West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV)

 - Class of 1934

Page 1 of 294

 

West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1934 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 294 of the 1934 volume:

Copyrighted, 1934 RALPH W. HEMINGTON A. ERNEST MALONE . Editor-in-Chief Business Manager • THE 1 934 • MONTICOLA THE MONTICOLA OF 1934 A - YEAR - BOOK PUBLISHEX) BY THE STUDENTS . OF . WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY MORGANTOWN. WEST VIRGINIA f •, ft DEDICATION 0e JOHN CORNWALL AN EMINENT SON OF WEST VIRGINIA, WHO HAS RISEN HIGH IN HIS CHOSEN FIELD. MR. CORNWALL HAS CAR- RIED WITH HIM INTO HIS PRO- FESSION THE IDEALS THAT THE TRUE MOUNTAINEER SPIRIT HOLDS FORTH. TO HIM, AS REPRESENTING THESE MOUNTAINEER IDEALS. THIS MONTICOLA IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED. FOREWORD wy yo PRESERVE THE PLEASANTER MEMORIES OF THE YEARS SPENT AT WEST VIRGINIA, TO PRE- SENT A TANGIBLE EVIDENCE OF WHAT WAS DONE, AND WHO DID IT, DURING THE YEARS OF 1932-33- 34 AT WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY TO STIMULATE POSSIBLY A FEEL- ING OF LOYALTY TO THE UNIVER- SITY, THROUGH THESE PAGES— THESE ARE THE OBJECTS OF THIS BOOK. CONTENTS wv ADMINISTRATION THE CLASSES ATHLETICS FEATURES MILITARY FRATERNITIES ORGANIZATIONS HUMOR ... -.. .,. .i 3n iMemoriam jf ormcr SlegijJtrar of tf)e JHnibergitp Administration ts - ' Mr, .- -, 5j r «• ' rf ' f ! I ■-a ' -jM w % - W W ' iff • i ™ ■ ■■C  .. , _ 5 P; - .■.iii.i.i 1 .. t ' M ' • -w ' f ' ' %.j 5.. • g .- ' ■■ . • A % fciV yj . ' - . ' ii. ' im: .: v t ' ! . ?5ij; i?e:-h:,: ,-;.- l.„ ■ r ? Mi ■ 1 ' ' 1 m .-1 ii i£ X i iii L j 1 :2i. ' ' ' M Mfr. m -.-. iniMiiiiiiiiiirt ' 1 THE UNIVECSIXy BCACC Cf ©CVEI2N€C$ Officers EDWARD G. SMITH President DAVID A. BURT ' President CHARLES T. NEFF. JR Secretary Members Frank H. Barb Herbert S. Boreman Arthur B. Koontz Cleveland M. Seibert Harriet L. French f Aithuf burke Koon Harriett lou.w Fr«ncK David All. Ourt ' 1[,T ' ■ ' J WE$T VllVGINlA UNIVCKSITY bOARD OF- GOVERNORS | ;.vSi ' i ' •.v ' - ' ' ' ,J ■) i ' WW ' ' -ii ' -iiei - ADMINISTRATIVE CmCERS Cr LNIVEESITy Dr. John R. Turner President of the University Professor L. L. Friend Registrar of the University Harry E. Stone Dean of Men Ruth D. Noer Dean of Women Dr. W. P. Shortridge Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Dr. Thomas P. Hardman Dean of the College of Lawr Professor R. P. Davis Dean of the College of Engineering Professor F. D. Fromme Dean of the College of Agriculture Dr. J. N. Simpson Dean of the School of Medicine Dr. Earl Hudelson Dean of the College of Education Dr. C. A. Bergy Dean of the School of Pharmacy Mr. Louis Black Director of the School of Music Dr. A. J. Dadisman Director of the Summer School THE UNITERSIXy STLDENT CCUNCIL Charles Wise President of Student Council Bill Neely Senior Representative — Men Dorothy Stevens Senior Representative — Women George Bailey Junior Representative — Men Ethel Swing Junior Representative — Women Lee Dobbs President of Senior Class Alfred Stewart President of Junior Class Arthur Benson President of Sophomore Class Jack Gocke President of Freshman Class Bottom Row Goeke. Benson, Wise, Neely Top Row — Dobbs, Stevens, Swing, Stewart ..i iiSi ' ..., ' .... ' ...: WOMAN ' S STUDENT GOVERNMENT A$$€CIATI€N Eleanor Hinkle President Ethel Swing First Vice President Jane E. Grimes Second Vice President Ethel Swing Secretary Virginia Johnson Treasurer Vivian Musgrave Senior Representative Mary L. Woodhull Junior Representative Margaret Condray Sophomore Representative Margaret HafFmer Freshman Representative - vZ THE CLASSES LEE F. DOBBS President JAMES CAMPBELL Vice President JANE ELLEN GRIMES Secretary LOUISE RIETZ Treasurer 1934 Put r Tliiil ti three .■ ' l .■■y:S: . - ii 6 1934 GRADUATES HANNUM, KATHARYNE VIRGINIA Levels Phi Mu HOLLAND, LUNSFORD BIGONY Sandstone Scabbard and Blade ROBERTS, DAVID JOHN Morgantown McCULLOUGH, HELEN HILLIAN Mo ' .e Hill UPTON, DOROTHY BELLE BLETNER, JAMES KARL Clarksburg Mason Pi Bela Phi B. S. Agriculture VOORHEES, DOUGLAS RANDOLPH Martinsburg Kappa Sigma; Forum; Varsity Boxing: Fi Batar Cappar WELLS, FRANCES Charleston Kappa Beta Pi Sec.-Treas. ; Cincinnati University; Ohio State University; Sec.-Treas. of Senior Class of Law School PILCHER, EDWIN SHARP Charleston B. S. Agriculture; Captain, R. O. T. C. NEWELL, MAE ELIZABETH Chester Theta Up si Ion ; Cosmopolitan Club; Kappa Phi; La Tertulia ; Beaver College for Women HAWKINS, CARROLL JAMES Brooklyn, N. Y. SMITH, SUSAN ROBERTS Parkersburg Chi Omega P(nir T}iirli -f nir 1934 GRADUATES COCHRAN, REGINA JUNE Morgantown Recording Sec. Pi Beta Phi ' 32. 33; Patroness Chair- man; Kappa Phi; Social Chairman Kappa Phi .31, ' 32. ' 33; Production Staff of the Sergent in the House ; The Intruder ; and The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife BOLTON. NEIL Belington Phi Sigma Kappa; Alpha Zeta; Assistant Football Manager; Pres. Agr. Club and Council; 4-H Club MAXWELL, MARY ELIZABETH Beckley Alpha Xi Delta HAWKINS. EDWARD SAMUEL Fairmont MURRAY JEAN M. Grafton Chi Omega NEELY. WILLIAM E. Jane Lew Phi Sigma Kappa; Student Council; Boxing Capt. HOUCK. HELEN FRANCES Ronceverte McCLURE, HAROLD D. Greenville, Pa. Kappa Sigma; Thiel College ROBERTS, DONALD RUSSELL Richwood Phi Sigma Kappa; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Phi Chi; 4-H Club STRATFORD, MARY BELLE Follansbee Alpha Xi Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Kappa Delta Phi; Phi Chi Delta DADISMAN, STANLEY E. Belington Phi Alpha Delta; Sphinx; U. P. Law School Student Body Prize: Broaddus Col- lege PROUDFOOT, BLENDA LENA Grantsville rnr r Thiftyfire .:S0 :,jj ( ...,.:.i ! ' ... J.rti ' V- ' ' - ' .-CitiaP 1934 GRADUATES EPPSTEIN. STANLEY M. Charleston Pi Lambda Phi; Kappa Kappa Psi; Phi Sis?ma Delta FURBEE, MARTHA VIRGINIA Mannington Pi Beta Phi; Press Club BALLARD, MARY KATHARINE Glen Jean Alpha Xi Delta; English Club; Eta Sigma Phi; Kappa Delta Phi; Theta Epsilon SPLICHER, J. WARD Clarksburg Phi Epsilon Phi MOROOSE, TUCKER ROCK BIAS, ALZADA ROSELEE Fairmont Montgomery Kappa Phi REED, MARY VIRGINIA Morgantown Girl ' s Friendly Society His- torian; Chaplain HOUCK. MARVIN R. COMUNTZIS. PETER GEORGE Morgantown Lewisburg HARRIS, LILLIAN A. Ellsworth, Pa. Alpha Delta Pi NACH, SARA JONES, CLARENCE RAY Weirton Morgantown Sigma Delta Tau; Delta Phi Tau Kappa Epsilon Alpha Pane T]iirtii-ni.i 1934 GRADUATES MESSMORE. L. ELLISON Brownsville, Pa EVANS. ELIZABETH y NN Ansted Theta Chi; Torch Serpent; Alpha Xi Delta; La Tertulia; Student Council; A. E. MARTIN, MARY B. Clarksburg Alpha Xi Delta Asst. Editor; Y. W. C. A. W. S. G. A. POWELL, JAMES EDWARD Clarksburg Pi Kappa Alpha; Pres. Phi Kappa Alpha LLEWELLYN, MARION R SMITH, CLEATRICE H. Morgantown Bridgeport Delta Tau Delta; Chi Sigma Kappa Phi; Home Economics Delta; La Tertulia Club; Y. W. C. A.; W. S. G. A. MORRIS, MARGARET CALE Masontown Theta Upsilon GASKINS, CHARLES E. Morgantown Alpha Oniega; Cadet Lieu- tenant VARNER, JOE W. St. Marys Tau Kappa Epsilon ; Inter Fraternity Council; Sphinx; Torch Serpent; Spiked Shoe; Varsity Club; Social Committee; Chm. Senior Ball Committee moore, fredrica McDonald West Alexander, Pa. CARTE, LILLIAN TAYLOR QUENON, CLARENCE A. Clendenin Farmington Delta Gamma; R. O. T. C. Phi Delta Theta; Sigma Gam- Sponsor ' 33; ' Weddipg ma Epsilon Bells •31. (U. Play); The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife . ' 33; Y. W. C. A. Pofir Thirty-seven i S A ' ._-. .. ,,. ' ' ,a  ' .v -m ' -- ' fH - ' - 1934 GRADUATES JOHNSON, MARGARET SIMMONS, ORA L. Morgantown Elk Garden Alpha Phi; Girls Glee Club Principal Alaska Jr. High School; W. Va. Law School; Principal Elk District High School CLEMANS, MELVIN S. FAUST, MARIE Clarksburg Grafton Phi Delta Theta ; Rowan Rifles Alderson - Broaddus College I930--3I MONTONEY, IVA KEITH, LAURENCE S. HARMAN Harrisville Harman Alpha Sigma Phi Home Economics Club; Y. W. C. A.; Girls Glee Club SCOrr, DENNIS KARL WILSON, ILENE Charleston Belington Delta Kappa Psi; Kappa Kap- pa Psi; Sigma Gamma Ep- silon; Torch Serpent; Rifle Team; Mgr. Rifle Team; University Orchestra KUYKENDALL, SUSAN HOMBERG, JOHN WILLIAM PARSONS Wheeling Romney Phi Delta Theta; Sphinx; Phi Mu, Beta Pi Theta; Eng- Delta Nu Tau; University lish Club; Kappa Delta Pi Dance Committee Chair- man; Pan Hellenic Com. BRICK, JOHN P. HANNAH. LAURA BOCK Charleston Cass Phi Delta Theta; Phi Chi; Theta Upsilon; Girls Glee Alpha Epsilon Delta Club; Phi Chi Delta Paffc Tliirty-cighJ iik ik kji 1934 GRADUATES BOCK, EDWARD SIDNEY JUDY, ALTA FRANCES Charleston Morgantown Delta Tau Delta; Phi Delta Delta Gamma; Athenaeum Phi; R. O. T. C. Staff; Kappa Tau Alpha; Matrix Pres.; Monticola Staff; Press Club Sec; Vice-Pres.; Univ. Dance Committee; Editor of W. S. G. A. Freshman Handbook; Beta Pi Theta; Phi Chi Delta STEPHENSON. JUANITA P. DARRAH, JAMES EDWARD Wheeling Fairmont Phi Mu; Home Economics Club McDonnell, william ASPINALL, CATHERINE V. J. JR. Morgantown Morgantown Kappa Phi Cabinet Member; Delta Gamma; Kappa Delta Phi; University Choir REXROAD, THELMA HIEHLE, FORBES R. LEONE Parkersburg Dcltii Gamma. Kappa Delta Sigma Phi Epsilon; Mountain; Pi Fi Batar Cappar; Asst. Manager Basketball; Foot- ball Manager; Junior Prom Committee DAVISSON, JOHN GRANTSVILLE JAKEMAN, VIRGINIA KELLY Weston Oceana Beta Theta Pi; Chi Sigma Pi Beta Phi; Litoonawa ; Rho- Delta: Sphinx, Inter-Frat dodendron; Sec. of Sopho- Council; Pan Hellenic Com. more Class FRAME, lONE FLESHMAN CARPENTER. HIRAM Walton AMBLER Chi Omega, Theta Epsilon; St. Marys Greenbrier College Sigma Nu 1934 GRADUATES COTRELL, MARY ELIZABETH Charleston Pi Beta Phi; W. S. G. A. A. A.; Y. W. C. A. W. RYAN, RALPH W. Ryan Phi Lambda Upsilon; Kappa Deha Pi; Press Club; Delta Phi Alpha; Library Asst. •32-34 FINN, MINNA ROSALYN Morgantown Pres. Mortar Board 33- 34; Pres. Woman ' s Athletic Assoc. ' 33 34; Ex-officio member of W. S. G. A. Council; Chairman of the Y. W. C. A. Mardi Gras ' 33; Rhododendron and Manager of Rhododendron Book Store •32- ' 33; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Li-toon-awa 31;Treas. of Li-toon-awa; Sigma Delta Tau So rority, Sec; Varsity Vaudeville BANDI. ROBERT THOMAS Wheeling Phi Delta Theta; Phi Chi; Delta Phi Alpha RIETZ. LOUISE JEAN Morgantown Delta Gamma; Delta Sigma Rho; Dramatic Club; Kap- pa Phi; Pan-Hellenic Assoc. Manager Women ' s Debate Team; Treas. Senior Class; Phi Beta Kappa HEATHERMAN, WILLIAM FRANK Huntington GUSTKEY. HARRY E. Independence Kappa Sigma McCLURE. MARIAN INNES Charleston Pi Beta Phi SCOTT, ISADORE MEYER Welch Phi Sigma Delta; Mountain; Delta Nu Tau; Delta Phi Alpha; Scabbard Blade; Chairman University Dance Committee ; Chm. Students Symposium ; Manager Var- sity Wrestling; MountaiAieer Week Team; Capt. R. O. T. C. ; Cadet Hop Committee ; Phi Beta Kappa WILLIAMS. KATHLEEN MARIE Lew isburg Li-toon-aw a, ' 3 ! ; Rhododen- dron, ' 32; Phi Upsilon Omicron; Pan Hellenic Council ' 32- ' 33; Home Economics Club KLEIN, JULES I. Morgantow n Pres. Freshman Class; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Delta Phi Alpha; Student Council; Hillel Foundation; Track; Phi Beta Kappa GOODRICH. MARY JANE Mt. Morris, Pa. Kappa Phi; Home Economics Club Piujc Fort;! wf 1934 GRADUATES HALL, IVAN WRIGHT POWER. RUTH ANNA West Union Martinsburg Phi Kappa Sigma; Kappa Phi Mu; Shepherd State Kappa Psi ; Univ. Orches- Teachers tra ; Univ. Band McDonald, mary ruth Grantsvilie LEWIS, THOMAS W. Kingwood Phi Kappa Psi DUDA. WILLIAM W. Scarbro Phi Lambda Upsilon ; Kappa Mu BALLARD. SALLY BLANCHE Glen Jean Alpha Xi Delta; Theta Epsilon WILLIAMS, EDGAR LOWERY JR. Fairmont Phi Kappa Sigma; Varsity Wrestling DOMAN, ELEANOR LYNN Cameron Phi Chi Delta; W. A. A.; W. S. G. A.; Y. W. C. A. DOM.AN, NELLIE HAZEL Cameron University Choir; Phi Chi Delta; Kappa Delta Pi; Standard Normal ; Fairmont State Teacher ' s College MANNING, CHARLES WILLIAM Moundsville Phi Kappa Psi; Asst. Boxing Manager; Chi Sigma Delta; Sphinx; Golf Team; Delta Nu Tau CRAWFORD. GENE Morgantown Kappa Kappa Gamma; Dra- matic Club; Beta Pi Theta; Press Club WOTRING. HERMAN WILSON Morgantown PiKjc Forlij-vnt 1934 GRADUATES HUGHES, MARY DOROTHEA Martinsburg Phi Mu CARSON, BETTY LETTE Charleston Pi Beta Phi Pres. ' 33; Wom- an ' s Student Gov ' t Assoc. Pres. ' 34; Junior Rep. ' 33, Treas. ' 32; Mortar Board, Rhododendron; Eta Sigma Phi: Phi Chi Delta; Li- toon-awa; English Club; Freshman Guide HUDGINS, JOHN GILBERT Hinton Phi Sigma Kappa HEFL. . MA RY LOUISE West Union Alpha Phi, Rhododendron; Litoonawa; Woman ' s Pan- Hellenic Treas; Univ. 4-H Club; Orchesis; Home Eco- nomics Club PRICHARD, CLAUDE Parkersburg Tau Kappa Epsilon; Senior Rep. on Student Council BOOMSLITER, PEGGY E. Morgantown Brj ' n Mawr College ' 31-32; Y. W. C. A., Cabinet; W. A. A. ' 32-33 BENNETT, EDWARD BENNETT Steubenville, Ohio Alpha Sigma Phi ; Kappa Kap- pa Psi; Torch Serpent; Sigma Pi Sigma Pres.; Band HENDERSON, JOHN GIBSON Fairmont Delta Tau Delta; Sphinx; Pres. Tau Beta Pi; Cadet Col. R. O. T. C; Cadet Hop Committee; Asst. Mgr. Baseball LADWIG, MARGARET Wilsonburg Chi Omega; Kappa Phi MORLEY, WILMER VERNON Mona ENGLAND, MARJARIE ELIZABETH Charleston Pi Beta Phi; Home Economics Club DOUTHAT, JAMES ROBERT Morgantown . ' m i Tagc Fort ij-i ICO 1934 GRADUATES SCOTT, ROGER B. Morgantown Delta Tau Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Pres. and National Sec. of Alpha Epsilon Delta; Monticola Staff; Scabbard and Blade; Torch Ser- pent; Delta Phi Alpha; Jr. Prom Chairman; Universi- ty Social Committee; Phi Beta Kappa FORMAN, LUCILLE North Fork Sigma Delta Tau; Hillel Foun- dation MARSHALL, RONALD Wheeling B. S. E. E. MEEK, ELIZABETH ANNE Wheeling Chi Omega; President Pan- Hellenic Assoc; Mortar Board; Rhododendron; Li- toon-awa STANLEY, MARGARET BELLE Shepherdstown Alpha Xi Delta; Home Eco- nomics Club SIMS, C. BINFORD Fayetteville Phi Delta Theta; A. I. E. E. STROCHAK, HENRY L. Brooklyn, N. Y. Pi Lambda Phi; Delta Nu Tau; Beta Pi Theta; Varsity Track PETERS, TRIXY McCLAUGHERTY Bluefield Delta Gamma Pres.; Kappa Beta Pi Pres. ; Law Quarter- ly Pres.; Sec.-Treas. Junior Law Class; Sec.-Treas. Stu- dent Body of Law School; Randolph-Macon Women ' s College; Phi Beta Kappa SHAFFER, MAURICE LEON Hyndman, Pa. Phi Kappa Sigma; Pres. A. S. M. E. ; Cadet Captain VAN METRE, MARY ELIZABETH Shepherdstown .• lpha Xi Delta; Home Eco- nomics Club MILLARD, MAE ZOGG MILLARD, JACK ANDERSON Wellsburg Morgantown Student Instructor Military Science and Tactics I ' lifii Forty-ilircc 1934 GRADUATES STONE. SAMUEL MARION Coal Fork Phi Kappa Sigma FROMME, JEAN LOUISE Morgantown Pi Beta Phi; Y. W. C. A.; W. S. G. A.; W. A. A.-, Beta Pi Theta; Delta Phi Alpha; Vice-President, ' 32-33 BEALL, RALPH RODNEY Beallsville, Pa MONTI, GENEVIEVE Clarksburg Pres. Beta Pi 1 heta ; Kappa Phi; Orchestra BOGGS EDWARD HUNTER Morgantown B. 5. Kappa Sigma GIGLIA. ROSE ANN Glen Jean LEWIS. ALBERT K. Grant Town Phi Kappa Sigma WRIGHT, LELA SUSAN Reedy Theta Epsilon, Kappa Delta Pi WEINER, JESS J. Paterson, N. J. Phi Lambda Phi; Varsity Basketball WILBURN, EDNA JORDON Bluefield Alpha Delta Pi OWEN, EMILY MARTHA BAKER, GLENN HICKS Fairmont Cameron Theta Epsilon; Trans. Fair- Phi Kappa Tau; Tau Beta Pi State Teacher ' s College ' 3 1 rage Forly-fonr 1934 GRADUATES LEINWAND, IRVING New York City Pi Lambda Phi STEMPLE, ROBERTA WARD Thomas HINKLE, ELEANOR THORNTON. JOHN T. Morgantown Wheeling Alpha Xi Delta; Mortar Board; Delta Tau Delta Rhododendron; Li-toon- awa; Pres. W. S. G. A.; Kappa Delta Pi; Intramural Msr. of W. A. A. KRIEGER, EDWARD MYERS Elm Grove Torch Serpent; Phi Lambda p; Beta Phi Upsilon; Sphinx; Phi Chi; Theta Chi STEVENS, DOROTHY E. Aliquippa, Pa MYERS, TEXA LOUISE Waynesburg, Pa Alpha Delta Pi FIZER. HOMER M. Morgantown Wrestling ' 3 1 ; Football, ' 29, •30, 31 MOORE, EVELYN GRACE Mount Hope VIRGIN, THOMAS EMERSON Hundred Tau Kappa Epsilon President; Scabbard Blade; Vice- President Engineering So- ciety WOODY, MARY AURELIA MARTIN, HENRY GEORGE McMechen Benwood Alpha Xi Delta; Home Eco- Marshall College nomics Club PlUIC I ' oitjI-filT p,r.--- 1934 GRADUATES HEMINGTON, RALPH W, Uniontown. Pa Theta Chi; Scabbard Blade; Monticola Staff; Editor in Chief Monticola; Monticola Pub. Board; R. O. T. C. Capt. WOODHULL, MARY LOUISE Mor2:antown Delta Gamma; Y. W. C. A. Treas.; W. S. G. A. Treas. ; W. S. G. A. Jr. Rep.; La Tertulia Vice Pres. ; Girls Glee Club; Le Foyer; Kap- pa Phi; Rhododendron Treas.; Litoonawa Sec; Pan-Hellenic Council BUSH, CHARLES R. Grafton Beta Theta Pi; Mountain; Fi Bartar Cappar; Spiked Shoe; Vice-Pres. Junior Class; Asst. Football Mgr. ' 31; Mgr. Track ' 33 ; Fresh- man Cheerleader WILBOURN, MARGARET E. Morgantown Pi Beta Phi; Pres. Y. W. C. A.; Delta Phi Alpha; Delta Sigma Rho; Pres. Li-toon- awa ; Rhododendron; Vice- Pres. Mortar Board; Pan- Hellenic Council; Phi Beta Kappa HUNGERFORD. FRANK LEVI Morgantown BOYER, VIRGINIA BRUCE Worthington Gamma Phi Beta ; Girls Glee Club CASTO, FLORENCE E. Jackson Heights, N. Y. Chi Omega CRACRAFT RUSSELL H. Wheeling Phi Kappa Psi WHITE, ANNA BANCROFT Morganto vn Delta Gamma, Litoonawa : Beta Pi Theta; Le Foyer; Phi Chi Delta FAHEY, WILLIAM T. Wheeling Alpha Sigma Phi; Mountain; Fi Batar Cappar; Scabbard and Blade; Lieut. Col. R. O. T. C; Editor-in-Chief of Athenaeum; Managing Editor Athenaeum; Phi Delta Phi; Mountaineer Week Team; Vice-President Sophomore Class SPITZ, IRENE ADELE Morgantown University Choir ' 30, ' 31, ' 32; Girls Glee Club ' 30, ' 31, ' 32; Sec. Phi Chi Delta 31 ; Vice-Pres. Theta Upsilon; Vice-Pres. Beta Pi Theta COLBORN, RALPH H. Middlebourne Delta Theta; Sphinx; A. I. E. E. ; Varsity Track; Varsity Cross Country Fdf r Fortiiiit 1934 GRADUATES CLARK, SAMUEL FRIEND DEITZ, JEAN E. Morgantown Ronceverte Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Lambda Kappa Phi; Glee Club; Univ. Upsilon; Delta Phi Alpha; Choir; Dramatic Club Band; Forum DRINKARD, JEAN HILSTON, NEAL WILLIAM Wheeling Warren, Ohio Chi Omega; Li-toon-awa; Delta Tau Delta; Alpha Zeta; Rhododendron Agricultural Council PAXTON, HAROLD G. Walton KENNEDY, MELBA ALYCE Morgantown Theta Upsilon: Theta Epsilan BURCHINAL, RUTH VIRGINIA Morgantown BROWN. RICHARD LEWIS Choi Morgantown LAMBERT, J. KENTON Parsons Tau Kappa Epsilon WHITE, ROBERTA HUSTON Romney Pi Beta Phi; Pres. Woman ' s Hall; Potomac State College ISRAEL, SARAH MORELAND. HARRY MARGARET THOMAS Clarksburg Huntington Theta Epsilon; Baptist Sorority Alpha Kappa Pi; Marshall La Tertulia; Beta Pi Theta College Piiiir Foiiii-.irvrn « ' i,!-- 1934 GRADUATES HENNEN, LYDIA J. Morgantown La Tertulia McMILLAM. ELBERT C. Confluence, Pa. BARBE, MARY ILEEN Morgantown Y. W. C. A. Cabinet •33- ' 34; Chi Beta Sigma ; President ' 33- ' 34; Freshman Guide •33. -34 McCOY, A. LEE Peterstown Concord College ' 31 - ' 33: Phi Delta Pi; Chi Beta Phi; Track ' 30 DAVIS, R. LUCILLE Terra Alta Gamma Phi Beta; Kappa Phi; University Choir; University Orchestra: University Glee Club BARRICK. FRED W. Lost Creek Theta Chi; Chi Sigma Delta; Senior Editor of the Monti- cola; Salevas Junior Col- lege; Salevas, Calf. ' 32 BENSON. CLARENCE J. Morgantown BAKER. MARGARET CHRISTINE Etkins Home Economics Club; Kappa Phi SHAFFER, ROBERT F. Morgantown Tau Kappa Upsilon; News Editor of Athenaeum ' 33 ; Managing Editor ' 33, ' 34; Row an Rifles, La Leatulia BAILEY, MARGARET ELIZABETH Weston Theta Epsilon; Trans. Mary Baldwin College, Stanton. Va. GRACE, JAMES E. Morgantown Trans, Bucknell University; Freshman guidance Week Committee HALL NATHAN I. Elkins President Wesley Founda tion Pciiie Forty-eight ikk fe Jr li fc FiE?t irI 1934 GRADUATES HiTE, RALPH M. Mannington Phi Kappa Pai FLEMING, CAROLINE Fairmont Kappa Kappa Gamma Pres. Beta Pi Theta HAMILTON, ALICE MARGARET Hinton Kappa Kappa Gamma; Phi L ' psilon Omicron WATSON, KENNETH STANLEY Morgantown Phi Kappa Tau; Sphinx KLUG, WILLIAM H. SMOYER, MARY Gary, Ind, CATHERINE Pi Kappa Alpha; Alpha Clairton, Pa. Omega, Pres. Sophomore Gamma Phi Beta; Phi Chi Class: Student Council; Fi Delta; Girls Glee Club Batar Cappar; Varsity Bas- ketball WILLIAMS, KATHLEEN Lewisburg Alpha Delta Pi DOWNS, WILLIAM RICHARD Morgantown Phi Kappa Psi; Delta Phi Alpha; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Sigma Pi Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa ROSS, ANNA VIRGINIA Newport, Del. Alpha Delta Pi; Rhododen- dron; Pres. Orchesis; Spon- sor R. O. T. C; Press Club FALCK, EDGAR L. Wheeling B. S. C. E. BARTLETT, LENOR.A Clarksburg Trans. Ohio Wesleyan, ' 32; Alpha Chi Omega LEDOUX, CLARENCE WATSON Clarksburg Pi Kappa Alpha; Phi Beta Pi Alpha Epsilon Delta Vcpr Forti -iune . i ' ' ,,,i ' ' ,-M0 ' ,-! 0 0 ... ' ..,:. ' .. :S r£ .-a ' tyS: - SSB P ' - 1934 GRADUATES SIPLE, MARY WILSON Romney Pi Beta Phi CHANNEL, CARL WAMSLEY Elkins Phi Kappa Sigma; Torch and Serpent HOLT, JANE Weston Pi Beta Phi; Dramatic Club WATKINS, A. HALE Grafton President Beta Theta Pi; Sum- mit of Mountain; L. H. C. P. of Fi Bater Capper: Capt. Mountaineer Team; Sphinx; Chief Justice, Phi Alpha Delta (Legal) BARTHOLOMEW, ELIZABETH ANN Wheeling Phi Mu; Phi Epsilon Phi; Rho- dodendron MONTEITH, VICTOR ST. CLAIR, JR. Martinsburg Pi Kappa Alpha HUEY. ELIZABETH JANE Mannington Pi Beta Phi BALLANTYNE, ROBERT B. New Cumberland Phi Kappa Psi CEYER, HANNAH VIRGINIA Martinsburg .Alpha Xi Delta ROSENBERG, MORTIMER W. Jackson Heights, N. Y. Pi Lambda Phi FIZER, ELMER PARSONS Morgantown Frosh Wrestling ' 30; Frosh Football ' 30; Three Years Varsity Squad 31, ' 32, ' 33; Rowan Rifles; Scabbard and Blade DEITZ. EDNA MARIE Ronceverte Kappa Phi Paiir Fift.i ' « ., 1934 GRADUATES GRIMES, JANE ELLEN EXLEY, BEN Morgantown Wheeling Li-toon-awa; Atheneaum So- Theta Chi; Sphinx; Torch ciety Editor; News Editor; and Serpent; Kappa Kappa Matrix; Press Club; Sec. of Psi ; Kappa Psi; University Senior Class Band WILSON FREDERICK M. LEMLEY, KATHERINE Marlinton Morgantown Sigma Nu; Fi Batar Cappar; Chi Omega; Beta Pi Theta; Phi Beta Pi; Scabbard and Girls Glee Club Blade BERTIE, RAYMA ALETTA COBB, DONALD PRENTICE Morgantown Fairview, Pa. Pres. Theta Upsilon; Kappa Phi Kappa Tau; Torch and Phi; Pres. Wesley Players; Serpent Pan-Hellenic Council LAW, LEWIS BRYAN Camden-On-Gauley Sigma Gamma Epsilon KNIGHT, GENEVIEVE Renick Theta L ' psilon; Home Eco- nomics Club; Phi Chi Delta; 4-H Club BURTON, BRYANNA SHAFFER, FRANCIS M. Elizabeth Morgantown Phi Upsilon O micron Supervisor of Intra-mural; Al- Rhododendron ; Litoonawa; pha Omega; Tau Kappa Vice-President Delta Gam- Epsilon ma ' 34 HARE, CHARLES E. Morgantown Phi Kappa Tau MUSGRAVE. SALLY LOU Point Pleasant Pi Beta Phi Vddc Fiftfi-nnc :S -.i: 1934 GRADUATES STORCK., BETTY A. Parkersburg Chi Omega HOLT, JAMES F. Grafton Pi Kappa Alpha GRIMES. JANE ELLEN Morgantown Ljtoonawa; Atheneaum So- ciety Editor; News Editor; Matrix; Press Club; Sec. of Senior Class MATUSIEWSK, JOHN PHILLIP Hempstead, Long Island, N. Y. Pi Alpha : St. Francis College, Brooklyn, N. Y. Newman Club MacDONALD MAE Bridgeport Gamma Phi Beta; Orchesis KIZER, JOHN O Wheeling Delta Tau Delta; Mgr. Moun- taineer Week Team; Mgr. Basketball; Mountain; Fi Batar Capper; Sphinx; Torch and Serpent; Delta Nu Tau STEWART, MARVIN TERRILL Morgantown Phi Kappa Sigma; Scabbard and Blade; W. Va. U. Rifle Team; A. I. E. E. Student Instructor in Military Sci- ence and Tactics; Boxing ■30, -31 CHITWOOD, ELIZ. ' BETH ANNE Morgantown Kappa Kappa Gamma; Li- toon-awa ; Delta Sigma Rho ; Manager Womans Bathing ' 32- ' 33; Woman ' s Debating Squad ' 31-32 KIGER, MARVIN Morgantown WATKIN, MARY ANN Morgantown Matrix; Press Club CUPPETT, DAVID EARLE Thomas Sigma Nu; Phi Delta Phi; Pres. Jr. Law Class, ' 32- ' 33: Pres. Law School ' 33- ' 34; Fi Batar Cappar COLE, MELISSA ELIZABETH Elkins B. S. Ed Fdfic Fiflj ' tii ' i) 1 1934 GRADUATES HENNEN, LYDIA J. Morgantown La Tertulia BENSON, CLARENCE J. Morgantown MUSGRAVE. VIVIAN MARIA Wallace Gamma Phi Beta; W. Va. 4-H Club; Home Economics Club; Woman ' s Athletic Association, Senior Repre- sentative of W. S. G. A., Y. W. C. A. Sec. DOOLITTLE, MARY LOUISE Fairmont Gamma Phi Beta; Orchesis; Phi Upsilon Omicrom; Pan- Hellenic Rep. ; Home Eco- nomics Club President CARTER. HOWARD THOMAS Wheeling Beta Theta Pi I ' lige Fifty-three . !0 ' 10 ' ' ' ' ' ' 00 t : 1934 GRADUATES LINGER, PAUL N. HAMPTON, RAYMOND L. Morgantown Kermit Kappa Kappa Psi Pres. ; Uni- versity R. O. T. C. Band DOBBS. LEE FILLMORE HILLER,, WOODROW W. Wheeling Clarksburg Phi Sigma Kappa, Phi Beta Pi Lambda Phi Pi; Pres. of Senior Class; Member of Student Council BROWN, FREDERICK Q. Phi Delta Theta SMITH, WILLIAM HENDRON Peterstown Business Manager of the Daily Athenaeum ■33- ' 34; Pres. Chi Sigma Delta; Adver- tising Manager of 33- 34 Monticola; Pi Kappa Alpha Faffc Fifty- four 19 3 3 SENICCS 4! .....sai ' ii0 ' ..-u; j P ' ' ' ' ' « V« 1933 GRADUATES CASEY, ADDIS E. HENNEN KATHLEEN M. Frostburg, Md. Morgantown Pi Kappa Alpha; Sphinx; Chi Omega; Beta Pi Theta; Torch and Serpent Sponsor R, O. T. C. SKIDMORE, MARJORIE VIRGINIA Charleston GARRETT, HENRY LEE Martinsburg Sigma Nu ; Kappa Tau Alpha PARRIOTT, WILLIAM WRIGHT Morgantown Phi Kappa Psi; Fi Batar Cap- par; Spiked Shoe; Varsity Club; Journaliers; Moun- tain; Mountaineer Week Team; Varsity Football SIMPSON, RUTH F. Morgantown Alpha Delta Pi; Mortar Board Pan-Hellenic Council; Vice Pres. W. A. A.; Senior Week Committee; Secretary Senior Class; Rhododen- dron LEE, ESTOUS Clarksburg Kappa Kappa Gamma MILLER, G. WILLIAM Martinsburg Sigma Nu; Fi Batar Cappar; La Tertulia; Spiked Shoe ZINN, SYLVIA RUTH Morgantown Matrix; Girls Glee Club; Athenaeum Staff; Monticola Staff; Pre ss Club; Chi Beta Sigma; Cosmopolitan Club ROGERS, N. HOWARD Keyser Phi Delta Theta ROSE, HERSCHEL H. JR. Fairmont Phi Kappa Psi GIBSON, VIRGINIA B. Kingwood Pi Beta Phi; Y. W. C. A. Fagc Fifty-six 1933 GRADUATES McCLAUGHERTY, JACK WADE, ELIZABETH Bluefield Morgantown Sigma Nu; Fi Batar Cappar; Pi Beta Phi Sphinx; Sec. Inter-Fratern- ity Council BURNS, HELEN ELIZABETH SMOOT, JAMES ROY Martinsburg Fairmont Alpha Xi Delta; Student Alpha Zeta ; Judging Team Council; Womens Athletic Association HOWARD, ZACK M. Charleston McCLUNG, HELEN Reedy Phi Mu MYERS, BERTHA VIVIAN PFALZGRAF, RUSSELL A. Parsons Parkersburg Kappa Phi; Home Economics Tau Kappa Epsilon; Scabbard Club; Girl ' s Glee Club; and Blade; Rowan Rifle; Grange ; 4-H Club Alpha Omega WIESNER, HENRY JR. Wheeling Kappa Alpha: A. S. C. E. Tau Beta Pi; B. S. C. E. LAWLER, BEULAHGRAYCE Lumberport Alpha Xi Delta; Matrix; Press Club; Mortar Board HOLLIDAY, VIRGINIA Parkersburg Kappa Kappa Gamma; Matrix; Press Club; Mortar Board MORRIS, JOHN HITE Morgantown Phi Sigma Kappa; Tau Beta Pi; Scabbard and Blade; Rifle Team Page Fifty-seven 1933 GRADUATES COLEMAN, ELENORE L. Charleston Chi Omega; Pan-Hellenic Council; Li-toon-awa; Rho- dodendron; Mortar Board; Kappa Phi; Beta Pi Theta PARSONS, NORMAN WELBEC Morgantown Delta Kappa Psi ; Tau Beta Pi; Capt. R. O. T. C; Scabbard and Blade; Blackguard Fusiliers; Student Insructor in Military Science and Tactics WATKINS, CHARLES EUGENE Charleston Beta Theta Pi; Mountain; Sphinx; Phi Beta Pi CROW, MARGARETTE FRANCIS Point Marion, Pa. ' ■i ' ' iW - ' J S EDWARDS, ELIZABETH E. Welch Pi Beta Phi; Eta Sigma Phi; Beta Pi Theta MONTEITH, VICTOR ST. CLAIR Martinsburg Pi Kappa Alpha; A. 1. E. E. BURFORD, RUPERT O. Charleston Tau Beta Pi; Phi Lambda Upsilon; R. O. T. C. WADE, JEAN SPENCER Morgantown Pi Beta Phi MILLER, ELIZABETH Little Gerrardstown Delta Gamma; Phi Chi Delta, Greenbrier College McQUAlN, GEORGE W. Troy L. L. B FARLEY, PALMER Beckley Phi Kappa Tau; Pres. of Journaliers; Press Club; Athenaeum Staff BISHOP, MARGARET Pocahontas, Va. Delta Delta Delta - 1 Fayc Fifti -ci jlil 1933 GRADUATES SWEARINGEN, HELEN Morgantown Alpha X{ Delta; W. A. A. Y. W. C. A. SMITH, SAMUEL GROVER Charleston Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Alpha Delta: Sphinx: Pres. Junior Class; Social Committee: Athenaeum Staff; Student Council: Non - Athletic Award ' 30 BOWMASTER, NAOMI Meyersdale, Pa. Eta Sigma Phi; Kappa Delta Pi; Phi Chi Delta ROGERSON, CLINTON Moundsville Phi Delta Theta; Phi Delta Phi BENNETT, LELIA KATHERINE Jaclcson Springs Beta Pi Theta; Kappa Phi, Louisburg College, N. C. CONN. HOWARD F. Smithfield. Pa. Alpha Zeta ; Rifle Team; Rowan Rifles BARNETT. FREDRICK H. Glenville Phi Deha Phi; Pres. Fresh- man Law Class THOMAS, RUTH BOUNDY Cameron La Tertulia KIME, EDWARD BLAINE Moundsville Pi Kappa Phi SMITH, VIRGINIA Morgantown Theta Upsilon; Pan-Hellenic Council; Press Club; Vice- President Junior Class NUZUM. DAVID GRAHAM Hepzibah Theta Chi; Rowan Rifles; Torch and Serpent DUBOIS, MARTHA V. Morgantown Beta Pi Theta: Kappa Delta Pi; English Club m ■■ ' . ' •Sa royc Fifty-nine 1933 GRADUATES COOKMAN, MARGARET A. Lost Creek Home Economics Club ; Girls Glee Club HAUGHT, ARTHUR PAUL Belle Tau Beta Pi; Ph. Lambda Upsilon; Sigma Gamma Epsilon KESSLER, KATHERINE FRANTZ Red Star Kappa Phi DEVER, GEORGE BAILEY Victor Alpha Zeta; Capt. R. O. T. C. : Spiked Shoe: Varsity Track: Cross Country: Var- sity Club SPIGGLE, NINA FRANCES Aurora Home Economics Club; Grange YOUNG, LINNWOOD HALL Philippi Pi Kappa Phi; Block and Bridle; Alpha Eta; Broaddus College SNYDER. PHILIP N. Mount Hope Sigma Nu HAWLEY, EVA CLAIRE Morgantown Delta Gamma ; Phi Beta Kap- pa ; Mortar Board; Kappa Delta Pi; Beta Pi Theta ; R. O. T. C. Sponsor; Kappa Phi; La Tertulia; Li-toon- awa ; Rhododendron BARTRAM. PAUL R. Fort Gay Tau Beta Pi; A. S. M. E. ; A. E. OWENS. SARAH VIRGINIA Shepherdstown Alpha Xi Delta; Home Eco- nomics Club SMITH. FREEMAN PAUL West Union Alpha Gamma Rho ; Sphinx; Alpha Zeta; Salem College •30- ' 3I COBB, RUBY BISHOP Summerlee Alpha Phi; Kappa Phi; Y. W. C. A. Page Sixty 1933 GRADUATES BAKER. DAN R. Elkins Tau Kappa Epsilon; Davis and Elkins -ag- ' SO, ' SO- l DORR, IRENE Morgantown Gamma Phi Beta; LaTertulia: Kappa Phi GLASSCOCK, PAUL CORDRAY Morgantown Chi Sigma Delta WOLVERTON, RUTH M. Elkins Alpha Phi; W. A. A.; W. S. G. A.; Y. W. C. A.; Press Club; Monticola Staff; Pan - Hellenic Council; Athenaeum Staff; Delta Sigma Rho TAYLOR, DAVID CLARENCE Petersburg Alpha Zeta; Grange; Block and Bridle FLANAGAN, BERTHA MARIE Shirley SHARP, GLENNA P. BAKER, JAY BURCHINAL Marlinton Morgantown Theta Upsilon; Grange; Home Kappa Sigma; Manager Box- Economics Club; Phi Chi ing; Fi Batar Cappar Delta WALLACE, JOHN B. Morgantown Alpha Omega VECELLIO, IDA ANN Beckley HUDGINS, GERALDINE ISOBELLE BURK PAUL N. Morgantown Morgantown Delta Gamma; Matrix; Press Kappa Sigma Club; Phi Chi Delta Igp-.v-n- 1933 GRADUATES SIMPSON, ALVIN ROSS Clarksburg Cadet Band; A. I. E. E. GORRELL, ELIZABETH Charleston Alpha Xi Delta; Pres. W. S. G. A.; Li-toon-awa; Rho- dodendron; Mortar Board; Junior Representative Stu- dent Council NEMETH. JOSEPH G. Osage WILLFONG, MARGARET ROSE Beckley Kappa Kappa Gamma COLEMAN, JAMES HOWARD JR. Farmington Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Alpha Delta; Sphinx LINGER, VIRGINIA MARGARET Clarksburg Alpha Xi Delta; La Tertulia JESTER, JANE New Cumberland Delta Gamma; Li-toon-awa; Sponsor R. O. T. C. KIESTER, JOHN HENRY St. Marys Phi Delta Theta; Kappa Kap- pa Psi; Blue Band HALL, JEAN ELIZABETH Delte Clay Gamma DEEMS, GEORGE C. Newell Sigma Nu; Spiked Shoe; Var- sity Track; Varsity Club LYNCH, LOUISE Hinton English Club; Kappa Delta Pi Phi Chi Delta BURDETT, JACK C. Point Pleasant Sigma Nu; Fi Batar Cappar; Law Composite; Mountain: Sphinx Fagc Sifli tira 1933 GRADUATES THOMAS, E. IVAN McCOY, ELIZABETH B. St. Albans Jane Lew Phi Lambda Upsilon; Delta Phi Mu; Beta Pi Theta; La Phi Alpha, President Tertulia; Kappa Phi; Pan- Hellenic Council COBUN, DENNIS B. Newberg WALTER, MARY VIRGINIA Morgantown p, , nu- AT u □ V DL nv ■ . Delta Phi Alpha Pres. Kappa Phi; Chemistry Club RIDDLE, HARRY GLENN Cairo Grange; Block and Bridle ATWOOD. HILDA RUTH Morgantown THORINLEY. RUTH Morgantown Theta Upsilon SMITH. GEORGE EMERSON Charleston WALLACE, JOSEPH EDGAR DAILEY, EVELYN BOOKER West Union Romney A. 1. E. E. ; R, O. T. C; Tau Delta Gamma Beta Pi MICHAEL, ETHEL WOLFE CALLAHAN, WILLIAM O. Morgantown Wheeling Beowulf; M. A. 33 Theta Chi; Pres. Inter-Frat. Council; Sphinx; Phi Delta Phi ■cM Piuic Sixty-three . .,a , M ' ,„-; .... .:,; i - .-.;.J ' ...., i 1933 GRADUATES HOLLANDSWORTH, NINA PIPES, BYRON T. Stanaford Cameron Sigma Chi; Chi Sigma Delta LEVIN, EMANNEL Brooklyn, N. Y. Kappa Nu; Rensselaer Poly- technic Ins., Troy, N. Y. THOMPSON, ALTA MAE Fairmont MASON, RUTH Meyersdale, Pa. Intramural Manager POWER, ROBERT STANLEY Huntington Kappa Alpha; Chi Sigma Delta: Torch and Serpent; Junior Prom Committee BURNS, HELEN ELIZABETH Martinsburg Li-toon-awa, Chairman Mardi Gras; Alpha Xi Delta KOONTZ, TOM D. Clendenin Sigma Nu; Sphinx ROBERTS, ERNEST E. Morgantown Sigma Phi Epsilon; Inter-Frat. Council; Fi Batar Cappar; Baseball Manager PROTZMAN, GARNET HESTER Morgantown Cosmopolitan Club; English Club; Eta Sigma Phi; 4-H Club; Kappa Delta Pi; Kappa Phi; Phi Beta Kappa SCHMEICHEL, EDWARD Wheeling Theta Chi; Delta Phi Alpha; R. O. T. C; Scabbard and Blade; Sphinx; Torch and Serpent COCHRAN, REGINA JUNE Morgantown Pi Beta Phi; Kappa Phi I ' llifi ' Si.rtll-foiii 1933 GRADUATES GASTON, JAMES HARRY Morgantown Chi Sigma Delta; La Tertulia FISHER, ELOISE Walton EDWARDS, DOROTHY P. Grantsville, Md. Chi Beta Sigma COSTANZO VINCENT A. Wheeling HAVENER, JOHN FRANKLIN Morgantown Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Delta Sigma Rho; Delta Phi Alpha BYRD, ELIZABETH WALTON Mannington Alpha Phi; Eta Sigma Phi; Kappa Delta Phi; Kappa Phi MOSS. SKRENCE WALBERT HICKMAN, HALLY BURTON Beckley Charleston Kappa Kappa Gamma B. S. M. E. KUYKENDALL. JOE P. Romney Alpha Gamma Rho; Alpha Zeta ; Ag Council; Block and Bridle; Grange STALNAKER, MARY HALE Washington, D. C. Alpha Xi Delta; Beta Pi Theta ; English Club; La Tertulia ; Phi Beta Kappa TRAYNOR, PHYLLIS ELIZABETH Cumberland, Md. A. B.; Glee Club; Choir; Y. W. C. A.: W. A. A. McWHORTER, JOHN PARRISH McWhorter Tau Beta Pi; Scabbard and Blade; Pres. A. S. M. E. ; Rowan Rifles Pope Sixlji-fivp 1933 GRADUATES DEARIEN, KATHERINE E. St. Albans Chi Omega; Kappa Phi; Press Club; IVIatrix; Beta Pi Theta WILSON, JOHN F. Clarksburg Phi Kappa Psi STILLMAN, MARGUERITTE W. Morgantown B. S. P. E. HITE, THOMAS A. Mannington Phi Kappa Psi; Fi Batar Cap- par; Editor Monticola ' 33; Monticola Board ' 32- ' 33; Sphinx; Chi Sigma Delta RITZ, ELINOR CLEON Bluefield Kappa Alpha Theta; Kappa Beta Pi; Order of Coffin; Sec. - Treas. Law Class 1930- ' 33 BROWN, DAVID LAING JR. Grant Town Phi Kappa Sigma LARGENT, WILLIAM H. GROW, LILLIAN IRENE Morgantown Clarksburg Phi Sigma Kappa; Delta Sig- Phi Mu ; Beta Pi Theta ma Rho; Fi Batar Cappar; Phi Delta Phi MARSH, ETHEL M. Wheeling Alpha Xi Delta; English Club; Phi Beta Kappa; Beta Pi Theta; Matrix MARTIN, MEREDITH A. Morgantown Pres. Kappa Alpha; Fi Batar Cappar; Torch and Serpent ROBINSON, WILLIAM LINGER, VIRGINIA WALDO MARGARET Grafton Clarksburg Sigma Nu; Scabbard and Blade Alpha Xi Delta; La Tertulia Tage Sixfi -.n.r, 1933 GRADUATES CARSPECKEN, HENRY LOUIS Morgantown Phi Sigma Kappa ; Scabbard and Blade; Cadet Hop Com- mittee SCANLON. MARY REBECCA Morgantown Kappa Kappa Gamma; Phi Chi Delta STEINBECKER. KATHERINE KOONTZ, CLARENCE JOHN ANN Elkins Wheeling Tau Kappa Epsilon; Torch Alpha Xi Delta; W. A. A. and Serpent Council BROGLIO, JOHN A. Morgantown Kappa Mu DANIELSON, GONELL Jamestown, N. Y. HADEN. CHARLES H. Morgantown L. L. B. ; Sigma Phi Epsilon: Phi Alpha Delta; Fi Batar Cappar; Varsity Club; Base- ball; Inter-Frat. Council RINEHART, WILLA CHENOWETH McMechen PIETRO, HELEN ELIZABETH Morgantown Kappa Phi; Athenaeum Staff; Matrix: Press Club; Rho- dodendron; Varsity Vaude- ville EDDY, DON J. Morgantown Athletic Board JENCKES, JOSEPHINE HARRIS Wheeling Univ. Choir; Girls Friendly Society SLEETH, CHARLES ROBERT Morgantown Pres. Delta Phi Alpha; Beta Pi Theta; Phi Beta Kappa Pa jc Sirlij-scvrn 0 gmf ' ,-,i s ' .-■ ifi ' ' 1933 GRADUATES WHITE, WAYNE GILMER Clendenin Phi Lambda Upsilon; Sigma Pi Sigma; W. Va. Wesleyan GARDEN. JOHN DANA Weston Phi Sigma Kappa; Fi Batar Gappar; Varsity Glub; Var- sity Baseball; Varsity Foot- ball WILLIAMS, MARTIN HAROLD Bristol Kappa Alpha; Alpha Zeta ; West Virginia Wesleyan Gollege CROSS, MARGARET G. Morgantown Home Economics Glub McKINLEY, GEORGE Glarksburg Beta Theta Pi W. BOAL, DORIS ADELE Piedmont Phi Chi Delta ; University Glee Club; University Choir EMILY. GARY HOFFMAN Bunker Hill Delta Gamma; Delta Psi Omega; Grad. of Shephard Junior College SMITH. KINGSLEY RICHARD Weston Phi Sigma Kappa; La Tertulia Phi Alpha Delta HOLLIDAY. FLORA VIRGINIA Parkersburg Kappa Kappa Gamma ; Ma- trix; Mortar Board, Rho- dodendron ; Li-toon-awa MARTIN. FRED HARRISON Bridgeport Phi Lambda Upsilon; Scab- bard and Blade; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi FISHBACH, MARY ELLEN Connellsville, Pa. Alpha Xi Delta; University Choir; Girls Glee Club; Brenan College ROSE. IRVING Brooklyn. N. Y. Phi Alpha; Senior Intramural Manager: Pres. Hillel Stu- dent Council Page Sirti -ci( ]il 1933 GRADUATES NEELY, REVA BELLE Riversville Home Economics Club REGER, VEIL K. Buckhannon A. B. GIDLEY, IRMA Morgantown Math BORINSKY, ABE Princeton Athenaeum Staff GOLDSBOROUGH, GLADYS T. Romney W. A. A. Cabinet; President O rchesis; Alpha Sigma Al- pha ; Marshall College 1929- ' 30 WHITE, DeWlTT Morgantown Phi Kappa Sigma; Varsity Rifle Team; Mountaineer Week Team; Debate Team; Univ. Choir; Asst. Bus. Mgr. Athenaeum; Capt. R. O. T. C; Delta Sigma Rho ; Phi Beta Kappa Puge Sixty-nine HARRIS, EARL K. Little Birch Glenville State; Marshall Col lege CARNEY, MARY LOUISE Wheeling Alpha Xi Delta; Matrix; Press Club; Pan-Hellenic Council; Sponsor R. O, T. C. BOWMAN, FRANK L. JR. Morgantown Kappa Alpha ; Press Club ; Athenaeum Staff; Jour- naliers WOOFTER. ELIZA MAE Camden B. S. H. E. COOMBS. FRED M. Morgantown Kappa Sigma; Fi Batar Cap- par; Scabbard and Blade; Spiked Shoe; Varsity Club; Alpha Omega; Varsity Track; Torch and Serpent HOWARD. ELIZABETH Cameron Phi; Forum; W. S. Pi Beta G. A. a .; ' al -.. i ' 1933 GRADUATES CRAMER, KATHRYN VIRGINIA B. S. Ed Morgantown GEPPERT, WILLIAM H. Clarksburg Delta Tau Delta; Phi Delta Phi; Torch and Serpent AHERN, VIRGINIA 1. Fairmont Gamma Phi Beta, Orchesis MARTIN, RICHARD ROBERT Wilmerding, Pa. Sigma Chi, Inter-Fraternity Council; Torch and Ser- pent; Pres. Freshman Med. Class GILTNER, VIRGINIA BARTLETT Parkersburg Xi Delta; Li-toon-awa; Chi Delta; Rhododen- Alphs Ph dron STAUB, WILLIAM S. Romney Phi Kappa Sigma; Mountain; Fi Batar Cappar; Torch and Serpent ; Scabbard Blade; Lieut. Col. R. O. T. C; Cadet Hop Committee WOLFE, CHARLES TREGELLAS Grafton Sigma Nu; Phi Delta Phi; University Choir; Tennis Manager; Sphinx NEKORANEC, PAUL LAWRENCE Morgantown WARE, CLARENCE MARVIN Belington Alpha Gamma Rho ; Chi Sig- ma Delta; University 4-H Club; Rovvran Rifles MUNCHMEYER, JOHN ROBERT Morgantown Tau Kappa Upsilon; Sphinx; Torch and Serpent COLE, DONALD ELLIOTT Philippi OWENS, JOHN C. Clarksburg Kappa Sigma; Torch Ser- pent; Sphinx; Fi Batar Cap- par; Pres. of Junior Class Page Seven ' . ii 1933 GRADUATES BRAGG, PAULEEN ELIZABETH Hinton Theta Epsilon; Phi Epsilon Phi: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet DULANEY. NELLIE ELIZABETH Uniontown, Pa. Home Economics Club; Cos- mopolitan Club; Phi Chi Delta; Westminster Foun- dation KENDRICK, JAMES GARRISON Weston Beta Theta Pi BAKER, NELLIE MYRLE Morgantown B. S. H. E. SMITH, MARY ISABEL PROPST, BEULAH LEE Eureka Philippi Alpha Phi; Home Economics Chi Beta Sigma; M. P. Stu- Club; Kappa Phi dent Group; Y. W. C. A. GORDON, EVELYN BELLE Morgantown La Tertulia; Y. W. C. A. RICHARDSON, THELMA OPAL Keslers Crass Lanes 4-H Club AGEE, ELIZABETH LA NELLE Welch Beta Pi Theta; English Club; Press Club; Phi Chi Delta COOKMAN, MARGARET Lost Creek Home Economics Club CONANT, ROGER BRADBURG Morgantown Press Club SMITH, ELIZABETH H. Morgantown Press Club; Matrix Page .Seventy-one my 1933 GRADUATES MATHIAS, JOHN ALLEN Moorefied Block and Bridle; Judging Team BOIARSK.Y, JULIUS L. New York City AMMAR, FAYAZ KALIEL BAILEY, HOGUE HARLAV Williamson Chi Sigma Delta; Rowan Rifle Pennsboro COPE, DAVID F. Crumpler Tau Kappa Epsilon; Scabbard and Blade; Sigma Pi Sigma; Captain R. O. T. C. MAYER, CHARLES O. Sale ROBINSON, BRUCE G. Smithfield, Pa. Alpha Gamma Rho; Alpha Zeta; Grange; Block and Bridle HOMER, J. D. GARARD Martinsburg Pi Kappa Alpha WEISSENBURGER, JASON J. Point Pleasant Sigma Nu; Phi Alpha Delta FISHER, EARL LLOYD Gassaway Phi Delta Theta; Phi Beta Pi ROGERS, N. HOWARD Keyser Phi Delta Theta; Fencing, ■32- ' 33 WARNER, EDWIN BROOKS Winona Tau Kappa Epsilon Tagc fi( rent y -tit u 1933 GRADUATES SUMMERFIELD, ELLISON S. Fayetteville Phi Delta Theta; Phi Delta WICHTERMAN, PAUL HERBERT Wheeling Phi; Scabbard and Blade; Press Club; Athenaeum Staff Inter-Fraternity Counci CADDOCK. ROBERT Newark, N. J. Pi Kappa Alpha WHITE. CARL B. Clarksburg Varsity Football Journaliers; Kappa Tau Al- pha RICHARDSON, HERBERT WALTER Charleston Phi Delta Theta; Phi Delta Phi WISE. CHARLES CHILTON JR. Moorefield Phi Beta Kappa; Fi Batar Cappar; President Student Council; Delta Sigma Rho ; Delta Nu Tau; Varsity De- bating; Forum; Mountain CONAWAY, CHARLES C. ST. CLAIR, JOHN THOMAS Morgantown Morgantown Athenaeum Staff; Journaliers; Sigma Pi Sigma Kappa Tau Alpha; La Tertulia; Press Club THOMAS. PAUL STUART Piedmont CASTO, FORD L. Eta of Sigma Epsilon; Phi Buckhannon Alpha Delta; University of Sigma Chi; Phi Alpha Delta; Virginia A. B. West Virginia Wes- leyan CRAMER. ROBB HAMMOND New Cumberland TENNANT. LELAND CHESNEY Morgantown Delta Tau Delta; Scabbard and Blade; Chi Sigma Delta Pogc fi event I) -three 1933 GRADUATES STEVENSON, CHARLES F. DILLON, DAVID REYNOLDS Bradford, Pa. Martinsburg Phi Delta Theta Tau Kappa Epsilon ; Baseball •32- ' 33 STORK, A. ROBERT Charleston Kappa Sigma ; Phi Beta Pi ; Fi Batar Cappar; Football Manager; Capt, R. O. T. C. PARKER, E. FRANK Riversville Alpha Zeta: R. O. T. C. Rowan Rifle GLASSCOCK, PAUL C. Morgantown Delta Kappa Psi; Chi Sigma Delta LEEDY, HOWARD M. Powhatan Phi Kappa Tau; Eta Sigma Phi; Press Club HUDSON, IDA H. Morgantown Home Economics Club; Phi Upsilon Omicron I ' tnic Scvcnfii-fiiiir erricEcs 1934 ALFRED STEWART President MARY EDNA BRADLEY Vice President JANE HESSE Secretary WILLIAM MILLER Treasurer JLNICRS I ' ugc Seventy-five ' .-iii .fetl . ■■■■ ' 1934 JUNIORS MALONE. A. ERNEST Weston MORGAN, WILMA C. Fairmont YOE, HARRY W. Martinsburg GIESEY, MARGARET H. Wheeling LEMASTERS, HERMAN R. Clarksburg BUSH. MARGARET E. Morgantown COOPER, ERNESTINE McComoa EVANS, DAVIS W. Grafton PIPES, ELREANE BOURN, CHESTER W. Charleston EDGAR, ANN DAVIS Marlinton CONNOR. CHARLES W. Morgantown Fage fievcnlij-tiix . .AdA 1934 JUNIORS TRENT, NANCY A. Charleston SMITH, JOE L. Beckley NALE, ERMA Morgantown JACKSON, JOHN H. Lonaconing, Md. JAMES, KATHLEEN Follansbee JARRETT, MARION F. Morgantown THOMPSON, ROBERT G. Three Churches ELLISON, HARRIETT P. Greenville CASKEY, WILSON R. Martinsburg JOHNSON, MARY E. Claysville MOYERS, ROALD A. Franklin TIDLER, RAZEL Clarksburg w ... .vii ' , ., ' iiess ' ««« 19 3 4 JUNIORS GOCKE, MARY F. Clarksburg STEWART, ALFRED E. Fairmont ASPINALL, SAMUEL R. Morgantown LYNCH, M. VIRGINIA Wheeling HARRINGTON, MARY K Princeton PARKS, SEIGLE W. Fairmont SWISHER, ART Catawba CLINE, MARIAN J. Grafton REED, JANE M. Clarksburg RICHMOND, WILLIAM F. Skelton WALKER, JACK W. Ripley LITTI F VIRGINIA O. Parsons Tafie Sercntii-cijiht yM 1934 JUNIORS WILSON. MARGARET V. Wellsburg GIBSON, MILFORD Kingwood FRANZ, GERARD A. Clarksburg BROWN, JESSIE F. IVIcGraws MAYO. SUSAN F. Buckhannon SILVER, GRAY Marlinsburg CLEAVENGER, GEORGE W. Clarksburg McQUILKIN, MARY J. Roanoke, Va. BUCKLEY, GERALDINE R. Marlinton GREENBERG, HERBERT New York, N. Y. HILL, BLAIR Lumberport KING, MARY BELLE Morgantown Viifir ffcrenly-nine - :. ' ' ..-. - ' ,.... 1934 JUNIORS ;;■ ' ■ -; HULBERT, REBA ButTalo TETRICK. WILLIS G. Clarksburg SIMS, THOMAS C. Fayetteville TRUMBO, DOROTHY Brandywine STORK. HELEN Charleston ARMISTEAD. CHARLES S. Bluefield NORTEMAN. SAM L. Wheeling BARNES, RUTH R. Fairmont CROW, ROBERTA H. Point Marion, Pa. HILL, LAWSON MERRIL Hillsboro MANKIN, WARREN W. Beckley RUFF, MARGARET M. Elkhorn Page Kiyliti! W 9 -- 1934 JUNIORS KECK, KATHRYN E. Morgantown PRUITT, GEORGE M. Collingswood, N. J. GOODWIN, TODD Wheeling ANDRICK, EVOK M. Elizabeth SMITH, VIRGINIA L. Lost Creek DOWDELL, DAVID W. Glen Dale POSTLETHWAIT, R. W. New Martinsville MOORE, VIRGINIA M. Elkins DE BERRY, JEAN Terra Alta GEARY, JAMES J. Alicia Lenna FOSTER, CARSON M Seth WASMUTH, GLADYS V. Glen Dale Ptu e Eifililfi-one -iJM ' ' ■■ViS ' . ' ■: ' 1934 JUNIORS SLACK. CHARLES Charleston MARSHALL, ELIZABETH A. Morgantown BORROR, JOHN W. Morgantown ROSS, SARA N. Pennsboro SMITH, S. PRESTON West Union BURDETTE, EDNA M. Leon HARDMAN, GWENDOLYN Spencer MILLER, ROBERT E. Huntington HESSE, JANE A. Lancaster, Pa. CAPLAN, IRVIN L. Clarksburg WALSH, MARY B. Charleston McGregor, Bernard r. Parkersburg Fiif r Eii hlji-h ' - ' i i .J jF M 193 4 JUNIORS PRFFST, MILDRED C. Morgantown SALMONS, RUTH G. McMechen FUEG, JOHN W. Wheeling McCOLLUM, LOUISE K. St. Marys aT.j « % % FERGUSON, HELEN L. SIMPSON, PATRICIA D. f B r Huntington Morgantown W { -V Ik Piu c FAiihty-lhree . f . .. ,- ' .. 19 3 3 JLNICCS ' «; £ ■ .rtv-jiS-- ;-ii i V? ' 1933 JUNIORS WILSON, JAMES BURTON McCLURE, MARION INNES Richwood Charleston FROMME, JEAN Morgantown BENSON, CLARENCE S. Morgantown LAMBERT, J. KEN Parsons CRAWFORD, GENE Morgantown HAMILTON, ALICE M. Hinton WIMER, JOSEPH W. Smithfield, Pa. LLEWELLYN, MARION Morgantown WOODY, MARY AURELIA McMechen DEITZ. EDNA MARIE BURNETT, WILLIAM H. Ronceverte Fairmont Page Eight II: 1933 JUNIORS WILLIAMS, KATHLEEN MARIE Lewisburg NEELY, WILLIAM E. Jane Lew BEERBOWER, FRED V. Kingwood DAVIS, R. LUCILLE Terra Alta DEITZ, E. E. JEAN Ronceverte DUDA, WILLIAM W. Scarbro EXLEY, BEN Wheeling MARTIN. MARY BROUGHTON Clarksburg CARSON, BETTY LEETE CLARK, SAMUEL FRIEND Charleston Morgantown BENNETT, EDWARD B. Steubenville, Ohio SHEPPARD, MARY BODIFORD Bradenton, Fla. Page Eighiy-seven i i ' ,, .a JUNIORS SCOTT, ROGER B. Morgantown STRATFORD, MARY BELL Follansbee MEEK, ELIZABETH ANNE Wheeling CAMPBELL, JAMES A. JR. Beckley HALLER, NELL Wheeling LANG, JAMES H. Bridgeport SPITZ, IRENE ADELE Morgantown WOLVERTON, JAMES HANSON Piedmont LADWIG, MARGARET CORNELIA Wilsonburg K.LUG, WILLIAM H. Gary, Ind. MAXWELL, MARY ELIZABETH Beckley HILLER, W. W. Clarksburg I ' agc Eighty-eight . A 1933 JUNIORS KUYKENDALL, SUSAN PARSONS Morgantown GIGLIA, ROSE ANN Glen Jean WILSON, ILENE Belington ISRAEL, SARAH MARGARET Clarksburg BALLARD, MARY KATHARINE Glen Jean RIETZ, LOUISE Morgantown HANNUM, KATHARYNE VIRGINIA Levels SMITH, VERA PEARL Keyser IRELAND. KATHERINE ROBERTA Washington, D. C. REYNOLDS, MILDRED IRENE Tanner HYER, LUCILLE Flatwoods MATTHEWS, GLADYS MAE Kimball v. ' - ..-;:ij;if ...■■J0 ' ' 1933 JUNIORS PICKENS, J. KEITH Mt. Clare WELCH, MARY Keyser GEYER, HANNAH VIRGINIA VOORHEES. DOUGLAS R. Martinsburg Martinsburg CRACRAFT. RUSSELL HUBBARD Wheeling RAMAGE, ELEANOR CONN Fairmont HOLT. JANE Weston ARBAUGH, JAMES MEREDITH Montgomery TALBOTT, REX IVAN Philippi RAMAGE, ANNA MARGARET Clarksburg WHITE, ROBERTA HUSTON Romney THORNTON, JOHN K. Wheeling Fctgc Nincii 1933 JUNIORS SHULTZ. BILLY BAYARD SPITZNOGLE, J. CLARENCE Charleston Follansbee SCOTT, DENNIS K. Charleston FLEMING, CAROLINE Fairmont KERNS, THOMAS EVANS Connellsville, Pa. MONTI, GENEVIEVE Clarksburg SMOYER. MARY CATHERINE Morgantown SMITH, WILLIAM HENDRON Morgantown HOUGH, WAYNE Morgantown WINGER, LELAND HENRY Shinnston STEVENS, DOROTHY EDNA MANNING, CHARLES W. Morgantown Moundsville Page Kincty-one ' ' ■f- ' i ' . ■■■ a 1933 JUNIORS BALLARD, SALLY BLANCHE Glen Jean DAVISSON, JOHN GRANVILLE Weston SHUMAN. CHESTER ALBERT Morgantown EVANS, ELIZABETH ANN Ansted ZOGG, MAE L. Wellsburg GRACE. JAMES E. Morgantown CLEMANS, MELVIN S. Clarksburg REED, JANE Clarksburg JUDY, ALTA FRANCES Morgantown BARRICK, FRED W. Lost Creek CUNNINGHAM, CHARLES WEAVER, MARTHA JANE E. JR. Morgantown Morgantown Page Nlncty-tivo ' A 1933 JUNIORS GARVIN, WILDA ANNE Cunard WHITE, RALPH MILTON Wadestown CHITWOOD, ELIZABETH ANNE Morgantown MATTHEWS, HELEN Connellsville, Pa. JOHNSON, MARGARET Morgantown JONES, EVELYN LEE Glenville SMITH, S. PRESTON West Union BERTIE, RAYMA A. Morgantown BAKER. GLENN H. Morgantown MURRAY, JEAN M. Grafton ROSS, A. VIRGINIA Newport, Del. CARTE, LILLIAN TAYLOR Clendenin Piipc Kinrtii-lliree t. ii ' - , - .. fr - - .., ..,,, 1933 JUNIORS HEATHERMAN, WILLIAM FRANK Huntington LEDOUX, CLARENCE WATSON Clarksburg LEA, ELLIS Charleston McMillan, elbert c. Morgantown CONNOR, CHARLES WILLIAM JR. Nellis DAVIS, SAMUEL MORRIS Lost Creek BOLTON, NEIL WILSON, FREDERICK M. Belington Marlinton QUENON, CLARENCE A. BOETTCHER, VICTOR Farmington HENRY JR. Charleston COBB, DONALD PRENTICE Fairview, Pa. LIPPHARDT, JACK WILLIAM Wheeling Pope Xiiicti -foiir 1 1933 JUNIORS ROBERTS, DONALD Richwood FRAME, lONE FLESHMAN Morgantown REXROAD. THELMA LEONE PRUITT, GEORGE M. JR. Morgantown Collin gs wood, N. J. MILLER, ROBERT Huntington COTTRELL, MARY E. Charleston NEWELL, MAE ELIZABETH Chester RYAN, RALPH W. Ryan CONN, HOWARD F. Smithfield, Pa. THORNHILL, MARGARET L. Buckhannon BARTHOLOMEW, ELIZABETH A. Wheeling POWELL, JAMES EDWARD Clarksburg P u)c Xinciy-fivr i i0 .f. ii ' .ii ' ' ..,u«JP« .,0 .., :(! ■■ ' 1933 JUNIORS BARTHOLOMEW, ELIZABETH ANN Wheeling KNIGHT. GENEVIEVE KINSLEY Morgantown ERD, THEODORA R. Morgantown HEFLIN, MARY LOUISE West Union Page Ninclij-xix $CPHCM€CE$ AND rCESHMEN wJia -- sii ■Jt f ' -A ' . ,.,.:;:i ' ARTHUR BENSON President JAMES HEINZE Vice President HURST WEAVER Treasurer Fogc Ni)ifiii-ri(ili1 rCESHMAN €PriCEC$ JACK GOCKE President PAUL SCHIMMEL Vice President JEAN WILSHIRE Secretary LOUIS CORSON Treasurer iif f inrt! -nine i ' iS Page One Hundred THE rO€TEALL CCACHES J ZITH the last game of the 1933 football season Earle Greasy Neale completed his tenure of office as head football coach at West Virginia. From here Coach Neale will go to Yale to assume the duties of backfield coach of their football team. With Greasy goes Red Mahan to coach the terminals on the same squad. Coach Neale ' s career here was marked by the difficulties that he had to face. The main difficulty being lack of material. Neale produced teams that, although, they did not win as much as the student body would have liked were always in there figh ting to get as far as they could. When the football season of 1934 starts the students of W. V. U. Earle Greasy Neale P(ir c One Hundred Three will see a team coached by a Charles Trusty Tallman man new as a varsity coach but well known as the coach of their excellent freshman football teams of the past few years. Charles Trusty Tallman will then have his grip on the reins that will guide the fate of our Varsity Footballers. The student body is strongly hopeful that Trusty will bring their team way out in front in 1934. Their hope is strong because they have watched his freshman teams perform and they know that those teams were well coached. Tallman seems to have the abil- ity to inspire his teams to fight to the last ditch. His teams are never beaten until the game is over. Coach Tallman is not only a coach. He is widely known throughout the state as a legislator and as an agri- culturist. As a legislator he is known and liked for the progressive bills that he sponsored and worked for. Along with the Student body and Trusty ' s ' many friends and followers, the Monticc wishes him luck and success. ..,iS0 THE LINEUP Goodwin Left End McDonald Left Tackle Zirbs Left Guard Wright . Center Swisher Right Guard Schweitzer Right Tackle Karr Right End Allen .. Quarterback Harriott Left Halfback Marker Right Halfback Thomas Fullback $ea$€n s Sccres W. V. U W. V. U W. V. U 13 W. V. U 14 W. V. U W. V. U 34 Dukes Pitt .. Owls 3 40 14 Bob Cats Detroit 21 Marquette .... 7 W. V. U 19 Hoyas W. V. U 19 W. L W. V. U 25 D. E 12 W. V. U W. J 13 TOTALS W. V. U 124 Opponents ...110 Won 5 Lost 5 THE M€tJNTAI SE ISCN REVUE The Mountaineer varsity opened its season Septem- ber 23 against a powerful Duquesne machine, losing their first opening tilt since 1928. The score, 3-0 is a true indication of the way the game went. Both teams lacking the necessary punch to score when the oppor- tunity presented itself. The deadlock was broken, and incidentally the game won, by a beautiful placement for a field goal by that well remembered Duquesne ed- ucated toe. After the disappointment of the opening game had paved the way we were better prepared to meet the crushing defeat that the Pittsburgh Panthers great steam roller team handed out to our Varsity the fol- lowing week at our first home game on October first. The Pennsylvania boys were just too powerful, as you can see by the score above. On October 7 the Varsity broke into the right side of the ledger; scoring 1 3 points against the Temple Owls. Although the Owls scored one point more than W. V. U., the close score caused many an encouraged expres- sion to break forth on the countenances of the student body. The passing of Parriott and Scott featured the efforts of West Virginia representatives in Philadelphia. Fage One Hundred Four n j - ' n : fs v f--- - - r cBij . NECC VARSITr PCR 1932 On Saturday afternoon, October I 5, the Mountaineer football fans were treated to the sight of a Varsity team of theirs on a spree . Although expected to win, the W. V. U. foot- ball team was not expected to go on a wild rampage and outplay the Wesleyan Bob Cats in every department of the game. The score had little to do with the real situation. After this exhibition even the pessimists looked a little hopeful. The night air and a powerful Detroit eleven stopped, or rather held up, the Moun- taineer string of victories, w hen on Friday night, October 2 1 , they whitew ashed our team to the tune of 2 1 to 0. Detroit unleashed a vicious passing attack that was the undoing of the Mountaineer footballers and led to the scoring of all Detroit ' s points. The student body and all W. V. U. ad- herents were startled out of their apathy when the word was flashed over the wires that the West Virginia football team had unexpectedly turned the tables on the Golden Avalanche and handed them a bitter pill in the form of a 34 to 7 drubbing. Eck Allen ran wild back of an excellent forward wall and scored the majority of West Virginia ' s points. The Nealemen, perhaps inspired by their great performance of a week ago, returned Page One Hundred Five to the Mountaineer Stadium to mete out a stirring 1 9 to defeat to the Georgetown Hoya ' s. The great defensive work of the W. V. U. line featured the play on this day. The following Saturday the team jour- neyed to Charleston and gave Washington and Lee the same treatment they had handed the Hoyas the previous Saturdav. The score W V. U. 19— W. L. 0. The backfield of w! V. U. ' s team, however, showed much more pep than in the previous game. Returning to the campus the Varsity pro- ceded to trim Davis Elkins ' reputedly strong team to the tune of 25 to 12. Headed by the great field generalship of Eck Allen the Nealemen were able to gain an early ad- vantage and hold it throughout the game. On November 26 the hopes for a season better than SO r were blasted when W. J. for the third consecutive time defeated W. V. U. The West Virginians seemed to have ac- quired a complex suddenly, and let scoring opportunities slip by seemingly unnoticed while the W. J. men kept on their toes and watched for the breaks; thereby ending W. V. U ' s. 1932 foot- ball season at 5 wins and 5 losses. . 0 - ,.,:. ' .,.u ANALYSIS OF THE SEASON AND TABULATION OF THE RESULTS W. V. u W. L. W. V. U 7 W. V. U W. V. U W. V. U 7 W. V. U 7 W. V. U 13 W. V. U 6 W. V. U 26 W. V. U 14 Duquesne 19 Pitt .... 21 Fordham 20 Temple 13 D. E 7 Marquette 13 Wisconsin 25 Wesleyan I 3 Georgetown 12 W. V. U 7 W. J 2 Totals: W. V. U. 88 Opponents 145 Won: 3; Tied 3; Lost 5. The season was characterized by West Virginia ' s lack of ability to capitalize on their scoring chances, and by many breaks ' that were not the fault of the team but the result of chance. All the games were fast and full of football whether we won or not. Pitt, Ford- ham, and Wisconsin were just too tough for our small squad to tackle, and the breaks of the game kept us from whipping Marquette and Tem- ple. We should have beaten W. L., and D. E., but the lack of scoring punch when the breaks were with us caused the tie games. With the advent of a new coach and new material we are all hoping for a better season in 1934. H € IJ N T A ■ N E E C TOUCHDOWN rCCTCALL 193J SLMMACy W. Va. vs. W. L. The varsity opened its season Septem- ber 23 at Charleston. There they battled Washington and Lee to a nothing to nothing tie. West Virginia should, by all means, have won that game, but misplays and lack of scoring punch kept them from the coveted goal line. Three times they were in the shadow of W. L. ' s goal line only to thro ' w away their scoring opportunities. W. Va. vs. Duquesne On September 29 the footballers jour- neyed to Pittsburgh, where they met Duquesne University at the Pitt Stadium. This game was one of the fastest that the varsity was engaged in during the season. During the opening minutes of the game W. Va. scored on a fast breaking play off tackle. By mak- ing the extra point we were able to keep out in front until the second half; for the Dukes scored in the second quarter but failed to con- vert for the extra point. In the second half Duquesne opened up; her forward wall mak- ing huge holes in our line, enabling their backs to practically walk through. When the final whistle blew the score stood: Duquesne 19, W. Va. 7. Page One Hundred Seven THE 1933 JOHN VARGO, Tackle Vargo is a junior and has one more year on the varsity. Vargo plays a swell game at tackle and will prove to be an excellent man for Trusty to find a place for next fall. JOE STYDAHAR, Tackle Joe is the biggest man on the team, and those who play opposite him know him to be a man of great prowess. His play is consist- ently good, and he should be excellent mate- rial for future All American Teams. TRAPPER ANDERSON, Guard Anderson is a senior and has played his allotted three years on the varsity. His ab- sence will be greatly noticed next year. Last year Trapper was mentioned on a New York Newspaper ' s All American Team. GENE WRIGHT, Center Gene is another senior who has played three years of excellent football for West Vir- ginia. Gene is the type that is always in the thick of the battle doing his best. LOU FIDLER, Guard Lou is a junior with one more year of varsity football ahesd of him. His play seems to improve steadily each year and his last one should be a big one. TOD GOODWIN, End Tod is one of the best natural football men that we have seen in action on the Moun- taineer field. Watch the tackles that are made and you will find Goodwin in on most of them. Far e One Uundred Ei ' jht West Virginia vs. Pitt On October 7 the University of Pitts- burgh Panthers invaded the Mountaineer Stadium to administer a severe trouncing to an inferior but fighting Mountaineer team. The score: 21 to 0, does not indicate the true power that Pitt showed on that Saturday after- noon. Pitt seemed to be able to gain ground at will ; and not through deceptive plays but by straight running plays through the line. In fact Pitt used only three different plays throughout the game. Twice the Mountain- eers were in the shadow of Pitt ' s goal line but the necessary punch needed to place the ball over the goal line was lacking. Now that the game is over and the season a part of foot- ball history we merely hope for a better game next year. West Virginia vs. Fordham After a lapse of one year our varsity again encountered the Fordham Rams in New York City. The team ' s journey to the big city was in vain however as the Rams, sport- ing one of the best teams in the east, trompled on the Mountaineer Boots to the tune of 20 Page One Uiindrcd Nin to 0. The game was however, characterized by a fighting West Virginia offensive that sur- prised the spectators and upheld the Eastern sports Vkfriters opinion that a good battle will always be found wherever a West Virginia University team is in action. West Virginia outgained the Rams and garnered ten first downs to Fordham ' s 7. Here as in the Pitt game the score did not show how the game really progressed. West Virginia vs. Temple In their second night game of the season The Mountaineers met the Temple Owls on October 28. Pop Warner ' s lads barely man- aged to eke out a victory over the Mountain- eers and they surely knew that they had been in a battle. When the smoke cleared away even the Temple adherents felt that W. Va. was on the wrong side of the 1 3 to 7 score. The scores were all made on passes, with the Warner bag of tricks fully opened and used up. With a few of the breaks W. Va. would have taken the Owls into camp and scored their first win of the season, but it must not have been on the books, especially the score books. THE VACSITy 1933 HERB STEWART, Center Another junior and incidentally one ot the fightinest centers on any football team. He played in almost every minute of the games last fall and was always ready for more. JAMES SCOTT, Quarterback The smallest man on the squad but wiry and fast. The prettiest open field runner since Johnny Doyle galloped over the turf in the stadium. ANGELO ONDER, End A big man and one with football sense. He moved up from the freshman squad this year to fill the shoes of Bill Karr; and a very good job he did too. ROMEO McDonald, Tackle The second largest man on the squad and probably the hardest. A junior on the cam- pus with one more year to be spent under the tutelage of a new coach. ART SWISHER, Guard Art is the mainstay of both the defense and offense. When a hole is needed in the line they call on Art and it will be there, even though the opposite line is often seemingly twice as big as Swish . BENNY THOMAS, Fullback One of the hardest hitting backs that West Virginia has ever produced, if there is any sign of a weak place in the enemy line Thomas can get through. Fayc One Hundred Ten West Virginia vs. Davis and Elkins On October 28, in the Mountaineers ' sec- ond home game of the season, Davis and El- kins was battled to a 7 to 7 deadlock. D. E. came here with a very small squad and pro- ceeded to unleash a variety of trick plays that set the W. V. U. varsity back on its ears for quite a sizeable portion of the game. Hovs - ever, after we found out what it was all about D. E. found it very hard to make any head- way at all. And again the lack of scoring power when deep in enemy territory caused the lack of a winning score to appear on our books to date. West Virginia vs. Marquette The le Golden Avalanche descended upon Morgantown Saturday, November 4, to get revenge for a defeat suffered at the hands of the Mountaineer footballers the previous sea- son; but as later events showed they were to Paye One nuiidied Eleven be sadly disappointed. The final score be- ing 13 to 13. This was another game that W. Va. should have put down as the first vic- tory of the season, but again it was not in the cards. The game was mostly an aerial affair, both teams scoring or getting into scoring position by virtue of forward passes. Eck Allen again proved the nemesis of Marquette by pounding the line for consistent gains and also unleashing some very beautiful passes. West Virginia vs. Wisconsin The Mountaineers again invaded enemy territory and were again repulsed by afore- said enemy. At the University of Wisconsin a Spears coached eleven defeated the Moun- taineers by a score of 25 to 6. The western- ers vfere just too much for us. The first half it looked like W. Va. had a very good chance to win but in the second half Wisconsin ap- plied the pressure and showed real stuff; in fact, enough to push over 25 points. THE VACSITy 1933 ECK ALLEN, Halfback The field general. For the past two football seasons Allen has been the outstand- ing star of the Varsity Football team. Al- ways with a clear head and a keen insight in- to his opponents probable plans; he has proved to be a very effective leader on the gridiron. TOM COVEY, Halfback One of West Virginia ' s best blocking backs. He is the man who does the work and gets little publicity for it. His defensive work is another thing that makes him a very valuable man to have around when you need good football. HOMER WHITE, Fullback A virtual pile driver in the attack, Homer can always be called on when a couple of yards are needed for that first down. Homer is another of the many juniors on the squad and should be due for a very successful sea- son after this summer. SAM MAWHINNEY, Tackle A sophomore from whom we will hear much when football is the subject of the cam- pus bull sessions . His weight combined with a flashing speed make him an ideal line- man. In the next two years we expect much of Mr. Mawhinney. Poijr One TTuvdrrd Ticclve West Virginia vs. W. Va. Wesleyan On a muddy Saturday afternoon West Virginia crossed over to the right side of the record sheet by swamping the Bobcats under a blanket of first-downs. W. Va. scored 24 first-downs to Wesleyans 3. The Mountain- eers were clicking in every department, and the Bobcats w ere entirely unable to stop their drives. Wesleyan came here prepared to take a victory from a supposedly weak W. Va. U. football team, but they ran into a team that was good enough to tackle almost any team in the country on that particular day. Here as in several previous games the score 26 to 1 3 does not show the correct proportion of difference between the two teams. West Virginia vs. Georgetown On the follow ing Saturday, November 25, the Mountaineers drew down another win. This time the victim w as the George- town Hoyas from the national capitol. This game was hotly contested from start to finish. West Virginia winning out in the last few min- utes of play. The W. Va. varsity was evi- dently encouraged by their victory of the pre- Pn()r One TJiinchrd Tldiicnt vious Saturday for the same fighting spirit was shown throughout the game. The Hoyas were strong this year and were supposed to beat the Mountaineers but they came out on the short end of a 1 4 to 12 score. West Virginia vs. Washington and Jefferson In the final game of the season played on Thansgiving Day, West Virginia fans were treated to another W. Va. victory and also to the best football game that the Mountaineers took part in all season. The outcome was a toss-up from start until the final whistle. In this game history repeated itself. Exactly ten years ago to the day, a fighting W. J. team downed the ball back of their own goal line to save a possible touchdown by W. Va., in this year ' s game the same thing occurred but it was a W. Va. safety that gave two points to W. J. The fine defensive work of both teams is really shown by the low score of 7 to 2, with West Virginia on the long end for the first time in four years. This game ended a season of five losses, three ties, and three wins, for Coach Neale ' s last season as head football coach. iJ0 my- ' .m ' W- ' rCESHMAN PCCTEALL 19 3 2 W.Va. Freshmen 38 Potomac State.... 7 W.Va. Freshmen 1 9 Pitt Freshmen.... 26 W.Va. Freshmen 1 9 W. J. Freshmen W.Va. Freshmen 6 Duquesne Fresh. Won 3; Lost 1. Totals W.Va. Freshmen 82 Opponents 33 193 3 W.Va. Freshmen 39 Potomac State. .. W.Va. Freshmen 45 Carnegie Tech Fr 6 W.Va. Freshmen Pitt Freshmen.... 7 W.Va. Freshmen 25 W. J Freshmen 7 W.Va. Freshmen 20 Duquesne Fresh. 7 Won 4: Lost 1. Totals W.Va. Fresh. 129 Opponents 27 Freshman football for the past two years at W. V. U. has been exception- ally good. Under the expert tutelage of Trusty Tallman the teams showed flash and skill. The plebes never waitd for their opponents to start some- thing, they always were on the offensive. Until the middle of each season the teams they were pitted against were given the odds. But after they had beaten Potomac State decisively and almost taken Pitt into camp people began to sit up and take notice. The very successful seasons of the past two years show what a fighting Mountaineer team can really do. Fage One IliindreJ. Fourteen 1933 TEAM Wilbur Sortet Guard, Capt. Glen Ayresman Center Jess Weiner Forward Fred Wilson Forward Patsy Slate Forward Louis Fidler Guard Joe Stydahar Center Tod Goodwin Forward Elmo Gower Forward Herb Stewart Guard Francis H. Stadsvold Coach John O. Kizer Manager 1934 TEAM Lou Fidler Guard Jess Weiner Forward Albie Colebank Forward Bill Klug Guard Joe Stydahar Center Patsy Slate Forward Herb Stewart Guard Fred Wilson Forward Andy Mestrovic Guard Marshall Glenn Coach EASrETBALL ' ( c- One Tlinidred Fifteen HJi ' ' £} ABOVE: 1933 SQUAD BELOW: 1934 SQUAD VARSITY Pui c Ont: HiDidred Sixteen 1933 SEASON W. Va. 35 — Salem College 29 30 — Carnegie Tech 35 24 — Temple University 27 42 — Bethany College 34 38 — West Virginia Wesleyan 39 20 — University of Pittsburgh 42 53 — Marietta College 28 47 — Washington Lee 45 25 — Georgetown University 47 30 — New York University 42 28 — Temple University 42 30 — Duquesne University 33 59 — Washington Jefferson 36 34 — Penn State 44 39 — Geneva College 48 35 — Davis Elkins College 40 25 — Duquesne University 32 58 — Washington Jefferson 31 35 — Allegheny College 22 46 — Davis Elkins College 30 44 — W. Va. Wesleyan College 36 33 — University of Pittsburgh 45 810 Won 9; Lost 13 807 1934 SEASON W. Va. 32_W. Va. Wesleyan College 24 26 — University of Maryland 24 29 — Carnegie Tech 32 37 — Georgetown University 32 21 — University of Pittsburgh 42 41 — Washington Lee 27 28 — W. Va. Wesleyan College 25 61 — Bucknell University 13 25 — Temple University 22 31 — Georgetown University 26 44 — Washington Jefferson 19 20 — Duquesne University 5 1 45 — Penn State 18 33 — Duquesne University 40 39 — Washington Jefferson 36 5 7 — Bucknell University 18 37 — Carnegie Tech 12 38 — Temple University 27 26 — University of Pittsburgh 27 670 Won 14; Lost 5 515 THE 1933 SEASON The 1933 basketball season saw the last of a Stadsvold-coached West Virginia Univer- sity basketball team. The season was char- acterized by many close games; many of them heartbreaking defeats. Eight of the games were won by margins of seven points or less. The 1933 team did not show much of the characteristic West Virginia fighting spirit; they were seemingly suffering from an infer- iority complex. The system they used seemed to be antiquated and inferior to the systems used by the Mountaineer ' s opponents. Where the opponents attack seemed to click under the new, and radically different, rules, the var- sity seemed slowed up by those same rules. The Mountaineer attack was a slow breaking game where a fast breaking game was imper- ative. The games where this was more noticeable than in others were: the Pitt games, and the Temple and Duquesne games. These teams had a fast breaking attack that left West Virginia ' s team running around in circles most of the time looking for the ball. The season ' s results show this clearly. Nine wins and thirteen losses is very unusual for a West Virginia University Varsity team, and especially for its basketball team. CAS r ET BAL L Page One Hundred Seventeen 1934 SEASON ' S HIGHLIGHTS MARSHALL SLEEPY GLENN West Virginia ' s first season of basket- ball under the coaching of Marshall Little Sleepy Glenn proved to be one of the best that we have enjoyed for quite a few years. TTie season opened with a 32 to 24 victory over W. Va. Wesleyan. In this game they showed remarkable speed and ball handling ability. The next game with the University of Maryland showed that the first game was not merely a flash in the pan. In a close decision they defeated the U. of Maryland 26 to 24. The next game with the Carnegie Tech boys proved disastrous. Our team was completely off and went down to defeat to the tune of 35 to 30. We should by all that was right have won that game. Georgetown as our next foe proved to be a hard nut to crack. The game went to two extra periods before we finally won out by the margin of 37 to 32. Pitt, our next opponent, proved too tough in both encounters; winning the first by a score of 42 to 21, and the second by the narrow, last second margin of 2 7 to 26. In our single encounter with W. L. we easily defeated them by the wide margin of 4 1 to 27. The next game, the second meeting with W. Va. Wesleyan, vfe managed to eke out a 28 to 25 victory. Bucknell, our next oppon- ent, proved to be our easiest games; we w on the first by the largest score of the season, 61 to 1 3, and the second battle by the second largest score of the season, 5 7 to 18. Tem- ple almost took us over at their band box; but we rallied in the final minutes and won out by a score of 25 to 22. In the second game with the Owls we had a little easier time of it; winning by a score of 38 to 2 7. W. J. were fairly easy to handle in the first game; W. Va. winning by 44 to 19 score. In the second game, however, W. J. surprised us by coming as close as three points of beating us in a 39 to 36 thriller. Then came the team that showed the only really superior brand of basketball, in comparison to W. Va. Du- quesne decisively whipped W. Va. first to the tune of 5 I to 20, and then 40 to 33. Resting after the first Duquesne scrap the team took time off to garner 45 points to Penn State ' s 18. The season just passed was remarkable in that there was such a sudden change in style. From the slow breaking style of 1933 they jumped suddenly into the fast breaking game that Little Sleepy liked so well to play himself. The results of this sudden change are well shown by the fine results obtained. Beaten by only three teams and w ith I 4 wins to stack up against 5 losses, that with a little luck would have been only 3. This is cer- tainly a good way for a coach to start his career, now we all hope that he will be a con- sistent winner. Page One Tlundred Eightc ' n fCESHMAN CASrETBALL 1933 Fr. 32 — Johnsons Clothiers 16 33 — Chevrolet Stars 23 37 — Fairmont Business College 8 29 — St. Francis Independents 30 14 — Pitt Freshmen 37 30 — Philippi Collegians 25 41 — Potomac State 51 37 — Fairmont Y. M. C. A 27 18 — Duquesne Freshmen 17 26 — Morgantown Collegians 23 19 — Potomac State 35 40 — Farmington High 31 31 — Sanitary Milk A. C 19 30 — Duquesne Freshmen 19 37 — Fairmont Comets 23 34 — Fairmont Y. M. C. A 40 20 — Pitt Freshmen 26 508 Won 1 1 ; Lost 6 450 1934 Fr. 56 — St. Francis Independents 25 32 — Pitt Freshmen 35 68 — City Alleys A. C 7 38 — Farmington High 31 51 — Point Marion High 15 45 — Fairmont Bakers 37 37 — Johnsons Clothiers 32 36 — Duquesne Freshmen 38 51 — Franz Burka A. C 22 37 — Duquesne Freshmen 32 85 — Seneca A. C 17 42 — Pitt Freshmen 31 5 74 Payc One Hundred Nineteen Won 10; Lost 2 312 ;fr-« 1 I 4 THE SWIMMING POOL IN ELIZABETH MOORE HALL rage One Hundred Ticcnty TCACr ECXIN© EASECALL CTHEC $P€RT$ .-iJi ' i ' ' ' ;rt JJ- THE 1933 TRA 1933 SEASON W. Va 95 Waynesburg 40 W. Va 68 U. of Pittsburgh....67 W. Va 112 W. J 22m W. Va 114 W. Va. Wesleyan 21 1934 SCHEDULE West Virginia vs. Waynesburg West Virginia vs. Pitt West Virginia vs. Temple West Virginia vs. Wesleyan Pugc One Unndrcd Twcnty-licn W. VA. 95— WAYNESBURG 40 120-yard High Hurdles Shelton, Waynesburg, first Bailey, W. Va., second Goodwin, W. Va., third Time : 1 5.9 sec. 100-yard Dash Woodford, W. Va., first Varner, W. Va., second Wertz, Waynesburg, third Time: 10.2 sec. Mile Run Zimmerman, W. Va., first J. Hill, W. Va., second Staggers, Waynesburg, third Time: 4 min. 43.1 sec. 440-yard Run Kennedy, Waynesburg, first Stern, W. Va., second Murphy, Waynesburg, third Time : 51.6 sec. Two Mile Run Dever, W. Va., first Staggers, Waynesburg, second Bochiccio, W. Va., third Time: 10 min. 16 sec. 220-yard Dash Woodford, W. Va.. first Wertz, Waynesburg, second Mclntyre, W. Va., third Time: 23. 1 sec. 880-yard Run Zimmerman, W. Va., first Deems, W. Va., second Booth, Waynesburg, third Time: 2 min. 4.4 sec. 220-yard Low Hurdles Bailey. W. Va., first Wertz, Waynesburg, second Shelton, Waynesburg, third Time: 26.4 sec. Shot Put Slate. W. Va., first Furlong. W. Va.. second Donley. Waynesburg, third Distance: 4 1 ft. Discus Throw L. Hill. W. Va.. first Slate. W. Va.. second Miller. W. Va.. third Distance: 120 ft. 6-1 2 in. Pole Vault Parriott, W. Va.. first Founds and Sortet. W. Va., tied, second Height: 1 1 ft. 6 in. High Jump Shelton. Waynesburg. first Slate. Goodwin. W. Va.. Wheeler. Milli- ken. Waynesburg. tied for second. Height: 5 ft. 9 in. Hammer Throw Miller. W. Va.. first L. Hill. W. Va.. second Post. W. Va., third Distance: 162 ft. 1 4 in. Broad Jump Varner. W. Va.. first Shelton, Waynesburg. second Bailey. W. Va.. third Distance: 22 ft. 8-1 8 in. W. VA. 68— PITT 67 100-yard Dash Woodford, W. Va., first Fleming, Pitt, second Schlossberg, Pitt, third Time : 1 0.3 sec. Mile Run Zimmerman, W. Va.. first Dever. W. Va.. second Kirkpatrick, Pitt, third Time: 4 min. 32.5 sec. 220-yard Dash Woodford. W. Va., first Keller, Pitt, second Kiger, Pitt, third Time: 22.8 sec. 120-yard High Hurdles Bailey. W. Va.. first Goodwin. W. Va.. second Guay. Pitt, third Time : 16.4 sec. 440-yard Run Keller, Pitt, first Kiger, Pitt, second McDonald, Pitt, third Time: 53 sec. Two Mile Run Clise, Pitt, first Albright, Pitt, second Dever, W. Va., third Time: 10 min. 9.4 -sec. 220-yard Low Hurdles Bailey, W. Va. and Guay, Pitt, tied, first Kiger, Pitt, third Time: 26 sec. 880-yard Run Keller, Pitt, first Watkins, Pitt, second Kirkpatrick, Pitt, third Time; 2 min. 3.6 sec. Shot Put Bonivita, Pitt, first Slate. W. Va.. second Gongloff. Pitt, third Distance: 45 ft. 4-1 2 in. High Jump Slate and Goodwin. W. Va.. tied for first Nelson. Pitt, third Heiglit: 5 ft. 8 in. Discus Throw L. Hill. W. Va.. first Craft. Pitt, second Seifert. Pitt, third Distance: 124 ft. 3 in. Javelin Throw Mentzer, W. Va., first Gongloff, Pitt, second Coombs, W. Va., third Distance: 1 68 ft. 5 in. Broad Jump Bailey, W. Va., first Fleming, Pitt, second Sebastian. Pitt, third Pole Vault Parriott, Sortet, and Founds, W. Va., first Height: II ft. 4 in. Hammer Throw Miller, W. Va., first GonglofI, Pitt, second Bonivita. Pitt, third W. VA 114— W. VA. WESLEYAN 21 120-yard High Hurdles Goodwin, W. Va., first Bailey, W. Va., second L. Debar, Wes., third 100-yard Dash Mclntyre, W. Va., first Woodford, W. Va., second Spears, Wes., third Mile Run Dever, W. Va., first Oldaker, Wes., second J. Hill, W. Va., third 440-yard Run Van Voorhis, W. Va., first Stern, W. Va., second Winter, Wes., third 220-yard Dash Mclntyre, W. Va., first Woodford, W. Va., second Spears, Wes., third Two Mile Run Dever. W. Va., first J. Hill, W. Va., second Talbot, Wes., third 220-yard Low Hurdles Bailey, W. Va., first Caplan, W. Va., second Debar, Wes., third 880-yard Run Deems, W. Va., first Stern, W. Va., second Colburn, W. Va., third Shot Put Furlong, W. Va., first Slate, W. Va., second O ' Dell, Wes., third Discus Throw L. Hill, W. Va., first Sanders, Wes., second Slate, W. Va., third Javelin Throw Mentzer, W. Va., first Coombs, W. Va., second O ' Dell, Wes., third High Jump Slate, W. Va., first Goodwin, W. Va., second L. Debar, Wes., third Pole Vault Parriott, W. Va., first L. Debar, Wes., second Founds, W. Va., third Hammer Throw Miller, W. Va., first Post, W. Va., second L. Hill, W. Va.. Broad Jump third Varner, W. Va.. first L. Debar, Wes., second Bailey, W. Va., third W. VA. 1123 3— W. J. 22 3 100-yard Dash Woodford, W. Va., first Zagray, W. J., second Mclntyre, W. Va., third Time: 9.8 sec. Mile Run Zimmerman, W. Va., first Dever, W. Va., second Colburn, W. Va., third Time: 4 min. 33 sec. Pole Vault Parriott, W. Va., first Sortet, Founds, W. Va., Stewart, W. 6c J., tie, second Height: II ft. 6 in. Javelin Throw Mentzer, W. Va., first, 181 ft. 9 in. Coombs, W. Va., second Melenyzer, W. J., third 220-yard Dash Woodford, W. Va., first, 22.5 sec. Mclntyre, W. Va., second McCarrell, W. J., third 120-yard High Hurdles Bailey, W. Va., first Goodwin, W. Va., second Fish, W. J., third Time: 1 6 sec. Shot Put Slate, W. Va., first Deacle, W. J., second Melenyzer, W. J., third Distance: 41 ft. 7 in. 440-yard Run Stern, W. Va., first VanVoorhis, W. Va., second Winter, W. J., third Time: 52 sec. High Jump Goodwin, Slate, W. Va., tied, first Anderson, W. J., second Height: 5 ft. 8-1 2 in. Two Mile Run Dever, W. Va., first J. Hill, W. Va., second Leppart, W. Va., third Time: 10 min. 1 1 sec. 220-yard Low Hurdles Bailey. W. Va., first Caplan, W. Va., second Goodwin, W. Va., third Time: 27.2 sec. Discus Throw L. Hill, W. Va., first Zagray, W. J., second Deacle, W. J., third Distance: 125 ft. 8 in. 880-yard Run Colburn, W. Va., first Zimmerman, W. Va., second Deems, W. Va., third Time: 2 min. 4.5 sec. Broad Jump Varner, W. Va., first Bailey, W. Va., second Shaw, W. J., third Distance: 21 ft. 9-3 8 in. Hammer Throw Miller, W. Va., first Myers, W. J., second Post, W. Va., third Paye One Hundred Twenty-four MCUNTAINEEC CCXINC W. Va. 6 — Bucknell University 1 6 — Duquesne University 1 7 — Temple University 31 — Naval Academy 41 2 6 — University of Pittsburgh I 4 — University of Wisconsin 3 Won 6 meets; Lost I In the past few years boxing has become one of West Virginia University ' s favorite sports. Perhaps this is due to the humans ' natural interest in the battles that they can witness in the ring and have no personal con- tact with, or maybe it is the fact that the Mountaineer Boxing teams have been such consistent winners. The past season was no exception as far as wins are concerned. The fighters won six meets and lost one; and the one that they lost drew down quite a lot of criticism on the heads of those w ho officiated; the general consensus of opinion being that the West Virginia boys deserved to win the match with Navy. The score that must stand however, is W. V. U. 31 2, Navy 41... Wis- consin in a post season match gave the Moun- taineers their only other close match, a 4 to 3 affair. This match was reported as a draw, but the official count according to contracted matches was 4 to 3 in favor of W. V. U. The matches with Bucknell, Duquesne, and Pitt were all won by scores of 6 to 1 , the one being due to the forfeit of our lacking weight. Tem- ple, the other victim, did not even win a bout, a heavyweight in this match being found in the person of Joe Zaleski. The Eastern Intercollegiate Boxing Team Crown again went to West Virginia as we placed a complete team in the final round of the tournament and came through with three finalist victors. Puglia winning the 1 1 5-pound class. Captain Neely the 1 3 5 -pound division, and Johnny Gallo easily handling the 165- pound class . Boxing is now the best attended Winter Sport and will probably remain so unless the basketball team becomes a champion team in a remarkably short time. I ' age One Ilundred Ticenty-five VACsiry Baseball 1933 IRA RODGERS Coach W. Va. 7 — Fairmont State College 7 5 — Fairmont State College 10 7 — Mt. Saint Marys College 5 2 — Georgetown University 3 2 Naval Academy 7 — William Mary College 11 3 William Mary College 5 14 — George Washington University 8 — Fairmont State College 1 4 — Fairmont State College 9 4 — Salem College M — Salem College 4 7 — Ohio State University 6 2 — Ohio State University 5 15 — Morgantown Collegians 1 I — W. Va. University Alumni 4 Won 6; Lost 9; Tied I Baseball at West Virginia University seems to be suffering from the same lack of popular support that its football team has for the last couple of seasons. It seems that un- less a coach can produce a team from a very small and inexperienced squad that will win the majority of its games the student body and other usual W. V. U. supporters will lose the greatest percentage of its proper interest and support. The baseball team as well as other W. V. U. teams and projects of general Uni- versity good and advancement, need the wholehearted support of the student body and interested persons; and without such support winning teams will never be produced. However, baseball at W. V. U. did very well in 1933 considering the lack of exper- ienced material. Pitchers such as Shaffer and Baker and Walker may always be counted on to pitch an interesting game, and hitters like Mascioli, Baker, and Doyle give that Big League atmosphere to the collegiate baseball games. The record of six wins, nine losses and one tie, while not a champion team record, is not bad and if proper w eather con- ditions had prevailed would have been con- siderably better. The outlook for 19 34 is not particularly bright because of the same lack of material, but after 1934 the team should show great improvement and will probably show the num- ber of wins to be in quite some excess of the losses. Coach Rodgers may always be count- ed upon to spring a few upsets and win from such teams as they did last year ( 1933) when they defeated the Big Ten Champions. P(U c One Hundred Tweiiti six INTRAMURAL $P€RT$ age One Hundred Twenty-seven ' - AOMIN l$TI5ATI€N HARRY L. SAMUEL INTRAMURAL STAFF DIRECTOR Harry L. Samuel ACTIVITIES SUPERVISOR Francis M. Shaffer ADMINISTRATIVE BOARD Carl P. Schott, Director of Physical Ed- ucation. Lloyd M. Jones, Director of Men ' s Serv- ice Program. Harry A. Stansbury, Director of Inter- collegiate Athletics. Harry L. Samuel, Director of Intramural Athletics. Activities Supervisor. Senior Managers. Ex-officio Members — the Varsity Coaches. INTRODUCTION With the establishment of a Division of Physical Education for Men at West Virginia University in September of 1928 there was also brought into being, as a branch of this Division, a Depart- ment of Intramural Athletics. Under the guidance of Professor Harry L. Sam- uel as Director the Department has just completed its fifth year of existence. Previous to this new departure com- petition in Basketball, Track, Baseball, and Horseshoes had been conducted on a straight elimination basis by the stu- dents, functioning through the Inter- (Continued on Page 130) Tage One Hu7idred Twiniy-eicihl Suitimary €f year 1932 - 33 FRATERNITIES The trophies symbolic of the inter- fraternity championship in the various sports follow: Speedball Pi Kappa Alpha Cross-Country Kappa Alpha Handball Phi Alpha Basketball Phi Sigma Kappa Foul Throwing Kappa Sigma Bow ling Sigma Nu Indoor Track Kappa Alpha Relay Kappa Sigma Volley Ball Tau Kappa Epsilon Playground Ball Sigma Nu Outdoor Track Kappa Sigma Horseshoes Tau Kappa Epsilon INTRAMURAL ATHLETIC CARNIVAL As a climax to the winter program an annual Athletic Carnival is held each year at which time the final game for the Inter-fraternity Basketball Champion- ship is played and at which time the All- Campus Intramural Boxing Champion- ships are held. This past year the finals in the 70 yard dash and the 70 yard low hurdles were held over from the Interfraternity Indoor Track Meet and conducted as a feature of the Carnival. While the Boxing Championships were being contested for, a Wrestling Meet was conducted between the Junior Var- sity and the Freshmen, the Junior Var- sity being returned the winners. Pac e One Hundred Tirnity.nine FRATERNITY ALL-YEAR STANDING FOR A. G. SPALDING TROPHY 1. Kappa Sigma 916 2. Sigma Nu 873 3. Kappa Alpha 855 4. Pi Kappa Alpha 771 5. Tau Kappa Epsilon 692 6. Phi Delta Theta 675 7. Phi Alpha 665 8. Phi Sigma Kappa 652 9. Theta Chi 602 10. Pi Lambda Phi 590 11. Phi Sigma Delta 534 12. Phi Kappa Sigma 503 13. Sigma Chi 418 14. Delta Tau Delta 396 15. Phi Kappa Tau 366 16. Phi Kappa Psi 355 17. Beta Theta Pi 275 18. Alpha Sigma Phi 275 TELEGRAPHIC BOWLING This past year a Telegraphic Bowling Match was scheduled between the champ- ion fraternity team at West Virginia and the champion fraternity team at the Uni- versity of Pittsburgh. Omega Delta of Pittsburgh and Sigma Nu of West Vir- ginia were the winners at their respective schools. Omega Delta was the winner of the match and the recipient of a hand- some trophy awarded by the Inter- Fraternity Council at Pittsburgh. , -S ADMINISTRATION (Continued From Page 128) fraternity Council. This competition was closed to all fraternities outside the Council and consequently only a small proportion of the student body actually took part, and thus a vast majority of the students were given no opportunity for wholesome recreation. Starting out in October, 1928, Speed- ball, a game new to West Virginians, was introduced. The game was received with unexpected enthusiasm on the part of the student body and from this time on the reception accorded the Intramural pro- gram was most gratifying. During the first year twelve different sports w ere conducted in the program. These were Speedball, Tennis, Cross- country Running, Wrestling, Basketball, Foul Throwing, Indoor Track, Bowling, Boxing, Playground Ball, Horseshoe Pitching, and Outdoor Track. In the second year. Handball, Volley Ball, Indoor Relays, and Miniature Golf were added to the program, thus swell- ing the total sports offered to fifteen. Tennis, offered in the first year, had to be abandoned because of a total lack of courts on the campus. Four new Tennis Courts have been provided on the Campus and it is hoped to restore Tennis as an activity this Fall. In the third year there were fifteen different sports offered in the program. Fencing being introduced as a new activ- ity and Miniature Golf being dropped be- cause of lack of interest. A total of 1,073 different students participated in the twelve types of sports offered the first year and there was a total of 2,642 entries in these sports. In the second year there were 1,095 different students participating in the fif- teen different sports offered, with a to- tal of 3,224 entries actually competing. In the third year there were 1,103 dif- ferent students participating in the fif- teen different sports offered with a to- tal of 3,448 entries actually competing. In the fourth year there were 1,090 different students participating in the fif- teen different sports offered, with a to- tal of 3,337 entries actually competing. This past year saw 1,029 different students participating in the fourteen dif- ferent sports offered with a total of 3,031 entries actually competing. The program will be altered from year to year and those sports which prove un- desirable for Intramural competition will be dropped and others will be added as popularity and facilities permit. Fnge One Hundred Tldrli FEATURES ®t| 193 4 qc One Hundred Tlnrttj-lhree ._.. i0 -;- i ,. jp mr ' £m mssm : ? mBwmsm mmmmm ? if, li if Melrose 0or Color, Warmth, Life. Grace, Charm, She combines all these into Beauty. Pagr One nniidrrd Tliiiti -f jiir y MEmm ' ' mmtSM ::s(m m iisi m;s m:xifim!m. Color — Like a painting from The brush of an old master. (Ufc One llunilicd Thiriif-pvc 3) ea t 333ilal]ire .a ' i f - :A ' 10 ■ 4 ■ i 0 aaS ..- ■0 (Anna aura arbtn ms i. ?si Mi ms-imimmHumm Mmiwiii Warmth — The warmth of the South is Expressed in her every move. Fage One Hvndrrd Tldrty-six Life — ACTION! CAMERA! She ought to be in pictures. ige One Hundred Thirty-seven v£} (Sfucnbolia : arris s.- - ' mmiii mii MsmMmmm ' mimrii MmBM • w Jt-ZM . 1«  ■ HNJ v — Grace She Moves Along Like A Verse of Beautiful Poetry. Paiic One Hundred Thirty-eiijiit m ' ' Mm:s i i WMm:iissm mM mm{mms , l VA «fJi.MlM «■ Charm A beautiful girl With a beautiful manner. 3lanc leaker Pufjc One niiiulrcd Thirty- nine .f ' j f- ......jAlf .. Si l ' 0 ' .„.-£S 1 The Junior Prom Queen Page One Hundred Forty THE MCUNTAINCEC A. Hale Watkins was elected by the student body to the distinguished position of Mountaineer. This position carries with it the traditions of many years, and signifies the highest honor that the students may confer on one of their fellow students. Hale has been outstanding in practically every de- partment of student activity. Last year he was nominated for president of the Student Council and was defeated by only a very few votes. He is President of Beta Theta Pi, L. H. C. P. of Fi Batar Cappar, Summit of Moun- tain, Chief Justice of Phi Alpha Delta, Captain of the Mountaineer Week Team, a member of Sphinx, La Tertulia, Chi Sigma Delta, Honor Court, Student Assistant to the Athletic Director. This Monticola feels that the Mountaineer presented in its pages will be outstanding among all the Mountaineers of the past and the future. age One Hundred Forty-one MILITARY THE MILITARY STAFF Geoffrey P. Baldwin Major Infantry, P. M. S. T. Willard L. Smith Captain Infantry, P. M. S. T. Robert L. Nesbit Captain Infantry, P. M. S. T. Stephen Whipple Captain, C. E., P. M. S. T. Ralph A. Lincoln First Lieutenant, C. E., P. M. S. T. H. T. Schultz First Sergeant, C. E. ; Assistant Instructor in Military Engineering and Property Custo- dian H. L. Dearborn Staff Sergeant, Infantry; Assistant Property Custodian J. E. Young Sergeant, Infantry, Sergeant Major (iijc One Hundred Forty- five w.pjf . ' i ' - SPONSORS REGIMENTAL Hannah V. Geyer Evelyn Cox First Battalion Nina Lee Waddell Second Battalion Lillian Carte Third Battalion Alma Eraser Company A Eleanor Ramage Company B Margaret Martin Company C Anna Laura Harden Company D Blanche Wharton Company E Thelma Rexroad Company F Alene Henderson Company G Marie Gaydosh Company H Elizabeth Kreger Company 1 Fugc One Hundred Forty-six iwweasjw CADET COMMISSIONED OFFICERS REGIMENTAL STAFF Willis G. Tetrick __. Cadet Colonel H. G. Walker . Cadet Lieutenant Colonel, Regimental Executive Officer W. L. Wilson Cadet Captain, Regimental Plans and Training Officer W. L. Shaffer Cadet Captain, Regimental Intelligence Officer H. C. Shaffer Cadet Captain, Regimental Adjutant E. B. Gower .Regimental Sergenat Major FIRST BATTALION STAFF A. E. Stewart Cadet Lieutenant Colonel I. M. Scott Cadet Major, Battalion Executive Officer R. W. Haines First Lieutenant, Adjutant L. M. Wilson Battalion Sergeant Major SECOND BATTALION STAFF R. L. Mentzer Cadet Lieutenant Colonel R. E. Craig Cadet Major, Battalion Executive Officer D. T. Hodges First Lieutenant, .Adjutant J. A. Jackson Battalion Sergeant Major THIRD BATTALION STAFF J. O. Kizer Cadet Lieutenant Colonel R. C. Ripley Cadet Major, Battalion Executive Officer J. A. Blaney First Lieutenant, Adjutant D. K. Tucker Battalion Sergeant Major Pdfie One Hundred Forty-seven . iJ,i ..i ' .: ; f?v ' . E. B. Aspinall, S. R. Baker, J. W. Baker, W. P. Bailey, G. G. Baldinger, R, W. Bayles, J. C. BertoUini, A. V. Bland, R. M. Bock, R. C. Bowcock, J. C, Bayles, R. E. Broderick, J. W. Brown, J. E. Butler, A. K. Camp, E. H. Campbell, J. A. Chittum, R. D. Cinci, L. Clark, S. F. Cole, H. W. Cole, W. W. Creel, R. B. Dieffenderfer, C. S. Jr. Douthat, J. R. Edgar, J. K. Elmore, G. F. Fisher, W. D. Furfari, F. A. Evans, D. BAND Gaudino, D. Gressang, R. W. Gwynn, M. B. Hall, 1. W. Hamstead, E. O. Harris, V. W. Hash, V. W. Hathaway, F. H. Heinze, J. H. Hill, L. R. Hornbeck, F. E. Hough, K. R. Hubbs, G. L. Jackson, W. E. Jacobson, C. M. Jarrett, M. F. Je!ea, J. T. Jones, J. C. Kinder, R. A. Lantz, H. L. Lewellyn, G. A. Linger, P. N. Mahaney, E. W. Malone, E. A. Marshall, J. E, May, W. S. McCall, R. G. McGregor, B. R. Mclntire, T. S. McMillan, G. J. Miller, R. E. Newton, R. L. Orler, V. J. Jr. Parsons, H. Rawe, M. L. Reiser, J. A. Jr. Riggle, C. G. Rinaldi, J. A. Robey. W. R. Runner, J. R. Shortridge, W. P. Skaff, V. Smith, H. A. Soisson, A. D. Stewart, J. H. Sturm, C. Sybert, P. W. Thomaason, L. Thompson, P. B. Tripplett. W. C. Vance, K. J. Vatz, 1. P. Vie we g, G. B. Jr. Walkup, H. A. Webster, R. R. Welch. W. H. White, O. F. Whitsell, N. E. Wilson, W. G. Willhide, V. C. Patjc One Hundred Fnrti -ci(i ' lit COMPANY A CAPTAIN R. H. Cracraft FIRST .LIEUTENANTS J. E. Darrah W. J. McDonnel SERGEANTS H. F. Conn E. B. Sheerwood B. F. Blackburn H. A. Michael H. H. King G. W. Davis C. R. Dodd BASIC 11 F. W. Shutko Battles, F. L. Horn, W. S. Reed. J. W. Colebank, A. D. Lineberg. H. W. Schimmel, P. A. Evangelista, J. J. Milman, J. Simpson, W. E. Galpin, S. S. Post, G. W. The], L. T. Gibson, O. L. BASIC 1 Shimmel. P. A. Adamek, E. Goldestein, I. McNulty, F. G. Burkhamer, H. Green, S. H. Neglia. F. Caplain, F. Haden, S. K. Renz, R. L. Communtzis, G. Jackson, C. K. Rhodes, E. L. Conley. H. L. Jackson, D. T. Scholl, J. A. Crookshank. J. H. Kraft, M. Shale. J. Darby, R. B. Kyle, F. R. Sims, H. H. Dodd. C. C. Lande, B. T. Soisson, M. Eiland, B. Leuchtag, S. A. Thompson, W. L Goeke, J. T. Martin, R. R. Martine. P. V. Watring. L. K. Pnijr Our IJiindrrd Forty-nine g J. F. Hall E. p. Fizer D. H. Canfield P. A. Mascioli Akers, R. H. Bait, J. R. Bonor, R. R. Cantor, P. D. Corbitt, R. W. Cox. F. C. Cruikshank, D. P. Frantz, R. A. Hall, C. B. Anderson, C. A. Carroll, E. J. Duffy, E. V. Jr. Gildersleeve, J. R, Hess, J. L. Honchoroff, A. Jones, A. E. Kauffman, L. COMPANY B CAPTAIN G. O. Farmer FIRST LIEUTENANTS C. E. Cunningham SECOND LIEUTENANTS SERGEANTS J. M. Snyder J. W. Fueg W. L. Hoskins BASIC II Harahan, W. Kuhn, R. C. McCormick, W. C. IVIestrovic, A. E. Michael, J. Moore, J. C. Parnes, D. Rider, W. H. BASIC I Linger, J. P. McKinney, J. B. Mockler, W. E. McNamara, J. J. Neely, R. C. Nutter, R. A. Powell, W. Pickus, M. K. C. Miller E. G. Kelley W. P. Kearns J. C. Shanks Revire, J. Jr. Rubin, H. Shepherd, J. W. Strawn, L. M. Swint, F. J. Weaver, F. H. Wilson, T. E. Yandala, C. Jr. Young, E. A. Samms, R. S. Seibert, A. W. Smith, J. B. Stern, N. M. Stydahar, J. L. Summer, C. L. Taylor, W. C. Zaleski, J. F. Tage One ITnnilred Fiflij R. A. Gre gg W. F. Hopper C. A. Peairs Blair, R. L. Brady, J. M. Brown, G. P. Byard, E. J. Carpenter, J. F. Casteel, J. R. Claiborne, W. L. Allen, G. N. Conner, W. F. Cox, H. L. Dotson, S. C. Dunlap, M. A. Fraser, J. R. Fray, L. W. Gatrell, J. D. Gibson, H. R. Grabiick, J. Viifir Our TTiiiiflrcd Fiflii-one COMPANY C CAPTAIN Wilson R. Caskey FIRST LIEUTENANTS SERGEANTS N. O. Willey BASIC II Crozier, D. M. Feingold, M. M. Gilmore, J. T. Gray, P. L. Herod, J. B. Leach, D. A. Madeira, K. H. BASIC I Kammer, R. L. King, E. L. Johnson, J. G. Leonard, E. O. Lynch, G. B. Malott, J. W. Miller, L. C. Moore, C. D. Oakley, F. F. Ocoma, E. M. J. M. Sowers J. L. Smith L. C. Kossuth Minnick, W. C. Niehaus, J. L. Oneacre, P. E. Rovire, C. Smith, D. C. Spargo, J. E. Clatworty, W. H. Pessolano, V. C. Phares, J. Smith, J. B. Smith, R. S. Stewart, J. Thomasson, R. F Thorniley, R. Q, Thrasher, H. W. Tucker, R. C. Wilson, A. F. .cilV ' T. Dastoli J. C. Zobrist H. P. Morgan Brown, F. E. Chapman, V. A. Cunningham, P. W, Fisher, C. R. Foder, A. J. Hawkins, G. W. Johnson, H. S. Lester, J. Linkenheker, H. W. Long, B. F. Long, W. F. McCue, R. B. Miller, V. Meyer, R. C. Nekoranec, J. Nuhfer, P. R. Orth, L. B. COMPANY D CAPTAIN H. E. Sturms FIRST LIEUTENANTS SERGEANTS J. A. Romano J. W. Horror W. H. Reger BASIC II Fortney, P. Hamilton, J. C. Hill, R. C. Lively, T. H. Loris, H. A. Menear, W, R. BASIC I Park, B. L. Park, J. O. Pyle, K. E. Ralston, S. F. Smith, G. A. Smith, J. W. Strider, C. H. Thomas, L. C. Welch, D. E. Archer, J. C. Caldwell, J. L. K. C. Martin C. H. Stockdale S. L, Norteman Miller, N. G. Nelson, F. B. Sawyers, L. L. Wells, G. R. White, H. S. Coombs, L. D. Crews, H. R. Fitzstephens, D. C. Green, J. R. Hall, J. C. Hartley, C. Hensell, R. Hogue, H. Llewellyn, J. P. McKeever, J. S. Shapiro, M. Wheeler, J. N. Viuir Oik TIiiHihiil Fiflji-t(fo J. F. Jarvis L. S. Devore R. A. Sagle S. R. Woodburn Bennett, D. F. Cona vay, E. D. Doman, R. A. Fagerlund, A. C. Gedwillis, B. Harshberger, D. W. Allen, J. E. Amato, E. J. Brill, P. G. Brown, W. G. Duffy, J. H. Edleman, M. Fisher, F. E. Flanigan, F. L. Goodwin, J. C. Heckert, P. S . Hughes, C. B. Judy, L. P. Lawton, S. Martin, S. L. Pniir Our Hiinihcd Fifty-tltrce COMPANY E CAPTAIN E. S. Pilcher FIRST LIEUTENANTS SECOND LIEUTENANTS E. H. Martin SERGEANTS C. S. Armistead J. S. Sligar J. Pomykata BASIC 11 Huddleston. A. E. Hughes, E. B. Leshkow, N. Moore. G. S. Rapsa vich, J. Ross, J. W. BASIC I Mason, S. M. McKone, C. J. Morris, D. W. Moser, D. R. Pratt, H. C. Rhodes, W. D. Rouse, D. P. Sands, J. H. Shawen, J. R. Sperow, L. H. Stine, C. W. Turoff, N. L. Vitelli, J. P. C. McKlveen F. L. Harrison H. R. Stewart Spangler, L. K. Sparacino, C. Sutton, M. Wachtel, M. L. Wachtel, W. H. Warman, C. White, D. F. Bowman, W. M. Bertschy, K. H. Clevenger, C. W. Cook, E. H. Crews, H. W. Jaynes, E. King, H. W. Perlstein, I. K. Sokolosky, j. Washington, j. A Williams, R. K. « s- ■ J. W. Lipphardt D. Oliverio B. W. Sidel F. S. Juszezyk Benson, A. A. Bucklew, J. M. Cannarella, T. H. Cresce, J. Downs, J. A. Fortney, C. R. Jackson, R. E. Leonard, G. L. Mason, J. W. Barclay, R. S. Ciesla, W. J. Cusick, L. M. Eberhart, F. B. Ezell, B. Goff, G. E. Henderson, W. W. Huyett, J. B. COMPANY F CAPTAIN W. H. Haught FIRST IJEUTENANTS J. T. Thornton SECOND LIEUTENANTS R. R. Summers SERGEANTS J. J. Tippman C. W. Lucas BASIC II Mills, L. C. Morgan, R. W. Morgan, W. M. Pruitt, G. M. Rogers, S. F. Tonry, J. R. Brockover, B. L. Fortney, E. L. Geuting, G. H. BASIC I Kuzner, T. Long, R. E. Pierce, M. H. Ritchie, A. H. Thomas, T. M. Vest, C. R. Zickefoose, R. L. R. Marshall J. W. Nash C. R. Tassan Harper, R. L. Martin, R. H. Moore, E. O ' Toole, T. Ramsey, R. L. Wexler, J. Kaplan, I. L. Hadsel, W. M. Conner, R. J. Farmanis, M. S. McDaniel, F. L. Knapp, T. D. Onder, A. Pyle, W. L. Tsorvas, H. Fdfir One Hundrrd Fifty-fonr 1. White E. R. Weston W. F. Richmond Boyles, R. G. Bowen, R. Bracken, C. R. Chaney, V. V. Cook, C. G. Corliss, R. Curry, E. D. Edenburn, E. J. Heath, G. R. Hess, C. R. Barker, M. R. Bradford, T. A. Brannon, J. V. Byrum, J. A. Cropp, H. H. Dorsey, J. Easton, J. Hall, R. O. Hardman, T. G. Holden, R. L. Page One Snndrcd Fifty- five COMPANY G CAPTAIN R. W. Hemington FIRST LIEUTENANTS J. A. Blaney SECOND LIEUTENANTS F. M. Wilson SERGEANTS C. W. Gregg C. R. Fadeley BASIC 11 Howder, W. M. Hunter, J. M. Johnson. H. J. Lewis, R. J. Linger, R. Meder, S. Meredith, W. R. Miller, E. N. Miller, P. L. Ramsey, H. K. BASIC 1 Kyle, B. Leadbeter, E. V. Lewis, W. H. Manackas, W. J. Margraff, S. T. McKinley, J. R. Oesterle. R. C. Pichering, J. R. Plansoen, J. L. R. Woodhul W. W. Mankin L. V. Mascioli Remage, R. Riddle, D. C. Robinson, A. F. Sexton, T. S. Thompson, N. E. Warden, W. P. Wyatt, J. B. McKenzie, J. A. Meyer, M. Schiffler, R. A. Randolph, K. V. Reiser, L. A. Riedel, D. P. Rubenstein, K. Schultz, B. W. Smith, E. P. Starck, R. L. Vinson, W. O. Glasscock, B. L. ; S ' .i . i,m . ke ..«-S ...0 .: : ...j.J ' ... s • Jr COMPANY H CAPTAIN R. B. Scott FIRST LIEUTENANTS W. B. Wilson C. J. Sites SECOND LIEUTENANTS L. V. Menefee SERGEANTS C. Ursich W. V. Riemer J. B. Maxwell R. B. Hibbert Stenger, H. W. J. Easley T. Currie T. Goodwin BASIC 11 Blair, A. L. Henry, B. Schaeffer, W. M Camp, K. E. Hare, J. D. Tebay, W. C. Carson, W. D. Grow, J. G. Tuckwiller, J. R. Case, C. C. Luchini, J. Vanaman, R. Crago, W. R. Mathes, T. M. Williams, W. Donley, R. H. Mayes, M. A. Wilson, J. M. Eagle, H. B. McClanahan, N. P. Yesler, M. George, T. A. Nuzum, W. Shawver, G. O. Grove, P. K. Reyer, G. BASIC 1 Bailey, C. A. Handlan, J. McCoy, K. J. Bargeloh, W. H. Hark, H. Minnear, T. E. Barna, H. P. Hazlett, W. H. Owen, R. Z. Blake, O. G. Henderson, L. Pifer, R. C. Collins, J. M. Higgins, B. L. Ramsey, R. L. Dunn, J. L. Jaynes, F. R. Russell, J. Ferrari, O. R. Jenkins, J. J. Smith, R. F. Gilson, A. J. Lanham, K. W. Stafford, T. Graham, A. E. Lutz, B. J. Thorn, A. K. Hall. J. B. Mawhinney, S. L. Thrash. M. M. Wolf, W. D. Page One Hundred Fifty-six J. D. Stratton R. A. Warrick H. Greenberg Arbuckle, J. H. Belcher, W. H. Bolyard, L. N. Busquets, S. Corson, L. D. Dilley, K. Espada, F. A. Fisher, W. E. Garner, W. Abbott, J. L. Bagvyell, G. E. Bailey, K. Bambrick, W. L. Broidy, S. Bruni, A. Chaney, R. W. Farland, J. S. Fowler, P. G. Vagc One Eundred Fifty-seven COMPANY I CAPTAIN B. P. Zulcoski FIRST LIEUTENANTS SECOND LIEUTENANTS F. B. Kennedy SERGEANTS B. W. Moore J. Rockis BASIC II Gorden, S. Hardman, R. V. Kesdin, M. Basle, G. Z. Lewin, T. F. Michael, G. T. Miller, J. E. Milleron, H. E. BASIC I Greenspan, J. Henderson, O. John, T. H. Kessler, D. Leslie, G. C. Lowther, R. S. Madden, T. C. Miller, J. H. Morgan, A. M. L. J. Shaffer R. W. Postlewait H. A. Carpenter Moore, O. D. Nitzhe, G. A. Parks, S. W. Poland, W. D. Shine, F. Summers, D. K. Williams, D. Wilson, G. V. Myers, C. B. Myers, E. W. Salerno, E. Shultz, B. J. Speier, R. Terry, O. R. Zatazale, J. Schafer, E. W. ::JW , ' ' ' ,. :. TACTICAL STAFF R. L. NESBIT _ Captain, Infantry, P. M. S. T ASSISTANTS Second Lieutenant Swing Second Lieutenant Parsons Second Lieutenant Rhinehart Second Lieutenant Dollison Second Lieutenant Tibbs Second Lieutenant Swisher Second Lieutenant Adkins Second Lieutenant Frame Second Lieutenant Millard Second Lieutenant Griffith Second Lieutenant Stewart Second Lieutenant Dawson Second Lieutenant Bitonti Second Lieutenant Cope Second Lieutenant Shuman 5: « ■- « . -M; ■. ?. Top Row. left to right Parsons, Dollison, Swisher, Frame, Griffith, Dawson, Cope. Bottom Row Shuman, Bitonti, Stewart, Adkins, Captain Nesbit, Sw ing, Millard, Tibbs, Rhinehart. Ftigc One Hundred Fifty-eight MILITACy 1 9 3 J Tiujc One Hundred Fifty-nine ;;vi ' £ Sf, , -. ' A. Avi?Ai COMPANY A CLARENCE MARTIN Company Commander VIRGINIA ROSS Sponsor Faffe One Bundrcd Sixty COMPANY B DURBIN WAY Company Commander MILDRED PETTY Sponsor Page One Hundred Sixty-one ■„ . i y iv ' ai ' ' - ' , ....-.--rf: ... '  ' ,0! COMPANY C GEORGE PYLE Company Commander VIRGINIA LITTLE Sponsor rage One Hundred Sixtji-two COMPANY D THOMAS VIRGIN Company Commander ELEANOR COLEMAN Sponsor Pdiir One lliinilrrd Sirtii-tlirce r.£i ' .,4 .. 0 . M Sd ? COMPANY E WILLIAM McWHORTER _ Company Commander IRENE WILDMAN Sponsor Pafir Our Hundred Sixty-four COMPANY F DE WITT WHITE Company Commander EVA CLAIRE HAWLEY Sponsor Piigr One Tlinuhrd f irlii-fivc is ' ' ' ' Z Z. ' Zrjiii COMPANY G GEORGE DEVERS Company Commander CATHERINE TETRICK Sponsor Pat e One Iliiiidred Si.r1i -.ii.r COMPANY H FAYAZ AMMAR Company Commander JESSIE FORTNEY Sponsor ■■:j-m Pape One Hundred Sixti seveii ■J M . .. ... COMPANY I MORRIS DROBECK Company Commander MARIAN McCLURE Sponsor Page One Bundred Sixty-eight Pafie Onr TI mid red Sixti iiine .,, .. i ..:::.. ' Fraternities INDEX Alpha Sigma Phi Beta Theta Pi Delta Tau Delta Kappa Alpha Kappa Sigma Phi Alpha Phi Delta Theta Phi Kappa Psi Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Kappa Tau Phi Sigma Kappa Pi Kappa Alpha Pi Lambda Phi Sigma Nu Tau Kappa Epsilon Theta Chi rCATECNITIES .v..) ' ...■•S .. ii l ' - THE ■NTCCPCATCCNITr COUNCIL OFFICERS RICHARD F. CURRENCE President JAMES F. HOLT Treasurer SHELDON HAYNES . Secretary REPRESENTATIVES Beta Theta Pi George Guthrie Delta Tau Delta Leland Devore Kappa Alpha Elihu Fortney Kappa Sigma .Henry White Phi Delta Theta John Homberg Phi Kappa Psi .Richard Currence Phi Kappa Sigma Sheldon Haynes Phi Kappa Tau Kenneth Watson Phi Sigma Kappa John Zobrist Pi Kappa Alpha James Holt Pi Kappa Phi Robert Harper Sigma Chi John Morris Sigma Nu Joel Smith Sigma Phi Epsilon Ernest Roberts Tau Kappa Epsilon Francis Shaffer Theta Chi George White Vage One Hundred Seventy-two Top Row — Henry White. Elihu Fortney, George White, Joel Smith. Bottom Row Joe Varner, Sheldon Haynes, John Homberg, Ernest Roberts. Vage One Hundred Seventy-three i 1934 GRADUATES Fahey. W. SENIORS Bennett, E. Cunningham, C. Keith, L. JUNIORS Hester, E. Slate, P. Mankins, W. Currie, T. SOPHOMORES Russel, P. J. Espada, r . Zaleski, J. Connor, R. Porter. J. King, O. Vanaman, R. FRESHMEN Porter, J. Dunn, J. Hawkins, G. Ferrari, O, Zatazlo, J. Vance, K. ALPHA SI i One Hundred Seventy-four GMA PM 1333 Page One Hundred Seventy-five GRADUATES Fahey, W. Post, C. SENIORS Gaal, James Reed, H. Shalante, S. Potter, R. JUNIORS Bennett, Edward Hayer, H. Hawkins, C. Cunningham, C. Hough. W. SOPHOMORES Hays, Francis Slate. P. Mankin, W. Hughs, S. Eskins, H. Currie. T. King. O. Richmond. E. Wilson. R. McGraw, A. FRESHMEN Hayer, H. Zaieski, J. Haester, J. Russel, P. J. Porter. J. B. Hershberger, H. Gifford. E. Rawe. P. Wilkinson, R. Hamilton, K. . .0 ' ..,: i0 ' ' ' ' ' .. 0 .r -u0 «s . «« - 1934 GRADUATES Watkins, A. Hale Griffith, Stephan Davisson, John Waddell, Richard Harrison, Paul Baer, Peter SENIORS Bush, Charles Goodwin, Carl Wolverton, James Pruitt, George Douthat, Robert Burkley, George Goodwin, Edward JUNIORS IVTaione, Ernest Bibbey, James Ross, Victor Slack, Charles Silver, Gray Guthrie, George Evans. Dave Hart, William Fallon, Joyce Murphey, William Carter, Howard O Toole, Thomas Burns. Charles Wilson, Sherrill Jones, John Rife, Wallace Baer, Phillip SOPHOMORES Miles, Charles Miller. Paul Fortney, Page Chambers, Paul Meredith, William Soison, Donald Carlin, William Thorn, Kenley Dillon, Jay Stafford, Thomas Meder, Sam FRESHMEN Soison, Melvin Ezell, Bonner Brannon, John Oestele, Richard Stork, Robert Roessing, Charles Gocke, John Hadsell, William Jackson. Charles K. Sands, Roy Oakley, Frank McCrmick, William Coombs, Davis Eraser, John Schultz, Byron Morgan, Alfred BETA THE ' f V- -f fj :« ' ? ' ,-.«i hTt. .f„ 1 1 I J 1 AM Aim One Hundred Scvciity-six TA PI 1933 GRADUATES Watkins, Hale Griffith, Stephen Waddell, Richard Harrison, Paul Burkley, George Watkins, Charles SENIORS Doll, William Hunter, Homer Davis, John M. JUNIORS Davisson, John Bush, Charles Goodwin, Carl Wolverton, James Pruitt, George Connell, William Douthat, Robert SOPHOMORES Tetrick, Willis Malone, Ernest Bibby, James Ross, Victor Slack, Charles Silver, Gray Guthrie, George Evans, Davis Hart, William Fallon, Joyce Murphy, William O ' Toole, Thomas Burns, Charles Carlin, William Jones, John FRESHMEN Miles, Charles Miller, Paul Fortney, Page Chambers, Paul Meredith. William Soisson, Donald Grow, James McCormick. William Meder, Sam 0))f Eundred Seventy -seven 1934 GRADUATE STUDENTS Charles Hoult Linden Bonn Brown Harold Schimmel David Sutton Thomas S. Moore Edward S. Bock William H. Geppert SENIORS W. G. Ferrell J. Gibson Henderson John O. Kizer Roger B. Scott C. E. Muhleman Joseph F. Ross Eugene O. Wright Frank H. Coffman Jack T. Thornton Neal W, Hilston H. E. W. Burnside Marion R. Llewellyn JUNIORS Harry R. Ruble James L. Morris William P. Baker Thomas M. Mathes Alfred E. Stewart Thornton S. Mclntire Harry H. King Charles W. Eskey Floyd J. Patton John W. Borror Charles H. Stockdale Charles B. Dollison Jesse R. Tuckwiller SOPHOMORES Leland S. Devore James P. Collins Bruce M. Embry Lucien M. Strawn Charles C. Case George W. Morgan, Jr. FRESHMEN Clyde S. Dieffenderfer, Ernest B. Agee, Jr. Gordon B. Lynch William S. Tucker Gerald A. Smith Robert W. Baldinger PLEDGES Robert Gibson Julian Henderson Carl Jacobson William Waltz Raymond Michaels Richard Patton Lewis Reiser Paul Schimmel John Washington, jr. Kenneth Fatkin Hal Johnson Samuel Mawhinney Harold Smith DELTA TA r Or tisi ' ,f 5!% «r ' Jr. d L Page One Hundred Seventy-eight L DELTA 1933 GRADUATE STUDENTS S. Verne Scott Charles Hoult Linden Bonn Brown Harold Schimmel SENIORS John E. Griffith David V. Sutton Thomas S. Moore, II Leland C. Tennant William H. Geppert JUNIORS W. G. Ferrell J. Gibson Henderson Edward S. Bock John O. Kizer Roger B. Scott C, E. Muhleman Joseph F. Ross Eugene O. Wright Frank H. CofFman Jack T. Thornton Neal W. Hilston H. E. W. Burnside Harry R. Ruble Marion R. Llewellyn SOPHOMORES James L. Morris William P. Baker Alfred E. Stewart Thornton S. Mclntire Harry H. King Charles W. Eskey Floyd J. Patton John W. Borror Julian K. Whanger Charles H. Stockdale Charles B. Dollison FRESHMEN (Pledges) James P. Collins Bruce M. Embry Leland S. Devore James Heinze Lucien Straw n Charles C. Case Fred C, Carroll Donald Beavers George Post Page L. Miller PofK One Jliinihcd Serrntif-ninc 1934 SENIORS Elihu Fortney Elmo Cower Homer White Frank Everhart Fred Schweitzer Charles Brockmeyer Thornton Kell Bob Woodhull Fred Goodall George Wilson Ew en Taylor Richard Edmondson Rudolph Hagberg James Brennan Buford McNeer Forest McNeer Douglas Farr Dana Eakle George Fasenmeier JUNIORS Dillon Smitt ' .e John Cook John Muhleman Emory Ireland Ailon Lingar Joseph Stewart SOPHOMORES Edwin Peters Thomas Sexton Vernon Hardman James Miller Donald Morrison Leland Jamison G. Richard Heath PLEDGES Wm. Kell Martin Barker B. Unger Hohaness Lewis Thomas John Marshall W. Guy Wilson Wm. Powell Ed Stone Ed Myers Ralph Bean Wayne Brooks rArPA Pniir One Tliiiuhrd F.iijhtii ALPHA 1933 Page One Ilinulrcd Eiffhi i -one SENIORS William Sydnor Floyd Schwa rtzwalder Wilbur Sorlet Donald Lough Meredith Martin R. Stanley Power Fred Schw eitzer Robert Richey Patrick Connel! Robert Woodhull Frank Bow man Elmo Gower Rudolph Hagberg Richard Edmondson GeorE;e Wilson JUNIORS J. Clarence Spitznogle Joseph McCoy Fred Coodall Ewen Taylor Mac Rouse SOPHOMORES Ailon Lingar John Muhleman Dillon Smittle Joe Stew art Robert McClure Emory Ireland John Cook PLEDGES Hugh Whitehair Leland Jamison Edw in Peters Thomas Sexton Frank Everhart Elihu Fortney Donald Morrison Vernon Hardman James Miller Richard Heath Thomas Mummy John Bowcock ..Mi ' ' 1334 SENIORS Boggs, H. Connor, C. W. Foick, E. McClure, H. Voorhees, D. White, H. Wotring, H. JUNIORS Wilson, F. McDonald, R. Fiddler, L. Allen, G. Crago. W. Mahanna, R. SOPHOMORES Colebank, A. Corbett. R. Cunningham, Hall, C. Haraham, W. Sherwood, E. Tebay, W. Triplett, W. FRESHMEN Bargoloh, W. Broderick, J. Huyett, J. Haden, S. Hash, W. Gustkey, E. Moore, D. McKeever. J. Pifer. R. Kusner, T. Gilson, A. Holden, R. Wilson, F. rAPPA Fitge One Jliinilrcd ' Eightij-two ' SIGMA 1933 SENIORS Owens, J. Storck. A. R. Fox, N. Fox, I. Irobeck. M. Craw, B. Coombs, F. Burk, P. Boggs, H. JUNIORS Connor, C. W. Falck, E. McClare, H. Post, C. Voorhees, D. White, H. SOPHOMORES Wilson, F. Rinehart, C. McBerny, M. Mahanna, R. Founds, M. Fidler, L. Allen, G. Reed, J. Stadyhar, J. FRESHMEN Corbett, R. Catrell, J. Cunningham, Sherwood, E. Triplett, W. Tebay, W. Colebank, A. Day. W. Haraham, W. ,« 4m Pdfir Onr TTiinih-rd Fyifilihi-llirce HWJ ' - ..a ' rfy 1934 GRADUATES Kahn, Emanuel Koslow, Albert Perilman, William Rose, Irving SENIORS Klein, Jules Feingold, Myer JUNIORS Kaplan, Irving Steinfeld, Benjamin Oxenhorn, Benjamin Cohen, Leon SOPHOMORES Cantor, Paul Gordon, Samuel Broidy, Samuel Rubin, Herman FRESHMEN Greenspan, Joseph Perlstein, Irving PLEDGE Edelman, Morris |3|il i iMM Our Unndrcd Eightij-fom ALPHA 1933 ' )itc Jfinulrcd Eir hty-fire GRADUATES Kahn, Emanuel Levinson, Herman Rose, Irving Schofield. Mortimer SENIORS Levine, Bernard Perilman, William Rosenberg, Carl JUNIORS Feingold, Myer Klein, Jules Megibow, Harold Spiro, Jerome SOPHOMORES Steinfeld, Benjamin Cohen, Leon OxenKorn, Benjamin Kaplan, Irving FRESHMEN Rubin, Herman Gordon, Sam Cantor, Paul PLEDGES Levine, Max Marcus, Martin Reyer, Gabriel j-y ' - ' Vf ' jf ' ........M- ' - .yvins ! 1934 GRADUATES Rogerson, Clinton Brick, John Richardson, Herbert SENIORS Quenon, Clarence Lipphardt, Jack Benson, Clarence Homburg, John Morris, Langdon Miller, William B. Cleman, Melvin Sims, Binford Grace, James JUNIORS Norteman. Sam Frantz, Howard Lantz, Harry Madeira, Kenneth Moore, Robert Woodburn. Allen SOPHOMORES Taylor, John Mills, Leonard Benson, Arthur Blak e, Norman Frantz, Richard FRESHMEN Lantz, Edwin Byrun, James Brown, Esley Lenz, Robert Jackson, Dean Mockler, William Bailey, Charles Cleave nger, George Garner, Woodrow PHI DELTA One JItiniJrcd F i(ihhi-six THET 4 1933 One Hundred Eiyhty-scvcn GRADUATES Morris, Langdon Richardson, Herbert Brown, Fred Kessler, Robert Meyers, Paul Summerfield Kiester, John Stevenson. Charles Colborn, Ralph Rogers, Howard Bandi, Robert Walker, Arthur Rogerson, Clinton Fisher, Earl Brick, John SENIORS Healey, George Jones, Oren Pettengill, Ralph JUNIORS Quenon, Clarence Lipphardt, Jack Sowers, John Benson, Clarence Homburg, John Miller, William B. Clemans, Melvin Sims, Binford Grace, James SOPHOMORES Norteman, Samuel Frantz, Howard PLEDGES Benson, Arthur Blake, Norman Frantz, Richard King, James Mills, Leonard Taylor, John ■-0 1934 GRADUATES Hite, Thomas A. Lowe, Robert W. Lowe, Scott C. McFarland, William Clifford, John H. SENIORS Ailes, Stephen Ballantyne, Robert B. Clark, Samuel F. Downs, Richard Edgell, Jacob H. Hite, Ralph M. Lewis, Thomas W. Maclin, Luttrell Manning, Charles Pettit, Harold S. Rose, Herschel, H. Jr. Cracraft, Russell H. Heatherman, William F. JUNIORS Gibson, Milford L. Maxwell, Isaac H. Morgan, Harold P. Thomas, John R. Byrer, Harry J. Owen, Edward SOPHOMORES Brown, J. Scott Kelley, Gilmore E. Maxwell, John Brent Wachtel, Martin Wachtel, William Weaver, Frank Hurst Wilson, J. McLain Blair, Andrew L. Grow, Joseph Handlan, James Robinson, Albert FRESHMEN Bland, Ruskin M. Caldwell, James Corson, Louis D. Duffy, Edwin Schifller, Robert Smith, Etley P. Vieweg, George B. Wilson, Arch Randolph, Kenneth ■ - «rf ' ' C One Hundred Eighty-eight PA PSI 1933 LMH I i lam W IM One Iliiiidred Eighty-nine GRADUATES Tyler, John Smith, Grover Coleman, James Lowe, Robert W. McFarland. William Clifford, John SENIORS Wilson, John Stat hers, George Cramer, Robert Henkel, Carol Parriott, William Post, Lawrence Hite, Thomas Low e, Scott C. JUNIORS Ailes, Stephen Ballantyne, Robert B. Edgell, Jacob H. Hite. Ralph M. Lewis, Thomas Maclin, Luttrell Manning, Charles Pettit, Harold S. Rose, Herschel Cracraft, Russell Heatherman. William SOPHOMORES Gibson, Milford Maxw ell, Isaac H. Morgan, Harold P. Thomas, John R. Ow en, Edw ard FRESHMEN Brown, Scott Kelley, G. E. Maxwell, John B. Wachtel. Martin Wachtel, William Weaver, Frank Wilson, J. M. Blair, Andrew Grow , Joseph Handlan, James Robinson, Albert 0 ' ' 0 ' W , ' ..-.;.ii ' ..- ' m ' - 1934 GRADUATES Scott, Denny F. Habig, John H. Staub, William S. Haines, S. E. SENIORS Channel, Carl W. Miller, Robert E. Shaffer, Maurice Shuman, Chester A. Stewart, Marvin T. White, Ralph M. Williams, Edgar L. Hall, Ivan R. Murray, William A. Stone, Samuel JUNIORS Gibbs, Harold B. Fisher, William D. Aspinall, Samuel R. Jackson, John H. BoviTnan, Marvine Cannady, J. E. Foster, Carson Morris, Wentworth SOPHOMORES Bartlett, G. T. FRESHMEN Huddleston, A. E. Hough. Kenneth Welsh, Herbert pm i it) ft i f% C Page One Hundred Nincli PA SIGMA 1933 Page One Muiuhcd Ninety-one GRADUATES Habig, John Howard Willhide, Victor Carl Chittum, George Scott, Denny F. Kerr, Vaughn W. Haines, S. E. SENIORS Staub, William Shaffer Wh.tc, Ralph M. Shaffer, M. 1.. Shore, E. J. Harris, E. W. Harris, Earl JUNIORS Murray, William A. Shuman, Chester A. Mller, Robert E. Stewart, Marvin T. Williams, Edgar L. Channel, Carl W. Scott. W. W. SOPHOMORES Jackson, John H. Aspinall. Samuel R. Fisher, Wi ' liam D. Hall, Ivan W. Phillips, V. F. FRESHMEN Henry, Edward C. Gibbs. Harold B. Lewis, J- K. Shirtinlieb, A. R. ...;0 , £ vM ' ..- iUfSs y.-.j.:, ' -; ' . ..■•■AM wjji, - ' - .-a- -i ' ' ' .. • ' .■■ ' ' 1934 GRADUATES McVeigh, Samuel J. SENIORS Hoy, Nevin D. Baker, Glenn H. McPheeters, Harold D. Cobb, Donald P. Hare, Charles E. McMillan, Elbert C. Watson, Kenneth S. JUNIORS Valan, Michael J. Kerr, Kenneth D. Lang. James H. Vargo, John H. Dowdell, David SOPHOMORES Johnson, Harry J. Reiser, Joseph A. Bertschy, Kenneth H. Eberhart, Francis B. Basle, Eugene G. Conner, Frederick W. PLEDGES Smith, Joseph Barna, Herbert Plil t{ Page One Hundred Xinety-twi PA TAL 1933 SENIORS Farley, Paul Leedy, Howard Hare, Charles JUNIORS Hoy, Nevin D. Baker, Glenn H. McPheeters, Harold D. Cobb, Donald P. McMillan, Elbert C. Watson, Kenneth S. SOPHOMORES Valan, Michael Kerr, Kenneth D. Lang, James H. Vargo, John Dowdell, David FRESHMEN Johnson, Harry J. Reiser, Joseph Bertschy, Kenneth H. Eberhart, Francis Basle, Eugene Page One Hundred Ninety-three 1934 SENIORS Dobbs, Lee Daviason, C. Neely. W. Wilson. W. 1 Craig, G. Rider, M. White, D. Mentzer, R. L. JUNIORS Sawyers, F. Harrison, F. Pickens, J, K. Roberts, D. R. Williams, N. Boreman, W. Friend, L. L. Coplin, R. Sawyers, L. McKIveen, P. Thomas. B. L. Price, B. G. Sligar. J. Seibert. G. H. Ragland, G. M. Condry, J. Richmond, F. Gwynn, M. B. Postlethwait, R Zobrist, J. Palmer, G. F. Riemer, W. V. Hudgins, J. G. SOPHOMORES McKenzie, J. Henry, B. Rider. W. Oneacre, P. Edgar. J. Williams. D. Harrison. S. INITIATES Linkenhoker, N. Shafer, B. K. Neely, R. C. Hedges, P. Hazlitt. W. Seibert, A. Hall. J. Corliss, R. Zinn. L. Johns, T. PLEDGES Fitzstevens, D. Miller, J. H. Pickering, R. Martin, R. Porterfield, H. Williams, R. Myers, C. Jackson, E. Baker, W. W. IDIil SIG One Hundred Kinctij-fouT HA rAPPA 1933 GRADUATES Hazlett, John L ' Argent. WilHam SENIORS Davis, William Bell. John Sims, Edward Fulks, Paul Connel! Robert Davis, Francis Raglan, Ned Carspecken, Henry Dean, Hoyt Garden, Dana Morris, John Barnetl, Fred Barley, Albert Rowan, Abe JUNIORS Dobbs, Lee Davisson, C. Neely, W. Wilson, W. L. Craig, G. Rider, M. White. D. Mentzer, R. L. Bolton, Neil SOPHOMORES Sawyers, F. Harrison, F. Pickens, J. K. Roberts, D. R. Williams, N. Boreman, W. Friend, L. L. Goplin, R. Sawyers, L. McKlveen. P. Thomas, B. L. Price, B. A. Sligar, J. Seibert, G. H. Ragland, G. M. Condry, J, Richmond, F. Gwynn. M. B. Postlethwait, R. W. Zobrist, J. Palmer, G. F. Riemer, W. V. Hudgins, J. Q. Wadjehovski. Victor FRESHMEN McKenzie, J. Henry B. Rider. W, Oneacre, P. Edgar, J. Williams, D. Harrison, S. Our Tl II iidrcd Ninety-five 1934 SENIORS William H. Smith John Dorr James Holt James Hill Carrol Swinler William Klug Towers Hamilton Hugh McPhail Edward Powell Clarence Ledoux Edwin Camp Herman Lemasters John Easley JUNIORS Patterson Kelly Wilson Shortridge William Hopper Wilson Caskey William Travis Blair Hill Herbert Stewart Harry Yoe SOPHOMORES Renwick Lewis Wilson Nuzum William Howder Ernest Bailey Richard Tonry FRESHMEN Earl Leadbeter Robert Nutter David Gattrel PLEDGES Stanley Pease George Cubbon Clifford Summers William May Joseph Settle Jack Kyle Gordon Kyle Robert Kyle PI rAP J«) i f! 4p M 1-= - m ' £,fi TR r - iT- ' p i I ' tiffc One llimilrcd Ninety-six PA ALPHA 1933 SENIORS William H. Smith John Dorr Samuel Morgan Charles Tonry James Holt Samuel Hammer Robert Caddock Victor Monteith Earl Engle James Hill Charles Dillon Addis Casey Paul Graham Garard Honrier JUNIORS Carrol Swinler William Klug Towers Hamilton Hugh McPhail Edward Powell Clarence Ledoux Edwin Camp Herman Lemasters William Tomlinson James Geary John Easley SOPHOMORES Patterson Kelly Wilson Shortridge William Hopper Wilson Caskey Robert Campbell William Travis Blair Hill Herbert Stewart FRESHMEN Renw ick Lewis Wilson Nuzum William Howder Edwin Toothill PLEDGES Stanley Pease George Cubbon Page One Jlandrcd Kincty-sevcn ,i 0f ..,,:S0 1934 GRADUATES Leinwand, Irving Funt, Morris S. Baker. Eddie M. SENIORS KroU, Milton P. Weiner, Jess J. Hoenig, Harold H. Gattlieb, Sidney L, Rosenberg, Mortimer W. Strochak, Henry L. Hiller. Woodrow W. Eppstein, Stan ' ey M. JUNIORS Greenberg. Herbert Ostrofsky, Ra ' pt £-■ Vogel, Joseph Franz, Gerrard A. Margules, LouJs Caplan, Irvin Solomon, William SOPHOMORES Bear. Emanuel Yesler, Milton Klein. Harold Leuchtag, Sidney A. FRESHMEN Caplan, Fred Eiland. William W. Landow, Bertram Hank, Hershel Rubenstein, Kenneth PLEDGES Kaufman, Leroy Pickus, Milton Shapiro, Melvin Kraft, Melvin D. Frank, Harry Goldman, Morris B. Jr. Vatz, Irvin P. Israel, Martin PI LAM H •O .ft - Q r r % ' ' iK %f- 1 Onr Tliindrcd Nincti -citilit EDA Dtil 1933 X r TT II tidied Xinffi -iiiiie GRADUATES Baum, Henry E. Leinwand, Irving Manuel, Marvin Grossman, Charles Funt, Morris Melnicoff , Sidney SENIORS Baker, Eddie JUNIORS Kroll, Milton P. Hoenig. Harold H. Hiller. Woodrow W. Eppstein, Stanley Weiner, Jess J. Stern, Joseph Rosenberg, Mortimer Gottlieb. Sidney SOPHOMORES Ostrofsky, Ralph E. Vogel, Joseph Franz, Gerrard Green berg, Herbert Solomon, William Mar gules, Louis Dolinsky, Edward PLEDGES Klein, Harold J. Yesler, Milton Frank, Harry Goldman, Morris B. Bear, Emanuel Strochak, Henry ■w .JM ' ..i0 ' ,. 9 1 34 SENIORS Winger, L. Wolfe, C. T. Carpenter, H. Cuppett, D. E. Miller, G. W. Bailey, R. E. Walker, J. W. Schmidt, G. C. Kenamond, G. Chafin, M. R. Morrison, C. Deems, D. JUNIORS Campbell, J. A. Wilson, F. M. Armistead, C. Lucas, C. Smith, J. L. Bratton, R. A. Creel. R. Vest, P. Williams, F. E. SOPHOMORES Mayes, M. Crozier, D. Carpenter, J. F. Grisinger, G. DeLung, H. L. Anderson, C. A. FRESHMEN Ritchie, A. H. PLEDGES Archer, J. C. Bradford, T. Shultz, B. Lambert. S. Cole, W. SIGMA Cp P ' - ( a D ' f o n Porir Tii ' o Hundred NU 1933 ' ' age Two Hundred One SENIORS Winger, L. Walker, R. Burdette, J. C. Doyle, J. Burdette, J. F. Koontz, T. McClaugherty, J. Snyder, P, Robinson, W. JUNIORS Wolfe, C. Chafin, R. M. Deems, G. Carpenter, H. Cuppette, D. Campbell, J. Spurgeon, B. Wilson, F. Bailey, R. Herold, E. Miller, W. Walker, J . Boettcher, V. SOPHOMORES C. Armistead, Lucas, C. White, R. Moss, G. Shonk, E. Smith, J. FRESHMEN Carpenter, F. Crozier, D. Mayes, M. Williams, W. PLEDGES Grisinger, G. Knight, G. Delung, H. Williams, R. 1934 TAU I APPA GRADUATES Dan R. Baker David F. Cope Melville C. Peck Ralph Haines David Dillon SENIORS John Goetz R. Aubrey Gregg Clarence R. Jones j. Kenton Lambert Claude Prichard Oliver N. Rinehart Francis Shaffer Chester Thomas Joseph W. Varner Thomas E. Virgin Gerald A. Lewellyn JUNIORS John W. Fueg Robert McCall Paul McCoy Harold E. McDougle James W. Scott Charles J. Sites Howard C. Shaffer, Jr. S. Preston Smith J. Earl Spar go, Jr. Harry E. Sturms Aurthur O. Swisher Robert G. Thompson SOPHOMORES Edward Curry Frederick H. Hathaway H. George Hill Dennis E. Leach William M. Wheeler FRESHMEN Donald W. Morris PLEDGES Reginal Krause Ben Morgan Roald Moyers John Dorsey Gene E. Crow Henry E. Crews Gordon Johnson Forest Lusk John Llew ellyn John C. Moore Russel Shawn El f « D ,o C ' Tj ax r? t: vn. C rl I ' li ir Tiro Tliiiidird Tn ' EPSILCN 1933 Fafic Tiro Uundred Three SENIORS Cope, David F. Munchmeyer, Robert Pfalsgraf, Russell Warner, Edwin Baker. Dan R. JUNIORS PricKard, Claude Dillon. David Goetz, John Hames. Ralph W. Lambert, Kenton Peck, Melvin Shaffer, Francis Virgin, Thomas E. Jones, Clarence SOPHOMORES Fueg, John Mark. Robert McCoy, Paul McDougle, Harold Shaffer. Howard Sites, C harles Stums, Harry Swisher, Arthur Smith. S. Preston FRESHMEN Hathaway. Fredrick Leach, Dennis Wheeler. William M. PLEDGES Gregg, Aubrey Gregg, Charles McCall. Robert Shaffer, Robert Scott, James Thompson, Newell Curry, Edward D. .i 0 1934 GRADUATES Krieger, E. M. Moore, J. M. Nester, H. D. Veon, B. N. Lichliter, H. Callahan, W. O. SENIORS Exley, B. Hemington, R. W. Lee, T. W. Messmore, L. E. JUNIORS Robey, G. W. Walters, J. W. White, G. S, Jarrett, M. F. Wilkinson, S. G. Adams, G. V. Barrick, F. W. Jarrett, J. N. Bailey, G. G. SOPHOMORE Dodd, C. R. FRESHMEN Hesse, J. L. Margraff, T. S. PLEDGE Allen, G. THETA ' Puye Two Hundred Four Clil 1933 GRADUATES Krieger, E. M. Moore, J. M. Nester, H. D. Veon, B. N. Lichliter, H. H. Callahan, W. O. SENIORS Nuzum, D. G. Schmeichel, E. D. JUNIORS Hemington, R. W. Exley, B. Messmore, 1 . E. Walters, J. W. White. G. S. Davis, S. M. SOPHOMORES Robey, G. W. Jarrett, M. F. Wilkinson, S. G. Bailey, G. G. PLEDGE Swisher, D. M. Page Two Hundred Five , 0f -,j, - 0 ::-[ii ifflm ' J - ' . 0 . 0 1 0 KLIZABETH MOORE HALL INDEX Alpha Delta Pi Alpha Phi Alpha Xi Delta Chi Omega Delta Gamma Gamma Phi Beta Kappa Kappa Gamma Phi Mu Pi Beta Phi Theta Upsilon SCCCCITIES ; . .. a ... i PAN HELLENIC COUNCIL ELIZABETH ANNE MEEK President KATHLEEN WILLIAMS Vice President MARY EDNA BRADLEY _ Secretary MARY HEFLIN Treasurer ALPHA XI DELTA Hannah Geyer Esther Newhouse CHI OMEGA Elizabeth Anne Meek Jessie Fortney KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Sarah Ballengee Mary Lee Crumbein PI BETA PHI Margaret Wilbourne Kathleen Berthy DELTA GAMMA Louise Reitz Mary L. Woodhull ALPHA DELTA PI Kathleen Williams Virginia Lynch PHI MU Hazel Tidier Roberta Crow ALPHA PHI Mary Heflin Reba Hulberl GAMMA PHI BETA Mary L. Doolittle Mary E. Bradley THETA UPSILON Rayma Bertie Leota Friend SIGMA DELTA TAU Miriam Koslow Helen Sc Kucha t Two Hundred Eight Two Eitndred Nine 1934 SENIORS Harris, Lillian Keck, Kathryn Millard, Mae Zogg Ross, Virginia Wilburn, Edna Williams, Kathleen JUNIORS Hesse, Jane Lynch, Virginia Marshall, Elizabeth McColIum, Louise Freest, Mildred Sharp, Jean Swiger, Dorothy Trumbo, Dorothy SOPHOMORES Jarrett, Nannie Pew, Mary FRESHMEN Donnelly, Fritze Prager, Dorothy Watson, Henrietta PLEDGES Berry, Pauline Bertschy, Mary Bush, Margaret Cowie, Jean Ernest, Ruth Jamison, Lucille Jarvis, Lois Langford, Isabelle McGuire, Marjorie McGuire, Ruth Saupe. Hallie Mae Simpson, Margaret Taylor, Viola ALPHA. DE Pai c Two Hundred Ten LTA PI 1933 SENIORS Simpson, Ruth Baker, Muriel Ross, Virginia JUNIORS Zogg, Mae Myers, Texa Harris, LiMian Williams, Kathleen SOPHOMORES Trumbo. Dorothy Hesse, Jane Freest, Mildred Swiger, D orothy Marshall, Elizabeth McCoIlum, Louise Lynch, Virginia FRESHMAN Jarrett, Nannie PLEDGES Jamison, Lucille Johnston, Harriet Smith, Emma Louise Wilburn, Edna Sharp, Jean Martin, Irene Guseman, Freda Taylor, Mary Rose P(u c Tiro Hundred Eleven ..„ni « 1934 SENIORS Cameron, Eleanor Heflin, Mary Johnson, Margaret JUNIORS Trent, Nancy Hulbert. Reba Wasmuth, Gladys Moore, Virginia Umbel, Waneta SOPHOMORES Holden, Virginia McKean, Bernice PLEDGES Evertt, Pauline Eakle, Edna Borror, Hester Murdock, Evelyn Turley, Helen Shaeffer, Rosalie Brook over, Elizabeth ALPHA Two Hundred Twelve i)lil 1933 Two Htnulrcd Thirteen SENIORS Wolverton, Ruth Byrd, Elizabeth bishop, Ruby Smith, Isabel Hogue, Mahaia JUNIORS Heflin, Mary Johnson, Margaret Reynolds, Mildred Schultz, Ruth Schultz, Frances SOPHOMORES Moore, Virginia Wasmuth, Gladys Umbel, Waneta Hulbert, Reba FRESHMEN McKean, Bernice Holden, Virginia iSsS ■ ' ■£ ' . i,f -V .M, , ' 0 1934 SENIORS Ballard. Blanche Ballard, Kathryn Geyer, Hannah Hinkle, Eleanor Martin, Mary Maxwell. Mary E. Stratford, Mary Belle JUNIORS James. Kathleen Little. Virginia Salmons. Ruth Simpson, Patricia Nale. Erma Newhouse, Esther Corbin, Darst Pipes, Elreane SOPHOMORES Coffindaffer, Mary Lee De Miester, Lucienne Henderson, Alene Johnson, Virginia Glass, Gwyndolia Darnell, Rose Griffin, Regina Thompson, Ann Young, Mildred FRESHMEN Evans, June Thomas, Pauline PLEDGES Duty, Alpha Hardesty, Josephine Mayo, Sue Belcher, Marjorie Gano, Louise Carroll Chaplin, Josephine Harrington, Mary K. Baker, Helen Bonar, Roxie Stanley, Margaret Van Meter, Mary E. Sexton, Elaine Bundy, Jean ALPHA Xt 7 v Tirn JTiiiKjrrd Fniirtrcii DELTA 1933 Thii TliindiTd Fifteen SENIORS Burns, Helen Carney, Mary Louise Gihner, Virginia Lawler, Beulah Marsh. Ethel Stalnaker, Mary Hale Steinbecker, Katherine Swearingen, Helen Linger, Virginia JUNIORS Ballard. Blanche Ballard, Kathryn Geyer, Hannah Hinkle, Eleanor King. Louise Martin, Mary B. Maxwell, Mary E. South, Gertrude Stratford, Mary Belle Evans. Jane SOPHOMORES Little, Virginia Simpson, Patricia PLEDGES Coffindaffer, Mary Lee Darnell, Rose K. De Miester, Lucienne Glass, Gwyndolia Gorrell, Elizabeth Gorsuch, Daisy Griffin, Regina Henderson, Alene Heiston. Julia Johnson. Virginia Johnson, Mary King. Julia Mathews, Helen Minsker, Virginia Nale, Erma Owens, Virginia Tetrick, Katherine Thompson, Ainsley Woody, Mary Young, Mildred .. ' Zj . 1934 SENIORS Drinkard, Jean Smith, Susan Meek. Elizabeth Ann Storck, Betty Lad wig. Cornelia Weaver. Jane Lemley, Katherine JUNIORS Krug, Mary Fortney, Jessie Wolverton, Ruth Reed, Jane Go eke, Mary Frances Walsh. Mary Betty Hardman, Gwendolyn Storck, Helen Edgar, Ann Davis Miller, Jean Gerchow, Mary Davis Weekly, Mary Susan Ferguson, Helen Louis SOPHOMORES Lane, Jane Condrey, Margaret McCoy, Katharine Meredith, Charlotti Hanifan, Eloise FRESHMEN Hanifan, Frances Hardman, Anna Neale PLEDGES Southward, Nancy Jackson, Mary Elizabeth Hennen, Mary Allen, Martha Lee McQuilkin, Mary Jane Miller, Evaline Balentine, Virginia Clil -M. M f%% i . V- Two ]Iiiiuh-(d SirUci €MEGA 1933 Tico Hundred Seventeen SENIORS Hennen, Kathleen Casto, Florence Coleman, Eleanor Dearien, Katherine Fortney, Ann JUNIORS Smith, Susan Ramage, Anna Margaret Meek. Betty Ann Storck, Betty Weaver, Jane Lemley, Katherine Davis, Mary Ladwig, Cornelia SOPHOMORES Krug, Mary Storck, Helen Fortney, Jessie Wolverton, Ruth Walsh, Mary Betty Miller, Jean Hardman, Gwendolyn Fleshman, lona Warren, Frances Rus Edgar, Anne Davis FRESHMEN Condry, Margaret Lane, Jane Hill. Nancy PLEDGES Hanifan, Eloise Weekley, Mary Sue Reed, Jane Ballantyne, Virginia McQuilkin, Mary Jane Shockley. Ruth Parriot, Sarah Thayer, Katherine Anne mr - . vpS ' ' - 1934 SENIORS Catherine Aspinall Trixie Peters Carolyn Brown Bryanna Burton Alta Frances Judy Thelma Rexroad Louise Rietz Anna White Mary Louise Woodhul Lilhan Carte JUNIORS Virginia Carper Ernestine Cooper Jean Maxwell Helen Rife Elizabeth Kreger Susie Peters Mary Louise Jester SOPHOMORES Claire Dickinson Mary Dickinson Anna Laura Harden Eleanor Hayes Barbara Powell Helen Jackson FRESHMEN Elizabeth Carroll Jean DeBerry Anna Lorentz Hall Eleanor Meadows Frances Plumley Jean Spray Elizabeth Wise Martha Jane Williams PLEDGES Geraldine Buckley Dorothy Comley Ruth Stockdale Lyda Morris Rebecca Dailey DELTA Page Two Iliindrcd ICifihlcrn GAM ViA 1933 Page Tiro Ilundred Nineteen SENIORS Trixie Peters Carolyn Brown Eva Claire Hawley Elizabeth Miller Emily Gray Hoffman Geraldine Hudgins Marjorie Skid more Jane Jester Catherine Cramer JUNIORS Catherine Aspinal Bryanna Burton Lillian Carte Louise Rietz Anna White Thelma Rexroad SOPHOMORES Virginia Carper Ernestine Cooper June Donahue Mildred Petty Mary Louise Jester Elizabeth Kreger Beverly Lowe Jean Maxwell Mary Welshans Mary Louise WoodhuU INITIATES Marie Baumgardner Evelyn Dailey Claire Dickinson Mary Dickinson Eleanor Hayes Anna Laura Harden Susie Peters Barbara Pow ell Billy Shultz PLEDGES Sally Axtell Kista Ferrell Pearl Fulton Martha Hocking Alta Frances Judy Mary Louise Robinson Jenny Waddell J ' W 1934 GAM ViA SENIORS Boyer, Bruce Davis, Lucille Doolittle, Mary MacDonald, Mae Musgrave, Vivian Smoyer, Mary Catherine JUNIORS Andrick, Evah Bradley, Mary Edna Tucker, Ruth Cooke, Mary C. SOPHOMORE Moore, Mary Virginia FRESHMEN Fleming, Nellie Hassner, Margaret Littman, Cecelia Littman, Gazelle Stewart, Rosalia Toge Two Hundred Twcnii DUI EETTA 1933 Page Two Hundred Twenty-one SENIORS Ahern. Virginia Dorr, Irene JUNIORS Davis, Lucille Doolittle, Mary MacDonald, Mae Martin, Mary Margaret Swisher, Marie SOPHOMORES Andrick, Evah Bradley, Mary Edna Tucker, Ruth FRESHMEN Moore, Mary Virginia my- 1934 SENIORS Chitw ood, Elizabeth Crawford, Gene Fleming, Carolyn Hamilton, Alice Preston, Margaret Ramage, Eleanor Welch, Mary Fergusson, Dora Kelly, Sara JUNIORS Ballengee, Sara Boor, Melrose Cox, Evelyn Fultz, Daisy Grumbein, Mary L. Hunger, Jane Laughlin, Marguerite Partlow, Virginia Barnes, Ruth Callahan, Laura Kerlin, Constance SOPHOMORES Crawford, Alice Duffy, Virginia Gaydosh, Marie Howard, Jane Richey, Guida Stemple, Alice West, Jane Hoblitzell, Lucy Ingram, Betty Jane Thompson, Mary FRESHMEN Armstrong, Barbara Armstrong, Roberta Chapman, Mary E. Bishop, Martha Davis, Elizabeth Kunst, Mary McEnteer, Carolyn Rogers, Mary H. Stemple, Margaret PLEDGES Burns, Margaret French, Mary Harle ss, Eleanor Hoard, Eleanor Jones, Josephine Kelly. Alice Prichard, Emily Thornton. Helen Wilmore, Nancy Wilshire, Jean i iPPA rAP ' 0 i? J 9 m ,k I ' agc Tiro Hundred Twenty-two VA GAMA 1933 Payc Two Hundred Twenty-three SENIORS Holliday, Virginia Lee, Estous Mitchell, Carolyn Moss, Florence Scanlon, Mary Rebecca Shonlc, Virginia Cox, Marie Wilfong, Margaret JUNIORS Chit wood, Elizabeth Crawford, Gene Fleming, Carolyn Hamilton, Alice Loving, Frances Preston, Margaret Ramage. Eleanor Welch. Mary SOPHOMORES Ballengee, Sarah Berge, Marjorie Cox, Evelyn Fultz, Daisy Grumbein, Mary Louise h Iunger, Jane Dower, Louise Boor, Melrose Laughlin, Marguerite Partlow, Virginia Rolland, Sara FRESHMEN Duffy, Virginia Gaydosh, Marie Howard, Jane Richey, Guida Stemple, Alice West, Jane A-it ' j £ ' ..,i 1934 SENIORS Kuykendall. Susan Bartholomew. Elizabeth Burdette, Edna Stephenson, Juanita Hannum, Kathryne Ireland, Kathryn Erd, Theodora Mullens, Virginia JUNIORS Tidier, Hazel Crewe, Roberta Goldsboro, Loretta SOPHOMORES Chittum. Mildred PLEDGES Power, Ruth Hughes, Dorothea Dague, Blanche Ha r twig, Katherine Robinson, Ruth Sheets, Genevieve Simms, Ruth Tillis, Marjorie McBerty, Donetta Stewart, Nondas Arthur, Dorothy Wegerich, Edith Dlil LAi . ' A Tiro Hundred Tirentyfoiir AiU 1933 Tiro Hundred Twenty-five SENIORS McClung, Helen McCoy, Elizabeth McDaniel, Mary A. Roberts, Pauline JUNIORS Kuykendall, Susan Hannum, Kathryn Bartholomew, Elizabeth Era, Theodora Ireland, Kathryn Stephenson, Juanita Gathers, Mary Jane SOPHOMORES Crewe, Roberta Tidier, Hazel PLEDGES Chittum, Mildred Chittum, Margaret Workman, Louise Mullens, Virginia Wildman, Irene Evans, Helen Flowers, Rose Marie Sharp, Anne ::-3S .. ' ' At - i5;S ' ' ■ ■ ' 1934 SENIORS Wilson, Margaret Cottrell. Mary E. Furbee. Martha Fromme, Jean McClure, Marian Stevens, Dorothy England. Marjorie Musgrave, Sally Lou Upton, Dorothy Holt, Jane Huey, Elizabeth Siple, Mary E. White, Roberta JUNIORS Campbell, Vivian Berthy, Kathleen Frantz, Marian Geisey, Margaret Nutter, Mary E. Cunningham, Joann SOPHOMORES Johnson, Katherine Duval, Edna Bass, Dorothy Baker, Mary Jane Crowell, Virginia Fraser, Alma FRESHMEN Hastings, Eleanor Collier, Mildred Handlan, Jean Rightmire, Jean Ashworth. Dorothy PLEDGES Pixler, Genevieve Henkel, Elizabeth Baer, Jane Leith, Henrietta Mockler, Eleanor PI EETA Page Two Uiindrcd Twcnti six Plil 1933 Fdf r Tiro TTinidml TwruUf-acvcn SENIORS Danielson, Gonell Howard, Elizabeth Wilbourne, Margaret Edwards, Elizabeth Cochran, Regina Gibson, Virginia Meanor, Elizabeth Orton, Jean McCIure, Jane Kahle, Mary Wade. Elizabeth Wade, Jean JUNIORS England, Marjorie Carson, Betty Fromme, Jean Cottrell. Mary E. Upton, Dorothy B. McClure, Marian Muagrave, Sally Lou Wilson, Margaret White, Roberta Stevens, Dorothy Haller, Nell Holt, Jane SOPHOMORES Cunningham, Joann Hughes, Helen Campbell. Vivian Frantz. Marian Brown, Barbara Nutter, Mary E. FRESHMEN Duval, Edna Johnson, Katherine Bass, Dorothy Kent, Mary G. Jones, Evelyn Eraser, Alma :,jS ' -•i - ' .. ' hW .:iS ....■ ' i .. j ii fp?r.- 1934 SENIORS Matthews, Gladys Newell, May E. Knight, Genevieve Spitz, Irene Bertie, Rayma Wilson, Uene Sharp, Glenna Hannah, Laura Thornhill, Margaret L. Kennedy, Melba JUNIORS King, Mary Belle Morris, Margaret SOPHOMORES Jackson, Susan Cunningham, Eleanor Friend, Leota FRESHMEN Newell, Pearl Rhodes. Ruth THETA Pdi r Tiro Hundred Ticcnty-cit hl IJP$IL€N 1933 I ' afic Tiro II mid red Ticnitij-nine SENIORS Smith, Virginia Peaslee, Ethel Sharp, Glenna Thorniey, Ruth JUNIORS Matthews, Gladys Newell, May E. Knight, Genevieve Spitz, Irene Bertie. Rayma Wilson, llene Thornhill, Margaret SOPHOMORES King, Mary FRESHMEN Friend, Leota Cunningham, Eleanor Newell, Pearl , ,Jif ... ii Pai f Tii-o lliiiidrctl Tliirlii SIGMA DELTA TAL NATIONAL FRATERNITY FOR JEWISH WOMEN OMICRON CHAPTER Established: February, 1934 Colors: Case-Au-Lait and Old Blue Helen Schuchat President Lillian Koslow Vice President Minna Finn Secretary Sara Nach Treasurer Ruby 1. Goldstein Sylvia F. Finn Dorothy Siegel Regina Piclcus Bernice V. Steckler Gladys G. Friend Zelda B. Stein Lillian S. Koslow Helen Schuchat Sara Nach Sylvia Cohen Minna Finn Sylvia B. Klein Page Two Hundred Thirty-one 5K1 ' ' - Fage Tiro ITiiiidicd Thirty-tKO Organizations 1 INDEX Tau Beta Pi Sphinx Scabbard and Blade Le Foyer La Tertulia Home Economics Club English Club Monticola Staff Monticola Publications Board Journaliers Mountain Kappa Kappa Psi Fi Batar Cappar Mountaineer Week Team Womans Athletic Association Y. W. C. A. Chi Sigma Delta iiCN€CACIE$ .j.ci ' ' ' - IW .■.LiiJ ' ' TAU EETA PI WEST VIRGINIA ALPHA CHAPTER Honorary Engineering Fraternity OFFICERS J. G. HENDERSON President W. E. HAUGHT - Vice President W. L. WILSON Corresponding Secretary J. I. CROWTHER Recording Secretary J. F. ROSS Treasurer E. L. FALCK Cataloger C. H. Gather G. P. Boomsliter W. W. Hodge W. A. Koehler R. P. Davis FRATRES IN FACULTATE C. R. Jones A. H. Forman M. C. Holmes S. P. Burke L. L. Amidon FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE J. B. Sutton H. W. Speiden W. L. Cottle, Jr. L. C. Swing POST-GRADUATES E. J. Niehaus A. P. Haught P. G. Schwender SENIORS J. G. Henderson J. I. Crowther J. H. Edgell E. L. Faick W. E. Haught J. F. Ross W. L. Wilson H. E. W. Burnside C. L. Anderson G. H. Baker R. R. Beall J. E. Darrah A. Grimal R. Marshall J. W. D Borror G. L. Mann J. A. Romano L. L. Friend, Jr. E. Ireland P. C. McKIyeen JUNIORS J. F. Millan J. Pomykata W. H. Reger F. W. Shutko L. A. Winter Tape Two ITiindrcd Thirtii-i ' i.r Tau Beta Pi fraternity was founded at Lehigh University in 1885. It is the oldest and the most representative of the honorary engineering so- cieties, and it is the only one at West Virginia University. Its purpose is to mark in a fitting manner those who have conferred honor upon their Alma Mater by distinguished scholarship and exemplary character, or by their attainments as alumni. Distinguished scolarship is not considered the sole criterion, although it is the primary requisite for admission. Alpha Chapter of West Virginia was formed from the one local Theta Psi fraternity, and was installed in 1922. Colors: Seal Brown and White Titge Two Hundred Thirty-seven SPHINX George Harris Healey Emperor Charles Manning , Scribe John J. Davisson Steward Stanley E. Dadisman James Holt Charles W. Connor Kenneth Watson Edward M. Krieger Joe Varner John Homberg Hale Watkins Fred Sawyers Thomas Hite John Kizer Charles Hoult J. Gibson Henderson Ben Exley James Campbell William Murray John J. Davisson Thomas Currie Fogc Two Uundrcd Thirtij-ciijhi Tfiyc Two Ifntidred Thirty-nine ..j 0 .... ' ... ' ' ....;i feiSi ' SCACCACD AND CLADE HONORARY MILITARY FRATERNITY John Adkins Captain Arthur Swisher First Lieutenant Marvin Stewart Second Lieutenant Roger Scott Secretary Harry E. Sturms Treasurer Wilhs Tetrick Sergeant at Arms Russell H. Cracraft John Thornton Isadora Scott James Darrah Ralph W. Hemington Ralph W. Haines Harry Sturms Elmer Parsons Fizer Chester Shuman How ard Shaffer Alfred Stew art Wilson Caskey Fred Wilson Jackson Jarvis Robert Summers Arch Daw son Charles Armistead Joel Smith Norman Willey Vagc Two Hundred Forln ll b I ' agc Two Hundred Forty-one LE rcrEC HONORARY FRENCH SOCIETY Genevieve Monti President Irene A. Spitz Vice President Susan P. Kuykendall Secretary Katherine D. Lemley — .. Treasurer Doris Rogers Sentinel Dr. and Mrs. Charles Mitrani Advisors Sarah M. Israel Edith Peairs Marguerite L. Laughlin Helen Houck C. A. Peairs Wentworth S. Morris Anne E. Sharp Holden McClung Mary Louise Woodhull Mary L. Arnett Julia Mayfield Hazel Tidier Phillip H. Varner Vivienne CoUett Jessie Brown Fage Two Hundred Fortii-two LA TECTULIA Frank Herrera President McLain Wilson - Vice President Joe Luchinii Secretary Donald Hare Treasurer Jessie Brown Russel Bland Mae Newell Mary Louise Woodhull Alfred E. Stewart Frank Pietro John Easley Felix Espada Phillip Mascioli Marion Llewelyn Faye Two Hundred Forty-three ,.:0 , .,. .. ..:, .,..: ' .. 4th Row: Shepherd, Shaffer, Moore, Porterfield 3rd Row: Hill, Michael, LeMasters, Flenniken, Miller, Elmore, Rinehart 2nd Row; Watkins, Jester, D. Watkins, Smith, Jackson, Slater 1st Row: Hirsohn, Danenberg, Martin, Wilmore, Shaffer, Judy, Allan, Smith J€iJCNALBEC$ Robert F. Shaffer President James B. Moore Secretary Blair Hill - Treasurer Graham Andrews James Shepherd James Flenniken Sidney Hirsohn George Michael Ellis Lea Gene Elmore William Shaffer William Miller Herman Lemasters Herman Porterfield William M. Smith Paul Martin MATRIX Aha Frances Judy President Ruby Jane Martin Vice President Eleanor Ramage Secretary Mary Louise Jester _ Treasurer Mary Ann Watkins Louise Traugh Frances Allan Mary Agnes Maxwell Susan Jackson Vivian Campbell Ethel Swing Margaret Preston Dorothy Watkins Jane Ellen Grimes Susie Peters Blanche Wharton Esther Danenberg Nancy Wilmore Virginia L. Smith Cornelia Slater Alice Crawford Fiiijc Two Hundred Forty-four l M ' A r ENGLISH CLUE Susan Kuykendall - Head Mary K. Ballard Clerk Betty Carson - Watch Sponsor Dr. David Dale Johnson Susan R. Smith Alexandria Endsley Elsie B. Cole Elizabeth Ann Chitwood Gladys Hunter Helen F. Houck Marie H. Sturgiss tela S. Wright Jessie F. Brown Edith Peairs Charles E. Vanvoorhis Esther Newhouse William E. Neely George Healey Pngc Two Hundred Forty-five . i ' w -- THE MCNTICCLA EDITORIAL STAFF Ralph W. Hemington Editor-in-Chief Ethel Swing Senior Editor Vivian Campbell Junior Editor Alta Frances Judy Organizations (women) Fred Barrick Organizations (Men) Alene Henderson Features Marsh B. Cwynn Athletic Editor Robert Creel Intramurals John L. Hesse Military Editor William Mockler Honoraries Thomas Hite Advisor BUSINESS STAFF A. Ernest Malone Business Manager Thomas Bartlett Thomas Sexton I a ■ n I ,-,.. f - Assistant Business Managers Lieorge Wilson Robert McKinley J William Smith Advertising Manager S. M. Gordon Assistant Advertising Manager Pdcjc Tiro Ilnndrcd Forly sLc Puffe Two Hundred Forty-seven THE MCNTICCLA PUCLICATICN C€ACD p. I. Reed FACULTY MEMBERS O. P. Chitwood E. E. Horack STUDENT MEMBERS Ralph W. Hemington A. Ernest Malone Charles C. Wise Piiflr Two nuinlred Fortij-eight MCUNTAIN George H. Healey Summit John O. Kizer Trail John Morris Cache Arthur Swisher - Guide William E. Neely Pass George Guthrie Trapper Peter Puglia John Morris George Guthrie David Tucker Benny Thomas Hale Watkins Orren Jones Isadore Scott Joe Bush Henry Schrader Forbes Heihle Ellis Lea Mel Founds George Allen John Kizer George Seibert Arthur Swisher Fred Schweitzer George Healey Charles Hoult Denny Scott Piipc Two IJttiulrrd Forty-nine ■iCME CCCNCMIC§ CLUE Waneta Umbel President Janet Reed Vice President Evaline Miller Secretary Jane Hartman Treasurer Genevieve Knight Ruth Henderson Harriett Ellison Marjorie England Margaret Baker Mary R. McDonald Mary Sue Weekly Margaret Wilson Josephine Hardesty Waneta Umbel Ruth Stockdale Evah Andrick Iva Montoney Puffc Two ITiindird Fiflif Piif c Tim Hundred Fiflji-onc Robert Douthat President Bernard McGregor - Vice President Ivan Hall Treasurer George Hubbs Secretary Wilson P. Shortridge, Jr Editor Ben Exley Earl Mahaney John Rinaldi Robert Douthat Bernard MacGregor Ivan Hall Marion Jarrett Wilson Shortridge Stanley Eppstein Fage Two Hundred Fiftii-tico THE MOUNTAINEER VEEr TEAM EVERY YEAR OUTSTANDING W. V. U. STUDENTS JOURNEY TO THE VARIOUS HIGH SCHOOLS OF THE STATE AND EXPLAIN THE ADVANTAGES THAT THE UNIVERSITY OF WEST VIRGINIA CAN OFFER TO THE YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN OF WEST VIRGINIA. Hale Watkins Captain John O. Kizer Manager Sheldon Haynes Isadore Scott Alfred Stewart Arthur Swisher David Tucker Tiigc Tim Uiindrcd Tiftij-thrce John O. Kizer William Miller David Sutton Ralph W. Haines John Morris Charles Manning Denny Scott Hale Watkins John Davisson - ' ... ii WCMAN S ATHLETIC ASSCCIATICN Minna Finn President Gladys Wasmuth Vice President Julia Eckert - - Secretary Gwen Hardman - Treasurer Eleanor Hinkle Intramural Manager Mabel Casto Minor Activities Ethel Swing - Publicity SPORTS MANAGERS Margaret Chittum 1 Volleyball Rose Funk Basketball Jane Hesse - Swimming Margaret Covert Baseball Jean Sharp Hiking Patty Simpson Archery Elizabeth Marshall . , Dancing Par c Two nuiidrcd Fifty-four « Mf v y £ Pof c Two Hundred Fifty-five l y. w. c. A. Margaret Wilbourne President Helen Schuchat Vice President Vivian Musgrave Secretary Mary Louise Woodhull Treasurer Pope Two Uitrtdrcd Fifty-six % C If! I 1 f ' 9 P D k ( ' f c Th!0 Hundred Fifty-seven ._,, . ...,,MW ' . .J.i ' PI ICATAC CAPPAP Richard Waddell Loyal High Chain Puller Ernest Roberts Vice L. H. C. P. Charles Eskey Keeper of the Conklin John Morris Keeper of the Hoard Neil J. Fallon Keeper of the Forelegs Albert Gwynn Keeper of the Hindlegs Thomas Hite Cheerleader George H. Healey Organist Douglas Voorhees Isaac Maxwell Jess Weiner George Guthrie Charles Wolfe Benny Thomas Joe Bush Bud Seibert Eck Allen Richard Waddell Joe Stydahar Rex Talbot Forbes Hiehle Fred Wilson George Bailey William Ruck William Klug Dick Chittum Charles Caldwell Tod Goodwin David Cuppett Denny Scott William Miller John Clifford Charles Eskey Charles Hoult Jerry Nyhan Thomas Hite Hale Watkins Lou Fidler Ernest Malone Mel Founds Fred Schweitzer Page Two Hundred Fifty-eight cm $ie H i DELTA HONORARY ECONOMICS FRATERNITY William Smith .. President Thomas Lewis Vice President Julian Crist Secretary Frank Pietro Treasurer K. D. Hutchinson Adviser Blair Hill Frank Pietro Phillip Mascioli William Smith Mel Founds Julian Crist Fred Schweitzer Gerard Franz David Tucker Berlin Reay William Hopper Page TiLo Uundred Fifty-nine 3i «p Tagc Two Hundred Sixt) Cf)e iWubtipcola VOL. XXXXXXX BEAUTIFUL SPRING OF 1934 NO. 13 SEAL Labor omnia vincit at CoUegii West Virgini, even if Veritati Arcum Scientia Donat Published by Dean Noerbetter and Prexy Turnerdown Sabraton, W. Va. Entered as third or fourth Class mailing matter at the Federal Building according to the Volstead Act of 1918. Piifie Two Emxdred Sixty-one .■t ' £W ' ■0 ... - .. . ., ■■■, RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS To show that we are not as crooked as we seem to be, but are instead a damsite worse, we submit the follow ing report on the finances of this volume: Receipts National Advertising $3,800,00 Local Advertising Cash, 6.79 (Season pass to Met., two hair cuts and four shampoos from Burkes, three Whiskey glasses from Morgantown Glass Company. ) Sale of Five Senior Cuts to Who ' s Who Adding Eight Degrees to Senior Writeups: Three M. A. ' s at $1.50 Four Ph. B s at $1.00 One Bus. Ad. at $0.10 Sale of Books to Students Ditto to Alumus Ditto to Deutscher Verein 37,000,000 marks Graduating Two Seniors 50.00 Lending Elizabeth Moore Hall to Chi Omegas for House Picture Using two jokes from Maniac Contribution from a Friend 4. 4. 0. 165. 5. 0. 10. 9. 0. 50 00 10 00 00 08 00 70 26 .91 Total $4,067.34 Vdfir Tinn TTiinihfil Sixty tifo RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS Disbursements Printing The Monticola 1934 Fountain Pen for Editor Ink for Fountain Pen for Editor Carfare to Pitt game Pitt Game Carfare Back Salaries to Staff General Expenses New Frigidaire for Theta Chi House Maintenance of Alpha Xi Back Porch Two Dozen Ping Pong Balls (Beta House) Life Insurance for Advertizing Manager Paper for Editorial Staff Ditto for Business Staff West Liberty Summer School Fee -$2, To Muddycola Editor for not Publishing Certain Com- munications 425.00 4.00 .09 7.28 2.50 7.28 13.94 500.00 682.53 380.38 1.75 29.88 5.12 5.12 .33 2.12 Total $4,067.32 Receipts $4,067.34 Disbursements 4,067.32 Profit .02 Postage for Sending This to Auditor ..$0,000.02 Net Profit $0,000.00 Fn jc Two Hundred Si.rlii-lhrec ., 0 ' P(i( c Two Jliiiulrcd Sij-li foiir THE RUBAIYAT OF A JUNIOR We are a Junior, Even of the Class of 1935 We are brimming over with College Spirit We believe in Attending Convocation (When it is the other classes That Attend;) We believed in paddling the frosh When we were a sophomore. (Now we are opposed to it. It is a brutal custom;) We believe in a good scrap Between the lower classes (When it doesn ' t cost us anything;) We believe that the sophomore Should do all in his power To keep the freshman In his place. If he doesn ' t he is Yellow. If he does, he is A rowdy. A year ago there was a fight In our good old tow n. It was a good fight — We enjoyed it; We forced the freshmen to it. But — Some property was destroyed ; That was rowdyism. . . . The fight is long since over. Everyone had his money ' s worth. The frosh have paid up-partly — Like men. But we love our college so much That we de cline to pay up. For that would make people think That the great Class of 1935 Approved of such rowdyism. We are a Junior Brimming over with college spirit: Hurrah for the old college And — the almighty dollar — Money talks. So let the eagle scream -,:;;() ? Piige Tiro IJiinilied Sixty-five ,! ' iffi « «« ' - HOODOO U. SPOSE Emma what? Emma Kootenuf, she replied. I ' ll say so. My name ' s Obadiah. Obadiah Adore-u, he answered. Then the tall lad chimed in. ' And, fair one, what do they call you? My name ' s Jemima. Jemima Kissin-u. And yours? Archa Archa what? Archa Gonna-kiss-me? Fresh thing! Let ' s go to the movies, Obadiah suggested. The plan seemed to meet with the approval of all. They entered the theatre and were directed to seats. you Cicero? Jemima questioned The usher turned. Pardon me, madam; did address me? No, she retorted. I said Cicero We-sit-in. After the show was over, they left the theatre. When on the street again, Archa Turned to Jemima and asked, Do you know Olga? Olga who? she bit. Olga Home-with-u-if-u-want-me-to. He did. The entered her home and went into the parlor. They sat on the sofa and then she turned the lights a little lower. Do you know Lena? she sighed. No, Lena who? Lena Little-closer, dear. He did. Page Two Iliinilrcd Siity-six OFFICIAL COLLITCH OF WEST VIRGINIA FACULTY STUDENT UFE REQUIREMENTS FOR GRADUATION COURSES OF INSTRUCTION J ' tiffc Tiro TIuiuli-(J Sixtii-nrren f ' JI ' A in !? SOME FACULTY All names listed below are arranged according to age? Wit the exception of the head usher, and he ' s a gay young fella. HEEL TURNERDOWN Head Usher, and Professor of Chinese Literature A. B. Star City ROLLING A. STONE Head of the Department of Handshaking and Profane Languages N. G. Arthurdale BLACK A. NEYE Moosic A. B. Star City High School SAYR U. GOOD Professor for Keeping Athletes Out of Games B. S. Sabraton University JESSE JAMES Bookstore R. F. D. From Home WELL WELL WELL Rock Breaking. (Little Ones from Big Ones) 198746 Sing Sing U. OTTA KNOWER BETTER Bugbear of Women D. D. Pinkerton Detective Agency Various others, but it wouldn ' t do to say much, for the writer wants to graduate someday. Anyhow, if you don ' t believe that we have a good school, write any of the above, and then don ' t come. Tage Two Eimdred Si.rtii-ei(iht REQUIREMENTS FOR GRADUATION Degrees — Third and thirty-second are offered at West Virginia. Don ' t take the word offered too literally, because it is nothing more than a blind. You have to work, brother, you have to work. Maybe we should say students offer to get the degrees. Anyway, get one if you can. FOR THE THIRD DEGREE: 1 . Sanskirt 1 hours 2. Agriculture 16 hours (Milking, Horse-shoeing, Cow Valet, Pilot) 3. Domestic languages 1 4 hours (Profane, Slang, English) 4. Necking 60 hours (Petting, Parking, Movie-going) 5. Academic Work I hour FOR THE THIRTY-SECOND DEGREE: No one has ever got this far, so we don ' t know yet v fhat to ask them to do. However, we feel sure that double the above will be nearly O. K., with the exception of the academic work, and we will cut that in half. MAJORS AND MINORS: Students must pick a major and two minors from the following group of subjects: Sleeping Sleeping Sleeping Sleeping Sleeping Sleeping Eating Eating Eating Eating Eating Eating Classes will take care of the sleeping, and Comuntzis will be glad to take care of the eating. fage Two Hundred Sixty-nine STUDENT ACTIVITIES Athletics — It is the purpose of the work in Physical Education to aid the students in school to keep their bodies in the best possible physical condition. To this end we have hired a competent director, who takes the roll wunct a week, and flunks you if you have pneumonia and can ' t come. We have a darn good baseball team, but they can ' t or won ' t get any easy games, and besides the Director says that Pittsburgh has a team and that isn ' t so far away as to make you go w ithout seeing a big league game every once in a while. We are particularly proud of our Field House on account of the number of Dumbells that hang out there. It is very well equipped, with a fine large swimming pool in the basement (ask Hirsohn) only you must watch diving when there isn ' t any water in the pool. Student Council — Another good joke. They really tried their best to do something, but so far the powers that be have done a lot of vetoing. However, the spring elections surely furnish a subject for fights and hard feeling. The Main purpose so far has been to wash dishes, and it seems funny that no one ever bothers to interfere with that phase in the least. Literary Societies — Relics of the past! A few faithfuls still get to meet- ings once in a while, but beyond that we dare not say. Every student is urged not to become a member because you are sure to get hooked for a dollar or so in the spring for your picture in the Muddycola. Either that, or you will get finned for not being on the program. Collitch Volunteer Orchestra and Choir and Glee Club — These organ- izations had a concert in Pisgee this past winter, and it was very well at- tended, especially by the student body. The Pisgee University Officials re- port few casulties from the visitation although some of their fraternities reported rituals missing. Fraternities The following fraternities are represented at West Vir- ginia Collitch: Beta Alpha Tau, Sigma Sigma Sigma Sigma and Sigma and ten or twelve others of practically the same names. There are a number of rules governing these clubs which are listed below: Puge Two Hundred Scvcntu 1. All persons asking to join fraternities must be in CoUitch. 2. Fraternities will supply their own weapons and ammunition for all Campus Fights. 3. Before being initiated all children must have their A. B. degrees. 4. After 1934 freshmen will not be permitted to room in the various houses, because we would not need the new dormitories if they did. Taking it all in all, fraternities are a good thing, because they make one keep one ' s head up, for fear of being stabbed in the back. R. O. T. C. Collitch Band — This competent group is under the able direction of the best band master ever to come out of West Virginia, he told me so himself. The main purpose of this band is to get the players out of military; they can ' t do a proper squads right so they put them in the band, whether they can play or not doesn ' t make any difference. The Band fur- nishes noise at all the football games in this district of the country providing it is there. If you already know how to play an instrument, you will be able to still play one after you have been in the band for a few years. Fi Batar Cappar — This is not, as the name implies, an organiza- tion based on the general plan of the Ku Klux Klan. Really, Oswald, it is simply the name for the group of students who are taking History and who want to mask their handshaking. Clever don ' t you think? It, I mean the organization, is under the direction of the head of the department of profane languages, who not only picks the activities but also the brand of whiskey. Very good, if you want to pass Ennis ' s History courses. French Club — Some such an organization as the one above but not nearly so open. For instance, you only need to come to the meetings to belong, and really the handshaking is very open. Anyway, you are sure to get something to eat if you attend them meetings. Page Two Iliindied Seventy-one Page Two Rundrcd Scvcntj -two ADVERTISEMENTS BUY AT THE STORES WHERE MONTICOLA ADS DIRECT YOU Vage Two Hundred Seventy-three When Buying Mention the IVIonticola Ad DEPENDABLE DAIRY PRODUCTS Sanitary Milk and Ice Cream Co. The Home Plant MORGANTOWN, WEST VIRGINIA REINER CORE A Man ' s Shop SUITS MADE TO YOUR INDIVIDUAL MEASURE AT and The Distinctive Stylepark Hat at $5 LOWER HIGH STREET YEARS OF PLEASING SERVICE We point with genuine pride to more than eighteen years of satisfactory service to West Virginia students and alumni. onnEr MASTER CLEANER 2025 University Avenue Phone 1234 473 High Street Nationwide BUS SERVICE FREQUENT SERVICE TO PITTSBURGH Chartered Coaches for all Occasions LOWEST RATES MORGANTOWN DEPOT Warner Theatre BIdg. Phone 2599 BLUE RIDGE LINES PJjotocraftersi Official Photographers for the MONTICOLA 1925 - 1926 - 1927 - 1928 - 1929 1930 - 1931 - 1932 - 1934 40 1 2th Street 22 1 Pleasants Street Wheeling, W. Va. Morgantown, W. Va. Robert G.jWilboura WHOLESALE PRODUCE Morgantown, W. Va. Thcitias Cleaner$9 Inc. 231 Pleasants Street, Morgantown, W. Va. DEPENDABLE DRY CLEANING DONE ESPECIALLY BY EXPERTS IN OUR PLANT BUILT FOR THE PURPOSE AND MODERNLY EQUIPPED. Phone 22 for delivery service. Plant 196 Chestnut Street Morgantown, W. Va. k ■Mljli- . ' tJKj ' L_l ' ■Bi l P ! wlMmk Hetel Mcrgan (Only Fireproof Hotel in the City) BEAUTIFUL ROOMS AND EXCELLENT CUISINE WE CATER ESPECIALLY TO PRIVATE LUNCHEONS. DINNER PARTIES, BAN- QUET ' S. AND DINNER DANCES W( DO OUR puir Lertifiedx THROUGH SERVICE AID QUALITY SINCE 1906 • j ' - :i.i;. my ,- ' l pr r- ( ] - -l ' ■ ' ■i |; j !?9:sw=¥w?  ■-« ■ Congratulaticmg anb (§ooti Huck METROPOLITAN THEATRE Home of the Annual Monticola Revue Make Your Home More Liveable With Attractive Furnishings, On Our Convenient Payment Plan HEADQUARTERS FOR oya: FURNITURE CO. 1110-12-14-16 University Ave. Morgantown, W. Va. Grunow Electric Refrigerators Sellers Kitchen Cabinets Bigelow Carpets and Rugs Bedroom, Living Room and Dining Room Furniture White Star Gas Ranges Pointer Coal Ranges Gold Seal Congoleum Maytag Gasoline and Electric Washers Phiico Radios ' The Store That Invites Comparison i ONLY CAR UNDER $2,000 WITH A V-TYPE EIGHT-CYLINDER ENGINE CENTRAL AUTOMOBILE CORP ' N. Morgantown ' s Ford Dealer Phone 76 126 Kirk Street Get a Demonstration — Draw Your Own Conclusion Morgantown Hardware Co. IF IT ' S HARDWARE WE HAVE IT Telephone 339 High Street 0. J. Morrison Department Stores Co. A West Virginia Organization CHARLESTON, W. VA. MORGANTOWN, W. VA. CLARKSBURG, W. VA. HUNTINGTON, W. VA. FAIRMONT, W. VA. WEST UNION, W. VA. LOGAN, W. VA. CLENDENIN, W. VA. RIPLEY, W. VA. SPENCER, W. VA. ASSOCIATED STORES Emerson ' s Grocery 229 Pleasant Street Phones 166-167 GROCERIES — FISH — DELICATESSENS Delivery Service To Gladden A Woman ' s Heart To Cheer A Friend In Sadness SEND FLOWERS 235 Spruce Street Established 1916 Flowers By Wire To All Parts of the World EsUblished 1900 O, • THE STUDENT HEADQUARTERS FOR GOOD FOOD Excellent Sandwiches and Light Lunches Delicious Refreshments Home Made Confections, Pastries and Ice Cream OUR REPUTATION WAS BUILT UPON THE FOUR CORNER WORDS! % Where Dad Took His Girl -J ' % Student Headquarters for Music Since 1906 S. A. PHILLIPS MUSIC CO. VICTOR — COLUMBIA — BRUNSWICK RECORDS SHEET MUSIC AND SUPPLIES 235 Walnut Street Phone 695 THE MCTCC INN OFFERS YOU COMPLETE ONE-STOP SERVICE Brakes Lubrication Electrical Service Tires Battery Service Windshield Wipers Fuel Pumps 966 University Avenue Tel. 1595 Morgantown, W. Va. AT THE s CAFE PT. MARION, PA. The Greatest Selections Of Beverages in the State. = A RENDEZVOUS FOR FOLKS WHO CARE KROPFF BROS. —JEWELERS— Metropolitan Theatre Building Morgantown, W, Va. THE BOOK EXCHANGE If You Want to Buy a Duck See JOE PENNER If You Want to Buy a Book See THE BOOK EXCHANGE 152 Willey Street Phone 2439-M CO-ED ' S FASHION CENTER 417 High Street Morgantown, West Virginia STADIUM BARBER SHOP EXPERT WORK A TRIAL WILL CONVINCE YOU J. R. Thomas, Prop. ELECTRICITY Does It BETTER There ' s hardly a task electrical servants cannot lighten. And the minutes they save in small jobs plus the hours they save on major tasks add new time for leisure and recreation. At every opportunity, use electricity, tt will do your work quicker, easier and cheaper. Monongahela System Electricity Is Your Cheapest Servant GENERAL OFFICES: FAIRMONT, WEST VIRGINIA More Than a Popular Men ' s Store — An Institution at West Virginia University HARRY GOLDSMITH CLOTHIER AND HABERDASHER Varsity-Town Suits and Coats Exclusively Harry Has ' Em Metropolitan Theatre Bldg. Morgantown, West Virginia The Fashionable Shoe Store WHERE QUALITY REIGNS Where Mother and Dad Bought Their Shoes Established in 1910 ROGERS THE BIG DRUG STORE Phone 2191 The MONTICOLA from ihe ■press of Wit iHorgantotDtt printing anb Pinbing Cotnpanp Printers . ' . Binders . ' . Publishers PHONE 125 Kirk and Chestnut Sts. Rear of Postoffice ALUMNI DICCCT€Cy Wm. G. Conley. Attorney Charleston. W. a. Ralph Hiner - Charleston. W. ' a. Isaac Van Voorhis, Coal Operator Morgantown, W. Va. Harold M. Howell Morgantown. AV. Xa. Dr. Brinley John, M. D Morgantown, W. Va. Dr. R. C. Hager, D. D. S Alorgantown, W. Va. Dr. Earl McCue, D. D. S Morgantown, W. Va. Dr. T. C. Thompson, SI. D Morgantown. W. Va. Dr. W. H. Howell, M. D Morgantown, W. Va. Dr. W. H. Cozad, D. D. S Morgantown, W. Va. Vic Shaw, Attorney Fairmont, W. Va. Ward Lanham, Attorney Fairmont, W. Va. Lewis Johnson, Attorney Fairmont, W. Va. H. H. Rose, Attorney - Fairmont, W. Va. Lorentz Steele, Attorney Fairmont, W. Va. Al Neely, Attorney Fairmont, W. Va. Carter Jones, Attorney Fairmont, W. Va. Wm. P. Lehman, Attorney Fairmont, W. Va. Robert Pierce, Druggist Morgantown, W. Va. Dr. C. A. McEnney Morgantown, W. Va. Moore Parriot Drug Store Morgantown. W. Va. Crescent Printing Shop Morgantown, W. Va. Charles D. Minor, Equitable Life Ins. Co. of Iowa, Morgantown. W. Va. Beauty Shops Eloise Stenger, 444 High Street Morgantown, W. Va. Chicago Beauty Shop, 228 Forest Avenue Morgantown, W. Va. Helen Nixon, 472 High Street Morgantown, W. Va. AUTOGRAPHS AUTOGRAPHS AUTOGRAPHS iAtl


Suggestions in the West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) collection:

West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

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West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

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West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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