West Virginia University - Monticola Yearbook (Morgantown, WV)
- Class of 1939
Page 1 of 236
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 236 of the 1939 volume:
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. „,tll $ The 1939 MONTICOLA Published in the interests of WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY William T. Nutter, Editor Elery A. McDonald, Business Manager The ' ' S 1939 Monticola IN THE SHADOW OF WEST VIRGINIA ' S INVALUABLE POS- SESSIONS, OIL AND NATURAL gp..-GAS, STANDS WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY, PROUD TO HAVE PART IN AN INDUSTRY SO VITAL IN THE PROGRESS OF MODERN CIVILIZATION. Dedication Because of the importance of oil and natural gas to West Vir- ginia industry and because of the State ' s contributions to the world in this field, we hereby dedicate this, the 1939 MONTICOLA, to the OIL AND NATURAL GAS INDUSTRY OF WEST VIRGINIA. VmCs The first Gas Well in West Virginia, Burning Springs, Wirt County. It is still producing gas, but must be pumped to keep off water. A gas compressing station. At tiiese stations the gas is compressed, gasoline and water vapor removed and the dry gas then transmitted to points of consumption. lir - A f li i i A Gasoline Refiner At ' mtr e icimeries, the natural gas-gasoline, or petroleum, are sepa- rated into their component parts. From these — gasoline, liquified petroleum gases and numer- ous other products are obtained. The Oil and Natural Gas Industry has be a real factor in the development and prosperi of West Virginia. Oil discovered on Burning Sjorincfs Creek ir Wirt County and on the Hughes River in Ritchi County about 1860 was marketed at that time for medicinal purposes, although gas had beer discovered earlier in Kanawha County in dril ing for salt brine. The real beginning of the Ir dustry was in 1889, when a well drilled on thej Burt Farm near Mannington, produced a large quantity of oil There had been a few gas Wells drilled priof to this, but they were abandoiSed on account o the expense of finding a market, (although one- or two towns in the northern part of West Vir ginia were supplied with gas piped from Penri- sylvania. The Burt Well started the wheels o| development that in a few years spreacU many of the counties of the State. In the drilling for oil, gas wells with enormous volume were discovered. At first gas was conj sidered a liability as there was no market for it Some producers would prefer a dry hole to gas well. The number of gas wells, however, bs came greater and it was necessary to find mar-, kets, and these markets were great distances . from West Virginia and required millions of dol lars capital. The supplying of gas these grec distances was an innovation and to carry this ' out required men who had both optimism ah(! vision. Some of the early oil companies orgc ized gas companies to supply towns adjacent to the oil and gas fields in West Virginia. At that time there was neither paved high- way, automobiles, trucks, nor tractors. The We Virginia roads were dirt roads, narrow, ove£_ hills and across streams, and there were but te- bridges. Horses and oxen were used on roac that were, for the most part, impassable, except, to the men in the oil field. Pipe lines were laid m all directions to connect these gas wells to large transmission lines. Compressing statioisa were built, duplicate bnes were constructed to .- take care of emergencies, as the supply had to be continuous to consumers many of whom, were more or less timid in using gas for do- mestic purposes. Improvements of :every kind were rapidly de- veloped. New macshinery and better pipe and fittings were reqijired so that manufacturing plants were organized to produce oil fiejd_ equipment. Local men became interested and, soon the oil and gas man became a fixture ir his communit y. Drilling for gas by both the cori anies and individuals developed a pro- duction in West Virginia which led all States and the farmer (whose farm in many cases hoc n losing money) became a receiver (hey frorrfc-pi source he had not known ,« - m 1 m y r 1 M „ T ' Jfy i iJ ii ' fcjrf 1 tf H % . i v . KT J ■M. ... ? L T, Im ■1 1 w J Ss 1 - There are at the present time in West Virginia some 19,000 oil wells with an annual production of some three and one-half million barrels of oil, valued at over five million dollars, and over 11,000 producing gas wells with a total annual production of some one hundred and fifty billion cubic feet, valued at some forty-five million dollars. To operate such an industry requires many com- pressor stations, gasoline plants, oil refineries, hundreds of miles of high pres- sure pipe lines, as well as thousands of skilled workmen. Such an Industry creates taxable wealth to help provide State and County revenues. It helps make possible better schools, churches and highways. The property taxes paid by this Industry reaches 46 of the 55 counties and in some, exceeds 50 percent of the total taxes levied. In addition to property taxes the Industry pays about $2,000,000 gross sales tax. It also returns to the land owner in rentals and royalties an excess of $5,000,000 annually. West Virginia and West Virginians have played an important role in the Oil and Natural Gas Industry. The State has served as the laboratory or training ground for many of the men prominent in the development of this industry m other States. It was I. C. White, a West Virginian and State Geologist, who ,gUCCessfuUy demonstrated the application of the anticlinal theory, the most im- portant single contribution to the location of oil and gas fields. The State, through its Geological Survey located at West Virginia Univer- sity, has published and made available complete sets of reports and maps on the State that have been of inestimable value to the industry. The department of geology and engineering school keep abreast with new technique and de- velopment so as to be of service to the industry in helping solve their problems and in the preparation of students with the best possible training to carry on. The Oil and Gas Industry will be an important one in West Virginia for many years. It will, however, experience many changes in character. The oil remain- ing in the sands, will be recovered by new methods including repressuring with gas, air and water flooding. This requires new technique and procedures. Deeper and deeper wells will be drilled. This presents new problems. The Industry has met and Solved its problems before and will continue to do so in the future. Hauling :he Old Way Hauling the New Way Inside View of Machinery in Compressing Station Outside View of q Compressing Station Elizabeth Moore Hall tu jcre the woiucii siciiii — mnl the men would like to . . . pulse of the University Woodburn Tower University Library font of knowledge Oglebay Hall of the agrarian i ' r -rtrfit. m S SSS ' fiinlii g iihat little fvogs arc made of . . . Science Hall CAME SEPTEMBER 15, and seekers after higher lore trekked back to Morgantown . . . three women fainting in the registra- tion jam (traditional) at the Field House . . . Freshmen looking bewildered as fraterni- ties tossed epithets in pledge- garnering battles . . . New Prexy Lawall beaming wel- comes . . . Legs Hawley ex- udes confidence of prime year on the gridiron . . . misplaced confidence . . . Saturday, the twenty-fourth, fateful day, and the campus migrated to Pitts- burgh in a Beat Hell out of Pitt frenzy . . . Saturday p. m., long faces and short pocket- books . . . Celebrated any- way . . . First convocation . . . unior Farmers ' Week opened in Ag. college . . . VICTORY OVER WESLEY AN. Bobcats bolsters hopes of the hopeful . . . Band recaptures cup at Elkins Forest Festival . . . Undergrads trade drinks with grads in Charleston as W. and L keeps pace with the mad Mountaineers . . . More gloom . . . Jack Blair tops military heap with R. O. T. C. colonelcy . . . Kay- dets sweat and swear in iirst parade of the annum . . . Michigan State Spartans outspar Glennmen as gloom reaches consistency of cold butter . . . Frosh elect young Klebe class prexy . . . Gridders to Creighton, and belated victory . . . Beta oldclothes brawl a shoddy success . . . FOOTBALLERS TRIP YOUNGSTOWN and all is forgiven, for a week, anyway . . . Biennial head- ache, midsemesters, blights campus life . . . Moun- taineers lose to Western Reserve, descend to dog- house again . . . Louie Corson enters hall of fame with composition of an Alma Mater which clicks . . . Phi Sigs toss Nazi party (Phftttt, Hitler) as Sigma Chis dedicate new shack . . . Loss to Georgetown gridders fails to dampen Homecoming spirit . . . Pi Beta Phis and Kappa Sigs come through with Homecoming decoration cups . . . First Cadet Hop in armory — first formal of the season . . . U play- ers stage first production of the year . . . Manhattan cops Mountaineer game in N. Y. . . . Came back and squeezed out G.-W. Thanksgiving day . . . FRAT MEN DON Soup and Fish and do valiant battle with Organdy and Peach Tulle as Joe Sanders puts in tardy appearance for Men ' s Pan . . . Phi Beta Kappas initiate six . . . Engineers Ball, Hall formal attract Jitterbugs . . . Yule serenade: Bottled heat keeps up fraternity morale — and voices — in an- nual songfest . . . Leonhart, Highland, rate Rhodes scholarship finals . . . And so to home for the holi- days . .. . HERR HITLER RESENTS Phi Sigs Nazi party . . . Phi Sigs don ' t give a damn . . . Dick Stabile plays for Women ' s Pan in Armory . . . Lieut-Col. Devore dies in Washington . . . Semester exams . . . SECOND YEARLY MOB-SCENE at the Field House — less acute this time ... Sir Arthur Willert talks at convocation . . . Teke ' s toss first frat formal of the year at the Morgan . . . Farm and Home Week at Ag school floods campus . . . EIC disbands . . . Penn State Whups Varsity couriers in famous long second . . . Gals don the pants for Gold Digger ' s Ball . . . JOY REIGNS AS th ' military boys rassle to the music of Jimmie Joy and THAT vocalist . . . Cagers close season with loss to Pitt, move out of EIC cellar (applause) . . . Sigma Chi ' s go Gay Nineties in cos- tume ball . . . Kampus Kruises . . . High school lads and lassies move in for state basketball tourney at Field House . . . More midsemesters . . . Michigan State drops U diamondeers in first game . . . MOUNTAINEER WEEK TEAM hies to the high schools . . . Sandburg slays students in convoca- tion . . . Student Union and Independents break loose and the Delta Gamma ' s show up in the red . . Coeds frolic in folk festival . . . Kappa ' s, Pi Lam ' s cop highest average crowns again . . . Greater West Virginia Week . . . Interfrat and intersorority sing a howling success . . . Black coffee and sleep- less nights — final exams . . . Commencement Week . . . Senior ball . . . Brawl . . . s ' all . . . Nuffsed . . . Proposed New Mineral Industries Building th4 As Provided for in Contingent Budget of the 44th Legislature. ration The picture on the next page depicts a low temperature frac- tional distillation analysis apparatus. The operation is being intently watched by students of the University. The analyses are used by the gas industry, the Public Service Commission, and the Geological Survey to study the composition and properties of natural gas as produced, processed, and consumed. It is one of the primary purposes of the West Virginia Geological Survey (which is housed in the Chemistry Building) to investigate and report upon the natural resources of the State. Since natural gas represents such a resource, ranking second in fact, it is fitting that accurate data upon this resource be had. DR CHARLES E. LAWALL Acting President DR. RICHARD ASPINALL Asst. to the President WILLIAM. J. MORAN President Student Body 16 n Acting President CHARLES E. LAWALL It was a warm day at the end of August, 1938, and Charles E. LawoH, then Director of the School of Mines, had been explaining for a day and a half to the members of the Board of Control in Charleston, the advantages of the construction of a Mineral Industries Building (a picture of which appears on page 14) on the West Virginia University campus. He had explained in detail how it would fill a long-standing need in the State. Having finished his explanation, he was preparing to leave the room when he said: _ I suppose that you are going into a conference on the matter of a new president at ' the University, and I hope you find just the right man. I must return to Morgantown. I have taken too much time as it is. He was assured that he hadn ' t taken up their time unduly and that they had found the right man for the presidency. That ' s fine, Lawall replied. Who is he? I would like to meet him. You have, the chairman answered. I have been talking to him for the past two days. You are he. So, as Arthur B. Koontz, president of the Board of Control, stated, Because of the familiarity of Charles E. Lawall with affairs of the University, his demonstrated ability as an administra- tor, because of the efficient way he had handled his department and his general knowledge of the State of West Virginia, he was the Board ' s choice for acting president of West Virginia University. President Lawall joined the staff of the College of Engineering in 1921 as a professor of mining engineering and director of mining extension. Since that time he has become known throughout the State as a leading influence in the advancement of the coal, oil, gas, and kindred industries by coal loaders, gas workers, and operators, as well as the leaders of these industries. Board of Governors JOHN JACOB CORNWELL ARTHUR BURKE KOONTZ President WRIGHT HUGUS Vice-President CHARLES THOMPSON NEFF, JR. Secretary HARRIET LOUISE FRENCH JOHN DEMPSEY HOBITZELL, JR. JOHN ROBERT POLAND ROBERT HOWARD PRITCHARD 20 Deans .T. P. HARDMAN Law C. E. LAWALL School of Mines RICHARD ASPINALL Assistant to the President W. P. SHORTRIDGE Arts and Sciences L. HAYMAN Pharmacy FRIEND E. CLARK Chairman of the Graduate Council R. P. DAVIS Engineering C. R. ORTON Agriculture, Forestry, and Home Economics FRANK CUTHBERT Music EARL HUDELSON Education E. J. VAN LIERE Medicine A. W. THOMPSON Physical Education and Athletics 21 Student Council The governing board of the student body is the Student Council. It is a standing committee which serves as a connecting link between the administra- tion and the students. The Council in addition to selecting men for various ad- ministrative and executive committees, makes all regulations concerning inter- class contests and relations, and reviews official acts of all officers and com- mittees. The Student Council is composed of ten members, elected annually by the student body. These members are as follows: president of student body, who is an ex-officio member; a senior man and senior woman representative; a junior man and junior woman representative; and the presidents of the Fresh- man, Sophomore, Junior and Senior classes. Foley Moran Flemina John Smoyer Davies McCartney Klebe 22 Simmons John Fromme Shaffer McWhorter Weaver Bennett Myers Ellison A. W. S. The purpose ' of Associated Women Students, composed of all women stu- dents enrolled in the University, is to regulate all matters pertaining to the stu- dent life of its members; to further in every way a spirit of unity and friendliness among the men and women of the University; to increase the student ' s sense of responsibility; and to be a medium for maintaining high scholastic and social standards. Open House, held each Friday night m Elizabeth Moore hall, met with huge success having an average attendance of two hundred students. Upper-class women acted as guides for the new women on the campus and guide meetings were held for the freshmen women during the first semester. One of the outstanding jobs of the council was the point and merit system. Blanks were distributed asking women to record all the major and minor activities they had participated in while in the University. The purpose of this system was to limit the number of outside activities, to create a fairer distribution of offices and to provide a basis for the selection of women to the various honoraries, clubs, and organizations. The annual Gold Digger ' s Ball was sponsored by A. W. S. and women treated the men for the evening. A. W. S. also helped Young Women ' s Christian Association sponsor an art exhibit. Teas were given the faculty, presidents of campus organizations, and the mothers of students. 23 25 fmi Many liquid mixtures can be separated only by a process of distillation. The illustration shows a one-barrel still with a frac- tionating column and condenser. It is used for separating crude oil into some of its fractions. The student on the ladder is drawing a sample from the column for examination. This still, together with a number of other large pieces of equipment, is used by the chem- ical engineering students in studying unit operations and unit processes. DOUGLAS M, FOLEY President Senior Class HARRY C. CLARK President Junior Class JAMES R. McCartney President Sophomore Class ALBERT E. KLEBE, JR. President Freshman Class 28 SENIORS ARREN D. LESLIE, Masoniown, Pa. B-; Sigma Chi; Alpha isilon; Fi Batar Cap- ;r; Boxing Mgr.; Men ' s ee Club. lARLES KERMIT DILLEY, Vlarlinton EVELYN LUCILLE BROOKS, Morganfown B.S.Ed.; Kappa Phi. EARLE LEWIS LANCASTER, Weston B.S.P.E.; Wrestling Team, Capt.; Cadet Officer, R.O.T.C.; Scabbard and Blade. JOSEPH B. H ALLER, Morgantown A,B.; Speech Club. HILDA JOSEPHINE LAZAROFF, Montgomery Sigma Delta Tou; Trans, from New River State. ELIZABETH McNElLL, Moorefield BS.P.E.; Kappa Kappa Gamma. THOMAS ELMER WEBB, Sistersville BS.Ch.E.; Sigma Gam- ma Epsilon; Pres. and Sec, A.l.Ch.E.; Corr. Sec, Tau Beta Pi; B.S.Ch.E. ' HOMAS EDWARD GRAHAM III, Parkersburg A.B,; Sigma Chi; Fi Batar (Jappar; Capt., Golf TJeam; Scabbard and I lade; Cadet Officer, I.O.T.C. 1 RANK MORGAN JOHNSON, Fairmont B.S, Forestry; Forestry diub. LLIAM LLOYD HELEN VICTORIA KENNA F. REXRODE, ANN VALJEAN WORK, j LLEN N. BOYER PYLE, GREGG, Durbin Arthurdale Mt. Pleasant VIorgantown Morgantown BS.Ch.E.; A.LCh.E. B.S.P.E.; Pan-Hellenic ; .B. 1 Alpha Delta. B.S.E.D. Council; Orchesis; Jr. Prom Princess; Phys. Ed. Club; Newman Club; Pres., Phi Mu; May Fes- tival. 31 SENIORS 32 ROBERT LOWES SARAH E. PROTZMAN. MERLE WAYNE MARTHA JEAN CHARLES J. BROWN, Morgantown FAULKNER, MAXWELL, PLOVANICH, Reedsville B.S.H.E,; Home Ec. Club; Trout Clarksburg Littleton ' A.B.; Chi Sigma Delta. Kappa Phi. BS.Agr.; Alpha Zeta; B.M.; Glee Club; Y.W. B.S.Ch.E.; Tau Beta Pi; Pres., F.F.A. ; Ag. Club; C,A.; Trans, from Duke Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Livestock Judging Team. Univ.; Kappa K Gamma. 3ppa Phi Lambda Upsilon; A.I. Ch.E. CHARLES ROBERT SYLVESTER D. LUCILE HILLEARY M. KING H. KENNETH SHOAF, HALL, HELSLEY, HOUCK, ARMENTROUT Smithfield, Pa. Morgantown Ridge Tunnelton Pittsburgh, Pa. B.S.E.E.; Band; Tau Beta B.S. Forestry; Forestry- A.B. B.S.P.E.; Girls ' Athletic B.S.; A.S.C.E.; Newman Pi; A.I.E.E.; Kappa Mu Club; 4H Club. Assoc; Phys. Ed. Club; Orchesis; Phi Chi Delta. Club, Alpha; Sigma Pi Sigma; Orchestra; I.R.E.; Ad- vanced Military. KERLIN ORD JUDY, KATHRYN KIMMEL, HARTSEL DALE MARY LOUISE CHARLES PEYTON Circleville Morgantown ALLEN KOONTZ, McCABE, JR., B.S.; A.B.; Ag. Club; A.B.; Kappa Kappa Clarksburg Morgantown Charleston Univ. 4H; F.F.A. Gamma; Speech Club; Plays: The Night of Jan. 16th , First Lady , Stage Door , Night Must Fall . B.S. B.S.H.E. A.B.; Football; Boxing; Chi Sigma Delta. SENIORS ATIUS G. KLUG, Joseph JESSIE BARKER PYLE, ROX LORAINE ZICKEFOOSE, .M,; Reserve umcer; man Club. RENCE MAY LEWIS, organtown — Muiyun to wii A.B.; Chi Beta Sigma; Y.W.C.A. DON WILLIAM CONAWAY, Monnin gton B.S.E.M.; A.I.M.E. Student Associate. Whuoliiig )MAS WILSON ROGERS, riffithsville C.E.; Am. Soc. C.E. ALICE LEONARD, Morgantown B.S.P.E.; W.A.A.; Dolphin Club; Newman Club. B.S.Ch.E.; Sigma Phi Ep- silon; Editorial staff of Moonshine; Engineering society. MARTHA PHYLLIS CURRY, Lost Creek B.S.H.E.; Phi Upsilon Omicron, Pres.; R.O.T.C, Sponsor; Home Ec. Club; 4H Club. JAMES POE ROBINSON, Grafton LL.B.; Phi Alpha Delta; Law Quarterly Board; Rowan Rifles; R.O.T.C. MARY ELIZABETH CRUMPECKER, —— Princeton A.B.; Alpha Phi; Glee Club; Sociology Club, Treas. PAUL EDWARD GORRELL, MeadviUe BS.Agr.; Alpha Zeta; Ag. Club; 4H Club; Moun- taineer Collegiate Chap- ter of F.F.A., Sec; Cadet Officer, R.O.T.C. VIE CATHARINE TETER, Buckhannon A.B.; Kappa Delta Pi; Le Cercle Francais; English Club; La Tertulia; Phi Beta Kappa. KENNETH EUGENE PYLE, Morgantown B.S.M.E.; Pres. and Sec, A.S.M.E.; Reserve Offi- cer, R.O.T.C; Instructor. ROSE MARIE PILEGGE, Morgantown B.S P-E.; Beta Iota; W.A. A.; Newman Club. DAVID NEVILLE REAY, Morgantown A.B.; Beta Theta Pi. 33 SENIORS DANIEL T. CARR, Princeton A.B.; Phi Sigma Kappa. JOHN STANLEY PEDGONAY, Clarksburg B.S.E.E.; Reserve Officer. VICTOR E. BIRD, Huttonsville B.S.F.; Pi Kappa Alpha; Pros., Forestry Club. JOHN HOMER HOLT NUZUM, Grafton B.S.Ch.E.; M.S.ChE.; Sig- ma Chi; A.I.Ch.E.; Fresh- man Boxing; Varsity Wrestling. SEYMOUR NACHBAR, Brooklyn, N. Y. B.S.P.E.; Phi Sigma Del- ta; Pres., Phi Sigma Del- ta; Treas., Sphinx; Var- sity Baseball; Fi Batar Cappar; Pres,, Jewish Foundation. CHARLES CLEMENT TEETS, Terra Alta B.S.Agr.; Ag. Club; Treas., Poultry Club; F.F.A.; Pres., Senior Class of College of Agri- culture, Forestry and Home Economics. GEORGE ALFRED UMBARGER, Richwood B.S.M.E.; B.S.E.E; A.I. E.E.; A.S.M.E.; Reserve Officer. ALTES JERALD MILLS, Elizabeth B.S. Pharmacy; Phi Sigma Kappa; Capsule Club; Pharmacy Club. HAROLD McKEEVER, Frankford B.S.Ch.E. ARLAN W. BERRY, Flatviroods LL.B.; Phi Alpha Delta, PAUL A, MILLER, Chester B.S.Agr.; Sigma N u; Chancellor, Alpha Zeta; Mountain; Capt,, Boxing Team; Inter-Fraternity Council; Agr, Council; Chem. Assistant. ROBERT W. JACKSON, Middlebourne A.B.; Phi Delta Theta; Fi Batar Cappar; Chi Sig- ma Delta; Pres., Spiked Shoe; Track Manager. THOMAS CHARLES McGUIRE, Lewisburg B.S.Agr.; Ag. Club; Scab- bard and Blade, CLYDE WHITLEY VICK, Jenkinjones A.B. WILLIAM GERALD MENEFEE, Keyser B.S.Ed.; Y.M.C.A.; Trans, from Potomac State. ' y HIP ' i 34. SENIORS FREDERICK WILLIAM HESS, Lumberport .B.; Glee Club; Orches- ra; Band; II Circolo Itali- ino. lAROLD HENKEL SMITH, South Branch I.SAgr.; Mountain; Al- )ha Zeta; Lt. Col. R.O. ' C; Rowan Rifles; Pres., ig. Club; Pres., 4H Club; .ivestock Judging Team. )ONALD BAUER OAKLEY, Nellis I.S.Ch.E.; Sigma Gamma Ipsilon; Tau Beta Pi. CHAS. E. FREEMAN, ' Hackensack, N. J. A.B,; Pi Lambda Phi; Freshman Basketball; Social Chairman; Bus. Mgr. Daily Athenaeum; Jr. Prom. Comm.; Fi Ba- tar Cappar; Cadet Offi- cer, R.O.T.C. ELIZABETH LEE HARSHBARGER, Elkins B.S.P.E,; W.A.A,; Phys, Ed. Club; Y.W.C.A.; 4H Club. EARL N. RODEHEAVER, Shinnston A.B.; Pre-Med.; Delta Tau Delta; Glee Club. ALBERTA ROSE HOSKINS, Morgantown M.S. FRED MILTON SWISHER, JR., Spelter B.S.Ch.E.; Band; A.I.Ch. E.; Gen. Eng. Society. NANCY NEEL COFFMAN, Lewisburg A.B.; Pres., Center Wing, Women ' s Hall; Vice- Pres., Chi Sigma Delta; Y.W.C.A.; Cabinet Sec, Rel. Work Council; So- cial Chairman, Center Unit, Women ' s Hall. VINCENT O ' LEARY NEUMAN, Wheeling A.B.; Football; Basket- ball; Track; Boxin([; Trans, from Catholic U VICTORIA MARIE RICH, Morgantown A.B.; Beta Iota; II Circo: 1 1 a I i a n o; Glee C I u $, Newman Club. GORDON LEON LEESON, Ravenswood B.S.P.E.; Band. MARTIN ROBERT BARKER, Rosario, Sinaloa, Mexico PATRICK H. CONLEY, Williamson A.B. FRANK E. POOLE, Clay A.B.; Alpha Epsilon Del- ta; Fi Batar Cappar. 35 Aik kilk KsjT ffsT si 9r SENIORS PAUL DANIEL WILLIAMS, HolUdays Cove A.B.; Pi Kappa Alpha; In- ter-Fraternity Council; Trans, from Ohio State; Band. JAMES C. SNEDDON, JR., Morgantown A.B. JACK W. KEPNER, Sistersville B.S.E.E.; Kappa Alpha; ,,A.T.E.E JAMES M. McCLAUGHERTY, Princeton - A.B.; Phi Sigma Kappa. CECIL B. HIGHLAND, JR., New Martinsville WILLIAM DANA CARSON, Newell A.B.; Phi Kappa Psi; ! LL.B.; Sigma Nu; Delta Rowan Rifles; Advanced ■Nu Tau; Chi Sigma Del- Military; Band; Delta Phi , ta; Phi Delta Phi. Alpha; Phi Beta Kappa. . H. GLENN FOGLE, Morgantown B.S.Agr.; F.F.A ; Alpha Zeta; Ag. Club. VIRGIL PHILLIP MOCCIA, Clarksburg A.B. ANGELO JOHN ANTALIS, Weirton A.B.; Cadet Ofticer, R.O. TC. ABEL FRANKLIN DeWITT, Morgantown B.S.Ed. 36 WILLIAM WALTER WARLOP, San Diego B.S.E.E.; A.I.E.E.; Beta Kappa; Trans, from U. of Arizona. WILLIAM MASON THOMPSON, Keyser B.S.Ch.E.; Kappa Mu Al- pha; Sigma Gamma Ep- silon; A.I.Ch.E. FORREST GRIFFITH HOFFMASTER, Millville B.S.Ch.E.; A.I.Ch.E. OTHA BARD JUDY, Circleville B,S. Forestry; Forestry Club. ALBERT W. FISHER, Huntington B.S.M.E.; Phi Tau Alpha; Chi Beta Phi; Pres. A.S. M.E,; Tau Beta Pi; Kappa Mu Alpha. SENIORS W. LEWIS CAMPBELL, Gates B.S.Agr,; Sigma Nu; Live- stock Judging Team. GEORGE ARTHUR SHEARS, Elizabeth B SAgr.; Phi Kappa Tau; Boxing; Ag. Club; 4H Club. JAMES AVON SMITH, Charleston A.B. EILEEN, LUCILLE JARRELL, Beckley B,S.; Delta Gamma; Mon- ticola Beauty Queen; Moonshine Beauty; Y.W. C.A.; Pres., Beta Theta Mu; Women ' s Hall Adv. Board; Pres., Delta Gam- ma; R.O.T.C. Sponsor; Plays: Anchors , Cor- responding Editor , On the Bridge at Midnight . JOHN FEAR, Fairmont A.B.; Pres., Junior Class; Chi Sigma Delta; Phi Delta Phi; Golf Team. CAROLYN RENDLE, Graiton Eta Upsilon Gamma; Sig- ma Phi Omega; Dramat- ic Club; Debaters. JOHN BURK McCUE, Morgantown A.B,; Baseball; Football; Basketball; Fi Batar Cap- par; Instr, R.O.TC; Re- serve Officer. EVELYN HARRIS, Philippi BSH.E; Chi Omega; Monticola Staff; Home Ec. Club. JOHN E. BROWN, Point Pleasant A.B,; Sigma Nu; Scab- bard and Blade; Le Cer- cle Francois; Chi Sigma Delta; Baseball. MILDRED DRANSFIELD, Gap Mills B.S.H.E.; Wesley League; Home Ec. Club; Kappa Phi. DWIGHT HAMLIN SKAGGS, Lewisburg B.S.Agr.; Ag. Club; 4H Club; Livestock Judging Team. JESS WILLARD FALKENSTINE, Morgantowfn B.S.P.E.; Tau Kappa Ep- silon; Varsity Baseball; Freshman Football. JULIA ELLISON, Greenville B.S.P.E.; Mortar Board Orchesis; Phys. Ed. Club Glee Club; 4H Club A.W.S.; W.A.A. Council Phi Chi Delta. ALLAN S. MAY, Sistersville B.S.E.E.; Kappa Alpha; A.I.E.E.; Eng. Soc. GLEN ODUS FORTNEY, Keyser B.S.C.E.; A.S.C.E.; Senior Eng. Booklet. 9i - 2,7 SENIORS ROBERT CHARLES LIVINGSTONE, Clarksburg A.B.; Delta Tau Delta; Cheerleader. ELIZABETH COX, Morgantown A.B.; Chi Omega; R.O. r.C. Sponsor. NANCY WILSON, Morgantown A.B.; Alpha Xi Delta; English Club. CHARLES H. STAUB, JR., Inwood B.S.Ch.E,; Sigma Gamma Epsilon. BROOKS J. LOCKHART, Sandyville Vl.A.Math.; Kappa Delta = ' i; Chi Beta Phi; Pres., Vlath. Club. MANCY GREGG .EITH, Morgantown A..B.; Sec, Phi Epsilon ■' hi; Historian of Senior lass. JOHN L. SCHRODER, Martinsburg B.S-; Phi Kappa Psi; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Bije Bije; A.l. M.E.; Band. V. LEONA SCOTT, Cannelton A,B.; Trans, from Mar- shall. C. O. MARSH, IR , Philippi B.S.E.E,; Tau Beta Pi; Treas., A.I.E.E.; Sigma Pi Sigma; Student Mem. Inst. Radio Eng. HELEN JORDAN KNAPP, Hurricane B.SEd. MILTON HARR, Ronceverte B.S-Forestry. POWHATON MILLER BABER III, Morgantown Alpha Kappa Pi; Glee Club; Band; Bethany Col- lege; Texas Christian Univ. ELEANOR EMOGENE STERLING, Tunnelton B.S.H.E.; Home Ec. Club. NAOMI LOUISE GRACE, Morgantown A.B.; Y.W.C.A,; Delta Nu Tau; La Tertulia; English Club; Phi Beta Kappa; Kappa Phi. RICHARD MOSES, Charleston B.S.E.E.; Fresh. Football; Varsity Football; Wrest- ling; A.I.E.E. 38 SENIORS ALFRED FRANKLIN WINTER, Charleston B.S.E.E.; A.I.E.E. MARY JANE WASMUTH, Glen Dale B.M.; Y.W.C.A.; Women ' s Glee Club. DEEM FRANK RAHALL, Beckley BS.Ch.E.; Pres., Pi Kap- pa Alpha; Bond; A.I. Ch.E.; Advanced R.O. T.C.; Asst. Managing Editor of Monticola. KATHLEEN VIRGINIA SILCOTT, Newburg B.S.H.E.; Home Ec. Club. EDWARD FRANK ECKERT, Morgantown B.S.Ch.E.; Vice-Pres., Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Vice-Pres., A.I.Ch.E.; Fr. Basketball Squad. GAYNELLE H. WERTON, Charleroi, Pa. B.S.H.E.; Alpha Home Ec. Club. ROBERT MOCKLER, Mannington B.S.Agr,; Phi Delta Theta; Fi Batar Cappar; Phi Tau Theta; Agr. Soc; Bije- Bije; Wesley Cabinet; Wrestling. LUCILLE VIRGINIA JOHN, Morgantown B.S.P.E.; Chi Omega; Mortar Board; Rhododen- dron; Li-toon-Gwa; Pres., Pan-Hellenic Assoc; A.W.S.; W.A.A.; Who ' s Who in Am. Colleges and Univ. ; Phys. Ed. Club; Dolphin Club; Freshman Guide; First Girl Cheerleader. GLEN LITTLE, JR., MARGARET CARY, Fairmont Lewisburg B.S.E.E.; ALEE.; Senior B.S.Ed. Booklet Com. JANE LINN OSBORN. Clarksburg A.B.; Pi Beta Phi; French Club; Y.W.C.A,; W.A.A.; R.O.T.C. Sponsor; Hon. Capt., Scabbard and Blade. HERMAN LEE SINNETT, Spencer A.B.; Kappa Alpha; Band; Trans, from Shen- andoah. SAMUEL RAYMOND SIMPSON, Morgantown A.B. JULIA DOVE GIBBS, Morgantown B.M.; Women ' s Glee Club; Orchestra. IWALTER C. POLLEY, Benwood 3.M.; R.O.T.C; Band; Slen ' s Glee Club; Or- hestra. 39 SENIORS OAKLEY JOHN HOPKINS, Salem LL.B. RALPH ERHARD, JR., Thomas B.S.E.E.; B.S.M.E.; Tau Beta Pi. MARY LENORE NICODEMUS, Clarksburg A.B. WENDELL WRIGHT GAFFNEY, Belle Vernon, Pa. B.S.P.E.; 2nd Lieutenant, U. S. Army Reserves; Varsity Baseball; Basket- ball. JAMES PAUL ULLUM, MARGARET SWIFT, Charleston Moundsville B ABus.Adm.; Tau Kap- B.S.Ed. pa Epsilon; Chi Sigma — - Delta. DANIEL R. ROGERS, Orleans, Neb. A.B.; Phi Kappa Psi. RUTH LEE LYON, Wheeling A.B,; Pi Beta Phi. I BETSY SHUCHAT, Baltimore, Md. A.B.; Sigma Delta Tau; Pres., Sigma Delta Tau. JACK W. HARVEY, Oak Hill A.B.; Phi Sigma Kappa. NICHOLAS T. GEEZA, Elkhorn B.S.Ed.; Pi Kappa Alpha; II Circolo Italiano; Band. 40 ELLEN WHITE FRENCH, Bluelield, A.B.; Pi Beta Phi; Trans, irom Bluefield College; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Math. Club. HARRY H. CAMP., JR., Spencer A.B.; Kappa Alpha; Men ' s Glee Club; Trans, from W. Va. Wesleyan. BETTY MARIE LYONS, Morgantown B.S.H.E.; Alpha Xi Delta; Phi Upsilon Omicron; Home Ec. Club. JOHN V. BALCH, FoUansbee B.S.M.E.; Vice-Pres., Am. Soc. M.E.; Tau Beta Pi. SENIORS JEROME F. PETERS, Masontown, Pa, A.B.; Kappa Alpha; New- man Club; Trans, irom U. oi Michigan. WILLIAM C. STEWART, Hundred B.M.; Band; Orchestra; Men ' s Glee Club. LAWRENCE BRYCE DARRAH, Fairview B.S.Agr.; Alpha Zeta; Ag. Club; Pres., Mountaineer Collegiate Chapter F.F.A. FLORENCE JEAN HIGHLAND, Clarksburg A.B.; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Phi Beta Kap- pa; Li-toon-awa. JOHN SAMUEL STEWART, Hundred A.B.; Pre-Med.; Band; Or- chestra. PELLA HALL RAPP, Oak Hill BS.Ed.; Trans, from Mor- ris Harvey; Alpha Mu. JOSEF JAN BENDKOWSKI, St. Marys A.B.; Sigma Nu; Chi Sig- ma Delta; French Club; Cadet Officer, R.O.T.C; Rowan Rifles; Newman Club. BARBARA COOMBS, Morgantown A.B.; Kappa Kappa Gam- ma; Pan-Hellenic Assoc; Speech Club; Freshman Guide; Plays: First Lady , Stage Door , Night Must Fall . Vv ALTER WILLIAM RIDGELY, Ridgely A.B. MURIEL ALDENE MORRIS, Morgantown A.B.; Kappa Kappa Gam- ma; Li-toon-awa; Rho- dodendron; French Club; Speech Club; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Glee Club; Freshman Guide; Play: Stage Door . BILL BALLARD RICHMOND, Skelton A.B.; Phi Sigma Kappa. MARY KATHERINE WILLIAMS, Keyser B.S.HomeEc; Home Ec Club; Trans, from Poto- mac State. ROBERT DePUE, Spencer LL.B.; Cadet Officer, R.O. T.C.; Trans, from Mar- shall, Marietta, U.C.L.A. ALPHONSE DECOSTER, Morgantown A.B. CHARLES WM. SNYDER, Charles Town B.S.C.E.; Phi Kappa Tau; Eng. Booklet; Am. Soc. C.E. wi?r 41 SENIORS WILLIAM P. GULLIFORD, Wellsburg A.B.: Beta Theta Pi; Sigma Delta, DEUA HUFF, Fairmont 3.S.P.E.; Orchesis; Chi Beta Sigma; Glee Club; N.A.A; Y.W.C.A.; Phys. d. Club, DOUGLAS M, FOLEY, Waverly BS.Agr,; Sigma Nu; Fi Batar Coppar; Sphinx; Mountain; Senior Class President; Alpha Zeta; Honor Court; Football. ETHEL M, NELSON, Washington, D. C, A.M,; Alpha Delta Pi; Glee Club; Y,W,C.A, JENNINGS BRYAN WHITTEN, Lewisburg B.S.Pharm.; Senior Class Treasurer; Pharmacy College President; Cadet Officer, R.O.T.C. AMERIGO CAPPELLARI, Beckley B.S,Ed.; II Circolo Itali- ano; Delta Sigma Rho; Varsity Debate Team; Mountaineer Week Team; Forum; Newman Club, RALPH K, BROOKS, Moorefield A.B.; Kappa Alpha; Sphinx, rONY R, GIGLIA, JR. Glen Jean X.B.; II Circolo Italiano; Jewman Club. MILDRED G. BENNETT, Albert K.B.; Kappa Tau Alpha; lafrix; A.W.S-; Mortar ! o a r d; Rhododendron; )aily Athenaeum; Sen- or Class Secretary; Phi ieia Kappa. EVALYN HOPE HARPER, Seneca Rock, B.S.P,E.; Phys. Ed. Club; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Glee Club. THOMAS JOSEPH RICHARDSON, Morgantown B.S.P.E.; Cadet Officer, R,0,T.C.; Scabbard and Blade; Fr. Basketball and Football. ROSS GAMBRILL JONES, Morgantown BS.ChE.; Kappa Alpha; Phi Lambda Upsilon; R.O.T.C; Glee Club; A.I. Ch. E. RUBY MARIE SHINN, Ripley BS.H.E.; Chi Omega; Phi Upsilon Omicron; Home Ec. Club; State Home Ec. Assoc; Univ. 4H Club. MORRISON WEAVER, Charleston B.S.Ch.E.; Tau Beta Pi; A.ICh.E, LEON KERNS, Dale B.S.E.M.; Sigma Phi Ep- silon; Sigma Gamma Ep- silon; Trans, from Salem. 42 1 fffr ff[ i 0[ y i SENIORS F. SCHWARTZ, Hinton 3.E.E.; Tau Beta Pi; A.I. JOHN ALLEN SPANGLER, Morgantown A.B.; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Sigma Pi Sigma. ROBERT G. DIXON, Piedmont A.B.; Math. Club. ROBERT LEE BIRD, JR., Charleston A.B.; Sigma Chi; Golf Team. GRANVILLE S. FLESHER, JR., Cairo B.S. Pharmacy; R.O.T.C; Band. IROLD ALLEN WILLIAMS, Fairview 3, Ed.; Phi Kappa Sig- 3; Reserve Officer; 3hinx; Rifle Team; ■eater W. Va. Week immittee; Orchestra; ountaineer Week am. HN A. MASON, JR., FRANCIS H. Charleston WICKLINE, 5.C.E.; Beta Theto Pi; Williamson 5SS Club Show; A.S. B.S.E.E.; A.I.E.E. b.; Glee Club. ARTHUR ECKERSON, JR., Charleston B.S. Forestry. STERLING CLARK MILAM, Calvin B.S. Agr.; Alpha Zeta. ALSTON BURKLEY SHIELDS. McMechen A.B. ALBERT EDWARD RHUDY, Bluefield A.B. HAROLD W. RIST, Wheeling B.S.Ch.E.; Tau Kappa Ep- silon; Bije Bije; Sphinx; Glee Club; Social Com- mittee. JAMES H. WOLVERTON, Richv ood LL.B.; Phi Sigma Kappa; Fi Batar Cappar; Sphinx. GLENN E. BAGWELL, Morgantown B.S.P.E. 43 nk £JI SENIORS DAVID JOHN POSTEN, Maiden A.B.; Sigma Chi; Y.M. C.A.; Glee Club; Fresh- man Wrestling; Fresh- man Track. BERNARD N. ZAPPIN, Williamson A.B.; Phi Sigma Delta; Fi Batar Cappar; Monticola Staff; Co-Football Mgr.; Reserve Officer. IRA ALLEN STINE, JR., Grafton A.B.; Orchestra; Glee Club. 44 GENEVIEVE MARIE RICHARD NEIL CARMEN ALBERTA D. HAROLD FOX, SPIKER, HEVENER, NUTTER, Mt. Morris, Pa. Lumberport Arbovale Renick A.B.; Rowan Rifles; Pres., B.SEd.; Speech Club; A-B.; Le Foyer Francois; A.B.; Li-toon-awa; Pres., Chi Sigma Delta. R.O.T.C. Sponsor. Mountaineer Week Soph. Wing, Women ' s Team; Freshman Week Hall; Comm. on Resi- Guide; Rowan Rifles; 4H dences; Freshman W.S. Club; X-Club; Y.M.C.A.; G.A. U. Dance Comm. , EARL FREDERICK ETHEL MAE FAIR, EARL F. GOWER, ROBERT G 1 BOIARSKY, Wellsburg Hundred WILLIAMSON, ■Charleston B.S.H.E.; Phi Upsilon B.S. Pharmacy; Pharmacy Charleston A.B.; Chi Sigma Delta. Omicron. Club; Newman Club. A.B.; Sigma Chi; Fresh- man Wrestling; Fresh- man Band. FRANCES CLIFFORD SUMMERS, CLARA LOUISE WILLIAM L. MUSSER, ; MONTAGLIANI, Buckhannon TRISSLER, Clarksburg Morgantown B.S. Forestry; Forestry Porkersburg Delta Tau Delta; House B.S. Music; Glee Club; 11 Club; 4H Club. A.B.; Alpha Phi; Pan-Hel- Manager, Delta Tau Del- Circolo I tali an o; Y.W. lenic Council; Li-toon- ta. C.A. Cabinet. awa; Rhododendron; Mortar Board; La Tertu- lia; Le Foyer Francois; Kappa Delta Pi; Phi Beta Kappa. SENIORS [OBERT LOUIS HOLLAND, Morgantown I.B.; Phi Kappa Psi; Phi )elta Phi; Cadet Officer, t.O.T.C. VAYNE WHITE ICHWARTZWALDER Huntington l.S,P.E.; Varsity Football; loxing; Freshman Foot- VILLIAM JAMES CUMMINGS, Morgantown !.S,Ch,E.; A.I.Ch.E. Sand; Orchestra. BETTY JANE FONNER, Middlebourne BS.H.E.; Phi U psi Ion Omicron; Home Ec. Club; Y.W.C.A.; 4H Club. THOMAS L. CRAIG, Kingwood B.S.P.E.; Phi Sigma Kap- pa; Rowan Rifles; Scab- bard and Blade; Cadet Officer, R.O.T.C VIRGINIA MAE WILDEY, Mullens B.S.H.E.; Delta Gamma; Home Ec. Club; Phi Up- silon Omicron. Vif ALTER WILLIAM MOODY, Morgantown A.B.; Kappa Sigma; Sphinx; Pres., Junior Class; Inter-Fraternity Council; Chairman Jun- ior Prom. OLIVE RACHEL DENISON, Philippi AB; V .A.A. DOROTHY CHARLOTTE COMLEY, Morgantown BSHE,; Y.W.CA,; Home Ec. Club. WILLIAM B. FOX, Talcott B.S.Ed.; Kappa Delta Pi; Freshman Rifle Team. LORENTZ C. HAMILTON, JR., Grantsville AB.; Tau Kappa Epsilon. DORIS CHEESMAN, Charleston B.S.H.E.; Alpha Xi Delta; Home Ec. Club; Vice- Pres. and Treas., Y.W. C.A. GEORGE H. SEIBERT, JR., Elm Grove A.B.; LLB.; Phi Sigma Kappa; Summit of Moun- tain; Fi Batar Cappar; Phi Alpha Delta. WILBUR CLAUDE ROBERTS, Elizabeth B.S.Agr.; Ag. Club; 4H Club; Poultry Club; F.F.A.; Phi Kappa Tau. JACK LEMUEL GARVIN, Wheeling B.S.Agr.; Member Dairy Judging Team. 45 SENIORS ERNEST WATSON HUTTON, Huttonsville B.S.E.E.; Phi Kappa Ps: Pres., A.I E E.; Pres,, Ger Eng. Society; Golf Man ager; Moonsliine; Senio Employment Booklel Advanced Military. JOE PUGH, Terra Alta B.S. Pharmacy; Treas Kappa Alpha; Sec. Treas. ot College o Pharmacy. VERNIE GUY CLATTERBAUGH Bluefield A.B.; Delta Tau Delta Baseball; Tennis. LUCY ELIZABETH JONES, Morgantown A.B.; Pi Beta Phi; R.O. T.C. Sponsor; Press Club Show; Pres., Speech Club; Glee Club; Plays: Roadside , The Drunk- ard , First Lady , Rip Van Winkle . JOSEPH DOTTS, JR., Fairmont B.S. Forestry. HARRY LEE PORTER, Oakland, Md. B.S.Agr.; Ag. Club; Poul- try Club. ALBERTA DYER STRADER, Philippi B.S.P.E.; Alpha Xi Delta; Vice-Pres., Women ' s Hall, Center Wing; Pres., W.A.A.; Rhododendron; A.W.S. Council; Fresh- man Guide; Hostess, Greater W. Va. Week; Y.W.C.A. JUANITA HALL, Morgantown A.B. Degree. PATSY JESS WILLIAMS, Morgantown A.B.; II Circolo Italiano. ROBERTA CLARK, Morgantown A.B.; Alpha Xi Delta; Rhododendron; Y.W. C.A.; Cabinet; Daily Athenaeum News Editor; Pres., Matrix; Press Club; Pres., Kappa Tau Alpha. ANTHONY, KELL, Bluefield A.B.; Kappa Alpha; Base- ball; Trans, from Blue- field College. HENRIETTA CORNELIA FOLMAR. Valley Grove B.S.H.E.; Home Ec. Club; 4H Club; Glee Club; Y.W.C.A.; Phi Upsilon Omicron; Trans, from West Liberty State Teachers. RALPH JONES, JR., Parkersburg A.B.; Beta Theta Pi- Mountain; Phi Beta Kap- pa; Pres., Inter-Fraternity ' ' Council; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Delta Phi Alpha; Tennis Team. ■LEWIS W. BAMBRICK, Weirton LL.B.; A.B.; Delta Nu Tau; Phi Alpha Delta; Reserve Officer. LAWRENCE REED McELHlNNY, Charleston A.B.; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Freshman Track; Varsity Track; Spiked Shoe. 4C) :mm m SENIORS GEORGE STEPHEN APPLEBY, Martinsburg A.B.; Men ' s Glee Club; Play: Romeo and Juliet . ZACHARIAH WYATT, JR. Weirton A-B,; Kappa Sigma; In- ter-Fraternity Council; Rifle Team; Cadet Offi- cer, R.O.TC. SEYMOUR D. ROTHSTEIN, New York City A.B., Pre-Med.; Phi Sig- ma Delta. MARTIN MATHEW FAHEY, Freemansburg A,B. ' 37; B.S. in Medicine; Phi Beta Pi. JANE CLARK, Morgantown A,B,; Press Club; Matrix; Athenaeum Staff. CHARLES WILLIAM KINDT, Ashland, Ky. B,M,; Mens Glee Club; II Circolo Italiano; Scab- bard and Blade; Delta Tau Delta; Cadet Officer, R.O.T.C; Plays; Cleo- patra , Romeo and Ju- liet . MARY REBECCA CORE, FRANCES Morgantown B.S.H.E,; Home Ec. Club; Rhododendron; Phi Up- silon Omicron. GORDON BERK LYNCH, Clarksburg LLB; Delta Tau Delta; Scabbard and Blade; Tennis Team; Debating Team; Rowan Rifles; Lt. Col., R.O.T.C; Chi Sigma Delta; Phi Delta Phi; In- ter-Fraternity Council; Men ' s Glee Club. ANNE FROMME, East Falls Church A.B.; Kappa Kappa Gam- ma; Pres., ' W.S.G.A.; Mor- tar Board; Li-toon-awa; Rhododendron; Orchesis; Phi Epsilon Phi. MONTAGLIANI, Morgantown B.S.Music; Glee Club, Circolo Italiano; Y.W C.A. Cabinet. ANNA NEALE HARDMAN, Spencer A.B.; Chi Omega; Mat rix; Li-toon-awa; R.O T.C. Sponsor; Monticok Staff; Pres Club; Athen- aeum Staff. ROLLA WILLIAMS, JR., St. Marys A-B. Journalism; Kapp( Sigma; Journaliers; Pres; Club; Social Co mm. Band; Staff, Daily Athen aeum. KEITH PHILIP FABIANICH, Weirton A.B.; Chi Sigma Delta; Cadet Officer, R.O.T.C. JOE PARK BEATTY, Mannington A.B., Pre-Law; Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Delta Phi. FRED H. LIPPUCCI, Morgantown A.B.; Trans, from U. of Cal. and Carnegie Tech; Reserve Officer; Instruc- tor, R.O.T.C, 47 ' A JL 9 St SENIORS ROBERT THOMAS DEEGAN, Grafton A.B.; Glee Club; French Club; Newman Club. EDMUND I. ADAMEK, Clarksburg A.B. ' 37; LL.B. PAUL SIMON ESSOF, Sistersville A.B.; Newman Club; Trans. Irom Georgetown. 48 WILLIAM JACKSON CARTER, Clarksburg A.B.; Phi Sigma Kappa; Phi Beta Kappa; Sphinx; Delta NuTau. ELOISE REPPERT, Morgantown A.B.Ec. PERRY F. MARSHALL, Clarksburg A.B.French; Pres., For- eign Lang. Club; Treas., Freshman Class. JESSIE IRENE BENNETT, Junior A.B.French; Monticola Staff; La Tertulia; French Club; 4H Club; Speech Club; Plays; Rip Van Winkle , Stage Door , Merchant of Venice , Night of Jan. 16 . JACK W. BLAIR, Charleston B.S.E.M.; Beta Theta Pi; Scabbard and Blade; Freshman Track; Vice- Pres., Inter-Fraternity Council; Chairman, Men ' s Pan-Hellenic; Cadet Col, R.O.T.C. SARA ROSALIND WARREN, Alderson B.S.H.E.; Phi Upsilon Omicron; Vice-Pres., Mortar Board; W.S.G.A. Council. HAROLD EDWARD QUIGLEY, Williamson A.B.Ec; Men ' s Glee Club. BETTY JANE MOORE, Fairmont A.B.; Press Club; Social Comm.; R.O.T.C. Spon- sor. SAM F. AUDIA, Charleston B.S.Ch.E.; Sigma N u; Football; Track; Boxing; A.I.Ch.E.; Fi Batar Cap- par. JOSHUA BISHOP ALLEY, JR., Bluefield A.B.Ec; Delta Tau Delta; Trans, from Bluefield Col- lege. IRVING LEONARD VOGEL, New York A.B.; Pi Lambda Phi; Treas., Inter- Fraternity Council; Chairman, Men ' s Pan-Hellenic Dance. MATHEW D. KERR, Matewan A.B. in Ec; Sigma Nu. SENIORS IICHELE A. CHARLOTTE ROSALIND JOHN DAVID FRANCES ELYCE DePIETRO, JR., SNEDEGAR, ANDERSON, JR., ZIMMERMAN, Holden Renick Morgantown Morgantown S.E.M.; Scabbard and B.S. English and Social B.S.Agr.; Beta Theta Pi; B.S.Ed. ode; Pres., Gen. Eng. Study; W.A.A.; Trans, U. Products and Dairy ociety; L ' odet Ullicer, Irom tireenbner UoUege. t attle Judging team; Ag. O.T.C. Club. rALLACE CRETAN RALPH J. YANDALA, ESTHER MURL LEWIS, ROBERT ZINN BERRY, MOORE, Morgantown Oak Hill Flatwoods Clarksburg A.B.; Chi Sigma Delta; B.S.H.E.; Phi Upsilon A.B. B.; Beta Theta Pi; Fi Freshman Track; Spiked Omicron. 2tar Cappar; Mgr., Box- Shoe. g Team; Delta Nu Tau. ED B. HESS, MARY ELNORA Martinsburg SHINGLETON, .B.; Trans, from Shep- Fairmont ;rd College. A.B.; Sec, Pi Beta Phi. HELEN V. GARDNER, Morgantown B.S.P.E.; Vice-Pres., W.A. A.; Dolphin Club; Phys. Ed. Club; W.S.G.A. LILLIAN NANCY VAUGHAN, McConnell B.S.H.E. ANDERSON C. HEROLD, JR., Parkersburg B.S.M.E.; Sigma Chi; Per- shing Rifles; Scabbard and Blade; Varsity Rifles; Am. Soc. Mechanical Eng. MILLARD C. THRASH, Reedy A.B.; Debating; Y.M.C.A.; Band; Trans, from Salem College; Glee Club at Salem. PAUL FRANCIS PITROLO, Grant Town A.B.Ec; Phi Kappa Sig- ma; Italian Club. fl l l T 49 SENIORS JOHN S. HAIGHT, Charleston A.B.Ec; Delta Tau Delta; Pres,, Chi Sigma Delta; Bus. Mgr., Coon Skin. I. D. LIVINGSTONE, JR., Clarksburg A.B.; Delta Tau Delta; Scabbard and Blade; II Circolo Itoliano; Mgr., Baseball Team; Cadet Officer, R.O.T.C. HARRY SHELTON WORKMAN, Morgantown B.S.Agr.; Freshman Bas- ketball; Ag. Club. OLIVIA KENDRICK, Morgantown B.S.Ed.; Pres., Delta Gamma; Li-toon-awa. THOMAS JOSEPH PATTERSON, Morgantown A.B.; Phi Delta Theta; Pres., Phi Delta Theta. DOROTHY JANE WOOLCOCK, Logan A.B.; Spanish Club; Pres., Sociology Club. ANDREW LANE BLAIR, Weston A.B. at Duke; LL.B.; Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Delta Phi; Mountain; Law Quarter- ly. CATHERINE C. CLIFFORD, Clarksburg A.B.; Sociology Club. WILLIAM EDMUND GILMORE, Wheeling A.B.; Sigma Chi; Delta Phi Alpha; Men ' s Glee Club; Rowan Rifles; Foot- ball; Basketball; Base- ball; Bije-Bije. EILEEN McHENRY, Parkersburg LL.B.; Chi Omega; Delta Sigma Rho; Rep., W.S. G.A.; Debating Team; Treas., Senior Class. RICHARD HUNTER, Morgantown LL.B.; Delta Tau Delta; Varsity Gymnastic Team. NEDRA JANE MYERS, Richwood A.B.; A.W.S. Council; Rhododendron; Mortar Board; Monticola Staff. STANLEY D ' ORAZIO, Wheeling LL.B.; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Varsity Basketball; Var- sity Baseball; Comptrol- ler, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Sphinx; Fi Batar Cappar; Phi Delta Phi; Sec. -Treas., W.V.U. Budget Comm.; Phi Beta Kappa. CLIFTON LEW PORTNOFF, White Sulphur Springs A.B., Pre-Med.; Pi Lamb- da Phi; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Orchestra. GEORGE BOLTON BYRUM, Wheeling A.B.; Phi Delta Theta; Pres., Spiked Shoe; Sphinx; Fi Batar Cappar; Varsity Track Mgr. 50 m.m: x - • ' - ' jf- ' ' Jt152 SENIORS CHARLES E ALLARD, Fairmont A.B.; Phi Kappa Psi; Sphinx; Mountaineer Week Team; Freshman Guide; Founder and First Pres,, II Circolo RaUano; Reserve Officer. HAROLD JOSEPH FLEMING, Ridgeley A.B.; Men ' s Glee Club; Band; Delta Nu Tau; Treas., Soph. Class; Sen- ior Man Rep. on Student Council; Pres., English Club; Sphinx; Phi Delta Phi; Freshman Hand- book; Phi Beta Kappa. ALBERT FRANKLIN GOOD. Charleston A.B., ' 37; LL.B.; Phi Beta appa; Phi Alpha Delta; i Batar Cappar; Chi Sig- na Delta; Delta Nu Tau. mary noyes McGregor, Wheeling A.B.; Alpha Xi Delta; Li- toon-awa; Y.W.C.A. E. ANDREW ZEPP, Martinsburg A,B., Pre-Med.; Pi Kappa Alpha; Band; Inter-Fra- ternity Council; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Pi Kappa Alpha; Bije-Bije; Men ' s Glee Club; Phi Chi. HARRY SCHERR, JR., Huntington A.B., Yale; LL.B.; Beta Theta Pi; Phi Alpha Del- ta; Mountaineer Week Team. COURTNEY LOGAN CARROLL, Fairmont LL.B ; Phi Delta Phi; Brooke Inn; Law Quar- terly Board. JEAN GORDON FYFE, Cannelton A.B.; La Tertulia; Le Cer- cle Francais; English Club; Kappa Delta Pi; Westminister Club; Y.W. C.A. LOUIS PEARSON WHITE, Clarksburg A.B., Pol. Sc; Sigma Chi. WILLIAM D. KELLER Parkersburg A-B-Journalism; Beta ta Pi; Press Club; J. naliers; News Edito Daily Athenaeum. Th.- CLAUDE EMERSON GRIMM, St. Marys A.B., Pre-Med,; Beta Th( taPi, B. JEAN McQUISTON Morgantown A.B.; Alpha Delta Pi W.A.A.; Delta Phi Alphc Math. Club; Dolphi Club; Pan-Helleni Council. SECONDO DALPORTO, Smithers A.B.; Phi Kappa Sigma; Phi Delta Phi; Delta Nu Tau; Chi Sigma Delta; II Circolo Italiano. GEORGE W. JEWELL, JR., Pennsboro A.B., Pre-Med.; Pres., Phi Kappa Tau; Freshman Rifle Team; Cadet Offi- cer, R.O.T.C. J. DEAN EISEL, Holden A.B.; Delta Tau Delta; Sphinx; Scabbard and Blade; Mgr., Baseball Team; Cadet Officer, R.O.T.C. 51 SENIORS ROBERT A, CRAWFORD, JR., Charleston A.B.; Sigma Chi; Glee Club; Alpha Epsilon Del- ta. KENNETH R. HOLLEN, Keyser B.S.E.E.; Gen. Eng. Soci- ety. HARRY FRANK LEWIS, Clarksburg A.B. Degree. BARBARA ANNE WOLFE, Cedar Grove A.B.; Delta Gamma; Jun- ior Orchesis. HELINDA ELIZABETH WHITE, Shepherdstown A.B.; Chi Omega; Daily Athenaeum; Press Club; Speech Club; Dramatics; Publication Board; Trans, from Shepherd State Teachers. CHARLES LEONARD TAYLOR, Clarksburg A.B,; Phi Sigma Kappa; Pres., Men ' s Glee Club; II Circolo Italiano; Press Club Show; Plays: Ro- meo and Juliet , Cleo- patra . JOHN P. SHALE, JR., Morgantown LL.B.; Tau Kappa Epsi- lon; Inter-Fraternity Council; Student Coun- cil; Delta Nu Tau; Chi Sigma Delta; Men ' s Glee Club. CORA ANNE MILLER, Morgantown A.B.; Delta Gamma; Li- toon-awa; Rhododen- dron; Delta Phi Alpha; Kappa Delta Pi; Senior Orchesis. ROY STUART SAMMS, JR , Charleston LL.B.; Beta Theta Pi; Phi Alpha Delta; Mountain; Fi Batar Cappar. JOHN EDMUND CRYNOCK, Pursglove LL.B,; Delta Nu Tau; Chi Sigma Delta; Phi Delta Phi; Pres., Newman Club; Track; Phi Beta Kappa. 52 HENRY FEINGOLD, Morgantown A.B.; Delta Nu Tau; Ger- man Honorary. CREEL S. CORNWELL, Morgantown A.B.; Kappa Alpha Tau; Press Club; Athenaeum Staff; Pres., Journaliers; Managing Ed., Daily Athenaeum. VIRGINIA LAURINE DAVIS, Bridgeport A.B.; Pi Beta Phi; Jr. and Sr. Y.WCA. Cabinets; Li-toon-awa; Rhododen- dron; Pan-Hellenic Rep.; Mortar Board; Who ' s Who in Am. Colleges and Universities; Prin- cess, Sr. Ball Court. JAMES MONROE VAN METRE, Martinsburg B.S.Agr.; Alpha Zeta; Rowan Rifles; Scabbard 6. Blade; Vice-Pres., Sen- ior Class; Proctor Men ' s Hall; Cadet Officer R.O.- T.C. ROBERT BURKE HAMILTON, Fairmont A.B.; Phi Kappa Psi; Al- pha Epsilon Delta; Men ' s Glee Club; Band. SENIORS lOMER L. ICE, JR., Enterprise iS.Agr.; Ag. Club; H Club; Livestock udging Team. ' RANKLIN DUANE HILL, Charleston LB. ' 37; LL.B.; Phi )elta Theta; Phi Del- 3 Phi. JED E. SHOTT, Bluefield I. B.; Sigma N u; lus. Mgr,, Monti- ola; Inter-Fraternity ' ouncil; Mountain- er Week Team; ireater W. Va. Veek Team; Spiked ■hoes; Sham pa in; rack Mgr.; Cadet )fficer, R.O.T.C; low an Rifles; Phi )elta Phi. MARY KATHRYN JOHNSON, Berwind A.B.; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Y.W.C.A Sec, Newman Club, Freshman Guide, Vice-Pres., Woman ' s Hall. OLAN G. HEDRICK, Fairmont B.S.P.E.; Phi Sigma Kappa; Football; Basketball; Phi Beta; Ass ' t. Line Coach. EDNA LEE LEONARD, Charleston B,S,Ed,;M. E. Church Choir; Kappa Phi; Wesley League; Plays; The Fire- Fly ; Trans., Mar- shall, Penn. State. LLOYD R. SHAID, Elkins LL.B; Phi Kappa Psi. JACK ROBSON, Charleston A.B.; Glee Club; Plays: Stage Door , Night Must Fall , Moor Born ; Speech Dep ' t. Acts. LOUIS REED MILLER, Fairmont LL.B.; Beta Theta Pi; Scabbard S Blade; Fi Batar Cap par; Delta Nu Tau; Chi Sigma Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Al- pha Delta; Cadet Officer, R.O.T.C. GUY CHRISTOPHER NICHOLSON, Welch A.B.; Pre-Med.; Kap- pa Sigma; Alpha Epsilon Delta. JOSCOE JUNIOR BROWN, Jane Lew B.S.Agr. WALTER S. BRYSON, JR., Moundsville A.B.Ec; Delta Nu Tau. MILDRED HARTLEY BRYSON, Moundsville A-B. Journalism; Chi Omega; Matrix; Press Club. WILLIAM K. LEONHART, Parkersburg A.B.; Varsity Debat- ing; Delta Sigma Rho; Delta Nu Tau; Phi Beta Kappa. MARTHA FORD Lewisburg B.S.Ed.; Treas., W.A.A. Council; Ex- Officio Member A . W. S . ; Trans., Greenbrier ColleJge. ALVIN SEWARD VOLKER, Morgantown A.B. Journalism; Editor, Athenaeum; Sports Ed., Athena- e u m, Monticola; Freshman, Varsity Debater; Journaliers, Pres., Press Club, Kappa Tau Alpha, Delta Sigma Rho, Intramural Mgr. Collegiate Who ' s Who; Convocation Comm.; Press Club Show; Phi Beta Kap- pa. ROBERT S. KEISTER, Clarksburg A.B.; Delta Tau Del- ta; Inter - Fraternity Council; Trans, from Duke; Plays: Rip Van Winkle . HAROLD C. GIVEN, Charleston A.B. ' 37; LL.B.; ta Tau Delta; Alpha Delta; Trans., Kanawha College. Del- Phi WWE JUNIORS Hazlett McMillen Lilyan Lawton William T. Nutter Rodgers laeger Fairmont Wellsburg Margaret Louise Tom Davies Shirley I, Currey Sampson Nemacolin, Pa. Fairmont Charleston Kendall L Hall Harrisville James Pierpont Bland Charleston Sibyl Louise Meadows Affinity Kenneth L. Knauss Wheeling Frances C. Williams Clarksburg Mary Ellen Phillips Clarksburg Alan Openshaw Vivian John M. Wheeler Clarksburg Frances Genevieve Wayne C. Campbell Virginia Mossburg Keefer Chester EUenboro Clarksburg Marvin H Porterlield Martinsburg Virginia Lee Batson Williamson Helen Tuckwiller Richard Vance Lynch, Jr. Lewisburg Spelter JUNIORS Norman A. Brasseur Clarksburg Vernah Merrie Stewart Huntington Ebert Francis Steed Porkersburg Genevieve James Clarksburg Noyes Burdette Charleston Jane Patterson Morgantown Carl D. Farnsworth Shepherdstown Marguerite Bright Gassaway Elery McDonald Davis Catherine Davis Morgantown William F. Watts Beckley Sara Virginia McLain Wheeling- James A. Morstiller Elkins Geraldine Andrews Morgantown Raymond Josef DuBois Charleston Bette Jean Sneddon Uniontown, Pa. Homer W. Shorpenberg Morgantown Margaret Waugh Wellsburg Delmar Martin Montrose Nancy Edgar Morgantown Bernard K. Wasserkrug Oak Hill JUNIORS Dorothy Robison Harry Adams Stansbury, Jr. Eleanore PearsoU Morgantown Morgontown Morgantown George E. Fisher, Jr. Bluefield Jeane Fischer Morgantown Jeanne Curry Delbarton George McCans Dugan Huntington Raymond A. Goodwin Juha Ann Poindexter Weston Charleston Anita Simon Baker Charleston William Mason Perry Logan Don L. Cornel ' Grantsville Carl A. Aronson Davis Virginia Hare Morgantown Nathan Cheesman Clarksburg Ruth Ann Icenhower Mason Mary Louise Johnson Merlin Scott Bergdoi; Nutter Fort Petersburg Anita Dickens Levels Lawrence Blair Thrush Virginia Lee McKane Moorefield Staten Island, N. Y. JUNIORS Allen Roy Bryant Canvas Mary Rosalie Scott Beckley Mary Gertrude Carper Morgantown Melvin Harris Laurel Creek Alexander Morris Adair Edith Gretchen Garlow Morgantown Morgantown Katherine Luh Sommer David Haught Beech Hill Grantsville Clayton B. Coleman Gay Donnally Wise Glen Ferris Relay Elizabeth Lane Leith Russell A. Wilbourn, Jr. Morgantown Morgantown W. Quentin Dickens Levels Mary E. Law Morgantown Charles M. Reed Martinsburg Hilda M. Creel Morgantown Harold H. Cashman Morgantown Bertie Lee Huff Cass Roy Lee Queen Lois Margaret Turley Ernest V. Morton, Jr. Huntington New Cumberland Wheeling ki ik JUNIORS Arthur William Newlon Virginia Lee Koepler John Lee Sullivan Charleston Bluefield Gary Marian Bowman Charles Capito Rebecca Carpenter Clarksburg Charleston St. Marys Harold Neely Bernese Bennett Glenn Willard Kiger Hinton Wheeling New Martinsville Betty McMechen Joseph Patrick Condry Betty Jane Shuman McMechen Clarksburg Morgantown W Scott Wysong Elisabeth Welton Ellsworth F. Cale Clarksburg Moorefield Charleston Mary Boggs George F. Griffin, Jr. Joney Bippus Morgantown Smithfield, Pa. Wheeling Aaron Rose Mickey McGuire Aloys Bernard Stenger Morgantown Huntington Wheeling JUNIORS Richard C- Anderson Morgantown Cora Frances Board Charleston Carl James Roberts Shinnston !eatrice Cruise Richard Dean Jane Nelson Bluefield Heironimus Davis Salem George Paul Hlusko Grant Towrn Susan Helmick Fairmont Jess W. Richardson Charleston RuthWeller Charleston Carl William Flanagan Mary Margaret Devore Ridgely West Union Frank Eugene Conner, Jr. Morgantown Mary Doris Spray Troy W. Robert Carr Princeton Jane Hart Hill Morgantown William Newton McGee Morgantown Virginia Rhodes Pence Springs Clarence William Witt Porkersburg Anna Margaret McKenzie Richwood Elmer H. Dodson Charleston Ci f 59 JUNIORS Daniel Francis Cronin, Jr. Murdayne Morsliall Richwood Grontsville Clarence Alfred Potterfield Charleston Nell Hively Charles Raymond Kitty Campbell Huntersville Whittaker Zimmerman Bluefield Romney Wallace McKalip Huntington Eleanor Lowe Point Pleasant Henry W. Schweinsberg Plus Ruth Tonry Martinsburg Anthony Rapaswick Betty Jane McWhorter Wheeling Morgantown Peter L. Hoffman, II Mary Kathryn Markle Mannington Confluence Harold J. Madden Clarksburg Peggy Louise Williamson Philip Warner Carter Spenser Morgantown Frances Coleman Aflex, Ky. William H. Powell Phyllis Ruth McCoy C. Edward Carpenter Clarksburg Stephenson Morgantown JUNIORS Robert Nuzum Phyllis Louise Spongier James Morris McCabe Hepzibah Morgantown Charleston Harriett Roeser Montgomery Hurley F. Hardmon Parkersburg Genevieve Donahoe Charleston George Jackson AUman Clarksburg AlmoE. White Wadestown Norman Hockenbury Harrisburg, Pa. Louis C. Griffin Clarksburg J. D. Ashworth Welch Marvin S. Lenett Bluefield Sterling Martin Charleston . Thomas Franklin Gibbs Lakewood, Ohio George N. Cowden Huntington Virginia McGraw McGraw ' s Ralph Willard Bishop Morgantown Josephine Carr Mount Hope Ralph Sherman Marshal ' Long Beach, Cal. Pot Moore Affinity Correll C- Shale Morgantown 61 JUNIORS Walter Sherrod Carpenter St. Marys Marcy E. McMillan Clarksburg Heinz Eisenhardt Morgantown Catherine Fortney Newburg William R. Ballard Glen Jean Barbara Belle Applebaum Charleroi. Pa. Robert Y. Hayne Ulvert Mathew Moore Thomas R. Wilson, Jr Charleston Bluefield Quinnimont Dorothy Haines J Richard Smith Violet Gadd Romney Glenville Charleston William H, Steed Charleston Dean W. Ferguson HoUidays Cove George Hopkins Martinsburg Margaret Mae Rohr Charleston Thomas Rodney Wilson Porkersburg Joseph Watson Charleston S. E. Franklin Wheeling J Gladys Belle Morgret Lumberport Richard Tabler Feller Martinsburg 62 JUNIORS Saraphemas Candas Point Pleasant Diane Toussaint Sistersville Wendell Simpson Moore Clarksburg Sallie Smith Wheeling Victor Petitto Mt, Clare Marjorie Lee Nicholson Welch Jack C. Morgan Fairmont Jane Greer Morgantown William Henry Mclntire Mount Hope Dorothy Hale Puritan Mines Dwight Fast Charleston Edyth Alwym French Welch Kenneth Rubenstein Thomas Mary Catherine Poole Clarksburg C, M- Smithson Powellton Zone Sloter Charles William Brown A Robert Markowitz Paul Satterfield Clarksburg Waynesburg, Pa. Clarksburg Weston 63 JUNIORS Tom Davies Nemacolin, Pa. Barbara Chalmers Smoyer Clairton, Pa. Helen Josephine Hood John Sewell Gather Rivesville Gralton J. Carl Palmer New Martinsville Marion Gooch Charleston Royden McKee Loucks Scottdale, Pa. John Nicholas Clarksburg 64 r . X SOPHOMORES First Row — John Roscoe Horn- brook, Wilma Bransford, John A. Crabtree, Virginia L. Weaver, Hen- ry A. Comley, Jean Louise Calla- han, Richard A. Welch, Jr., Sara Beneke, Dan Long, Eleanor R. Harper. Second Row — Grace Templeton, Clyde Robert Cattrell, Nellie Mor- gan, Duane Adams, Emily Murray, Edgar C. Siegrist, Marjorie Stros- nider, D. Aldo Gianola, Helen Fiess, Lewis J. Robb, Jr. W0 Third Row— Harold Thompson, Charlotte Shingleton, William A. Lunk, Nell Boggs, Everette M. Rog- ers, Betty Brooks, Champe Clark Pool, Janet Duffield, Mike Joseph, Shirley Grace Greene. Fourth Row — Elinor Hartley, Robert A. Naumann, Margaret Jane Lee, Larry McLaughlin, Eve- lyn Dorothy Smith, Letcher Wigin- ton, Betty Lee Schuchat, Jules Pow- ell, lone Dunn, Ralph W. Gerchow. Fifth Row— Phihp H. Harper, Rosalie O ' Neale, Ralph E. Patter- son, Mildred Shortridge, Edward Lane Exley, Lucille Keith, Mont M. Gardner, Natalie Porter, William H. Cowger, Cassie May Stone. 65 I 1! A f f ' % q . c- fii SOPHOMORES First Row — Ernest M. Brown, James Donald Ezell, Anna Nell Winning, Howard L. Mclntyre, Mary Jane Foley, Sam Kanner, Betty Irene Nichols, Cecil S. Volk, Mary Louise Foulk, John Corliss. Second Row — Frank P. Bane, Mary Bretz, Leslie H. Moyers, Mary Ben Morris, William E. Riggs, Ger- trude Goldman, Franklin G. Wade, Helen L. Moore, Charles McDer- mott, James A. Rothwell. Third Row — William Clinton Woofter, William Ray Goff, Thelma Irene Hartley, William T. McGin- nis, Mariana Collins, Paul A. Poul- icos, LaYvonne McCoy, Ernest C. Goff, Katherine Fouts, Edwin Spears, Jr. Fourth Row — John Parker, Reva Forman, Robert Harold Loeb, Mar- garet Jane Gibson, R. J. Peters, Deane Donahoe, Herschel A. Jar- ell, Betty Ellen Berry, Charles Hen- ry, John L. Snider. Fifth Row — Joseph C. Stutler, Ed- ward W. Gieseler, Martha Mae Conner, Douglas Wynn, Lois Keck, Theodore Oscar Deaumer, Eliza- beth Bailey, Evert M. Pearcy, Betty Taylor, Charles H. Ruck. 66 k1kLr4f 4J ; jJF A 2AJM i SOPHOMORES First Row — Harold W. Piggott, Jr., Jack E. Mumll, Betty Lee White, Delfore Lee Cottrill, Jr., Mary Hen- ry, Charles Friebertshauser, Jean Blosser, Arch Bullard, Rebecca Nay, John A. Shepherd. Second Row — Charles E. Utt, Marguerite La Jo McCulloch, James G. Collier, Isabella Cage, Marvin Richard McClung, Emily Harrison, Cornelius C. Davis, Jr., Gretchen Lee Reighard, John P. Hindsely, James K. McLaughlin. Third Row — Glenn W. Green, Miles W. Bell, Mary Stansbury, Charles Lawrence Ritter, Bettie Stallings, John Jenks, Shonk, Anna D. Blair, Russell L. Heinlein, Flor- ence Jane Shaifer, Herbert W. Woolard, Jr. Fourth Row— Dale A. Waltz, Harriet G. Wolverton, Milton Sid- ney Koslow, Jeanne Connell, Louis D. Gundling, Ruth McVeigh Coff- man, John Norwood Pattison, Juan- ita Shahan, John S. Haught, Rob- ert M. Simms. Fifth Row— Wallace R. Dodge, Charles Edgar, Jane Boyer, Glenn W. Thome, Margaret Ann Sum- mers, Robert Lewis Gibson, Cath- erine Curran, Yankee Barbakow, Charlotte A. Thomasson, Rowe R. Bunner. 67 . THH r -jaf HB h SOPHOMORES First Row — Thomas Gillooly, James Rowe McCartney, Amy Jane Roberts, Henry C. Davis, Jr., Frances Louise Haan, Clarence Edwin Smith, Pauline Schultz, Ed- win W. Crooks, Charlotte G. Wil- son, John William Plattenburg. Second Row — William E. Miller, Claire Williams, Loren L. Fisher, Dylys Payne, H. Jackson Bryan, II, Elizabeth Houston Allen, Joseph T. Crane, Ann Yoke, Ira Ranson, Wil- liam C. Sowers. aWJi.SBILD ' l Third Row — Joseph Stenger, Jr., George K. Folk, Anita V. Girard, David Arthur Reed, Elsie C. Jenni- son, Robert S. Wilson, Ann McMil- lion, Clin Carter Glass, Dorothy Adams, Don Brant. Fourth Row — John T. Reynolds, Patty Peck, William Pershing Kirk, Isabelle A. Urling, David S. Pipes, Aida Franquiz, Meade A. Livesay, Ruth Grabe, Frank Eugene Horn- brook, Charles Mahan. Fifth Row— William Ira Powell, C. J. Pearson, Jane Brand, W. T. Jackson, Jr., Rosenetta Mervis, Ken- ton Allen Hall, Marjorie Annon, Albert E. Collins, Gwen Shale, Murray Myers. 68 • J, C-- ' T- - W A W ' jI - -M W-- - U«m  =r - SOPHOMORES First Row — W. Roy Hashinger, Jr., Elbert Matthews, Gordon M. Grisinger, Louise Lazzelle, William H. Osborne, Robert Mueller, Re- becca Fletcher, Richard Davisson, John F. Volker, George E. Carver, Second Row — W. H. Lewis, Rich- ard J. Gould, Richard C. Liskey, Maurice L Simonton, John William Jones, Jr., Leah Sellares, William Y. Klett, William Franklin Morgan, Jr., W. Harold Urling, Frank L. Campbell, George M. Eckley, Jr. Third Row — Lloyd E. Church, William E. Wright, Jr., Jack Spring- er, Gilbert Nach, Virginia George, Herbert Gottlieb, Jacquelyn Ban- quer, Dwane Ringer, John Hack- ney, William Vance, William O. Hundley. 69 FRESHMEN First row — Jane Eleanor Dunning, John Duncan McCue, Mary Lou BuUard, Clarence Caudill, Mar- garet Louise Brabban, Wesley C. Brashear. Second row — John Stephenson, Eileen Miller, William Edward Cotton, Eleanor Frances Linger, Robert B. Pierce, Carol Johnson. Third row — Jack L. Barrick, Kenneth McMechen, Malcolm W. Sperow, Paul E. Copher, James Leg- gett, Robert Glenn Arrington. Fourth row — Clement B. Bassett, Herbert H. Goff, Jr., David T. Stemple, Stephen A. Douglas, Howard Philips, J. William Shaffer. Fifth row — Eleanor Kaplan, Robert William Nel- son, Nancy Flournoy, Ralph A. Courtney, Jr., Kath- erine Jane Kingry, Burl Randolph. Sixth row — Paul F. Storck, Betty Goldsmith, John Mathews, Elsie Jean Kacer, R. Moore Dodrill, Lucille Quillen. Seventh row — Charles H. Feller, Hortenziu Benchea, Charles O. Hardman, Albert Klebe, Paul Deem, James Pershing Painter. Eighth row — Orville Hardman, Herbert H. Roth- well, John B. Connell, Jr., Ralph Nelson Block, Andrew Calderwood, Wallace Hirshberg. Ninth row— Marilyn Bird, Raymond H. Hoult, Josephine Duncan, George Curnes, Mary Jean Burdick, Raymond C. Nassimbeni. Tenth row — Martin Rubin, Nancy Mathews, Walter Anthony Bowman, Mildred E. Moon, Wil- lard Edward Moore, Bettie McCann. 70 TP ' J - 3 -f m?. L T- 1 ' j ' k J i iiiiill ' - 1 fTTf p. FRESHMEN Firs ' row — Charles E. Kessel, Audry Morgen, Phil Johnson, Ruth Simmons, Don R. Patterson, Ann Stewart. Second row — Catharine Baer, Dorsey O. Cole, Louise Bergdoll, John William Brown, Jr., Elizabeth Jane Gibson, Kerwin Ranson. Third row — Jack Parrish. Doris Cabell, Walter Warren Point, 111, Virginia Lee Fleming, James Cole, Edith Kress. Fourth row — Miles John Jorgensen, William Jamison, Virginia Marie Smith, James R. Swiger, Eleanor Jones, William Allen Bumgardner. Fifth row — James Pitrola, Christie MacDonald, Rowland R. Devore, Elizabeth S. Romine, Harry B. Gibbs, Howard J. Forbes. Sixth row — Denver Curnutte, Richard Lee, Frances Stotler, J, Robert Shingleton, Helen Nich- ols, Joseph Butta. Seventh row — Morton Stanley Cohn, Lewana Koon, James Eugene Young, Jeanne Michie, Con- rad Prager, Jon P. Hardway. Eighth row — Richard B, Clark, Paul R, Corristan, R. Christine Davis. J. Charles Hall, Janet ToUiver, William M. Kramer. Ninth row — C. E. Greene, Lydia Beckett, Miguel Cintron, Leah Winifred Hudson, John Adams Springer, Benjamin Brown. Tenth row — Ellen Marie Campbell, William Mager King, F. Elizabeth Barker, William Boose, Silea Cappellari, Russell Armentrout. 71 FRESHMEN First row — C. Gordon Sherwood, Mark Grove, Mary Jane Dobbie, Alexander Tail, Millie Hamil- ton, Max L. Kammer. Second row — Stanley E. Deutsch, Mary Buchan- an, Thomas Cummins, Mary Jo Pine, James Tidier, William B. Morgan. Third row — Arthur Bekenstein, J. W. McCallister, Kathleen Peel, Edward O ' Neill, Bette Rahe Hine- line, Raymond Buzed. Fourth row — Werner A. Grimpe, Margaret Reams, Jack Lotstein, Florence Josephine Gilmore, George William West, Jack Harford. Fifth row — Robert A. Crichton, Richard E. Bayne, Annice R. Blumberg, Herbert W. Young, June Wat- son, Gale C. Bland. Sixth row — J. Byron Bodensick, Shirley Slaab, Milton Kotler, Barbara Walker, Morton Arnold Hardman. Seventh row — Guy N. Belcher, Jr., Henry Good- man, Jeanne Louise Ramsey, J. B. White, Nancy Pugh, Don H. Bond. Eighth row — Richard Pharr, Dolores Peters, Rob- ert Spiker, Evelyn Marie Hill, Bill Francis Hender- son, Septimiu Benchea. Ninth row — Alvin I. Fineman, Robert W. Wildey, Ann Wickline, Richard Sycofoose, Doris Franquiz, Roger D. Griffith. Tenth row— Jack D. Slaughter, Eloise Jane Clai- borne, William Robert Dawson, Keitha Anne Ran- dal, Allen J. Enelow, Harry Wheeler Eakin. 72 -j T r fiT u% T - ■■FRESHMEN First row — Elliott Ellis, Caroline Jones, Clarence Smiglin, Marceline Weiner, Asper Petros, W. R. Murphy. Second row — Charles D. Stansbury, Thomas McCarthy, Grace Williams, Steven Gatrell, Vir- ginia Kathleen Johnston, Ellsworth Clark. Third row — Burton Peskin, Rhea Levin, William Earl Parsons, Jean Smith, James Frederick Ruch Roy W. Biddle. Fourth row — Burl Clayton Lewis, Louis Dalla- croce, Dorothy Mae Hoffman, Larry Andrews, Lil- lian Nach, Harry Stover. Fifth row — Thomas Knapp, Frances Yost Han- cock, Joseph I. Schwartz, Betty Bieberson, George William Hogshead, Kenneth D. Bailey. Sixth row — William Newton Corbitt, George A. Cooper, Jr., Martha Ann Edgar, Max Cubbon, Betty Jane Sharpless, Fay T. Bear. Seventh row — R. A. Mclntyre, Gretchen Snod- erly. Earl W. Reiley, Jr., Lois Barnes, Paul Plenni, John W. Hoy. Eighth row — Walter Greig Crichton, Jr., H. C. Foster, Jr., Gwendolyn Hinerman, Fred William Cook, Jr., Dorothy Dueker, George H. Stems. Ninth row — James A. Forney, Anna Jane Kiger, Charles E. HoUandsworth, Virginia Walkup, Jack- son B. Browning, Sydney Smith. Tenth row — Carl Zeit, George Stewart Sharp, Mabel Hoskins, Victor Earle Sage, Helen Andrick, Thomas Woodrow Alkire. 73 FRESHMEN First row — Estelle Treacy, Mary Elizabeth Cup- !tt, Herman T. Nash, Betty Lou Freismuth, Hil- rion Sanchez, Jr., Virginia Joan Knotts. Second row — Elizabeth Dickinson, Howard Ash- draft, Betty Baker, Robert Groban, Betty Thurnes, etty Jane Preece. Third row — Be er, John R. M Baric, Louise L :ty Conniff, S. Elizabeth Hashing- Elis abeth Ballard, Rudolph Fourth row- lord, Margaret beth Jean Bever sanne Monroe, James B. Craw- tacks, James E. Fletcher, Eliza- dge, Alice E. Miller. Fifth row — Irene Audio, Mary Louise Dovies, Dhn Smith, Margaret Eagen, Donnally Morris, P. ( Jarolyn Edgar. Sixth row — Mary Jean Marple, Margaret Ann Curry, Elizabeth Davies, Mary Wheat, Mary Cath- ( rine Waldo, Margaret Elizabeth Street. Seventh row — Evelyn R. Gordon, V. N. Green, Jean Haden Robert N. Provence. 74 iviities FRATERNITIES Robert Lee Bird is examining samples of drill cuttings, from a deep well drilled as a test for natural gas. This work is being done to obtain informa- tion on the subsurface geology of the state, under the guidance of Professor James H. C. Martens. It is hoped that this will be of considerable value to the oil and gas operators. The Geological Survey has in its samples storage room about 30,000 samples of drill cuttings from 150 different wells. DRAMATICS MUSIC 76 University Publications Board PROF. STEPHEN AILES DR, O. P. CHITWOOD PROF. C. C, WILLIAMS, JR. DR. P. L REED ALBERT F. GOOD HELINDA E. WHITE PROF. LESLIE D. HAYES The Committee on Student Publications is composed of five faculty members, appointed by the president of the University, and two students, appointed by the president of the Student Body. This committee supervises all of the student publications, including the Monticola, Daily Athenaeum, Student Directory, Moonshine, Freshman Handbook, Coon Skin, and Cruiser. -AH-etppkeemte-fer-positions-orr-the-staffs-of these vtmcrns publiuuliuiib luUbL by- approved by this committee. Each staff in turn is responsible to it and must make suitable reports. 79 The 1939 Monticola WILLIAM T. NUTTER Editor ELERY A. McDonald Business Manager The 19 9 Monticola is deeply indebted to the West ' irginia Oil and Natural Gas Asso- ciation and its secretary, Edwin Robinson. They havi f made it possible for us to give rec- ognition 1 3 one of our state ' s most important industries —the oil and gas industry. The as- sistance cf Paul H. Price, state geologist, in the prepa •ation of the material for the dedi- cation was invaluable. We are indebted to Shirley Currey for her assistance as literary editor; to Al Volker for his splendid resume of the sports year; to Jack Shepherd for his work as advertising man- ager; to Evelyn Harris for her work in the beauty contest; to Jack Bryan for his feature column; to Vernah Stewart and Ernest Hut- ton for art work; to Alex Adair and Jack Shadel for the snapshot pages; and to Hubert DeLynn for hours of tireless service. ¥he)S W !j terf f me n ib mki w l i u ae pictu res do not appear include: Mildred Selby, Jack Shadel, Dick Welch, Bill Morrison, Bill Sowers, Hubert DeLynn, Jack Bryan, James Kidwell, and Har- old Heyer. 80 Monticola Staff Evelyn Harris Vernah Stewart lot in A, Shepherd Ernest Hutton Louis Grundling iviarttia iVlae CJonner Shirley Currey Irene Bennett Richard Pharr Alex Adair Al Volker Septimiu Benchea Warren Point Wesley Brashear 81 The Daily Athenaeum Charles E. Freeman Business Manager Creel S. Cornwe Managing Editor Alvin S. Volker Dr. P. I. Reed Editor Head of Journalism Dept. Five days a week the students of West Virginia University are supplied with copies of the Daily Athenaeum, published by the department of journalism, one of the outstanding newspaper train- ing schools in the country. The editors of the Daily Athenaeum this year, Al Volker and Creel Cornwell, had the honor of starting the Daily Athenaeum off on the first year of its second half-century. In September, 1887, the first copy of the Athenaeum was pub- lished with U. S. Grant Pitzer as the first editor. It was planned to put out an issue every two weeks and the printing was done by Julian Fleming, proprietor of the New Dominion steam printing house. The Athenaeum is now published every day except Sunday and Monday. It keeps the students abreast of national news through the medium of the United Press. This year the Daily Athenaeum has been heard as well as seen through the Campus Commentator, who broadcasts campus news through the University studios. 82 Athenaeum Staff The organization this year has included editor-in-chief, Al Volk- er; managing editor, Creel S. Cornwall; business manager, Charles Freeman; news editors: Anna Neale Hardman, Clyde Hess, Wil- liam Keller, George Armstrong, Don Meranda; Robert Nuzum, Jane Burnside, Ted Eiland, Robert Earle, and William Thompson; sports editors: Clyde O. Hess, William Thompson; society editors: Shir- ley Currey, Jane Greer, Jean McCay Bailey, and Edith Garlow; literary editors: Jane Burnside, Mildred Bennett; photographer, George Armstrong. Professor P. I. Reed is head of the department, George R. Rine- hart is assistant professor and H. Boone Michelson is instructor. Fourth row — Robert Earle, Elery McDonald, RoUa Williams, William Thompson, Instructor H. B. Michelson. Third row — Phil S. Spahr, Cecil Cutler, Clyde O. Hess, Harry J. Bryan, Alma White, Jack Dunlop, Martha Mae Conner, Frank Shaffer. Second row — Creel S. Cornwell, Jean McCay Bailey, Virginia Lee Batson, Bill Powell, Anna Neale Hardman, Edith Garlow, George Armstrong, Betty J. Lee, Mildred Hartley Bryson. First row — Prof. George Rinehart, Florence Lewis, Ann Yoke, Betty White, Betty Nichols. Robert Clark, Ted Eiland, Jane Burnside, Mildred Bennett, Virginia Lee McKine, Prof. P. I. Reed. 83 Mountaineer Week Team The Mountaineer Week Team comprises a group of students at West Virginia University who visit the various high schools of the State about Easter time each year. Their purpose is to tell of the educational opportunities offered at our State University by presenting a brief, yet comprehensive, sketch of student activities on the campus and for bringing about a better understanding between the State high schools and the University. The team was first organized in 1927. It has completed its 12th annual tour. The team ' s activities are entirely student financed. For the past six years, Mountain, men ' s honorary, has sponsored the Mountaineer Week Team. For several years. Dr. Richard Aspinall, assistant to the president, has been coach of the team. This year ' s Mountaineer Week Team program was perhaps the most com- prehensive and extensive yet attempted. In all, 128 high schools located in every county of the State were contacted. In addition, members of the team conferred with students of two junior colleges with regard to future enrollment at the University. Twelve University men were selected as regular members of the group and three were chosen as alternate members for short speaking tours. Never before this year had University women been included in the personnel of the team. This year more than thirty young women volunteered to appear at their home high schools, with the man member of the team whose tour included that particular high school. Five motion picture projection outfits were dispatched to different sections of the State to show pictures of the campus, of high school athletic events held at the University, and of college activities. Men ' s Glee Club, with a membership of 75, under the direction of Mr. Frank Cuthbert, School of Music, visited three high schools. Third row— Charles E, AUard, George Arthur Shawkey, Vernon Bailey, Carl A. Aronson, H. Paige Bell, William E. Gilmore. Second row — William E. Neely, Arnold Addison, Harold Fleming, Richard Dolly, Ralph Jones, Jr., Lewis Riley. First row — Neil Hevener, James M. Van Metre, Ned E. Shott, Dr. Richard Aspinall, Roy Samms, John L. Sullivan. 84 Mountain Founded in 1904, Mountain has since that time enjoyed continuous active existence. To promote the interest and welfare of the University in accordance w ith the principles adapted by the administration is the object of Mountain. Membership is based upon personal character and service to the University. Third row — Douglas Foley, George H. Seibert, Jr., Roy Samms, Lewis Riley, David Volkin, Abe Tomchin. Second row — George C. Leslie, Sterling Vines, William Neely. First row — Paul Miller, Andrew L, Blair, Harold Smith, Howard Klebe, Ralph Jones. 85 Third row — Dolly, Heiskell, Volkin, Foley, J Byrum, Hogue, Moran, Lothes, Eller. Second row — Neely, Leslie, D ' Orazio, G. Byrum, Shuman, Madden, Seibert, Condry, Wolverton. First row — Riley, Nutter, Dickerhoff, Mclntire, Comuntzis, Freeman, Jackson, Addison, Mockler, Graham, Klebe. Fi Batar Cappar Fi Batar Cappar is the men ' s mock honorary organization for campus lead- ers and lettermen. The Alfa chapter was founded at W. V. U. on March 13, 1914, for the purpose of boosting the school. The founders adopted as a badge, a small square of leather emblematical of the goal of college life — the sheepskin. Its fastener is a small piece of brass derived from the ancient brazen calf, the meaning of which is one of the secrets of the organization. The Fi Batars undertook two new tasks this year. They started a new scholar- ship loan fund for minor sports athletes with Dr. Thomas E. Ennis, their adviser, the trustee of the fund. The Freshman Honor court was started and was com- posed of one member each from Fi Batar Cappar, Mountain, Sphinx, and a representative from the campus at large. The purpose of the Honor court was to prescribe the punishment for freshman rule violators. Officers: L H. C. P Howard Klebe Keeper of the Hoard Douglas Foley Keeper of the Konklin George Byrum Cheerleader Gus Comuntzis 86 Sphinx 5 Fleming J. Byrum Moody Bailey Ript Phelps Nachbar D ' Orazio Klebe G. Byrura Sphinx, senior men ' s organization, has as its aim the sponsoring and main- taining of campus traditions and the fostering of the well being and interests of freshmen. In 1934, Sphinx introduced the first interfraternity sing to be held on the campus. The sing has become one of the most popular and beautiful annua! events on the campus. Last year it was broadcast for the first time. The Sphinx gives a cup each year to the winner. In the fall the Sphinx plans a homecoming during the football season. They help edit the freshman handbooks and this year the Sphinx conducted the freshmen guidance meetings. Officers: Emperor of Sphinx - Howard Klebe Steward-treasurer Seymour Nachbar Scribe-secretary Harold Rist Adviser - Dr. A. L. Darby .njiiMi-U . mu 87 Scabbard and Blade f First row — Ernest Hutton, Mi- chele A. DePietro, Jr., N. T. Turoff, Jane Linn Osborn, Wen- dell S. Moore, James M. Van Metre Second row — William H, Powell, Bob Parrish, John S. Gather, Homer W. Sharpen- berg, John D. Livingstone, J. D. Ashworth. Third row— Anderson C. Her- old, Jr., David G. Sterling, Jock Blair, Louis Reed Miller, Wayne C. Campbell, Jack C. Morgan, Jess W, Richardson. Fourth row— Frank T, Grif- fith, Hazlett McMillen Rodgers, John Lee Sullivan, Wilmer E. Rodes, Jack Springer, Richard Vance Lynch, Jr., John E. Brown. Fifth row— Thomas R. Wilson, Jr., Thomas L. Craig, William Moreland, Robert Y, Hayne, Don L. Cornell. Charles Kindt! Paul Satterfield. Sixth row— Thomas Joseph Richardson, Thomas Edward Graham, III, Earle Lewis Lan- caster, J. Dean Eisel, Troxell O Mason, Thomas Gibbs, C. Ed- ward Carpenter. Scabbard and Blade, national honorary society of cadet officers, is located at universities and colleges with Departments of Military Science and Tactics. C company, second regiment, was founded at West Virginia University in 1916. This year C company won -the National Scabbard and Blade pistol champion- ship. Each year the Scabbard and Blade presents medals to the highest ranking basic one cadets. Officers: Captain N. L Turoff 1st Lieutenant W. B. Mendell 1st Lieutenant J B. Rielly 1st Sergeant T. O. Mason 1st Sergeant... W. Rhodes Technical Sergeant A. C. Herold Honorary Captain Jane Linn Osborne Adviser Major Burdick Mortar Board Myer! John Laurel chapter ranks high among the many chapters of Mortar Biard m va- rious universities throughout the United States. Members are chosen on the basis of scholarship, leadership, and service. Service projects include Laurel cottage, a cooperative house, ani man honor roll for freshettes attaining an average of 2.5 or better. the fresh- Scott Smoyer Tonry Baker Carpenter Turley McMechen Zimmerman Waugh Rhododendron Rhododendron, junior women ' s honorary, was organized in order that recog- nition could be given to junior women who had shown promise in scholarship, character, leadership and in activities, and to give them an opportunity to work together for service to the University and toward the further development of their talents. The women eligible for membership are those who will be juniors the com- ing year, who have attained a certain specified scholastic average and who have been outstanding in character, leadership and activities. The honorary ' s main project is the sponsorship of Rhododendron house, a cooperative establishment on the campus organized to help University women live as economically as possible and yet at the same time give them the oppor- tunity of enjoying group life. OFFICERS Barbara Smoyer President Phyllis Spongier .._ Vice President Betty McMechen Treasurer Rebecca Carpenter Secretary 90 Li-Toon-Awa Payne Keith Friendship is the meaning of Li-toon-awa in Indian language. This sym- bolizes the aim of the organization which is to be helpful and to serve as a g;:piip nn fhp rrtr n piis Thp Tn pmhftrs attempt to assis t freshman women adapt themselves to University life. The organization was founded at the University in 1927 and is the outstand- ing sophomore organization. Candidates for membership in Li-toon-awa are judged on qualities of character, personality, scholarship, extra-curricular ac- tivities, and leadership. 91 Tau Beta Pi Oakley Johnson Fisher Balch Marsh Aroi son Shoaf Madden Plovanich Schroder Von Berg 9 u 92 . . . to mark in a fitting manner those who have conferred honor upon their Aima Mater by distinguished scholarship and exemplary character as under- graduates in engineering, or by their attainments as alumni in the field of engi- neering. This was written in 1885 at Lehigh University at the founding of the honorary scholastic engineering society, Tau Beta Pi. The Association now has a total of seventy active chapters throughout the engineering schools of the United States. West Virginia Alpha chapter of Tau Beta Pi was installed at West Virginia University in 1922. It has an active membership of twenty undergraduates and a faculty membership of fourteen at the present time. Officers of Tau Beta Pi are: C. A. Aronson President H. K. Shoaf - Vice-President T. E. Webb Corresponding Secretary T. O. Mason Recording Secretary J. E. Bailey Treasurer Members of Faculty Advisory Board: Professor G. P. Boomsliter Professor C. H. Gather Professor H. W. Speiden Alpha Epsilon Delta The date of conception of Alpha Epsilon Delta was April 28, 1925; when, according to an old historian ' s book, fifteen leading pre-medical students, under the leadership of Dr. Jack P. Montgomery, met in Tourney Hall at the University of Alabama, to discuss the writing of a constitution. Since 1926, chapters have been installed at Howard College, Birmingham, Alabama; University of South Carolina, University of Texas; Baylor University; University of Florida; University of Georgia; West Virginia University; and Alabama Polytechnical Institute. As a result of much work on the part of students and of Dr. A. L. Darby, Epsilon Alpha chapter of Alpha Epsilon Delta was established at West Virginia, May 30, 1931. CS f: n o en. (f . f . f . Wysong Thrush Fletcher Aspiote Crawford Davis Lynch Silverstein Scott Foley R. Hamilton Mourat Leslie Cashman Davis B. Hamilton Haught Nicholson Jones Antalis 93 Phi Upsilon Omicron Boggs Spray dey Devore Cruise Former Tonry Carpenter Dransfield Core Curry Warren Zimmerman Lewis Haines 94 Shinn Folmer Fair Lyons Phi Upsilon Omicron, national professional home economics fraternity, strives to establish and strengthen the bonds of friendship, to promote the morals and intellectual development of its members and to advance and promote home economics. Phi Upsilon Omicron was founded at the College of Agriculture at the Uni- versity of Minnesota in February, 1909. Lambda, the local chapter, was estab- lished in 1923. The local chapter has two national honorary members: Miss Rachel H. Col- well and Miss Nell Nesbitt. It also has three national officers: Mrs. Nell Lanham Leonian, editor of the Candle, Miss Ruth D. Noer, assistant editor, and Mrs. Helen Pohlman, councilor for district I. The main project sponsored by the organization this year was the giving of twelve food preparation demonstrations at the Rhododendron CCC Camp. Officers: Phyllis Curry President Barbara Smoyer Vice-President Henrietta Folmar Recording Secretary Kitty Campbell Zimmerman Corresponding Secretary Rebecca Carpenter Treasurer Ruth Weller Historian Meurl Lewis Editor Betty Fonner Librarian Sara Warren Chaplain Nelle Shepherd Sponsor In order to stimulate interest in the various divisions of the College of Agri- culture for viromen, the Home Economics club was organized to develop lead- ership and cooperation in the groups. Speakers give the members direct appli- cations of their major subject, with the advantages and disadvantages of each. Any home economics major is eligible for membership in the club and each year before the official opening of the organization, the officers plan and con duct a membership campaign with a representative from each of the four classes to assist. The representative who obtains the greatest number of mem bers receives a gift at the first meeting which is a party in honor of freshnOT students. The cabinet of the club is the hostess for this meeting and the follow- ing meetings are conducted by the various members. The serving and entertaining of guests during Farm and Home Week is the largest project of the club. One of the objects of the organization is to send a delegate to the national convention each year with this delegate reporting the convention proceedings to the club the next fall. Home Economics Club Johnson M. Boggs Preece Stone Core Fortney Shinn Warren McCann Haines Davis Devore Claiborne N. Bogis Folmar Spray Kacer Girard Hinerman Coleman Werton Curry Silcott Smoyer Lyons Bergdoll Cheesman Andrick Fair Siimmons Wildey 95 Journaliers Fourteen years ago several men enrolled in journalism courses at West Vir- ginia University gathered one evening to discuss a topic of mutual interest. They returned to their rooms that night as members of a new campus organiza- tion — the Journaliers. Through the succeeding years the original purposes of these founders have been preserved in the creation of better fellowship among journalism students, promotion of the interests of the Daily Athenaeum, and an understanding of the journalism profession in general. Always alert to promote the relations of the University with the press of the state, the Journaliers help entertain the visiting editors and publishers of the state, as they gather on the University campus for their annual conference. On the campus they award recognition to the most outstanding of the Daily Athen- aeum ' s journalists. The slug sheet: Al Volker Creel S. Cornwell Robert Nuzum Robert Earle Clyde O. Hess Ted Eilond Parks Butler Honorar y member: Frank Matthews George Rinehart George Armstrong William Keller Don Meranda Christie Batlas Rolla Williams Cecil Cutler H. Boone Michelson William Thompson Frank Shaffer Jack Dunlop Fontaine Hoof Woodrow Wilson Jack Bryan First row — Creel S. Cornwell, Jack Bryan, Cecil Cutler, Clyde O Hess, Prof P Eilond, Jack Dunlop, George Armstrong. Second row — Prof. George Rinehart, William Keller, Robert Earle, Rolla Williams, William Thompson, Frank Shaffer, Woodrow Wilson, Instructor H. Boone Michelson. 96 B. White Currey Greer Hardman A, White Lewis Bryson Bretz Yoke Batson Nichols Gooch J. Clark Garlow Bennett R. Clark McKane Matrix Banding together for the purpose of cementing friendships and furthering cooperation among the women of the department of journalism, Matrix, a pro- fessional organization, concerns itself wi th such activities as publishing a hand- book for pre-journalism women, and a tea in Elizabeth Moore Hall in honor of visiting newspaper women and editors ' wives each fall. This year twenty-one women majors in journalism are members of Matrix. _This group issued the Daily Athenaeum in a streamline fashion on one occasion , this year. Sports and society alike were handled by the women. This spring the members were hostesses at a tea for freshman women who plan to major in journalism. Matrix meetings are informal and emphasize good fellowship over profes- sional spirit, but members are not unaware of the serious aspects involved in planning for a newspaper career. Officers for this year are: President Roberta Clark Vice-President Edith Garlow Secretary Shirley Currey Treasurer Mildred Bennett 97 McQuire Strader ( Uifford Tonry Leonard Gardner To issaint W. A. A. 98 Woman ' s Athletic Association exists to give all women students an opportun- ity to participate in recreational activities. The organization sponsors the intra- mural sports program which consists of tournaments in horseshoes, volleyball, badminton, basketball, foul throwing, softball, bowling, and swimming. With the assistance of Orchesis, honorary dance group, the association spon- sors the May Festival. The regular meeting is in the form of a sport night held the first Monday in each month. Members participate in recreational games and an informal social hour at the meeting. Officers: President... Alberta Dyer Strader Vice-President Helen Gardner Secretary Ruth Tonry Treasurer Martha Ford Intramural Manager Helen Gregg Y. W. C. A The Young Women ' s Christian Association strives to realize a full and creative life through a growing knowledge of the Divine. The weekly meetings are held on Wednesday evening and are opened with a devotional service. Last year the Young Women ' s Christian Association sponsored the dance drama, The Juggler of Notre Dame, presented by Orchesis. The Kampus Kruise is held each spring by the Y. W. C. A. in Elizabeth Moore Hall, and features dancing, games, refreshments, and a floor show. Weaver Urling Stallings Michie Smoyer McWhorter Connell Wheat Davis Andrick Devore Keith Burdick Clifford Zimmerman McMillion Wise Campbell 99 Spiked Shoe j ' h _ I _ After a lapse of several years, the University chapter of the National Colle- giate Society of The Spiked Shoe has again become an active campus organ- ization. The general purpose of the Spiked Shoe is to foster interest in track and to increase its popularity on the University campus. The specific purpose is to bring together in a closer bond all those interested in track as a sport. Officers: Robert Jackson President Frederick Weiland.. ' . Vice-President Jack Springer Secretary-Treasurer Art Smith Faculty Adviser Fourth row — Hall, McCallister, Adair, McCarthy, O ' Neil, Rodgers, Romanoski, Nicholas. Third row — Coach Smith, Morris, Armentrout, McCue, Reed, Post, Hackney, Klett, Cather Mathews. Second row — Ringer, Rapaswick, Tressler, Clark, Shadle, Brooks, Knapp, Storck, Shonk, Pisegna. First row — Brown, Haley, Richards, Springer, Livesay, Johns, Unbehaun, Friebertshauser, Jacobson, Jackson, Coombs 100 Third row — James Gilmer, Edward Eiland, John Hackney, George Ferrell. Second row — Delford Lee Cottrill, Edgar C. Siegrist, David Dole Johnson, Frank Campbell. First row — George Flowers, William K. Leonhart, Benjamin Tissue, Dr. Carl M. Erasure, William T. Nutter, Frank Griffith. Delta Nu Tau Delta Nu Tau is an honorary pre-legal fraternity founded at West Virginia University in 1932. It was formed to give honor to the better students in the pre-law group. With this fraternity as a nucleus, the pre-law students are organized to fa- miliarize the group with the problems and phases of the law profession, and to bring each member into closer contact with the law school proper. Each year members of the law school faculty and numerous other prominent Jawyers and judges of the State are selected to speak to the group. To become eligible for membership a candidate must have a two-point average for two consecutive semesters of pre-law work. Officers of the group are: William T. Nutter._ - President William K. Leonhart - Vice-President Benjamin Tissue .- Secretary-Treasurer Carl M. Frasure - Pre-Law Adviser 101 Alpha Zeta The purpose of Alpha Zeta, agricultural honorary, is the development of the farm, and the farm home, through on organization controlled by agricultural students. It is advised by an agricultural faculty and stimulated by the bonds of fraternity around a membership chosen after an earnest agricultural motive. The fraternity of Alpha Zeta was founded at Ohio State University, Colum- bus, Ohio, by Charles W. Burkett on November 4, 1897. John F. Cunningham and ten other chapter members established the Townshend chapter and since that time the fraternity has grown throughout the country until at the present there are forty-four chapters. The West Virginia chapter was chartered in 1 922 and since that time has been the only honorary fraternity in agriculture on the campus. Consideration is given equally to scholarship, leadership, and character, in considering any candidate for membership. Officers: Paul A. Miller Chancellor Wayne Faulkner Censor Henry Bailey Scribe James Van Metre Treasurer Merlin Bergdoll Chronicler Third row— S. Milam, J. Sims, H i i h H .mith, D. M, Foley, R. Miller, H. Porter, W. Cox. Second Row — D. Bragg, B. L. Holden P Gorrell G. Fogle, J. Hammer, A. Ripley, J. Corrick. First row — Merlin Bergdoll, Henry Bailey P A Miller, W. Faulkner, James Van Metre, C. Summers. 102 Chi Sigma Delta 1 t m % ■H|.; K P | Third row — Keith Fabianich, Paul UUum, John Brown, WilUam Mucklow, Second row — Charles McCabe, William Gulliford, Earl Boairsky, Joseph Bendkowski. First row — John Swisher, John Haight, Prof. K. D, Hutchinson (Faculty adviser), Nancy Neel Coffman, Harold D. Fox. Chi Sigma Delta was founded at West Virginia University eight years ago. The purpose of the organization was to promote general interest and scholastic enthusiasm in the study of economics. This organization was organized to be a strictly honorary fraternity for stu- dents who have maintained scholastic leadership in economics. To further this leadership, Chi Sigma Delta gives a scholastic award each year to the most outstanding junior in the economics department. Officers for the year are: JohnS. Haight - President Nancy Neel Coffman Vice-President Paul Heckert Treasurer John Brown. Secretary Those missing from picture are: Robert Brown Paul Heckert Mary Elnora Shingleton Mrs. Mary Abbott Phares 103 A. I. E. E The object of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, composed of junior and senior electrical engineering students, is to enable students to pre- sent technical papers before an audience, each member being required to pre- sent — during the entire year — four speeches of a technical nature. The group is a student branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers of which the students may become members after they have obtained their bachelor of science degree. Officers for this year are: Ernest W. Hutton President Don Worrell Vice-President C. O. Marsh Treasurer H. K. Shoaf _ Secretary Fourth row — Whitescarver, Marsh, Winters, Winter, Kepner, McClung, Bailey, Moses, Pasculle. Third row — Harris, Giboney, WickUne, Anthony, Hutton, Haught. Second row — Benvenuto, Erhard, Jones, Grow, Bennett, Conaway, Worrell. First row— Hollen, H. K. Shoai, Schwartz, Prof. A, H. Forman, J. Shoaf, Roby, Mynes, Blavos. 104 Fourth row — Julius Singleton, R. R. Gilia. Third row — Frederick Hess, James Pitrolo, J. P. Williams, Paul Pitrolo, James H. Doster, Victor Petitto, Charles Blottner, Robert Crichton. Second row — John Livingston, Silea Cappellari, Betty Lee, Eleanor Negri, Laura J. Monroe, Helen Furfori, Robert Darby, Amerigo Cappellari. Front row — Joseph Biafore, Roy D ' Ariano, John Cavalier, Lena Ferrara, Dr. A. L. Darby, Victoria Rich, Louis Cimino, George Sparacino. II Circolo Italiano II Circolo Italiano, Italian honorary society, is maintained so that the students of the University may have an opportunity to familiarize themselves with the Italian language, literature, and culture. Dr. Stephen F. Crocker, honorary member, gave an illustrated lecture on Early Italian Renaissance Paintings at the first meeting of the year. Other outstanding speakers during the year were: Prof. Lucius Reda, Clarksburg; Comm. Eugenio Morreale, royal Italian consul from Baltimore; and Dr. A. L. ' Darby, club sponsor. Following the annual May banquet, a three act Italian play, La Zia di Carlo, was presented by the Italian players. The officers are: Amerigo Cappellari — President Lucius Cavallaro Vice-President Lena Ferrara Secretary-Treasurer Dr. A. L Darby Sponsor 105 Third row — Cornell, Thompson, Birch, Reed, Scollon (Editor), Eckert, Flavoinca, PreviU. Second row — Toothman, Folsom, Moore, Sullivan, Gibbs, Oakley, Goodsell, Phelps. First row — Pratt, Schroder, Nichols (Vice-President), Shorpenberg (President), Dudderar (Secretary-Treasurer), Prof. Stoob, Griffith. Sigma Gamma Epsilon Upsilon Chapter of Sigma Gamma Epsilon was installed on the 27th day of May, 1927. Previous to this time there were 12 chapters located at major uni- versities and colleges throughout the United States. Upsilon Chapter was founded by John L. Titton, S. L Galpm, William A. Staab (present Faculty Adviser), W. Y. Yeaton, C. E. Lawall (Acting President of West Virginia University), John A. Given, Harry C. Kennedy, Melvin C. Smith, John M. Toshing, Stephen Kreckoric, D. L. McElroy and William Crawford. The objects of Sigma Gamma Epsilon are the social, scholastic, and scientific advancements of its members; the extension of the relations of friendship and assistance between the universities and scientific schools with recognized standings in the United States and Canada; and the upbuilding of a national college society devoted to the advancement of Geology, Mining, Metallurgy, Ceramics, and Petroleum Engineering. 106 Bije-Bije The Mystic campus organization of Bije-Bije was organized October 3, 1937. There were 14 charter members, all well-known men on the campus. At the present time the organization has 18 active members. The group meets at 12:30 every other Sunday morning at the Pond. The color of this mystic organization is green, the symbol is the octopus, and the flower is the pansy. There are five officers of the Bije-Bije; namely: Kingfish, Goldfish, Swordfish, Bullfish, and Carp, who serve in the Capacity of President, Treasurer, Sergeant of Arms, Secretary, and Adviser, respectively. Officers for this year are: Kingfish Harold W. Rist Goldfish John T. Fravel Swordfish William E. Gilmore Bullfish Arnold Addison Carp ..Clifford Garwick Fourth row — Howard C. Spear, William W, Currence, H. Jackson Bryan II, Wallace McKalip, Sam Mandich. Third row — Charles Allard, Norman Hockenberry, Jim Byrum, Charles Cox, Chandler Camp- bell, Howard C. Klebe. Second row — Sam O. Pinion, E, Andrew Zepp, William Moran, Paul Riddle, J. B. White, Bob Mockler, Bob R. Feather. First row — Edwin C, Curry, William E. Gilmore, John T. Fravel, Harold W, Rist, Arnold Addison, Clifford E. Garwick, John L. Schroder, Jr. 107 Dolphin Club Standing — Phyllis Spongier, Dorothy Hale, Lucile Houck, Miss Grace Griffin (Sponsor). Second row — Juanita Shahan, Jeanne Curry, Jean McQuiston, Jean Chandler, Nancy Allen. First row — Thelma Scott, Mary Jane Burdick, Virginia George, Frieda Eckert, Gwen Shale, Naomi Webster, Jean Marshall, Lillian Counts. Organized four years ago at West Virginia University, the Dolphin Club has had as its purpose the promotion of water safety and more skillful swimming. This is an honorary organization with Grace M. Griffin, associate professor of physical education, as the sponsor. During the past year the club has presented a water pageant and has spon- sored an intramural swimming meet. It has conducted tryouts for West Vir- ginia University ' s participation in the National Telegraphic Swimming Meet. Junior members are instructed in swimming and diving skills and are taken into the club on passing certain skill and endurance tests. The officers of the organization are: Dorothy Hale -- - President Nancy Allen First Vice-President Lillian Counts Second Vice-President Jean Chandler Recording Secretary Thelma Scott Corresponding Secretary Jeanne Curry Historian 108 Phi Alpha Delta Phi Alpha Delta is an honorary for law students. Its purpose is to further the fellowship between the law students, and to acquaint them with professional standards. Monthly banquet meetings are held with prominent lawyers and jurists as speakers. Phi Alpha Delta was organized in 1902. This, the Willey chapter, got its name from the late Prof. Waitman T. Willey, one of the earliest members of the College of Law faculty. It was admitted to the National or- ganization in 1925. Third row— L. Bambrick, G. Seibert, A. Good, W. B. Spillers, J. Robinson, H. Scherr, J. Mason, E. Swiger. Second row— W. H. Bronson, R. Goodwin, J. Wolverton, W. Carter, M. Green, E. Kessel, G. Post First row— Prof. E. C. Dickinson, L. Mclntyre, L. Riley, H. Given, J. McClaugherty, I. Smith, W. Latta, J. Goshorn. 109 Agricultural Club The Agricultural Club, potentially, is one of the largest organizations on the campus. Any one of the two hundred Agricultural students may become a member upon the payment of annual dues. Although organized primarily to promote social activities and entertainment for the members, the club also undertakes activities v hich are of educational value. It sponsors departmental organizations such as the Mountaineer Poultry Club and the Mountaineer Col- legiate Chapter of Future Farmers of America. The first Mountaineer Egg and Baby Chick show, which is now an annual affair, was sponsored by the club. Each year plant and seed diseases are identified at a judging contest, and apples, potatoes, hogs, horses, dairy cattle, beef cattle, sheep and poultry are placed. The zenith of the club ' s activities is the Ag Costume Dance, which is looked forward to by all University students. Participation in the All Ag Picnic, attended by the students in Home Economics, Forestry and Agriculture, usually concludes the program for the year. FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES Fourth row — I. E. Carpenter, R. H. Thompson, R. F. Dodrill. Third row— J, D. Dakan, B. J. Kann, C. I, Dunn, P. Babich. Second row — D, C. Curry, V. I. Fisher, R. J. Nottingham, W, D. Williamson, R, C. Marple. First row — H. G. Hetlebower, J. M. Hughes, O. E. Schubert, H. L. Hammer, D. M. Cartwright, M. R. McClung. 110 The officers are: Harold Smith President John Hammer Vice-President JackTyree Secretary- Merlin Bergdoll Treasurer Bryce Darrah Reporter lUNIORS AND SENIORS Sixth row— G E Tabb, D, M. Foley, H, H Smith, Wm. H. Cox. Fifth row — H. S. Workman, M. L. Smith, S. C. Milam. Fourth row— H. L. Porter, R E. Miller, J. A. Corrick, F. I Taylor, I, Cooper, H. L. Bailey. Third row— A. R. Bryant, Z. Ellison, C. C. Teets, L. M. Reid, P. E. Gorrell, I. B. Swecker, H G. Fogle. Second row— J. W. Hammer, G. E. Cain, J. A. Sims, G. A, Shears, D. D. Bragg, P. A Miller, C. G. Johnson- First row— T. B. Starr, W, C. Roberts, H. A. Roush, J. M. Tyree, M. S Bergdoll, A R. Ripley, B. A. Beeghly, M. W. Faulkner. Agricultural Club 111 Men ' s Glee Club The W. V. U. Men ' s Glee Club of seventy-five members, under the direction of Dr. Frank Cuthbert, has had a most active part in the musical program of the University. In addition to broadcasts over stations WMMN and WLW, the Club has presented programs in Morgantown, Fairmont, Clarksburg, Shinnston, Weston and Buckhannon. The travesty May Madness was given as part of the Greater West Virginia Week activities, with performances May 10 and May 13. The Club journeyed to Pittsburgh for its annual May broadcast over Station KDKA. After a lapse of many years, the Glee Club was reorganized by Dr. Cuthbert in 1934, with a membership of thirty. It has grown steadily in number and pro- ficiency, and the concerts and the broadcasts have received high acclaim. Two male quartets have been featured, one composed of Dwight Fast ' 40, Max Cubbon ' 42, Benny Classetti ' 40, and William Gilmore ' 39. The other male quartet was composed of Charles Taylor ' 39, John Mason ' 39, Robert Lee ' 39, and Charles Kindt ' 39. Sydney Allsopp ' 41, pianist and winner of the 1937 W. V. U. Scholarship in Piano, has appeared as soloist with the Club. 1938-39 officers: William Gilmore ' 39 President Walter C. PoUey ' 39 Vice-President Dwight Fast ' 40 Secretary Benny Classetti ' 40 Treasurer Harold Quigley ' 39 Librarian 112 W. V. U. MEN ' S GLEE CLUEf Dr. Frank Cuthbert, Director Bernard R. McGregor, Assistant Director Mary Elizabeth Summerfield, Accompanist 0i mmm Anderson, Earl E.; Appleby, George S.; Baber, Powhatan M.; Bailey, Kenneth D.; Baker, Charles Lewis; Bartkus, Edward P.; Bland, James P.; Bond, Don H.; Burner, Eugene L.; Camp, Harry; Campbell, Frank; Cappellanti, Lawrence A.; Carr, Daniel T.; Carr, Wm. Robert; Cavallero, Lucius; Clark, Richard B.; Classetti, Benny; CottriU, Delford Lee, Jr.; Craze, Jas. Harold; Crawford, Robert; Cubbon, Max W. C. Decoster, Alphonse J.; Deegan, Robert T.; DeRosa, Hugo; Dobos , Daniel D.; Dodson, Elmer H.; Earle, John D.; Farnsworth, Carl B.; Fast, Dwight; Fike, Milton E.; Folk, George; Forman, A. Hardie; Forman, Wade K.; Frazier, John C; Frere, Emile G.; Goal, Frank N.; Gilmore, Wm. E.; Gundling, Louis; Hamilton, Robert B Herod, C. Warren; Hess, Fred W.; Hughes, Robert T.; Jones, Gambrill; Jor- gensen. Miles John; Juric, George M.; Kaltenbach, Earl G.; Kindt, Charles W.; Kondratick, Lawrence T.; Lee, Robert B.; Leslie, Warren D.; McGee, William N.; Martin, Homer D.; Mason, John A. Neumann, Robert A.; Onisko, Anthony; Parsons, Chester S.; Pearson, C. Jud- son; Polley, Walter C; Powell, William I.; Quigley, Harold E.; Reed, David A.; Reger, Robert F.; Riddle, Walter M.; Rodeheaver, Earl M.; Rodgers, Hazlett M.; Rodgers, James H. P.; Rowles, John Paul; Sabalo, Raymond; Shaffer, Frank E. Simon, Mitchell; Springer, Chas. Wm.; Stenger, Aloys Bernard; Stine, Ira A.; Sutton, N. Lyle; Taylor, Chas. L; West, James; Williams, Paul D.; Zimmerman, Ernest L. FRANK CUTHBERT Director 113 Women ' s Glee Club The University Women ' s Glee Club was organized in 1927 by Prof. Lydia Hinkel, with a membership of 30. Since then the organization has increased to a maximum membership of 135. The first concert was given in the spring of 1927. Following this initial pre- sentation, concerts, both local and out-of-town, have been given each year. These include concerts at the University of Pittsburgh; Washington, D. C; Waynesburg College, Waynesburg, Pa.; and Elkins, W. Va. During the past few years, broadcasts have been given over radio stations at Fairmont, Morgantown, Pittsburgh, Washington, and Cincinnati. Officers of the Glee Club for the current year include: Prof. Lydia Hinkel, conductor; Mrs. Virginia McWhorter, accompanist; Julia Gibbs, president; Mary Jane Wasmuth, secretary-treasurer; Lucille Keith, librarian; and Mabel Grimes, publicity director. 114 WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB First Row — Mae Overholt, Mabel Grimes, Jane Reger, Dylys Payne, Gene- vieve Donohoe, Louise Bergdoll, Vivian Kelly, Jane Dunning, Martha Gallaher, Mary Cuppett, Elthea Eddy. Second Row— Anita Dickens, Lucille Lewis, Alma White, Ruth Grabe, Barbara Smoyer, Jean McMillen, Lucille Keith, Julia Gibbs, Mary Jane Wasmuth, Doris Brewer, Doris Conn, Ethel Nelson, Mary Poole, Bertie Lee Huff. Third Row — Edyth Cross, Christine Davis, Lydia Beckett, Mildred Shortridge, Harriet Wolverton, Evelyn Davies, Mrs. Virginia C. McWhorter, Miss Lydia Hinkel, Ruth Icenhower, Mary Crumpecker, Anna Lee Davies, Wilma Stewart, Betty Baker, Edith French, Lois Turley. Fourth Row — Helen Tuckwiller, Margaret Sampson, Elsie Kacer, Mary Wheat, Gladys Morgret, Eileen Samms, Rebecca Fletcher, Christine McMillen, Shirley Stabb, Ellen Campbell, Elizabeth Dickinson, Keitha Randall, Ardette Hardin, Joanna MacDonald, Barbara Walker, Frances Mehalic, Lucy Vandervort. Fifth Row — Elizabeth Tuckwiller, Helen Reger, Jeanne Monroe, Frances Woodhull, Patty Peck, Mary Jane Spaur, Gretchen Reighard, Nellie Morgan, La Yvonne McCoy, Corelyn Shanaberger, Sarah Hashinger, Mary Louise Young, lone Dunn, Gory Hungerford, Aurelia Elliott, Sue Frum, Lorna Black- shire, Norine Sterling. Members absent from picture: Elizabeth Acker, Irene Audio, Josephine Berry, Elra Brown, Marjorie Berg, Rebecca Carpenter, Roberta Clark, Dorothy Comley, Josephine Chalfaut, Elizabeth Davies, Virginia Davies, Lucille Dodge, Mary Eddy, Martha Edgar, Nancy Flournoy, Nellie Gallaher, Eva George, Gwendolyn Hinnerman, Frances Haan, Eloise Hall, Ardette Hardin, Thelma Hartley, Bette Hineline, Virginia Hope, Adelia Huff, Susan Jacobs, Mary Johnson, Lucy Jones, Vivian Jones, Virginia Knotts, Katherine Lemley, Elinor Linger, Joanna Mac- Donald, Charlotte Manion, Jane Marshall, Mildred Mason, Pauline Mattingly, Ercel Maust, Jean Maxwell, Margaret McCullough, Frances Milan, Frances Montagliani, Aldine Morris, Evelyn Murdock, Evelyn Painter, Dorothy Pollock, Frances Price, Eloise Reppert, Emma Rhodes, Elizabeth Romine, Inez Scott, Jane Shaffer, Mary Sigwart, Betty S temple, Mary Elizabeth Summerfield, Mary Waldo, Virginia Wells, Marian Williams, Mary Wolfe. 115 College of Pharmacy In response to the request of the West Virginia Pharmaceutical Association, the Board of Regents established a department of pharmacy in the School of Medicine in 1914. Since 1932, a minimum of four years of study has been re- quired for a bachelor of science in pharmacy. The College of Pharmacy was established as a separate division of the University, June 6, 1936, by order of the Board of Governors. The chief purpose of the College of Pharmacy is to provide systematic in- struction in pharmacy, its allied sciences, and such other subjects as ore deemed essential in the education of a pharmacist, that he may meet the present and future demands of the profession in an able and intelligent manner. Staff: J. L Hayman, Ph.C, M.S., B.S. Phar. G. A. Bergy, Ph.C, M.S., B.S. Phar. F. L. Geiler, M.S., B.S. in Phar. Fifth row— Gottlieb, MacDermott, E. Rogers, Simonton, Silver, C. Walker, Whitten, Pugh. Fourth row — Prestepove, Osburn, Coffman, Garcia, Stump, Harvey, Mills, Perry. Third row— Angotti, Tetrick, Abruzzino, Beighley, Fisher, Hollandsworth, Gower, Flesher, Krupey. Second row— Pierce, Lynch, Nelson, Elsey, Greco, Wigner, Ferguson, Kuper, Allison, Palmer. First row — Prof. Hayman, Curry, Harper, Shutts, Wilson, Shirey, Griffith, Deem, Hamrick, Plummer, Ellison, Cooper, Prof. Geiler, George, Bippus. 116 117 B e a u ties The beauty contest this year was judged by two Hollywood personalities — Fuzzy Knight and Johnny Mack Brown. We thought it entirely fitting that Fuzzy, a former student here at the University, who has since his undergraduate days made quite a name for himself in the capital of beauty and glamour, should be one of the persons to make the selection. The contest was judged solely from full length portraits. From the twenty- six contestants, five winners were chosen, and they appear in the order of their selection. We found occasion to marvel at the speed of modern trans- portation during the contest, when we found our winner an- nounced in the Collegiate Digest less than 2 hours after we had mailed the pictures to Hollywood. Of course we found out later that it was all a mistake. . . . Jnar()arei J ouise JjraDDan Oflpka Jjtl Jjeila 121 OiUen J ucLiie arreLL Jjelia Ljamnia 122 Vbrcjinla O. utare Oflpka k 123 T- prances J ouise utaan Oflpna i JJeLta i m T 124 1 4 ■im Florence ane Skaffer JjellaCfa 125 MAIDS OF HONOR SHIRLEY CURREY ANNA NEALE HARDMAN ELIZABETH COX CATHERINE BAER EILEEN MILLER BETTY BERRY MURDAYNE MARSHALL BETTE SNEDDON REGIMENTAL SPONSOR JANE GREER Kappa Kappa Gamma 127 rater n i t i e Beta Theta Phi Beta Theta Pi fraternity pauses in its hundredth year for anniversary celebrations. One of the fraternity world ' s great leaders, the late Francis W. Shepardson, advised the present site of Beta Psi chapter just ten years ago and his desire that the chapter house be built on the highest of Morgantown ' s seven hills has been fulfilled. This year marks the hundredth anniversary of the founding of the national chapter at Miami university in Oxford, Ohio, and a centennial celebration will be held Aug. 4-8 this year in the litttle Ohio college town. The Jennie Baird Society, an organization of mothers, wives, sisters, and daughters of Betas, was reorganized on the campus early in March and entertained with a Moth- er ' s Day tea at the chapter house. Socially speaking the chapter with Mrs. Clarence Smith as housemother, entertained with its traditional Barn Dance in the fall, and the annual tea dance and formal, April 29. 1 Thomas Gillooly 2 James A. Forney 3 J. Robert Shingleton 4 John Lee Sullivan 5 Elmer H. Dodson 6 Hazlett McMillen Rodgers 7 ArchBuUard 8 Ralph Jones, Jr. 9 James Donald Ezell 10 William P. Gulliford 11 Robert S. Wilson 12 William D. Keller 13 Joseph T. Crane 14 Franklin G. Wade 15 PaulF. Storck 16 Arthur William Newlon 17 KermitDilley 18 Edwin Spears, Jr. 19 John Corliss 20 Edwin W. Crooks 21 James G. Collier 22 Malcolm W. Sperow 23 Charles D. Stansbury 24 Charles O. Hardman 25 William Earle Riggs 26 Carl Roberts 27 Willard Edward Moore 28 Harry Scherr, Jr. 29 Jack Blair 30 Charles Lawrence Ritter 31 William F. Watts 32 Clarence Alfred Potterfield 33 J. William Shaffer 34 Claude Emerson Grimm 35 John David Anderson, Jr. 36 Robert M. Simms 37 James Kemp McLaughlin 38 Richard C. Anderson 39 John A. Mason, Jr. 40 John Matthews 41 Dean W. Ferguson 42 Wendell S. Moore 43 James S. Leggett 44 Howard Phillips 45 George M. Eckley, Jr. 46 Earl W. Reiley, Jr. 47 James Eugene Young 48 William E. Miller 49 Herbert H. Rothwell 50 William H. Powell 51 Charles E. Jones 52 Dan Long 53 Louis Reed Miller 54 George Stewart Sharp 55 Wallace C. Moore 56 David Neville Reay 57 James P. Bland 58 Frank Eugene Hornbrook 59 Roy Stuart Samms, Jr. 60 Noyes Burdette 61 Richard Davisson 62 Harry Stansbury, Jr. 63 Ellsworth R. Clark 12 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 JO II U 13 14 15 16 17 Id 19 20 21 22 23 2425 ,33; 26 27 26 29 30 31 3Z ' ' ' ' 34 35 3( 37 36 39 40 41 43 44 4546 47 48 49 50 ' 51 53 6455 56 57 58 59 60 4 U 43 130 ajQ r% n 0 f ' ■- ■•% ' ■4 ' ' - A ' ' =■• ' ' ■■-? w cs c%. rs. f - !f- . Beta Theta Phi 131 Delta Tau Delta Gamma Delta chapter at West Virginia is a revival of the original Gamma Delta established at Monongalia Academy in 1860. The first chapter of the order was founded at Bethany college in 1859, and in 1886 the Rainbow, or W.W.W., society united with Delta Tau Delta. Out of respect to the older organization, the fraternity journal was renamed the Rainbow. Fraternity colors are white and gold; the flower is the pansy. Active chapters of the fraternity number 74 and the total membership 24,000. 1 W. Scott Wysong, Jr. 2 G. Merle Amos 3 Guy N. Belcher, Jr. 4 John S. Haught 5 Jack C. Morgan 6 Walter S. Bryson, Jr. 7 William L. Musser 8 Harold C. Given 9 Miles John Jorgensen 10 James Tidier 1 1 J. Dean Eisel 12 James E. Fletcher 1 3 Robert Lewis Gibson 14 Raymond C. Nassimbeni 15 Joseph Wilbur Parker 16 James Rowe McCartney 17 Robert S. Keister 18 Philip W. Carter 19 Kenneth R. Hollen 20 J. Byron Bodensick 21 Richard Hunter 22 Charles William Brown 23 Wayne C. Campbell 24 John S. Height 25 Ellsworth F. Gale 26 David Arthur Reed 27 Harry William Weinberg 28 George N. Cowden 29 Hilarion Sanchez, Jr. 30 Jack L. Barrick 31 William R. Mucklow 32 Clifford V. Fisher 33 William Barnes Morgan 34 Dallas McCune 35 William Clarence Witt 36 Richard E. Romig 37 Kendall L. Hall 38 Earl N. Rodeheaver 39 Charles R. Whittaker 40 Edward W. Beedle, Jr. 41 Parks M. Butler 42 Raymond H. Hoult 43 N. Elbert Matthews 44 Naaman J. Aldredge 45 J. D. Livingstone, Jr. 46 J. B. Alley, Jr. 47 William E. McComas 48 Cornelius C. Davis, Jr. 49 William H. Osborne 50 Jackson B. Browning 51 William E. McPherson 52 John Fear 53 Robert C. Livingstone 54 Vernie Guy Clatterbaugh 55 Kenton Allen Hall 56 Charles William Kindt 57 Frederick Morris Tissue 58 Richard Vance Lynch, Jr. 2 3 4 5 6 7 Q 9 10 U IZ 13 I4fs 16 17 IQ 19 ZQ l II Zi i4 Z5 34 35 3b 37 39 40 41 42 444546 48 495051 52 53 54 56 5756 132 ft _ t ■' J! cs y O Vi- %!► w ' r A ! . f % T .f v c o £■o n. (?! t 4 Delta Tau Delta 133 Kappa Alpha Kappa Alpha order was founded in 1865 during the presidency of Robert E. Lee at what is now Washington and Lee university. The purpose of the society was to pre- serve the Southern traditions which had been overthrown by the Civil War. Originally Kappa Alpha had been named Phi Kappa Chi, but the founders complied with the request of Phi Kappa Psi and renamed it Kappa Alpha to avoid possible confusion. Alpha Rho chapter received its charter in 1897 and was one of the first fraternities on the University campus. The rose and the magnolia are the fraternity flowers and the colors are old gold and crimson. The 67 active chapters include a membership of more than 25,000. 1 Anthony Kell 22 Ralph K. Brooks 2 Robert Burton Lee 23 Harry H. Camp, Jr. 3 Allan S. May 24 Victor N. Green 4 Ross Gambrill Jones 25 Royden McKee Loucks 5 Jack W, Kepner 26 Jerome F. Peters 6 Joe A. Blagg 27 William Francis Henderson 7 Herman L. Sinnett 28 James S. Kahle, Jr. 8 John Sewell Cather 29 Robert N. Provence 9 Herschel A. Jarrell 30 Frank P. Bane 10 William G. Wilson 31 Frank Conner, Jr. 11 George K. Folk 32 Thomas Franklin Gibbs 12 Robert J. Peters 33 JoePugh 13 Merlin S. Bergdoll 34 Ulvert Mathew Moore 14 Joseph C. Stutler 35 John Norwood Pattison 15 Philip H. Harper 36 Walter Warren Point, III 16 Carl D. Farnsworth 37 Hortenziu Benchea 17 George E. Fisher, Jr. 38 H. Paige Bell 18 Mark Grove 39 Charles H. Feller 19 DaCosta Smith, Jr. 40 W. Edward Gieseler 20 Richard Feller 41 Ben S. Johnson, Jr. 21 William A. Moreland 42 Marvin H. Porterfield 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 IZ 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20ini il i5ZbZ7 Z8i9 30SI 3l3iS4ss 36 3736 40 4141 134 r ' ! ( ' ' aal. 1 f . id A A ■' Ji j W Sr . - ' 7 ' r Kappa Alpha 135 Kappa Sigma One of the original southern fraternities, Kappa Sigma was organized at the Uni- versity of Virginia in 1869. Its founders early realized the value of expansion and as a result, Kappa Sigma was the first southern fraternity to establish a chapter in the North. Gamma Phi chapter on the local campus was founded in 1918 a revival of the original Pi chapter chartered in 1883. Fraternity colors are green, scarlet, and white; the flower is lily-of-the-valley. Rep- resented in 45 states, the 107 chapters have a total membership of 36,000. 1 Joseph Stenger, Jr. 2 Walter William Moody 3 Orville Hardman 4 William Franklin Morgan, Jr. 5 Robert Kuzner 6 Rudolph Baric 7 C. Gordon Sherwood 8 Paul R. Corristan 9 Maurice L. Simonton 10 Charles E. Hollandsworth 1 1 William Earl Parsons 12 Fontaine Hooff 1 3 Harley F. Hardman 14 Rolla Williams, Jr. 15 Rowe R. Bunner 16 George A. Cooper, Jr. 17 Keith Fabianich 18 Walter J. Ridd 19 J. Parker McDonald 20 Charles Edgar 21 William Newton Corbitt 22 Herman T. Nash 23 Zachariah Wyatt, Jr. 24 Donally Morris 25 Thomas Rodney Wilson 26 Guy Christopher Nicholson 27 PaulAtwell 28 Charles E. Kessel 29 Robert W. Wildey 30 William Robert Dawson 31 Frank E. Shaffer 32 Arthur Lundquist 33 Roger D. Griffith 136 12 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 II 12. 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 2 2 22 23 14 25 28 i9 30 3 31 d f Cl o 4 ( O Q • ; .f O Q .ff|. O ■' ip ' -w i ' tx ( j o cv ( - f a - Kappa Sigma 137 Phi Delta Theta The organization in 1916 of the Virginian, a literary club composed of young men of high scholastic standing, was the first step in the establishment of West Virginia Alpha of Phi Delta Theta fraternity on the West Virginia University campus. A bond of friendship grew up among the members of the literary society, and in the fall of 1919 Phi Delta Lambda was organized as a local Greek letter fraternity. There were nine charter members. Phi Delta was taken from the name of the national or- ganization and Lambda added because Phi Delta Lambda was the eleventh fraternity to be recognized on the campus. The group was determined to win a charter from the national organization. At the Montreal convention in 1926, a charter was voted this group of applicants. On March 12, 1927, under the direction of Dr. John J. Tigert, president of the General Council, and Arthur R. Priest, executive secretary, the chapter was installed. There are 46 active members in the present chapter and 12 pledges. Richard Owen, Hastings, W. Va., is the president; Juane Hill, Charleston, treasurer; Jack Harvey, New York City, pledge master. Phi Delta Theta was founded at Miami university, Oxford, Ohio, December 26, 1848. Other members of the Miami Triad are Sigma Chi and Beta Theta Pi. There are 108 chapters in the national organization and approximately 49,000 active members. 36 Paul Plenni 37 William H. Steed 38 Letcher Wigington 39 Edward Lane Exley 40 Norman Hockenbury 41 W. Glenn Green 42 Charles McDermott 43 Thomas Cummins 44 William Vance 45 John T. Reynolds, Ir. 46 Henry W. Schweinsberg 47 Dale A. Waltz 48 Kenneth McMechen 49 James R. Swiger 50 William O. Hundley, Jr. 51 Robert Mockler 52 Albert Klebe 1 Fredrick Kloes 18 Robert Nuzum 2 Charles Quincy Cox 19 John William Jones, Jr. 3 Lloyd E. Church 20 John C. Harvey 4 Franklin Duane Hill 21 William Y. Klett 5 Howard C. Klebe 22 Richard Z. Owen 6 James A. Byrum 23 Thomas Joseph Patterson 7 George B. Byrum 24 Robert William Nelson 8 John Hackney 25 C. Edward Carpenter 9 Robert W. Jackson 26 Dwane Ringer 10 William Jemison 27 Paul De Witt 11 Douglas Wynn 28 Robert Tidball 12 Richard B. Bord 29 Glenn W. Thome 13 James Frederick Ruch 30 William M. King 14 J.B.White 31 William T. McGinnis 1 5 Richard L. Dean 32 Herbert W. Young 16 Julies Powell 33 Harry B. Gibbs 17 George McClure 34 J. D. Ashworth 35 Sidney Smith 2 ' ' 76 9 10 II ' ' 1 15 16 Ijl8 19 iO zi iz U 4S 26 27 g Z9 30 ' l iiib 37 38 394 ' 4 45 44 45 46 474««50„5, 138 . - €( Ci ■X i : 4 Phi Delta Theta 139 Phi Kappa Psi Because of a split in the Columbian Literary Society in 1889, the Athenian Literary Society was formed by the dissenting group. These men became interested in Phi Kappa Psi and petitioned its national officers for a chapter. In order to become a fraternity, the petitioning group had to get permission from the administrative authorities of the University, as they had been opposed to the estab- lishment of any fraternities on the campus. The permission was graciously given. In May, 1890, West Virginia Alpha chapter of Phi Kappa Psi was established. This chapter thus has the distinction of being the oldest fraternity on the campus. The first chapter of Phi Kappa Psi was founded in 1852 at Jefferson College (it later became Washington and Jefferson). There are now 52 chapters and over 28,000 members. The fraternity colors are Hunter ' s Green and Cardinal Red. The flower is the Jacqueminot Rose. 1 Cecil B. Highland, Jr. 2 Charles Edward Allard 3 Chadler Campbell 4 William T. Nutter 5 John A. Shepherd 6 John L. Schroder 7 Uoyd R. Shaid 8 Phil Johnson 9 Ralph A. Courtney, Jr. 10 Everett M. Rogers 1 1 Ernest Watson Hutton 12 Dorsey O. Cole, Jr. 13 John C. Ailes 14 Russell A. Wilbourn, Jr. 15 John Duncan McCue 16 Clarence CaudiU 17 George M. Dugan 18 Joe Park Beatty 19 Paul E. Gopher 20 James William Watson 21 William Edward Cotton 22 Kenna Joseph Heatherman 23 Ralph W. Gerchow 24 BobParrish 25 Daniel R. Rogers 26 William Allen Bumgardner 27 Lewis J. Robb, Jr. 28 Richard A. Welch, Jr. 29 Jack E. Murrill 30 Clarence Edwin Smith 31 Robert B. Pierce 32 Alexander R. Tait 33 Andrew Lane Blair 34 Champe Clark Poole 35 Harold W. Piggott 36 James Cole 37 Jack Parrish 38 David T. Stemple 39 W. H. Lewis 40 Ralph S. Marshall 41 Robert Burke Hamilton 42 Robert Louis Holland 43 W. Jameison Brown 43 W. Jamieson Brown 44 Burl Randolph 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 II II 13 4 15 16 n I 19 20 2 22 23 24 2b 26 27 26 35 34 39 40 35 29 30 41 •3 0- 7 42 43 38 31 32 44 140 ! v.i vi if O ' O- f O W .% ' - ' M- --T Phi Kappa Psi 141 Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity was founded at the University of Pennsylvania in 1850. Forty years later, in 1896, Alpha Gamma chapter was established at West Virginia. The national fraternity is composed of 36 active chapters. The flower of the Phi Kap ' s is the white rose. The colors are gold and black. 1 Daniel Francis Cronin, Jr. 2 Anthony Rapaswick 3 John Adams Springer 4 George Paul Hlusko 5 PaulO ' Farrell 6 James Pitrola 7 Richard Dean Heironimus 8 Harold Allen Williams 9 John Cavalier 10 Robert Thomas Deegan 11 PaulPitrolo 12 Secondo Dalporto 13 John Roscoe Hornbrook 142 Phi Kappa Sigma 143 Phi Kappa Tau Alpha Xi chapter of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity was founded at West Virginia Univer- sity November 10, 1928. In the United States today there are 46 active chapters. The colors are Harvard red and Old Gold. This year Phi Kappa Tau moved to a newer and better chapter house on Carson street. 1 George Washington Jewell, Jr. 2 Carl Flanagan 3 Zane B. Sloter 4 Russell L. Heinlein 5 George Arthur Shears 6 Wilbur Claude Roberts 7 Charles William Snyder 8 Joseph F. Watson 9 Marcy E. McMillan 10 Roscoe Brown, Jr. CD o Phi Kappa Tau 145 Phi Sigma Delta Alpha chapter, the first of twenty-one rapidly expanding chapters of Phi Sigma Deha was founded at Columbia University in 1909. The chapter at West Virginia University, Upsilon, was established from a local organization, Mu Delta Mu, which went national on May 7, 1927. On this date, Upsilon chapter came into being. Our fou nders were men, modest, but of ulterior aims. Before them was always the desire to build a society that would be a recognizable, forceful, and integral part of the University. It has the endeavor to imbue all Phi Sigs with a desire to continue the Spirit, enthusiasm, and fraternalism, that has exemplified the conduct of our fratres of former years. Phi Sigma Delta is sponsoring a noteworthy project whereby several German refugee students are brought to the United States to further pursue their college education. Upsilon chapter has done its share by sponsoring Heinze Eisenhardt, who is at the present time enrolled in the College of Engineering of the University. The fraternity colors are purple and white; the fraternity flower is the carnation. The officers for the year 1939-1940 are: Murray M. Myers, master frater; Herbert Gottlieb, vice-master frater; Milton S. Koslow, treasurer; and Marvin S. Lennet, secretary. 1 Alvin I. Fineman 12 Joseph I. Schwartz 2 Milton Kotler 13 Herbert Gottlieb 3 Seymour D. Rothstein 14 Allen J. Enelow 4 Yankee Barbakow 15 Milton Sidney Koslow 5 Sam Gordon Levine 16 Wallace Hirschberg 6 Elliot Ellis 17 Max L. Kammer 7 Seymour Nachbar 18 Murray Meyers 8 Marvin S. Lenett 19 Bernard R. Zappin 9 Sam Kanner 20 AbeTomechin 10 Jack Lotstein 21 Heinz Eisenhardt 11 Gilbert Nach z 3 4 5 6 7 6 9 10 II 11 13 14 16 zo 146 - f O C . CI if f o ? . o Phi Sigma Delta Phi Sigma Kappa Phi Sigma Kappa was founded at Massachusetts State College on the 15th day of March, 1873. Delta chapter, one of the oldest Greek letter organizations on the West Virginia campus, was established in 1891. The colors are silver and magenta; the flower is the red carnation. 1 C. E. Greene 2 Herbert W. Woolard, Jr. 3 Joseph Patrick Condry 4 William T. Spriegel 5 Robert A. Naumann 6 Charles H. Ruck 7 John L. Snider 8 Harry Stover 9 Evert M. Pearcy 10 Harold Neely 1 1 John B. Connell, Jr. 12 William Henry Mclntire 13 S.T. Mclntire 14 J. Carl Palmer 15 Harold J. Madden 16 Ralph E. Patterson 17 William Jackson Carter 18 Thomas R. Wilson, Jr. 19 John Nicholas 20 Aloys Bernard Stenger 21 Altes Jerald Mills 22 Olan G. Hedrick 23 John William Brown, Jr. 24 Delmar Martin 25 Hal B. Belcher 26 Charles L. Taylor 27 Howard J. Forbes 28 JonP. Hardway 29 Stephen A. Douglas 30 Leo John Littman 31 Charles Mahan 32 C. M. Smithson 33 Miles W. Bell 34 Edgar C. Siegrist 35 Ernest M. Brown, Jr. 36 W. Harold Urling 37 William Clinton Woofter 38 James M. McClau gherty 39 Don H. Bond 40 Raymond A. Goodwin 41 A. Paul Poulicos 42 James Harold Wolverton 43 Duane Adams 44 Don R. Patterson 45 Lawrence Blair Thrush 46 Richard C. Liskey 47 Jack W. Harvey 48 Louis C. Griffin 49 William Brooks 50 John M. Wheeler 5 1 Richard Bayne 52 William Ballard Richmond 53 Howard L. Mclntyre 54 Nathan Cheesman 55 Thomas L. Craig 56 J. Richard Smith 57 R. A. Mclntire 58 Philip Wise 59 Kenneth D. Bailey 60 Daniel T. Carr 61 W.Robert Carr I 2 3 4. 5 6 7 a 9 10 II 11 3 1415 6 7 iai9iOZ 22 Z3 ZA Z7 28 Z9 30 31 3Z 35 36 37 36 3940 4Z 43 44 45 46 47 4649 50 51 3Z 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 148 I!5 f? f ft O  ft Vt ' v - is!y ;? fi l % r% . d f mS a .a o y 3 e) CI f 1 ■k  =■r- • ' ■««!«- ™ U s-W W «e.- H O O r . 7 fl C3 a n Ci ft- 1? . ,.f -O . .f f . ' 1 ' Phi Sigma Kappa 149 i Kappa Alpha I Founded in 1868 at the University of Virginia, Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity was the result of the close friendship of several Virginia men who had served in the Confederate Army. Few new chapters were organized in the next twenty years and only four were actively functioning when a reorganization convention was held in 1889. From that time until the present day, the fraternity has grown vigorously; 78 active chapters are now included in the organization. Alpha Theta chapter was founded at West Virginia University in 1904. Fraternity colors are garnet and old gold and the official flower is the lily-of-the-valley. 1 E. Andrew Zepp 12 Walter Anthony Bowman 2 John Stephenson 13 Richard Sycafoose 3 Howard Earl Spear 14 Harold Conrad Pratt 4 Charles M. Reed 1 5 Gordon Leland Cox 5 George Hopkins 16 Alan Openshaw 6 Clyde Robert Cattrell 17 MaxCubbon 7 Henry A. Comley 18 Deem Frank Rahall 8 Victor E. Bird 19 Miguel Montesinos 9 Nicholas T. Geeza 20 John Smith 10 Arthur Weeks, Jr. 21 John William Phelps 11 Paul Daniel Williams 22 W. R. Murphy ' z 3 4 = 6 7 8 ' ° 13 IZ ' 4 1 5 6 ' 7 16 19 20 21 22 150 Pi Kappa Alpha 151 Pi Lambda Phi I Pi Lambda Phi fraternity was founded at Yale in 1895. Mu chapter, one of 18 in the United States, was founded at West Virginia, May 22, 1922, The colors are purple and gold and their flower is the chrysanthemum. Pi Lambda Phi won the Darby cup for scholarship this year. 1 Martin B. Rubin 13 Bernard K. Wasserkrug 2 Clifton Lew Portnoff , 14 Arthur Bekenstein 3 Charles E. Freeman 15 Robert Harold Loeb 4 Robert Groban 1 6 Fred Caplan 5 Kenneth Rubenstein 17 A. Robert Markowitz 6 Aaron Rose 18 Irving Leonard Vogel 7 Stanley E. Deutsch 19 Cecils. Volk 8 Burton Peskin 20 Morton Arnold Mallinger 9 S. A. Marcus 21 Milton Pickus 10 Morton Stanley Cohn 22 Fay T. Bear 1 1 Henry Goodman 23 Sylvan E. Franklin 12 CarlZeit 1 3 5 7 6 9 ,0 ■,3 14 15 1 n Id 19 20 21 23 152 O ( . I T |  T a -U - ' i Lambda Phi 153 Sigma Chi Sigma Chi was founded at Miami university at Oxford, Ohio, in 1855 and has 98 active chapters. After the disastrous fire of last year, the Sigma Chi ' s remodeled their home on Fraternity Rovi and moved in this fall. The Sigma Chi float took first honors in the Homecoming parade last fall. J i 1 John R. Morrow 2 Walter Greig Crichton, Jr. 3 Griffith Thomas Crichton 4 Robert Lee Bird, Jr. 5 William Boose 6 Lewis Baker 7 William E. Wright, Jr. 8 John Homer Holt Nuzum 9 William M. Kramer 10 George D. Bambrick 1 1 Charles Henry 12 Jack Springer 13 C.J.Pearson 14 Olin Carter Glass 15 David John Posten 1 6 Robert Glenn Arrington 17 James N. McCabe 18 Frank P. McCann 19 Norman A. Brasseur 20 Henry Davis, Jr. 21 Robert A. Crichton 22 Robert G. Williamson 23 James B. Crawford 24 Charles Capito 25 Louis Pearson White 26 James Morris 27 Charles Friebertshauser 28 Warren D. Leslie 29 W. E. Gilmore 30 John William Plattenburg 31 Robert Mueller 32 Thomas Edward Graham, 111 33 John Conaway 34 Richard J. Gould 35 Anderson C. Herold, Jr. 36 Dwight E. Fast 37 Charles P. McCabe 38 Clyde Whitely Vick 39 Frank L. Campbell 40 Davids. Pipes 41 Wallace McKalip 42 Edward O ' Neill 43 Julius W. Singleton, Jr. 44 Robert Y. Hayne 45 RoyW. Biddle 46 Meade A. Livesay 47 Wilmer E. Rodes 48 Thomas Knapp 49 Peter L. Hoffman, Jr. 50 George H. Stems 51 George Jackson Allman 52 William R. Ballard 53 George E. Carver, Jr. 54 Robert A. Crawford, Jr. 8 9 ' 0 1 13 14 5 6 17 16 19 ZO 2 22 Zi lA- 15 26 27 l 29 0 32 33 34 35 36 37 40 4.142 4U4 45 Us 49 50 51 54- 154 o t ' l ' f J i J f J ' b ' k - ' U .T fc J| ' d tf: - f - ir r l 0 LJ -y Cj .C i1 t A Sigma Chi 155 Sigma Nu Sigma Nu fraternity was founded at Virginia Military Institute, January 1, 1869. The fraternity had its beginning as a secret society, The Legion of Honor, which finally became a national fraternity. Sigma Nu has 98 active chapters and is represented in all forty-eight states. The total membership approximates 32,000. Gamma Pi chapter was established at West Virginia in 1904. The fraternity badge is the five armed star, the flower is the white rose and the colors are white, gold, and black. The fraternity officers for the year 1939-40 are: John J. Shonk, eminent commander; Kenneth L. Knauss, lieutenant commander; Robert Spiker, secretary; and John P. Hindsley, treasurer. 1 John Curtis Dawson 17 Oakley E. Hess 2 Saraphemas Candas 18 Frank G. McClung 3 Dwight Hamlin Skaggs 19 Harold Thompson 4 Sam F. Audia 20 Matthew D. Kerr 5 Walter S. Carpenter 21 W. Roy Hashinger, Jr. 6 D. Louis Gundling 22 Douglas M. Foley 7 Ned E. Shott 23 William H. Conkle 8 Jess W. Richardson 24 Larry Andrews 9 John P. Hindsley 25 William Dana Carson 10 Charles E.Utt 26 Loren L Fisher 1 1 Robert Spiker 27 George Curnes 12 W. T. Jackson, Jr. 28 John E. Brown 13 IraE. Ranson 29 W. Lewis Campbell 14 John Jenks Shonk 30 Paul A. Miller 1 5 Gordon M. Grisinger 31 John Stewart 1 6 Kenneth L. Knauss 32 Kerwin Ranson Z 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 II £ 3 14 15 16 7 19 20 1 2Z 23 4 5 272S Z9 30 1 1 156 ' ( ( a W r uil - Sigma Nu 157 Sigma Phi Epsilon Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity was established at Richmond College in 1901. Gamma Beta chapter was founded at West Virginia University in 1903, today being the second oldest Sig. Ep. chapter. The national fraternity has some 75 active chapters with a membership exceeding 18,000. The flowers are the American Beauty rose and the violet; the colors: red and royal purple. 1 Thomas Griffith 14 J. W. McCallister 2 Jack L. Garvin 15 Richard Pharr 3 Elery McDonald 16 Francis Quackenbush, Jr 4 Rox L. Zickefoose 17 William Pershing Kirk 5 Lawrence R. McElhinny 18 Thomas Maid, Jr. 6 B. A. Kirk, Jr. 19 Clarence Smiglin 7 Jack Harford 20 Thomas McCarthy 8 Leon Kerns 21 Raymond Buzed 9 James A. Graham 22 Theodore O. Deaumer 10 John Semat 23 John W. Hoy 1 1 Raymond Joseph DuBois 24 Sammy Pinion 12 Stanley D ' Orazio 25 Don Brant 13 Albert E. Collins I Z 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 II li 13 20 2 2 23 24 25 158 f . f fSbk y . f % 9 Vt - v,-.,j(rj ,- _A wA(,.J.- ' Sigma Phi Epsilon 159 Tau Kappa Epsilon Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity was founded at Illinois Wesleyan University in 1899. Rho chapter, one of the younger fraternities on the West Virginia campus, was estab- lished in 1923. The National organization consists of 42 chapters and 76 alumni groups. The Teke flower is the red carnation and the colors are cherry and grey. Officers: President Nicholas L. Turoff Vice-President Glennis Ellis Secretary Ray Goff Treasurer.. c. B. Coleman 1 James Paul Ullum 19 Paul Deem 2 Heber Duffy 20 William Jennings 3 C. B. Coleman 21 Howard Ashcraft 4 H. Jackson Bryan, II 22 Leslie H. Moyers 5 Harold W.Rist 23 David Haught 6 Robert Von Berg 24 Herbert H. Goff, Jr. 7 William Zatezalo 25 Conrad Prager 8 William Ray Goff 26 Harold H. Cashman 9 John P. Shale, Jr. 27 James Albert Sabo 10 Don L.Cornell 28 Troxell O. Mason 11 Correll C. Shale 29 Wallace R. Dodge 12 Paul Satterfield 30 Richard Lee 13 James A. Rothwell 31 Jess Willard Falkenstine 14 Burl Clayton Lewis 32 John Parker 15 N.L Turoff 33 Ernest C. Goff 16 Lorentz C. Hamilton, Jr. 34 Larry McLaughlin 1 7 Mike Joseph 35 Ernest V. Morton, Jr. 18 Don W.Morris 36 William H. Cowger 160 12 3 4 5 6 7 6 9 0 II 13 14 15 lb If IB 19 20 21 22 23 4 2627 26 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 I f f 1 i?b o •CS- f • ' . «;. if , O H O _ _ f O D. Tau Kappa Epsilon 161 Inter-Fraternity Council Jones Piggott Gibbs Ashworth Wyatt McElhinny Vogel Carver Neely Performing regulatory duties in matters relating to rushing, pledging, and the initiation of men, the Inter-Fraternity Council, comprised of one representa- tive from each fraternity, serves as a com mon ground for meeting the various problems of the fraternities on the West Virginia University campus. The organization functions under a constitution which was devised in 1937. Each year an interfraternity dance is given. Joe Sanders, The Old Left Hander , played the program of dances in the Field House in January. 162 Pan-Hellenic Council John Spangler McQuiston Stansbury Greene Work Smith Bailey Davis Turley Upholding the creed of the national Women ' s Pan-Hellenic Council, the West Virginia chapter endeavors to promote good scholarship, guard good health, maintain fine social standards, develop whole-hearted cooperation vi ith the ideals of the college for student life, and serve the college community. The organization, composed of a junior and a senior representative from each national social sorority on the campus, composes the rushing rules and attempts in various ways to acquaint the student body with its purposes and actions in achieving them. Each year this organization sponsors a formal dance. The orchestra which entertained this year was that of Dick Stabile. 163 Alpha Delta Pi Alpha Delta Pi sorority, the first secret organization for women, was founded on May 15, 1851, at Wesleyan Female College, Macon, Georgia, as the Adelphean Society. In 1904 it became a national Greek letter organization and since that time has estab- lished a total of 130 alumnae groups. The total membership exceeds 14,000. Alpha Upsilon chapter became a part of the national organization in 1924. Adelphean, the sorority magazine, is published every four months. It is the first sorority magazine to use a complete pictorial back. Azure blue, and white are the sorority colors and the flower is the wood violet. The most outstanding social event sponsored by the local chapter this year was its benefit dessert bridge held February 16 to raise money for the Abigail Davis National Student Loan Fund established many years ago by Alpha Delta Pi. During the month of February all Alpha Delta Pi chapters throughout the country sponsor a money- raising project to benefit this loan fund. Other social functions Alpha Upsilon chapter sponsored included an informal dance in October, a pledge tea honoring all campus sorority pledges, a Christmas party, prep show, initiation banquet, and the spring formal dance in May. National officers who visited the local chapter during the year were Miss Marian Boyle, province president, and Miss Maxine Blake, grand first vice-president. 1 Lois Keck 2 Lucile Keith 3 Bette Sneddon 4 Ann Wickline 5 Mary Margaret Devore 6 Grace Templeton 7 Margaret Rohr 8 Dorothy Hale 9 Betty Thurnes 10 Sibyl Louise Meadows 1 1 Juanita Shahan 12 Mary Catherine Poole 13 Jeanne Curry 14 Phyllis Ruth McCoy 15 Margaret Stacks 16 Lois Barnes 17 Ethel M. Nelson 18 Marion Gooch 19 Jean McQuiston 20 Edyth Alywn French 21 Virginia McGraw 1 3 5 7 6 10 6 9 ' 3 4 5 ' is 19 ZO ' 164 Alpha Delta Pi 165 Alpha Phi Ten women at Syracuse University founded Alpha Phi fraternity in 1872. These girls had dreamed of an organization, national in scope, and within a month of their found- ing they had successfully corresponded with women at other universities. In 1907 the organization became international with the installation of the chapter at Toronto. Today there are 37 chapters of Alpha Phi throughout the United States and Canada. There are 12,000 members. The fraternity has pioneered in six fields. It was the first women ' s fraternity to build and occupy a chapter house. This was at Syracuse University in 1886. It set the prece- dent of the visiting delegate system now used by all national women ' s fraternities. Alpha Phi called the first inter-sorority convention which later formed the National Pan- Hellenic Congress. It was the first women ' s fraternity to have an endowment fund of $50,000 and was also the first to publish a history of its first fifty years. The precedent oi a central executive office was set by Alpha Phi. The official badge of Alpha Phi is the Greek letter Phi with the Greek letter Alpha superimposed upon it. The pledge pin is an ivy leaf of silver or gold with the letters of Alpha Phi. The colors are bordeaux and silver gray, and the flowers are the lily-of-the- valley and the forget-me-not. Alpha Phi claims as one of its members the only woman in the Hall of Fame, Frances Willard. This honor came to her through her work for women ' s rights. There has been a United States postage stamp issued in her honor. Beta Iota chapter of Alpha Phi was installed at West Virginia University in 1930. Among the traditional affairs of the chapter are the formal and informal dances, the annual Pledge Tea given for the pledges of all other women ' s fraternities on the campus, and the Senior Breakfast given in honor of the graduating members. 1 Clara Louise Trissler 2 Estelle Treacy 3 Virginia Lee McKane 4 Mabel Hoskins 5 Virginia Walkup 6 Jeanne Louise Ramsey 7 Mary Elizabeth Crumpecker 8 Betty Taylor 9 Mary E. Boggs 10 Mary Louise Davies 1 1 Lois Turley 12 Alice E. Miller 1 3 Elsie C. Jennison 14 Leah Sellares 15 R. Christine Davis 16 Margaret Waugh 17 Virginia Hare 18 Gaynelle Hayes Werton 19 Mary Jane Wasmuth 20 Jeanne Monroe 5 a 9 ' 2 15 14 16 IS ,g 17 16 ZO 166 Alpha Phi 167 Alpha Xi Delta Alpha Xi Delta, the first national sorority to be established on the West Virginia Uni- versity campus, was founded at Lombard College, Galesburg, 111., in 1893. The sorority colors are double blue and gold, and the flower is the pink Killarney rose and the pin is a gold quill. Each year Alpha Xi Delta celebrates the day of its national founding. Every two years national sorority conventions are held. In non-convention years the nine pro- vinces of the sorority hold individual province conventions at colleges selected by the province presidents. This year delegates from every college chapter in America will meet at Asheville, N. C, from July 3 to 7. 1 Ruth Tonry 2 Mary Noyes McGregor 3 Margaret Eagen 4 Louise Lucas 5 Betty Marie Lyons 6 Helen Nichols 7 Frances Haan 8 Marianna Collins 9 Elizabeth J. Gibson 1 Margaret Brabban 11 Jane Hill 12 Bernese Bennett 13 Dorothy Robison 1 4 Hope Ballard 15 Janet Tolliver 16 Mary Ellen Phillips 17 Betty McMechen 18 Dylys Payne 19 Roberta B. Clark 20 Doris Cheesman 21 Evelyn Hill 22 Elinore Linger 23 Ruth Simmons 24 Elizabeth Hashinger 25 Mary Jeanne Marple 26 AnnMcMillion 27 Janey Bippus 28 Rebecca Carpenter 29 Catherine Fortney 30 Barbara Smoyer 31 Alberta Strader 32 Dorothy Adams 33 Gladys Morgret 34 Louise Bergdoll 35 Nancy Wilson 36 Betty Nichols 37 Mary Wheat 38 Jeanne Fischer 39 La Yvonne McCoy I Z 3 4 5 6 7 6 9 10 1 II f3 14 15 16 17 IB 19 20 11 2i 23 5 26 2 28 29 3132 33 34 35 37 38 39 168 Alpha Xi Delta 169 Chi Omega ( Leading all sororities in number of chapters, Chi Omega has 93 active chapters and 37 alumni groups. The sorority was founded in 1895 at the University of Arkansas. Theta chapter of Chi Omega was installed on the University campus in 1905. Chi Omega ranks first in house ownership and in the valuation of her property. The white carnation is the sorority flower and the colors are cardinal and straw. 1 Keitha Anna Randal 18 Mary E. Law 2 Anna Neale Hardman 19 Jeanne Michie 3 Helen Hood 20 Mildred Shortridge 4 Charlotte A. Thomasson 21 Natalie Porter 5 Lucille John 22 Florence Josephine Gilmore 6 Sallie Smith 23 Catherine J. Curran 7 lean Smith 24 Edith Gretchen Garlow 8 Frances Coleman 25 Mary Jo Pine 9 Elizabeth Cox 26 Mildred Hartley Bryson 1 Sara McLain 27 Virginia Lee Batson 1 1 Harriet G. Wolverton 28 Julia Ann Poindexter 12 Mickey McGuire 29 Anna Blair 13 Eleanore Lowe 30 Carolyn P. Edgar 14 Ruby Marie Shinn 31 RuthWeller 15 Helinda Elizabeth White 32 Eileen McHenry 16 Nedra Jane Myers 33 Nancy Pearis Edgar 1 7 Evelyn Harris 34 Martha Ann Edgar 10 II 1 3 ' 4 29303,3 3334 170 Chi Omega 171 Delta Gamma Wearers of the Delta Gamma anchor date their founding back to 1874 during the period just following the Civil War when there was a growing need for higher educa- tion for women. From its founding by three women: Eva Webb, Anna Boyd, and Mary Comfort in a Mississippi school known as the Oxford Female Institute, Delta Gamma has grown into a national organization comprising 47 active chapters and 96 alumni groups. It stands for the highest ideals and is established only in the colleges having the best scholastic and social standing. The history of Delta Gamma has been a record of splendid achievement. The frater- nity was admitted to the National Pan-Hellenic Association in 1902 and has been active since that time. The National president. Marguerite D. Winant, has served on the National Pan-Hellenic board for a number of years. The first edition of the Anchora was published in April, 1884, and is generally recognized as one of the outstanding fra- ternity publications. Delta Gamma did active work during the World War in Belgium and in 1 917 retained the Delta Gamma House at Ossendrecht, Holland, a seaside home for destitute and ailing children. The Student Loan Fund of Delta Gamma has aided many worthy students. Alpha Xi chapter has made a record on the campus of West Virginia University entirely befitting that of the national organization. Established in 1922, the fraternity boasts of members in such campus honoraries as Phi Beta Kappa, Li-toon-awa, Rhoden- dron. Associated Women Students, Orchesis, Young Women ' s Christian Association, Phi Upsilon Omicron, and Alpha Epsilon Delta. The chapter held an informal dance in November, a formal in May, and pledge and initiation banquets. The pin of Delta Gamma is a golden anchor with a white shield and cable. The colors are bronze, pink, and blue and the flower is the cream colored rose. 1 Betty Baker 2 Eileen L. Jarrell 3 Helen L Moore 4 Mary Rosalie Scott 5 Eleanor Randolph Harper 6 Elizabeth Houston Allen 7 Shirley Staab 8 Jane Patterson 9 Jeanne Connell 10 Eleanore Pearsall 1 1 Olivia Kendrick 12 Jane Brand 1 3 Florence Jane Shaffer 14 Martha Mae Conner 15 Cassie May Stone 16 Bertie Lee Huff 1 7 Jean Haden 18 Anita V. Girard 19 Marilyn Bird 20 Elizabeth Dickinson 21 Virginia Rhodes 22 Emily Murray 23 Betty Jane Shuman 24 Virginia Marie Smith 25 Peggy Louise Williamson 26 Phyllis Louise Spongier 27 Mary Stansbury 28 Geraldine Andrews 29 Cora Anne Miller 30 Margaret Ann Summers 31 Virginia Wildey 32 Josephine Carr 33 Barbara Anne Wolfe 34 Mary Henry 35 Pat Moore ,e3 5 6 7 d 9 10 11 IZ 3 14 15 16 17 ' « ' 20 11 2Z ' 24 26 7 26 9 ' 3 3 34 35 172 Delta Gamma 173 Kappa Kappa Gamma Beta Upsilon chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, in its thirty-third year on the campus, points with pride to the new three-story Georgian colonial home which will be home for thirty members of the chapter and their housemother, Mrs. Charles Miller, beginning next September. The new residence has been under construction during the past three months. Mrs. Beth Schofield, director of provinces from Indianapolis, Ind., visited the campus during the year and the women entertained campus friends with an informal dance on November 4 and a formal dinner-dance on March 24 — a week following the formal initiation of 18 women. Coeds from the Kappa Kappa Gamma house hold such positions as president of the Associated Women Students and vice-president of the student body, as well as repre- sentation in such campus honoraries for women as Mortar Board, Rhododendron and Li-toon-awa and have also gained prominence in speech and dramatic productions on the campus. The group participates in the awarding of graduate women ' s scholarships to schools in Paris and Switzerland each year and for the last nine semesters have held the scholarship award for women ' s groups on the campus. Kappa Kappa Gamma is one of the oldest Greek letter sororities. It was founded at Monmouth College, Illinois, in 1870. The Kappa ' s were the first to have a sorority mag- azine and to form a uniform budget system. The national has 71 chapters, 95 alumni chapters, and a membership of 25,000. The flower is the fleur-de-lis, and the colors are light and dark blue. 1 Eileen Miller 15 Betty Lee White 29 Louise Lazzelle 2 Betty Lou Freismuth 16 Muriel Aldene Morris 30 Martha Jean Maxwell 3 Emily Harrison 17 Sara Beneke 31 Kathryn Kimmel 4 Barbara Coombs 18 Betty Canniff 32 Gretchen Snoderly 5 Millie Hamilton 1 9 Helen Fiess 33 Nancy Mathews 6 Marjorie Strosnider 20 Elisabeth S. Romine 34 Marian Bowman 7 Cora Frances Board 21 Susan Helmick 35 Mary Kathryn Johnson 8 Catharine Baer 22 Jean Louise Callahan 36 Caroline Jones 9 Margaret Jane Gibson 23 Nancy Flournoy 37 Nancy Pugh 10 MaryBretz 24 Virginia Lee Fleming 38 Mary Buchanan 1 1 Nellie Morgan 25 Catherine Davis 39 Florence Jean Highland 12 Elizabeth McNeill 26 June Watson 40 Anne Stewart 13 Margaret Jane Lee 27 Mary Lou Bullard 4 1 Jane Greer 14 Anne Fromme 28 Mary Jane Dobbie 1 Z 5 4 8 9 0 5 6 7 2 fS - ■, i ,f -€ 7 A . _ 14 Id 16 ij 16 19 ZO i Hy Zl Zl Zi 4 £8 29 30 25 26 Z7 3t 5Z 33 ■■mm 35 36 37 38 i940 174 .,7 ■■■4X ' T Kk Kappa Kapp a Gamma 175 Phi Mu On October 29, 1927, at West Virginia University, twenty-one young women were welcomed into the bond of Phi Mu fraternity by Mrs. Clifford Roder, second vice-presi- dent, and Mrs. Evans Hornberger, national president. Gamma Beta chapter, first called the Woodburn club, was organized at West Virginia University in May, 1926, and continued as a local sorority for a year and a half until a charter was obtained and the women of the Woodburn club became active members of the Gamma Beta chapter of Phi Mu. Phi Mu is the second oldest secret organization for women in this country. It was founded at Wesleyan College, Macon, Georgia, on the fourth of January, 1852. The three founders who are honored by Phi Mu each March 4 are: Mary Dupon Lives, Mary Mynrick Daniels and Martha Hardaway Reading. The organization as first founded was called the Philoma thean Society and this name was retained until August 23, 1904. The local group is one of fifty-eight collegiate chapters and more than a hun- dred alumnae clubs. One of the achievements of Phi Mu is the Healthmobile which does a valuable piece of humanitarian work among the poor and unfortunate babies of Georgia. The work is done under the direction of the Georgia State Board of Health and consists of equip- ing and maintaining of a large, specially equipped truck, which carries clinical and educational aid to the rural districts of the state. Active members of Gamma Beta chapter belong to the English clab, Phi Upsilon Omicron, Orchesis, and other local organizations. 1 Margaret Swift 2 Elsie Jean Kacer 3 Betty Ellen Berry 4 Geneviev James 5 Ruth Ann Icenhower 6 Katherine L. Sommer 7 Evelyn Dorothy Smith 8 Katharine Jane Kingry 9 Isabelle Cage 10 Kitty Zimmerman 1 1 Anna Nell Winning 12 Virginia Mossburg 13 Ann Valjean Work z I 3 4. 5 9 13 ,0 , IZ 176 Phi Mu 177 Pi Beta Phi The West Virginia Alpha chapter of the oldest national fraternity for women, Pi Beta Phi, was founded on the West Virginia campus in 1918. Since that time the organiza- tion has grown and today the sorority occupies a recently purchased home on Univer- sity avenue. The fraternity was founded at Monmouth college, Illinois, April 28, 1867. Today the organization boasts of a settlement school in the mountains of Tennessee, which is sup- ported by the 80 active chapters of Pi Beta Phi. The sorority flower is the white carnation, and the colors ore wine red and silver blue. 1 Eleanor Jones 2 Lydia Beckett 3 Murdayne Marshall 4 G. Charlotte Wilson 5 Betty Jane Sharpless 6 Marguerite La Jo McCulloch 7 Genevieve Donohoe 8 Bettie Stallings 9 Frances Stotler 1 Jean Blosser 1 1 Diane Toussaint 12 Jane Grainger 13 Rebecca Nay 14 Elisabeth Welton If — _ _ iMi. M I IliBglllBWBli I 15 Betty Bieberson 16 Mildred E. Moon 17 Virginia Lee Koepler 18 Ann Yoke 19 Isabelle A. Urling 20 Jane Eleanor Dunning 21 Ellen White French 22 Betty Brooks 23 Betty Jane McWhorter 24 Pauline Shultz 25 Mary Ben Morris 26 Catherine C. Clifford 27 Rosalie O ' Neale 28 Jane Nelson 29 Virginia L Davis 30 Katherine Fouts 31 Lucy E. Jones 32 Virginia L. Weaver 33 Elizabeth Bailey 34 Frances Cabell Williams 35 Kathleen Peel 36 Mary Elnora Shingleton 37 Shirley Currey 38 Mary Louise Foulk 39 Vernah Merrie Stewart 40 Ruth Lee Lyon 4 1 Jane Linn Osborn 42 Carol Johnson 43 Marjorie Annon 12 3 4 5 7 a 1 13 14 9 0 15 J6 ' 7 8 9 20 zi Zl 23 24 25 26 27 Z6 29 30 3 38 32 33 34 35 36 37 39 40 4 42 43 178 Pi Beta Phi 179 Sigma Delta Tau The Omicron chapter of Sigma Delta Tau, a national sorority for Jewish women, was established on the University campus in 1934 and is the youngest sorority on the campus. The national sorority was founded at Cornell University in 1917. At present Sigma Delta Tau has sixteen active chapters and the membership totals 1458. The sorority flower is the tea rose and the colors are cafe-au-lait and old blue. 1 Reva Forman 1 1 Shirley Grace Gree 2 Eleanor Kaplan 12 Anita S. Baker 3 Gertrude Goldman 1 3 Evelyn Gordon 4 Lillian Nach 14 Betty Lee Schuchat 5 Barbara Belle Applebaum 15 Betty Goldsmith 6 Audrey Morgen 1 6 Rhea Levin 7 Rosenetta Mervis 17 Marceline Weiner 8 Annice R. Blumberg 18 Hilda Lazaroff 9 Betsy Schuchat 19 Jacquelyn Banquer 10 Edith Kress z 6 4 5 7 d 9 10 1 2 13 14. 5 16 ,7 ,8 19 180 Sigma Delta Tau 181 A t h I iv m ft4 1 jr M ' ' fSi yM |p r: !Ni r m e t i c s t T Football And so it came to pass that a great depression fell upon University football fortunes, and the 1938 football season came to be known as The Year of the Great Let-Down or All Is Not Golden Era That Glitters. After a season that had loyal Mountaineer fans harking back to the halcyon days of University football, predic- tions were made that the 1938 team would roar through to a great season. There were even those among the wagering gentry who were willing to risk a fin or two that the Mountaineers would at last draw bead on the Panther from Pitt. Unfortunately the Panther — and others — had a few ideas of their own. But all in all, the season ' s woes were grossly exaggerated by a fandom that expected too much. Teams were laying for the Mountaineers cfter reading in the newspapers (anything for a story!) that the Mountaineers were rated fourth in the East behind Pitt, Fordham and Dartmouth. It became speedily apparent that the Mountaineers should have been rated a little further down the list. Apparently having all the material necessary, there was little spirit on the team and less strategy. The breaks definitely went against the Glennmen and, although the Varsity looked good for short periods in every game, it wasn ' t consistent enough to play up to expectations. Just when it would appear that the Glennmen were under way, something fruity would happen, and the game would be thrown the other way. F ' rinstance, in the Michigan State game, a game which the Spartans were favored to win after a close tussle, Clark, stellar left half of the Mountaineers, took the kickoff and returned it 60 yards deep into State territory. After making a first down the Moun- taineers lost the ball. Then Pingel, State ' s all-American, and one of the best backs to face the Varsity all season, punted far downfield to the Mountaineers ' five. The punt was blocked and recovered for a State touchdown. After this inauspicious beginning, the Mountaineers took to the air in a desperate gamble to regain the touchdown, and three passes were intercepted and run back for touchdowns. Several thousand of the loyal and true traveled to Pittsburgh to see the opener, in which the Mad Mountaineers were supposed to show the Sutherlanders a thing or three. The result was disastrous, as the Panthers easily whipped the Mountain Men, 19-0. The score wasn ' t so bad, but the failure of the Varsity to make a single offensive threat was. The next game was with Wesleyan, and the Glennmen assuaged their wounded feelings by smearing the Meth- odists, 38-6, although they showed themselves alarmingly weak against passes as the opposition impudently marched the length of the field to score after drilling pass after pass into the demoralized Varsity backfield. Then came what was probably the nadir of the season so far as the Mountaineers were concerned. Little Wash- ington and Lee held the mighty University team to a 6-6 draw, and it took a last minute length of the field march to gain us a tie. Creighton was defeated, 21-13, in a thrill-packed game which saw substitute Bob White crash through center for a touchdown with 20 seconds of play remaining. The score came after White doggedly pounded his way half the length of the field on successive line-plunges. Audio and Rapaswick were the other heroes of this game. A third- string Varsity started against Youngstown and easily sub- dued them, 27-6. MARSHALL SLEEPY GLENN Head Football Coach ERRETT RODGERS Backfield Coach FRANK ANTHONY Line Coach The season ' s record: WVU WVU 38 WVU 6 WVU __ WVU 20 WVU..__ 11 WVU _ WVU_ WVU- WVU__ 7 Cheerleaders Pitt 19 Wesleyan 6 W. 6,L.____ _._.__ 6 Michigan State 26 Creighton 13 Youngstown 6 Western Reserve... 7 Georgetown 14 Manhattan 13 Geo. Washington .. 6 Jack Morgan James Borror Lucille Jotin Saraphcmas Candas Louis Reed Ivliller Football Squad ic 38 WM 48 3f 7 „. , %■I t  . t , , 2i 34 4S 4! Ii aj Third row— Welch, Pike, Mellace, Baisi, Woolter, Seabright, Mandich, Shonk, Dolly, Heckert. Cestaric, Foley, McCulloch. Second row — Line Coach Anthony, Sherwood, Siko, Sterle, Springer, Hockenberry, White, Ossoski, Ellis, Smith, Simmons, Corliss, Gussie, Head Coach Marshall. Front row — McCann, Davies, Pinion, Clark, Rapaswich, Richardson, Rockis, Jennings, Eller, DeAngelis, Lorenz, Atty, Audia. 185 Gussie and Audia batting down one of Mackey ' s passes in the Wesleyan game. JOSEPH CESTARIC Tackle ALBERT BAISI Tackle Georgetown scored twice in the last quarter, once on a dis- puted play, to ruin the Mountaineer Homecoming. The Hoyas, however, deserved the victory as they outplayed the Moun- taineers on both offense and defense. Manhattan also whipped the Mountaineers by two touchdowns, although the Varsity outplayed the New Yorkers and outdowned them, 7-2. Western Reserve continued its undefeated spell by ekeing out a 7-0 vic- tory over the Mountaineers after a game that was closer than the crusts of a lunchwagon pie. Came the final game with George Washington and a close victory, 7-6, with the Mountaineers outplaying the Colonials over most of the route. Hockenberry leaped high in the end zone to nail a long pass from Audio with ten seconds remaining in the first half to score. Audio converted the extra point for the one point margin. MICHAEL GUSSIE Guard WALTER PIKE Tackle SAM AUDIA Fullback DOUGLAS FOLEY Tackle ALEX ATTY Guard SAM PINION Hallback RICHARD DOLLY End 186 HARRY CLARK Halfback JOHN CARLISS Halfback ANTHONY RAPASWICK Quarterback CHARLES ELLER End SAM MANDICH Center JOE CZAJKA End THOMAS DAVIES Fullback A disappointing season to be sure, but one that was full of black cats and broken mirrors. The team seemed even better than the one that whipped Texas Tech in the Sun Bowl the year before. Fortunately, only a few really valuable players grad- uate. They are: End, Charley Eller; Fullback, Sammy Audio; Guards Alex Atty, who made most of the all-opponents ' teams and who will play professional ball this fall, and Murine De- Angelis; Quarterback, Harold Lorenz; and Tackle, Doug Foley. Glenn will have lettermen two and three deep at every posi- tion this season, in addition to eight or ten likely prospects from the mediocre Fresh eleven. Returning at end will be: Dick Dolly, John Shonk, Bud Smith, Bob Mellace and Joe Siko; tackles: Al Biasi, Bob Heckert, Walter Pike, and Bud Woofter; guards: Gus- sie, Cestarick, Richardson, Sherwood and Sterle; centers: Man- dich and Jennings; backs: Clark, Pinion, Davies, Corliss, White, Rapaswick, Hockenberry, Seabright, Ellis, McCullough, Rockis, and Simmons. The Freshmen will send Phillips, Stansbury, For- ney, DeFranco, Antolini, Sharp, Goodman, and Gilooly. GLENNIS ELLIS Halfback ROBERT HECKERT Tackle Sam Audio going over right guard in Xhe Youngstown game. Basketball i Doc Naismith ' s game hit slightly greener pastures at the University this season, as the Mountaineers hoisted themselves, covered with mold, out of the conference cellar which they had learned to call home. Furthermore, any child can and will tell you, that with several breaks the Raesemen might have won the conference championship, All in all, fans were treated to one of the most exciting home seasons in years as the embattled Mountaineers fought out every game to the last man. Games were close and hearts were beating in swing time most of the season. It was Coach Richard Dyke Raese ' s first season as Varsity mentor and his teams pleased everyone. He inherited a team of headaches. At the end of last season it looked as if the Varsity this year would have plenty of height and reserve strength. What happened? Moorehead and Netherland didn ' t return to college. Fisher dropped basketball. Pell dropped out of college at the semester. Seabright was declared ineligible. Hockenberry was handicapped by a char- leyhorse. That left Shepko and Hockenberry as the forwards. Brooks at center, and Mandich and Capt. Harry Lothes at the guards. Only Jimmy McCartney was classed as capable reserve material, and Jim stands about 5:7 in his cornpads. Despite this woe, the Mountaineers managed to win more than they lost. They defeated Temple at Temple, for the first time in five years. Pitt was whipped at Pittsburgh for the first time in eight years. The Varsity lost a 51-50 decision to the great St. John ' s team at Madison Square Garden, and then a protested, three extra-period game to Penn State here. Homer Brooks broke his own record for foul shooting both for the season and for the conference games. He really proved he was there when the chips were down by sinking 1 1 out of 1 1 in the close Penn State game. Harry Lothes made numerous all-conference teams, and all all-opponent teams. He then made the official all-conference team and finished third in con- ference scoring — a remarkable record for a guard. Brooks was fourth in scoring and made the second official team. A great Freshman team, owning 15 victories in 17 starts, will send Baric and Ruch, the Scoring Twins to the Varsity next season along with Smittle, Kalmar, Henry, Hicks, Gillooly and Pharr. The Varsity lettermen all will return with the exception of Capt. Lothes. They are Brooks, Seabright, Hockenberry, Mandich, Chepko and McCartney. Reserves are Holler, Brown, Ellis, Stansbury and Whipkey. RICHARD N. DYKE RAESE Varsity Coach McCartney Seabright Brooks Chepko Stansbury Hockenberry Capt. Lothes SEASON ' S SCORES WVU- 43 WVU.- 63 WVU 46 WVU 43 WVU..- 46 WVU- 31 WVU... 42 WVU... 37 WVU 50 WVU 32 Wesleyan 29 Marietta 35 Salem 43 Carnegie Tech 49 Wesleyan 35 Georgetown 37 Temple 33 Temple 34 St. John ' s 51 Georgetown 40 WVU - -37 WVU 45 WVU 43 WVU- 45 WVU- 40 WVU 54 WVU 43 WVU 40 WVU 43 Geo. Washington. -39 Marietta 28 Penn State 46 Pitt 42 Penn State 54 Carnegie Tech 50 W. 5cJ 45 W. 6rJ 39 Pitt 49 Won, 10— Lost, 9 189 Baseball Third row — Gaffney DePetro Nebera Tritschler AUard Shaffer Second row — Levine, Fisk, Schilansky, Lorentz, Cone, Campbell, McElhinny, Fumich, Dever, Phares, Coach Rodgers. First row — Livingston (Mgr,), Ryan, Falkinstine, Slomon, Brown, Bennet, Anderson, Myer, Grossman, Kell, Nachbar, Tyson (Mgr.). Coach Ira Errett Rat Rodgers ' ball club last spring was handicapped by inconsist- ent pitching and the lack of a slugger of the game-breaker type to team with Art Scalli. As a result the Mountaineers came through a tough schedule with several spots knocked off them, winning five and losing ten. Captain Art Scalli, stellar leftfielder, displayed astonishing ability in the clutches, delivering extra-base blows in several games with men on base in the ninth inning. Krenosky, who showed signs of developing into a real pitcher, was unable to return this spring, and Harry Clark, who came along fast at first base, both in fielding and hitting, was occupied with spring football training. The Mountaineers this spring are a young team, a team that definitely promises to go places. Handicapped by bad weather, Rodgers ' tyros stepped out with one day ' s out- door practice under their belts and gave a veteran touring Michigan State team two close battles, before losing, 7-5 and 6-4. The Mountaineers present a veteran outfield and a sophomore infield. Lorenz is in left, and led the Mountaineers in hitting in the first series; Anderson, fleet centerfielder, is back; and Hockenberry, star catcher of the freshman squad last season, is in right. Schilansky is on first, Sloman and Grossman are the keystone combination, and Charley Brown is on third. All look good on defense. Captain Ducky Nachbar, handles the catching ably and comes through with a bingle now and then. The pitching is in the hands of John Lee Squint Phares, who is now trying his hand at baseball after football, basketball, and track. Phares is a steady pitcher who may come along fast. Even more impressive was the debut of Bennett, a sophomore, in the second game. With better support, he might have whipped the Spartans. Fred Chief Nebera, another senior, will round out the corps. The reserves are Ryan in the infield and outfield; Falkenstine, catcher; Tritschler, outfield; Flanagan, outfield, and Brown, infield. WVU 2 Michigan State 4 WVU 3 Ohio Wesleyan 2 WVU - 6 Ohio Wesleyan 5 Western Maryland, cancelled, rain WVU 5 Mt. St. Marys 9 WVU 1 Georgetown 13 Temple 14 Shepherd 3 Ohio University 3 Ohio University 18 Marietta 2 Penn State 11 Penn State 1 1 St. Vincent 5 St. Vincent 5 Alumni 16 WVU 5 WVU 8 WVU 7 WVU 11 WVU 10 WVU WVU 3 WVU : 3 WVU 1 WVU 6 Track The scores of last year ' s dual meets: WVU 21 Pitt 95 WVU._ 49 Ohio U 67 WVU 77 1 3 Bethany 39 2 3 WVU 78 Carnegie Tech 39 ARTHUR N. ART SMITH Track Coach Once again the track and shoe sport received little support at the University, in spite of the fine results that Coach Art Smith has been getting with only a skeleton squad of athletes. The Mountaineers managed to break even in ' their four dual meets last year in spite of the fact that Coach Smith had only a small squad with which to work. This year a fine bunch of sophomores reported in addition to several holdovers from last year ' s team. Missing were star hurdler, Capt. Kenny Riskey, and sprinter, Dave Isaac, but the other mainstay of the team, Tony Rapaswick, was back to toil with the weights. In addition, Tom Davies was back for the sprint and jumps. Cather, a good hurdler, lent strength in that department and the sprints. Springer, weightman Ossoski, and distance men, Weiland and McElhinny, were also on hand. The sophomores who added strength were Strouse in the sprints and hurdles. Savage in the pole vault, Livesay in the sprints, Tressler and Helm in distance events, and Reed in the high-jump. Weiland, junior distance man, did 2:02 for the half mile in early practice and Coach Smith pronounced his 4:38 for the mile on indication that Weiland was improving. Gather ' s fine mark of 18.9 seconds for the one-lap indoors dash was also considered good. Strouse ' s sprinting has been good, and Rapaswick is probably the best weight man the University ever had. Savage is likely to surpass all vault marks before he is through. Second row — Domenic Pisegna, Coach Art Smith, Anthony Rapaswick, Charles Reed, Ray Waters, Frederick Weiland, Meade Livesay, Jameison Brown, Robert Stemple, John Nicklos (Mgr.). First row — George Strouse, Jack Springer, Albert Savage, Wilson Richards, Joseph Jacobson, Duane Tressler, Joseph Coombs, John Cather. 191 Boxing Minus the services of national intercollegiate champs Dickerson and Littlepage, boxing fell into evil ways at the University last winter as the Varsity beak-busters managed to win only two out of six matches. Coach Eddie Vacheresse was handicapped by injuries, heavy scholastic schedules and with- drawals. The Mountaineers won both matches at home. C. C. N. Y. was defeated, 5-3, in a close set of battles in which there were no knockouts. Temple was short- handed and short-winded, and lost, 7-1, after forfeit- ing in three weight divisions. Their only victory came when Guido, conference champion for three years, KO ' d the University representative. Away the Varsity ran afoul of Kentucky, Bucknell, Wisconsin, and Michigan State. The Mountaineers were never in the latter two battles which the Mid- westerners won hands-down. The other two cake- walks were more exciting than a kicking mule in a dynamite factory, with the Varsity leather-pushers losing by close and even disputed decisions. Sammy Puglia, brother of the immortal Pete, led the boxers as a sophomore losing only in the Wiscon- sin match after a wild right had smashed his nose. It was his first defeat in the ring. Capt. Paul Miller copped the duke in the majority of his tete-a-tetes and Beecher Hinkle showed flashes of brilliance. The rest of the lineup was shifted often as Coach Vacheresse had to replace injured or scholastically- deficient men. Ward, Linger, Maurer, Pisegna, Gus- sie, Previll, Bonfili, Shears, Baker, and Fisher all boxed in intercollegiate matches. Of these. Miller, Baker, Bonfili, and Previll will graduate. The squad will be considerably bolstered by the stars of the Freshman team. Gene Tudor and Crispin Hernandez. Capt. Miller and Previll survived the semi-finals of the Eastern Intercollegiate tournament, but both were defeated in the finals. The University had previously won the conference title in five out of eight years, and this was the first year that it failed to land at least one weight-division championship. The season, blow-by-blow: WVU 3 WVU 31 2 WVU 41 2 WVU 7 WVU 1 2 WVU 1 Bucknell 5 Kentucky 41 2 C. C. N, Y 31 2 Temple 1 Wisconsin 71 2 Michigan State 7 CAPT. MILLER HINKLE 127 175 LINGER PISEGNA 145 Heavy BONFILI WARD 165 PUGLIA 120 155 192 Wrestling Top Picture — Coach Gwynn; John Conaway, 165; Bob Mc- Ardle, 128; Edward Kimble, 165; Clifford Summers, 145. Center — Charles Hall, 175; Captain Earl Lancaster, 145; Voor- his Wigal, 136. Bottom — Paul Satterfield, 121; Tom Davies, Heavy; John Hammar, 155. Wrestling lost its grip on popular imagination, if you will pardon the crack, as Coach Whitey Gwynne ' s mat- men managed to win only one of five matches. It must be said here and now, however, that it was one of the toughest schedules ever negotiated by a Varsity squad. Temple and W. J. had good seasons, and Case, Ohio State, and Michigan State are always good. Capt. Earle Lancaster concluded his brilliant Varsity wrestling career, al- though handicapped by injuries that at one time made it doubtful whether he would be able to wrestle at all this year. He finished with only three defeats in three years of grappling. Except for him, Hall was the only graduate, leaving a fine squad of men for next year. Next to Lancaster, McArdle and Sat- terfield were the most consistent wrest- lers, with Kimble, Conaway, Hammer, and Davies improving rapidly. Several good prospects from the Freshman squad will round out a promising ag- gregation for next spring. The season ' s record: WVU.. 3 WVU 26 WVU 11 WVU.. 9 WVU. 8 Ohio State 29 W. 1 6 Temple 17 Case 15 Michigan State 20 193 Tennis Minus veterans Littlepage, Klebe and Camp, Coach Tom Ennis was never- theless expected to turn out an impressive tennis team from the largest squad of tennis candidates in some years. Returning squadmen were Capt. Austin Dud- derar, Rice, Coffield, John and Bob Spangler, McAllister, and Jones. Several other candidates were regarded as excellent choices to break into the lineup. Last spring the netters had far from an impressive record, but the teams they played were as far from mediocre as Walla Walla is from Timbuctoo. After several tennis balls had had the life smashed out of them and several pairs of white flannels had gone through the wringers too often, the Mountaineers turned up with a season ' s record of three victories and six defeats. If it had not been for the ability of the T ' Ennismen to win at home, the season might have been truly disastrous. After losing to Duquesne away, 7-2, the Var- sity smeared the Dukes here, 5-4. After defeating W. J. here, 8-1, the Moun- taineers absorbed a drubbing there, 5-4. After losing to the Ennismen here, 7-2, the Methodists from Wesleyan won at home, 6-3. The scores: WVU 2 WVU 8 WVU 5 WVU 4 WVU 7 WVU WVU 3 WVU 3 WVU 1 Second row — Rice, Dudderar, Moore (Mgr.), Caffield. First row — R, Spangler, Hawkins, J. Spangler, McAllister. Duquesne 7 W. J 1 Duquesne 4 W. 1 5 Wesleyan 2 Navy 9 Georgetown 6 Wesleyan 6 Pitt 8 194 Golf Third row — Jack Morgan, Ed. Carpenter, Bill Boose. Second row — Richard Welch, Ernest Hutton, Homer Sharpenburg, Bob Wilson. First row — Chan Campbell, George Hopkins, Captain Tom Graham, John Fear. University golf is apparently headed for a banner year. Captain Tom Graham and all five of his worthy colleagues — Hopkins, Fear, Bird, Sharpenburg, and Campbell — returned this year to comprise the 1939 Varsity — a Varsity that came through a difficult season in 1938 with three victories and six defeats. In spite of the fact that all six of last season ' s regulars were on hand, it was by no means certain that they would all start the first match. Bob Wilson, Albert Spencer, and Bill Witt, transfer from Kansas State, were regarded as having excellent prospects of breaking into the lineup of regulars. Feature matches of the 1938 season were the return matches with Carnegie Tech, Duquesne, and Waynesburg, which the Mountaineers won after losing to all three of these teams away from home. The only team to defeat the golfers on their home links was the mighty Pitt Panther. In this match John Fear upset the star of the Panthers, Bill Daddio, who also earned a few words of praise for his alter ego, as an ail-American football end. Graham, serving as captain again this season, was perhaps the most con- sistent of the linksmen, as he toiled against the best man each oppoijent had to offer. The season: WVU WVU 3 WVU. 2 WVU 51 2 WVU 2 WVU 7 WVU. 2 WVU 51 2 WVU 11 2 Pitt 9 Carnegie Tech ....6 Duquesne 7 Waynesburg V2 W. 1 7 Carnegie Tech ....2 Waynesburg 4 Duquesne 3 ' 2 Pitt 7V2 195 Mill ijmm . t a r y y ■JKh jM Nn rv K Ia IsjJ ' j,PtOi W N M Ir f y fi ii fc hi . mI t V l Jt 1 5 A .X v ; ff J 1 i i v § I ■- J - ' ' Jrw v -r fv -AL . • ' r | V Sx Jy? V j r i v G. . - ' ' ' ir [ - .... Hr ' ., ' Iv l ' s J 1 Reserve Officers Training Corps ' i 198 IN ME MORI AM LIEUTENANT COLONEL LELAND S. DEVORE Infantry, United States Army Born at Wheeling, W. Va. January 9, 1889 Died January 15, 1939 Professor of Military Science and Tactics West Virginia University May 1, 1923, to September 1, 1927 April 16, 1936, to January 15, 1939 Military Staff First row — Maj, Alexander Adair, Infantry; Maj. Roy D. Burdiclc, Eng. Corps, Acting Com- mandant; Maj. Harvey Shelton, Infantry; Capt. Maybin H. Wilson, Eng. Corps. Second row — 2nd Lieuts., Reserve Corps; G. W. Post, F. H. Lippucci, Wm. Latta, Ford Rich- ardson, Jr., J. L. Riley, M. Pickus, E. J. Amato. Third row — Tech Sgt. M. B. McMath, Eng. Corps, 2nd Lieuts., Reserve Corps; N. L. Turoff, G. W. Grow, Jr., R. L., Shuman, J. B. McCue, H, A. Williams, Sgt. J. E. Young, Infantry. Fourth row — 2nd Lieuts., Reserve Corps; B. N. Zappin, C. Q. Cox; K. E. Pyle, H. A. Dickerson, W. B. Mendel, R. W. Hancock, Jr., Sgt. A, J. McClung, Infantry. 199 Regimental Commanders and Staff Sponsors Rear — Cadet Major Robert A. Porriah; Cadet Captains J. E. Bailey, C. W. Kindt, J. W. Dud- Front — Cadet Colonel Jock W. Blair. Second row — Elizabeth Cox, Genevieve Spiker, Rosalie O ' Neale, Elizabeth Bailey, Betty Jane McWhorter, Gretta Stidger. First Tovf — Eileen Jarrell, Cora Frances Board, Phyllis Curry, Jane Greer, Jane Linn Osborne, Betty Jane Moore, Lucy Jones. 200 Battalion Commanders and Staffs Rear — 1st Battalion; Cadet Captain A. J. Antalis, Cadet Major William A, Moreland; 2nd Battalion; Cadet Cap- tain H. N. Johnston, Cadet Major T. O. Mason; 3rd Battalion; Cadet Cap- tain William H. Powell, Cadet Major J. B. Whitten, Front — Cadet Lieut. Colonels V il- liam W. Dorrell, 1st Battalion; Wilmer E. Rodes, 2nd Battalion; Harold K. Smith, 3rd Battalion. Rifle Team m - J|t iJt ■' St «v ' J - Back row— Major Shelton, Anthony, Sterling, Smithson, Snider, Powell (Manager), Duffy, Sergeant McClung. Front row — Edgar, Clark, Hosey, Haught, Adams, Marple, Painter, Faber. 201 First Battalion 202 J COMPANY A First row — 1st Sgt. Arnold, B., 1st Lt. Brown, J, E., Capt. Miller, L. R., Company Instructors 2nd Lts. J. L. Riley, Jr.; and C. 1. Cox, Reserve Corps, 1st Lt. Holland, R. L., Sgt. Cross, M. D. Second row — Corporals, Dodson, E. H., D ' Alessandro, A. J., Bonner, W. R,, Wood J D Pil-e W L Littman L J., Cassell, H. S., Freeland, B. H., Davis, C. C. Third row— Cadets: McLaughlin, L, M,, Rice, J, W., Branham, P. F., Stansbury, R. G., Kloes, F. J Witschey R. D., Hinkle, B., Ranson, I., Loar, J. E. Fourth row — Plattenburg, J, W,, Hall, G, A,, Hockenberry, C. E., Naumann, R. A., Morgan, W. F Tr Edgar T. C, Wise, P., Baisi, A. F. Fifth row— Sherrad, D., Kincaid, J, E., Planni, P. J., Stuart, R. K., Waters, I. L., Rubin, M. B., Peskin, B., De Piase, F., Hamilton, C. J., Greco, A. R. Sixth row— Springer, C. W., Benedict, L. J., Benchea, S. I., Goe, J. N., Ostroff, M. M., Copher, P T Holey B K Suarez, J. P., Baker, N., Painter, J. P. Seventh row — Bolton, R, Kickman, J. B., Hatfield, W. A., Haines, G. L, Delynn, A. H., Blattner, C H Morris D. H., Porterfield, I D., Greene, C. E,, Clovis, J. F. Eighth row— Bell, H. F., Pritt, T. M., Reynolds, J. T., Jr., McFarland, T. C, Hunt, R. B., Randolph B F Tr Foster, H. C, Jr., West, G. W., Cole, D. O. ' ' COMPANY B First row— Sgts. Rodgers, H. M,, Jr., Jones, F,, 1st Sgt. Milano, J. V., Sgt. Satterfield, P., 2nd Lt. McKeel, P. L., Gaffney, W. W., 1st Lt. Mason, J. F., Capt. Riddle, P. R., Company Instructors 2nd Lieuts. W. L. Latta, and H. a ' Williams, Reserve Corps; 1st Lt. Britton, H. H., Copt. Antalis, A. J., 2nd Lt. Craig, T. L., Sgts. Angotti, J. A., Adair, A. M., Simmons, H. C. Second row — Sgt. Moore, J. H , Corporals Ringer, D. E., Romig, R. E., Pool, C. C, Butler, P. M., Wilkison E E Haught, J. S., Sowers, B. C, Rockis, J., Kanner, S., Ferrell G. Herod, C. W., Trulos, M., Conner, S. K., Hogshead, R.] Sgt. Craze, J. H. Third row— Cadets; Hosey, G. R., Utt, C. E,, Church, L. E., Romano, A, J., Folk, G. K., Koslow, M. S., Hornbrook, J. R., Grossman, H. E., Hartley, R. L., Patterson, R. E., Dakan, J. D., Hackney, J. G., Darrah, E. L., Davisson, R. L. Fourth row — Barbakow, Y., Bouldin, D. F., Mullens, S. H., McClung, M. R., Andrews, R. N., Prettyman R B Pattison, J. N., Lohr, C. E., DiPasquale, L. F., Jack, R. C, Miller, R. E., Doster, J. H., Almodovar, C. G. Fifth row— Rifenburg, R. W., Muir, R., Crichton, A., Dietz, W. P., Headley, J,, Castiglione, D., Singleton J W Morris, C. M., Brown, B. P., Ranson, K. R,, Ressler M. J., Richards, E., Stover, A. M. Sixth row— Grier, J. W., Murphy, W. R,, Hartlieb, G. W., Thompson, H. G., Herod, W. J., Nelson R W Kotler M., Rice, D., Levine, S., Ellis, E., Kutak, F. R., Milton, C, Randolph, B., Storck, P. Seventh row— Matthews, J. C, Brashear, W. C, Kondratick, L. T., Shaffer, J. W., Spiker R C Hogshead G. W., Davis, J. B., Brown, D. P., De Lynn, H. J., Price, H., Comley, H. A., Dodrill, R. M., Miller, C. C. Eighth row — Plakotoris, N., McCann, F., Bobbitt, L. O., Hagedorn, F., Bailey, K D. Bayne D Brooks R Maldonado, ]., Smiglin, C. A., Smith, J. M., Collins A, E. Cale, E. F., Marple, R. C. COMPANY C First row— 1st Sgt. Davies, T. M., Sgts. Gussie, M., Hammer, J., Heckert, R., Jr., Lynch, R. V., 1st Lt. Freeman, C. E., Capt. Bennett, H. D., Company Instructors 2nd Lieuts, Pickus, M., and Riley, J. L., Jr., Reserve Corps, 1st Lt. Robinson, J. P., 2nd Lt. Van Metre, J. M., Fabianich, K. P., Sgts. Kuzner, R. A., Sowers, E. F. Campbell W C Staff Sgt. Griffith, F. T. y , . .. Second row— Corporals, Ramsey, W. W., Hertzog, J., Clemans, S. M., Wigington, L., Loeb, R. H Wright W. E., Cutler, C. L, Fike, D. W., McCartney, J. R., Brown, E. M., Smith, D. E., Riggle, B. G , Gibson R L Hooff F. B., Montesinos, M. L., Sgt. Otto, J. S. ' ' Third row— Cadets Shaffer F. E., Cottrill, D. L, Jr., Hall, J. H., Jackson, D. M., Reger, R. F., Brant, D M., Ashford, J. W., Dotson, O. M., Grasso, J. A., Hornbrook, F. E.. Beaulieu, J. E., Lewis, W. H Brasseur N A Campbell, F. L., Stutler, J. C. Fourth row— Woolard, H, Jr., Rodgers, J. H. P., Riddle, W. M., Garcia, J. R., Parson, C. S., Fisher, L L Arrington, R. G., Siegrist, E. C, Hastings, G., Weeks, A. L., Harper, P. H., Volk, C. S., Moore, H. ' ].. Creel, D. H. Fifth row— Babich, P., Downes, J. D., Hughes, J. M., Jones, H. S., Kammer, M. L., Fisher, V J Dodrill R F Barrick, J. L., Sams, R. G., Bear, F. T, Corbitt, W. N., Welch, C. D., Duckworth, J. M., Bland, G. G. ' , Powell ' , W. I. ' Sixth row — Stone, J. E., Martin, R. R., Carpenter, 1. E., Jr., Lynch, H. R., Schubert, O. E., Bassett C R McGhee, O. C, Lenhart, F. A., Hoy, J. W, Heflebower, H G., Milam, D. F., Cook, F. W., Jr William W L Draner ' J, C, Belcher, G. N. , . ., t. , Seventh row— Petitto, J. J., Cork, H. L., Eakin, H. N., Goff, H. H., Jr., Riddle, C. G., Armentrout, R., Bowman W. A., Moses, L., Sycafoose, R., Watson, J. E., Kann, B J., Beighley, C. E., Kahle, J. S., Hoover, W. P. Eighth row — White, C. P., Mikita, W. B., Enelow, A. J., Thompson, R. H., Foggle, J. J., Tassone, T., Jr., Grace W. L., Rodgers, E., Joseph, M. L., Forbes, H. J,, Siwgart, J., Smith, S. C, Post, O. A., Douglas, S. A., Tidier, J. Ninth row— Shields, R. E., McCelland, W. J., Coudill, C. C, Jenkins, C. M., Pinnell, G W McClure G J HoUandsworth, C. E., Shadle, J. H. 203 Second Battalion t -C -if- ' . ij - ' t ' ' c ' ' 43 - • 4i . tr: ; t% v. t; , ■-?, ' •«: ' :• :T. UFfe KS iunilfifhifbLfiL 204 COMPANY D First row— Sgts. Radabaugh, R. E., Coonts, G. G., 2nd Lts. Previll, M, L., McNabb, S. A., Capt. DePietro, M. A., In, Company Instructors 2nd Lieuts. Grow, G. W., and Dickerson, H. A., Sgts. Peterson, H. R., 1st Lt. Carpenter, C. E., Sgts. Conner, F. E., Ir., Cornell, D. L., Sullivan, I. L. Second row: Corporals DeAntonis, V. I., Nunnally, T. M., Stockdale, G. R., Zinn, T. B., Ir., lenkins, C. A., Houston, H. W., Onisko, A, A., Woofter, W. C, Graham, I. A., Sheets, H. A., Cadet Elliott, D. O. Third row— Cadets Schindler, C. A., Adams, D., Keleman, I., Ir., Gree, V. N., Stemple, R. A., Deaumer, T. O., Comuntzis, T. I., Mueller, R. H., Kirk, W. P., McBee, H. G., Henry, P. I. Fourth row— Flowers, R. G., Pride, P. D., Peterson, C, Plakotoris, I., Feller, W. B., Swiit, R. M., Skebeck, F., Stevens, H., lohnson, I., Bayer, D., Satterfield, O. Fifth row — Rippetoe I. A., Walls, R. E., McGowan, I. D., Williamson, F., Frincke, R. B., Bane, F., Mallinger, A., Buzed, R., Downey, R. F., Lynch, R., Galli, A. Sixth row — Hall, lohn N., Gregory, I. A., Ir., SchoU, £., Chapman, B,, Graham, L F,, lackson, R., Groghan, G., Corte, S., Hank, F., Swiger, I. R., Richardson, R. L. Seventh row — Boose, W., Nichols, A. B,, Ir. COMPANY E First row — Sgts. Forman, W. K., Manack, E. A., Moore, W. S., 1st Lt. Cunningham, T., Capt. Sharpenberg, H. W., Company Instructors 2nd Lieuts. Turoff, N. L., and Mendel, W. B., Reserve Corps, 2nd Lt. Conoway, R. H., Sgts. Gibbs, T. F., Goodsell, L. ]., 1st Sgt. Hutton, E. W., Sgt. Avey, G. R. Second row — Corporals Waddell, E. L., Ir., Hall, K. A., lacobson, I. E., Pearcy, E. M., Carver, G. E., Couch, R. T., Zatezalo, W. M., Mclntyre, H. L., Hall, A, Maddex, G., Kime, I. L., Cadets Pantalone, V. L., Shafer, G. C, Show, L. Third row — Cadets Green, G W., Shepherd, I. A., Hashinger, W. R., Garletts, K., Cowan, W. T., Conaway, I. B., Malone, I. C, Smith, H. R., Keen, I, N., Craven, R. L., Brockardt, I. W., Hawkins, T. B., Angel, C. L., Higginbotham, B. M., Ir. Fourth row— Pipes, D. S , Guyton, I. A., Edgar, C, Seefelt, H., Kerns, W. C, Spencer, I. D., De Franco, F. I., Wotring, M., Pyles, M. T., Gaither, E., Bippus, E,, House, W. G., Hix, H,, Simpson, N. E, Fifth row— Merritt, F. M., Sayre, N. D., Reiley, E. W., Hall, I. C, Howard, V., Nash, H. T., Siems, G. H., Hunter, W. D., Duncan, D., Knapp, E., Shefsiek, I., Smith, C, McKain, G. Sixth row — Manthorpe, C, Bumgardner, W. A., Brooks, W., Comuntzis, M. G., Kincaid, E., Devore, R., Crumrine, K., Downs, W. I., DeHart, C. B., lorgensen, M. I., Nye, W., Medford, R. D., Rogers, E. L., McKinley, I. Seventh row — Dawson, W, R., lohn, I. N., Hunter, G., Browning, I. B., Kozik, I., Unbehaun, R. H., Tudor, G., Thompson, A., Evans, D., Emery, L. D., Dimmick, R., Reckard, I. W., Kidd, W. R., Ir., Schwartz, I, I. Eighth row — Taylor, H., Patterson, D. R., Hardway, I. P., Cooksey, B., Grimpe, W. A., Muldrew, E., Durgin, R., Cole, I., Hardman, A., Slaughter, I., Corristan, P. R., lohns, I. COMPANY F First row— Sgts. Hayne, R. Y., Cokeley, E. R., Snyder, C. I., 1st Lt. Rahall, D. F., Capt. Griffith, T. L., Company Instructors 2nd Lieuts. Amato, E. I., and Pyle, K. E., Reserve Corps, Megrail, G. G., Staff Sgt. Dudderar, F. A., 1st Sgt. Birch, S. B., Sgts. Haney, I. L, Teti, I. I., Rose, A. Second row — Corporals Wilgus, F. I., Hindsley, I. P., McPherson, W. E., Cadets Waltz, D. A., Corps, Morris, I. B., Bartkus, E. P., Reed, D. A., Keenan, E. B., Cadets Frazier , ]. C, Kidwell, I. V., Corporals Catrell, C. R., Cadets Wynn, D. W., Hays, L. D., Bradley, I. L. Third row— Cadets Bloom, W. E., Chiazza, A. C, Dalton, R. L., Cowger, W. H., Livesay, M. A., luric, G. M., Goff, W. R., DePietro, I. L., Ruck, C. H., Allen, V. I., Burgess, O., Marks, H., Volker, I F. Fourth row— Sheets, H. K., Means, W. C, Clark, R, B., Reed, H. E., Sparow, M. W,, Moore, W. E., Viets, L O., Rucker, R. S., Mansfield, O. S., Connell, I. B., Latta, B. D., Hatch, L. M., Kramer, W. M., Curnes, G. C. Fifth row- McGinnis, F. M., Webb, A. O., Trembly, G. C, ludy, W. S., Crawford, I. B., Poindexter, I., Grimm, E. E., Kapnicky, I. A., Stephenson, I. W., Coulson, A. L., Frymier, I. W., Brown, W. C, Calderwood, A., West, I. C, Sisk, H. H. Sixth row— Ash, B. V., McCarthy, T. I., Biddle, R. W., Feller, C. H., Henderson, B. F., Gibbs, H. B., Cummins, T. A., Russell, G. P., Ludden, I. I., Faron, I. I., Brand, I. I., Lee, R., Kuhl, P., Martin, S. T. Seventh row — Curnutte, D., Wise, L., Noone, W., Forman, H., Lockhart, B. H., Holtzworth, H. E., McCallister, I. W., Ruch, I. F, Ir., Williams, I. C, Talbert, R. B. 205 Third Battalion r . « :,rf ' i ■' -  ' -.V i ' ■' Z 1 -i 206 COMPANY G First row— Sgts. Wilson, T. R., Gather, J. S„ Anderson, E. E., 1st Sgt. Morgan, J. C, 2nd Lt. Richardson, T. J., 1st Lt. Moore, W. C, Capt. Marcus, S. A., Company Instructors 2nd Lieuts. McCue, J. B., and Shuman, R. L., Reserve Corps, 1st Lt. Rowe, W. A., 2nd Lts. DePue, R., Bendkowski, J. J., Sgts. Smithson, C. M., Pitcher, J. L., Snider, J. L. Second row — Corporals Wilson, R. S., Williamson, W. D., Thome, G. W., Keck, J., Cartwright, D. M., Coombs, J. G., Borror, J. C, Jennings, W. J., Crooks, E. W., Petrelli, J. W., MacQueen, D. A., Moore, U. M,, Cadets Piggott, H. W., Brown, R. H. Third row— Cadets Mandich, S., Sloman, L., White, B., Bird, D. M,, DeVille, J. C, Waters, P. R., Wharten, J. J., PuUiam, G. E., Davis, H., Stenger, J., Aspiote, J., Hammer, L., Capito, E., Nach, G. Fourth row — Denver, R. F., Ellison, Z., Heiman, J., Brooks, H., Myers, J., Seabright, C. E , Shonk, J,, Whipkey, L , DeWitt, P., Courtney, R., Pyles, C, Willetts, D. L., Moss, N., Wright, J. F. Fifth row— Berman, H. M., Brown, J., Shively, C. R,, Butta, J., Pinnock, T., Pill, J., White, J. B., Mann, R., Sparacino, G., Burnside, R. D., O ' Neill E., Jr., Gissy, T. E. Sixth row — Heyer, H. K., Klebe, A. E., Clark, T. G., Hamrick, G., Moyers, L., Hernandez, C, Villano, G., Motney, G., Cox, F. B., Vance, G., Romonoski S,, Wigner, G. E., Wildey, R. W. Seventh row — Hirschberg, W. B., Morris, G. A., Austin, R., Henderson, R. E,, Deem, J. K., Parsons, H. H., Lank, W. A., Johnson, P., Rodgers, R., Fineman, A,, Kalmar, L., Lewis, J., Bekenstein, A. Eighth row — Prager, C, Mitchell, J, L,, Shutts, P., Morrison, W,, Shirey, R. H., Watson, P., Murray, R., Point, W., Sweeny, J., Ellison, J., Pharr, R., Vossler, C, H. COMPANY H First row— Sgts. Richardson, J. W,, Nicholas, J. F., McGhee, W. N., Jr., Anderson, H. R., 2nd Lt. Dickerhoff, J. R., Gorrell, P. E,, 1st Lt. Smith, A. E., Capt. Blaney, K. B., Company Instructors 2nd Lieuts. Hancock, R. W., and Zappin, B. N., Reserve Corps, 1st Lt. Lancaster, E. L., 2nd Lts. Livingstone, J. D., Eisel, J. D., Staff Sgt Smith C E Sgts. Ashworth, J. D., Anderson, R. C, 1st Sgt. Highland, C. B. Second row — Corporals Core, H. A., Johnson, D. D., Riggs, W, E,, Watts, W. F., Simms, R. M., Forney J A Vance, W. J., Ellis, G. H., Tritschler, R. H., Pisegna, D. R., Jacobs, H. E., Cadets McArdle, R. H., Mourat, S ' , Cooper, H. E. Third row— Cadets Cuppett, M. T., Long, D. S.. Shingleton, J. R., Shay, G. S., Gillooly, T, J., Collier J G McGinnis, W. T., Swisher, R. E., Jackson, W. T., McConnell, F., Gottlieb, H., Allsopp, S., Gianola, A. D., Quick, J. C. Fourth row- Semat, J. T., Martin, G, L,, Cowger, R. D., Matthews, N E., MacDermott, C. P., Spencer J W Rogers, J. W., EUiott, E. S,, Thalman, M. L, Constante, A., Fike, R E,, Cady, S., Wilhelm, C. A., Powell, J. v ' , Simonton, M. L. Fifth row— Alfred, J., Bierer, W., Ashcraft, H., Goodman, H., Adams, L., King, W., Brownovitch C E Lough D Linnetz, F., Springer, J. A., Clark, E. R., Gefen, S., McMecken, K., Dallacroce, L. ■. , . Sixth row— Campbell, R. L., Lopinsky, J. M., Heinlein, R. L., Koch, H. N., Ammon, W L Hardman C O Henovitz, K. R., Bavic, R. J., Harford, J., Hoult, R., Lynch T. L., Holdin, P., Souh, P., Wilson, C. • ■Seventh row — DeVeas, T., Jemison, B., Post, R., Parrish, J., Jones, D., Templeton, R., Holt D Cohn M S Yost, P., Carverbaver, J., Phillips, H., Lotstein, J., Benchea, H., Nelson, R. O., Waller, S. ' ' ■•■Eighth row — Morgan, W: B., Martin, S. S., Smith, S. A., Petrides, P. G. COMPANY I First row— Sgts. Guseman, P. A., Bragg, D. D., Workman, L. H., 1st Sgt. Springer, J. H., 2nd Lt. Watson, J. W , 1st Lt. Shott, N. E., Capt. Kearns, J. A., Company Instructors 2nd Lieuts Latta, W. L., and Richardson F Jr Reserve Corps, 1st Lt. Mathews, R. N., 2nd Lts. Jewell, G. W., Wyatt, Z. W., Sterling, D. G., Sgts Mamula P ' Straight, F. M., Tyson, J. R. ' ' Second row— Cadets Heltzell, G., Ritter, C. L., Bland, J. P., Crichton, W. G., Corporals Mann, G E Snead R. B. Draper, D. C, Crickmer, R. E., Spears, R. E., Mellace, R. P., Wilson, W., Bullard, A. H., Ezell, J. ' D., Sgt ' . Santymire, M. Third row — Cadets Arnett. J., Rogers, E. M., Vest, J., Burner, E. L., Slevin, J. M., Tressler, D W Bryan J Wallace, G. S., Dunning, F. R., Morgan, J. T., Murrill, J., E., Simon, M., Tyree, J. M., Strouse, G. A. Fourth row — Cintron, M., Hardman, W. H., Biafora, J. R., Cooper, G. A., Bambrick, W. H Knapp T S Hall, B., Fumich, G., Sterle, H. R., Kuhn, G. S., Harvey, L. E., Hupp, W. A., Savage, A. S., Spahr, P. S. ' ' -1 Fifth row— Kicks, R., Pierce, R. B., Griffith, R. D., Petros, A. S., Bangert, H. A., Smittle, W. J., Bodersick J B Deutsch, S. E., Andrews, L. W., Greco, C. E., Faber, J. D., Dragoo, C. H., Strachan, F. S., Parsons, W. E. ' Sixth row — Stemple, D., McCue, J. D., Basle, G., Ferguson, R. R., Wade, R. G., Fink, M., Johnson, L K Cubbon M., Kuper, E. J., Mazzei, D. T., Miller, C, Jr.. Eisel, J. M., Newman, C. H., Cotton, W. E. ' ' Seventh row — Wells, J., Davis, L., Nassimbeni, R. C, Sanchez, H. Hamilton, J. B., Fletcher, J. E., Horn, E. F., Feather, L. J., Fahey, J. F., Plummer, J. P., Schramm, A. C Dorsey, A. H., Zeit, C, Zimmerman, L. Eighth row— Riley, H., Block, R., Hughes, B. 207 Military Band First row— Walter A. Mestrezat, Director Emeritus; Cadet Captain Thomas E. Graham; Sponsor Miss Lucy E. Jones; Clarence Caudill; Richard T. Feller,; Brady F. Randolph, Jr.; Bernard R. McGregor, Director; Captain Maybin H. Wilson, C. E. Second row— Carl M. Jenkins; Edwin S. Gaither; Edwin W. Crooks; Harold Jackson B. Browning; Paul D. Williams; Robert B. Lee. Fleming; Third row— John E. Bailey; Sidney H. Williams; Robert L. Von Berg; Robert J. Fleming; James L. Poland; Charles E. Friebertshauser; Powhatan M. Baber; Frank N. Gaal; Daniel D. Dobos; William B. Morgan. Fourth row— Maurice F. Treacy; Fred R. Toothman; William J. Cummings; Joseph W. Parker; John W. Plattenburg; Louis P. Cimini; Edward Eiland; Mack F. Allison; George Sparacino; Glenn E. Bagwell. Fifth row— Ralph S. Marshall; William C. King; Charles M. Reed; George W. Hogshead; Lloyd E. Church; George S. Armstrong; Harley F. Hardman; William C. Stewart; Walter C. PoUey; Latane H. Ware; Robert B. Hamilton. Sixth row— Herman L. Sinnett; James R. Swiger; John S. Stewart; Benny Classetti; Fred W. Cook, Jr.; Harold L. Morse; Alexander M. Adair; Alays B. Stenger; Harry K. Shoaf; Nicholas A. Krupey; Laurence L. Liston; Delford L. Cottrill; Ralph Hogshead, Jr. Seventh row— Cecil B. Highland; Wallace R. Dodge; Jack H. Hall; Robert R, Rodgers; Alexander H. Forman; James B. Gabriel; William T. Nutter; Robert A. Tidball; David r! ' Creel; Paul S. Deem. Eighth row- William N. Corbitt; Hallie P. Bell, Jr.; Charles H. Ruck; Orville Hardman; Beryl B. Maurer; Frank E. 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ORCHESTRA, CHORUS AND CHOIR MUSIC Repairing of Musical Instruments MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED VO LK W El N ' S 632 LIBERTY AVE. — AT. 1704 PITTSBURGH WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE Taith, Confidence, and Pride in Our University Quality . . . - 4 { ' • NO OTHER • SALES • TALK • NEEDED AT OII|PUPtt0 495 HIGH STREET -z-rE ef t ri ca Afarchandisei-i Cliarloston, WAa. INDEX Adair, Alexander Morris --57, 81 Ademek, Edmund J 48 Adams, Dorothy ....68, 168 Adams, Duone 65, 148 Addison, Arnold 84,86,87,107 A. I. E. E 104 Ag. Club _ 110,111 Ailes, John C 140 Aldredge, Naamon J 132 Alkire, Thomas Woodrow 73 Allard, Chos Edw 51,84,87,107,140 Allen, Elizabeth Houston.... 68, 172 Allen, Hartsel D... 32 Allen, Nancy .....108 Alley, J. B., Jr 48,132 AUman, George Jackson 61, 154 Alpha Epsilon Delta 93 Alpha Delta Pi 164,165 Alpha Phi 166,167 Alpha XI Delta..... 168,169 Alpha Zeto 102 Amos, G. Merle... ...-132 Anderson, John David 49, 130 Anderson, Richard C 59 Andrews, Geraldine 55, 172 Andrews, Larry ...73, 156 Andrick, Helen 73, 95, 99 Annon, Marjorie 68, 178 Antalis, Angelo John 36, 93 Anthony, John C 104 Applebaum, Barbara Belle 62, 180 Appleby, George S... 47 Armentrout, M. King 32 Armentrout, Russell 71 Armstrong, George 83, 96 Aronson, Carl A 56, 84, 92 Arrington, Robert Glenn ...70, 154 Ashcraft, Howard ...74,160 Ashworth, J. D .61,88,138,162 Aspinoll, Richard 84 Aspiote, John — 93 Athendeum Staff ..82, 83 Athletic Section 182, 195 Atwell, Paul 136 Audia, Irene - 74 Audio, Sam F 48, 156 A. W. S... - 23 B Baber, Powhatan Miller 38 Babich, Peter 110 Boer, Catharine 71, 126, 174 Bagwell, Glenn Eugene 43 Bailey, Elizabeth 66, 163, 178 Bailey, Jean McCay 83 Bailey, Harry 102,111 Bailey, Kenneth D .73, 148 Bailey, Vernon H ......84,87,104 Baker, Anita 56,90,180 Baker, Betty 74, 163, 172 Baker, Lewis ...154 Batch, John V 40, 92 Ballard, Elisabeth 74, 154 Bollard, Hope 168 Ballard, William R 62 Bambrick, George D ...154 Bambrick, W. Lewis 46, 109 Bane, Frank P .66, 134 Banquer, Jocquelyn 69, 180 Barbakow, Yankee 67, 146 Baric, Rudolph 74,136 Barker, Elizabeth F 71 Barker, Martin Robert 3b Barnes, Lois 73, 164 Barrick, Jack L 70, 132 Baseball ...190 Basketball 188, 189 Bassett, Clement B 70 Botson, Virginia Lee.. 54, 83, 97, 170 Bayne, Richard 72, 148 Bear, Fay T 73, 152 Beatty, Joe P 47, 140 Beauty Section 118, 126 Beckett, Lydia 71, 178 Beedle, Edward W., Jr 132 Beeghley, B. A Ill Bekenstein, Arthur 72, 152 Belcher, Guy N., Jr 72 Belcher, Hal B 132, 148 Bell, H. Paige .....84, 134 Bell, Miles W ...67, 148 Benchea, Hortenziu 70, 134 Benchea, Septimiu 72, 81 Bendkowski, Josef Jan 41, 103 Beneke, Sara 65, 174 Bennett, Bernese ...58, 168 Bennett, Jessie Irene ...48, 81 Bennett, Mildred G.. 42,83,89 Benvenuto, Alfred R 104 Bergdoll, Louise 71,95,168 Bergdoll, Merlin S 56,102,111,134 Berry, Arlan W 34 Berry, Betty Ellen 66, 126, 176 Berry, Robert Zinn 49 Beta Theta Pi ...130, 131 Beveridge, Elizabeth Jean 74 Biaford, Joseph ...105 Biddle, Roy W 154, 173 Bieberson, Betty 73, 178 Bije-Bije 107 Bippus, Janey 58, 168 Birch, Silas B... 106 Bird, Marilyn .70, 172 Bird, Robert Lee, Jr.. ....43, 154 Bird, Victor E ...34,150 Bishop, Ralph Willard 61 Blagg, Joe A.. .134 Blair, Andrew Lane 50, 85, 140 Blair, Anna 67,170 Blair, Jack 48, 88, 130 Bland, Gale E.... 72, 130 Bland, James P 54 Blavos, Nicholas G 104 Block, Ralph Nelson 70 Blosser, Jean 67, 178 Blottener, Charles 105 Blumberg, Annice R 72, 180 Board, Cora Frances 59, 174 Board of Governors 20 Bodensick, J. Byron 72, 132 Boggs, Mary E 58,95,166 Boggs, Nell -.65, 95 Boiorsky, Earl F... 44, 103 Bond, Don H 72 Boose, William 71, 154 Bord, Richard B 138 Bowman, Marian 58, 163, 174 Bowman, Walter Anthony .70, 150 Boxing 192 Boyer, Allen N . 31 Boyer, Jane ... 67 Brabban, Margaret Louise 21, 70, 120, 168 Bragg, D. D 102,111 Brand, Jane 68, 172 Bransford, Wilma .- 65 Brant, Don 68, 158 Brashear, Wesley C 70, 81 Brasseur, Norman A 55, 154 Bretz, Mary 66,91,97,174 Bright, Marguerite — 55 Bronson, W. H ...109 Brooks, Betty 65, 178 Brooks, Evelyn Lucille — 31 Brooks, Ralph K 42, 87, 134 Brooks, William 148 Brown, Benjamin 71 Brown, Charles William 63, 132 Brown, Ernest M., Jr 66, 148 Brown, John E 37,88,156 Brown, John William, Jr 71, 148 Brown, Robert Lowes 32 Brown, Roscoe J 53, 144 Brown, W. Jameison... 140 Browning, Jackson B . ... 73, 132 Bryan, H. Jackson, II.. ...68, 83, 96, 107, 160 Bryant, Allen Roy ...57,111 Bryson, Mildred Hartley 53,83,97,170 Bryson, Walter S., Jr.... 53, 132 Buchanan, Mary 72, 174 Bullard, Arch 67,130 Bullard, Mary Lou 70, 174 Bumgardner, William Allen 71, 140 Bunner, Rowe R 67, 136 Burdette, Noyes ......55, 130 Burdick, Mary Jean 70, 99, 108 Burnside, Jane 83 Butler, Parks M 132 Butta, Joseph 71 Buzed, Raymond 72, 158 Byrum, George Bolton 50, 86, 87 Byrum, James A... .86, 87, 107, 138 C Cabell, Doris 71 Cage, Isabelle 67, 176 Cain, G. E Ill Calderwood, Andrew 70 Cole, Ellsworth F 58, 132 Callahan, Jean Louise 65, 174 Camp, Harry H., Jr ...40, 134 Campbell, Chandler 140 Campbell, Charles E 107 Campbell, Ellen Marie 71,99 Campbell, Frank L... 69,101,154 Campbell, Wayne C 54,88,132 Campbell, W. Lewis 37, 156 Candas, Saraphemas 63, 156 Caniff, Betty 74, 174 Capito, Charles 58, 154 Caplan, Fred 152 Cappellari, Amerigo 42, 105 Cappellari, Silea 71, 105 Corliss, John 66, 130 Carpenter, C. Edward 60,88 Carpenter, I. E 110 Carpenter, Rebecca 58, 90, 94, 168 Carpenter, WaUer S 62, 138, 156 Carper, Mary G 57 Carr, Daniel T., Sr 33, 148 Carr, Josephine 61, 172 Carr, W. Robert.. 59, 148 Carroll, Courteny Logan..... 51 Carson, William Dana 36, 156 Carter, Philip W 60, 132 Carter, William Jackson....48, 87, 109, 148 Cartwright, D. M 110 Carver, George E., Jr... 69, 154, 162 Cary, Margaret 39 Cashman, Harold H... 57, 93, 160, 162 Cassel, H 102 Gather, John Sewell 64, 88, 134 Cattrell, Clyde Robert 56, 150 Caudill, Clarence 70, 140 Cavalier, John 105, 142 Chandler, Jeanne 108 Cheesman, Doris 45, 95, 168 Cheesman, Nathan .....56, 148 Chi Sigma Delta 103 Chi Omega 170, 171 Church, Lloyd E 69, 138 Cimino, Louis 105 Cintron, Miguel 71 Claiborne, Eloise Jane..... 72,95 Clark, Ellsworth R 73, 130 Clark, Jane 47 Clark, Richard B 71 Clark, Roberta 46,83,97,168 Clatterbaugh, Vergnie G 46, 132 Clifford, Catherine C .50,98,99,178 Coffman, Nancy Neel 35,99,103 Coffman, Ruth McVeigh 67 Cohn, Morton Stanley 71, 152 220 INDEX Cole, Dorsey O _ _.71, 140 Cole, James -. 71, 140 Coleman, C. B _ 57, 160 Coleman, Frances 60, 95, 170 College of Pharmacy _ 116 Collier, James G __ 67, 130 Collins, Albert E 58, 158 Collins, Mariano _ __ 66, 163, 168 Comley, Dorothy Charlotte -.. 45 Comley, Henry A _ 65, 150 Comuntzis, Gus - - 86 Conaway, Don William 33 Conaway, John B 154 Conaway, Roy H..,- 104 Condry, Joseph Patrick 58,86, 148 Conkle. William H 156 Conley, Patrick Henry..- 35 Connell, Jeanne 67,99, 172 Connell, John B., Jr 70, 148 Conner, Frank, Jr -- ...59, 134 Conner, Martha Mae 66,81,83,91,172 Cook, Fred William, Jr 73 Coombs, Barabara .41, 163, 174 Cooper, George A., Jr 73, 136 Cooper, John 111 Copher, Paul E... 70, 140 Corbitt, William Newton 73, 136 Core, Mary Rebecca 47, 94, 95 Cornell, Don L 56,88,106,160 Cornwell, Creel S 52, 82, 83, 96 Corrick, J. A 102,111 Corristan, Paul R 71,136 Cotton, William Edward .......70, 140 CottriU, Delford Lee, Jr .67, 101 Counts, Lillian Courntney, Ralph A., Jr 70, 140 Cowden, George N 61, 132 Cowger, William H 65, 160 Cox, Charles Quincy 107, 138 Cox, Elizabeth 38, 126, 170 Cox, Gordon Leland 150 Cox, W. H 102,111 Crabtree, John A 65 Craig, Thomas L .45, 88, 148 Crane, Joseph T 68, 130 Crawford, James B 74, 154 Crawford, Robert A., Jr .......52,93,154 Creel, Hilda M 57 Crichton, Griffith .....55, 1-54 Crichton, Robert A 72, 105, 154 Crichton, Walter Grelg, Jr .73, 154 Cronin, Daniel Francis, Jr 60, 142 Crooks, Edwin W ......68, 130 Cruise, Beatrice ...59, 94 Crumpecker, Mary Elizabeth 33, 166 Cubbon, Max 73, 150 Crynock, John Edmund 52 Cummins, Thomas 72, 138 Cummings, William James 45 Cuppett, Mary Elizabeth 74 Curnes, George 70, 156 Curnette, Denver 71 Curran, Catherine Joan 67, 170 Currence, W. W 107 Currey, Shirley I .......54,81,126,178 Curry, D, C... ......110 Curry, Jeanne 56, 108, 164 Curry, Edwin C ...107 Curry, Margaret Ann 74 Curry, Martha PhylHs 33,94,95 Cutler, Cecil 83,96 D Dakan, J. D 110 Dallacroce, Louis _ 73 Dalporto, Secondo 51, 142 Darby, A. L 105 Darby, Robert .105 D ' Ariano, Roy 105 Darrah, Lawrence Bryce 41 Davies, Elizabeth 74 Davies, Mary Louise 74, 166 Davies, Tom 64 Davis, Catherine .55, 174 Davis, Cornelius C, Jr 67,93, 132 Davis, Henry C, Jr 68, 154 Davis, Marion 93 Davis, R. Christine 71, 166 Davis, Virginia L ...52, 89, 99, 163, 178 Davisson, Richard 69, 130 Dawson, John Curtis .156 Dawson, William Robert ...72, 136 Dean, Richard L... 138 Deans 21 Deaumer, Theodore Oscar 66, 158 Decoster, Alphonse 41 Deegan, Robert Thomas 48, 142 Deem, Paul 70, 160 Delta Gamma 172, 173 Delta Nu Tau 101 Delta Tau Delta 132, 133 Denison, Olive Rachel 45 DePietro, Michele A., Jr 49, 88 DePue, Robert 41 Deutsch, Stanley E 72, 152 Devore, Mary Margaret 59, 94, 95, 99, 164 Devore, Rowland R 71 DeWitt, Abel Franklin 36 DeWitt, Paul ...138 Dickens, Anita 56 Dickens, W. Quentin 57 Dickerhoff, James 86 Dickinson, Elizabeth 74, 172 Dickinson, Prof. E. C 109 Dilley, Kermit 31, 130 Dixon, Robert G 43 Dobbie, Mary Jane 72, 174 Dodge, Wallace R 67, 160 Dodrill, R. F ...110 Dodrill, R. Moore 70 Dodson, Elmer H 59, 130 Dolly, Richard 84, 86 Dolphin Club 108 Donohue, Deane 66 Donohue, Genevieve 61, 178 D ' Orazio, Stanley 50,86,87,158 Doster, James H .105 Dotts, Joseph, Jr 46 Douglas, Stephen A .70, 148 Dransfield, Mildred 94 DuBois, Raymond Joseph 55, 158 Dueker, Dorothy 73 Dudderar, Frederick A 106 Duffield, Janet 65 Duffy, Beuhring Duffy, Heber 160 Dugan, George M 56, 140 Duncan, Josephine 70 Dunlop, Jack 83,96 Dunn, lone 65 Dunn, C. I.. 110 Dunning, Jane Eleanor 70, 180 E Eagen, Margaret 74, 168 Eakin, Harry Wheeler 72 Earle, Robert 83, 96 Eckerson, Arthur, Jr 43 Eckert, Edward Frank 39, 106 Eckert, Frieda ...108 Eckley, George M., Jr .69, 130 Edgar, Carolyn P 74, 170 Edgar, Charles 67, 136 Edgar, Martha Ann 73, 170 Edgar, Nancy P 55,170 Eiland, Edward 101 Eiland, Ted .83, 96 Eisel, J. Dean ...51,88,132 Eisenhardt, Heinz 62, 146 EUer, Charles 86 Ellis, Elliott 73, 146 Ellison, Julia 37, 89 Ellison, Zack HI Enelow, Allen J 72, 146 Erhard, Ralph 40,92,104 Essof, Paul S 48 Exley, Edward Lane... 65, 138 Ezell, James Donald 66, 130 Fabianich, Keith Philip 47, 103, 136 Fahey, Martin Matthew 47 Fair, Ethel Mae... 44, 94, 95 Falkenstine, Jess Willard 160 Farnsworth, Carl D 55, 134 Fast, Dwight E 63, 154 Faulkner, M. Wayne .32, 102, 111 Fear, John 132 Feather, Robert R 107 Feingold, Henry 52 Feller, Charles H.. 70, 134 Feller, Richard 62, 134 Ferrard, Lena 105 Ferrell, George 101 Ferguson, Dean W 62, 130 Fi Batar Cappar , 86 Fiess, Helen ...65, 174 Fineman, Alvin I 72, 146 Fischer, Jeane 56, 168 Fisher, Albert W 36,92 Fisher, Clifford V 132 Fisher, George E., Jr ..56, 134 Fisher, Loren L 68, 156 Fisher, V. J... 1 10 Flanagan, Carl 59, 144 Fleming, Harold J 51,84,87 Fleming, Virginia Lee 71, 174 Flesher, Granville S., Jr 43 Fletcher, James E 74, 132 Fletcher, Rebecca 69, 174 Flournoy, Nancy 70 Flowers, George 101 Fogle, H. Glenn 36, 102, 111 Foley, D. M.. .....42, 85, 86, 87, 102, 111, 156 Foley, Mary Jane 66, 93 Folk, George K 68, 134 Folmar, Henrietta C 46, 94, 95 Folsom, Lucas W.. 106 Fonner, Betty Jane 45, 94 Football 184, 187 Forbes, Howard J 71, 148 Ford, Martha 53, 98 Forman, A. H 104 Forman, Reva 66,91,180 Forney, James A 73, 130 Fortney, Catherine 62, 95, 168 Fortney, Glenn Odus 37 Foster, H. C, Jr 73 Foulk, Mary Louise 66, 178 Fouts, Kat herine 66, 178 Fox, Harold D 44, 103 Fox, William B 45 Franklin, S. E 62, 152 Franquiz, Aida 68 Franquiz, Doris 72 Frasure, Carl M 101 Fravel, John T ......107 Freeman, Charles E .....35,82,86,152 Freismuth, Betty Lou 74, 174 French, Edyth Alwyn 63, 164 French, Ellen White 40, 178 Friebertshauser, Charles ... ...67, 154 Fromme, Anne 47, 174 Furfari, Helen 105 Fyfe, Jean G 51 Gadd, Violet 62 Gaffney, Wendell W 40 Gardner, Helen V... 49,98 Gardner, Mont M,... 65 Garlow, Edith Gretchen 57, 83, 170 221 INDEX Garvin, Jack Lemuel 45, 158 Garwick, Clifford -107 Gatrell, Steven ._. -- 73 Geeza, Nicholas T 40, 150 George, Virginia - — 69, 108 Gerchow, Ralph W 65, 140 Gianola, D. Aldo- 65 Giboney, Ray E _- 04 Gibbs, Harry B 71, 138 Gibbs, Julia Dove „, J„ Gibbs, Thos. Franklin..61,88, 106 134,162 Gibson, Elizabeth _. 71, 168 Gibson, Margaret lane..... 66, 174 Gibson, Robert -67, 132 Gieseler, W, Edward... ' A Giglia, Tony R., Jr 42 Gilia, R, R - -.,0 GiUooly, Thomas 68, 3U Gilmer, James .... Gilmore, Florence Josephine ' I. 1 U Gilmore, W. E...... - -50.8 .107. 4 Girard, Anita V .68,95,172 Given, Harold C. 53, 109, 130 Glass, Olin Carter.... 68, 154 Goff, Ernest C...... 66, 60 Golf, Herbert H., Jr -70, 60 Goff, William Ray -66, 60 Goldman, Gertrude n on Goldsmith, Betty 70, 180 Gooch, Marion 64, 97, 164 Good, Albert F...... 51, 09 Goodman, Henry -.-. ' J Goodsell, Leonard J.. ,„- ,nn ' Jq Goodwin, Raymond A 56, 109, 48 Gordon, Evelyn - - -74, 80 Gorrell, Paul Edward 33,102,111 Goshorn, J. en i,ic Gottlieb, Herbert 69, 46 Gould, Richard J 69, 154 Gower, Earl F....... 44 Grabe, Ruth °° Grace, Naomi Louise f Graham, James Allen ., „. no Ic? Graham, Thos. Edw. IH... 31, 86, 88, 54 Grainger, Jane — ] ' ° Green, M. C , 09 Green, V. N 74 34 Green, W. Glenn 67, 138 Greene, C. E. ..... - -71, 48 Greene, Shirley Grace........ .65, 63, 80 Greer, Jane .....63,97,127,174 Gregg, Helen Victoria.... 31 Griffin, George F - =° Griffin, Grace y- 08 Griffin, Louis C... 61, 148 Griffith, Frank T 88, 01 Griffith, Roger D -- --72, 3b Griffith, Tom L -106, 58 Grimm, Claude Emerson 5 , UU Grimpe, Werner A co ' tH Grisinger, Gordon M 69. 13° Groban, Robert 74, 152 Grove, Mark 72, 134 Grow, George W.. 7n -Vno n GulUford, William 42 103, 30 Gundhng, D. Louis 67,81,15b H Haan, Frances Louise.. 68, 124, 168 Ha :kney, John 69, 101, 138 Haden, Jean .74,172 Haight, John S 50, 103, 132 Haines, Dorothy ......62,94,95 Hale, Dorothy 63,98,99,108,164 Hall, Charles Robert - 32 Hall, J. Charles, Jr 71 Hall, Juanita 46 Hall, Kendall L..... -54, 132 Hall, Kenton Allen 68, 132 Holler, Joseph B... 31 Hamilton, Lorentz G., Jr...... 45, 160 Hamilton, Millie ...72, 174 Hamilton, Robert Burke. 52, 93, 140 Hammer, H. L 110 Hammer, J. W 102,111 Hancock, Frances Yost 73 Hardman, Anna Neale..47, 83, 97, 126, 170 Hardman, Charles O 70, 130 Hardman, Harley F 61, 136 Hardman, Orville ...70, 136 Hardman, William Harold... 72 Hardway, Jon P ...71,148 Hare, Virginia 56, 123, 166 Harford, Jack 72, 158 Harper, Eleanor Randolph 62, 172 Harper, Evalyn Hope.. 42 Harper, Philip H 65, 134 Harr, Milton 38 Harris, Evelyn 37,81,170 Harris, Melvin ...- 57, 104 Harrison, Emily 67, 174 Harshbarger, Elizabeth Lee 35 Hartley, Elinor 65 Hartley, Thelma Irene 66 Harvey, Jock W .40, 148 Harvey, John C... 138 Hashinger, S, Elizabeth ...74, 168 Hashinger, W. Roy, Jr 69, 156 Haught, David 57, 104, 160 Hought, John S 67,93,132 Hayne, Robert Y 52,88,154 Heatherman, Kenna Joseph 140 Hedrick, Clan G.. .-... 53, 148 Heflebower, H. G 110 Heinlein, Russell L.... .....67, 144 Heironimus, Richard Dean... .59, 142, 162 Heiskell, Edgar F 86 Helmick, Susan 59, 174 Helsley, Sylvester D... 32 Henderson, Bill Francis 72, 134 Henry, Charles 66, 154 Henry, Mary 67, 172 Herold, Anderson C, Jr 49, 88, 154 Hess, Clyde D 83,96 Hess, Fred B 49 Hess, Frederick William 35 Hess, Oakley E 156 Hevener, Richard Neil 44, 84 Highland, Cecil B., Jr 36, 140 Highland, Florence Jean 41, 174 Hill, Evelyn Marie 72, 168 Hill, Frankhn Duane -. 53, 138 Hill, Jane Hart...... 59, 163, 168 Hindsley, John P 67, 156 Hineline, Bette Rahe 72 Hinerman, Gwendolyn ..— 73, 95 Hirschberg, Wallace .....70, 146 Hively, Nell - -- 60 Hlusko, George Paul .59, 142 Hockenbury, Dorothy Mae -.. 73 Hoffman, Peter L, 11. 60, 154 Hoffmaster, Forerst G 36 Hogshead, George William 73 Hogue, Harry J 86 Holden, B. L 102 Holland, Robert Louis -45, 140 Hollandsworth, Charles E 73, 136 Hollen, Kenenth R 52, 104, 132 Home Ec. Club 95 Hopkins, George .....62, 150 Hopkins, Oakley John 40 Hood, Helen ...64, 170 Hooff, Fontaine 36 Hornbrook, Frank Eugene 68, 130 Hornbrook, John Roscoe .65, 142 Hoskins, Alberta Rose 35 Hoskins, Mabel 73, 166 Houck, Lucille H -32, 108 Hoult, Raymond H 70,132 Hoy, John W -.. .73, 158 Hudson, Leah Winifred 71 Huff, Adelia 42 Huff, Bertie Lee. ......57, 172 Hughes, J. M 110 Hundley, William O., Jr 69, 138 Hunter, Richard 50, 132 Hutchinson, K. D 103 Hutton, Ernest Watson 46, 81, 88, 104, 140 I Ice, Homer L., Jr.... 53 Icenhower, Ruth Ann 56, 176 11 Circolo Italiano ...105 Inter-Fraternity Council .152 I Jackson, Robert W 34, 86, 138 Jackson, W. T., Jr 68, 156 James, Genevieve 55, 176 Jemison, William 71, 138 Jarrell, Eileen Lucille 37, 122, 172 Jarrell, Herschel A.... 66, 134 Jennings, William 160 Jennison, Elsie C... 68, 166 Jewell, George Washington, Jr 51, 144 John, Lucille .-. 39, 89, 163, 170 Johnson, Ben S., Jr 92, 134 Johnson, C. G,. Ill Johnson, Carol 70, 178 Johnson, David Dale 101 Johnson, Frank Morgan 31 Johnson, Mary Kathryn 53, 174 Johnson, Mary Louise 56, 95 Johnson, Phil 71, 140 Johnston, Virginia Kathleen 73 Jones, Charles E 130 Jones, Caroline 73, 174 Jones, Eleanor 71, 178 Jones, John William, Jr.... ......69, 138 Jones, Lucy Elizabeth 46, 178 Jones, Ralph, Jr.. 46,84,85,93,130,162 Jones, Ross Gambrill 42, 104, 134 Jorgensen, Miles John 71, 132 Joseph, Mike 65, 160 Journaliers 97 Judy, Kerlin Ord 32 Judy, Otha Bard 36 K Kappa Alpha .134, 135 Kappa Kappa Gamma ...174, 175 Kappa Sigma 136, 137 Kacer, Elsie Jean 70,95,176 Kahle, James S., Jr 134 Kammer, Max L 72 Kann, B. J HO Kanner, Sam ..— -. 66, 146 Kaplan, Eleanor .-.. 70, 180 Kack, Lois -. -66, 164 Keefer, Frances Genevieve.. 54 Keister, Robert S 53, 132 Keith, Lucille .65,91,99,164 Kell, Anthony 46, 134 Keller, William 51,96,130 Kendrick, Olivia .50, 172 Kepner, Jack W...... 36, 104, 134 Kerns, Leon -- -42, 158 Kerr, Matthew D .48, 156 Kessel, Charles E 71, 109, 136 Kiger, Anna Jane 73 Kiger, Glenn Willord 58 Kimmel, Kathryn ......32, 174 Kindt, Charles William... ...47,88,132 King, William M.. 71,138 Kingry, Katharine Jane 70, 176 Kirk, B. A., Jr .158 Kirk, William Pershing 68, 158 Klebe, Albert -.... 70, 138 Klebe, Howard C 85, 86, 87, 107, 138 Klett, William -69, 138 Kloes, Frederick 138 222 INDEX Klug, Ignatius G 33 Knapp, Helen Jordan 38 Knauss, Kenneth 54, 156 Knapp, Thomas 73, 154 Knotts, Virginia Joan 74 Koepler, Virginia Lee _53, 178 Koon, Lewana _ _ 71 Koontz, Mary Louise 32 Koslow, Mihon Sidney 67, 146 Kotler, Milton .....72, 146 Kramer. William M ...71, 154 Kress, Edith 71, 180 Kuzner, Robert 136 L Lancaster, Earle Lewis. 31,88 Latta, William 109 Law, Mary E... .....57, 170 Lawall, Charles E 19 Lawton, Lilyan 54 Lazaroff, Hilda 31, 180 Lazelle, Louise 69, 174 Lee, Betty J 83, 105 Lee, Margaret Jane 65, 174 Lee, Richard .71, 160 Lee, Robert Burton .134 Leeson, Gordon Leon 35 Leggett, James S .70, 130 Leith, Elizabeth Lane 57 Leith, Nancy Gregg 38 Lenett, Marvin S .61, 146 Leonard, Alice 33, 98 Leonard, Edna Lee 53 Leonhart, William K 53, 101 LePera, Emory Leslie, George C 85 Leslie, Warren D 31, 86, 93, 154 Levin, Rhea .73, 180 Levine, Sam Gordon — 146 Lewis, Burl Clayton... 73, 160 Lewis, Esther M 49, 94 Lewis, Florence May 33, 83, 97 Lewis, Harry F 52 Lewis, W. H ...69, 140 Linger, Elinore Frances 70, 168 Lippucci, F. H 47 Liskey, Richard C .69, 148 Li-toon-Qwa 91 Little, Glenn, Jr 39 Littman, Leo John 148 Livesay, Meade A 68, 154 Livingstone, J. D., Jr 50,88, 105, 132 Livingstone, Robert C... 38, 132 Lockhart, Brooks, J 38 Loeb, Robert Harold ...66, 152 Long, Dan .65, 130 Lothes, Harry 86 Lotstein, Jack ...72, 146 Loucks, Royden McKee .64, 134 Lowe, Eleanore .60, 170 Lucas, Louise 74, 168 Lundquist, Arthur 136 Lunk, William A 65 Lynch, G. Berk 47 Lynch, Richard Vance, Jr.....54, 88, 93, 132 Lyon, Ruth Lee ...40, 178 Lyons, Betty Marie 40, 94, 95, 168 M MacDonald, Christie 71 Madden, Harold J 60, 86, 92, 148 Mahon, Charles 68, 148 Maid, Thomas 158 Mallinger, Morton Arnold 72, 152 Mandick, Sam .107 Marcus, S. A .152 Markle, Mary Kathryn... 60 Markowitz, A. Robert ....63, 93, 152 Marple, Mary Jean 74, 168 Morple, R. C... 110 Marsh, C. O,, Jr 38,92,104 Marshall, Jean 108 Marshall, Murdayne 60, 126, 178 Marshall, Perry F 48 Marshall, Ralph S ...61, 140 Marstiller, James A 55 Martin, Delmar .55, 148 Martin, Sterling 61 Mason, John A., Jr 43, 109, 130 Mason, Troxell O 88,92,160 Matthews, John 70, 130 Matthews, Nancy 70, 174 Matthews, N. Elbert 69, 132 Maxwell, Martha Jean 32, 174 May, Allan S....... 134 Meadows, Sibyl Louise 54. 164 Menefee, William 34 Men ' s Glee Club 112,113 Mervis, Rosenetta 68, 180 Meyers, Murray 68, 146 Michelson, H. B 83,96 Michie, Jeanne ......71,99,170 Milam, Sterling Clark 43, 102, 111 Military 196, 209 Miller, Alice E... .74, 166 Miller, Cora Anna 52, 172 Miller, Eileen 70, 126, 174 Miller, Louise Reed... 53,88,130 Miller, Paul A 34,85,102,111,156,162 Miller, R. E... 102,111 Miller, William E .68, 130 Mills, Altes Jerald 34, 148 Moccia, Phillip Virgil 36 Mockler, Robert 39,86, 107, 138 Monroe, Jeanne 74, 105, 166 Montagliani, Frances 44 Montesinos, Miguel 150 Monticola Staff 80, 81 Moody, Walter William 45,87,136 Moon, Mildred E 70, 178 Moore, Betty Jane 48 Moore, Helen L.. .66, 172 Moore, Pat .61, 172 Moore, Ulvert Mathew .62, 134 Moore, Wallace C 49, 130 Moore, Wendell S... 63,88, 106, 130 Moore, William Edward 70, 130 Moron, William J 86, 87, 107 Moreland, William A 88, 134 Morgan, Jack C 63, 88, 132 Morgan, Nellie .65, 174 Morgan, William B .72, 132 Morgan, William Franklin, Jr .69, 136 Morgen, Audrey 71, 180 Morgret, Gladys Belle ...62, 168 Morris, Don W 160 Morris, Donnally 74, 136 Morris, James 154 Morris, Mary Ben 66, 178 Morris, Muriel Aldene ...41, 174 Morrow, John R .74, 154 Mortar Board 89 Morton, Ernest V., Jr 57, 160 Moses, Richard 38, 104 Mossburg, Virginia 54, 176 Mountain 85 Mountaineer Week Team.. 84 Mourat, Steve 93 Moyers, Leslie H... 66, 160 Mucklow, William R 103, 132 Mueller, Robert 69, 154 Murphy, W. R... ...73, 150 Murray, Emily .65, 172 Murrill, Jack E 67, 140 Musser, William L ...44, 130 Myers, Nedra Jane 50,89,170 Mc McCabe, Charles P., Jr 32, 103, 154 McCabe, James N 61,154 McCallister, J. W 72, 158 McCann, Bettie 70,95 McCann, Frank P.... 154 McCarthy, Thomas 73, 158 McCartney, James Rowe 68, 132 McClaugherty, James M 36.109,148 McClung, Dwight 104 McClung, Frank G... ...156 McClung, Marvin Richard 67,110 McClure, George 138 McComas, William E 132 McCoy, LaYuonne 66, 168 McCoy, Phyllis Ruth 60, 164 McCue, John Burk 37 McCue, John Duncan.. 70, 140 McCulloch, Marguerite La Jo 67, 178 McCune, Dallas 132 McDonald, Elery A..... 55, 80, 83, 158 McDonald, J. Parker 136 McDermott, Charles 66, 138 McElhinny, Lawrence Reed.. ..46, 158, 162 McGee, William Newton 59 McGinnis, William T 66, 138 McGraw, Virginia ...61, 164 McGregor, Mary Noyes 51, 168 McGuire, Mickey 58,98,170 McGuire, Thomas Charles 34 McHenry, Eileen ...50, 170 Mclnfyre, Howard L 66, 109, 148 Mclntire, E. L 86 Mclntire, R. A 73, 148 Mclntire, S. T 148 Mclntire, William Henry .....63, 148 McKolip, Wallace .......60, 107, 154 McKane, Virginia Lee 56, 83, 166 McKeever, Harold 34 McKenzie, Anna Margaret... 59 McLain, Sara 55, 170 McLaughlin, James Kemp 67 McLaughlin, Larry 65, 160 McMechen, Kenneth .70, 138 McMechen, Betty 58,90,168 McMillan, Marcy E ...62, 144 McMillion, Ann ......68, 99, 168 McNeill, Elizabeth 31, 174 McPherson, William E 132 McQuiston, Jean 51, 108, 163, 164 McWhorter, Betty Jane 60,99,178 N Nach, Gilbert 69, 146 Nach, Lillian 73, 180 Nachbar, Seymour 34, 87, 146 Nash, Herman T... 74, 136 Nassimbeni, Raymond C 70, 132 Naumann, Robert A 65, 148 Nay, Rebecca ...67, 178 Neely, Harold 58, 148, 162 Neely, William E 84, 85, 86 Negri, Eleanor .....105 Nelson, Ethel M 42, 164 Nelson, Jane 59, 178 Nelson, Robert William 70, 138 Neuman, Vincent O ' Leary 35 Newlon, Arthur William 58, 130 Nicholas, John 64, 106, 148 Nichols, Betty Irene .66, 83, 97, 168 Nichols, Helen 71, 168 Nicholson, Guy Christopher.. 53, 136 Nicholson, Marjorie 63 Nicodemus, Mary Lenore 40 Nottingham, R. J 110 Nutter, Carmen Alberta 44 Nutter, William T...... 54,80,86,101,140 Nuzum, John Homer Holt 34, 154 Nuzum, Robert 61, 138 O Oakley, Donald B 35, 92, 106 OFarrell, Paul ....142 O ' Neal, Rosalie .„ 65, 178 223 INDEX O ' Neill, Edward 75, 154 Openshaw, Alan 54, 150 Osborn, Jane Linn 39,88.178 Osborne, William H 69, 132 Owen, Richard Z.____ 138 P Painter, James Pershing ____ 70 Palmer, J. Carl ___64, 148 Pan-Hellenic Council _____ 163 Parker, John _ _ __ .66, 160 Parker, Joseph Wilbur ____ 132 Porrish, Bob ____ _ 88, 140 Parrish, Jack ____ 71, 140 Parsons, WiUiam Earl _...._ 73, 136 Pasculle, Lew ___I04 Patterson, Don R.___ 71,148 Patterson, Jane 55, 172 Patterson, Ralph E._ __ 65, 148 Patterson, Thomas Joseph 50, 138 Pattison, John Norwood __ 67 Payne, Dylys ....68,91,168 Pearcy, Evert M __ _ 66, 148 Pearsoll, Eleanore _ 56, 172 Pearson, C. J 68, 154 Peck, Patty 68 Pedgonoy, John Stanley 34 Peel, Kathleen 72, 178 Perry, F. Marshall Perry, William M _____ 56 Peskin, Burton 73, 152 Peters, Dolores ___ _ ___ 72 Peters, Jerome F 41, 134 Peters, R. J,_ 66, 134 Petitto, Victor 63, 105 Petros, Asper _..._ _..__ 73 Pharr, Richard __ __ 72,81,158 Phelps, John William __.__ 87, 106, 150 Phillips, Howard 70, 130 Phillips, Mary Ella _ 54, 168 Pi Beta Phi____ 178, 179 Pi Kappa Alpha 150, 151 Pi Lambda Phi 152, 153 Pickus, Milton 152 Pierce, Robert B 70, 140 Piggott, Harold W 67, 140, 162 Pilegge, Rose Marie _ 33 Pine, Mary Jo 72, 170 Pinion, Sammy 107, 158 Pipes, David S 68, 154 Pitrola, James ______ 71,105,142 Pitrola, Paul 49, 105, 142 Plattenburg, John William ...68, 154 Plenni, Paul _ 73, 138 Plovanich, Charles 32,92, 106 Poindexter, Julia Ann ...56, 170 Point, Walter Warren 71,81,134 Polley, Walter C... 39 Pool, Champ Clark... .65, 140 Poole, Catherine ...63, 164 Poole, Frank E .35, 93 Porter, Harry Lee 46, 102, 111 Porter, Natalie 65,91,170 Porterfield, Marvin 54, 134 Portnoif, Clifton Lew 50,93,152 Post, G. W ...109 Posten, David John 44, 154 Potterfield, Clarence 60, 130 Poulicos, A. Paul 66, 148 Powell, Jules 65, 138 Powell, William H 60,83,88,130 Powell, William Ira 68 Prager, Conrad .71, 160 Pratt, Harold Conrad 106, 150 Preece, Betty Jane. .....74, 95 Previll, Marshall L ......106 Protzman, Sarah 32 Provence, Robert N 74, 134 Publications Board 79 Pugh, Joe 46, 134 Pugh, Nancy 72, 174 Pyle, Jessie Barker „ 33 Pyle, Kenneth Eugene... 33 Pyle, William Lloyd 31 Q Quackenbush, Francis V., Jr 158 Queen, Roy Lee..... _____ 57 Quigley, Harold Edward__ __ 48 Quillen, Lucille 70 R Rahall, Deem Frank 39,150 Ramsey, Jeanne Louise 72, 166 Randal, Keitha Anne 72, 170 Randolph, Burl _____ 70, 140 Ranson, Ira E 68, 156 Ranson, Kerwin __71, 156 Rapaswick, Anthony 60, 142 Rapp, Pella Hall 41 Reams, Margaret 72 Reay, David Neville 33, 130 Reed, Charles M 57, 105, 132, 150 Reed, David Arthur 68 Reed, P. 1 82, 83, 96 Reid, L. M 11 1 Reighard, Gretchen 67 Reiley, Earl W., Jr.. .73, 130 Rendle, Carolyn 37 Reppart, Eloise 48 Rexrode, Kenna F 31 Reynolds, John T., Jr 68, 138 Rhodes, Virginia ..59, 172 Rhododendron 90 Rhudy, Albert Edward 43 Rich, Victoria Marie 35, 105 Richardson, Jess W... 59, 88, 156 Richardson, Thomas Joseph 42, 88 Richmond William Ballard 41, 148 Ridd, Walter J 136 Riddle, Paul .107 Ridgely, Walter William 41 Riggs, William E 66, 130 Riley, Lewis 84, 85, 86, 109 Rinehart, George 83, 96 Ringer, Dwane .69, 138 Ripley, A. R 102,111 Rist, Harold W 43,87,107,160 Ritter, Charles Lawrence 67, 130 Robb, Lewis J., Jr .65, 140 Roberts, Amy Jane 68 Roberts, Carl ...59, 130 Roberts, Wilbur Claude 45, 111, 144 Robinson, James Poe .....33, 109 Robison, Dorothy 56, 168 Robson, Jack 53 Roby, John G 104 Rodeheave, Earl N .....35, 132 Rodes, Wilmer E 88, 154 Rodgers, Hazlett McMillen 54, 88, 130 Roeser, Harriett 61 Rogers, Daniel R 40, 140 Rogers, Everette M 65, 140 Rogers, Thomas Wilson 33 Rohr, Margaret 62,99,163,164 Romig, Richard E 132 Romine, Elisabeth S .71, 174 Rose, Aaron .58, 152 Rothstein, Seymour D .47, 146 Rothwell, Herbert H.... 70, 130 Rothwell, James A 66, 160 Roush, H. A Ill Rubenstein, Kenneth 63, 152 Rubin, Martin 70, 152 Ruch, James Frederick 73, 138 Ruck, Charles H .......66, 148 S Sabo, James Albert 160 Sage, Victor Earle 73 Samms, Roy Stuart, Jr 52,84,85, 130 Sampson, Margaret Louise 54 Sanchez, Hilarion, Jr.. .74, 132 Satterfield, Paul ...88, 160 Scabbard Blade... 88 Scabbard and Blade. 88 Scherr, Harry, Jr .51,109,130 Schroder, John L 38,92,106,140 Schubert, O. E... 110 Schuchat, Betsy 40, 180 Schuchat, Betty Lee 65, 180 Schultz, Pauline .....68, 178 Schwartz, G. F 43,92,104 Schwartz, Joseph 1 73, 146 Schwartzwalder, Wayne 45 Schweinsberg, Henry W .60, 138 Scollon, Thomas R ...106 Scott, Mary Rosalie .57,90,172 Scott, Thelma 108 Scott, V. Leona.. 38 Seibert, George H., Jr 45, 85, 86, 109 Sellars, Leah ...69, 166 Semat, John 158 Shaffer, Florence Jane 67,91,125 172 Shaffer, Frank E ...83,96,136 Shaffer, J. William 70, 130 Shahan, Juanita .67, 108, 164 Shaid, Lloyd R..... 53, 140 Shale, Correll C... 61, 160 Shale, Gwen 63,108 Shale, John P., Jr .52. 160 Sharp, George Stewart .73. 130 Sharpenberg. Homer W 55.88.106 Sharpless, Betty Jane.. 73, 178 Shawkey, George Arthur 84 Shears, George Arthur 37, 111, 144 Shepherd, John A .67,81,140 Sherwood, C. Gordon 72, 136 Shields, Alton Burkley 43 Shingleton, Charlotte 65 Shingleton, J. Robert 71,130 Shingleton, Mary Elnora 49, 178 Shinn, Ruby Marie 42, 94, 95, 170 Shoaf, H. Kenneth 32, 92, 104 Shoaf, James R 104 Shonk, John Jenks _____ 67, 156 Shortridge, Mildred _____ 65, 170 Shott, Ned E.__ ___ 53,84,156 Shuman, Betty Jane.___ 58, 172 Shuman, Robert 86 Siegrist, Edgar C .65,101.148 Stems. George H 73. 154 Sigma Chi 154. 155 Sigma Delta Tau 180. 181 Sigma Gamma Epsilon 106 Sigma Phi Epsilon 158. 159 Sigma Nu ...156.157 Silcott, Kathleen Virginia 39, 95 Silverstein, Irving 93 Sims, J. A 11 1 Simmons, Ruth 71,95,168 Simms, Robert M 67 Simonton, Maurice L 93, 136 Simpson, Samuel Raymond 38 Sims, J 102 Singleton, Julius Walton 105, 154 Sinnett, Herman L 39, 134 Skaggs, Dwight Hamlin 37, 156 Slaughter, Jack D 72 Sloter, Zone B.. 63, 144, 162 Smiglin, Clarence 73, 158 Smith, Clarence Edwin 68, 140 Smith, DaCosta, Jr 134 Smith, Evelyn Dorothy 65, 176 Smith, Harold Henkel ...35,85,87,102 Smith, Ira M 109 Smith, James Avon 37 Smith, Jean 73, 170 Smith, John 74, 150 Smith, J. Richard 62, 148 Smith, M. L Ill Smith, Sallie 63, 163, 170 224 INDEX Smith, Sidney ._ _„_ --73, 138 Smith, Virginia Marie 71, 172 Smithson, C. M 63, 148 Smoyer, Barbara Chalmers 84, 90, 94, 95, 99, 168 Sneddon, Bette - 55, 126, 164 Sneddon, James C, Jr 36 Snedegar, Charlotte 49 Snider, John L 66, 148 Snoderly, Gretchen .73, 174 Snyder, Charles William 41, 144 Sommer, Katharine L _ 57, 176 Sowers, Bill C __ __ 68 Spahr, Phil S 83 Spongier, John Allen - - 43 Spangler, Phyllis Louise-61, 108, 163, 172 Sparacino, George _ __ 105 Spear, Howard Earl— — .._ 107,150 Spears, Edwin, Jr -.- 66, 130 Sperow, Malcolm W 70, 130 Sphinx 87 Spiked Shoe _— -100 Spiker, Genevieve 44 Spiker, Robert _ _ _ 72, 156 Spray, Mary Doris 59,94,95 Spriegel, William T 148 Springer, Jack .- — 69,88,154 Springer, John Adams 71, 142 Staab, Professor 106 Staab, Shirley 72, 172 Stacks, Margaret 74, 164 Stallings, Bettie 67,99,178 Stansbury, Charles D 73, 130 Sfansbury, Harry 56, 130 Stansbury, Mary 67, 163, 172 Starr, T. B 11 1 Staub, Charles Harry, Jr 38 Steed, Ebert Francis 55 Steed, William H 62, 138 Stemple, David T - 70, 140 Stenger, Aloys Bernard 58, 148 Stenger, Joseph, Jr - -- --68, 136 Stephenson, John 70, 150 Sterling, David G 88 Sterling, Eleanor Emogene 38 Stewart, Anne -71,174 Stewart, John - 57, 156 Stewart, John Samuel 41 Stewart, Vernah Merrie- 55,81,178 Stewart, William C 41,156 Stine, Ira Allen, Jr - 44 Stone, Cassie May 85,95,172 Storck, Paul F -70, 130 Stotler, Frances —71, 178 Stover, Harry - _ —73, 148 Strader, Alberta Dyer..- ..46, 98, 168 Street, Margaret Elizabeth 74 Strosnider, Marjorie 65,91, 174 Student Council 22 Stutter, Joseph C 66, 134 Sullivan, John Lee 58, 84, 88, 106, 130 Summers, Clifford 44, 102 Summers, Margaret Ann 67, 172 Swecker, J. B Ill Swift, Margaret 40, 176 Swiger, James R 71,138 Swiger, Ernest 109 Swisher, Fred Milton, Jr 34 Swisher, John 103 Sycafoose, Richard 72,150 T Tabb, G. E HI Tait, Alexander 72, 140 Tau Beta Pi _ 92 Tau Kappa Epsilon 160, 161 Taylor, Betty -. 66, 166 Taylor, Charles L 52 148 Taylor, F. I 1 1 1 Teets, Charles Clement 34,111 Templeton, Grace 65, 164 Tennis 194 Teter, Vie Catherine. 33 Thomasson, Charlotte A 67 Thompson, Harold - 65, 156 Thompson, R. H 110 Thompson, William Mason.. 36, 83, 96, 106 Thorne, Glenn W 67 138 Thrash, Millard C...... 49 Thrush. Lawrence Blair 56, 92, 148 Thurnes, Betty 74 164 Tidball, Robert ..- .... ' .138 Tidier, James 72, 132 Tissue, Frederick Morris ..101, 132 Tolliver, Janet 71, 168 Tomchin, Abe .85, 146 Tonry, Ruth ...60, 90, 94, 98 168 Toothman, Fred R .....106 Toussaint, Diane 63,98, 178 Track 191 Treacy, Estelle ...74, 166 Trissler, Clara Louise .44,89,163,166 Tuckwiller, Helen 54 Turley, Lois 57,90,163,166 Turoff, N. L .......88, 160 Tyree, J. M HI U Ullum, James Paul. -... 40, 103, 160 Umbarger, George Alfred 34 Urling, Harold W 69, 148 Urling, Isabelle A ...68, 99, 178 Utt, Charles .67, 156 V Vance, William 69, 138 Van Metre, James M ......52, 84, 88! 102 Vaughan, Lillian 49 Vick, Clyde Whitley 34, 154 Vines, Sterling 85 Vogel, Irving Leonard.. .48, 152, 162 Volk, Cecil S...... 66,152 Volker, Alvin Seward... 53,81,82 Volker, John F 69 Volkin, David 85, 86 Von Berg, Robert..... 92, 160 W W, A. A... 98 Wade, Franklin G 66, 130 Waldo, Mary Catharine 74 Walker, Barbara 72 Walkup, Virginia .73, 166 Wahz, Dale A 67, 138 Warlop, William Walter 36 Warren, Sara Rosalind 48, 89, 94, 95 Wasmuth, Mary Jane... 39, 166 Wasserkrug, Bernard K 55, 152 Watson, James William 140 Watson, Joseph F .-. .62, 144 Watson, June 72, 174 Watts, William F 55, 130 Waugh, Margaret 55,90,166 Weaver, Morrison 42, 92 Weaver, Virginia L 65,91,99,178 Webb, Thomas 31, 92 Webster, Naomi 108 Weeks, Arthur 150 Weinberg, Harry William 132 Weiner, Marceline 73, 180 Welch, Richard A,, Jr 65, 140 Weller, Ruth 59,90,94,170 Welton, Elisabeth 58, 178 Werton, Gaynelle Hayes... ...39, 95 166 West, George William... 72 Wheat, Mary 74, 99, 168 Wheeler, John M 54, 148 White, Alma E...... 61,83 White, Betty Lee.. 67,83,174 White, J. B.. .72, 107, 138 White, Helinda Elizabeth 52, 170 White, Louis Pearson 51, 154 Whittaker, Charles R 60, 132 Whitten, Jennings Bryan 42 Whickline, Ann .....72, 164 Whitescarver, Robert S .104 Wickline, Francis H ...43, 104 Wiginton, Letcher .65, 138 Wilbourn, Russell A., Jr 57, 140 Wildey, Robert W 72, 136 Wildey, Virginia .....45,94,95,172 Williams, Claire 68 Williams, Frances C 54, 178 Williams, Grace 73 Williams, Harold Allen 43, 87, 142 Williams, Mary Katharine 41 Williams, Patsy Jess. 46, 105 Williams, Paul Daniel .36, 150, 162 Williams, Rolla, Jr .47, 83, 96, 136 Williamson, Peggy Louise... 60, 172 Williamson, Robert G ...44, 154 Williamson, W. D 110 Wilson, Charlotte G ...68, 178 Wilson, Nancy ...38, 168 Wilson, Thomas R., Jr 62 Wilson, Thomas Rodney....62, 88, 136, 148 Wilson, Robert S 68, 130 Wilson, William G 134 Wilson, Woodrow 96 Winning, Anna Nell ......66, 176 Winter, Alfred F 39, 104 Winters, Harold Merle 104 Wise, Gay Donnally 57 Wise, Philip 148 Witt, Bill ...-. 59, 132 Wolfe, Barbara Anne. ...52, 172 Wolverton, Harriet G 67, 170 Wolverton, James Harold 43,86,87, 109,148 Woofter, William Clinton 66, 148 Wollard, Herbert W., Jr ...67, 148 Women ' s Glee Club.. ..— 114,115 Woolcock, Dorothy Jane 50 Work, Ann Valjean .31, 163, 176 Workman, Harry Shelton 50,87, 111 Worrell, Donald T 104 Wrestling 193 Wright, William E., Jr 69, 154 Wyatt, Zachariah, Jr..... 47, 136, 162 Wynn, Douglas .....66, 138 Wysong, W. Scott 58, 93, 132 Yandala, Ralph J ....- 49 Yoke, Ann 68,83,97,178 Young, Herbert W 72, 138 Young, James Eugene 71, 130 Y. W. C. A 99 Z Zappin, Bernard N 44, 146 Zatezalo, William 160 Zeit, Carl 73, 152 Zepp, E. Andrew - 51, 107, 150 Zickefoose, Rox Loraine ...33, 158 Zimmerman, Frances Elyce 49 Zimmerman, Kitty ....60, 90, 94, 99, 163, 176 225
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