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Page 32 text:
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r ' .: . f¥i -i A haywagon transports Johnson men and their dates to a wiener roast. Unity and Johnson Hall are one. The smallness of the dorm contributes to the closeness of the men. This year the men of Johnson enjoyed together four mixers with sororities and dorms, a hayride and two formals. At the Christmas Formal a chubby, jolly Santa Claus gave favors and corsages to all the men ' s dates. Mother ' s Weekend and Father ' s Weekend were big events. The men threw a big party for moms and dads on the Saturday of each weekend. Johnson Room staffers, inside view, after stuffing. One hundred ninety-seven men; in a room 10 ' x 10 ' by 9 ' ! 28 Row One: Ronald Dra- biski, Lawrence V. Will- iams, Cletus Anderson, president, Richard Chubb, Hal Buchert, graduate assistant. Row Two: Marie Prole, Tom Hitchcock, Al Frankel.
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Page 31 text:
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Row One: Linda Larmer, president. Row Two: Gail Kalapos, Mary Ann Smith, Elaine Horvath, Renate Stamm, Harriett Rowan. Row Three: Ruth Nitzsche, Judy Schwartz, Susie Fien, Roxanne Finley. Row Four: Beatriz Canter, Nancy Kamm, Judy Reed, Frances Turner, Judy Hays, Mrs. Ethel Moll, resident coun- selor, Barbara Beard, Helen Myers, Donna Hollinger, Veronica Santo, Liana Turrin. Row Five: Karen Tacketl, Barb Gann, Karen Rittinger, Pauline Able, Rosemary Ott, Joyce Lahowe, Valerie Mack, Diana Hutchison, Karen Broomhall, Pat Lonrz, Georgia Hitterpole, Alexa MacLeod, Kathleen Schneyer, Sandy Lenzi. Being one of two women ' s dorms on the Green was a distinct advantage as evidenced by the crowded con- ditions outside Jefferson ' s doors at 12:30 each week- end night. Homecoming found a Jefferson girl on the queen ' s court. Jeffies worked together on the float. Scholarship was encouraged by compulsory study periods, totaling five hours a week. At every semester end, the floor section holding the highest grade average was treated to a pizza party. Jefferson, Jeff- erson is our cry . . . — so went the familiar fight song echoing across the Green so many times as an example of the spirit and enthusiasm of Jefferson Hall. Jefferson Halloween time found a strange assortment of characters eating in the cafeteria. c a iP fi BOJnri i Ju WW W JluD j 27
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Page 33 text:
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Row One: Jim Volk, president Row Two: Paul Gallagher, head of residence, Thomas Schanrz, Rich- ard Streim, Tom Atkin, Bob Moore. Row Three: John Hoskins, Tim Miller, Phil French, Melvin Wilson, Donald Hughes, Dick Jancslk. Row Four: Myron Recob, Raymond O ' Neal, David Chase, Cliff Cribbs, Don Rowley, Bernard Cooper, Jed Frost, Bill Evans. In September, the negative rather than the positive was accentuated by the residents of Lincoln Hall, making their debut in OU society. Two hundred seventy-four men had the bare essentials — no pillows, no telephones, unfinished floors, no officers, no money and no screens (flies outnumbered men fifty to one!) The negative proved valuable, for it was the rallying point which brought the men together determined to improve conditions and rank Lincoln among the best. The wheels of improvement began to turn. An Old-Fashioned Christmas was the theme for a Christmas Formal that was a p art of an active social season. The positive was now accent- uated; negative thinking had been eliminated. The foundation had been laid for a dorm that will play a leading role in the future. lincoln Mail duty ' s a chore . . of the guy on the desk.
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