 103, 150, 170 Green, Ellen C. (2) 55, 125 GreenblatI, Sam (4) 85, 136, 164 Greenlees, Alberta R. (3) ....159 Greenlees. John P. (1) 18 Greenlees, Roberta E. (3) 35 Greenwood, Robert H. (2) —24 Greiner, Fred K. (3) 78 Gribble. Mary M. (2) 159 Grieves, James H. (1) 74 Griffith, Marjorie E. (2) 27, 50, 121 Grigg, Dan N. (3) --41, 85, 150 Grim. Pauline (1) 18 Grimsley. Helen K. (4) ....59, 136 Grodeck, Adelaide N. (2) 56, 166 Grossman, Herbert (4) 135 Grossman, Leonard (4) 136 Gruber, Elinor J. (1) 35 Gruey, Sarah M. (4) 32. 56, 136 Guides, Mary F. (2) 125 Guthrie. Randall C. (I) 18, 45, 90 H Haas. Jeanette W. (4) -- 128, 136, 150 Habat, John E. (1) ....18 Hadden, Virginia L. (3) 32 Hafner, Esther E. (3) 29. 121 Hagen. Ruth K. (4) .136, 170 Haines. Eleanor M. (1) 18 Hainley. Lois J. (1) 18 Halbedel. Kathryn B. (4) 118 Halderman, James F. (2) 38, 44, 95 Hales, Mary V. (I) 50 Haley, Donald W. (4) ...-32, 137 Hall, Elma A. (4) 35, 137 Hall, James C. (2) 86 Haller. Helen E. (2) 159 Hamilton, David A. (3) 26, 90, 160 Hamilton, Jeannette (3) ...- 56 Hamilton, Maydelle (3) 158 Hamilton, Robert E. (1) ......104 Hamilton. Robert G. (1) ....i8, 35 Hamm, Dorothy L. (2) 35. 50 Hancock, Mary J. (1) ....18. 121 Hanna. Edwin D. (1) 18, 77 Harahus, Helen (4) 137 Harclerode, Paul L (4) 137 Harkabus, Mildred L. (4) 27, 105, 137 Harkins, Frances N. (4) 160, 164 Harkness, James M. (2) -—..-32 Harmon. Robert A. (1) 18 Harrington, Elizabeth E. (2) 67, 113 Hanis, Martha I. (3) 170 Harrison. Howard M. (2) 39 Harrison. Mary B. (4) 137 Harrold, Mary E. (4) ....66, 137 Harry. Ormsby L. (2) 32 Hartford, Margaret E. (4) 28, 29, 121, 137, 146 Hartman, Dorothy M. (3) ..-..-32 Hartman, Edmund T. (4) 90, 176 Hartman, Frances J. (4) 32, 137, 159 Hartsough, Doris A. (1) 18 Harvey. Marjorie A. (2) 56 Haskins. Helen (4) 122, 143 Hasselbach, John (I) -6, 82 Hay. Jane L. (2) ----Ill, 114 Hayes, Clarence E. (4) 146 Hayes. Faye L (1) 18 Hayes, John M. (1 ) ..........73, 150 Hayes, Richard T. (I) 86, 160 Haynes, John B. (3) 177 Healy. Winifred L. (4) -- 125, 132, 199 HechI, Martin L. Jr. (2).... 26, 86 Heck, eeanor C. (1) --- 18 Hegel, Orville E. (1) 151 Heitman. Marjorie L. (1) 122 Heldman. Mary V. (1) 18 Heldman. Naomi M. (3) -..-...159 Heller. John S. (2) 73, 155 Helman, Marjorie E. (3) 2, 45, 60, 61, 122 Helwig. Lawrence G. (1) 164 Henneberger Jane (4) 114 Henrich, Edna E. (4) 1.-137 Henry. Virginia L. (1) ....61, 122 Herrel. Charles R. (3) 26, 29, 78 Hess, Harry A. (2) 31, 32 Hess, Helen L (1) 121 Hesson, Martha E. (I) 18 Helzler, Marilyn J. (I) ...18, 68 Hetzler, Robert H. (4) 24, 56, 78, 146 Heydick, Dean A. (4) 16, 73, 137, 153, 155 Hickman, Charles P. (1) 18 Hicks, Earl A. (4) ..44, 137, 175 Higgins. Armel G. (4) 35 Higqins. Edgar F. (2) 50 Higgins. Marie C. (1) 18 High. Jane (0 18, 27 Hill, Elizabeth R. (3) 29 Hine. Richard E. (4) 73, 137 Hinlz, Gloria L. (4) 1137, 159 Hirsimaki. Eli N. (4) 41, 44, 74, 137, 176 HIinka. Pete I. (3) 73, 166 Hocker, William A. (2) 39 Hodes. Wallace (1) 85 Hoffman. Betty J. (1) 18 Hoffman, Geraldine C. (3) 121, 150, 164 Hoffman, Samuel R. (1) 90 Holcomb, Harriet L, (4) J 117, 137, 150 Holmes, Jeanne H. (1) 152 Holycross. Eugene (1) 32 Hood. Lyle E. (4) 197 Hook, Lois E. (3) 32 Hooper, Barbara K. (3) 103, 118, 129 Hooper, Earl A. (2) 50 Hooper. Marian J. f2) - 29. 118, 150 Hopkins. Carol V. (I) .■■27, 121, 155 Hopkins, Mary E. (1) 66 Hopkins, Ruth E. ,, 50 Horan, Daniel L. 0) 82 Horn. Bernard (1) ....152 c titdent c:: ita.eK Hornby. Charles D. (1) 18, 48, 73 Home, Elizabeth (2) -. 118 Homing, Arthur J. (3) 59, 164, 168 Hornstein, Mary L. (4) 118, 129, 150 Horowitz, Seymour I. (1) 18 Horton, Howard J j. 31 Hosch. Harlan R. (1) 89 Hoskinson. Howard K. (3) ....137 Houck, Mary E. (1) 18, 118 Houf, Ruth J. (2) 31, 35, 56, 114 Houl, Weldo E. (4) ...- 56, 89, 137, 164 Houk, Robert B. (1) 18 House, Eileen F. (4) ...56, 137 House, Irene M, (4) 137, 170 Houston, John W. (1) 18. 32 Howard, William E. (3) 69 Howell. Alice L. (2) 122, 164 Huck, Joan E (2) —.159 Hudlett, J. Gertrude (1) 18 Huhtala, Eugene M. (3) 74 Hull, Mary K. (4) 118, 153, 157 Hummell, Chester H. (3) 48 Humphrey, Dorothy J. (1) 60, 51 Humphrey, Robert J. (1) 73 Hunt. Carrie M 35, 138 Hurley, John J. (3) 73 Hutcheson. Norman E. (4) 78 Hulson. Eleanor J. (4) 118 Hydovilz, Jeanne S. (4) 126, 138 Hyslop, David J. (4) 44, 81, 95, 138 I Ibele, Oscar H. (3) 24 Ireland. Judith (2) ....E7, 32, 159 Irvine, John R. (1) 32 Isaacs, James P. (3) ....8, 63, 78 Ish, Carl ]. (2) 78 Ivary, Henry (2) 25, 39 I Jackson, Edward B. (4) 138 Jackson, Robert M. (2) 164 Jacobs. Phyllis W. (1) 122 Jacoby, Eileen G. (1) 50 JadeHs. George A. (2) 74 lahn. Mary M. (4) 138 lakobey. Olga V. (3) 164 Jandes. Mary M. (1) -18 laniak, Robert J. (2) 39, 44 Jasper, Samuel J. (1) ■■-.38, 162 Jasper, William (3) 30, 32 Jaynes, Wanda M. (1) 125 Jefiers, James K. (1) 18 leffers. Jessie P. (1) 18 Jenkins, Dorothy M. (I) 18 Jewell, Dick E. (1) ........ 81, 162 Jewell, John M. (1) -...69, 81 Joachim, Martin A. (I) -— 85 Jobson, Mildred M. (2) 50 Johns, Rosemary Carol (1) 27 Johnson. Arthur R. (4) — 78 Johnson, Betty ]. (2) 50 Johnson, James B. (3) 138 Johnson. Lloyd S. (1) 16, 69,81 Johnson, Robert B. (41 -73, 139 Johnson, Ross S. (3) .-32, 160 Johnson, Sylvester S. (3) 24, 44, 90 215 tllAettt d YlA X: (continued) Johnson, Virginia E. (3) 164 Johnston, Grace L. (4) 138 Jolly, George R. (4) , 22, 24, 45. 89. 138 Jones, Archie H. (0 18 Jones, Dana S, (2) 81 Jones, Jack C. fl) 41 Jones. Jane (2) 121 Jones, John M. (2) 90 Jones. Martha W, (3) 21. 28. 29, 114 Jones. Robert F. (1) - 18 Jones. Roger J. (4) 90 Jones. Shirley (2) .- 121 Jones. Walter J. (1) -.18. 48. 69 Journay. Betty L. (4) 29. 66. 138 Judd. Wallace C. (11 18. 73 June. Harriet A. (3) 113 Junloff, Raymond M. O) ........18 luringus. Carf F. (4) 138 K Kahn, Howard M. (4) . -63. 155 Kalat. Edward J. (3) 26 Kalivoda. Paul P. (2) 44 Kamuf. Edith P. (4) 8, 17, 23, 27, 60, 61. 138 Karch, Shirley M. (4) 35, 54, 138 Kasimov, Sam L. (4) 138 Kasputis. Edward (3) ...44. 175 Kass, Stanley (1) --18, 85, 150 Kaylor, Ronald E. (2) 38. 44 Keefer, Frances C. (1) 56 Keiser, Ila M. (1) -- 114 Keller, Doris M. (4) 35, 138, 159 Keller, Duane H. {2) 150 Kelley, Harold G. (4) 138 Kelly, Irene M. (1) 117 Kelly, Thomas A. (1) 164 Kemper, Richard B. (3) 53 Kemph. John P. (2) 164 Kempton, Dorothy J. (4) 4. 35. 138. 159 Kenney. Robert CO) 90 Kenney, Robert S. (!) - -48, 166 Kenny, Edith R. (1) 122 Kent, Betty L. (1) 18, 118 Kent, Grace M. (3) -29 Kepler. Edith L. (1) 16, 17,61,68 Kerman, Earl W. (2) 69, 168 Kern, Lavema M. (3) 32, 59 Kerr, Paul B. (4) 21. 24, 90, 138 Ketner, Wayne M. (2) —50. 89 Keys, J. Grant (3) 24. 26 Kilian, emore D. (2) 89 Kiltinen. Doris L. (3) 17, 22, 27. 29. 68 Kincade, Mary M. (2) 32 Kinkaid. Raymond T. (1)--18. 48 Kinney. Robert N. (3) 69 Kish, Ernest A. (3) - 24. 86. 177 Kittle. Frederick (2) 90. 156 Kline, John W. (3) 90 Klohs. Dorothy M. (3) 159 Klopfenstine. Roy F. (2) 77. 153 Kluga. Bernard R. (2) 39 Knapp. Elsie J. (3) 114 Knaul, John E. (4) 138 Knerr, Ramona J. (1) 114 Knight, Shirley A. (1) 18, 56, 114, 150 Knisley, Allen H. (4) 59. 138. 160 Knisley. Arvin D. (21 - 61. 188 Kocher. Harvey B. (4) 78 Kochowski. Theodore R. (1) L.- 82. 105 Koons. Gordon R. (2) 77 Koons. Lura J. (1) 18 Koop, Marian L. (1) 68 Kovarsky, Leonard (1)- -85, 150 Kowalski, William I. (2) ...-6. 82 Kreckel, Virginia H. (1) 155. 162 Krecker. Frederic M. (4) 146 Krenzler. Alvin I. (1) - - 45 Kridel. Morton (3) 3, 26, 38 Krieger. Norman C. (3) -.78. 149 Krispinsky. John F. (2) 82 Kritz. Adolph S. (2) 77. 105 Krjzman, Jean A. (1) 18 Krohmer, Robert C. (2) --38, 44 Kronour. Mariorie V. (1) 18. 68 Krukosk. Robert J. (4) 48. 133 Krumbiegel. Harry H. (3)— 175 Krumling. Carol J. (2) 125. 151 Krumm, Ethel M. (1) 67. 118. 194 Kruspe. William F. (1) 78 Kucharski. Walter S. (3) 105 Kuchenrither. Dorothy M. (2). .27 Kuchenrither, Sarah J. (4) 139 Kuhn. Mary C. (1) 18 Kuhner. William J. (1) 38. 77 Kull. Robert B. (1) 32 Kuncel. Frank J. (2) 77 Kunkel. Beatrice L. (1) 29. 50 Kunzelman. Edward G. (2) ----164 Kursel. WiUiam J. (3) 26. 89.151 Kustin. Emil S. (4) 85 Kutler. Norma I. (3). . . 50. 126. 204 L LaMonica. Joseph J. (Arts-Sp) 45 Lafferty, Alice E. (2) —125, 170 Laing. Hamilton C. (4) 139 Lalich. Peter T. (2) 94 Lama. Alice L. (1) --18. 35. 166 Lamb. Jane L. (2) 113 Lamberti. Joseph M. (1) 18. 56. 105 Lamp. Dalton C. (2) 77 Lancaster. Ruth J. (3) 35 Lane. Ken (1)— 18 Lane. Lois A. CD 18. 121 Lanich. M. Jean (4) 122. 139 Lanier. Dorothy A. (1) 27 Larkin, Virginia E. (3) 117. 150 Larrick. Dorothy J. (1) 18 Lasher. Mary E; (2) --9. 29, 41. 50, 114, 152, T57 Lauden, Franklyn K. (4) 27. 41. 63, 106. 139. 152 LaugMin. Mildred L (U 18 Lavelle. Edwin T. (U 105 Law. Virginia L. (1) 164 Lawrence, Richard E. (3J-55. 90 Lazowsky. Francis C. (2) 184 LeComte. Charles E. (1) 168 Leach. Leroy P. (1) 154 Leben. Curt (4) 139 Lehman. Robert S. (2) 50, 73 Lelghton, Kenneth M. (1) 86 LVmr. Fred C. (1)— 18. 86. 155 Lebnhart. Martha L (3) 157 Levine. Burton D. (2) 85 Levilsky. Charles A. (1) 18 Lewellyn. Adeline E. (3) 122 Lewis, Anna D. (1) 18 Lewis, Charles R. (4) 139. 157 Lewis, Ruth A. (4) 139 Lewis, Ulah A. (1) 68. 121 Libbey, Oden F. (3) 16, 73 Librizzi. Peter N. (4) —139. 160 Liccardi. Mari A. (4) ..., 55, 106, 128, 139, 150 Licht, Irving H. (2) 50, 152 Lichtenstein. Madyline E. (1) 126 Lichty. Vivian J. (1) 118 Lieberman. Jane A. (3) 22, 29, 170 Ligett, Robert E. (3) 89 Lindsey. Ruth E. (3) 22. 29. 59.- 63, 113, 152, 170 Linke, Richard O. (3)- -77, 157 Lipka, Caroline A. (3) 27. 128. 129 Lipman. Stanley S. (2)- 85 Lipphardt. Mary L. (1) 113 Liss. Stanley A. (2) 85 Listen. Lawrence R. (1)---- 18 Livingston. Ira C. (3) S9, 73 Lloyd, Albert L. (2) 90 Lloyd. Margaret L. (2)---- 29. 58. 152 Lockard. John A. (3) - 24. 56. 90, 152 Loesch. Marie M. (4) 139 Loew. Franklin E. (4) —73, 139 Loflus. Charles R. (3) --89. 139 Logan. Phyllis K. (3) -118. 162 Long. Richard C. (1) 48 Long. Robert S. (3) 86 Loquer, John D. (2) 81 Lott. Margaret L. (4) 27 Love. Charles W. (3) 154 Love. Mary I. (2) 113 Lovell. Katharine T. (2) 67. 121, 162, 166. 194 Lowry. W. Carl (MEd) 59 Lowther. Robert (2) 74 Lyons. Jeanne E. (3) 68. 170 Lyons. Margaret L (2) 50 Mc McBride. Charles S. (2) .-, 26. 150. 168 McBride. Dorothy E. (1) 18. 118 McBride, Margaret E. (1) 18. 118 McCleary. Mary A. (2) 164 McClure. Dorothy M. (2) 113 McClure. James W. (3) - 89. 103. 139 McConnaughey. Betty L. (1) 18, 35 McConnaughey, John R. (1) _ 18, 77, 150, 205 McConnell, lames (2) 48 McCord. Helen E. (1) 18. 68 McCoy. Lois S. (4) -139 McCoy. Lowell L. (2) 50 McCoy, Vula C. (4) 139 McCray. Anne (1) 122 McCulloch, Mary (4) 29, 125, 139, 158 McCullough, Jane F. (1) 105 McCune. Ellsworth J. (1) 18 McCune. Ruthanne (2)— 16. 125 McDonald. Carl W. (2).- 86. 155 McDonald. George T. (1) 82. 105 McDonald. Lee E. (1) 86 McDougall, Eileen C. (4) 121, 139 McElfresh. Rachel J. (2) 35 McElhenie. Miriam R. (3) 159 McElhiney, Marjorie (4) 118. 129 McEndree. William G. (3) 85 McFadden. Jean A. (3) 121 McGaffney, William E. (l)---78 McGee. William Jr. (1) 32 McGrath. John E. (1) 73, 152 McGuire, Esther J. (1) 18. 35 McHale. Rosemary M. (4) -- 23. 139. 142, 154. 157 Mclntyre. Lois N. (1) 18. 32 McKasson. Doris A. (2) 60. 61. 118 McKay. Aurea I. (4) 117 McKay. Mary A. (4) 114,162.166 McKee, Vincent G. (4) 139 McKerna. Joseph E. (2) 82 McKibben. Aleta M. (3) 56 McKinven. John A. (3). .58.61. 152 McLane, Mary L. (1) 17 McMahon. John V. (2). .50. 69, 166 McMains. Louise A. (4) 139 McMenamy. Rita M. (2) -50. 105 McMillen. Mary E. (4) 140 McMillen. Charles L. (1) 18. 89 McNally. Patrick ]. (1) 18 MacNamara. William K. (3)— 78 MacNamara. William S. (3)— 89 McQuistion. William E. (3) -78 McSherry. Harry W. (3) --X 7. 44, 95, 97 McVay, Burdette R. (3) 89 McVicker. Frank R. (1) 166 McViTiorler. Louis R. (3)—. 73 M Macchione, Matilda G. (4).. 29. 56 Maccombs. Alice (1) 18, 114 Mackinnon, Alice P. (3) 114 Maddy. Edwin J. (2) 90 Magness. Marilyn E. (1)-— ...18 Mahan. Betty L. (3) 159 Mahan. Phillip S. (1) 18. 48 Maher. William J. (3) 6. 82 Mahlood. Genevieve M (2). .32. 50 Mahrer. Susan C. (1) 68. 152 Maiden. John O. (3) 58. 177 Main. Eunice (2) 50 Main. Rodney W. (3) 77 Male. James W. (1) 41. 73 Mallett. James F. (1) 18 Malone. Mariorie J. (2) 164 Maloney. Virginia K. (1) 18.117 Mandell. Harvey M. (1) 85 Maneggie. Edith M. (4) 23. 35. 140. 141, 152, 157 Manlovitz, Simon (1) 18 Mann, Fayetla B. (3) 35 Manter. Earl W. (3) 32. 59. 166 Manler. William R. (2) 32 Manzler. Idamae (4) 121 Maple. William E. (1) 18. 48 Magard. Glenn R. (3) 55, 64. 140 Margoles. George J. ( ' } 6. 105. 150. 155 Margolis. Edward J. (2) 82 Mariani. Ernest (1). . 18 Marks. Evelyn F. (1 ) 32 Marks. Myron J. fl) 18 Marlatl. FlorineE. (3). .59. 140. 166 Marra. Joseph P. (2). .18. 50. 69, 93 Martin. Phyllis L. (1) 18 Martindill. Charles S. (4) 89 Martineau. Harry L. (3) 155 Mason. Arnold (1) --18. 48. 73 Malheny, Robert F (1) 18 216 Maul, Dwight E. (1)-. 18 Maurer. Thomas B. (4). .30, 32, 140 Maxwell, Esia J. (2) -- --55, 114 Maxwell, Janet E. (2) 17, 29, 118 Maxwell, Raymond F. (4). 140, 162 Maxwell, Robert W. (4) 140, 164 Mayer. Patricia C. (2) 121 Mayes, Helen E. (3) 109, 114, 129; 160 Mayes, Rugh K. (3) 55, 114, 128, 150 Mazfroff, Jerome H. (1) 18, 85 Mead. Howard W. (4). ...90. 146 Mechem, Alice E. (2). 114, 153. 155 Mechem, William A. (2) 77, 153 Medicus, S. Eleanor (3) 125, 158 Mednik. Allen (1) ..18 Meek. Richard B. (1) 46, 73 Meister, J. Yvonne (3) 170 Meister. Martha C. (4) :.. 31, 35, 113, 140 Mekedis, Alex P. (3) 56, 59, 175 Melcher, Cathryn F. (2) 35. 113, 160 Menuez, Roscoe R. (2) 48, 81 Merkel, William R. (3) ....90, 155 Mermelslein, Gladys E. (l)...-27 Merrill. Jane (1) 18, 113 Merrill, Marie T. (1) 18 Meschan. Florence (4) • 21. 23. 29, 40 Messick, George H. (1).18, 61, 150 Messner. Charles (3) 56 Melz. Mary (4) v 113 Metzger. Wallace F!. (1) 48 Miller. Betty Z. (4) 113, 140, 157 Miller, Branford D. (I) 81 Miller. Carl G. (3) . . -■73 Miller, Charles E. (2) .-•-..:-..50 Miller. Dorothy (2) ....118 Miller. Emmalyn E. (1) 16 Miller, Frank B. Jr. (l)- —■78 Miller, Franklin P. (4) 1...140 Miller. Helen M. (4) 122 Miller. Irving 0) -153 Miller. Mary M. (1) 168 Miller. Melvin E. (4) 140 Miller. Mildred V. (2) 32 Miller. Robert I. (3) 32, 94 Miller. Ruth A. (3) 118 Miller. William F. (1) 18 Milligan. Lawrence C. (3) 90, 103, 150, 154 Miner, Alfred- C. (3) 69 Minnameyer. Martha A. (4) 16. 32, 140 Mitchell, Seymour (2) 85 Mittleman, Myron Budd (2) ....61 Mlakar. John A. (2) 94 Mobley, Ernest N. (2) 74 Mock, Mary E. (4). 54, 118, 140. 159 Monda. Tarzan f4) -.140 Monks. Mary A. (4) 56, 140 Monroe. Beatrice O. (1) 18 Montani. Ruth E. (1) 18 Mook. Ralph E. (3) 32, 48 Moore, Collier W. (1) 18 Moore. Frank C. (4) - 140 Moore, Harold H. (3) 1 60 Moore. Jadk L. fl) 77 Moore, Vivian L. (2)..-. 50 Moorhead. Doris L. (3) 27 Morgan, Beatrice L. (4) 32. 140 Morgan. Marie R. (MEd.) 31. 58 Morgan. Robert M. (2) 50 Morgan, Thomas E. (3) 89, 164 Morgans, Harry (1) 18 Morgenstein, Daniel D. (3) 85 Morgenstern, Evelyn E. (2).. ..122 Moriarty, Helen M. (MEd). ...59 Morris, Helen M. (1) 18 Morris, Milton E. (2) 50 Morris, Virginia R. (2) 122 Morrison, Anna M. (1) 29, 114 Morrison, Arminta M. (3) 61 Moskowitz. Milton H. (2) 85, 170 Mossbarger. Emma J. (1) -18 Mote, Kingston (1) 18, 48 Moulton, Janis L. (3) ....114, 150 Mullett, Virginia A. (4) ..- 21, 29, 114,- 133, 140, 170 Mulloy, Mariorie A. 1). 60, 61, 122 Munas, Eli R. (4) 140, 150, 157 Mundee, John A, (3) : 86, 105 Munk, Ruth E. (2)....v 164 Murch, J. De Forest (2) 89 Murdock. S. Carolyn (2) 114 Murphy. Jean (4) 109, 122 Musgrave, Harriet E. (2) 50 Muth, Chester W. (1) 18 Myers, Dorothy O. (2). .60, 61, 113 Myers, Florence M. (4) 32, 140 Myers. Vera C. (3) 22. 29, 109, 113, 170 Myers, Wayne P. (1) 18. 43, 56 N Nagle. Richard (1) 32, 78 Neal, Glen C. (4) .-:.48. 73, 141 Neigler. Selma M. (4) 159 Nelson, Barbara J. (4) 17,23. 29,30, 109, 121, 141, 170 Nelson, Frances J. (4)....56, 141 Nelson, Janice T. (2) 121 Nelson, Marian A. (1) 18 Nelson, Ruth (4) 125, 141 Neulier, Virginia M. (2). 50. 66, 129 Neurad, Dlen J. (1) 126 Newhart, Paul E. (1) 18 Newman, Harold (1) 18 Nicholson, Elizabeth C. (4) - 141, 157 Nicholson, Robert H. (4) 32, 141 Nicolet. Gale A. (1) 18 Nieman, Oizabeth C. (1) 18 Nierman, Janet L. (2) 55. 113 Noilz. Paul F. (2) 32 Norman. Mary V. (1) 18 Norris. Gail R. (3) 55 Norris, Milton R. (1) 18, 48 Norris, Thelma B. (1) 18 Noss. William J. (1) 18. 82, 105 Novak, Frederic A. (4) 177 Novario. Gerard L. (1) ....18. 86 Novario, Rosemary A. (4) 121 Nutt. James E. (2) 86 Nye. Richard P. (4) 59. 78. 141 Nye, Roberi E. fl) 48. 162 O O ' Brien. Jeanne M. (1) 121 O ' Brien. John G. (4) ■' ... 24, 26, 89. 164. 166 O ' Brien. Madelon K. (I) 67, 118 O ' Hara, Francis N. (3) 105, 151 O ' Shansky, Harriet F. (1) 18 Obloy. Stanley J. (4) 78. 141 Oelze. Cari V . (3) f Ofslager Norman W. (2) 41. 50. 86. 205 Ogg. Charles L. (4) 48 Ogg. James R. fl) 18 Ogle, Rita E. (2) 50 Ohl, Grant L. (1) 89 Ormsby, Ruth E. (2) 50, 122 Orsillo, Angelo C. (4) 141, 160 Orlner, Fredrick G. (2) -.-81, 151 Osborne. Bernard D. (3). ...39, 74 Osborne, Dewayne O. (4) 86, 141 Oley, Vernon W, (1) -..90 Olt, Cari H. (3) 6, 44, 74, 94 QM,. Margaret M, (1) ;.-.18 Owens, Roberi B, (1)....77, 152 Owens, Ruth E, (4) 159 P Pace. Frederick G. (1) 166 Packard, Marceil E. (4) ...- --35,. 147, 150, 158 Pqhner, Walter M. (4). 78, ' 105, 166 Painter, Dorothy E. (3) 27 Pairan, Paul T. (2) ' 48, 77, 104, 151, 152, 157 Palermo Anthony (2) 93 Palmer, Clarissj E. (2) 32, 50 Palmer, Eva J. (4) 117, 141 Palmer. Mary C. (3) 27 Panarites, Anastasia J. (4) ..._ 27, 35, 54, 56, 141 Pancoast, Richard E, (1)— 18, 77 Pancoast, Robert F. 3) .-t......77 Parker, Warren W. (3). 3, 39, 42, 44 Parks, Joan (2) 32, 50 Parks, SaraD. (2) 35, 113 Parks, William N. (2)-.-. 160 Parry. Jack D. 2) - 73 Paste, Susan B. (2) .67, 118 Pataki, Eugene S. (-1) 18 Patner. Ruth E. (2) 126 Paton, Webster D. (2) -...-38 Patrick. Edward V. (I) 105 Patrylow, Walter J. (4) 105. 141 Patton, Ann (1) 118 Pattori, Mary K. (2) 32, 50 Paulk, Arnold P. (4) 141, 160- Paulus, Harry F, (4) 105. 1-41: Paushter, Milton (4) .141 Pavlish. Andrew H. f4) 141 Pawlyshyn, Olga J. (2) 50 Payne, Frederick W. (1) 27, 77 Pearce. Elizabeth T. (4) ..-■..- 121, 141, -162 Pearson, Eric E. (2) 48 Peattie. Edward G. (4) 141 Peck. D. Bradley (2) 48 Peckham, Eleanor A. (1) 18, 114 Peieau, Virginia R. fl) -.29, 121 Penny. Jean C. (4) 141 Pentland, Mary L. fl) 18 Perkins, Bob (2) 89, 151 Perkins, Dixie (2) - 50 Perkins. Nellie L. fl) 1 ' 25. Perlstein. Arthur S. (3) fiS Peristein. Philip S. (1) 85 ' Perrine. Charles H. f2) 24, 50. 56. 166; Perrine, Marjorie M. f2) ...... .r ' - ' . 50, 56, •164: Perry, Catherine A. f3).— -.y: ' ' .V 22, 27, 58, 110; 121 Perry, Doris I. fl) -...35 Peiers. Harold S. f4) ...77, 141 Peterson, Allan M. f 3) .- 35 Pfaff. Cecil A. f4) 142. 160 PhelDs. Frances E. fl)-.- 18 Piatt. Betty I. (2) 35, 50 Piazza. Anthony A. (4) 93 Piazza, Jerome C. (3 ■■24, 93 —)tucient c: nde)c Pickard, Leona M. (,4) • 142, 145, 150, 170 Pickens, Fay M. (3) ;: .32 Pickens, Mary J. (4) 147. 149 Pickens, Mary leane (1)....32. 59 Pierce, Jacob N, (1) 164 Pilliod, Adrian F. (3). 77 Plant. Roberi C. f3) 142 Plaskoff, Reuben G. (3) 24, 102, 103, 170 Piatt, Helen R. (1)..- 126 Plotnikoff. Nina M. (1 -..-IS PoUey. Doris A. (1) 18 Pontius, Eleanor M. (1) 122, 155 Pope, Roberi L. (2) 164 Popham. Owen E. (2) 48, 150 Porter, Virginia L. (2) 118 Post. Gladys E. fl) 68 Postle, Evelyn J. f3).— -162, 164 Potter, Charles K. f2) 24 Potter, Donald F. f3) 86 Potter, Rex B. f3) 89 Poltorf, Mary E. (3). 27, 29, 35, 117 Poushey, John B. f4) 89, 157 Powell, Newman W.f2) 32, 162, 166, 188 Powell, Pearl A. f4) 142 Powell, Ruth E. f4). 142 Poznanovich, Paul f2) 50 Price, Harry B. (1) 90 Price, John D, fl) 18, 86 Price, Roberi B, fl) 48 Pride. Virginia B. f3).-..46, 114 Pritchard. Charles E. f2) 166 Pritchard. Helen E. (2) 50 Pritchard. Jack D. f4) 89 Propp. Mary A. f4) -27, 35, 142 Pry. Morton C. f3) 90. 155 Ptak. Wilbur F. f4) 74, 142 Puckett, John J, (2) ..50. 157. 166 Puckstein. Paul E. fl) 81 Pugh, Wilbur L. f2) 32 Purviance. Dorothy A. (A) ■32, 56. 59, 14 ' ' Puzzo. Frank S. f4) 93, 142 PyT us, Harry (7)..- 17. 50 Q Ouigley. Mary T. (4) .-.107, 113 Ouisenberry, Roger C. (2) 24. 1 60 R Rabinovitz, David (4). ..... 24, 58, 85, 142 Radford, William J. f3) 104 Raines, Margaret K. (2) 114 Ralph, Edwin A. (4) 142 Ralston, Orlan C. (4) 81 Rals ' .dn, Raymond H. (1) 81 Rardin. Alice E. (4) 109. 113 Rardin. Daniel A. fl) 48 Rauch. William H. (1) 81 Raus. Elizabeth J. (I) 118 Ray, Ovid S. f4) 142 Reading, Roberi M. f4).. 73. 142 Redding. Thomas H. f3) 73 Reed. Eleanor M. (3) 159 Reed. George R. fl) -48 Reed, John P. f4) -90 Reed, Lillian M. (1) 18 Reed, Peyton D. f3) 30. 56. 166 Reed, Roberi R. (1) 18 Reed, Virginia J. f4) 157. 170 217 c tudent c ndi ex (continued) Reese, Constance J. (4) 59. 1 14 Reese, Robert L (1) 78, 164 Reeser, Margery F. (3). -29, 35 Reid, Charles D. (2) 89 Reid, Dorothy M. (2) ....113, 164 Reid, George A. (4) 73, 160 Reid, lames F. (1) ....18, 48, 61 Reid, Mary E. (3). . . . 129, 162, 164 Reid, Ruth G. (3) 35 Reinicke, Rachael E. (I) 18, 67 Reiter. Richard A. (1) 18, 77 Remsen. Barbara H. (2) 122 Remsen. Jeanne V. (1 ).......— 122 Rennechar, Helen D. (4) — 114, 147, 164 Repar, John L. (1) IB Repicky, John J. (3). .26, 38, 39, 82 Reynolds, Dizabeth C. (1). 18 Reynolds, Rosemary C. (3).. ..156 Rhodes. Robert D. (1) 46 Rice. Catherine L, (4). 109. 117. 142 Rice, Lois V. (2) 50 Rice, R. M. (1) 162, 164 Rich, Dorothy L. (1) 162 Richards, Haydn (I) 78 Richardson, Robert O. (3) 90 Rlchman. Albert H. (2) 85 Richman, Maurice (2) 48 Ridkenbacker, Robert J. (3). -77 Ricker, Mary R. (2) 28, 29 Ricker, Marine (2) 1.....50 Rickert, Elmyra M. (2) 56 Rickey. William A. (3) 35 Ridge, Thomas E. (2) 48 Ries, Ellen T. (1) 16 Higgle, Kathryn H. (2) -..-27. 35 Riley, Dwight A. (2) E4, 89 Ringer, Ben B. (2) 26 Risaliti, Dan (3) 39. 44. 93. 175 Risberg. Robert F. (2) 48. 91 Riltersburgh, Donald L, (4) 59. 77, 138. 142 Roach. Charles E. (1) 65 Roads, Wesley A. (2) 150 Robbins, John P. (2) 39, 44 Roberts, Virginia M. (2) 27 Robertson. Helen G. (3) 27. 67. 103, 128 Robertson. Mary L. (3) ....27, 41, 46, 67. 114, 150, 152 Robertson, Max H. (2) 77 Robertson, Vera, J. (1)....17, 114 Robinson, Elaine J. (1) 18 Robinson. Mary E. (3) 35 Robinson. Samuel K. (3) 77 Robishaw. William A. (2). ...86 Rogers, Charles A. (l)....ie. 4B Rogers. Eugene M. (4) 89 Rogers. Jack F. (2) 86 Rogers. John S. (1) 18.69 Homing. Gerald (1) 18 Honk. Jeanne C. (2) ...-116 Roosevelt. Richard A. (3) 39 Hose, Charles W. (3) .103, 152, 154, 157, 176 Rose. Norma J. (1) 18 Rose, Virginia E. (4) 1109, 118, 136, 147, 150 Roska, Charles (2) 24, 58 Rosner. Eugene L. (2) 85 Rosner, Ruth M. (4) 126, 142, ISA Ross, Douglas H. (1) 18, 26 Roth. Dale J. (4) i 160 Roth. Philip (1) 85 Rothrock. Ruth F. (4) 142. 162 Rowe. Dorothy L. (2) 50 Rowland, Robert E. (4) 142 Rowland, William O. (1) 18, 81 Rudolph, Richard H. (2) 50 Rudy, Pearl L. (1) 18 Ruf, Stanley E. (1) 90 Rufus, Joseph G. (3) 38, 82 Ruhl, Jeanne E. (4) -...16, 134. 142. 154, 155 Rusnak. LiUian H. (2) 50, 54 Russell, Helen A. (I) 32 Rutherford, Janet A. (3) 118 Ryan, George H. (2) 73, 150 Ryan, James A. (I) 90 Ryan. Ruth M, (2) 50 S Sachs, Melvin R. (3) 85 Saddle, Jeanette Y. (4) -.-. .142 Salpeter. Manine R. (1) 68 Sammons, Lucille (1) 18 Sample, Harold E. (2) 89, 150, 152, 157 Samson, Mary J. (2).. 106, 110, 158 Sanders, Gene A. (1) 90 Sanders. Robert E. (1) ..18, 184 Sarldakis, Gustave K. (3) 74 Sarver, Helen L. (31 35 Sassaman, Robert K. (2) 81 Sauer, Robert C. (2) 69 Sauers, Doran A., Jr. (4) 147 Savage, Gilbert T. (2) 46 Sberna. Carmen C. (3) 39, 93, 103 Sbema, Clara M. (2) 29, 50 Schafer. Jean L. (1).... 18 Scheel, Raymond Carl (1) 18, 77 Schemenauer, Earl L. (4)..-. ' .142 Schild, Homer C. (3) 73 Schilling, Dorothy A. (3) 118 Schloss. Harold E. (1) 78 Schmidt. Karl H. (3) 38. 89 Schminky, Robert R. (l)-...38, 39 Scholie ' d. William M. (1) 18, 77 Scholes, Qaylon E. (2) ..--38. 44 Schroeder, Marian L. (2) 122 Schroeder. Richard K. (1) 78 Schuler. Frederick R. (1) 18, 77 SchuK Eleanor J. (2) ... 9, 41. 50. 114. 151 Schulze. Emden C. (4). 35. 143. 170 Schwane, William H.. Jr. (3) ....90 Schween. Phyllis E. (1)..18. 121 Sdano. Edward A. (3) 93 Scipione. Qara A. (2) 170 Scott, Emma K. (3) 32 Scott, Howard W. (2) 50 Scouten, Roy C. (4) 78. 143 Scranton. Donald N. (2) 82 Sechrist. Mai R. (3) 77 Secrest. James M. (2) 50 Seesock. Frank L. (1) 18 Segale. Virginia J. (1). 18. 105. 166 Sellers, I. W. (1) 81 Seltzer, Sarah (4) 147, 158 Semenow, Margy (2) 27, 126 Senff, Marguerite E. (3). ...32, 59 Sennelt, William C. (1) 81 Settle, Richard L. (2) 48 Sever, Robert G. (2) 160 Shackleton. Frank W. (3) 64, 157 Shafer. John W. (3) 3. 7. 24. 38, 39, 44. 74 Shank. Esther P. (1) 18. 35 Shartf. Jean A. (1) 56, 126 Sharkey. John N. (2) 90 Sharp. John W. (4) 73, 143 Shaw, Euphemia S. (2) 35 Sheldon, Doris E. (1)...4 155 Shellenberger. Gail E. (2) 61, 122 Shepard. Roberi E. (1) 18 Sherlock. Jay R. (1) 168 Sherman, Arthur W. (4) 21, 22, 32, 41. 58. 102. 143. 150. 190 Shertzer. Ruth (3) 16 Shessler. Jack E. (1) 18 Sheward. Avonell L. (4) 125, 143 Shift. Jake (1) 18 Shindledecker Margot A. (1).--- 32. 159. 154 Shoemaker, Robert H. (1) 18, 63, 77, 153 Sholtis, Joseph R. (11 18 Shorr, Henry L. (3) 85 Short. Ethel L. (2).. 67. 122, 157 Shroll. Dorothy (1) - 18 Shulman. Joseph V. (4) 143. 155 Sidders. Evelyn M. (4) 59. 143 Sieberl. William E. (1) 78 Siegel, Wilbert R. (2) 38. 39 Silverman. Peari (2) ....126. 164 Silverman. Samuel K. (1) 18 Silvey. John O. (2) 160 Simerka. Freda M. (4) 17, 23, 35, 125, 143, 159 Simmons, Jack J. (3) 39 Simmons, Joan E. (3) ----107, 113 Simmons. William C. (3) 73. 143 Simon, Fannie G. (3).... 126. 143 Simon. Ruth M. (4) 27, 126 Simpson, Billy T. (4) 90 Sinclair. Frank R. (2) .35 Singer. John M. (3) 197 Sirbu. John D. (2)...- 74 Skala. Virginia E. (4) 66. 143, 159, 164 Skidmore, Roberi C. (2) 48 Skirke, Eunice F. (1) 18, 168 Slavitt. Rita (4) 58, 125, 143 Sleeman, Mary K. (2).... 164 Sloal, Edgar H. (1) 18 Slusser, Robert (4) 74, 147, 155 Small, Phyllis H. (1). . 18, 35. 45. 68 Smart. William (1) 78 Smith. A. Lucille (2) .--109. 122 Smith. Betty P. (1) 150 Smith. Charies L, (1)..- 35 Smith. Doroiha L. (1) 117 Smith, Florence R. (4)....35, 143 Smith, Harold E. (3) 160 Smith, Harry C. (4) 58, 143 Smith, Helen R. (4) 35, 143 Smith. John J. (1) 18 Smith. Lena R. (MEd) 143 Smith, Lorraine (1) 18 Smith, Mary H. (4) 169 Smith, Minerva M. (2) 35 Smith, Paul W, (3) 90 Smith, Philip G. (4) 78 Smith, Richard J. (1) 90 Smith, Robert H. (4) -...143 Smith. Robert J. (1) 18 Smith, Robert W. (3) 32 Smith. Thomas H. (1) 18 Smith, William P. (1) .60, 158 Smolik, Vernon K. (3) 61 Snare, Joan M. (1) 35 Sneller. Leona M. (2) 121 Snow, Harold W. (1) 86 Snyder, Hannah M. (4). 41, 121, 159 Snyder, James E. (3) 38, 44, 94 Snyder, Mabel H. (1) 121. 158 Snyder. Robert T. (4) 24, 77, 104, 143 Snyder, Thelma E. (1) 18, 56 Sogg, Jay D. (2) 27. 85. 150 Soliday. Richard C. (2). ...89. 164 Solomon. Seymour (4) 85 Sorrick. Helen L (2) 150 Sosnow. Bernice R. (3) IM, 126 Sovetts, Philip M. (2) 50 Soviero, Joseph A. (4). ...93. 143 Spahman, Dorothy I. (1) - 41, 60, 61. 121 Spatlcs. John C. (4) 143 Spencer, Robert B. (11.18, 162, 164 Spidell, Hope E. (3) 29, 121, 158, 164 Spidell, Robert O. (1) 18 Spielholz. Hai ey D. (1) 85 Spina. Anthony N. (4) 144 Spohn. Armitt J. (4) 90. 157 Sponseller. Richard 0. (1) 90 Sponseller. Ramond J. (4) ....144 Sprague. Edward A. (1) 89 Sproull. Ruby G, (3) 32 Sguire, Wade R. (1) 18 Squires, Wayne M. (Sp) 166 Stamm, Charles C. (2) 48 Slanhagen. Mary L. (1) ---32, 164 Stearns, Dale V. (2) 38 Stechbardl, Sophie M. (4)-.. 144 Steele, Barbara A. (1) 18, 68 Steele, Vivian J. (1) 18 Steimeyer, Bertha E- (4) 144 Slellwagon, Helen K. (3). . 1 18, 128 Stemple, Humbert S. (1) 16 Stephenson, Jane B. (2) 17, 114 Stevens, Betle J, (3) 122 Stevens, H. Douglas (4) 144 Stevenson, Cecilia T. (2) 17 Stewart, Qaude H. (4). ...24. 81 Stewart. Helen L. (4) 56, 147 Stickney, Herbert H. (4) 24. 59. 73. 144 Stilgenbauer. Robert J. (4) 53, 77, 144, 151, 160, 185 Stiner, Esther R. (3) 103, 121 Slockwell, Robert C. (1) 18 Stois, John A. (3) 157 Sloll, William S. (4) 144 Stone, Betty L. (4) 23.27,29. 113, 144 Stone, Louise (4) 159 Stone. Robert S. (4).... 144 Story, Elizabeth K. (2) 125 Slowe. James B. (2) 156 Stowell. George W. (4) 73. 144 Strakol. Angela (3). . 107. 1 13. 157 Stratemeyer. Janet (4) 144. 166 Stratton. Helen E. (1) 114 Stretch. John W. (1) 32 Stringer. Qara H. d) 16 Stuber, Annette J. (3) 114, 194 Stumph. Frank G. (1) 18 Sturm. Howard R. (3) 74 Sturm. L, Caroline (4). 144, 159, 162 Sturrett, Joseph A. (4) 53 211 Stutle, Marjorie B. (1) 122 Sullivan, Frances M. (1) 122 Sullzbach, Ruth A. (1 )..... 32 SupanOT. Emil W. (4) 44, 144, 175 Supance, John O. (1) 38, 39 Sutherland, Lewis (4) 78 Sutton, Peggy F. (1) 1-8, 113 Swaim, Oliver W. (3) 160 Swallow, Garnet G. (1) 18 Swanson, Phil R. (1).- 18, 90 Swaykus, Paul (4) 44, 177 Swearigen, Frederick A. (2]... 50 Swearigen, Robert V. (2).. 81, 151 Swedenborg, Loren A. (2) 89 Swindell, Roberta E. (2) 144 Swinehart, Edgar H. (2) 81 Swinehart, William T. (1) 18, 4B Szalran, Adolph C. (4) 144 Szalay, Frank I. (2) 89, 44 T Taber, John M. (2) -...74 Talbotl, Harold B. (2) -26, 74 Tatje, Robert D. (1) 17 Taylor, Donald P. (3) 77 Taylor, Janet E. (1) 17, 122 Taylor, Jeanne (1) 122 Taylor, Marjorie J. (4) 109, 118, 144, 164, 166 Tebow, Robert R. (2) 74 Teets, Francis W. (2) 32 Terrant, Frank R. (4) - 144, 168, 170 Tenant, Seldon W. (4) 144,160 Tharp, Marie (I) -35 Tharp, Owen S. (1) — 18, 48 Thomas, Donald L. (2)...-155, 166 Thomas, Harold G. (2) 74 Thomas, Jeanne E. (2) 125, 151 Thomas, Jenny (2) 162, 164 Thomas, Lowell H. (2) 77, 164 Thomas, Margie A. (1) 118 Thomas, Maiiorie E. (2) 56, 66 Thomas, Wendell P. (2) 69 Thompson, Charles M. (4) 35 Thompson, Lila J. (1) 35 Thompson, Margaret A. (4) 113, 144, 152 Thompson, Myron D. (3), .90, 106 Thompson, Richard (3) 55 Thompson, Richard M. (2) 50. 90, 105, 155 Thompson, Wilham B. (4) 144 Timberlake, George 1. (2) 89 Timblin, Samuel G. (1) 150 Tingle, Dona D. (3) 32, 159 Tirella, Francis J. (3). .93, 151, 194 Tobey, Helen L. (2) 118 Tobias, Lloyd (I) 166 Todd, John S. (3) 27, 77, 102, 104, 190 Tornstrom, John (4) 145, 150 Torek. Alex D. (4) 60, 145, 170 Toth, Louis J. (2) 105 Tracy, Everett A. (1) 18, 48 Travis, George M. (3) 31 Trimble, Mary K. (!) 18 Tripp, Philip A. (2) 162, 170 Trudeau, James O. (3) 39 Tucker, Eloise W. (4) 17, 21, 27, 32, 145. 150, 164 Turner, Clifton W. (4) 78 Turner, Evelyn H. (4) 145 Turner, Howard E, (1) 18 Turner, William H. (2) 48 Tullle, Juanita L. (1) 18 U Uhl, Jennie (4) 121, 159 Ulrich, Paul H. (1) 35 Umbarger, Harold E. (1) 18 UnderhiU, Betty W. (4) 35, 145 V Von Ome, Ronald W. (4) 48, 59. 73, 107, 145 Vanaman, Nathan E. (1)...18, 56 Varolii, Daniel (4) 93 Vomer, Mary K. (4) 35, 159 Vilt, Marcella A. (2) 122 Vinarsky, Abraham (2). .27, 61, 85 Vineyard, Julia A. (4) 1 1 4, 1 45 Von Behren. Homer E. (1) 46. 48, 69,89 Volenik, George P. (1) 18, 48 W Wade, EUzabeth C. (3). . . .35, 164 Wager, MaiT V. (3) 27, 46. 109, 125 Wager. Thomas P. (1) 89 Wagner, Dorothy E. (3) 155 Wagner, Fredric (1) 77 Wagner, Mary A. (4) 122 Wagner, Ruth N. (1) 18 Wakim, Sophie G. (4) 54, 159 Walbright. Horold W. (1) 18 Wall, Henry R. (1) 18,77 Wall, Robert (1) 18, 48 Walls, Caryl R. (3) 66, 113 Walsh, Robert (2) 74 Wallers, Ruth L. (1) 18 Ward. Betty J. (3).. 125, 151, 155 Warren, Helen V. (2) 159 Warther, Alice A. (4) 145 Wassink, Richard J. (2) 89 Watkins, Charles E. (1) 89 Watkins, Earl T. (1) 74 Watkins, Emily L. (2) 125 Watt, Albert J. (2) 81 Weaver, Donna L. (1) 18 Weaver, Jean S. (3) 66, 164 Weber, Charles E. (4) 17, 27, 58, 145 Weber, T. W. (2) 81, 155 Webster, Ernest J. (4) 81 Weimer, Clarence E., Jr. (3) 59 Weimer, Marjorie J. (1) IB Weimer, Vivian M. (4) 17, 67, 128, 145 Weinberg, Stanley (2) 152 Weinstein, Milton M. (1) 18 Weitzel, Kenneth E. (2) 73 Welch, Charles J., Jr. (1) 18 Welch. Everett J. (3) ...26, 39, 44 Welsh, Robert E. (2) 16, 41, 78, 164 Wendel, Edmund, Jr. (1) 166 Wendelken, EUzabeth J. (1) 166 Wendler, Dale E. (2) 74, 166 Wenger, Max F. (2) 18, 50, 77, 151, 153 Werner, Edward R. (1)50,60,151 Wertman, Howard E. (3). . .22, 42. 44, 73 Wertman, Robert L. (3). .7, 26, 73, 152, 154, 192 West, Edward M. (2) 48 West, Floyd R. (2) 162 West. Woodrow F. (2) 78 Westerfield, Jeane (I) 125 Weymueller, Annabelle L. (2). .29, 110, 122, 164 Wheat, Robert H. (1) 86 Whealon, Fred W., Jr. (1) 166 Wheaton, Mariorie E. (4) 27, 29, 109, 114, 145 Wheaton, Robert H. (4) 145 Whipple, Nan Y. (1) 18, 110, 117, 162 Whilcomb, Carl S. (2) 48 White, Betty J. (2) 56, 125 White. Harold F. (1) 48 White, livin L. (4) ...73, 143, 145 Whitford, Robert M. (3) 68, 78 Whitman, Barbara (1). . 17, 58, 121 Wick, Paul W.(l) 18,77 Wiegand, Robert A. (4).. 73, 128, 145 Wiegel, Carl E. (3) ..24, 81, 155 Wiegman, Jack A. (4) 21. 22, 41, 56, 140, 145, 150, 170 Wiener, Clarice (3) 128 Wierzbowski, Edward J. (3). . . .44 Wiland, Dorothy V. (2), . . . 35, 50 Wilcox, Ruth S. (2) 150 Wilder, John H. (1) 74 Wiley, Henry E. (2) 48, 50 Wiley, James A. (2) 48 Wimams, Barbara J. (2) 113 Williams, Betty J. (1) 18 Wilhams, Dixie L. (3) 168 Hess, Mrs. John A 56 Howelt, A. C 52 Hutlon, Ina Ray 70 Jones, Rev. E. W 30, 32 Kabibble, Ish 102 Kaltenbom, H. V 171 Kinney, Melvin 1 93 Kyser. Kay 102 LaBastille, Mme 171 Lady 17 Luchs, Rev. F. E 30 Mason, Sully 1 02 Newcorae, Mrs. Ellen 65 Williams, Jane E. (2)..,, 1 21, 159 Williams, William C. (1) 78 Wilmer, Marjorie R. (1)...18, 114 Wilson, Carl R. (I) 86 Wilson, Charles E. (1) 90 Wilson, Dorothy J. (3) 122 Wilson, Eva L, (1) 164 Wilson, Harry R. (1) 18, 77 Wilson, Martha A. (3) 121, 170 Wilson, Mildred 1. (1) 32 Wilson, Paul W. (1) 35 Wilson, Robert J. (2) 90 Wingett, David W. (1) 18 Winterrowd, Rachael A. (3). . . 121 Wise, Evelyn E. (3) 125 Wise. Lois M. (4). 55. 118, 129, 145, 159 Wise, Richard B. (1) 18 Withum, John Z. (2) 166 Witsberger, Bernard H. (MA).. 56 Wodarsky, Paul W. (1) 18 Wolff, Herbert P. (1) 38 Wonner, Robert W. (4) 145 Wood, Irene F.(l) 18, 118 Wood, Roberta E. (I) 114 Woodings, Robert V. (I) 18 Woodruff, Sherman C. (2). .48, 50 Woods, John. Jr. (3) 77, 160 Woodworth, Eleanore M. (2) 122, 164 Woodworth, Margaret A. (1)..I8 Woollard, Jeanne U. (3) 121 Wooley. Una S. (2) 41, 46, 48, 50, 114, 151 Worslall, Elizabeth A. (4) 23, 109, 121, 147 Wren, Herman E. (4) 16, 73 Wright, Agnes J. (4) 118, 128, 145 Wul f, Edith F. (4) lie, 145 Wunderlich, Wesley (I) 18 Y Yaroshuk, Olga S, (2) 56 Yaw, Evylyn O. (3) 32 Yeager, Mildred E. (2) 50 Younce, Russell (1) 89, 164 Yousko, George L. (1) 18 Young, Frank R. (4) 145 Z Zahmdl, John M. (2) 39. 44 Zakrasek, Joe (2) 78 Zaworski, Edmund (4) 24, 82 Zech. Charles (2) 48, 78 Zehring, Robert (1) 89 Zeigler, Robert P. (3) 48 Ziegler, Sarah (3) 27, 35 Zink. lean (1) 18, 197 Ziroff. Harry (4) 145 Zook, Don (4) 22, 41. 70, 147 Zuck, Emily A, (2) 31, 50, 68 Zucker, Donald (3) 56 vecLal ndoc Babbitt, Harry 102 Biddle, Dr. T. R 206 Casadesus, Robert 165, 166 Chubb, Dean E. W 41, 131 Church, Mrs, D, E 184 Cooper-Cole, Fay 171 Crawford, Rev. N. J 30 Donford, Mrs. J. W 32 Danford, Rev. J. W 30, 32 Darling, Mitchell W Dickerson, H.J 40, 206 Dowd, Rev. W. G 30, 105 Ellington, Duke 46 Enters, Angna 165 Erskine, Dr. John 168 Fitzsimmons, E. Gayle 190 Gibbs, George James 10 Gilliland, Strickland 41 Goossens, Eugene 165 Gorln, Igor 165 Hart, Dale 107 Noss, Mrs. M. G 56 Phillips, Carl 104 Phillips, Rev. Harry C 171 Porter, Mrs. James P 54 Pritls, Ernest C 107 Purrington, Rev. R. G 30 Savely, Mrs. Nora 65 Shannon, Margaret 30,35 Simms, Ginny 102 Smith. Mrs. Barbara 21 Whitehouse, Mrs. Victor 56 Wolfe, Henry C 171 219 J N PRODUCING this year ' s Athena we hope it will recall, in the years to come, many pleasant memories. Each year the Gray Printing organization is happy to play an important role in interpreting through yearbook staffs — events of historical sig- nificance of many high schools and colleges . . by Fine Letterpress or Distinctive Gray-Lith. your happy days are recorded. THe GRRV PRinTinc compnnv PHONE 638 Yes, another Atheiia. It has been a real pleasure publishing this book for the students of Ohio University. At times it seemed as if our goal U ' ould never he reached. There u-ere many things ice wanted to do, and did; likewise many obstacles appeared that were not overcome, hlevertheless, we offer this, the thirty-sixth vol- ume of the Atheiui, as a perma- neiu record of your memories and our memories of the frieiuls with whom we worked and played dur- ing the year J 939- J 940. To the many persons, knouni and unknoiin, who have helped with their ideas and assistance, we are greatly indebted. To the many staff members who volun- teered their services, we offer a crmi ' ii of wild olives. tents omen Published annually by the stu- dents of Ohio University at Athens, Ohio. Professor George Starr Lasher, chairman. Commit- tee on Student Publications. Editorial and business offices on the ground floor of the Student Union Building. Annual budget, approximately $6000.00. Circu- lation this issue, 1018. L ' Alliance Francaise 56 Alumni Association 206 Athena 150 Bond 45 Baseball 177 Basketball 94 Beta Psi 59 Board of Trustees 206 Boyd Hall 66 Campus Affairs Committee. ... 21 Cheerleaders 45 Chemistry Society 160 Choir 162 Choir Invisible 131 Choregi 170 Church, Dr. D. E. et al 184 Classroom Feature 52 Community Concert Artists. ... 165 Convocations 171 Co-op Feature 64 Cutler Hall Feature 149 Dance Club 128 Dances 1 72 Debate 170 Delta Phi Delta 157 Delta Sigma Chi 32 Der Deutsche Verein 56 EpsilonPiTau 160 Eta Sigma Phi 56 Executive Committee 12 Faculty Snaps 1 86 Football 36 Foreword 4 Fraternities 70 Freshman Class 18 Green Key 24 Home Economics Club 159 Homecoming 40 HovirardHall 67 Intramurals 99, 178 J Club 24 Junior Class 1 00 Junior Prom 102 Kappa Beta 35 Kappa Delta Pi 59 Kappa Kappa Psi 166 Kappa Phi 32 Kindergarten-Primary Club .... 1 58 Lindley Hall 68 Men ' s Dormitory 69 Men ' s Glee Club 164 Men ' s Union 26 Military Ball 46 Ministers 30 Mortar Board 23 Music Feature 162 Newman Club 105 Ohioan 1 54 OU Engineers 189 Ohio University Post 152 Orchestra 1 64 OU Revue 60 Pershing Rifles 48 Personality Parade 110 Phi Beta Kappa 148 Phi Chi Delta 35 Phi Eta Sigma 24 Phi Mu Alpha 166 Phi Upsilon Omicron 1 59 Phoenix 22 PiEpsilon Mu 160 Psi Chi 58 Publications Committee 21 Registration Feature 16 ROTC 47 Scabbard and Blade 48 Selection Boards 21 Senior Activities 207 Seniors 132 Sigma Alpha Iota 166 Sigma Delta Chi 1 57 Sigma Rho 157 Sophomore Class 50 Sororities 108 Student Grill Committee 21 Swimming 98 Tennis 176 Torch 22 Town Hall Feature 62 Track 174 University Theater 168 Varsity O 44 COPYRIGHT 1940 in the United States of America by Arthur W. Sherman, editor, and John S. Todd, business manager ol The 1940 Athena. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED— no part of this book may be reproduced in any lorm without permission in writina (rom the editor. ( When Glows The Evening Star reprinted with the permission ol the Ohio University Alumni Associotion.l Member: National Scholastic Press Association 221 WJ i
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