Central Methodist University - Ragout Yearbook (Fayette, MO)
- Class of 1942
Page 1 of 164
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 164 of the 1942 volume:
“
'15 -lv- .nw a Q.:-Rm: . :,j.AJ. .f, . x' 1 9: 13,7 New f -4- -, 5, 'gin , ' li ,, . ', ,,, -1 ,,x. , .f 4 1 . ,X -Q' 4 M1 1 V , ,. ,..x,A .. .I ky . ., , , ' - f A Q l. 1 72, 0, .Ale . -... V, . ..!'. ' -. , , .Q ., :IW - 'Q ,715 ,1-R -' V , 1, wr ,i . ,. T5 ' A' , .T-, 5' ' ' ,Z t - f' ' af? , , -,.. 4 I-I ,.., U .. Q.. . 5 'ff ,f.y,Af, + -mn, ., 1 -1222, 4. Iv ,. 3 .Q-r'.-' 'iii A 'yr 1 t.',.4-L, I' -. N.-. '--f -sf 31,12- .7 t. , mb, , f , ,.f,gi,:' 1-. .. 'L -,. 5 , U- 1, . J'..:,.f:'- 1.,',1,: ',: f:-:Al 1 - Q ,. QQV liji' 1151 ' .- J. V -if . J, . '. , -. v v ,V., N, .-.. J, J 7 ' S A In gd r 1'1. , ' 1 Y' Agn! 311 i 19 GA 7 ' -SE .r k, v An. ..,35y I if -La ffm J , f, U4 QV I 1 1 I1 , A. ,. ,7- 5 .4 Q13 . u ' if-' 1 H 511 M4 5, 11 1-. ,, Qc? A I , ,- ,fy 1 'fi W1 ' rf- J,. . g - c1jv',ff1 1 ,, ,x RAM' 1 , 1 fy, 2, .1,,, Q, f 'yen -- ll1'.'1 , X H . 11' 1 , n Q A:1!741f1', 1 ' ' ' fx' '-Vfsf . .'f:w- S 1 ' I 1 . 1 1 1 ,, 1 , QQ '- . 1-S 4:1 . 1',...1A,.ii . I 1. Q I, ,g,.. 1 1 A 1 'g?11311 1 1. . V 1, Hr 5 , 'xg' ' 11' ,m Q , ,QC L. vi A 4 g V 311151, 1- I lx ' .. - 1, , 4- n ' V' 1:-L ,f u4.1'e1,, 'e ,v 1 ,Annu ..'.'1'.,s,, ,2- -'- 'f:mf1ifJ -' SA-5' ,fr-'IF I ' '..'.-1 ' 3- T2 -511:f2'1 ,A ,,.y.A3p-,,-5 A, , , -A 1 an ' s, , 1 ' ' . - - 14. X, 11111: - , 1 V .5 T Tk NINETEEN FDRTY-TWD PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENT BDDY DF CENTRAL CDLLEGE FAYETTE - - - MISSDUR A. L. THURMAN, Edilur if L. A. HARRISON, BITS. Mgr. ff E. L. OREAR Ad Mg 71 yyzz.. QQ A ff Q? . -v f-11: 1 ' 1 I 'Wx X ,R hx ':..-,z- ?4..,fIu, 'req X S Vw JI X J xxisjf 5.7 M? f. 'Ta ...zif -.. KL n gn 5?-'XZ 1 x ,-J ,vki 7 Uygx. HQ., All. 'ri WN America's collegiate youth find themselves critically in- volved in another world-wide struggle for something or other . . . regardless of what it is, they find them- selves committed to the extent of making important decisions, which although primarily important in the present will definitely influence their future life. With all such seriousness facing us seven days a week it seems practical to some of us that something be done . . . with some such idea in mind we have planned, argued, fought, re-planned and in the end have come out with an annual. A college annual serves as a re- minder of the time one spends there . . . calling to mind people, frats, sororities, professors, classes . . . we can't include all, but we have attempted a pano- ramic view of your year at Central . . . for your im- mediate pleasure as well as in years to come we present, with hopeful prayer for acceptance, the 1942 RAGOUT if 1 THE CQLLEGE A4' ADMINISTRATION 'Ek ' 'A ' FACULTY S, A CLASSES 14 ' I ACTIVITIES PUBLICATIONS ATHLETICS GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATIONS SOCIAL WHIRL CLUBS PERSONALITI ES .-,fs Xe, r' . inge- A .. ' . . . ,. 'W vv',13L ' W ' - Nfl 'K 5 xv ' ,V 'J ,, -in sv 54 ' ' A NJ. ' 1. ' . 0 . 4 ' 5' .-,A ' X ' K -.fc f is -A . f f ., . Nl'-'Q vb 0 ' ' N5 ,I K 4 A 'flu 4' ' . P. ' . , EN , K 1 4 P 4 'lg' . 1 X R' NQNN Ki- , ., :Q jlpx- . V , 1 , ,x ., 1 -A W jf .1 - -. ' 'rf PG. f r 3 - X 4. A' ' - -an ' 5- ,f5'9...,, 1 x yr 1 1,2 Q-3' 1 . 'nfl xx mf' 5.i5' 3. -8 - 1 rin' A 4 M J LN f 1 yur. -5 fx. 38,111 Q - X 1 , J, ll 3 .Q I . I .. 1 M ' 4 n A 9 g-, V .W rj, X. x , lf A ' .2 , 9 , JK . XG? it? x my ef X' Y .. '-.VS .- '.' 1 ' , A X' uw' x . 1 ,A 2 'ff 4 .. ' . . -. X ' hiv, x ' , V... Q X .r n A rx V, .' xv , '. . il, 'v.-,: . .HX Where there's smoke . . there should be lpeat! in-M' ui 'nr 1 . T'-YT P'lPF x ' v- , so A ,X v L4 1,3 , W kr .-B' '.4444,ZfJ4w'i sk lliur-lime dusk cusls its slirulou' on .lIF,l1l1I'l'lV HAY. l91l . . . graduation of sixty-seven seniors. addressed by a llvashington dollar-a- year man. Central grad. who told of their place in tl1e world of today . . . history was being made . . . Summer came on . . . one hundred and ten students found their place in the summer session at Fayette, while the rest of us worked or relaxed in our home atmospheres . . . crisis . . . Jl'LY . . . second selective service registration . . . again the hundreds of thousands of names include those of college students . . . others worried . . . SEPTENIBEH . . . colleges and universities found ranks depleted . . . decrease 11ot up to expectation . . . collegiate work begun u11der stress and strain of something great impending . . . vice-president Bob Clark does not return . . . deserts for home town and Springfield Teachers . . . petitioned election finds Cockerell victor over Ford . . . Central's football team looks good in beginning workouts . . . coached by George lxline. assistant to Cling for fifteen years . . . elevated via sick leave granted C. :L Clingenpeel ...A X ccidents hit . . . squad disabled . . . loses opener to Baker 32-0 . . . Nlizzou loses opener to Ohio State . . . dance band reorganized as cooperative enterprise. renamed Casa Xovag managed by Jess Harper .... X nderson's army drills continually . . . Kline continues feud . . . Schaperkotter and Burcham make out coaching staff . . . tIti1'l'Ul3ER . . . nothing new o11 war front . . . Davis does good job with recruited assistants . . . cheering better tl1a11 in past . . . Principia falls prey of one point defeat . . . first conference victory over Tarkio 19-0 . . . n1am111outl1 hon- fire . . . merchants begin cooperative drive for stadium on Davis field. buy out gate for Warrensburg game . . . biggest crowd i11 years sees stronger team romp over the green and black 28-0 . . . critics praise dance band . . . Rockwell Kent . . . patient Page 8 . . . lrees slzarle all . . . individual while Dr. Stull and stooges set up equipment for projection in middle of lec- ture . . . drinks beer with Henderson . . . where celebrities meet . . . Henderson leaves for west coast, ends up in the south training for army air corp . . . NOVEMBER . . . things look blacker, Eleanor gets vehement i11 MY DAY . . . labor leaders quarrel violently . . . get nowhere . . . Players revive lost play by Wlilliam Dunlap False Shame . . . Kendall goes steady with Gilbert i... Howell proves talent find in first production . . . large homecoming crowd greeted with most, eleborate set-up in some years . . . Bill Jewell hands out T-O defeat .... A toms and lietas initiate .... DE- CEMBER . . . Dr. Culmer says Japan will never attack . . . things become worse . . . Japan sends envoys to Washington . . . churches raise money to maintain camps for conscientious objectors . . . Japs attack Pearl Harbor on the seventh day of December . . . furor reigns . . . students leave college . . . naval enlistments grow . . . Presi- dent asks for congressional declaration of war . . . Dr. Ruff and Dean Puckett come to chapel and advise students to remain cool. and stay put ,... debt grows . . . Leon Henderson continues to control prices . . . Casey snaps pictures . . . football men get in the running at lloward-Payne . . . llurcham takes over cage squad . . . publica- tions ofhcials worry . . . advertising falls oil' . . . vacation . . . Mizzou ends successful season with New Year's day game at New Orleans against Fordham, coming out on the short end of a 2-0 score . . . Hose Bowl moved from coast inland . . . Oregon taking on Duke at Durham . . . Centralites present at both contestests . . . continual blackout. scares on West coast . . . 11ew year comes i11 with millions of Americans trying to forget . . . night clubs run wide open . . . Mayor LaGuardia spends most of his time in Wash- Page 9 umill llw rnivslir' xluulf' . . Iieneulh llze arch . . . inglon . . . JANITAHY . . . Colle-ga-s lwgin to look forward . . . all forinulate war curricula . . . Cc-11t1'nl falls in linc with ai plan of study Calling for graduation in two nncl tim-tllirfls yvnrs . . . lllltPl'Il-WOPli Sllllllllffl' session . . . no '-12 spring vacation . . . lilllv lpnsine-ss coinplnins . . . lminlwr plant in Kansas City opens . . . Welsh case re- opi-in-cl .... 1 Xriny. imvy. inarines innke hurried dashes for collegv canipusos . . . Presi- flvnt llolwrti ll. Hlilfrvsigiis as presiflvnt ol'Centrz1l . . . successor? . . . R. VV.Adkiss0n, Cvnlrnl grad rvturns lo ll0COllll' lnirszn' . . . Pc-rry VVOUIHIEIIII flew lliglivr . . . SGIIIPSIGI' . . sirive 1850 A. , M-oi if 1' ,- 2-5 II.Q::m ' W I -Q, j A ' '. 4 - .mv i M- '- -.g.-ggi-wx' Q f' 3 wx ., ,Q jg ' ' . - . : .qgff r. , K X . sf . V 4 Amt Y' Page I0 Science Hall . . insifle lies kr1m1'1Pdye.' DV' .. x ll ' '19 0 , Y, 'W . x ,tv M ..,.,,.,,,Mi,c, a examinations . . . reading lists . . . faculty committee . . . honors work . . . regis- trar's semester check-up shows several absent . . . college goes on . . . FEBRUARY . . . inter-dorm dinners are more successful . . . Roberts report is made . . . con- tinued speculation . . . government decisions made on Sunday, no good on Monday . . . Congress votes itself a pension . . . dissension . . . OPM scrapped . . . Hannibalite Donald M. Nelson, made number two man in land. second only to Franklin D .... Whiteman and others bewail over-night stream of poor songs . . . Remember Pearl Harbor . . . Glenn Miller does bang-up job of popularizing songs . . . any type . . . Streep has his troubles . . . Harlan Leonard plays Beta-Chi Delt dance at Daly . . . well received . . . Wirt Mitchell fixes roof on Armory . . . rain coats and umbrellas no longer seen in check room . . . new system of checking maintains popularity . . . three coats . . . no funds . . . student body officers dicker for name band . . . publications policy for ensuing years discussed . . . enrollment office begins a check on students re- Pazr II i ! W ' . . fl ff, jx ' ,. . L .h X i N Q, Ph' f Q V Ni '- x ' ,J. ,X 1: ,Q I .X , V kgxtw' ' f ' ' 'X lb X H .,. W A, y. . ' ' N, , , ' K' ,-.N P -. el 4 -, ll 'f - ' ' ' R ' 'P Z 1.5 .Q , ,s .1-,rx K ti.-ii,,'i:m: .V , H . L I Ak Rf -f, Q-X U S ,, X . Q. Y' I -. V. xx ' 1 , . I W., A -it' , '- ' V: ' v Nd .725 SQ, .. '7 4' X ,-.a-,.13-g5'J- ,5 ' b .j.1ri,,4?R'v , A fsswqgmf, ,mu ,Q -a',,'. rxlx li' . , ' .:- -: . , 75- - V' . vi mfr,-'Lu i Lf a'. 'WY . 1 . ' K. '15, 1' Agia :-1 i ' 1. f1m? 4? f' 'N ' 5' . . ., - 1- 1 1 1 x 'ffg f is ,-- -A L M ii ,rY- '1 1 I , .f 5 . , . , 4 . in . . -is X. 1 : .. 5- 3 , 4 , .h W 4 f . 'girl I- ,. , . ,Q ..-. ,V 1 , I , x l? ,: . -V., .5 1-E 2 S S'-M 4 ,1 5,- ix ',:v' : JN ,lg Arg'-Q., A 1' -if 1 A -X -AQ: VH ', - 1 ,' , Eg-vi , A ,J qx ,-xig,.q! Q.I W lg it ,fQ,.v.Lg1 ,I . 'M' 'V .-5 'ig' 55842 9339 If ' X X V ,N 1 ' ' 1 . . 5 ff9 w'?2 qi ' 1. ' ' ,' -' - xx! -1' .M ' 9' .' , . . - 4Mg !Q:4w.' yillf, -V ,- r ,x , '- V f Q' ' ' -2' X 'Q se., X ,,-V, N t- 3: X 'E' g QQ. .f-1, 4: - .. .fx 4 - 'W 'fn , wb A., n 'f . Jww ' H v .gy J J iv 9 VZ... .bind Il1e snows came These were presenl and accounlerl for! Chapel Iimef. Page I2 NJM- A Cupples 111111: herein sils the iillllff'-Il'l'l.flIlfll'Sfn nmn . . . turning next year . . . reserve your rooin now. save thirty dollars . . . food is terrible . . . senior tahles at, Mchlurry entertain faculty guests one night each week . . . good neighbor policy . . . dietician tears hair . . . Miss Worrell rehearses an experiment . . . coinedy prevalent throughout land . . . LaGuardia resigns governinent position . . . returns to New York to direct defense proceedings . . . complains at individuals . . closes hurlesque shows . . . show girls picket his hoine. stopping oll' also at the residence of Paul Moss . . . Burgess Nleredith drafted . . . three days at Camp Crowder . . . . . . slone walls . Page 13 Peanul pushing pledges of Phi-Bela Academy award winners surprise . . . Cooper, Fontaine . . . critics quibble with fluff- olf thrown Davis, direction . . . Grand Theatre in St. Louis returns to burlesque after three-week legit ru11 of New York cast of Li fe with Faflzer . . . Grant Wood, guest lecturer on '11 lyceum dies . . . forerunner of' movement of questionable future . . . smart people begin to figure on income tax . . . MARCH . . . wind . . . Franklin D. cele- brates his tenth year at the White House . . . fellah rates feature write-ups . . . Religion comes in for its share of emphasis . . . Dr. Anderson, Methodist emmissary from Nashville, heads visiting faculty . . . controversy . . . Congress hears Morgen- thau demand higher income tax for both high and lower brackets . . . sixty percent increase ...l ll Irs. Bzznrpsiead-Leiglz l... Phi Rho Kappa brings Abraham Lincoln back . . . gOV6I'l1l1l6Ilt, state and national, makes allowances for college students . . . MY DAY continually advocates woman registration . . . Sylvia Sydney, appearing in Angel Sfreel advocates same . . . Lieutenant General Knudsen says the boys in St. Page I4 Louis are too slow . . . Orear leaves school for bomber plant in Kansas City . . . Stevens tears hair over national situation . . . Bill Mankin takes physical examination for army . . . Mrs. B. I. Lawrence leaves for Washington . . . Col. Lawrence Day . . . Part of Company M. 35 div. leaves for Alaska . . . others leave . . . General Mac- Arthur holds out . . . Japanese generals do right hy themselves and their coun- try . . . suicide. . .March 16tl1, income tax reports . . . March l,7th, third drawing . . . Will Osborne plays Columbia . . . Glenn Miller picks queens . . . Louis Untermeyer, author, poet, farmerg friend to Central professors, comes to lecture on poetryg stays to lecture in classroom for a day . . . home concert of Professor Anderson's dress outfit very entertaining . . . tour northwest part of state . . . spring comes on rapidly . . . water fights . . . laziness . . . army takes Burcham, Blair, and Shockley, meterology division of Army Air Corps . . . RAGOUT goes to press . . . APRIL. MAY . . . Home of clialk-llzromirzy R. R. Fleel . . slar-gazer. Page I5 fs 'N !,-, 3, L is xl' 9 XL, W f X X J L7 F5 S J N ,Q f Tv 1 Gu Jf X Eg X X K A' X fliiq J X V? '3 ' Q-fx, .ISS , , Y KX 5' H I x ' fl X ,Y 1 if UM! , g 1 , X X' I , X M Z ,FI .4 1 Zttvf A KM' f-I? X VDQN I X 1 um -N X a , ff J' 3, , 5 ,Q K , ., ..,,i '-w 1-ZW g KO Q. t ' h 1 x F XA. 5 X. Q , M ,Q 1 1 My x ' C' X :N' 'M -'WY ,w 1 . X ff n 1 'ah '- ' 'il' 5 . H '- ,- ' w .ia if -N K-- nf'-y N 1 f . Q' ..,t. 'L v':w 'W M35 A iw 4 Q Q- '15 Q WN' Q, Q 'i' flxi ' n aff B. , .V ' Z9 ' V Q in 2. N sf? as W 'K is-3' Xggf'f A 34 1 iw 1 -hi . . ff- 5 ' 1: '.. .Hr ' v.-4 gg, -W' . 3,4 -gl- ,jiflfili ii Q IW PRESIDENT RUFF Dr. Robert ll. Hull' Came from the dec p south to Central College some years ago. With l1im he hrought that eongeniul manner that made him u friend and advisor to the student and ai president to he admired hy his fueulty. Last year ill health overtook hin1 and he eondueted College husiness from hedside und from lfloridu where he attempted recovery. ln September l9ll. incoming llI'PSlllllGll und most upperelussmen suw him for the lirst time. He was on the eampus and ut his desk. Soon he found it impossilmle to do the -jolm as he wished and he urrzmged to step down. ln Deeeinher. Dr. Hull' resigned us Centrul's president eifeetive in September 1912. ln elosing u most sueeessful period of administration he has instituted u war-time plain for the eollege and xxill in other ways Continue to foster udwineenient until Z1 sueeessor is nauned. Students. ulumni. faculty und inmnner- uhle friends will miss him. Page IA' An institution in himself, Dean Erastus Paul Puckett has guided the affairs of Central men sinee 1908, finding time also to conduct the other administrative duties of his office. Vlfhen the going becomes tough, he swings around in his Chair, thumbs through a volume of Kipling, or dreams of his ventures heside a mountain stream. As a nianeextremely likeable, horribly eflieient, and most frank. His mannerisms have won admiration of all students who have eome to know him as Central's grand old man. new ,Ag DEAN PUCKETT Page 19 DEAN ANDERSON Dean Ruth L. Anderson, native lowan, Came to Central College in 1930 with an established scholarly reputation. lnterested in a comprehensive study of Wil- lialn Shakespeare, she enjoys a national reputation as an authority. Teaches English to SOpllOl11OI'Q students. A club wonian, nationally known in A. A. U. W.g travels extensively but has been on the Campus niost of the year. Maintains respect of College women in Conduct of her office as their dean. Page 20 v - Wa, -Vl. Q its 3 . D E A N . -A f-f e' W R I G H T Dean N. Louise Wlright has been dean of the Swinney C0llSPI'Yill,OI'y of Music since 1925. Hundreds of pupils will attest that she is an excellent musician, hut when they speak of her it is more of a friendly instructor they talk, not ofa nation- ally famous composer and pianist. Working at tl1e present time on several new compositions for piano, Dean Wlright is hack at her studio after a prolonged illness. A high spot on tl1e conservatory recital program each year is the duo-presentation of Miss Wright and her competent assistant, Miss Hayes. The dean's anxiety over promising students has sent many negligent pupils home fired with ambition for imitation. Page Z1 gf!!! ffsaffffrfzvl' t.lLlI'.:...f lil Qznaii i' AJ.. - ,bu .Univ af' i r ' I if .n. '1w'.x.1 N141 ERASTUS PAUL PUCKETT . .' ...... Dean and Professor of Economics Who propounds a theory for economic salvation. RUTH L. ANDERSON ...... Dean of llvomen. Professor of English A recognized authority on Shakespeare. KENNETH P. STEVENS ....... Professor of Biology Who tears hair over future of young doctors. JOHN RANDOLPH .......... Professor of English Always pessimistic over debaters . . . always wrong. NEIL ELBRIDGE GORDON ....... . Professor of Chemistry Who keeps his name on top in scientific circles. ROBERT RYLAND FLEET ....... Professor of Jlathematics and .-lSlI'0II0l71-V Who keeps students awake to what is about them. N. LOUISE WRIGHT ......... Dean of Suiinney Conserratory Who still writes popular compositions for piano. OPAL LOUISE HAYES ......., Associate Professor of Piano Plays excellent piano in duo-recital with dean. WILLIAM DENNY BASKETT .... Professor of Foreign Languages Teaches German with enthusiasm. F REDERIC ARTHUR CULMER . . Professor of History and Government Who puns with regularit y. EDWIN BUTHVEN WALKER ..... . Professor of Philosophy and Religion Who knows his subject and expects a lot . KEITH K. ANDERSON ..... Assistant Professor of Band Instruments Who teaches meaning of time. MERRILL ELMER GADDIS ..,. Professor of History Who does caricatures on the side. EVERETT C. BUGKNER .... Associate Professor of Chemistry Who returned after year's leave. GEORGE W. KLINE ....... ,-lssociale Professor of Economics Who now functions as athletic director. EUGENE RICHARD PAGE .... . . Professor of English Language Who finds lost plays. EULALIE PAPE ...... Assistant Professor of Foreign Languages Who Inakes it all seem so easy. FRANK LLEVVELLYN HAGER ...... Professor of Foreign Languages Who enjoys a cigarette and the morning paper. ELIZABETH WORRPILL ....... Instructor in Speech Who Il1Elk8S the campus drama conscious. HAROLD G. NIEALY ........... Alssistanl Professor of Violin Conducts the little symphony . . . converted to swing. Page Z3 Y z tw. ' I I J . 1 - ' ' W . .f- ,I , 3, . vs 4 W, ? 1? SQA. -elf: . EM . f s t F 4 V Q, In ,AVN l h. -l XXI f c ia. .f nl fi, ...',xw. D si Lnftzc, S .-fu , .xffw -:.+T.f-if----f 51411 731- ml 'Wk' QA. 41 .Vw .ff S s 'Q .5 ' gf. '5, in ,fa QM: ifA , Y 2 Qz f A- ' Q 1 I -1 E ' Hi ' H , ri -1 ,, E ifvl Qu, . 'TT 11-31. H 'a I H8190 I r 5 . J r fr EDWIN A. JENNER . . . T . . . Professor of Biology Who explai11s the beginnings Of all things. LUTHER THEODORE SPAYDE ...... Assistant Professor of Organ LESTER C. SHELL ......,. . LEWIS GROVER ABERNATHY .... Who conducts an excellent A Cappella Choir. Instructor in Chemistry Who took unto himself a Wife. Professor of Physics Who tells the Whys of heat and light. LELAND SCHAPERKOTTER ...... Graduate Assislanl in Illailzemalics BERYL TRIPLETT ........... ELMER BIRDELL GIFT ......... . RACHEL K. FIELD .... Who has a heavy following from Chicago. . Associate Professor of Ari Turns out student artists . . . builds homecoming sets. Professor of Education Who educates student teachers. . Instructor in English Mothers lonely freshmen. FRANK H. BANYARD ...... . Assistant Professor in Voice Who discarded chorus for girls' glee club. HARRIET DURHABI LAWRENCE ....... Inslraclor in Education Carries on for husband Who is O11 leave with army. JOHN PAUL AICKINSEY ........ Associate Professor of Sociology Who holds many degrees. . . JULIAN F. SMITH ....... Associate Director of Hooker Library Who leaves shortly for Du Pont, Inc. HAROLD REEVES COLLINS . . I nslruclor in English AII understanding Inale. PAUL BAKER BURCHAM ...... Instructor in. Mallzemalics Who will predict Weather for Uncle Sam. ROLAND AKERS BOONE ...... I nslruclor in Religion. Director of religious activities on campus. HALLIE JEAN THOMPSON . . . Instructor in Commerce A returned student. WILLIAM D. STULL .....,.... Assistant Professor of Biology Who is Well-informed OI1 geological data. tnote tl1e squirrelj ROBERT KELLOGG JOHNSON .... , . . . Librarian, A fiend at faculty correspondence. FOHTUNA L. GORDON ..... . Graduate Assisloni in. Foreign. Languages Teaches French, travels extensively. LETA F. HOLLEY ...... I nslriicior in. Commerce Page 25 A new comer to faculty circles. N , A fIxTHl-:RINIQ I3AB11m:h ........ . Iiffllillllff' .P1.v.v1'sl1111l in Hzzszl' Orgranisl . . . awunlpanisl by pupular llt'llltllld. Nlxnra xmcr Sc:11.wr:Rlu1TTl-in .44,. . Gflldllllff' A1.w.x-islfzrrl in Cnrnnzerve Cmnvs In favulty via Faye-llv High Sclmol. XII-:NTIS NVHIGHT , .... .-l.v.v1'xlur1l llireclor Qf Rmwalion Who rm-lurns lo In-1' alma male-r. llr11,1cN C. Nlmzfilfnlmx' , ,lNSl.SlflIIf I.ibrar1'rm A pativnl individual. lhrnrzlu' STIQPI' ..., , . . , Gruduulf' .'l.VSl.Sllllll in lI11.v1'z' Wim lf-an-s mon In play fur his lllll'll'. Fnxxk li. Bvlxrzllul Prufossur 1- .X Nnlcnsox- K LIN 14: me-rilus. F1-url is l'ul'gulh-n. Kxnlcx AND SKIP!-Y llolllwmllil lg alll-mlants. l'rqf0.w.vur Qf 1IllHlPIllflf1.l'S Cmzllernen Ch ildren Page Jo 1 MOORE VEST.-xr. CIIINGENPP I- I ATKINSON QW ' C! NELSON CLINGENPEEL, Presidenl VIRGINIA VESTAI. BOB MOORE RU'l'H A'rI4INsoN Secretary Vice-Pres ideni Treasurer Early in the fall the senior class held its anIIual election of officers to act as its official representatives. Nelson Clingenpeel, of Fayette, was victimized and made President. From an impressive freshman class of 280 students, only 60 have survived the strain of four years of isolation in Fayette. However, this effort has not detracted from their ability, and they show great promise in their respective fields. For Homecoming royalty, the senior nominees were Neil Blair, Sandy Cockerell. Nadine Taylor, and Peggy Pile. In the student hody election, Neil Blair Eillfl Nadine Taylor proved their popularity. and were chosen to reign over the varied activities of Homecoming. With graduation inevitably approaching, seniors are feverishly counting up hours aIId honor points. Some have their requirements, while others-well. they're still counting. Page .27 .-X'1'n1xsux Bllilr l51.x1n BIKKDSHICII ISI urn Bl'l'1'lII'lIK f.XPliN f.I,IN4iIiNPl'Il'1 C4N'lxliIKI-Il,I. tinmz, I . 411n,r:.J. Il. D1 Hms 171-Jxunmz D1 me li xsnx' I-Ixul4:I.luu1r1 Flseznllu-:mx Fnlllm L-l1.l.l ui lim rc 'li I IAIIX I l,-x umm Il.xluus.1f, 1 2 , 1: 4' R- A :L . Q . Y- 41 P ' 9 ' 'C Q X I r X X s 'N Q f .. I V ,pl ff- N F ', 2 3,1 A, -w 8 5 X, .f K Y, x -1 xi - - X x , 'VJ X4 ,. '. if c ' we -55' Q' ,,' ,fm , . ,,, , Y., , N,-p., .y-, -,,4-.ncjv f ' fgiif' I 1, A 5 32 1 f-ti I v Lx' -'A 5 , . 22 '21 -s ' ' -5 ,T ' -5 'gf Q .' ff if ' 7 ' K , ' , 'A ' -:a 1 u 1 '.4'3 r' . -:il A , -W -.- ' ' ' .M '3 f- ' l 3 f Q 1 ' h I x , 'I 9 i I K, -'- N I ,- ex ' 6 N 2' 6' I -Q f 1 Q' ff- A 1- , 'Q x ' if if .i ' SA l: 5 ,Q!:,g??iAi4 z. If f 5' uw v ,.. ', .9 4' P L ' ' ' Q- - A .f f '- -..4 , ,L Y -: XS: b ' ' 'x L SX X X I 1 K X. K IIAHIKIS. H. I 7 N Page ZA' RUTH ATKINSON ..... Piano ......, .Jefferson City Phi Beta, Alpha Phi Alpha, Mixed Double Quartet, Treas. Senior Class, '41, DONNIE BIRD ...... Yoice ........ Senalh Harding College, Arkansas State College, Phi Beta: Alpha Phi Alpha, A Cap- pella Choir, Marching Band. NEIL BLAIR ...... Mathematics ..i.... Troy Beta Sigma, Phi Rho Kappa, Yice-Pres. '41, C Club, Track, '41, Pres. Stu- dent Body, '42, Homecoming KiIIg, '42, VVho's Who, '41-' 42. ALICE LOU BRADSHER ..., Commerce ....... Polo GaIImIa Sigma Pi, Reporter '41, Future Teachers, Girls Marching BaI1d. JOHN BURCH ....., Chemistry .....,. Brookfield Chemistry Club, Student Affiliate of American CheII1ical Society, Band: Orchestra. WILLIAM BUTCHER ...,. Biology ........ Adrian Alpha Epsilon Delta, Yice-Pres. '41, Delta Phi Alpha, Treas. '4l. ELAINE CAPEN ..... PiaI1o ...... Sedalia Phi Beta, Doorkeeper '41, Future Teachers, Band, Chorus. NELSON CLINGENPEEL .... Economics . . . . Fayette Chi Delta, Phi Mu Alpha, A Cappella Choir. SANFORD COCKERELL .... Biology ...... Kansas City Alpha Epsilon Delta, Pres. '42, Chi Delta, Yice-Pres. '41 : C Club: Track, Yice- Pres. Student Body, '-42. FLORENCE ELIZABETH COLE . . . Music .,..... Portagerille Phi Beta, Treas. '41, Future Teachers, Pres. '42, Chorus, '39, '40, '41, State Methodist Students, Sec'y '42, Methodist Student Organization, Sec'y '40, '41, '42, J. HoLLowAY CoLE .... Music ..... . .llalta Bend Phi Mu Alpha, Pi Gamma Mu, Future Teachers, Band, Choir. HUBERT DUBOIS ..... Chemistry ..,.. .llerico Chemistry Club, Pres. '42, Scribblers, Phi Rho Kappa, Choir '4l. MARGARET DEMAREE .... German ...... Rnslwille, Ill. Delta Phi Alpha, Sec'y '41, '42, Gamma Phi Mu. Pres. '41, Chemistry Club: Pi Kappa Delta. DoN DUWE ....... Art ...,.... Maplewood Chi Delta, C Club, Golf, M. C. A. L. Champion, '41. LUCY EASON ...... Commerce ..... New Albany, flliss. Pi Kappa Theta, Sec'y '40, Treas. '41, Gamma Sigma Pi, Sec'y '41, Players, University of Mississippi, '38-'39. MARY ENGELHARDT ..... Commerce .,..... Slater Alpha Phi Alpha, Gamma Sigma Pi, House Council, Sec'y-Treas. '40, Gamma Phi Mu. FoLsTE FISCHBECK .... Commerce ...... Farmington W. A. A., Vice-Pres. '41, Pres. '42, Gamma Sigma Pi. EDMUND FORD ....., English ...... Blue Springs Beta Sigma, Phi Mu Alpha, Players, Pres. '41, '42, Future Teachers, Collegian Sports Editor, Ragout Staff, Who's Who, '41, '42, C. C. A. Cabinet. BARBARA AvALoN GILLIAM . . . English ,...... St. Louis Pi Gamma Mu, Chorus '38, '39, '41, IDA FRANCES GROCE .... Music Theory Richmond Phi Beta, Choir, Band, Orchestra. PAUL HAHN ...... Music ..... Leadington Band, '39, '40, '41, Basketball, '41, Baseball, '42, Intramurals. J. T. HARPER ...... History ........ Fayette Phi Mu Alpha, Beta Sigma, Marching Band, Concert Band, Casa Nova Band. CHARLES E. HARRIS ..,. Economies ....... .llemplzis Beta Sigma, Players, Pi Gamma Mu, Editor Ragout, '4l., OLIE LEON HARRIS ..... Chemistry . . . New Franklin C Club, Basketball. ir 41 A' Hlglfl' Ill-Alva l'XINlI!IilCl.l, lm: mmnu: xllZl'wAlll.XNIh XIIVIIII-I Nleunu-3 Ill-11.1143 Pnmfx l'l-3xm,l-:'n1x PlIll.l.ll'S l'll.1-1 I,l'l'l'S Inns:-1.41. lim sic. NN, lil 'l'lllCIll-'lllill NITIHHINH Suu Sll01'kl.l4IN SNIHII 5'rl4.lu.lx1: 'lixl.mrl' Tu um 'l'mm xs J 5 M3 ,,,?-, .0 -. gf 5' I -e'! W 1 1 gn .44 rf wx- A1-0 ,A v. ,J . -rs . - iv' -'KZ , AN Q1 ,fn 5- -s.,- K, .5 f.. T 'Q ,gf q Qi xi 'L T 0. I .. Jjiaa . ,.a. 'su Na' . N rv 'i i11A .rv-. 5 5 , awfua I 1 Q 'IJ' ' fn-nas' .Ng r Q-1 I x ' - WVR. ,, 6 X 'w ,Y Q A 'f'3f I . fd rfb 5 'X ,, . K x' X if :Xt K L-, v . 'V K ,K W. Q5 ,X .6 I A L- Q K , xr Q , X ..,o . ' xg ,V a ll mix- V A. NIT Q F 2 4 '-JL. 1 C5 C. Page 30 JOHN HERT ...... English ,..... . CClII'f0l'Il1'fl Scribblers, Pres. '-42: Phi.Rho Kappa, Yice-Pres. '40: Pres. Sophomore Class, '39: CoIIcert Band, '38, '39: Editor CollegiaII, '42: Orchestra, '38. ROBERT HI'IYING ..... History ........ Fayette Pi Galllllla Mu: Art Club: Track. ROBERT KINIBRELL .... English . . . 1 u-Vette Marching BaIId, '38: Intramural Basketball-Football, 'l2. NANCY LOCKRIDGE ...., Commerce . Ifulvelle Gamma Sigma Pi: A Cappella Choir: Chorus. KATHRYN INICFARLAND .... Music ....... .lonesbury Future Teachers: Chorus, '39, '40: Glee Club, '42: Baptist Choir, '39, ' ll. DOYNE IVIICHIE ...... Music Theory .... CuruIlIer.vI'1'lle Phi Mu Alpha, Treas. '39, '40, Yice-Pres. '.l2: C. C. A., Yice-Pres.. '41 1 Metho- dist Student Church Chairman, 'All : A Cappella Choir, Student Manager, '40, '41, '42: Concert Band: Student Body Treas., '12. ROBERT IXIOORE ..... Organ ....... Farminglon Phi Mu Alpha, Pres. '-192: Yice-Pres. Senior Class, 712: Church School Organist, '39: Choir, '38: Band, '40, '4l. INIABIEL OELZE ...... Religion . . .llaplezcood Band: Future Teachers: C. C. A.: Chorus. ROBERT PAYDEN ..... Economics ....... .llfzreeline Chi Delta, Pres. 'l-2, Sec'y ' l-0: Pi Gamma Alu, Yice-Pres. 'l2: Phi Nlu Alpha: Band: Intranmrals. I'IONVARD D. PENDLI-:TON .... History-tiovernment . Curllmge Future Teachers: Track. ROBERT PHILLIPS ..... Chemistry , . . . .lejferxofz Cily Delta Phi Alpha: Chemistry Club: C Club: Tennis Team. PEGGY PILE ...... French .....,. .lluf-.whull Alpha Phi Alpha. Treas. '39, Pres. '40, 142: Gamma Phi Alu, Sec'y 'llz House COuI1cil, Yice-Pres. '4l: Student Body Secretary, '42: Girls' Band: Secretary Junior Class, '-40: Who's Who, '4l. '-42. RANDOLPH PITTS ..... Commerce ..,.... l or1'.vle1l C Club, Sec'y '4I: Future Teachers: Collegian Stall: Track: Director of Intra- Inurals, 742: Basketball: Intramurals. CHARLES A. HOUSE ..... Commerce Bucklin Marching Band, '38: Intramurals. W.ARDI'ILL.A HOUSE ,.... Mathematics ...... Bneklin Chemistry Club, Sec'y '-II: Band, '38: C. C. A. Cabinet, Sec'y '4I: Future Teachers. PHOEBE RUTHERFORD .... Biology ....... SIIP1Il.VI'l'HP American Chemical Society: Gamma Phi Nlu: Delta Phi Alpha, Pres. 712: Band '38, '39: Chorus, '39, '40, '4l. EDWIN B. SCOGGINS .... Social Science -,...,. f.'Il'llI'0ll Future Teacher: C. C. A., Pres. '-ll. MARTHA SI-:AY ...... COIIIIIICITC A Salem Gamma Sigma Pi: Future Teachers: Chorus. ROBERT SHOCKLEY .... Mathematics Bolirur ClIi Delta: C Club: Football, '38, '39, '40, '4l. J. YIRGIL SMITH ...... Chemistry .,... Henriellu Chemistry Club: Student Affiliate of American Chemical Society. JOHN STERLING, JR ..... Chemistry ..... . Latham Student Affiliate of the American Chemical Society. J AMES S. TALBOT ..,,. Economics ..., San ,-tnlrmio, Te.ru.v Beta Sigma: C Club: Tennis, '38, '39, 'Al-0, '4l: Intramurals. NADINPI TAYLOR ..... Art ......., Le.r1'nglon Pi Kappa Theta, Sec'y '39, Yice-Pres. '4l: Art Club, Treas. '39, Pres. 'Al-2: Marching Band, '38, '39, '40, '4l: House Council, '4l: Homecoming Queen, '42: WhO's WIIO, '41, '42. ' BETTY K. THOMAS .,.., English . . ll'urerI,v Page 31 Gamma PlIi Mu: Band: Art Club: Future Teachers. 'B' i vs. lb - 'l'Ill nun T 5 X xwn I x XI-1S'l kl - 1 XX XIKNII I -- 5 3' 1: XX l-l.l,S NN Il.lxI'Llt l XX IIASUX Nh IX'l'uN A. l.. 'l'lll'ltNI,XN ..,.. liuglisll ..4... DP Solo lie-ta Sigma: Play-rs. N ic-Q--Pri-s. 'liz Future- Tr-ac-lu-rs: llagzmit, liclitui 'I' llnlsl-LRT YANATTA ,,... Sm-ial SCl6'Ill't' .,... CU1l1I7lbl'll Football. '38, '39. 'ltl. '1l: Baskt-tball. '38, '39. '-10. 'll : Track: C Club: Future- 'l't-aclu-rs: Pi Gamma Mu: Bt-ta Sigma. Tre-as. '1l. Pros. '-12. Yliuslxl,-x YI-ISTAL ..,.. tlmurm-rce ....... ,llacon Alpha Phi Alpha. 'l'rt-as. '--10. Yict--P11-s.Y'-1l: Gamma 'Phi Mu: Gauuua Sigma Pi. 'l'rt,-as. 'll 1 llnust- tluuucil. Prt-s. 711:51-niur Class. St-C'y '-ll: Cl1ort1s:lYl1o's lyllu '-1I. 'l2. til-iumsrx XYARNHUFF .... Art . .i.... B00f1l'l'NP Art Club. Yict--llre-s. '-12: Pi 1i2iIllllltl Xlu: Future- 'll-at-lit-rs: Baud. lm-LRT XYICLLS .,..., 1lllt'lIllSlI'X .....,. Ffzyelfe Clit-iuistry Club. Yin--Pre-S. 'll 3 Studs-ut Afliliatm- of AIllt'I'lC?:1Il Clic-iuical Sur-ie-ty. 1iXltUI.YN XYILRI-IRSUN .,.. Nlusic Tlu-wry . . . I.1'Hle Rock. ,-lrk. Phi Bc-ta. Pre-s. '1l: tiamma Phi' Blu: Flittirt-YT:-at-lu-rg: A Cappt-lla Clmir: tlirls' Baud. '38. '39, '10: Huust- tluuut-il. '10: C. C. A. Cabinet. '38. '39. 'l0. 'llZXYll1b'S Vlm. '1l. '12, l':AllL XYILSUN ...... Sm-ial SClt'lll't' . . . . Ilamzibfil Future- T1-at'll4-rs. Yin-e--Prt-s. '-12: lutramurals. '39 '10 'll '10 lluutll-:'r XYINTUN , .... Nlusic- Tlu-wry ..... Oak Grow- Phi Ht-ta, llisturiau '1l: Gamma Phi Nlu: A Cappt-lla Choir: Cuuct-rt Band. 'ltll House- 1ltlllllt'll. St-c'y-'l'rt-as. '1l. i 'A' ir t t Page 32 fi . i A '--.Q Onlmn LIUEIKRI PICKETT Hfxnmsow Y -ik 235 fr:- li, x Junior Class L. A. HAnP.1soN, President E. L. UREAB NIARIAN PICIQET1' BILL GVERRI l ice- President Secrelary Tl'6ClSl1l'6l' The Junior class opened this year's activities with its usual bitterly fought election. When the haze of the hattle cleared, they found that they had elected the following: Andy Harrison. President: Eddie Orear. Vice-l'resident: Marian Pickett. Secretary: Bill Guerri. Treasurer. Since then, the class has lost the services of its president and vice-president, hoth taking johs on the defense front. Originality was the keynote in the junior class homecoming float. A large pot contained several men representing the Jewell players. while the Central savages waited eagerly to consume their vict.i1n. For attendants to the Home- coming Royalty, the discriminating junior class selected Becky Chiles and Andy Harrison. With war now a reality instead of a possibility. 111any juniors have gone into various branches of the service. In a serious, hut not depressed frame of mind. those left look forward to next year when they will have reached the status of seniors. Page 33 Auxx Wm lhmcu Hliwrrzx H4 YI ' In BIil'Il'kI'1N In I 1 14.14. Hiumx l'n'1'kl.1':x Brsn fiwvs limi.:-is fitblllx , Cum In limun-in Cnx1u.l,. fillklli, Z. Cm rswn lJ1'm.1-xx l'I1.1,u l'l l' ICLSL , l l4:l.m1xx Flxxl-311, l lnI4:sT4 ml-1 IR , Hr 1r41 kfivlvf lfrzirzxrillf' .Uulwrly 1 I em ph is Plrllfslulryl . f Il.V4'llf' H rrrr rlrillf' SUVIIIIIIIIII . Sulern llIllt'llPlIllf'Ilf'f' H vs! Plrzins Uuplzfu' 4:1:1 I l.'or1l'e'r 1!I.l'l'llSSl , 1fIllli6'Il ffhurlvxlnn llrlylmxlille , fflllliilll l,lll lI1l. lfulu. fvfll' Isfflllkll-ll lx unxus lfily Kansas f.'1'ly Fl NMA Uupleu' vrff: I liuxl-ix Tlwrrmxrillez Hu. lil lilklll . . III-UIIPQ' IINIIRISUN Wurllglfmwry ffily llnam-:xnu'l'u nl , , I,Uf1ANI- lllmalxs , Plulle lfilhv lx hx v ,T -f' W g- .,. . -lv - Q , ., 4 6' - , 'Vx , ,f ...g J A r. -.', ! S- ,Q 9 ,- :N Y I , B N af: - 4 E A 1 5' 4 ' 'C'- -24 x 'J f' fb, 5- . , ' ' F I . 1 ,Ig -.Q A I 6' L- -3 ,R 32479 I J EA' ' ! r . ' Xi'-t. .'f ' f- 9 C' if I Y 'FF- -PF 1 , -5 p awp - Q.. 3 ,Q ,.,,.,... Q' wwf' .4f' 1 A 1: Iag'3-I v 43,1 X I g Q- -Q , ,ix ' 12 7' ' , Q l im N ? ,UH A n Navi 1 4.2 r 1. n' W-'-x 1 . Q Y , x I - ,J I S! 3 51 . 11 N B ,. , . ' 3 .I I 1 . . x, ' V5 ' ggiizg,-.A X P . 1? e x. . .a ,v , . -P - L -m. X 5 X Xt. : A - 5 ' , 'f Q J f , D sw, D 1 'irish ' Q- N AL R A ik. fl 3 , w l. ' 'V' X ,St , .I :fl V 1., 1,g.E:f , Page 35 Ilnku . IIVNTI-Ill , .lutksnw .lnxmws . .lrwlis . Klxfaslwln' kink . Lua . l,Ur:'rxa m NICAINNI , xllTCUI.I.l'1X Nlulil-tr: .lejffersnfz I lily . I ful In . Iffflllllilllll . l ll-Wil? Nw rsh 0 . Unlmrllv . Sl'kt'SfUI1 Lupe' ff!4f'IlI'llf'lIIl H 1ll'I't'IISlPIll'jl , Sl, Luuis fvfll' I'vf'llllkII'Il . . l1'e'llun M4:CU'rm:n,-W Sl. lflmnl. Winn. TWILHUIKN M11,l,1f1n XIURIEUNY . xIIWllIl,-XY YVIUNYAN , QYIIICAII . l'.xs4tuI-1 . lx' unsus ffily l'vll1Af'lIlllIll. llinn. . l,uu'sun . If 1r1n lII'l-IIC Uurc'r'1ine Poplar Bluff . JVt'l'lIf1ll Uhf He's reluclanl . . I'x'1'n14'h l'vr'mx I'I1'kI-I'I l' Ii lclmlmllin lin If Ihrll Hulusnx Iimslxsnx Sum m,m , SIxlI.l.Nl xx S'l'RIil'I'l' Sl mm SXXINIUNIHS . Vl'll1NiNll rll'I'4 rx Wmawzn , ww lxvirlmwmrl Nl1'11'11rls1'ill1' P1 rrfrlywfflf' Sllf'Hlfllll . l'v1L.W'f l 1' . N f'4: xlm If rfrr nrille' I ful im r' . 1 uAw'l I 4' l lI.Vf'l I H ll vxl Plains . Uemplzis .NlPl'ill!I.fit'l1l . ll urxuu' NX 'kI.l.U'l'I lIlIff'lIPlIIl1'VIl't' XX xlxrux lflltlH'1I. luuvl xx KIKIC , Pnlnxl' W xnwnm. .l. H. lliglww XX uufnnn. Nl. l,. I u4w'l!r' XX umm-'x lxunsux ffil-v XX vrsnx h f:lllN!1llll' NXnl,u.n . xxllltilfl' , Y X'l'l'IS . Zlillllli HUA. . . Ilff'1llll4IlIf lx irlcnwunl . .1ll.l'l'llXSl' Nl. I.ur1i.v . Nlruzlwrrtv .1 'vu 1 Q 3 I an T D S' ' 4' I ' -ul- V V' Q' - A 'A ' 4. ' ag sq' T. ig f WY , -s ff ' AL. if 1 X wi, fx A Q . . -cn4 I Y A t I . N U , N' ,, 'M X' fmm hwhd9'Jf gin if 'T it ' 'Q -'P fc- A kg F 'V,.' --- 1 .L wma :MQW Z., E Gaia: ' . X v, Ac K , qi- I ...M x 5. ' 12 5' 4 f 9 , E 'f ALEWRM. ,.,, 'SJ A ALAJX. 'Pitt 1:4-I A:-' , Q' . 4' If ' 'F- ' if ' A -f' a A ' 04 ' 5. . il- I ' X -3 R , ig A n4!kX Page 36 3-1' WARDEN HOI.BIES Hays 5. gl HERRICK .ap ,Y ws- YV' BILL H.-ns, Presidenl Bois HOLMES FAYE VVARDEN KAY HERRICK Vice-President Secretary Tl'6Cl.S'lII'0l' Entering their second year at Central, the sophoniore class. now in the ranks of respectable upperclassnien, selected their HHCllI1lIllStI'Hl,lOll.ii Selectees were Bill Hays, Presidentg Bob Hohnes, Vice-Presidentg Mabel Faye VVarden, Secre- taryg and Kay Herrick, Treasurer. Connnittees were fornled and activities were planned for the ensuing school year. The Sophon1ore's participation in honieconiing activities consisted of a float. designed by Bill Stewart depicting Jewell as a ship lost at NC. Carl BOCliIllHll and Kay Herrick, a familiar couple on the canipus, were chosen to aid King Neil Blair and Queen Nadine Taylor in their short but glorious reign. Page 37 Xls14,l,1-A . Xrklcusux Xxnl-insux lhm. . Ihnxu sm li K'l'liS A Iilc umx lglCN'l'l,l-'X lhasulxm If ISUVKNI xx l5m,lxa:r:n Hmu: , lgllltll-1 , Blll'llI. , RlH'NINlAl,l. Bl srlluvr llu.1.ls , f:llII.l'IS fhmnx . l1l,Ixul-:NPR Cnlmiuxx 4 :INll'kl-1'I l' Cm m Ii Du ls. lf, Unis, J. IBANIS. D. Dmsx . IMDIKIKICI. . lil. . Kunxus lfily . lfuyelle' If Ikfllllllillfl Uulzlyfollwry ffil-v U vlzsler Urlrlws , .Ulun l'wll4W'H? , Ffzlvellf' , Fuivellz' . lxdzrzxazx I I ily . I 'ersr11AIlf'x lx unsus lfily Salem Flllf Hirer . Srzlfshury . SI. Lvuin . lluyl:es1'1'lle' , lmlependenve Fuyeile , Ifrzyellv Uuberlqv , Fu-velle Perely I 114ve'lle lmlvpemlerz r'f' , H1110 Sprinyn li 4-hxler Graves .Urmm Zee- 145. ' - F3 gf-I fic ' T 'Y' A ' - ' ' 1' . , - '73 - V :Stas-:A:' ff.-Q - ,' W 4.11 fn lt f - '- wg, 'jjjf L, , ,2 -' 4 6 . gal ' v -em-E3 .L f 45- an e. X ..,. f-. XX' 'Z ' regi- 19- 'SJ if an OPHOMORE Pago' 38 1- Qi! 3' --x QR v ,, -Q., .di i3 aP ' 7 ik . .- A . . .Ea 1 gms-' ,, 9' af S515 if .xr - xr Mg-.N N L A, A A f -:V ' ' ' 54 1-V vm. R ,x ,M Page 39 -v gi- 1 ,V . 1. N 1-' IL L2 Du unc llrzu , lCl.mclxs lin lv: lix rc . FIFl.hS PYIKANITIS l nr1l'r,ua . I,'11'nlun Ilrefel 1leSnlo . lfruvkfiflfl , Ilf'Snlo . l'vl'Illlk,f?ll'll , I.Pe'x Sunzmil New Ilurvn Fm ICIHIICX l-in l,'111l1f1lI'llI.l1 1il'llAkl NST Ilelrnil. llirh. Il.u'm,m ll -uxrrzn Il.uu-mx IIAIKIIIS Hns Ilrmnurn HHH: lllmilnl-xx Hicks , Ilulmrzs . l 11yPfIP lionrze Terre .mlflffflfllf . . Trqv Hilwurzkee, U is. . Serial ia Sf. lfharlfs . Fuyelle Uenzphis. Ter. , Troy Ih11'1's lnnks upf lllss , Ill 'ITIIISUX Hu xl-Lxlxlux llx x'r'r lwxrzs .I uflfll-1 .lmuxslw lxlslsu IXlXll.lN , l'XIliIxl'K'l'liIK'lx K lmlcvk . l,.xkl4: Lux Ill-IYVIC I,m:h , l,lcFx1nN LICXXIS l,w.m l.1'x x . 'Xl xxx , xlAIlkl'X1 Nl Kliljl I'1'I I'l XIVCUX xlII.l.S . Xlmmli Nl. Nlmmrz B. fNlunlusuX N11 IKPIIX, 11. N11 HPIIX. N , I,l.l'kl'Ilfl If4lUIlI'l'Ill' x ,, - yvfll' lIu1'r'n - ' ,Q G. :- I ip . an -D- l u4wlla' I ' E QQ.. ' . C ' A .., , L .QL ,. . - l'1ll.VPHl' xlllVIl'4l1Nl. Ill. Q. . ' J 6 L. 2 2- xl4llPlf'll'U4llI 0 R lflllfllldllf' ' 'tary KK th X 1 A 4 A . IflNllll'l'Ilf' I I I.l'lII'l'lIIl'Ul'HI ' 3 ea fi' ' f- 5 , 'L Sfnilhrille' X QA 4 x ' A w ... H .. -5 f Y .lfilfvrsnll ffiluv , B ' A 'Q' -. ' J --FY J '.-M5 1-VHZZL' A 7 ,,5,f', Q ' 1,1 ..-5:3321 . ER YSL fa lfuyelle' ning X ff' - ' ' if 'P' as ' I 1 av , , Trnv ' i x 3' if ' , ka ,N , r, , . V. . A Q' 3 k, H flshilzglorz E . r 4.-5 ' lilusgnu' ' ' ' S ', 'C I ll FAQ 1 . Sllf'HlfILII l'11'v111m11l . , .5 . l,'11l1.IoI1 ' 5 '. 6 3 -4, K 'J cs , V 4 - 'X . 3: ' ... ffrurnm IIIHN 'mx X xr N Q Nr X56 1 , f 453' ' llfhrim Q l f , V I 4. '- R AI. Lulus G K W Q A F ' s M .,,. . l r1'1lf'r1'1'kIo11'r1 -1.1 ,- ' 1 gh' , 3 Q-1-ff ff ' ' , .. . l urrrlir1yln1l X . L 1 'L' ' Q Z XR. I . l'vllf'l'H1' . S41l1'sl111r-v 6 z -' 'Q 9 Q , fr Q3 ' . ' 1 INIIIIIII' ffllljf .U V , x 1 l 111llPfr'll'4nuf is 1 V X a ' 'a A OPHOMCRE Page -I0 u vi Il 4 A xxx- ,W -. Q 'IQ 'A -1 -1, '. 3-'F' . Qll Y I 'R 'xx 4 'X' , k -.ag .Ma-as ' ,-Q M Y, D A ., 1. D -- ,145 , -A x we ' .I- I - A f bij .. -.my F-V. - ag-:irq M: 532, I r'-Z'-K Hg... A W. .ein-141, .. M-,,1as, fi., t -'M Ava.-:3v:':wv i WU ,Q TR 1. 3 33,1 ...gg 5 -JZ- ' X yi ' D . V V, .3 f .4 . ,Qj-'fn X if 9, , .i 1:1-'2.'Q:5 1 iieifg:-fi ic, 3?-if,fl5'If.-?.,.,.:2Q1QiQs:a:.-, A K , -:Q .-,-, - Q-Q-f-fx-rg.-my J .,f. , - h :wxm-1. llgpllgf, rdf Page 41 ln llze H0011 nhl S1lllIllI4'I'- limf' Mx lens N 1-iw MAN ULDHANI PA HIKISH PI-:un Plu'l l'Il : lx 11: Pml.l.ls PHINTZ Pm1r:T'I' l'Ul.l.l.u1 l,l'1 :K ETT l'Um1H,xsI-3 . lil-11511 RIFINIEIEH lhmnlxs RUSS!-:LL F-.u'I,Es SHAW . SHEETS SHIELDS Hu rm 1.11111 F11-veil e .Hurrelinv Norhurne , Neoslm Laiham 1Jft'llIIlUIl Pueblo f:C'l1fI'llIl-ll Serin I ia , F11-velle lirewz H irlgff' L01 inylnn Kz'rk1mu11 , Fayelle I runiun . Clinlun Fayelle . Lenmy 811111116119 SIIIIKIJQY Hum'elnr1 SXIITII l'wtl.VPHf' S N llilill . Fflivvllv S131 mics , fjllf'l'UlH1llI S'I'I N sm' , , lllli4'lJt'IlllFII1'P STIKI I-zurzl. lflaylun S l I'l l'f r N , l IL.Vf f l 1' 'l'1fnn14:1,1, Tlmyer Tn in lili Kansas lfillv 'l'mmPsnx Sl1elhAv4'iIle' 'IHIIUHP , . lxnrzxux lfiluv 'l'ln'lxs'r4 px f,'6'Il,l'llll'1l 'I'4ml,lN IJIUHXIIIIFQI 'l'n14,r'z , fhzrrulllnrz 'l'u'Kl-:lx . Sl. Louis W KI.I. Ef1'P1x1'or Springs XY Alum lfllillllflll' XYARI-'URII Fuyelle' NN ,-vrxuws , Hluckslrme W rim in IleSnln NYlI,L'UXUN , , ,llm-4m W ll.snx , llurrlin NN lvrl-:ns H ehsler Graves XYINTHN . Unk Hrurf' NN Y.K'l I' I,'llil'lIfIU WUINII , .lllun X Hl'YKil-'ll , !,'f'IIfl'llIl.fl lVl'll . lfunzp f?U'lillS1lll 'T .1 iff -f L ' '. 1-Y: . H ,,.A., -.f V. J, 1 QS' ,, j L? ' ,fig-,,. ff 1... ' J: A L MA V, . ' Y ', 2 2 ll, rf i' . Q: -1, .lv-5 -4, 1 xg x ,, .' 'X Zia., A he A r 32:1 I V. 1 , b-QR ' a.-nn 4 S W' 'QQ 'Nr 'C' X v- Eg... -5. nf' 1 3 l 'K. O ff xka 1 WI ' 4 . , A 9 '.. '! . + 'Q' f x.,, QV ,av PL? 'Q 613' 3 'Q 'T Q -A . ' ' ,X wx . ,M 1 ,fx - h 'U' Fx, A X53 xi ' xw. fl- y L 93 , ,Q qi F-fx 1 Yi' 2,51 Els: , 1 K lf ' , .51 ' q ' L, A A.-7 ! . t fps' Page -IZ 9 .1 3' M rcmr NVALLI' x Momww T3 'R l...,,A SILER F reslzmen lass lion SILER. Presidenl JAMES XNALLHY SHIRLEY NIoR'roN GENE NIICHIE Vice-Presidenl Secrelary Treasurer l 'll ' to all freslunen classes. the After the process of orientation, iewicermg freshmen of '42 held their election of oflic hem thru the year's activities. The burden of ers. Friends nominated. and strangers elected four students to lead t presidency fell on the capable shoulders of Bob Siler of Normandy, Missouri. The first activity of the freshman class was an amateur program presented to the student body, directed by Bob Zulauf. A variety of talent was displayed by Bob Siler, Dorothy Hendren, Bill Lovell. and others. For attendants to the Homecoming King and Queen, the freshmen drafted the services of Van Johnson and Eve Fry, who added much to the dignity of the Coronation program. One of the highlights of the year was a dinner. arranged by the frosh inter- dorm committee. Meeting in the dining room of McMurry Hall, the freshmen enjoyed a fine supper and nmsic furnished by the Esquire's of Rhythm. Page 43 ABI-Il.lC Av: I-'I' Mn. , Ahum A men x url' Nru r:l.l. I3-uxlan. .l. lhm-zu. Xl. lixvrx liuzm-:l.l4:xx Huw!! uw HASIxl'I'l l' Bleu runs lirtvhxux lSlr:lu.x Blown! l3l,ax1'h Iii rl'II,SI'.N B1 il-1'IX'I'N lil! . lf0Illll'IlHP f,'f1r11llwr.w'1'1le fx unsus lfil-v Iirunl ffillv Nurlmrm' lx rlrzxux lf1'l.v .1lV.I'l,l'4I Sl. ffluir Ii!'V'l'AVIllllll .QlH'Hll.Hll Iiuulzrille l'Yll4Vt'H? flrun! lflllv . Holla Slwlhirzu H IAIHISIII' lflI1lIll'IIH6 Hale . U ulxun liuuxlc lluunlvzin lieu' Bun lxunsfzx lfily lglllllllli Uulrlen lilurans Hua-un Blu m 1-:lx I'v4l.Vl'Hf' Blum N. XX lfu-wife Blum N, IC. fhlexsu linmx N. Nl. , . U frzwrly lil IIVIIKXI Uuwfxhnrn. ky. Q? . ,.- Xk . v - pw., J. Q? 6' r f we ' x ,W Al 5 ew- N. xr, af-fl. Q.. S- :ft - ,FQ .,. --1: -n KL. E L f - Q. Q rv- . ' as ar gi 2 -l 1 c 1 fb . A V in ' Y ' X 1.1 -1 Aix nf 'I 1 , Q 'a ' X? fn - - K ,. ,, , ,I -1 ig f 3 y ,ir I '- ,, ,iv 4' 'lf f, 47 pp 31 K N A ' 'Wd , A 'K - I . Nl gli, js- ttf' I if b 0' D ,f lf' Q - v f A V517 Q ,S A Q Q LA'-5' -I ,- X ls. 5 as . 'fi sy t ., 'JC fvx W 4 v 5 x 2 cf 1 - lx .. , K I -- I W K Page -H 1 . A i- 9 - ' iq. ,Q ' 'RI 1 w -1 efsvi A 1 A+- f - - -- 1 .N 3 B1 : ' X , 'f 'K ' s., - - 'We . ' .go 1 , . . +' 3 -X A' -' 5 .52 ' .1 :Xml ' 5 1 -1 ' AT' ' YN lf' - 771 . Q-'ITIIQQ1 . ' - Y Y 5 5-'15?f5E'Z. 1 V -- 1 ' 'X ' x la' if-if -- ' iii-1 . 4' 9 1 f 'hi -fu . Q 9 my 3- 11 -,A , ,. . ,. , , X xg,:'s1L,M e 'N ' 1.2-iiikgifz' ' ,sifi . 1' 555-Q-?SXr,5?, .Q j 9 1 5 , ,fish . cgi,-5,511-4, ': 'fs' -7- 1 .R 'R f'f?Ff 1 ,- fig. -1.- ' ' NV K jx R'-1.5-T -' g ,L , . xgiw- --we , ' I --Y-I . A: . .V - .' ' 1 w 1 -3' ' - - 1- -2 L - . X' 5 ts - , - - ' '. 1 J. f 3 4 1 H N -ef ' -.-.Y N4 - , X ' 1-iq . lik' .1 z.. A, W.. 4, 4.4 - . if y -Xu lD- SL ,. Page 45 I , I f ra' 1. - . -f my -41 ,-ntl. ,,,.vcr av fn 'JI' HRl'NlXlIf1l,l. Hl's1:11u1'1' Hrs!! li1 rl,l-in, II. B1 1'1.11:l:. .l. 1. 1 I 1 f 1 1 4 1 1 4 1 I 1-. 1-, ANlPIil'1l.l. ANYON ARLIN XHPl'IN'I'liIL AHPl'1N'l'lCll. 'All'l'l-Ili . KSSLUNIC HAXIYLIAZIK H NPNIA N LANE IAN , IAVIWX I bll'I'IlH UlfKl'IlKIil.l. . iUFFIil.'I' , 11112. l.. Troy , Sl. 1.1111 fs l111l17m111l1v11'1' S1kPsln11 Sl-kPSf0Il f,'11r11llwrs1'1'1l1' lflsberry 1,11 I IUILIP lirrmlrifirflrl . C1111-flnrrz ill Iflrflllllflllli LFIIIIIY Ill1ll lf'll1lFIll'l' . If11lyfe11v1y lf4lIl'lfI1jj lirwfn Sl. f,'l111rIPS Iflrlon Kunxas lfily Slrglvr. IH. lfl1.Vf4lll'll T11rk1'11ll, ffenlral 19. f11rI.l-.. f.. U1111141. XX. LUIAIN' ffuxN1cl1l.w Iluxlxxll 4 l1s'1'l.m CHX IIXIII lhlfmx llxnm Du ls. .I. Du ls. Il. lMxlH..l. Ibn IjI'2'kIKlNbIKI l314.m mms IJ1sl,F1xu llrzxwiu D1-ixxlcxx Illgxxx IJUISX Ilmu-:ul s Doss lMx1,l4:. lb lim 1.11. XX I In uzlc Il11v'xx.l5, . Ill N1:xx,.I, I., I Qgfg: ' ff V- !--S , .fr . 'Ky ' 1, fl aw ,A 31.1 , at v' 1 511 , .4 5 , 1 1 4 1 ll,ll.Vl1lIl'Il ZZ A ,151 Pnluxf 7 Q 5 Q lir1'1'L'1'11r1'1lg11' li 13 1 f,'11rrolll1111 Vx A ' V F la K 4 E3 . Ililfllfvllllll I l1'vll4Vl'lll' tn' T' 6 ' , ', 7 'Q' l'l11ll+' l.'1'l.v ,V V ' 12111111111 I 7551-525 2 .gv.,!!.V E-i1S11i..fu , Jn. llu111pl11111 Q lf11u111'1ll1' V 1' V I '-f 1 .un A l'r1111lcl111 E O .M Iltllillll' Iflllhff F 5' ' V , H Flrjfllf lfil-v x. - 'W' Fr. - . 1-4, 1lt'.l'I.l'4l R. .M ' V, 11.111 ., 'f Q M l 1'1'1l1'1'1'1'lQl1111'11 A b , ' '4' x A 1 my V ,- 1 I I rx S. v YQ 1 U Nknklw l'vll-VUHI' 1f'11w111f Q, ' l'vfl.Vl'Hl' 1 ' 'V 'ar A Y ,V ll rlnslvr f1l'4II'f'N ' iw . Skulcir' , 4 llewluyfr' -4 .67 'Q' li1m111'1'lf1' -I 'T' .Y , fx :L Q . 1 I I'1'llll1l ij, , lflglvllll N 3 Q ,R lg. V I - P' a 4 .Nl1e'll1y1'1ll1' Q X W N1 ,s N K H 1 111111111 X 2 1' f -, A 2 Q, ,mv . x. -Ya.. ..,-'F w X .. A fx :unw- Q? A L 'E- 5 1 I ,- 1 1- X. 1 I ara Y 9 ,. X, s ...N K 6- . i 1 eo- A sf E 5 A 547- 1 1 x 'wi--vi' v.,- ' .... X 1 I . A.- he. X.. s a--- if K 9' L. A. x 'fir 'V s ,K s J. nh. QT, . X Page -I0 C' H!- 1' 'hs f- ,N X 'Yi Page 47 . A '51 K 353' ,. , X -' , .v -J - x,II an :ilu -.p -N V 'A , .1 1 , ...Y . tgp I .. 'av-Q 3, a....., ,Y x v JZ' .fffg :rx-. . 113253 fi any Y ,,..mA ,. ,Q 'xg Q- swf Q ' gn Q ' , '33 -L -ng :EK Q5 f -V fi-f if X- feb' ' -' ,QQSQ 35? -7 .- . . , Fsififgg. 1 . Q 'x 'V-fifmxx - ' ,- 1 . ' .... ............. 'W f,'UllI'Ul'll!lAUll . IN xx Drss , If u GICIK l'A'lil'1l.XlI'Ill'Ill Elm xmas l':l.IrIiIXS fflllflffilll Urmm lfllIIIll'I.l,f' lIl,fl!llAlISl'I'Hf' liunm' Tvrrz' , IJQSUII1 l':N'I'l41l' IL'.1w1s1'nr Springfs ICN x NS , lJf'Sulu F x I n '.'l'lIfl'lllI-Il l'NlI,I,U . l 1'rmr:n um l m-:rin , Flu wr Fm . fiIl.Bl lXT . 1inxNXExl,xNx f:lil'flCN . f:Nl'1l'IYHAl,lGl'I H1 I FI'1Y . Hl'N I'lll'III Hkhxlvr f:f'1Il'4'.Y lf'VllIllII1'I'lIf' lflr1'll1'z'nlhf' lllilffxflllfjj , l'l11ll.vh11rg1 lferfululv IVPII' lluzwz .xl1lI'f'l'1I-Ilf' . l.f'.l'i11y1lo11 lx' inylslun IXIIIISIIS Uilqv Huis Hui . llulllxruw Nur! llxxvmtk Ilxnm-:lx . Il x'l1'm:1x ll nvfzs . Illcxnluaw lllclwnux Hzcssrzl. Illczlumw Hluulws llm mum-1 . H1 un nm Ilummw , II1 mr . Ilmu-1-Hn , l lush-1TT1-Ln S1'1n'slul1 51111111111 I1 1 ll1IIl0Il11l, Hass. , L. H1 DS'I'IiTTEll, J. llmx 1-11.1. IIVIXICR , IIIWIPIIIKIICS .I ICNKINS , .lm1l1Nx11-infill .lr1uXsnN, li. .lunNsuN, C. .lmlxSuN, V. .luwzs , . 1301111141111 , I llAVl'11t' S11e'111.v1'i11rf , 11111111111 . 1111111 illun . f1llI'11I1l!lf . Ker1r11Qv 11111111 liwzrl Plulle lfilmv .'1l'l'llll' Huck New Frfmklin . I .'f1 I1 zzff . .1l11ys1'i11e I I1ll'l'611ll6' Fr11r1kj'41r11 Frarzkforrl I lsceula If rlrnlll' ille U 'esl 1111111715 . 1111111111-II I l1-Vf'11f' , I 111 mm , Fflyt'11l' Car11ll11'rs1'1'I1e . . H11-vsc -'2'C'.s I 6. 3 Th . P'- -. K- lf, fl 1' -Y .AL Fur- 'A' .ix 4- A, , :fjffrlf 1? 1 ,, 2 4 -1 A :lf lsd 'Y . T' .- 2 fi . 'lk - . -L , f ws, , , .., 1g,:' -- ' - -- 5 .: 4 ,Q-. Q if ., f' . , ' . ,fy ' . rf 'J' ' 1 .3 .-ff, Q, A s XJ 1 1 1,4 1,1 ,-1 inf A' 5'- K' ,.,. P4 E Iv' Q' ns -nf lik. is ff :P f'N'-3155 Q,- Nu' Q Page 48 cg vu- A ff -. rl K' Q A .1 Q g' ' A 'C AXLA ns- oo- , 1 In V E 'w A 5- W? ,K ,. . ... 'i .1 Is,.i . . JN., my-. dn .1...g.3,, ,-.. ..TT,?5,,t- ,rv .- K X F' Q- r. k yf 46952, W vulsgi fwfx , vii? X xv Q 52' ,115 75 v' ' 7 ,Sf '94 I ..'1f XV rf ,33- rv:?,N 'ff --A -i pm if QV I fy'- x.- 5 V Page 49 lx If In x lv, n I'Xl'II.l.l'lIX Imax xm In-:xlnl 1, Ixlixlnm lx lx mmf lx I xw.1ucl.l, lx lQsl,lx4p IXXIHIYI' lxnuu-:Nm ul, lxl Nm-in l.uwl1 Lu rauux I.uxlu1:xvl-1 I .rc I-1 I.r:r414'll l.r31ullxlx4:1s1x I.r:ms Llmgs , I,1xns'rmnl Tmnz lnsvs. Illlf. I,'f1r:1llwrxr1'Ilf' Lu Umzlw lxrlllsus ffiliv lfff l'1'f1qn4 HI. I. 1'r' lun fjllll- fhrn in l 4l.VP'llf' lilmf S,1r1'r1y1.w .luplin Unk' flrorf' xlll 1'1r n .Xvl'll' f,'1llllIrl'l-ll llhnny l r14vl'll+' '.Il1H1fIl' ffhilll' :'1: Ihr .Ylqyflwrry ,flll1'k'Il'IlfPf' Ilflllllll' lilujf .Nflllllllll llferefv 1llIl'tllVS lim lfumlf I1N111x fhzklfmwf l.11'11x1 ll Hl.w11'r1y1 I f' x sf V- . l,11x1, -frfqx' I.. Q ' ' 1 , 1 -V V' 1 l,.111111 H X,'fJw 1 ' ' T! v - -3 A. A l1,x111, l' l'ff,1'1Q1 I... F' HX - - XXI 117 1V ,gy R ie lv- l,1 lklX1, X.1rr11f1wly 4,-1 A. , ,- V' , gl 1- A Nl xxx lfffflfl x ' .971 - XIXIHINN 11111111151 lfrwwrz 1 Xh1'111f lxfzrmzx f'1'llv n ' Y Y' ' , Y A 'Q Y .' ' 4 Nlx1111111 Af, l.11111s S' n ,, A 'Q 3 X111 my H, l'w4IkVt'HP X P7 : 9 Q 0 .M W. K A K N111 1'1N. N lffflwffzz' N1 xx1x111.1, Nflflllfvll .- 1-N 'F' 2. 1 Nl xX 51z'Vl:Iff1 - -, Q k l - , 1 Nl11Kx11'1s1.1.1, l'lf1ff.v1111rf1 'M' Y N , W V . 'X 5 1 1 L' N1 5 A - I ' ibm Nl: Vxxx S11r1f1Npr1'11f1v. Ukfrl. X11 Van lluirhcyrl ,x - .0 I ' W- . , N1. x m 131111111 W 4. 5 ' .S+ ' 1 Xl1,x11-111 H1 Hun ,J 5' - 25' :fr Y' N ' Q I R. M .2 .5 L.. L N11 hX Il x11.11-Q lmlwm N11 1f1.1 111111111-mul ' 5 ' . . - 1 2 K ' 1' 5' . Nl1x1,1: 1111f,11,,w,111- ' -, FR ' -. -I4 uk I ln X111 1111 f,f1r11fi,1'f-N1 1111- A , 1:1 N K. K A A rail , Q 1 J, F NI111 1.11 sh. 11.511 ffl, XI1x111111 l'ffl1lf1rlil11,g7 XIHHX l v1.v1'H+' TN s X C3 ' I Xhrlrlxfx II,-,'y,f'f'f11Il . N BA! ,,.-v ' Q 45- x A x RE Page 50 v 3 - X N Page 51 Q ' Dy x A - T' '+L f P+ L - ' ,X 59 N QP. 7 f ,, .,l I 37 P 53' 5 ... , Q- .Q sr - ' H QLD 'fx --A ' ' xb li A j ex 'Sl .ca . - Q , Q A S . :T 'T -vu A A 5131, AXM Y A 4 K X Q 1 ffl 27 Y . 'i xv 'k fi 'A EL Q--.f?' '-Q I 3 'QV -:NW-1', 0 Q'Q3fr 1a'.., seek -X an A , Huy I prffxwzl , Nlmunm . Nlmvrux NIU-31.1.1-zu Nlrluux' . Xlnfns. A. . Nlwzns. E. . NIH-Jus. L. Yxsn X II-llll-LIU! mm-in Hmmm , . l,,LSliN , Pu.ur:n l'xxTuN . P,-nv: . P1clTHx1 xx . Przwx . PETTIJHHX PFLA1 xirzn, li. PFI,Al'Nll-IR, Nl. P1EHPnxT . . Sf. I,u11i.w llupleu' frff4 I . 1 v4IAV8Hl' f1'l1lllFf'lUl Vumz, Ijnlu. ffurrnlllun Ilurflirz lflrl-vlon ,X IIIITCIIAIIP l5'unr1l'l'Ue GI'lIlItlI'l4l'l1' .Yurefly 1 lrlrsllufl lfu-velie Iximlmusler . Troy lxbiny lfilxv , f fruiy I Irrzigf Sl. Louis I'11.1'1uan l'llc1u lf li uxs li xul Iva lh-:rn Ill-INIVK lillnal-Lxx xx Hush . lllxm ll11Bls41N li11mlx111'11 IR111:1c1w .lI11lv.c1'1ll1' , Unlcrzrzv lX,4lIlSIlS iff!-v I '111'1'1frxil-v fffl-v , lllIl'1lI-Il Ur1l1l1'11 lil'1111L'4!11'l1l 1 IIIVUII l1111g1l1111. li. lf. N1'11.wl1n Sl, 1.1111 1'.v 'V011' l r1111lcl1'11 'W ,J 1 . an HL nv- wg N- E lil IINXICIIIAII. lfffrixlvll S xxlnftns . Iglllllllfllf' Q Su mar. 5 . l.111'l1'1lv .E 5 9' Srululvl-Llx lflfllrll X .5 E xx' ,Ji SVIII ISICI. Nl, 1.111113 Sum u,,1l4: I 11.wflI1' Sum win fflllllfllfflfll . '55 2 is SIA: x um , 1 I11r1'1'l1'111 Q x gx S111xlxll.1cn l.'11l1Qf11r111'11 SHICIHX 1 11 PII l:',1'1'1'lx1'11r .YIIFIVIINN , N x 511.14211 1N11r11111111l'v 3. - Aj, Sk xmas C Tll!1.X'l'I' ' 'T' A X il Sh xmas I5 . IiUlPIlI'llllf SXIITII. X. AKII111115' , f A , Spf Q Sxlrrll, U. li1111111'1ll1' SXIITII. Nl , .xIlll'l'f'll'lll' 1 tl .nf Fi.. 1 X mwffszwz- , . vs :X-sb?-Nw: :XXX :.:Xw- 1 Xx XJ. dx ' V. - ,NX :,x1, X X X X XX . , gb-7 X .,-.,. ,X xx XX xx Q X X X X, . , X, 53252-f,g2.' 3 53-x?-Xaixf X , . X:-: Nr V ..l,,Q.g,.g XXXQQX3, - Q, iL X,-... .X Page 53 v-. 'i-..-- .-be v X . 3 .X t x X X , X .., . . X .- X -V 5 5.19 -XX: N gsgxexwssiw- 1 1 X 1f,-- 1 'nf ,N -m nf, 419, . - f 1'--wifi 'N' if:.'iz+i-4, .,e'v-5545+ f .x - f2fA'i'is:av2.':.-3 ', ,,g3.gg'-A - 'f 1 M xx' 'ls V' ,I .ms 'f PQ' ' f--,. ...X NLSS3- REI X ' .-:X Q 2 . 152: :1.-'f-X-r.::.- .Xx X X.: X f .X X wg' q xv XX X ggifji xx . I Y X V xg M X 1' ,XXaz??K H2 595 va. A XY? f ,hir .. 9 ' mfg W - .Qi 'df Surm, W. Swocm . Spnlxul-:R SPIN' S'1wxP1.Es . S'l'ICX'ICNS STEN 1avs0N S'l'msu-1 . S'rlxA1 VH . STIIEEP Sl 'l,L1xQ-xN Sn I-:I-:N EY Su INIJLI-in 'l'.u,1'oTT 'l',n'Lon, A. 'l'.u'Lun. B, , 'PETERS . Triml as . A laysrille .1 I ef ico . Skuk ie H rffz lwslmro . lflinlnn I,llIlIl-Vfll filasgozu 31411111 liwzd lflrlylffr. Hula. A'flI1NlIS flily Clzivuyu, Ill. lfl11'4'1lym. IH. Iiruymer .1 I efzfco Troy Silceslon . l uAw'lle , 1 hlessu Turmvsow. F. Jfjffvrxun flfly 'l'um1PSnN, .l. ffl: l.Hil'4lllIP lIlfCf'l7ll.SSl.UIZ ul sllulvnl lmrly barn lla I1 ce. I,lllnll-Cillliill l'lll'ffl'lfllAllS will: plmluyruplwr, 'I'vmnx'mx 'l'l mam-1 'l'I nxl-in XX' xnmzn. XX . XX xnmcn. li XX' umm. .I. XX xl.l.m. ii. XX Hicks XX rss!-il, XX'rsTI, xxx li XX I-IS'I'XllXl!l'l XX'l1-:clans XXu.l,1.xX1s XX 1l.snx XX IXHICIXI XX lsr: XX nl.F , XXmm . XX xaimwl-' LI'1.xl If .X- lx'r1n.w1.v lfil-V . l'vIl-VP' I 1' Silcvxlun fll4lSfl1Hl' .'X'f'11' l r 41r1 lflllll Ifh ill l'1'a rllw ffl: illi f'4: llu' l 4 lixfef llf' XX elfslf-r firurex , IlIllllSl'illf' Il Hlvzsynzl' lllflfll-IlS1'lllf' Nl. l.u11 is I .'.X'l'f'Il4' l,f'lIlll-X' IfHllllI'l'Hf' , flflllll lflllv XX vlnxlvr flrn1'f'.w lllvkllzvzlz Xllllx IXPIIIISHX fflllv I -1. .jk l 1 X .4 S Q .AO- X B. 39 C ,I z 9? , .T jg 614, 5 L., X LLM., ta gg ,I 3 fp . 4 3 C' 7 Wifi' .Lia Xl . PX I. 33 3. 7 ,fl .1 nf Q ' I ,..: X f vm ' r iff , 'i 'UH p. iv .4 I sr C E Pu .1 my g Nwazfflys xi, lf., ' , I 1 I -s ,. W ,k , -1 ,sl + I Q 5,44 N ' 'ff ' ' X Q 24 11 ' , . .X--, 2 We my Xe! , f1,jhfxmw fl lf, f X 2 f X lj 7 VX' X ,ff W 6 1 !J ' X ' f A X :J I 'Z' , f. I -- fx 1 K Z AA' If U NX 7 14 Z! I w X. ,, x 9,4 q 1 I 'K K Qvpw, s B 'ani 1 Yl 2' 1,4155 5 gd 0 Alamy .1111 Turzfr 4111 -S 111 . - 'fi during h-Jllieoflmgz , . . T Iyappas with hits f A Ml v x 5, u g , the 11:,aii-mlal gillfiklll QTUN ff. . Hr BMW YI F xx Art Club 0 T11is NUHI' 11111111011 1110 110g11111111g of 11ll' 1111 011111's 11f10011111 ylxill' of SIICCPSS- 11111 CI'Pi'l11Y1' 0x1s10111-0. 1511011 ytxill' 11011' s1111j01-ts 111111 forms of 0x1110ss111g 1111 ilI,1lJl'PC1ii11UIl 1110 111111011 111 1110 1111011111 1'1111011 111111 1111010s1111g 11111,q111111s of 1110 lll1'011Il?1IS. T1111 111' 1110 y1'2iI'.S 11100t111gs 111110 1100111110 1I'2lC11110IlEl1. T110 first is 1110 C1111st11111s 11111111 111 11111011 011011 11101111101 111111,qs 1111 1111,f1111111 gift. T111s 10111. 111 sp110 111' 1110 pI'1'Yil1PllC0 of g1I'1S.t11ll-' lllilSI'll11ll1' 11101111101s 11111 11111 101-011'0 011s1111110 .j011'0111. 1'11'11I'llill'y fo11110011t11 is 1110 110011s1o11 1111 1110 SUCOIIIT 010111 of 1IIll1UI'12'lIl1'4'. 1110 Yil11'I1t1ll1' llilfty. C1111- 01111110s 11010 1110 Sll11li1'ClS of 111111111111 111101111111-s 11111110 111' 111111 11111 011011 1110111- 1101. 110011111111-1111011 111' 1111 0I'1g1Il1l1 1'01s0. 11110 111' 1110 11111s1 1111111110 111111 011- -j111111110 IJI'UQI'1lIllS 111' 1110 ylxill' 1111s ,Q'1YOIl 111 Xliss Tr1p1011. S110 111050111011 1lPl' 11110 0111100111111 111' dolls. 011011 111' 11111011 111111 21 1111111111 111s11111'. N111 111111' 1111 IllPlll1l1'I'S of 1110 1111 011111 f1I'1Il1x 1011. 0x001110 Ol'1g.1'1ll1l1 11111115 of 1111 111111 11p11r01-11110 11111111110 pr11g111111s. A 1 l 1 , 4 'N- nlv 1 , n H ,. ,3 'Z'l -1, ., 1 ,,. Q ng - vig. K , V4 ' 1 1.31. 5 :11511 1 They work so1111r1l . . . 11111 11lPy 111110 111011 111110110111 0111111011103 11s 11011. During 1110 1lOIll9COIll1Ill! SGHSOII 11o111s 11010 IllElC1G. signs 11111111011 111111 1110 s111g0 1111s d0s1g110d 111111 0o11s11110t0d for 1l0IllPC'0Ill1llgl'Oy1fl1tj'. As 1111 C1ll1J IJIPS1- 110111 Nildilltx Taylor 1111s 1lOIll9COI111Ilg 1I110011. 1111 011111 111011111013 took El sp001111 1111110 111 11lC1I' work. 1111101 111111-s011so11111 activities 111- 011111011 1110 tlSSf'lll1J11llg' of 1111 0x11i11it for 1118111111 111 1.110 1111111 s011oo1s. stage d0- Sigllillg 111111 1110 111111111112 of posters for YElI'10llS CHIIIIJUS 110111'i110s. YGI'S311119 NIHI'1ilIl 1'101101t d0s1g110d 1111056 0101'01 110001111110 pilllP1S as tl 1.73C1igl'OllI1C1 for 1110 1111311 No1'11s at 1110 Stlldllllt body d111100s. Page 60 o The Art Cluh coopvratefl with Phi Mu Alpha. Phi Beta, and thv Studvnt Body Officers in sponsoriiig' the EippPtlI'iiIlCP Of liartoii NlllIllZlW. fornior chuicer wiih Ted Sha1w's troupv, in a rvc'ital at Daly Auditorium. Events of the latter part of the- yvar included the pllotogmpliy show. which fPtltlll'Pd the work ul' al iiumhvr of iillliltflll' pl1otio,qrupl1v1's on thv 1-ampus, sllpplmilciilie-rl hy scmw ol hir. .lacolisf Dr. Stull's. and Nlr. 'l'ii1flulI's pllotogruplisz arts szilv ol' origi- nal work: and the- spring furnial climivr. It is vvvr the- purposv of thv Ari -, A . . . . f.illlJ to l'0llliJ no sfwlul il1'ilYliy with tho vxte-llsimi oi' art znpplw-izltiiiili and . 1 - . the Ill2lllltl'llilIll 4' ui high slalnfhnrrls in ull forms ol' sell' vxprvssion. PI'?.S'l.fl6lIf. Nimlxri 'lfn Lon I 4l.l'6-Pl'6.S'I.fi6IIf .S'e1'l'ela1'.v 7'l'FflSlll'f'l' GrcuRf:1,x WixRNHulf1f Dums S'l'REE'I' Nlixm W l'u:hE'r'r Standing: HEX'INCi, Dmmnom-'F, REED, MINITHEE, IIUSTETTER. CIAMPBELI., 'l'HoMAs. Mauna. T.n'Lun. Ihncaifns Sealed: NVHIGHT. BOELSEN, STREET, INN!-is, XVARNHOFF, PICKETT, Blesunovrz, Bnunw. XYELCH, ACK:-Lnsow. PATRICK Page 61 . almmnz Sllgfmbl Pi Q Central Collegc-'s honorary secre- tarial sorority with a three-fold goali personality. scholarship, and skill, was organized in l93T. Regular monthly meetings are held with programs planned to develop more efhcient secretaries and to help gain an insight into the business world and its operations. The meetings are varied, consisting of talks by guest speakers, an initiation service held each semester, quiz programs and contests, round table discussions and parties given in celebration of special holidays. Each year the club sends a round-robin letter to alumni to tell tl1e1n what goes on since tl1ey have gone and to keep posted on what they are doinggalumni in Washington, D. C. working for Uncle Sam, in industrial centers per- forming secretarially in many different positions. in numerous high schools teaching future Gamma Sigma Pi n1en1- bers, and some in American homes per- forming wifely tasks with secretarial efliciency. Perfect Secrelury Slreel This year the members of Gamma Sigma Pi were among the first to volun- teer for civilian defense work. They typed the civilian defense registration cards for Howard County. Many of these girls will probably go right on as Uncle Sam's secretarial neices in Civil Service positions upon the completion of their college courses, as have a number of former members. Others will teach secretarial skills in high schools. Through all these activities Gamma Sigma Pi ll1Gll1lJCI'S never cease to appreciate the guidance and help of Misses Thompson and Holley, spon- sors. The title of Ideal Secretary for 711-,422 was conferred upon Doris Street. She was chosen not only for her ability in secretarial techniques but for scholar- Pagt 62 4 ship. personality. and professional inter- ests shown. A first semester senior. she has been Dean E. P. Puekett's see- retary for a year and a half with her own office situated between the Deans and the Registrars on tl1e highway through Brannoek Hall. Not only has Doris shown exceptional talent in coni- lneree but she has been an active ineln- ber of the Art Club as its treasurer. In season she twirls with the boys niarehing band. She is also president of Gannna Sigina Pi. In adclition to all of this she linfls tinie to assume another role. that of wife to popular Silver Street. Presirlenl. Doms S'l'REE'I' l tviee- Pl'8.S'lidE'fll Sef'rela1'.v Tl'?ClSlIl'6I' NIARY ENGELHARDT Lum' .EASON YIRGINI.-x YESTAL Slamling: I'IYATT, ROBINSON, FISHBECK, YATES, SEAT, WILSON, JONES. FHElDMm'En, Pnx'L1.Is. XVARPI, lhI0lKl!ISON. LOCKHIDGE, XYARFOHD Sealed: Tii0MPSON. VESTAL. STREET, EASON, BRADSHER, HoLLEY, XVALL, DAVIS, SQUIRES Page 63 Alplm E psllon elm O 1912 linds Nlissouri Alpha Chapter of Alpha lipsilon Delta. National llonorury Pre-Klcdical Fraternity. in the midst ol' its eighth successful year of existence on the Central campus. Previous to 19314 eligible pre-med stu- dents had found membership in Scalpel and Forceps which was discontinued with the founding ol' Missouri Alpha. Alpha Epsilon Delta. However, last spring this organization was revived in order that pre-medical students might receive the benelits of a broader pro- graun. F-calpel and lforceps is the actiyc prc-med fraternity on the campus while membership in Alpha lipsilon Delta is awarded to those achieving high scholastic honors. lfpperclassmcn who meet the qualilications in scholar- ship. dependability. personality. ap- pearance and attitude are permitted membership in Scalpel and Forceps. Excellence in scholarship has al- ways been highly emphasized to har- monize with the honorary nature ol' the organization. Miller Mayfield, The pre-rncils FPIIIJ' ufler cribin conipleliun Merrill 'l'omlin and lxenneth Duzan were initiated into Scalpel and Forceps this year while honorary fraternity pins ol' Alpha Epsilon Delta were con- ferred upon George Ewing. Gladden Elliott. Frank Elders and John Loug- head. The organization boasts of nu- merous outstanding alumni including many in high-rating medical schools. Doctors of Medicine, and several in- ternes. Meetings of this organization are held on the lirst and third Wednesdays ol' each month and are divided to in- clude business and pleasure. The pol- icy has been to present outside speakers at the meetings whenever possible. This year the fraternity has enjoyed talks by Dr. Pierce of Lee Hospital: Dr. Gilkcy, a pediatrician from Kansas City: Dr. Jacobsen. a professor at Washington University Medical School: Dr. Sam Brown of Kansas City General Hospital: and Dr. Logan Clendenning. a distinguished physician and author Page 64 of the daily column on things medical which appears in the Kansas City Star. Last spring these llltifllCHlly-IlllIlClt:'Cl students put aside their medical instru- ments long enough to display their ability at the line art of carpentry. BI'0ClilllHl1,S lake, south of Fayette, is the scene of their constructive efforts and here a cahin now stands as a product of their linished work. This cabin is the scene of many picnics and swinnning parties during the spring and fall nionths. George Ewing. SOIlllOlIlOI'P from Brookfield, was the delegate to the 191-2 National Convention of A. E. D. at Nlorganstown, Vlvest Virginia. Since the founding of the organiza- tion here, Dr. Stevens has been its sponsor, and he is now serving his third lf0I'Ill as National Yice-President of Alpha Epsilon Delta. PI'6Sl.l16I1f. S,xNEonn Coen ERELL Vice-P1'esiden1' Secrelartv Tl'6G.S'lll'6'l' BILL BVTQIHEE HElRBEB'l' liL'SH IUICK Sw xmoxns Back row: ENYING, REEDEIK, PASCOE. ELDERS. FUNKE, .lAcKsoN, LOUGHFIAD, ELLIOTT, W.u'1,ANu. SM I'Illl:IlIHC, lhlILLl:IR Fronl row: DE. STULL. BUTCHER. COCKEEELL. Svxmoxus. BUSH. DH. STEVENS Page 65 Nlumliriyr lin. ill i.x1iflx,llmlv:,XN uuucx. liIl,LIXN1. Yu x'r'r.x. XX ,uxynoi-'rx Cwps. liy ws. llxim1s,1Ioi.l-1. Nlrnirn' Ywilefl: lXl,lNl'f. Du, tixnins. l'unizw, BtmNIC.lil'l11lllll, Du. Nlttlxixsi-ix' Pi Gamma M 0 'l'hv Missouri lxappa Chaptvr ol' Pi thu homers ol' the faculty lllCIl1llCI'S and Gamma Nlu. a national social scivinfv sponsors. Thi- participation of all in honor socic-ty, was vstalmlishvd in 1936. tln' group tlisCussions of timely topics Thi- purposv ol' Pi tiamma Xlu is tho in thv various lim-lcls ol' social scioiicv rultiyation ol' high scholastic' attain- is t'IlCOllI'il?Q'l'tl. ln aclclition lllP0llllQS mc-nts anrl thv promotion of tht- usm- of arv flswotefl to aclclrvssvs. papers. rc- srivntilic- me-thofls in tho stucly ol' thv ports o11 rvsvart-li and good fellowship. sorial sc-iviic-vs. Nlvinlwrsliip is limilvfl Tho final activitivs of the yvar includv to juniors. st-niors. alumni. ancl in- a trip to a spot of historical impor- strurtors who liaw niajorvrl in tht- social tanrv and a lure-altfast for invnihers and st-ivin-vs, ancl who liayo attainvcl at visiting alumni on Juno l at tho homo le-ast superior rank in thvsv stuclivs. ot' Nlvrrill li. Gaclclis. Hvgular monthly iiivvtiiigs arf' hvlcl in l'1'es1'1Ie1zl. HILL GKIQHIXI l'1'r'e-171-es-irlwzl. Hors Punt-:N Sec'1'elar'y. HEI,EN liooxic Parr lm Slumling: WINTUN. lhfrmznronn. XYAIKIDEN, DH. XYALKFIK. rllHUNlNS. SlliH,fKl,l'IY. Baum. Sealed: vES'I',-kI,. PILE. Dliixumirl. lilxUxn1Al.l.. NN uaulznsox, llllilii mama Plzz' M 0 Gamma Phi Mu is a woman's phi- losophy club, organized three years ago by a group of coeds and Dr. E. H. VValker. It gives an opportunity for girls who have shown themselves quali- fied and are interested to discuss mod- ern philosophical problems which are of concern to them. Only five members were hack at the lJ6glI1I1l11g' of tl1e year hut seven new girls were selected immediately and in the second semester the mem- bership was increased to fifteen. Nlcet- ings are held on the lirst Monday eve- ning of each month at Dr. and Nlrs. Walkers home. The first S0l11l'StPl' was devoted to a discussion of connmmity socialism, individualistic and socialistic democracy. with papers presented on each of these with discussion following. The second semester the book Con- lemporary li6'llifjli0lIS Thouglzl, compiled by Thomas liepler was the hasis for discussions. Presidenl, lVlARGARE'l' DEMAREE Vice-President! Secrefary Treasurer HELEN BRUMMEL PEGGY PILE FAYE W-.ARDEN Page 67 Cizemzktry lub Q The Chemistry Club is composed of chemistry majors and minors who have attained the required scholastic stand- ing and have acquired enough credit to become student afliliates of the American Chemical Society or associate members of the local organization. The object of the club is to afford an oppor- tunity for the students of chemistry in Central College to become better ac- quainted. to secure experience in pre- paring and presenting technical ma- terial before the public and to instill a professional pride in chemistry. Starting its thirteenth year with thirteen members, the club grew to a membership of thirty during the second semester. Twice each month, on the second and fourth Thursday evenings. the club meets in Iloolter Scientific Li- brary to hear programs given by the students themselves. The program usually consisted ol' teclmical papers given by at least two students and the presentation of a short item ol' current chemical interest by each of the n1e1n- bers present. Some 1QflUI8tft'lI0ll'S deserl jbr runzparalire laboratory This year the club achieved campus recognition when it topped all Central organizations in scholastic standing for the iirst semester. The chemists became the ranking intel- lectuals of the campus and were treated to a free show at the Fayette Theatre. Each year the Chem Club sends representatives to the national meeting of the American Chemical Society. Among those who attended the Mem- phis meeting this year and read papers were John Burch, Cracking of Heavy Hydrocarbonsnz Hubert DuBois, Al- kalies, Magnesium and Sulfur Com- pounds in Portland Cementng John Sterling. Synthetic Rubber Polymeri- zation : Robert Philips. Theories of Catalysisng and lbert Wells, Chem- istry of Vitamin Bl. As the chemist also believes in the social side of life, not all meetings were Page 68 1 devoted to chemistry. Twice during the year, the Ill6lI1l'l6I'S adjourned to the city park for the traditional Steak fry aIId picnic. At the start, of the second semester, impressive initiation cere- Inonies for the new I1l6H1lJ6I'S at Science Hall were followed hy a party in the library given hy Dr. and Mrs. Gordon. A formal diIn1er-daIIce was held at Mrs. ClilfoI'd's Tea Room iI1 Nlarch. The Chemistry Award. a years sub- scription to the Journal of Clzemical Educalzfon. will he presented to the senior chemistry major with the highest scholastic average at the conclusion of school year. with sponsor Gordon mak- ing the presentation. Presidenl, HLBERT DL' Bois Vice-President Secretary Treasurer I BERT WELLS WARDELLA RoI'SE YIRGIL SMITH C50 Back row: TOISILIN, STERLING, BUTCHER, SUKow, PHILIPS, SUTTON, BOCKMAN. CALLIS. NIILLER. STEw.xnT Second row: ELDERS, CRAIG, HARRIS, XYATES, BOURN, RUTIIERFORD, DR. GIIRDQN, BRUI-IL, DEMAREI-3, ACKERSON, BURCH. PASCOE, FRANCIS Sealed: SILELL, SMITH, ROUSE, DUBoIS, XVELLS, SHEETS, PROF. BUCKNER Page 69 P1 Kappa elm 9 llp to lfehruary 2.11, when tl1is ac- count was written. Central's delmate teains had participated in a total of forty-six debates, for twenty wins, thirteen losses and thirteen non-deci- sions. Getting oil' to a strong start, a squad of l'our-Toinlin and N1cCoy. and 111101112111 and v1Ctll't1GIlftUUli lirst place in the Williain Jewell Tourna- inent. Noveinher 15. And in the liirksville ineet. Deceniher 11-12. hoth .111-Coy and liutler and 1Yieinan and Toinlin won three of four delrates to place in upper quartile. Hut these deliates were all on the lirst SOlll0S1tt1'iS question ol' federal regu- lation of Iahor unions, and when the dehaters went to their lirst tournament. ltlehrtlary T at Warrenshurg on the new question, that of a federation of the democracies, they did not fare so well. All three teains split even, winning two and losing two. IflLIIl1U1.D,IiS mos! wzlzuzble dehuferf finserl ehuirej First semester conipetition un- covered several freslnnen possibilities and Coach Randolph worked inces- santly to develop thein into squad inenihers. Semester initiation hrouglit six new faces into the ranks of Pi Kappa Delta: Butler. Baskett. Tal- cott. NleCan1phell, Milburn. and Old- hani. Events scheduled after February I2-1 included: February 27, State Tour- nainent at Springfield. Missouri: March 13. Kemper Debate rllOllI'I1I:il1lPI11, at Boonville: March 21. National Exteln- pore Contest at COlllIlllllkl1 April 5-10. National Pi Kappa Delta Tournainent at Minneapolis, Minnesota: and May 1-2, lluhlic Affairs Conference at Elsah. Illinois. Page70 Representing Central at the Mis- souri division of the National Extern- pore Contest held at Columbia on March 21, one of Randolph's boys- lVlerril Tomlin, sophomore from Platts- burg-won first place. ln addition to the gold fountain pen award. Tomlin earned the right to speak i11 Kansas City early in April in a tri-state series of competition, with the winner going to Washington, D. C. With his eye peeled for spring tennis weather, Coach Randolph also takes time out to plan on the years' end round of meets a11d tournaments. lle is suh- jecting his squad to severe training regulations and if past victories speak for future successes. Central's dehaters will show up well in the national com- petition when all chapters of Pi Kappa Delta convene in Minneapolis on April 5 for a five-day session. Pl'8Sll0l6I?f. VVILBURN HENDERsoN Vice-Presidenl. Jiums IDURLEY S6'l'l'6fGl'.V. DONALD Simon' Slanding: BUTLER. BASKETT, DR. RANDOLPH, Suxow. Mr:Cm'. Tmium. ULDHM1 Sealed: TALCOTT, MCCAMPBELI.. MILBURN. xVARDEN Page 71 Plzz' Bam 0 Even if this year l1adn't proved a successful one for Tau Chapter the memory of the definitely successful tenth-anniversary reunion of last June would over-shadow any complaints. At that time over half of T au's charter members were here and they were re- initiated into the chapter in a model initiation. Early this fall Tau Chapter singled out seven girls talented in music or drama and had them in the throes of rushing. The Pleiades, as the seven called themselves, were Marcia Win- ton, Helaine Lewis, Betty Milburn, Ruth Higgenbotham, Ann Kroeck, Don- nie Bird, and Lurlene Lefmann. In their six weekis pledge period they were supervised by pledge captain De Aun Finnell. Formal initiation took place December 13 in the Phi Beta room, followed by a banquet at the Hotel Howard honoring the new n1e1n- bers. During the banquet, induction serv- ice was held for two new patronesses. Tau Chapter is proud to add to its patroness group two of Central's out- standing faculty members-Miss Ruth L. Anderson and Miss Eulalie Pape. l l The Pleiades-minus one! Outstanding in Phi Beta's activi- ties this year was the Sadie Hawkins' dance sponsored by them, November 8. Strawstacks, turnips, cider, and Dog- patch costumes lent to the typical at- mosphere. The program calendar has been exceptionally interesting, featuring fac- ulty guest speakers and performers. Phi Beta's also furnished their annual chapel program in January, which showed Tau's real talent. The major regret of the year for Phi Beta was the resignation of Betty Coghill Stull as chapter advisor. Fil- ling her position now is one equally loved and efficient-Catherine Bab- cock. Tau's high ranking among the national chapters is accredited un- questionably to the great interest and help of these advisors. The spring rushing season began February 22, with Nancy Maupin, Page 72 v Virginia Bust-hart. and Nlary Elizabeth Knight as the chosen three. After their usual training and instruction they were initiated into ineinhership Hay 2 and were honored guests at a forlnal hanquet following the initiation seryiee. lnitiating the spring formal season the Phi lietas and Phi Nlu Alphas gave their annual dinner-danee on Nlareh T. The banquet was helfl in the Parrish house and the dance at the Armory. Xlusie was furnished hy the Casa Nova hand. Despite the faet that it was a loeal affair this year the eyening was its usual great sueeess. The total activities of this Phi Beta year result in its heing a full and fruitful one. Nlqith fraternity ideals hefore tl1en1 may the aetiye menihers of next year make it an even lvigger and hetter year. P1'e.s-z'rlenl. CxRo1.yN XYILR I-insoy l '1'c'e-P1'e.s'1'r1'e11l Seel'e1'ary TI'f'fl.N'lII'Fl' DH Aly l:IYNICI.I, Gwrzy lxmh l'll.URFIYtil'I Coit: Standing: M. XYINTUY. RICH. lxICCL?TCHAN. FIXEIDSIEYER, GAINEY, BIILBUHY. I.EFx1.xN. II1c:far:xiso'ni,u1. linux. Knoscx. Gm icrf. NICKEE Seated: LESYIS, CAPEN, Kimi. BABCOCK. WILKI-znsow, FINNELL. Com-1, PUCKETT, Arxixsuw. II. Wixrox Page 73 Plzz' Mu Alpha Q Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia is a national honorary musie fraternity. lt was founded nearly fifty years ago at the New England Conservatory of Nlusie. Central's Chapter. Beta Nlu. was Char- tered in 1931. and is one of three Chap- ters in Nlissouri. Phi Mu Alpha's aims are to foster the spirit of good musie. to develop the manly musician and the music' i11 man. Un Oc-toher the ninth. Beta Klu ehapter presented the Woodwind Quintet of the llniyersity of Iowa in a convert in the .'XSSt'Illllly Auditorium. Later that month the ehapter was visited hy its Province Governor. Prof. lfranlt XY. llill. who teaches at Iowa State 'I'e-aehers' College. Xlr. llill was entertained at dinner in NleXlurry llall. followinfr which he led a diseussion ol' 2' fraternity' prolilems. The Friday night lwfore llllI'lSlIllllS yar-ation. Beta Xlu entertained Cen- traI's music' students with a danee in the gymnasium. Dance records were taken from fraternity members' li- hraries and the phonograph was inan- lirullier lfnlenzun prf1elires.' aged by a few of the Chapters recently acquired pledges. Following the dance. Beta Nlu men led the singing of carols on Brannoek Hall steps. The accom- paniment for the singing was furnished hy the fraternity's hrass choir. Un January tliirty-first sixteen pledges were initiated into the organi- zation. Following the formal initia- tion, which was held in the Assembly fXuditorium. the new members were honored with a banquet at Mrs. Clif- l'ord's Tea Room. Phi Mu Alpha again sponsored the recorded musie programs whieh were started last year. This y9kll'.S programs have heen presented in the Parrish House assemhly room where the Carnegie reeord lihrary and phono- graph are housed. Puqff-I o Beta Mu chapter was privileged to help foster the dance as an art. ably assisting the student body in its pres- entation of the famous Mumaw in recital at Daly Auditorium in Febru- ary. One of the most anticipated events of the year is always the annual Phi Mu Alpha-Phi Beta spring formal din- ner dance. This year the dance was held in Fayette instead of Columbia, as has been the practice. On March tlIe seventh, Phi Mu Alphas and Phi Betas banqueted at tl1e Parrish House aIId adjourned to the Armory to dance to tl1e smooth music of the Casa Nova dance orchestra. Presz'derzI. BoB Nloomi Vice-Pres iden! Secrelary TIPIISIIIPI' DOYNE lhIICHIE BILL SU'rToN .ll-uIEs THoGxIoR'I'oN Back row: I,ovELL. YouNc:Ea. LANE. BALI., PII.I:HIcn. DAY'lS. PARRISII. SHIRLEY. BUTLI-tk. Com-I Third row: STIIPP. Forum. BUSH, RICE, l4UE'l'Z0NN'. SILER. THURNTUN. KEENEII, KFLSIQY. lfnsycrls. Bonn. NIQIII-:nsox Second row: lhlEALY. SHELL. Tuoomoarox. NIooIIE. NIIIIHIE. SPAYDE, JACIQSIIN, SUTTOX Fronl: STREEP. XVALLACE, HIGCQINS. MlI.LEl1. PECK. ZUI,.aUF Page 75 Alpha Plzz' Alpha 0 1'ote11ti111 lt'ilClt'I'S1llIJ. Cllllgtxlllillllly. personal att1'a1'ti1'e11ess, versality. SC'llU1ill'SlllID. 111111 persoiiality-with these qualities i11 111i1111. liay llerriek. Carolyn Lihhy. Lucie Drake. Mary lillrQ't'11lEll'fll. Yirginia Yestal. Mary Allllt' .'xllflt'l'SOIl. Xaoiui Slioekley. De Allll l'1i1111e11. Ruth :k1lxlIlSUIl. 111111 Peggy Pile. tl1e I'tllllI'Illll,Q' Xlplias. 111et the first night of' sehool to review' the Sllllllllt'I'.S t'XfN'I'lOllt'txS 111111 plan aetivi- ties for tl1e t'llSlllIlQ' sehool year. lvlllltll' tl1e lea11ers11ip ol' Ruth At- ki11so11. rush Cilpltllll. rusliiiig started ofl' witl1 tl hang 111111 1'o11ta1't was Illiltllx with the rus11ees l1lI'0llg1l 1'oke sessions at tl1e tlfllfl store. The first Illtllitll' event. of' the season was il treasure lllllll for the rusliees 111111 their 11z1tes f'ol1owee11 hy 11z1111'i11g 111111 I'0f'I'PS1lIl1t'IllS i11 tl1e gym. The rush season was 1'li111a1xe11 with il ll11wz1ii1111 1Jl'lllQ'l' lllllCll- 0011 at tl1e lel'11wa1'11 llotel. tl1't1111er 19, livelyn Aeliff, Betty kay Bridge, Mary Bruhl. Edna Clare, Frances 'l'l1o111pso11. Charlotte Paxton. QIIPPH .llkinsorz 11111101.1111 zrilh 11 riylif 111 III11' Dell 11'ir1ferfurl1111I Carlin tfoekerell. Dawn V11l10llltlS. Gwen liirk. 111111 .lane S1-111'a1ler i111lieate11 tl1eir i111'li11atio11 to join tl1e ranks of 1511111111 Phi fXlp11a. A-Xs llo111e1-o111i11g approaelled tl1e Ilt'0IDllylUS fllSCOYt'I'Gfl that a float for the ll0111eeo111i11g parade was 1101 some- thing that eoul11 he aee11111plisl1e1l over- night hut I'0qlllI'QCl i11ge1111ity 111111 hard work. As il result of tl1eir e11tl111siastie CUUIJt'I'?lll0ll. Alplias proved tl1eir i11- 1'e11tive11ess with tl1eir green illltl white float. C2lI'I'ylIlQ.' 11e-gla1110rize11 Carolyn Lihhy 111111 gltllllOI'lZOCl Ruth :'kl14ll1SOll. I't'IJI'OS0llllllg Jewell 111111 Central re- spectively. 111111 1J9ilI'll1,Q' tl1e motto Hlfiggers Do11't lie''ACe11tral-Oo111pl1- tee11 - Jewell - NOtlllI1'..1 After 611- joying a waffle hreakfast. at tl1e Howard Hotel. tlllllllS and Alphas ElC1jOllI'Il9fl to see tl1eir float capture tl1e prize for originality. Page 76 o Following tlIe precedent of previ- ous years, Alphas entertained their dates with a Christmas dinner after which gifts were distributed. Christ- mas activities also included 311 all night feed aIId a farewell exchange of gah and gifts. The third annual Alpha-Kappa dancefproved to he a huge success Elllfl couples enjoyed dancing to the strains of the Casa Novas at the Armory. Following the example of the na- tion iII practicing war-time economy, tlIe Alphas cancelled their spring formal reservations iII Columhia. Combining forces. Alphas and Kappas staged a successful spring formal in home terri- tory May 9. We prophesy that. iII future years as it has been for us . . . Loyalty will IIe'er cease to he . Sisters we'll always he. Presideni, PEGGY PILE Vice-Presidenl Secrefary Treaszlrer VIRGINIA VESTAL DE AVN FINNELL Nlxom SHOCKLEY From Iqfl I0 righl: THOMPSON. DRAKE. COCIQEBELL. BRUHL, LIBBY. HERRICK, SI-IOCKLEY. VESTAL, PILE. ATKINSON, KIRK, FINNELL. ACUFF, TI-Iomus, CLAHE. PAxToN, BRIDGE, Aiwmaasox Page 77 Pz' Kappa T hem O V for victory may be an over- worked symbol by now, but nothing else can better express the activities of Pi liappa Theta since the beginning of this school year. Thirteen old members, Tillie Hall, Jeanne McCutchan, Becky Chiles, Mar- garet Robison, Marian Pickett. Helen Jones, Jackie Davis, Dege VVall, Nadine Taylor, Lucy Webb Eason, Snooks Reed, Ginny Patton, Van Buschart. returned to the campus in September and the rush was on! President Pickett and Rush Captains Dege Wall and Jeanne Mctlutchan led the returning members in the search for girls who would make good Kappas. Rush sea- son was oflicially opened with a one- o'clock luncheon at Clilford's Tea Room where a large number of rushees were guests of honor. For tl1e concluding event of the season the Howard-Payne Rec room was converted into The Rathskellerf' Telegrams were sent to the prospective pledges inviting them to attend the gala opening. , xmas' X Pi lxappa Tlielu enlerffzirzs relurning llllllllllllt' ul Dinner Bell lunclzenn. Mary Frances Murray. Jane Dai- ley, Sis Higgins, Ray Ann Robison Virginia Buschart, Mary Gilbert, Nancy Cox, Sara Margaret Nieder- winnner, Jeanne Greenhalge, and Doro- thy Hendren received bids and were formally initiated to membership after two weeks of pledging. Following initiation the Kappas were entertained by Mrs. John Randolph, Miss Hallie Jean Thompson, and Miss Beryl Trip- lett at a fireside supper honoring the new members in the home of Mrs. Randolph. Homecoming, reigned over by Queen Nadine Taylor, was as exciting as ever. With Our Hearts Set For Victory the Kappas were awarded the prize, a gold loving cup, for the Page 78 v most beautiful float in the homecoming parade. Ten alumnae returned for the homecoming dinner commemorat- ing the sixteenth anniversary of Pi Kappa Theta. One of the highlights of the social season was the annual kappa-Alpha winter formal at the armory where the members of both organizations and their escorts danced to the music of the Casa Nova Orchestra. Realizing the need for sacrifices on the part of everyone during the national Oll16I',fI9llCy. the liappas deemed it ad- visable to give up the annual spring formal in Columbia in favor of a dance iII Fayette. The usual spring thcinf- was carried out, this time in coopera- tion with the Alphas. P1'esif1'enl. MA RIAN l'II:I4If:1 1' Vice-Presirleni S6'C'l'6llC1l'.Y T1'ea.s'111'e1' NADINE TAXLOR HELEN JoNEs LI'c:I' E,xsoN Slanding: BUSCI-IART, MCCUTIIHAN, CHILES, lloBIsoN, NIQIIJEIIWIMMIQII, Cox, REED, HALI. Second row: GILBEIIT, DAILEY. ROBISON, JONES, T,u'I,oIx, PICIQETT. Exsoiv. KRMIEII, LUIQIQING, GIIEENHALGI5 Fronl: lilGGINS, WALL, DAVIS, MURRAY, PATTIJN Page 70 Bam Szgmnz 0 With 11111 s11h11111 y1'11I' 11111'111y 111111011 way. 11111 1311111 Sigs 111111211111 r11shi11g 111111111' 11111 1111111111111 111111111rs11ip 111' 131111 Y1111111111. '11111'1I' 1irs11 f11111'1i1111 w11s 11 s111111111r 1111111 i11 11111' 13111111111 111111 111' 11111 C1111serv11- 111ry. C111111s 111111 l'1gZ1I'G111?S w11r11 p11ss1111 11r11111111. 111111 illl 11ir 111' ,Q111111 1'01111ws11ip p1'11v11i11111. C1'll1I'i111S gyni w11s 11111 s11111111 of 11111 1111x1 1311111 p11r1y. O1'i,qi111111y s1'h11111111111 11s 11 pi1111i11 i11 11111 I111I'1x, rainy W01111lCI' 11111-11ssi11111111 il 1-111111g11. 111111 HS 11 S1111- s1i1111i1111 11111 1311111 1'11sh1111s 111111 1h11ir 1111111s ,Q'111111111'1111 i11 11111 1'1'11C1111r 1111x for sizzling 111111 dogs 111111 1-111111s. N111si11 s1y11111 i11 111111 11is1i111'1iv11 IIILIIIIIGI' hy 11111 011811 N11111 111lIl11. As 11 liighlight 111' 11111 I'l1S1l s1111s1111. 11111 11111111111 1311111 13111111 1111111111 w11s 1111111 i11 11111 111'11111ry. 111138111111 2111811111 1111w11 1,1l1'1I' 1110111111 111111 111i111i11' 111111 sh1111I1111 111111111111 111 11111 1111111s 111' 11111 1111811 N111'11s. 51111111 1-i1111r i11 111I'Q1' q1111111i1i11s 1111111 111 i111'11r111111i11y. 111111 11v1111 11111 11111111111'111111s 111111 11 sw1-I1 1i11111. 1111 11111' 11ig'1111 11111'11r11 11i11s w11111 11111. 1'11sh1111s w111'11 11111111'111i111111 1111 11111 i'1lS1,0I' 10111.11 1111' 11 lll1111l1,g'1l1 SIlZ11'1i. wi111 g1'il11111 s111111wi111111s 111111111 C1111s111111111 i11 i1111s1i- 1111111111 1111111u111s. I3111'kels Qffun 111 11 Very 111111111 !1lllll'P.1 f1OIl10COIll1ll,Q' 1111111111 the 1311t11s I'G11C1y 10 1111 11111111 1111111 111 111111 to 111113 C1111111r111i011. A 1111111 1111pi111i11g 11 11111111 111i1111, with 11111 1l1lll110I'S S1lOO11Ilg at 11 11111111 1111011 I'OIJI'GSCll11llg' the Jewell Car- 11i11111, was 13111111 1'11r 11rigi11111i1y. 1311111 Sigma 11111111111 w11r11 w1111-111111111 111 11 S1111111111' 1111111 i11 1111' social r110111s 01' N1C1X1l1I'I'y 111111. Hush w111111 1111g1111 with 11111 1391111 p11111g11s W0i1I'1llg 11111 1I'11C111110I1111 11ow 1i11s. D1111111 days w111'11 1111s11rv11d wit11 11111 11r,q1111iz111i1111 1-1111v1111i11g 1111 11111 G01- s1111 T1111 G11r111111 111 w1111-11 11111 si11111C1111 11111i1111s of p11111g11s. Also p11111g11s w11r11 11s111111 111 1111 11111111111 11lS1iS 111' 111110r. A still' i11i1i111i1111 1'111111w1111 11 week 12111612 111111 11111 111111p11y111s w11r11 1111w Ill91111JE'I'S 111' 1311111 Siglllil. With 1'111I'111Il 1111011111111 i11 1,0Wll wi11111111 il sp1111s11r. 11111 1311111s, 10g9l11l6I' wi111 Chi D111111. 1111111 11dv1111t11g11 ofthe 11pp111'11111ity 111 1111111 this 15111110118 or- Page 30 4 chestra leader. Daly Auditorium re- sounded with the jump tunes of Leonard and the blues songs of vocalist Myra Taylor. The originality of Beta Sigma is furthered with a continued series of afternoon tea-dances. Actives gather at the armory around l:30 p. Ill., dance to six Ellld then adjourn for dinner. Traditional with Beta Sigma are serenades. Always they are received at Howard-Payne hy a group of re- sponsive, appreciative women. lI1 keeping with the times, it was decided to hold the spring formal iII Fayette. A delicious hanquet was served iII the Parrish house at wlIiclI time graduating seniors were honored and sponsor Luther T. Spayde Illilflfx his annual discourse. The group then adjourned to Daly Auditorium to dance to the lilting strains of the Casa Nova Band. l'll'EiU'I'llll,y llI'0l.llCI'S alrsent when the picture was made include: Sam Manley. J. H. Mills: Dexter Davis. liill Zerhe. and Bill H ungate. Presidenl, Bois YAN,x'I I',x Vice-Pres idem' E. L. UREAR S6Cl'6flll'.V TI'6'ClSlIl'Pl' J. P. 'l'HocIMoR'roN BILL l R,xNc:Is Back row: T.A.I,Bo1'. SAYLES, PIIsRPoNT. BIsAvr:ns. .lACKsoN. BALI., LEECH. PAIIRISH, BIICHIE. Bocmuw, Aimnp Third row: STI-IWAIIT. EWING. DENNENY, HARRIS, BLAIII. lVIAllPlN, LUI5'I'zow, VFHUHNIAY, Lolronrzaiv. DI-zlavifns LAKE, HoI.MEs, ROBERTSON, SAVERIDE, HAIXPER, l'TAlK'l'GE Second row: WAI,L.ACE. Fonn. FRANCIS. THoGMonToN. Oni-Lan, XIANATTA, SPAYDE, II.n's. Boar: Sealed: MIIILER, T.-KYLOR, STREEP, ADAIR. HIGGINS, l.ovEI.I,. WALKI-tn, STREIGHL Page XI Clzz' Delta I It wus il tlull lilll thut tl1is gruup ul tk-11l1'z1l's sm-inllx niitulvcl nu-n lt-tl this yuan' . . . at IiI'vul'1-millict lwtwt-vn rt-- Sllfllltllllgl tu llu- wurtls pXtm11 znul Chi IM-Ita. 'l'lu- Jxttllll tllulv is no numrv .... -Xiul in its plzu-v now stznuls tlu H , . - Q. - 1 . t,ln lit-ltns. that is tlu- crux ol this stury. 'l'lut tI'tlIISl.UI'lIltltltlil liI'UlIl tlu- rvulin ut'tlu-sc'it-ntiti1- Yut'2llllIl2ll'j' tu tlu' nurrt- urtluulux tl1'4-4-lt ulptuilu-t1-u111vJn11tm1'y Ill ut tllt'lI' Ylintvr l'lUI'llltll, wlu-n Xliss lie-clty Chile-s. tluiii' qtu-on for thv vul- ning. tiiiwiltwl tlu- new 1-rvst. anul l,I'l'Sl- tlvnt liolw1't l,ilXtlt'll znniuuiu-4-ft that tluf Mann filuh was ch-sul. zuul that tfhi llc-ltu wus tlu' ulliviul nvw titlt-. It st-1-ins that tlu- o1'g1u11iza1tio11 haul wotvtl tu 1-lianigv their nunu' 1-z11'li4-1' in tlu- yvzii' tnul wuitm-tl until tlu- psyvlio- lugivul nurnuint. whit-h wus tlu- xYllllt'l' l'ltlI'Illtll. to tlixulgv tluiii' sc-vrvt. rx . . ... llutn' otluir sumatl tlt'tlYltll'S wv1'v: l'lu- traulitiunnl plvtlgt- uctivitivs lust spring whivh lIlt'llltlt'tl un iw lDI't'2llxt'l'H .it tlui gyin. with ple-tlgvs tnul clutvsz tl 'S-ni Iflli Ilrll fflIl't'll Iflllilvs l'llj4l.VS ilu' l'l'Ulll-lljl.S rllirlviluf. t'l1cwse- znul Culwu hust for tht' pros- pvctiws in xlCxlllI'I'y 1110 I'U0lll1 and that nnnunl l'loclg0 lD2lllt'0 att tlui Ar- nuiry. 'l'lu-y 1-vlolrrutt-tl with thvir hrotluii' frail. tlux Iivtu Siglnais. in a nllt'tWGOIlu st-113011 1lznu'0, l'vz1t111'i11g Harlan Leon- urtl. 'l'luty also clippvtl into tlui rt-t1l111nl' tho iuwel un Nlurcli 21. in an i11l'u1'111nl clash nhoul to thv inusit- ut' thv Coin- innnistic Cnsu Novus. The lu-ight ot' tlu-ir social svaisun Cilllltx Xlaiy l with thvir spring forinul at tlui Daily fX11clilo1'iu111 in lfalyettc. This was llI'Pl'ilt't'tl hy at lmtnlquvt ut tlu' l,tlI'I'iSll lluusv. at which the fzlculty sponsors uttmllptvtl to fault' front sight as soon as possihlv. Page H2 1 The organization pledged thirty- five men during the iirst semester, thus achieving their constitutional quota. The cardinal principle upo11 which the Chi Deltas worked this year was following its ideologies of the past in enhancing and creating a feeling of hrotherhood a11d mutuality among its members and the student body as a whole. Though the name was changed, the spirit of the old Atom Cluh was maintained. QEd.'s note: Exactly as written hy a Chi Deltj Presidenf. Bois PAYDEN V ice-Pres1'denf Sez'1'ela1'y T1'eas111'e1' SANDY COCKERELL NELSON CLINGENPEEL CLADDEN ELL1oT'r Back row: BARNHART, MCNATT, JOHANSEN, XVINTI-IRS, FILLO, DURLEY. VAN XVAGNER, IQENDALL, SAVAGE, WARREN. HORD, N. MURPHY Third row: SHAW, C. MURPHX', SHOCKLEY, BROWN, f,iILBEl1'l', JOHNSON, DUNCAN, FISHEL, Dowlz, SYMMoNuS, MUNYAN, RAVVLINGS, J. CLINGENPEEL Second row: ROEMMICH, N. CLINGENPI-JEL, XVAYLAND, ELLIOT, COCKERI-:LL, PAYDEN, KLINE. Monnow, CANNON, BAINTER Sealed: GUERRI, RIXEY, TAYLOR, HA1'NES, MURRAY, REEDER, FISCHBECK Page 83 I l N vfa K f-. a A ff sf - xkggg xr Q? N All N- is I V ii- xr I Y Y xl, H, , ffix J vb X2 ff Y X ,, X f N K X ffl! 1 X X X2 Al- Q f ,ka - -'r' I' f XR ff W ', , IK XX yd 5 1 ' 7 I 1 f ff' Rf X --J- . . :X 2' . x, 1' 'M Wi1.f43-X. :, - ' - Q , ',137xfS3?' - ' . wv,'f'a-fm-gif - 5116 3-gfyiisfx Sig ' ,' N X. ew ! . . fx, 52 - fqp, T.34,j -,' xxgifli V , X A 5 s , , V , X A A A ,,,,,, . . .., , . . ,'.-:.:f,j1v : X . F V hiv :-1 ' 1 ' ff- X Xw V E 5 5. 7 A :GW ,X 2 . MVQ, . V' Nmap-sb fxlafx-i'SE f:s?: ST'X V, XR A Q-RQ 'S- WM Y f::QSi,f. C -ag' 5 - ff ' X ff. 3 if SY? 4 fl , vga x is XF., NYG? X z Qu,-. : Kc Q w - ' Q ,,., X R 2 WE ww ES jx ae A .Amy v, Y.: A' 1, Mg... A gh. - , ?5 ldves ut, work: Th I Tlw lltlllll kicks ulf!: livin p 9 ,, Ivy go again l0y,I'0 oil'-and Over: . . . l .1uz' 86 .xv 9 Uiiivwsitx' of Iowa quintet exzuuiues music . . . :uit K they just playful Sklllltlil Pretty. isu't NP: NYi1at's the trouhlv. Ur0ar?: Dr. Ruff: . . und with this c-rmm a Page' 57 v 31, .' ':-in -rf W. u,,,-I 9'-,..m......o ' L... .lov-zs. Wmawzn. Unrzuz. AI-QAIIII, Puzmzrr. Bnoww, 'I'uum1.xx zzgout 0 lu addition to cloadlinv and dis- count worrivs thv Ragout has heen lllll,2'll1'Cl with lJllSlIll'SS-Illklllilgtll' lroulmlv this yi-ar. Andy llarrisou loft all tho SPlll0Sll'I', and lhv publications hoard 4-lvctm-cl liclfliv Urvai' to lill lhv vacaiicy. lu NlilI'Cll ho loft school and Bill Zvrbv was svlvc-tvcl lo Iiuish thv joli. As usual iucliviclual pllotograpliic flvacllinvs wvrv a llPilflilC'lll'1 lmusiucss was had . . . no arlvvilisiug: Copy had to lw writlvn: slacks of proofs lo ho rvaflg organizations gavv us trouhlvl Xwlllll' 5070101 glsrfdllall-,2.f I94I-42 p0 55ASS0GP5xQ But now all is over and ware all lrwuds again. Marian Piclu-tt. Hvlou Joucs. Dim- uiitll Lee Brown. and Hill Zvrlw assislvcl tho oditor while the husiuoss managers Illilill' good use ol' the almilities ol' Dulw Aliill'fl and Holm Rolwrtsoii. Yalualmlo assislaucv has ln-vu ron- clvrvcl hy Nlr. Nlaulaiu. lilll'QOI'-liilllil liIlQ'l'ilYlllg Cillllpilllyl Nlr. llassmau, Nlid-Statv llflllllllgl' Company: and Dr. SlPYl'llS. llili'lllly arlvisor. lfllllllllf. A. L. rlllll'RM.XN Bzzsiness illarmgers ll,x1m1soN. OREAR. ZERBIC P 11 gf SN 4 Slurzfling: SMITH, NVAGWEII, SCUGISINS, lNl,fxnQUlf:'l 1'n. lilrsu, l'l'r'l's, lil'Fl lCX, Fnnn, Munn-xx Sealezl: lilTDAKUNS'l'. Hmm: DL'ltl.l1IH'. Nl.-mx ollegzim Q ln filling the role of Central's stu- dent newspaper, NIissouri's oldest stu- dent publication''sthe Collegian at- tempts to mirror the moods and opinions of the eollege student body. ln the Column, Campus Opinion, members of the student body may either praise or condemn. Other weekly features are the popular Eagle Eye, by the editor. and Sideline Com- ments, sports feature. With business men eomplainng, Business Nlanager James Darley. has had a dillieult time raising money for Editor John H1-rt. ln spite ol' preva- lent l'our-page issues. the Collegian has enjoyed a successful year. A eonipetent stall' anxiously await any awards that may fall their way from both state and national CUllC,Q'l2ll-P press eompetition. Editor. JOHN HERT Bll.S'l.II6S.S' Alanager. JA mis IDVRLEX Page 80 Nlumliny: lim'1n1.xx. Dl'l'm1s. IglHlNlC. tlmm, lirsu Nerzlwl: S4-matzixs. Yrzuxiu. ltursn. l'.x'l'lue:n, Nlllillll-I Ch rzktzizn A.s1s'0czZ1z'z'0f1 0 Thr- ffvntrul fiilI'iStitlIl :xSSUt'itltiUll Cunlpus. Occusimls to lw pzn'tit'l1lurly iilllllfilflti its pmgrzlni for 1911-12 by 11-ll1mnlre1'0tl urv visits lay the Xl. S. tl. fiiI't't'tiIlgI i'l't'SilIllilll su-tilt anctivitivs. Ui' fifllllllllliil- WUIM Dux Of' l'l'ilN4'I' wllivll illvllltlvtl an t'illlI't'il svlwic-Q-, il sc-i'vic'0. and Hvligious linlphusis Wvolt. mixc-r in tht- l'zn'risl1 llousv, il hush 'l'l1oCo11t1'ul CilI'iStiilll fXss0t'iz1tion JI'UQ'l'tlIll and il frvslnnznl illll2lit'lII' hour. ffilllillvl l'0lll'0SPlllS U10 Cvllllbillvft rt'- ligious uctivittivs ul' the' Nlctllodist Stu- Uliltxl' zu-tivitivs vspvt-inlly popular clvnt UI'QtlIliZElti0ll, tho Student Chris- with tht' stutlvnts Imw In-vn an iinpor- tiun EIlfitxtlY0l'. and that Baptist Student aint illillltxllfk' on tlw religious lift- uf' tht' Union. Pre.v1'fler1!, linnn-1 Stzmzcslxs I '1'f'f'- P1'0.s'irle11l SP1'r'0lal'-v Tl'6llSlll'8I' DUNN!-I NIICHII-I C,mom'N Lnsm IIERBEBT Brsn Page 00 v xg- bw ..., Slf1ml1'r1g.' 'l'Hl'IV-XIKN, IIIAIIVII Dlx. STI-IX ENS. Um:-ut, D1 m,m. limm Seule4l.' Nluzml-2, Denis, PILIC. Cm'14r:nFl.l.. II-KIKIKISUN 0 67'lZ77167Zf These nine student hotly officers direct the aifairs of ,fIOYPI'llIllPIlt. on the Central campus. Meeting every Nlcnlday morning at 10:00, they plan and direct the collegiate pI'OgI'tilll. Dr. lx. P. Stevens is sponsor. Page 91 Il 'i Leif! lo riglllx Snoukm-:v, Wivrow. lliinnnzx, Pn.1-3. DEAN AYDERSOY. Miss XYELLS. VEST.-xl., PICKETT, T.u'Lon H -P House ozmvil 0 With more authority tha11 in former years and with house iniprovements continually before them, the members ofthe House Council have been a busy group this year. A complete new pla11 of dormitory government was adopted. each girls' voice in it being as important as the next one's. A girl has the privilege of appealing to the council if she feels her penalty for rule in- fringement unjust. Her conduct de- pends upon her own good judgment. This year has also been o11e of decided advancement in the social field. The newly established fun night every Saturday is an acclaimed successg the inter-dorm and faculty dinners have been well-planned and fun for all: the Sunday afternoon chats have bce11 helpful both personally and socially: and the new defense projects have reached their expected popularity. The girls of the council feel they have been repaid i11 results for the time and thought it takes to make living conditions more pleasant. Pl'6.9Iiff6II.f, VIRGINIA YEs'r.u. TYff'6-PI'P.9ilf0IZf, PEGGY PILE Secretary. H,xRR1E'r WINTON Page' 92 Slfznding: BHADSHER. Fonn. PITTS, lliczcsiaxnorasxl. lNIr:lfA1x1,.ANIm 'l'uUaxnw, Y.'xw.x'1'1'A. Coma-Jn, Hanna. Scouuiws, Housa Sealed: SEN. TYILKERSUY. XYILSOY. XVARFORD, Coma, Cowes. PATRICK, Dn. GIFT. Tumus, KIAPEN F zztzzre T eelefzers I Tl1e Williani T. Harris chapter of Future Teachers of America is closing its third year on the Central campus. One of three chapters in Missouri and one of 8-L in tl1e nation, this group has experienced continual growtl1 si11ce its beginning. The purpose of this organi- zation is to provide for students pre- paring to teacl1 an opportunity to have practical experience in working out educational prohlenls and to keep them up with the niodern trends i11 education. The Future Teacher movenient grew out of the desire for student nieniher- ship in the National Educational Asso- ciation and was lirst hegun in 1938. lt is the hope and desire that through inenihership in lf. T. A. stu- dents will learn to he proficient teach- ers. The Future Teacher niovenient eniphasizes the principles of good living. lt expects niuch from its lll6llllJE'I'SZ it gives l11l1Cll2 it nieans 1nucl1. President, FLORENCE COLE Vice-President! Secretary Tl'6l1S1lI'6I' EARL WILSON FINIS CAPPS ELEANOR VVARFORD Page 93 T he Players 0 'l'l1e tfentral tfnllege Players re- turned tu the ealnpus eleyen strung and with their sponsor. lletsy Worrell. he- gan loolting for a play at the lirst meeting. Dr. Page ut' the linglish De- partment suggested uneuyering one ul the lust plays. llis interest was aroused tllI'0lIQll researeh as an associate editol ol' a volume of said lust plays, and his enthusiasm was iniparted to Nliss Worrell who 4-hose to direet William l3unlap's l alse Shame. lnitial try-outs lim' the lirst play uneuyered several l'I'ttSlHIlPll pussihili- ties and at least one ol' the linds proved her worth. lletty .lane Howell, tlsee- ola. did a niee pieee ol acting' in her lirst role as the liaroness l last'hland -Xnuther l.I'PSllIllilll in the person ul' tht yillian. Xal ljthklllilll. turned in a niet lN'I'liUI'lllitIlt't'. 'l'he veteran arturs liddic lfurd and :Xl rllllllfllltltl turned in theil usual good perilirnianees, while other ineinhers ol' the east did equally well inalting for a sueeessful heginning. 'l'he puhlieity aeeurded this drzuna hrought many letters to the ulliee ut' the direelur, inquiring as to where seripts might he lll11 . . . muxl lcnuu' Ilzeir lir1e.vfSk1'pper'x sl11l'll'l1y1,' purchased . . . form ol' presentation and like important questions. The Players practice of two-niglit perl'urina11ee was continued as was reserved tieltet sales. Alter a hriel' rest period. during which. tllftlllgll virtue of national Crisis and war entry. people lbCt'?ll1lt' laugh eonseiuus it was lll0lt,Q'lll prulitahle tu produee a ernnedy. Mrs, Hampstead- Leiglif' play' hy llarry .lalnes Smith starring llelaine Lewis in the title role played to a eapaeity two-night house. Figuring largely in this production were inexperieneed actors . . . nlany fresh- men . . . l'lay's had spots were oll'-set hy some yery line acting on the part ul' a few. The Players availed l,llGlllSE'lYGS ol' a most competent electrician in the Page 94 u person of Ray Stevens, freshman from Palmyra, New Jersey. His keen mind and natural aptitudes plus working ability have added much to the audi- torium stock of electrical equipment. At the semester three students, Betty Jane Howell, Lucy Eason, and Betty Milburn were initiat.ed into Play- ers in an impressive ceremony centered around the stage in Classic Hall. To close the season Miss Worrell directed lVloliere's famous comedy 6'The Doctor in Spite of Himself. A well- chosen revival, well-acted and well- received by the play going campus The event of the year was the year's end banquet, changed this year to a dutch supper in the director's studio. Awards were made to the out- standing stars of the season's produc- tions. P1'esidem', E. A. FORD Vice-Presidenf, A. L. THURMAN Sec1'eIa1'y-Treasurer, DE iAUN FINNELL Slanding: ROBERTSON, STENVART. VVAHDEN, HARRIS, THoGMoRToN, XVAGNER Seated: HONVELL, EASON, THURMAN, FORD, FINNELL, MILBURN, XVINTON. LEWIS Page 95 - Y -..- 5 f- i - 'i 'i'3i' lin-vs' llurch ing Ham! Soi S l'r1gl'essnr fl nrlersrm Band-Anderson 0 The lmys' marching hand hegan a strenuous seasun's workout yery shortly alter registration. l reslnnen had heen practicing: each al'ternuun lor a week when the upper-classnlen returned to giye them a hand. Director li. lx. fXndersun w ith the assistance ul' ltuhert Stepp hegan to coordinate their ina- neuyers, and also tu teach the new men the seriousness ul' the l'eud with the athleticdepartment. When they were ahle tu get on Davis lield. they inarched for hours un end. and when Coach liline's huys entertained the team from Principia. .'xIlflPl'SHll.S unit drilled in unison at the hall'. As the season went un. they played hetter and with their lIllIlI'OYt'Ill0Ill coupled with the intri- cate arrangements and inaneuyers en- gineered hy Stepp. the hand showed up well hefure a liuge ll0Illt'COIlllIlQ crowd un Nun-inlver 20. Soon thereafter they quit the lield and tuula tu the cunserya- tury for another series of grueling practices in competition for the prized touring hand. ln Septeniher Professor Anderson hegan his sixteenth year on the Central campus. Now he is engaged in a search l'ur a successor tu Stepp who deserts for the army. Pas: Un 1 ,, , ......,., ..,.-,--,,.,awwwmw1. m .Mr '1 'r'!'J:! e f A, ..'.f,. 1x.',c'H'1'?f--'f.Q:1f'3k' lm- fe: lfzr- l'S73w:74 'f fY-'llfffl X W l Girls' QTIHFCII ing Band Bmw'- O The girls' band undergoes the same toughening exercises as does the male organization. They are drilled and re- hearsed separately and then are merged for their joint maneuvers under the lights on Davis Field. Under the tutelage of Professor Stepp and the baton of drum major Mable Faye Wardeii, Joplin, they do well for them- selves and always seem to maintain the standards set by those who went before. Color bearers: Jean Green- halge and Kathryn Reed. Page 97 Tu'irlir1g Corps T zwirlers Seeing service before tl1e two or- ganizations is the twirling corps of fourteen girls captained by senior Geor- gia Warnoff. For four years Blackie has tossed the baton i11 front of the marching bands and has done specialty work. Training now being given EIS- sures us that choral work will reign next season. These girls deserve much praise for their performances, and in the past have shared tl1e spotlight with the entire Anderson aggregation, appearing at varied functions. l Y s -4 I,PI'NlllIll1'l.' lf.ilIlf'I'Ilf'lXl llintnxs. Annu. liol.l5. l iai.im'n.tIox. lh-Lung l'L'1:i4i-:'1 r.XX1l,soN.Fm. litblCT'I'Nlil'l, lil'SSlCI,l.' xlltllllli. Nl xi Pix: tlflulcsl Sl l l'ox, Yltltblllfl lBllSS1l1IIIl lix,xNs3 tSu.rj Xltttlnivisi-1I.1,. PAIKHISII, H,xnPl4:ng tglcvor- flionj l,osi4:1,i,: lTl'lllll1lElSl .luzksox NN u.i.u:i-:. Yorwrai-zn. Zl'i.xlF. Sxwisrzlxs. Amix-wo:-:iii tlfrencli lzurnsj S'1'i1:l-P. Doss: tl3ur1'!umf.wJ li. tlnung Ain4:nxa'i'. li, tlnfnog QTrumlmm-st lluirfzri. lllooixs. Alli-KIJUH. Comix. li.'ll.I.. Nlrtxrziis, ltuuan, tlos'1'i,m': tliussest Srincrzv, Bt r1.r:n. Wmnlax. lncr.: lPcrc11ssiorzJ Nloomf. lioorzns. l,ll.t'llFlI. VlllltlRN'I'UY, Ihiss. Roms. 0716677 0 ,Xppcaring hcforc a capacity crowd ol' enthusiastic listcncrs. thc Ccntral ffollvgc tlonccrt Hand IJI'PSPlll-Nl its annual lltllllt' conccrt under thc dircc- tion ol' Prof. licith li. Andcrson, lfchu- ary 27. l 4-aturcd soloists we-rc Prof. Luthcr 'lf Spaydc playing l inalc from thc tilonccrto tire-goriano hy llictro .-X. Yon on thc Ilannnond organ. Nlaric Nloorc playing ll Ycntou hy liricci- aldi as a llutv solo. Nancy Xlaupin. Contralto. sang Saint Sacns' Hy llcart at thy Sm-cl Yoicm- and cornctist Donald Jackson playcd king Carni- val hy liolnnnir lxryl. Gt'I'SllWlIliS e-vcr-popular Rhapsody in lilac Bama' hrought such applause that l'iI'OIll Africa to Harlem was played as an cncorc. Thc conccrt closcd on a patri- otic notc with assistant hand dircctor Hohcrt Stcpp's spccial. Yaricd arrangc- incnt ol' 'l'hc Star Spangled lianncrf' Spf-cial lighting vlfccts addcd color illltl cll'cctiwm-ss to tho cntirc program. For t-ight days thc hand travclcd ovcr northwcst Xlissouri llI'0SOIlllll,Qf ap- plaudcd pcrlorinanccs in Xlolwrly. lirooltlicld. Nlarcclinc. tifliillicothc. 'l'rc-nton. Hltlllillly. CillllttI'Oll. St. .lo- scph. Plattc City. lxansas City. Excel- sior Springs. Lcxington. and Marshall. Page us 49 i t i' , gi I as ' H k B l 'Nl NI W 1 Hur I l,Il'Hl nr Pu x I N11 nu D ix xx ac row: ,uwu.uvr, .ANI-:.i II.l,l'IIi.. Aww., imzkensom, ,x 1. 4, -o -, ' x 't:s,1 ll 43, 1 iz Third row: Ili-zixwnox, flUI,l'I. IIIINIPIIIKIIAIS. IDUISY. KICENI-ZR, lilumizlx, NluCoY, 'l'no4:uon'r1w, Spnoic Second raw: Inc!-IK. liuzu. tinoizn. Kuna, lncvxiwx, I,m,1Kium':iH:, BlVSlZlIAlt'l', Nluimw, Wmzoxow Ff'UI1I'I'01l'.' Nl1:CU'rciiu:. RICICID. Ciumg llrvrrzn. ljllliKl'ITT, Bum, Bl-'SQIIUDXIL xYI'Y'I'UN. XYIl.KI4IIiSUN fzppellaz Choir 0 For tho A Cappvlla Choir, this year meant tho perpetuation ol' p1'm-vtlilig high standards set up unclvr the clirer- tion of Profossor Luthvr T. Spayde. Early in the fall thc- Choir was invitvcl to appear again in the- Nlolwrly audi- lLOI'llIIll7glYlIlQ it thv rlistiuctiion ol' being the only choir vw-1' I'0qllt,'SlCfl for a return eligagellwiit. Mtvi' the annual popular Home Concert on April ltlth. the choir left April 12th on a 1000-illilv Concert tour of Southvastvrn Missouri. Following a tliref'-clay sories of Concerts in and around St. Louis. they continuvd Director. l'P.oF. LUTHER T. SPAXDE Pagr 90 soutliwarrl. thou xiorlwcl hack up to JGlli0I'S0l1 City wlico-iv tln-5' gawv their twvntivtll and last concvrt on 4-Xpril 19th. Spot-ial fvaturvs on tho prograiu werv rc-aclings hy 'l'onnny Iilrowvri a X't?l'Sti'-Slwillxlllg trio with lls-le-n l'uc'lwtt. Carolyn Willie-rson. and llarrivt Win- ton: a nialv quartc-to coniposc-fl ol' liflflie- liarnharti, .lack Nlillvr. Dan lihuit-an, and .lay l'i0rpointi. Etldim- Urvar was the ill1l10tlIlCt,'I' for tho group and svnior assistant Doynv Mit-liiv st-Iwi-tl as Stu- dent Nlanagefr, assistvtl hy Danie-l Mt-- Coy. Sfllflellf Ijl.l'6'l'l0l'. Doxwn lhlItIHIFZ Huck mir: Nl xl l,I,lili. iiiuximi-Jn. lh-Lv. Houma. Ili-ix. XY.u.m-zu. XYATKINS. xl.XRKI'X1 Smlfwl: Hunan. Umm. l'nlXTz. i':LSl l. I ,u1u:ii1i,u, llnmgnrszw Theology O liiclcr llic Icziclcixliip ol' Dr. i'lliWill CilI'iSliiiI1 Ethics. amd G0d. Tl1c Wznllici' :md limp Roland HUUIIP as Ncw Pcucc and llCCOIlSil'llCli0Ilu was spunsurs. :xml Donald Hunk us prcsi- discusscd during thc sccoud scmcstcr. flcnl. llic 'I'I1culog'S il2lYt' PIl.iOj'l'Ii il most lliglllig-1,15 of thi- Wal- im-ludgd 21 'l'f'f '5Sl. l FVUV- TIN' fflwlllifflliffll 'WS picnic ut thc park. thc llllllllili Imttlc on Hlcli lwim' U 'l 1Ul this PiW'1'- UMW thc gricliron with thc doctors. il lllC'Pi- ll2lliY0iy ill lilt' iltlllllxs ul' SIJUIISUTS. ing willy Ryxligifjlls Enlphgigig XXYQQIQ Pape-rs lmw lu-cn prcpurcfl on Sllcll Lcziclcrs. and an rclrcat to thc Lukc of upics us Cillll'i'il Rclzitimisllipf' tl1cUzurks. Pl'6.YIill6lIf. DON Comm Iice-Pfm-1'fle11I. IXICIHIIS Ihm-:ia S6't'l'6'ffll'-V- T1'ea.v111'e1'. EARL PRINTZ Pac: 100 Slumling: III-:IfImEIx. l':I,l.I0'l', PIIII,IPs Sealed: BI'Tm1I-mn, Rl l'lIERFllRD, Du, l3.xsKE'r'I'. DHxI,xIIIcI4: It Ph ' Alpha! 9 Central's Beta Chapter of Delta Phi Alpha is 0110 of tlIe S11lZlll9Sl, organiza- tioIIs 011 the Campus llllti it is of good standing. Delta Phi Alpha is a na- tional lIoIIorary German fraternity and was founded at Wolford College in South Carolina iII 1929 by a graduate of Central, Dr. James A. Chiles. Its qualifications for niembership are an S average iII all subjects, at least twelve hours of college German and a eon- tinued interest in the study of GerIIIan. Meetings are held onee a month in the lIonIe of Dr. tilld Mrs. Baskett and have DCQII largely soeial alfairs this year. Nlargaret Deinaree a1Id Phoebe RlltlllPI'i'Ol'Cl were the only HlUlllllBl'S at the beginning of the year but four other German students were eligible Elllll were soon taken iIIto tlIe organization. As a group which fosters under- standing ol' aI1d toleranee toward an- other eulture we feel that Delta Phi Alpha is doubly lIllIJOI'lilllt today and hope it may long st.and for the same ideals. President, PHOEBE RIJTHERFoRn Secrelary, lh'lARGARET DEMAREE Page 101 T1'easIu'er, VVILLIAM BUTCHER E sguzras' of Rfzytlzm 0 Is your UI'Q'tlI1lZilllUIl pluuuiugg' an sm-iul t-xt-util ll' so. lu-rv is sunu- guml ut-wsl 'l'h4- lisquirvs ol' Hhytluu lrtnu tht- vzuupus ol' tilt-iitml fifulltfgv urt- uuw zmnilulmlt- liar your Pllqitljlllvlll. NY:- would lilw wry Illllt'll to furnish that musit' for yuur ut-xt fluiivv. party. show ur hzuiqut-t. Hur unit has pluyvfl tliruugliout Xlissuuri uufl lxzulsus for 1-vvrytl1i11,Q' l'rmu te-an tlauicm-s to tlu'utric'ul work. Wt- urv t-quippt-cl with huth formal uutl iulurmzil uttirv. thv lwst in instrunwuts zuitl sound vquipuivut. uutl tht' lutvsl iu pupulzu' musit-. VM- liuw st-wrul urigiuul uowltivs which urv 4-spew-iully utluptuhlv for lNlIltlllt'lS illltl pzulivs. Il' you wuut tu ht- assure-tl ol' an wry Sllt't't'SSlilll uutl t'll-itlyillllt' t'Yt'lllllg' to 'Wlusiv iu an l3isti1u'tiw xlttIlllt'I'.-i plvaisv vmitalrt our husiuc-ss lllttllitQ't'l'. I3a1lvSti'e-4-put that lfuyvttt-zttltllwss . . . l5ou't Iwsitutv for thc- spring tlutvs uri' living Imultt-tl rupitlly .... H Thus rvzuls an llmrm lvttvr wc:-iitly sf-ut out hy this musical 0I'rQ'2llllZ2ltl0Il. u 7 I Snuppwl in urliun . . , lI1llt'igll'l'l'Il.S lmirr'uI.' It-ttt-r which has uc-ttccl lllt'lll muuy rtfplivs and tl solid sunuuvr hooking. JXIIIUIIQ othvr StltlltlS, the-y will zlppvur ut suuuuc-r rt-sorts in tifolurzulo Sprillgs. tfolurzulo, :uid tilouwuucl Springs. Colo- raiclu. 'l'h05 urv liilclvvitlvtl as yvt. hut the-y :nay hcgiu their sunmwr work with il joh ut Xlurtiu's ou thv Plaza in lxuusus City. Thv thrvv hoys who Coulprist' this trio hurl llt'YOI' uwt until llI'0SllllltlIl wvek lit-rv at Ce-utrul. Whilv hluwing urouucl tht- vnu thaw' got tht- hug uutl lltlgilll swinging. 'l'hvir first Pll,Q'2iQt'lllGlll was pluyvcl vurly in tlctohvr ut the 'l'igPr llntvl. fltllllllllllil, for tht' Sutll1'clz1y Niglitt-1's. SWtllllx llwtilty cluh. Siucv that timt- tht-y limo played evcrytllilig from lllt'ill0I'S tu lxlIllt'I'tll clir0Ctor's han- que-ts. Page 102 o There is room enough on the campus for two musical organizations, and this trio serves well its purpose. Shortly after organization they were booked for Wayside lnn. Moberly. and have played there on week-end nights throughout the school year. lt is from this engagement that Lovell received the inspiration for 0119 of the tunes that he is to have published shortly. ln working stage shows for the local theater they became connected with the H. L. Griffith circuit and have the opportunity to tour the south- western part of the United States on one-nighters the latter part of the summer. At the present their catalog in- cludes 235 tunes from standard to original arrangements. Bill Lovell. composer, has two tunes up for publica- tion: Wayside Boogie, and Stop, Halt, and Fall in Love. Dale Streep. kansas City, is busi- ness manager and serves as booking agent. while Bob Zulauf, also ol' kansas City. arranges and fronts for the group. This trio is the first of its type on the campus in solne time, and tlms far they have made a success of their enter- prise. For jobs out ol' town they pick up a drummer friend from lxansas City. Summer uniforms have been or- dered and the boys. four in number. are planning on a bang up summer's job of' entertaining. ZULAUF, LOYELL, STHEEP Page 103 um N0 Ll O After goi11g thru so111c rather sensa- tional experiences 011 their road trip tl1is sunnner. the hand returned to the Central CHIIIIJIIS. The boys. after the loss ol' lien Dover. decided Oll a cooperative organization. witl1 all IIIGIII- liers sharing the prolits and the work equally. The 1131119 Casa Nova was adopted, and J. T. Harper was lltllllfxfl front lllilll. The llilllfl I'PlLlll'llCCl with Ollly six old inenihers, Higgins, Jackson. Hun- gate, Borg, Savereide, a11d Harper Hllll replacenieiits were i11 order. After careful deliberation the following addi- tions were 111ade-Ji1n111y Adair a11d Caushy Cole i11 tl1e sax section, Johnny VVallace i11 tl1e trunipet section. Paul Hartge o11 tl1e tI'OllllJOI10 Elllfl George Ewing Ull tl1c hass liddle. Ill keeping with their cooperative policy, the various tasks necessary to keep it i11 its top-ranking positio11 are assigned to the hand nienihers. Jack Higgins sets tl1e dates Hllll rehearses the outlit: .less Harper hesides fronting the Hull: swings Delilah! hand serves as business nianagerg Paul Hartge l1as cl1arge of equipment, and several of the boys write arra11ge111e11ts. For rnany years the hand l1as lacked just 0116 thing-an attractive feniale vocalist. Not so this year how- ever. for the Casa Novas were fortu- nate i11 ohtainirig talented Dorothy Hendren. fresl1n1a11 at Central. Dot was at l1er best singing sweet tunes, a11d was entliusiastically received wherever the hand played. Witl1 the turning of the semester. Bill Hungate and Dorothy Hendren left the CHIIIIJIIS. The two existing vacancies were lilled wl1e11 Howard Ftllfllllklll. junior from New Franklin, took over the sax post a11d Ruth Walker, blonde freslnnan vocalist Callle i11 as featured singer. Page 104 4 Throughout the year, the band has played at practically all dances given by the Student Body and the various fraternities and sororities. Versatility has always been present in the arrange- ments presented by the band. .litter- bugs, those who like sweet tunes. rhuinba addicts, even lovers of the waltz, conle away well satisfied with the niusic they have heard. The Casa Nova's job has been hard this year what with the necessity of iilling vacancies, but they have done admirably. Critics say it is the best in years. Rjy Slanding: EWING, COLE, HARPER, JACKSON, H,kRTGE Sealed: HIGGINS, WALLACE. S.u'EnE1DE, Bono, ADAIR, FELDMAW, xv.-KLKER Page 105 nl. I' f. 'fx . . , .' - l X n. xx, if i- , - x Xyi--K X , l , X kung: . - Q Pup Davis 1'm-Iam-sg Nliss Ihiflgfv and Pruett in-al' vivwj: Nliss Nlilftllil. istrzu' . . .3 Tlwy always mum- Inu-lx- H. W. Aflkisscul. IlllI'S2lI'2 Phi Rho kappa 4ntf-rlzmins 4lfrl's. notv: and thvy I'lxflllSl'd lo buy UI',Q'illliZtltiUll spzlcvjz l-2-3- . . .Y Mr. Al Thurrran Editor 914 GOUT 1 2 RA Central 044117 Mixer February 20, 197-L2 College Fayette, Missouri Deer Mr. Thurrmn: Your Centml College beauties were all too 'bmutif UE: P' so I ed Ln the ent h the following results: 53 W4 of ul for one man to possibly judge e land to The boys all agreed that you gave me a ult, assigmment, and we hope that our s ions will satisfy the Central Colle dent body Ve're only sorry that every the pls cou1dn't. vin. 1 s yesr's UT! 'I I f cerely, I U P 107 TODAY, THE TOPS IN MUSICAL ENTER- TAINMENT, GLENN MILLER HAS ONE OF THE FINEST BANDS EVER ASSEMBLED. OUR SINCERE THANKS TO A VERY BUSY AND TALENTED MAN WHO TOOK TIME OFF TO JUDGE THE BEAUTIES FOR THE 1942 RAGOUT. .v,wx-M W .5 w c., - -.,-fr:-1-:W -Am' W :fE?e.Iff?15E3-fi 5311 Nw --r:,aA1E-'::3:'- 5-1 Ir.: , . :SM . , , ,Q.1,3.,Qx:,x.nQ4 Q : -5 -i f , , we - vw x ,i:,f:1kgw.Qv4 LN- 1.f:3':ai:::-1':i1gQ x V ., Q, ,W H . . f- ' +I . r , ,. mer' X E-'H fi, , A - writ.-41133 ,f.:-4.3 :Pr faq-1 :5fg:':,:v , 1 Q' 'Sw wergrksifs V 1'1- 1' ' . 14-'zgagg -rw - QNs,:g54,g-523-3313.21.5.gs. r will ' . X, -5 .6 . X .Q .ax,g15g- 'Q - I I f 1' f2':1'f:, x gg,rSTQ?k3aEa:f:s,s:f:e,'-f1.1' ., - '- 2'. 1Ll:22-www X , .r - - fi-.EQAQQQNI-x . .- 4, SX 1 :,:-w,:gm4'N.5x 3.1-1 11' ,: ' ' gfjhj:.b'mg-- X ...ga-:: -f-1 my f NSN. X2-. ' . 4 N - :1 2Iaif': if . f f n '! Nvil lilalir. llolm-cmlnilng lxing. c-mnvs from Troy, Missouri. A-X llulllwlllutics Illilqilll' . . . sl udvl1l lmody prosidvnt . . . livin Siglllil . . . now in Los Angvlvs. lfulil'orniu studying IIl0tl'0I'OlOg'y for the- Unilvcl Slutvs APIIIN Mr Corps. I 1'r1Qv' 110 . H W '. 3 NE1Ciillt?VFHyYiOI', HOllltxCOI1lill,Q' Qui-vii, hails from LF'XiIlgi,OIl. Missouri. A sf-nior urls major . . . Pi kappa Tlwtu . . . nrt club IlI'GSidPllt . . . C0i0I'-iJ0iiI'PI' . . . plans to do gradiiatv work. 5 1 :S 1 V 1 Q 5 I HCJlll9COIllilll2' o11 the wevk-vlid of Novmilwi' 220 prowd to he- the most, Suu 4 ssl ul ill years. vVf ilLilGI' was pf-1'ff-Ct. i1llllfiI'0KiS of olcl grads returned and plan- were Carried out pvrfectly. A most elalmoratc week-oiifl of 1-I1l1e1't1z1ii1l11e11t1 . . . o1,g zation cliiiners. smokers. reuiiions. Jvwoll-Coiltrzil 011119. l1o111PCf ll'10' 1 Puge 111 ,C JI ll ,, f 1111011 2 .L, . , I5 ' J R 2 XY r' N ik., 415952 I mx : 2 f '-Q-wx..-fx-x - f JJ- , .fv t . W ' A ff.. U O Pi lxazppu 'l'Iu-lu riflvs :muy with I'UUIllI IXiIlQilllllfllH'4'Il wail fUl'IlilI'illlU.S vup.6Llu-lxil1,Q'.Dzaih-5. mul lluvis utup lwgizlllillg' . . . Hlilil' ilillql huppyfz '14--xxinllillglHuuU:lflmfl hmm .. .1 'Twzls ai llil'1' ifllxil . . . hut . . .1 All- Hl'fIIl'IliIIj.l' alumni gznllwr in tha- url ulhm-1' lllllllIll4'l . . Phi Rho lxalppzlx Pau' III v efmg ,npevfe Alpha actives and iiillllllltlf' lvrealxlllst hut. l4'o1'fl lady with lhv 1-xposurv. at Howard Hotel: Which all IJTOYPS7- lfiiuiellg And this. kids. won tho prizv they used to have one: At last--tiliv for originality! two Bush twins: GCl1ti0llltlIl with the Page llj R 30.7 Q I , ,MQIQSQ1 Eli I l f I O Nico shzxcloxxs . . . ilu-y won thc game T-0: Cockorell. Rockwell Kent, and Dr. Stevens llurry lo lluwzud Payne fOI'?dlIlll0I'lQ Quevn Taylor p1'GSe11ts tho ball to .lem-ll caplaill lwforv kickoff of llOIll9C0llllllg game: Suooks is tired l'aL'e' ll-I T , 1 C , S l 1 j.1'I'lilll'UIl lmpeluls reported lor the llll lifzrlc l'UIl'.' N11N,x'l l', VIXKXIAIH, l.r11-11:11, llUl'l'I N. l,UxI'I. II ww-'s, SKYLI-IS 1vlIfl'1lI'Hll'f f1UI.l'I, .l. XX Xl.I.l'1X. f1l,lNIil'INl'l I'Il.. 1:llXS'l'l'IliY. SXNI'Il41Nl'1X. SI'l.I,IX xx. Nluu-m' S4-mm! mmf I'm,xxn. Soul-gxsux, Xllrulri Il xxxl.lxus. l lI.I.Kr. Ihncxmlru, XllllKlKUXY, Ihxlgx' Ifirxl I'4lll'.' lfuuzu Ixl,lx'li. llnluv. XXINTICIKS, .luihsux Sll1llIIxI.I'IY. Yxx'x'I l'x. l xsIl1u4:4th. ll. Nlnlmmm, SPIIIYGICR, S1 'll xvlcnm rl l'lcn r w - 0 lhe l9lAl Ioutlmll season opened all ffm-ntrul on Sl'lDll'IlllN'l' 9. as fifty-hve - - . . . . pI'ilt'lft'1' IIIICIUI' llle lllleluge ul' Coz fleorge lxlille. fi0llSIliC'll0llSlb' :missing was the Ihilllliliill' IIIISIHIIQ figure of l'urmer Cuz lf. N. fllingenpeel who is on il ye: tial nr Q leave clue to illness. Lust season marked CliII,Q't'IlIWCl.S iifteenth year as CCIllI'ill,S ullllelie director. and Kline wus IIIUYPLI lo head COQICII after fifteen years us Clillgfs ilSSiStillll. Seven letternlen were I'GtllI'IliIlg fronl lust year: Holm Yilllilttil, Bill Nlormw, Holm Shoekley. J. VV. Hord, Page 116 Bob Jackson and Willy Winters. Nor- man Murphy had earned a provisional letter. With much to be desired of a starting eleven, Kline drew heavily on his promising freshman crop and began pointing the team for the lirst game of the season, an intersectional clash with our Methodist brothers of Baller Uni- versity at Baldwin, Kansas. A completely new football system was introduced in the Central ranks with the advent of the T formation and expectations werc high as the Eagles .journeyed to Baldwin on Friday, September 26, to meet the Halter team. But the game did not alford a fair test zllosl valuable man of llze year, Bob Slzockley . . . soon to pred ic! wealller for army air corps! Page II7 Cu-r'upl11inS lvflllflllll mul Slmrkleuv Sllllllillfjlj' congrallllrzle Ihen1seI1'es.' for the new fornnition because during the greater part of the afternoon the ball was being handled by the very capable liaker backs. VVhen the Eagles did handle tl1e ball. the fumble was there to mar the play. The Eagles fumbled everywhere, from their own ll-yard line to the Baker 2-yard line where the lxansans were given a mo- mentary scare. but recovered quickly and went on to score. Baker scored once in the first quarter, once in the second, once in the third, Hllfl twice in the fourth. The final gun saw Central on tl1e wrong end of a 32-0 score. fl ,Q F ,- lfmivlws S4'lmpf'rkolle'r. Kline, uml ll righl look zvorriwlltv on as .leirell spoils lIllHl?f'UIIII.I1!l. 7-II. TI10 flvnlral fans saw lllt'lI' team in ac-tion on tho night ol' Friday. Uc- tolwr 3. for thv lirst linw NVllPll the liaglvs play-cl host to Principia College of Sli. Louis. Corning bark lirilliantly aflvr the-ir c-rnslling de-foal by Hakvr. x n tllv Eaglvs he-ld t,llf'll'11011-COllf9I'0I1Cf' rivals to one t0llCllCl0WIl thc first half. thv touchdown lxf-ing the result of a long pass. Central camo back strongly thv last hall' and also scored but missed tllv Convvrsion and Principia walked Hake-r. . . 3.2 I'rinr-ipia.. . T Vll2lI'lilU. ......., . Cnlvvr'-Strocklon. , xYill'I'PIlSlJllI'g, . . . 28 Simpson ...... lXl'lllp0l'. . .lvwell . . Central.. A . 0 Cvntral.. A . 6 Cvntral.. . . 19 Contral.. . 6 Cvntral.. . 0 C0lltI'2ll., . 0 Contral.. , 0 COI1l,I'ill., . 0 Pug: IIX away with the game 7-6. .Central out- rushed their foe 200 yards to 50 yards but failed to gain inside Principia's 20-yard line. The first Eagle touch- down of the season was scored by full- back Bill Morrow. Displaying a win- ning form, the Eagles met Tarkio College on Davis field the night of October 10. Two freshmen figured largely in Central's 19-0 victory in their opening M. C. A. U. game. Ed Springer, end from Skokie, Illinois, and his classmate, Bob Leech from Chilli- cothe, made runs of 78 and 73 yards respectively. The first Central score came in the closing minutes of the first period when the Eagles, starting from their own 37, made five consecutive first downs on plunges. and then sent Morrow over from the 3-yard line. ln the third period, Central was backed to its own 12-yard line following a 15-yard penalty. On an end around play, Springer broke loose and with excellent blocking went down the side- line to score. ln the fourth quarter with the ball on their own 7-yard line Leech broke through tackle, dodged over to the sideline, was halted near mid-field, and then reversed his field. to be caught from behind on Tarkio's 21. Leech went off tackle to the 6-yard line from where short plunges took it over. Central 19-Tarkio 0! Going to Canton on Saturday, Oc- tober 18, the Eagles were the guests of the none too hospitable Wildcats of Culver-Stockton. The Wildcat team lived up to its reputation as the No. 1 Page 119 Eagle jinx by playing smart, heads-up football to take advantage of every miscue by the inexperienced Eagle team and won 9-6. Stockton scored after the game was o11ly four plays old when the Cat's right end intercepted a lateral pass and ran twelve yards un- molested for a touchdown. ln the third quarter J im Wally, on the Wildcat 30, faded back and tossed a long pass to Willie Winters who stepped over the goal line for tl1e Central score. ln the fourth quarter, big Art Hendren, Wild- cat acc, split the uprights with a perfect field goal from the Central 23 to pro- vide the victory margin. Central out- gained Stockton 205 yards to 121. Central's football team received its second worst drubhing of the season on the night of October 2-1, at the hands of a strong Warrensburg T eacher's squad. The Mules scored three touch- downs in the first half, then coasted to :K 1 . L if 4 z .. . - - .E . . , . a . . ...uf fvb ef , fw 1' ' ,111 1 - f i 412-L 5-2215: K j:l ...if , ' ' .'-3-+'- .1 ' ' X ' '.15i ' - 2 y - 31 il,--5 l ift 4 + - . , p -a , 11 .2 -- - -. t yp ' Q , ' i ' '-L Y- 'V I.-F X -1 19 R ,-. ,. .. N - 4 .l rsfzj-,-1 , , - 1' f f N - . R .-.3 - ef? f J M. - N ,pew .P,.-4-,.i.., 'eg ' V MH t V f-vffffil' i'lL7 ' ii ' . vi- ,... , 'A -.57 i . f ff' A Lj'f'N'f,,j.v.3fg,1:fxfvi.'Qf ' 4-S5 . . ' -px-g1'.11...5,,gff gy-.,,:g A -V. ,ff f,-me ge. re' . , -'9?':e1e'f .5 5 P .-,pf -M . 'W 'f --'fga I e. 'Q-,w'w.'f f , NM f A ' A N ,aan ,L,31f: 't-. . V it gfiiffi Sorry we missed . . . uclion. on ollzer side . . . Jewell's Nr 1 man Anderson, UU looks on inleresledlyl J- ' s , i.. xt X . 1 1,ut'ul aullmrilies arresl Presiilerzl lfzljfforjislz and grime 1'liUIllflillI1.' a 28-0 victory. Central's lingering case of fumblitis set up two Warrensburg touchdowns. The Eagles line played a stellar game but the Mules found little opposition around the ends. due princi- pally to superior speed and blocking than to tl1e faults of our own wing-men. The Eagles played their tirst game against Simpson College of lndianola, lowa. on a muddy Davis Field Friday night. October 31. For three quarters the Iowans dominated the play and drove within the Central 12-yard line live times. but they lacked the power to overcome an Eagle line that stiffened when its goal line was threatened. Vanatta's punting was the team's sal- vation for the first half. He averaged over 40 yards per try and was forced to kick from behind his own goal line time after time. In the fourth quarter the Eagles showed a complete reversal of form and with Leech doing most of the ball carrying and the Eagle linemen opening holes large enough to drive the pro- verbial truck through the team made three sustained drives to the Simpson ll. 1-it and 22-yard lines, being stopped once by a fumble. once by a pass inter- ception and once being held for downs. A very muddy. scoreless tie! About 200 Central fans followed the Eagles to Boonville on Friday night. November T, and watched them play 60 minutes of football in sub- freezing weather against the Kemper Yellowjaekets, o11ly to finish just where they started-in a 0-0 tie. The Yellowjackets found them- selves stopped on the ground by the Eagle forward wall. but made up for it ill passes which failed to gain only when touchdowns were i11 sight. Cen- tral's rulming attack worked well. chalking up 192 yards, but bogged down in scoring territory. ln the fourth quarter Central put on a successful drive to the Kemper -1-yard line but lost the ball on downs with only -L5 seconds left to play. Another scoreless tie and it had begun to look like this we-won't-score- Page 120 Ilr. lfujf lrruls foulluzll sqmul and ollzers In 11 xlmk flinner . . . 11v1I'r'lu1 lllllfflll-lLfl ul fin- alvrsun, Hulfx cron' on your llI1lff'.' I re.vlm14u1 l1'm'r1m1i1'lr. fzxxislml lgv flasxrlzale l i1l+1.mIs.' Mfr- Iif'l,IlIl. please' llllfflj l,uuk rirhl ul Hu' Curmflvl. .l please' . . 'lleuvy' Jllorrow Qwhile lzelmelj lries Ihe cenler: slapped by concenlralefl oppusilion. if'-you-won't jinx was getting to be serious husiness. And the Homecoming game with Jewell only a week away. Before a large homecoming crowd. the Eagles did their best to upset the Cardinals from William Jewell on No- vember 220. The Eagles started the game hy showing some alert foothall. if not a powerful sustained offensive. Two pass interceptions and good punt- ing by Vanatta kept Jewell near its goal the first half. Near the opening of the third quarter, Jewell got the hall on the Central ll-yard line from a punt. On the next play, Baker, Jewell fullback, went off tackle, dodged three men in the secondary, and outdistanced the entire Central team to score. For the remainder of the game the Central offense dominated the play, but the attempt was like the British war effort - too little and too late. The Eagles put forth one more great effort and had the ball on the Cardinal 3-yard line as the gun sounded the end of the game and also the season. One win. five losses, and two ties designates Central's gridiron efforts for the 19-11 season. Not particularly Page 122 's ,f nm Q Freshman Leech comes around the end . . . he d1'dn'l make il! Slocklon 9, Cenlral 6. outstanding, but the spirit of the team was rather good at the close of the season as many of the gridders retired to the gym and cage practice. All looked forward to spring and the few weeks practice that it affords. Bob Shockley, Eagle center and senior from Lebanon was voted the most outstanding Central football player of the season at the annual football banquet. Shockley was also chosen line captain and Bob Vanatta, Pg 123 senior quarterback from Columbia, was chosen backfield captain. Squad members who lettered dur- ing the past season were Bob Jackson, Bob Leech, Norman Murphy, Jack Baker, J. W. Hord, Glen Chasteen, Bob Vanatta, Gene Michie, Bod Boein- mich, Bob Rawlings, Howard James, Bill Morrow, Wilfred Winters, Paul Paulsen, James Walley, Edward Springer, Joe Fillo, Sam Sayles, Bob Shockley, and Roy Fishbeck. j 1 ,--M1 , 4 Back rum: BICINTYRE, BASKETT, BIONDI, .lm xv.-XLLEY. BURCHABI Second row: CANNON. GR.kUE, HARRIS, V.-KNATTA. G. WALLEY Fronl row: FRIETAG, HOLMES. MEYERS, XYARREN. Svxmoxns Basketball O The Central Eagles, under coaches Frank Burcham and Raymond Mc- Intyre opened their 1941-42 basketball season by beginning training o11 No- vember 16. By the end of the football season there were 30 men out for practice. Only six lettermen were back to compete for starting berths. Warren Pettigrew, Henry VVarren. Bob Holmes, Bob Vanatta, Leon Harris, Hlld Dick Symmonds composed this group. Central opened its season at Boon- ville on December 5, defeating the cadets of Kemper 54-38. This early season burst of scoring gave indications that Central was co111ing up with a pennant-contending team this year. Returning l1o111e to meet the Kirksville Teachers December 9, the scrappy Central Cagers gave the Bulldogs a run for their money but were defeated in the closing minutes of the fray 39-31. Page 124 In the last gaine hefore Christmas vacation the Eagles went to Chillicothe on Deceinher 19 where they soundly whipped the Ducks of Chillicothe Busi- ness College 36-18. After a good start on the victory road. the team disbanded for vacation with a record of two wins and one loss. Swinging hack into action. the Eagles took a week-end trip to Illinois 011 January 9, 10. winning hoth games they played. Friday night they de- feated Shurtlell' College at Alton. llli- nois. 36-30. On Saturday night the Eagles played l'rincipia of St. Louis and again came out on the correct end of a -L7-32 score. Drury. one of the lkl. C. A. U. favorites. canie to Fayette on January 12. and walked oil' with a 1-2-28 victory. The garne was never in douht after the first few minutes. Drury led at the half 15-9. and consistently increased their lead. Traveling to Tarkio to ineet the pre-season M. C. A. U. favorite. the Eagles on January 25 lost to the Owls in a rough game, -L5-37. Central hat- tled Tarkio on even terms in the first 15 minutes of play, hut faded near the end of the period and trailed 2-1-18 at the intermission. A rally in the closing minutes sparked by SylllIll0IlClS and Pettigrew fell short. The Central de- Page 125 fense held George Lewis to three points. George Walley scored I3 points for the Eagles. Meeting .lewell thc next night at Liberty. the Eagles wo11 their lirst con- ference game lmy defeating the Cardi- nals -L8-38. George Walley again sparked the olfense. scoring 19 points. ln a return galne with liirksville there. the Eagles were again defeated hy the Teachers. Playing even the first half. the green and lilack dropped he- hind the last half and lost 30-37. Sym- nionds Inade nine points for the Eagles. Arms uufslrelchell. Eagles and Uzvls ,fiyhl for br1I1.' llmalfu COD lnxex lip-off: Iiixlmp fl-GJ sfumlx Irv. r w - - 1 larkio. playing at l'ay'ette. kept its record clean. l ehruary 3. in the Nl. C. A. ll. haskethall race hy heating Central l-l- to ll hut it took an over- time for the flwls to gain the decision. The visitors had an easy time during the first half' and led at the inter- mission, 28-IS. With George Walley showing the way. the Eagles tied the score at 39 all with just three seconds left to play. ln the overtime period Warren scored a field goal for Central. hut. Arneal scored f'or Tarkio and Lewis added the margin of' victory with a field goal and f'ree throw. This was truly one of the hest games seen on our court in years. Un February T. the Eagles repeated an earlier perforlnance hy downing the William Jewell Cardinals again on the home court.. The score was ,ffl-25 with Yanatta heing high point man with I3 points. lnvading the Ozark region. the Eagles were guests of' the Springfield Teachers on lfehruary 9. coming out on the short end of' a ff-36 score. Nleeting Drury on the lflth, the Eagle cagers again were on the wrong end of' a 12-31 score. The first half was close hut in the second. the fresher Drury team pulled away from the tiring Eagles to get the decision. Un Tuesday. lfehruary IT. tl1e lilue .lays of Wvestminster ohligingly dropped a close game to the Eagles on the home court. The score was 25-21- with George Walley gathering 13 points and Boh llohnes 9. for a total of 22 of our 25 points. llank Warren was out- standing on the defense. Central's squad. seeking a confer- ence victory. went to Culver-Stockton on lfehruary 25 and played on even terms with the Wildcats hut were de- feated ,L5-62 when the Cats loosed a last. niinute scoring spree. The Eagles were paced hy lioh Vanatta who dropped in IT points. ln the finale of' the 191-1-422 basket- hall season. the Central Eagles dupli- Pagz 126 4 cated a previous performance on March 3, in defeating W6StH1lI1St6T at Fulton 24-23. Warren scored 10 points to pace the Eagles. This final victory gave the Eagles a final standing of 5 victories, and five losses in the lVl. C. A. U. and left them in fifth place in the standings. Tarkio and Drury tied for third, Cul- ver-Stockton finished second and Mis- souri Valley won the title. CEd.'s note: Missouri Valley eliminated in inter- collegiate cage quarter-finals by Pitts- burg Teachersj Lettermen for t.he season were Warren, Holmes Symmonds, Vanatta. George Walley, .lim Walley, and Petti- grew. SEASON Central Kemper. . Central Kirksville . Central ..... Chillicothe .... Central ,.... Drury .... Central Shurtleff. . Central ..... Principia . Central ,.... Tarkio. . . Central ..... Jewell .... Central ..... Kirksville . Central Tarkio. . . Central ..... Jewell ,........ Central ..... Springfield Central ..... Drury .... Page 127 Coaches Svlzaperkoller and Kline defeuleil llze rulixervulory Cnnl r1rlm1'r1'lly ylcuzce uf Klinej. Sludenl 'Hilti' enlluzswl as Turkio-Cer1.lru1 game enlers tlI'0f'ffllI6' period . . . llzey uvonf , . N 'N I 'I ffm' 5 ff Q .t , . , , . A lli , i A ' 1, ' . 'Pit 'Ru' 4 1 f gy N y 'Y ' f ..- I ae me - i M - .ws 0g,...w3.0 Nllw ' iiyji' f mi I.. 'kj tQ,.,,, Lixm Q -' I if lu, V'-46 A P N?-r sq- -- - E -,,.vf,,,,' l 5 irii,,. i i tug ,Q if N ww 5 , 'amy , x - . ljymw 1 t- ' Third row: Biowm, CAPPS. DENNY. 'l'.n'1,on. Co1.E. Bmw. BAKER. SILI-Sli. CHASTEN Serum! row: SwEENEx'. lxlAllLLER. lvllllllllf. GILBERT. lVlr1N.-x'rT. FHEED. IIol.MEs. SAVAGE. CAm.lN Firsl row: KLINF. Cook. XVI-IST. SPmyt:En. DUZAN. lA'l.E. M.x'rms. RI-:yNif:K. PITTS. CQCKEREL1. Tm ak 0 The Eagles e11ter the 19142 traek season facing a shortage of lettermen. but with prospects of better than average material ill the freshmen group. Carried over from preceding years are lettermen Captain Randolph Pitts. Bolt Holmes. Sandy Coekerell. Don Cook. and Bill Morrow. Facing this short- age. it will he necessary to lean heavily upon the freshmen material if a well- rounded team is developed. Several of the more outstanding freshmen are Glenn Chasteen. Louis Graue. Paul Freed. Gene Miehie. lid Springer. Boh MeNatt, kenneth Taylor. Gene Sween- ey. Noel Gilbert. allfl John Cannon. Central is looking forward again to the opportunity to he host to the M. C. A. U. Athletic Tournament to he held in May. Tarkio emerged as win- ner in the 'll meet for the third eon- seeutive year. Pre-season information indicates they will he hack with an- other strong team. Westminster was a close second. klllfl Valley finished third. Central tracksters made a good showing in a few events. hut lacked all-around strength and so ended in last plaee. Stewart of Central ehalked up the only tirst hy winning the javelin. Letters for the 19-11 season went to Randolph Pitts. Virgil Stewart. Sandy Coekerell. Bob Holmes. Don Cook, Frank Harlan. Glenn Jett. Bill Morrow, Les Stallings. and Neil Blair. Page 128 JW. C. A. U. milers avoid fallen Eagle Qunirlenlzfedl. VVilh room io spare . . . Queens' sland in background. Huddled ojlfcials check time of lape-breaking dash man. Pape 129 Z ,. 1 I I7 'I ii enzor Ihm Ihurfn ll. tl, l. li. rm'1lnli.vl. l,'1lIIl'll Klint' is qlmlql'.vprI11gfs upprouvli, Uelh, sevorul 11 iylz in z'or:jPrw1re competition 0 Thi' Cc-ntrul Collvgo golf l,t'tlIll ol' 19110-ll wound up its svuson with thv o11ly winning rt-Cord of any uthlvtic' tvzun on our czunpus. 'l'hvir rot-ord for tho full and spring niutc-ln-s wus vight wins us 2lQttlllSl four losse-s with two tic-s. Lcd lay tifuptuiii Don Duwv. who did not losv at niutch ull svuson. thv liaglv squud rolled up at totul of lll points. 4-on1pzu'vd to thvir opponvnts' ltl3l-2. Duwv. of ffvntrul. wus Xl. tif. A-X. ll. nwdulist with an rt-cord sliuttes-ring scorn ot' HT strokes, or tlirvt' under pur, for UH 36 holes. Murray Uvtll, also of Central. plum-cl svcond for individual honors only ont' stroke hohind Duwv. with 138. Both Duwo und Outh shot suh- pur goll' und hoth scorvs hrokv the prvvious Xl. C. A. ll. rvcord. Lottvrinvn for tht' season wore Duw v, tlvth. tifurto, und Striogol. Duwe and St1'ie-gt-l will lw hut-lt this spring and should lil'OIll the nuclous ol' unotlior strong tvzun. Clothworthy, l'rcslnnan. and Sliocldoy. senior, with some squad oxpv1'i01it-ti, will hc position Cuudidutos. Page 130 Xi ,ee ' WPI . X g .,,, ..... ::.- V . 2. . A g 'f s s ,. ...gf Coach Page is delernzineri: malls al sluke! 7 , PTS. l.' .S if ft ' X X. 51 s v. E Af lil Tnlbol sels liinzselfjhrjbrehurzzl relurn. T ennis O With spring matches against Kem- per, Culver-Stockton, Westnliiister, Warrensburg, and Principia, the Cen- tral netsters ended their 1941 season with a record of two wins and four losses, both wins being from Warreiis- burg. Since good-all around material was lacking, Coach E. H. Page entered only one doubles team and only one man in the singles in the M. C. A. U, spring tournament. Phillips and Talbot lost Page 131 to Culver-Stockton in the doubles and Talbot also lost to Stockton in the semi- finals of the single matches. Letternien for the season were Captain James Talbot, Bob Phillips, and Dave Neiswiender. With Talbot and Phillips back this year a much stronger team is proph- esied. Luetzow, Lane, Hays, Gene Michie, and Haynes are outstanding candidates for the other positions. C Club 0 Tl1e C Club is perhaps the hardest organization to get in that exists on the campus. by virtue of the strenuous work and practice that it takes to ear11 a varsity letter in any of the sponsored athletic activities of Central College. The man who wears the C has the re- spect of the student body. Sponsorship of the club was turned over to George VV. liline, who is acting athletic director during the absence of C. A. Clingenpeel. Ile and his cohorts, Burcham and Schaperkotter, assist President J. W. Hord, Jefferson City, in running the affairs of the letterinan's club. The problems they encounter are many, programs to be printed and sold, concession stands to maintain, injuries to be paid for. standards to uphold. These men hold bi-monthly meet- ings to foster better relations between the lettermen of the campus and those graduated, also to consider possibilities for advancement of the collegiate ath- letic policy. Divan QM-il .wldorned Cl club clzoirslers serenarle from Turner's balcony At the conclusion of the football season the old men gathered ,round and thought up a severe initiation for the neophyte lettermen who were: Roy Fischbeck, Bob Leech, Jack Baker, Glenn Chasteen. Gene Michie, Rod Roeinmich, Bob Rawlings, Howard James, Paul Paulsen, James Wially, Ed- ward Springer, Joe Fillo, and Sam Sayles. When the extended pledge period of two weeks was over, these fellows knew that what the big boys had told them was true. Because of events beyond their control' the C club lads abandoned the annual invitational high school basket- ball tourney . . . to be resumed at a later date. Page 132 Thi- lrasketlmll svason oncle-cl wilh just unc new lCtlPl'lllilIl, Gvorge Wally. Rzitlwr than l12'lV0 an initiation for Georgia lhv Cluh will wait until thi- tvnnis. golf, and truck l0ll-9I'IllPll airv zninouncecl and svncl thvni all thru lhv sznno grueling ordeal. Thi- high puint of thv zillilvlic' yvai' was the annual lnziiique-t ut thv Parrisli lilouse. All this fllIlIlli'I' tha- UlllSl12lIlfllIlg' athlotvs ol' lhv season w'4-rv lionorcrl, and ring :incl lwy uwuiiwls wvrv inaflv to lhv seniors. Pl'PSl.llPlIl. J. W. Holm l vl.l'6-pl'6.9l.ll?Ill SPl'l'6'lC1l'-V T1'ea.v111'P1' HILL NIORRONN Riiwm' l,,I'l l'S HUB .luzlisux C50 Back row: SAYLES, Hnmmnrn. SIIOCKLEY. Nli'nvin'. Y xxA'r'rA. ll:-icuii, .l. W,u.i.m', Nlngnir: Third row: XVIXTERS, FISfIlil3Pil'K, STREIGEL. lhwnivas, P,ur1,sEx, Fl1,i,u. Svniwmcn. Coc:uEnr:1,i. Sealed: KLINE. PITTS. Hmm. Nlmxnowx .l.u,1nsuN. SQJIAPICIKKOTTER. Bmin. Iluuins, Conn, Si wxmxns. Wuziil-ix, TAMLBOT, PHILIPS Page 133 llll'lll4'l'lllg' 11l'spu1'ls for 1101111-11. ZS Slumlirzy: li, XX 1111:11'1', Nl. W111c:11'r.SK11,1.N1xx, lilfll. 'l'11m1l's11Y Nf'flll'flS l',111'111.. l'iIS11lll3lil1lx. l'illKI'fN'I'UYI'1, iixlwm' O . C O 'liliv 'lxiUIll1'lliS Xllilvlic' .XSSUl'lilli0ll l'lYl'l'y yi-air lllv orgz111izz1lio11 builds .1l lit'llll'ill ffcmllvgc- is il llll'lIllN'I' of II11' il lloul for lIo1111'c'o111i11g. ,lillOil' floats N.1lio11:1l :XSSOI'lilllUll ul' Mlilvlirs for for pznsl yvurs llilYl' lwvii t'XC'0ll0Ilt ones N 111111-11. 'l'I11- lil'IllI'ill L'llilfIll'I' is coin- illlll lllillly liuw- lN'0ll i1wu1'drcl prizvs. si-fl ul' girls who uri' lIlll'I'l'SlQ'fl i11 llll' , , , , II11-111usl UlllSlllllfllllQ' t1Y0lll ul the j1'ilI' is plziy-clay. 01111 set aside for llllI'lIlj.Z' llw lnzislwllmll ss-z1s1111 llli'Ill- Sllp0l'YlSl'Il urlivily of high srliool girls In rs ul' llii- u1'g:111iza1l1iu11 sulrl rulws, l.I'0Ill s111'1'11l111cli11g' lowiis. Its purpose 1.111fIy lmrs. illlfl upplm-s. lip' ills' 1111'a111s lwiiig' i11l1'u1l11c'ti1111 lo and pzlrlicipaltioll ul llu- l'1111rls 1'a1is111l this 11:15. II14' ill lliv spurls i'll.iONl'll lay Cviitral Nl. X. QX. mis ulili- lu l'ill'l'j out H10 1101111-11. .illilvliv p1'og1':1111ul' llw 51-ur. l'1-c.v1'rlw1l. l'il,USSll-1 I1'1s1:11B1cc:1x I '1'1'f'- l'1'0x I.Ill'llf .S'4'r'l'f'lf1l'tv T1'0f1s111'0l' Nl xm lilil III, lC1111,1 l 11114:s'mN1f: :XNNIQ GAINHN I'1113r 13-I -0.1 -WM fu X H-k,...zM AL-A-:..,.X,t.. -xwxx- x. ,Y V Vw---....,., V1 '4: ,N nr., ,Y - ' A MYYNEY ' ' XG-HCL' !-f , sf S .Mx 'll .nw I ,-34, ' vEJ?4' ullllm KIT:- 1DSUu. Nucl!!! 5'ELE.2'J6 5 OIIUYY SIIYICI M25 9 Bmmncn TOKUIIS 52 '11 Sf' U Tr Z, 027' DLR np Wi cffpfm W st' n' 4 W Pt. 1 -1 f. . V f . ii' ' f -K , 8 1 oi I J, ., Qing. T ygg-if ill?-f-Sfifif-if . lr ,M 't gf ,z J .5 3 If f in J - .-.gn . ' Q .-2' ' y :M :ii 1 Ha NS, msn. 'flifi n : :'? -I T able of Contents A A CAPPELLA CHOIR ..., ACTIVITIES ............. ADVERTISING SECTION , ..,,.. 99 ALPHA EPSILON DELTA ...,, .. ALPHA PHI ALPHA ...., ART CLUB .............. ATHLETICS ..... . . B BANDS ...........I.. BASKETBALL ......4 BEAUTY QUEENS, . . . BETA SIGMA ....,.. C C CLUB .4............A., CASA NOYAS ..........,, CENTRAL CHRISTIAN A TION ,... .... ........, CHEMISTRY CLUB ..... CHI DELTA .....,.,A COLLEGE ...,...,I COLLEGIAN. .. . . A .. CONCERT BAND ..... D DEAN ANDERSON .... DEAN PLCKETT ..... DEAN WRIGHT ........ DELTA PHI ALPIIA .... E ESQUIRES OF RHYTHM F FACULTY .............. FOOTBALL .............. FUTURE TEACHERS. . . . FRESHMAN CLASS ...... FRESHMAN OFFICERS. . G GAMMA PHI MU ..... GAMMA SIGMA PI. . , .. GOLF ....,.,........ GOVERNMENT ..... Page 137 .891-130 III-156 . .61-65 . .T6-TT . .60-61 I 15-1371- . .96-97 124-127 108-109 , ,80-81 132-l33 101-105 SSOCIA- .,..........90 . .68-69 . .82-83 . .I6-55 ,....89 w..2I ..,.,19 .....20 ....IOI .,..,.,.I02-103 .,....22-26 . 4..II6-123 I ...... 93 .... 414-54- .....6I ...H43 , . 62-63 ....I30 ,....9l II HOMECOM ING KING AND QITEEN.. .......... HOWARD-PAYNE HOUSE COUNCIL ............ I INDEX ..... .. .I .ILNIOR CLASS ..... JUNIOR OFFICERS. O ORGANIZATIONS ..,... P PHI BETA ..... .I,..,., PHI Mlf ALPHA ,.,. , PI GAMMA MU. . ., .. PI KAPPA DELTA .... PI KAPPA THETA .... PRESIDENT RLFF ...... 1 R RAGOLT .,.,. . , S SENIOR CLASS ..... .I.. SENIOR OFFICERS 4...... SOPHOMORE CLASS ..... SOPHOMOR E OFFICERS ..... T TENNIS, .....w... ,. THE PLAYERS .... THEOLOGS .... TRACK ...,... W W. A. A. .,.. ,.... . . IIU-III ....92 ...I38 . .3-I-36 . , . .33 I .56-83 . .72-T3 . .TI--T5 . . , .66 ..,.TI . .78-T9 ....I8 ,.,.88 , .28-32 . . . ,227 . .38--I2 ....3I ...I3I . .9-I-95 ,........I00 128-I29 . . .134 SENIURS A All1inson,Rulh, , , 11 l1ird, Dvromlzl. . lilair, Neil Nlagzrurlvr 28 l1oonu-, 111-14-n llunt . Rradslu-r, Alice Lou. , . , l1urL'h. John Shirley. , . . . 11ulvh1-r, 1Yi1liarn Ali-xundl-r C lfnpvn, Elaine Eleanor . Clirigf-:iw-el, Charles N1-lson Cos-ken-ll, Sanford , 28, 65, 82 lfolv, Florence Elizalwtll Cole, Jasper llullouany , D 19l'Il'l81 1'1', Lilla Xlargarl-1 Dul1oiS, llulwrl Lev, Dum-, Donuld Alba-rl E Eason, Lucy XVebl1 Engclhardl, Mary Alice. F Fischlwck, Folsh- Anna Ford. Edmund Albert , 28, G Gilliam, Barbara Avalon. . Grow, lda lframres , , , 11 llahn, Paul M:-lvin . . llarper, James Thomas.. Harris, Charles Edward Harris. Olie Leon . . , Henderson, Xvilburn., 11ert, John J ........ Ileying, Robert Joseph J Jackson, Rohr-rt Conrad K Kimbrell, Robert Powell L Lockridgv, Nancy Kring X1 N1i4'1li1-, Doyne- Ernest f11oorl', Rolwrl Lvl- . . , U Uvlzv, fN1alxvlJc-urn-llv.. In 1'aydu-n, llohvrl Duncan., l'vnrllv1on, llownrrl Dwnin , Pllilips., Rolrvrl Richard, . 1'ils-, Mary June. . . ..1,28,1.1,16,11 .28, 72. 711. 99 .81, 91, 1111. 11151 , , oh . . 211, 69 , 28. 09 28, 65, 101 2 , 711, 911 L1, 28, 8.1 1, 91, 128. 12121 28. 721, 921 28, ho. 75 8 ,- . .w - -8, 61. 69.101 , 28, 69. 90 28. 811, 1110 28. 621, 79, 95 , . 28 . 28, 621, 1211 81, 89. 921, 95 ..,,28,6b ,28, 1.1. 9.1, 99 .28 ., 28, 81,105 ,28, 66, 81, 95 .....28,121 ..,Z10,6l, 66 ,,.210, 61, 66 .65.116.121f1 , , 110 , . I10, 621, 99 ,2l,90, 91,99 11 27, 210, 61. 75, 98 . . 110 . .110, 66, 811 . , , 110 10, 69. lol, 11111 - -- ,, ..10, 111, 11, 91, 9- Pills, livnliulnln l1andolph.i110, 89, 921, 128, 11111 R Rouse, Iiharles Andrew. Rouse-, W'nrdu-lln Rosalind Rulln-rford, 1'ho1-1n- Lou. , S Svoggins, Edwin S.. . .. . S1-ay, Nlnrlha Mildred . Slim-kla-y, 1111111-rl Nlilltlrd. Smilll, Julnn-s N irgil , Slvrling. John, Jr , T '1'al1nuI, .lunn-s Spaulding 'l':ly1or. 1Nadin1- Ann Tliolnns, 114-ily lxall11-rinv M111, lhurlnzxn, A. 11. . , 112, hh, 81, , . . 110 .I10, 69, 90, 911 10, 67, 09. 101 .f11l, 89,911,011 . 110, 1111, 911 .10. 811. 116. 117 , 210, 69 . , 110. 09 110. 81, 1111 61, 07, 77, 021 61. 61, 11. 9.1 88, 91, 911, 95 nde V N analla Rolwrl 112, 66. 81, 921, 116, 117 X vstal, Yirginia . .. 27, 32, 621, 67, 92 NV Warnluolll Georgia Yirginia Morris . . . . 212, ol, 66, 67 11'vlls. llwrt Clifton ,,.. . . ..... 112. 69 Wilkerson, Carolyn, . .212, 67, 731, 921, 99 Wilson, Earl Franklin . ..... . .I12, 911 Winton, llarrin-1 LaYonne.. JIVNIURS A Alexander, Bettie Lou.. . . , B Rainier, Louis Alexis . . Bakr-r, Ferris Coy ,.,. 111-sten, Jani- Elizabeth. . . Hourn, Mary. . . ..,,. , ., Hreekeriridge, Charles Claude Brown, Dimrnilt Lee . . Buckley, Margueritr- . . Hush, llerhert Owen, Jr. C Capps, Finis llerherl. . . Chiles. 111-'cky Ann . , . . . 4:,o1,.J,9z,Qo . .31,9s .. . 811 , .i1,1, 100, 128 ,.,,.., 31 11-1. 61, 69 . 2111- . . . .111, 88 ' 7 90 ....11, 15, 89. ..21-1. 66, 921, 128 . . . ..,, 3.1, 9 Cook, Donald Wayne.. . , 314. 90, 100, 128. 12121 Corder, Nlary Louise. . . , Corvey, Gloria Frances . Craig. Louis Elwood ,,.. Craig, Zvttie Bettie. .,.. , Crosno, Marion Elizabeth.. D Durlvy. James Edgar .,.. E Earirrkson. Richard Keith.. , Elliott. Gladden Y. , . . E1se,James Pr:-ntiss . . Evans. Myra Lou . . ., ....1,1, 9.1 , . . . , .11 Z1-1, 69, 98 , . .31f1, 98 . . 31 ...11-1, 811. 89, 91 ifaJ,65fa3.1o1 ,. .. .34,100 , , ... 66 F Fairchild, Iloward Llewellyn ,.,... , . . . 100 Felrlmann. John Howard. .,.... 31, 98. 105 Finnell, De Ann. . . , . , Firr-stone, Mary Emily. . Funke, 1larold Frederick G Gains-y, Ann Dewease.. . Guerri, 19111118111 Grant, . . 11 llall, Edna Voncielr-. ..,... . ..11.1.1,.1, 05 . ...,.. 214,111,1- .,.,,,.I1-1.65 ,..31, 711, 134 ,.3I1,11-1. 66, 811 .116, 79 llarrisnn. Lewis Andrew , . .1111, 111. 91 Iliggifnhotham, Ruth Frances.. . .11 1. 72, 721, 911 lllgglns, Andrew Jackson .21-1, 75. 81, 98, 105 llord. John 1Vesley. . . . .Z15, 811, 116, 11121 llunter. Marjorie Louise. ......... 115, 99 J Jackson. James Donald .I15, 75, 81. 98, 105 Jenkins, Catherine. , , Jones, l10l1y llelen. . K Kingsbury, John. . .., . Kirk, Gwendolyn Aileen. . L Lanz-. llaruld Lf-c, ...... Layton. Jessi- Mc'Gulr1-. Luc-tzow, llvrman llenry. , . M N11-Amino, Norman Lester Mdlllllvy, Norma Rose.. . . lb1L'iY:1l1CllllI1. Jeanm' . , . McK1-1-.1'Ir1it11.. ., .. . . Nlnyliu-ld, l'ivkn4 y Miller . Nlillinrn, 114-My Lou . ., . 'Xlillu-r. John l1urInn . . Nlilln-r. 11 illinm Randolph. . Nlorrow, Wlilliam Roy . , Nlnnyon, Edgar Marvin .,., Murray, Edward Bowman. . . , . ,. 215 .,115, 621, 79, 88 115 .115, 721, 77, 99 ,,.115, 75, 99 fff35ff5,at . . 115 ,..115, 721, 79. 99 ..,........15,1.1 . .,... . . 811 115, 71, 72, 711, 95 .15, 65, 15. 81, 99 69 ,115, 821, 116, 1311 . .1n.8I1 ...215, 66, 811, 89 1 U Urear, Edwin Lu1her,....I111, 115, 81. 88, 91. 99 P lascoe, James John.. .., .... 115, 65, 69 Patrivk, Mary Frances .,.. . , ,I16, 65, 90, 93 Patton, Marian Yirginia .. .......,. 36, 79 Paulsen. Paul Frederick ..,... . . 1113 Pickett, Marian Faye, . ..1.1, .16, 61. 19, 88, 92 33 Poe, Gr-urge Elmer . , P1 Rf-eder, Charles Clinton. Rice. Uliver LeRoy . . . Rich, Mary Elizabeth. . Robinson, Ruth Pauline Robison, Margaret Jane b Shockley. Flora Naomi., . Skillman. Dorothy Miles. Snider. Rohert Louis. . . . Street, Doris Mar- ,.... Sukow, Donald Newton ....,36, 65, 811, 101 ....16,1:r . , 116. 721. 99. 134 , .... 36, 63 . . .216, 79 .216. 67. 77. 92 ....,..Z16,134 . ...,... 36 . ,..116, 61, 62. 63 .. ..16.69.7l Sylnmonds. Richard Earl. .116. 65, 811, 124, 1311 T Thogmorton, James Pleasant.Z16. 75. 81, 95, 99 V Yan Wagner, James Lyman., . . 83 W 1Vagner, Billy Gibson .,....... ,216, 88, 89, 95 YVallace, John Carson .... . . .216, 75, 81, 98, 105 VValton, Mary Louise.. . . Ware, Margaret Amanda. . . . , . . 36 VVar1'ord. J. B.. Jr. .... .. Warford. Mary Eleanor. . . .,.,... 36 .,.....,.36,63,921 Yvarren. Henry Lee .....,. 116, 66, 811, 124, 133 Watson, Oscar Eugene. . . Wayland, E. Charles.. . . Wright, Betty Lou., , . . . B3 . , ...I16, 65, ...36, 63, 69 Y Yates, Mary Virginia ..... . , .I16, 611, 69 Z Zerbe, William Henry .... . . 36 SOPHOMORES A Ahele, Jeanne Althea ,... .,...... 3 8 Ackerson. Betty June . Anderson, Mary Anne.. . .. B Ball. 1Villiam Douglas. . . Harnhart. Edward Camp. Bates, Estus Lawrence. . Beamon. Lawrence Earl, Bentley, Hanna Mary. . Besgrove, Anna Mae.. . . l'1ockman. Carl Def- ..,. , . . .. ,ss 61,69 77 . .,... 38, . ..38, 75, 81. 98 ' 83 99 38 . ..,.18, , 38 38 . ..Z18,6l,99 ...I18. 69, 81, 90 Bollinger. Nvilliam Harrison. . . . ,..... . 38 Borg. Roy Conrad. . . ...38. 75, 81. 98. 105 Brice, V1'endel Rual . . , , 38 Brugh, Mary Virginia l1rummall, Helen 9YPf'd, 1'1usvhar1. Yan ........ . C Callis, Clayton Fowler . Chiles. William Henry. . . Chorn, Ruby Ruth ....... Clingvnpeel. John Dow.. . . Coleman, Lloyd NV. ..... . Crock!-ll, David 1Vi11iam, Crowe, Frances. ........ . . D Da vis, Estelle Prewiil ,,... Davis, Jacqueline Louise , . Davis, Keith Mann .,.... Doisy, Roherl Ackerl . Dorn-1, Robert Eugene . Drake, Lucie Anne .... , . Duzan, Kcnnvth Ray. , . .38Q6i166fTi.134 as 67 . 118, 79, 99 ...38. 69 38 . .,..... 38 ...38, 811.116 .,..,38.74 38 ,...38,99 38 .,,38, 63, T9 .,..,38, 91 38 'fI1f as ....39.v7 ...39,12s Page 138 39 ' E Elders, Frank Alvin, Jr . ..,., 39. 65. Ewing, George Marvin.. . .39. 65. 81, 1 Eye, Helen Ruth .... ,... . .. F Fields. Leland Stanford. Jr.. Y Fishheck, Roy Sieberl. .,.,..,... 83, 116, 1 Francis, VVilliam Connett ,... 39, 69. T5, 81. Freitag. Forrest Louis ,... ......,... I 19, 1 Friedmeyer. Sara Margaret . . .39, 63, G Gudakunst, Betty Sue... 119. H Hackley. Harold Leon . Halter. Harvey Pirtle . . . . Harper, Kenneth Lyndon, . . Harris, Mary Victoria . . , Hays, William Vaughn . Herrick. Kathryn Amelia. . . .39. . . .:f7, 39. ,:s7, xo, TT, 69 05 '19 33 99 21 T11 89 39 39 39 09 81 92 lleye. Paul Lee.. ,...,. . . 119 Hickman, Harry Leo . . . . 39 Hicks. Lloyd Mcllhaney . . . 39 Holmes, Robert. Duncan. . , . 37. 39. 81. 121. 128. 1311 Huss. Altalyn Jane. ,,.., , . . . . 10 Hutchison. Edna Pauline . -10 Huvendick. George. Jr.. . , 10 Hyatt, Mary Jane ..... . 10 I Innes, Norma Clare. , .. . .'10, 60. 63 J Jallie. Robert.. . . ...,.. . . .10 Johansen, Maurice Charles. . . 10, 83 K Kelsay, Henry Nlurlin.. .. . . .'10, T5 Kimlin, Helen Louise. ...... . . . . . 110 Kirkpatrick, Archibald Thomas.. . . . -10 Knight, Mary Elizabeth .. . . . 119 Kramer, Shirley Jean., . . . . . . . . . . T9 Kroeck, Loula Ann ..,. . . 10, T2, T3 L Lake. Eugene Elsworth.. , , ..40. 81. 116 Lawrence, Ozelle Marie.. . , . . . . . . 10 Leek. Martha Ann. . ... .... .-10, 99 Lefmann. Lurlene Emelia. .... . . ,40, T3, 99 Lewis. Vllilma Helaine. , . . Libby. Carolyn Louise . . Loughead. John Robert. . . . J10, T2, T3, ...10,6T, .. . .65, 95 TT 81 Luna. William Marion.. . . . . . 10 M McCoy, Edward Ilamilton, Jr.. . . . .-I-0, T1 Mann, Edna Marie ....... . . . 11-0 Markum, Cledyth Whitfield.. 40, 100 Marquette, Donald Edward.. . . . .-10, B9 Mills. J. H. ............... . . . -1.0 Moore, Mary Ruth ..... . . . . 10 Moore, William Fulton ..... , . . . . l-0 Morrison, Eleanor Jane.. . . . Murphy. Charles Otto. Jr... , Murphy. Norman John ..... . . MyerS.Jane Kathryn .. . . ... ..10. 63 40.8.5 .-10, 83, 116.133 .....,...,11,98 N Newman, Eileen ..,........... ..... 4 1. Nickerson. William Trihbey.. . ...,. 75, 0 Oldham, Charles Richard .,... . . . 11, P Parrish. William Trainer.. . Peck, Robert Keith. . . Pettigrew, Warren Alexiander. Phillis, Frieda Forine.. . . . Printz, Earl, Jr.. ..... . . . Pruett., William Earl .,.,. ...4l,75,81, f' ..ff4i,1 Pulliam, wiuiam Durwoodi. '.Q Purchase, Zelma Louise.. . . . Page 139 90 99 T1 98 75 41 41 00 411 11-1 -11 4 Index-Contz'nuea' R Reed, Kathryn Virginia . Riemeier, Jeannette Hilda. . Robertson, Robert Stanley. Rogers, Sara Marie .... Russell. Betty Jean. . b Savereide. Robert Lorraine , . . Sayles, Samuel Lane.. . Shaw. Robert Dwight. . . .-11, 61, 79, 99 .. .,.,. '11 81.95, 100 .-11,6l,98 . .-11.98 65.81.105 11, 81,116,133 , .11,8Il 69 Sheets, Donald Guy. . . . . . ll. Shields, Gordon Goodrich , . . . -1-1 Shirley, George Vlfilliam. .lil T5 Smith, Carl George . 12. 89 Snider, Anna Lou . -12 Squires. Eva Louise . . , . -12. 621 Stewart, Wllilliam Garrett.. 12. 69, 81. 95 Slriegel, Ralph Stephen, Jr . . . 12. 81. 133 Sutton. Jolm William . . . 12. 69, T5, 98 T Terrell, Yirginia Elizabeth 12 Thayer, Dorothy Blanche. . Thompson, VViniI'rcd Joyce- Thorp. Rowena Rosalind Thurston, Stanley King, Jr, Tomlin, Edwin Merrill . . Tre-1'z. William George . Tucker, Elnora Elizabeth. . , W Wall. Dorothy Jean. . , lVard, Charles Edgar. . lVarden, Mabel Faye .. VVar1'ord. Lois 'l'hompson . . . f1.. lVatkins, Edward Dennis. Jr Welch. Emma Jean. . . . . . . VVilcoxon, Dorothy Jean WVi1son, Betty Jeanne . Vl'inters. 1Yill'red Robert Vllinton, Marcia Marvin. Vl'righ1. Scott Ulin. . . . Wyatt, Dale Ford.. Young. Joseph Uglesby Younger, Clyde lVade.. FRESHM EN A Abt-le, William Arved . . . Aculf, Evelyn Mills . Adair. James Edward. . Ahl. Charles... . ..... Akard. Charles Wendell.. Arr-hart, Harold Gordon. Atwell. Roy Milton ,.... . B Baker. John Groves . . . Baker. Mabel Maleece. . . Banta, Mary Marjorie.. . Barkelew. Robert Henry.. Barnhart, lVil1iam Joseph. . Baskett, Charles Bennett.. Beavers, Vllade Calvin. . . Beckman. Ruth Ann . Bicrly. Thomas Elbert. . . Biondi, Eugene . . . . . Blanck. Albert Frank, Jr. Boelsen. Marjorie Elizaha Boettner. Mildred Elizabeth Boone, Elma Fay ....... Bray, VValter Hugh. . . , . Bridge. Betty Kay. . . Briggs. Darlene Ruth... Brower. Thomas Dudley. . Brown. Ellice Elizabeth. . . . ,. 12 . 12, . . . 12 112.71131 '12 ,12,T1.69 .. 12 12 . 12. 611. T9 .. '12 ..3T, 6T, Tl, 95, 98 .1 . .12. 100 . . 12, 61 12. 99 , 111 83,116,121,133 . 111. T2. Til, 95 . . T6 . 112 .. .12 . 12. T5. 98 . . . 1-1 .ll. TT 81. 98, 105 ... ... '11 . . 11. 81. 88 .....1l,98 el--1 ,. 11 11.98 . 11- . 11 . ..., -11 ,11,T1.121 . . .11.R1 -11 q . ., . -1-1 .4-1, 1-11. 128 11-1- lth.. ...,.. -11-, 61 98 . ...11, , . . .... -1-1 .. .11,128 ..11-,TT -14 . .11.99 ., 1-1 Brown, Maxine Fletcher .... . , 4-1 Brown, William Baston. . . . 11, 821 Brummell, Mariane Francis. . . -15 Burcham, Roberta Ann ..... . '11 Buschart., Virginia Mary., ,... 15 Bush. Elizabeth. . . . Bush. Virginia ..... . . . . Butlcr. Charles Dean , . Butler, James Edward.. . C Campbell, Virginia Maude .... . . .... 4-5, Cannon. John Lewis. .... . . Carlin, Jack Charles ,... '15 -15 .-t5,T1,98 .....15,T5 61 . ..-15, 83, 124 . ...-15,1211 Carpenter. James Franklin Carpenter. 11-ra Franres Carter. Mary Louise . . Casalone. George John Chandler, Harold Louis. Chapman, Lawrence Nt-il. Cllastn-en. Glenn Lyle . Clare, Edna Pearl. . . C1 ay. Robert Strolher . Clotvsorthy. Harold Winston Cockerell. Carlin., . . . . , . . Cn rlfelt, Carl Frederick. Cole. Causby Hugh. . . Cole, James Arthur .. Colvin, Dorotha Mae. . C4 rnnelly, James Thonlas Conrad. Henry Webb ..,, Costley, Vivian Glenn . Cox, Nancy Elaine . . D Dailrly, Mary Jane.. .. 111 ilton. Ruby Lucille. Davis. Joe Ries . Davis. Ralph Dorrell . Davis. Thomas l'lynn, Jr . Day. Lucile Jane . Deardorf. Robert D. . Ds D1 -eve-rs. Harold Frank 'llino, Norma Marie. . Denneuy, Frances Marian. Dt 'nneny. James Clinton, . Denny, Clifton Enyart, Jr Dt D4 Dt risy. l'hillip Perez .... iremns. llaul Nlason rss, llodge 1Val1ace. Jr, . Doyle, Donald David Doyle, lvayne Joseph Drace. Jack flleredith. . Duncan, Dan Baker . . . Dt Dt Dt incan, Joss-ph Lewis. . inn. John lra.. . iss. Margaret Elizabeth. E l'15'lgt'I',l'Tl Z'll1t'I'S Marie . . Echelmeier, Mary Kathryn Edwards. llalty Lou . . .. Elders. Williams Kenneth.. Estep, Guy Ervin. . .. . . Evans. Ronald Clarence . . F Fair. Ronald Barker. . . . . Fillo, Joseph Stephen. . . 1T, 83. 116 1 Fishel. Clyde Hampton, Jr Fitzgerald, Francis Joseph . Freed. Paul Edwin .... Frost, Rr-tty May. Fry, Evalena Kirk G Gilbert, Mary Elizabeth Gilbert, Noel Clark . . Grannemann, Wayne Vllillie Graue, Louis Charles . Green. Helen Jean . Gr:-enlialge. Norma Jean Gulfey, Channing Ewing. Gunther, lVilliam Joseph. 11 llahs. Vliilliam Asa , ..... Ham. Clarence Leroy., . , . Hamilton. Richard Fairlield Hancock. Sydney Claire, . . Harper. Margaret Jane. . . Hartge, Paul U . .... . Hatcher, Orinda Jen ,... Haynes. Clinton Richard. . Hendren. Dorothy Jane. . Herndon, Vllilliam Franklin Hessel, Howard., .... . . Hickman. David Browning. Higgins, Lorene Virginia.. . llogge. Jessie Catherine. . . . Holcomb, Mary Frances. . . Holman, VVilliam Sherwood Holt, Jack Cecil. ........ . Hopper. Jack Ambrose. . . . Hostelter, Lulu Lyle ....., Hostetter. Myra Judith, . Howell, Betty Jane ....., Huber, George 1Villiam ..., Humphries, George Edward. 15 15 . 15 . 15 15.100 115 . 116. 128 . , 15, TT . 15 15 .15. TT . . 15 105. 116. 128 15, 98, 99 16 16 16 16 ..16. T1. 98 . . 16. T9 16 . 16 -16 16, T5 'lo 16. 61 16, Rl 16 1-6 16, HI 16, 128 lo, 90 16 16, 98 . 16 16 -16 16. 99 .16. 821 . ,1T 1T. 98 . 17 . fl-T . 'IT , -1T 1T lT, 98 ..... 1-T . 21, 1213 . . . 821 ... -1-T .1T. 128 ..., -17 , .1T. 98 . . 17. T9 . 83.128 . . 1T ... 121 ... . 1T 117. T9. 108 ...,.1T. 89 1T . -18 . 18 . 18 . 48 . 18 ...81. 105 ... , 18 18. 83.116 .... -18 ...-18. 99 .., 18 18 . .18. T9 18 ... 18 ,... -18 ... 48 .,18, 116 ... -18 ...-18. 61 ...-18. 95 . . 18 .-18, 99 J Jenkins. Blartha Lee ..,..., Johnmeyer. Hillard Eduard . 48 Johnson. Betty Lynn. ...... . . . 48 Johnson. Charles Casper . . . . . 48 Johnson. N an Louis. Jr. . 48. 83 Jones. Anna Jane ...,.. . . . 48 K Keener.I1arry Elliott. Jr.. .49. T5 Keller. Melvin Reed .... .49. 90 Kenagy. Harry Edwin. . . 40 Kendall. X ictor James ..,. . .49. 83 Kendrick. Dorothy Lou.. . . . . 40 Kihhe. John Carter ,...,... . 49 Kimbrell. Joseph Mitchell. ,... . . 49 Kiiling. Karl .-Xrthur. .,,.,,, . 49 Krahenbuhl. Besie Catherine. . . S0 Kunder. Richard Miller . . . . . 49 I. Lampe. Alberta Mae. . . , 49 Laughlin. Dorothy lrvine . 49 lawrence. Betty Yiola.. . . 40 Lee. Charles Donald ..,, .,... . . . . . 49. 98 Leech. Robert 11'ray. . ... .19. 81. 110. 133 Ldghninger. Robert Elliott . ,,.,, 49 Levis. Betty Love. . . . . , -IQ Ijles. Billy Xlareus .... . . . . 49. 128 ljndstmm. Ned Everett . ljston. Eleanor Sue .... . .. 49 50 Long. Mildred Louise. . ........... . - 50 Lovell. Billy Mitchell. .50. T5. 81. 98. 102. 103 Lovell. Rosemary .,,.. . . . . . . 50 Lowe. Georgia Bemioe.. . . . . 30 Lueking. Virginia Marie. . . 50. T9 M BIcCampbell. Ethyl Jean .. .S0. Tl. 98 McCann. James Floyd.. . . ..... 50 B1cCoy. John Daniel ,.,... . . . ...,... 30. 99 McXatt. Robert Burroughs ,......,..,,, 50. 83. 116. 128. 133 Mann. Paul Stanley . . . . . . . . . .50. 89. 99 Mathews. liildred Martha ,,,, ,...... 5 0 Mathis. Thomas Albert. . llauller. Ralph Arthur. . Maupin. George Miorth.. Maupin. Nancy Xlarion. . . Siaxwell. John Aldred . . May. Henry Clayton. Jr. . Xleador. Sara Margaret.. .. Bleentemeyer. Mary Ellen . Meesey. Leonard albert. Jr ,....,.. . . . Meyer. Richard Denzel. .,..,.,....., . Miehie. Rilly Eugene..43. 50. . .. 50.128 ..50. 100. 128 . . . . .50. 81 ..50. 98. . . 50 50 S0 . 50 s 99 50 oil. 1-4 81. 116. 128.133 Sltller. Nina Elizabeth. ........ . . . . . . ntl Blinetree. Robert Lee. . . ....... . . . .50. 61 Index- Cofztinued Moon. Helen Margaret. . . Moore. Kathleen Marie. Xlorrow. Bert. Jr ....... Morton. Tera Shirley . . Mueller. .lem ell Virginia . Murray. Mary Frances. . . S0 ....50.98 .....5l.1l6 ..43.51.l09 51 ...51.T9 Myers. Alberta Inez.. . . . . 51 Myers. Elwyn Price . . . 51 Myers. Lois Helen ..... . . 51 X Sash. Eugene Russell. . . . .... .. Sl Niedenximmer. Sara Margaret . . . . .51. T9 0 Oerly. Margaret Sue ..... . 51 Olson. Lloyd Dean ...... .. 51 P Palmer. Eleanor Sue ..... Paxton. Mm Charlotte . . 51 ...SLTT Payne. Julia Ann ............ . . Sl Peithman. Elizabeth Louise .... . . S1 Penn. Jean .................. . . Sl Pettijohn. Charles Edgar .... . 51 Pflaumer. Elizabeth Jane ..... . 51 Ptlaumer. Mary Kathenne .... . . . 51 Pierce. Mary Martha. ...... ...... S 2 Pierpoint. John Jay.. .. . Pilcher. George Edward .... Poland. James Ros. ..... R Rains. Roger William ...... Rawlings. Robert Johnson. . . . Ready. Hamid Raymond .... . 51.81.99 . .52. TS. 98 .. . . 116 52 52. 93. 116.133 98 Reed. Carl Henry. Jr ....... ...... . 32 Renick. Merrill Lendel. . 52. 128 Ridgtvay. Francis Ray.. . . . . . . 52 Risk. Donna Etta. ...... .... . . . 52 Rixey. Thomas Dyer. ..... . . .52. 83. 116 Robison. Ray Anne ..... . ........... 52. T9 Roemmich. Rodney Arnold. .......... . 52. 83. 116. 121. 133 Rogers. Charles Mulliam .......... ..... 5 2 Ruhwedel. Margaret Jane. . .......... 52 S Sanders. Rufus Ravmond ..... Savage. Joseph Leon. .... . Schrader. Dorothy Jane. Schubel. Lois Rebekah. . Schtvalje. Lillian Mae. . . Scrivner. Sarah Alice ..... Searcy. Jessie Lou ....... . Semmler. Zona Charles. . . . . . .52. 98 52. 83. 128 . . .52. TT 52 51 1 n aw as Sherwood. Samuel Charls ......... . . . 52 Siler. Robert Leonard. ......... 43, 52. 75, 128 Skags. Carolyn June .... .... .... . . . 52 Skaggs. Thorton Dayne. Jr.. . . . . . . S2 Smith. Anne Lee. .......... . 52 Smith. Mary Margaret. . . . . . 52 Snlith, Oscar Lee ....... . . 52 Smith, 1Yilliam 'ter. . . . 53 Snook. Les Jean Carol ......... Sorensen. Soren Peter ...... . Springer. Edward YYalter. Jr . Spry. Forst Franklin .... . . Stapls. Blildred Katherine.. . . Stevens. Raymond Grant. . . Stevenson. Qlive Ruth.. . . . . Stohre. Paulme ................ Straub. Slargaret lleredith ..... Streep. Dale Ellsworth 53. TS. 81 Strothman. John Fred Hadley.. . Sullivan. Jack Edmund. ...... . . Sweeney. Gene Danton.. .... . . Stvindler. Reta Reve .... T Taloott. Jamie Ruth Anne. . . Taylor. Betty Jane. ...... . Taylor. Eugene Austin .... Taylor. Kenneth Xoble.. . . . . Teters. Marjorie Jean .... . Thomas. Dawn Eileen ........ Thompson. Frances Mitten .... Thompson. Jean .............. Thornton.. Denver Elgin. Jr.. . . . . a3. . Tuggle. Billy John. ........ . Tumer. James Bryan ..... . . 116 ' 116128 53 53 .. S3 . 53 53 53 .98.102.103 53 .. .... 53. 116 . .53. 116. 128 . ....... 53 ..53. T1 53 .......53.81 ..83. 116.128 53 53 53 . ..... 53 ...54.T5.98 54 5-1 XV Walker. Ira Milford ........ ..... . 81 lYalker, Ruth Madts ....... . ........ 54, 105 YValker. iYi.l1iam Wallace ............... 54 TValley. George Edmund. ............. 54. 124 Vfalley. James Arthur .... 43. 54. 116, 12-1. 133 Meeks. Thomas Jelferson ............... 54- Wsll. Robert Leland ................. 54 'West. Vfilliam Shelton. ....... . . 128 Vt'estlake. Martha YVi1l ....... . . 54 Westmoreland. Edwin Stuart. . YYeigers. Gwendolynne Helen. . YYil.liams. Lige J ............. XYilson. Dorothy Nell ...... . Yiinheim. Kenneth Samuel.. . Wise. Mary Geraldine ...... YYo1f. Mary Elizabeth . . . YYood. Lyman Ralph.. . . lVycko11'. Bruce ........ . Z . . 54 .. .. 54 . . 5-1 . . 54 . . 54 . . 54 . . 54 . 5-I . . 54 Zulauf. Robert Paul .... . . .54. TS. 98. 102, 103 Page 140 THE MODERN WAY -MMS -fe 1,2 Hur mulls-rn slurr- is we-ll Ntfwlu-fl xxitln up-to-lln--minut-- Illr'I'l'll3llLllSt' uf all flvscriptiuns. Tlw wvrvivv llnal i:lf l'UlllIJtilllPS it malws this llle- must Plljflfiillll' plan- in Fayvttv tu Natixfy your Wallis. xx-llf'll in ne-ml uf drugs. SllllflI'lP5. wllmll -upplie-5 aml Utlwr 11:-wssitie-5. sw us first. Drwp in auytinw fur a rlrilzk aml a bilv lu f-at 111 our a1r-wlnrlltwllvrl slow. Xmll arr- always mllmrm-. Prf-sc-riptiulls 2:iYl'4'llI11p41l1llfll'tl avvllratf-ly and1-1limi:-lltiflublya. llslllgl fully tln- lugln-st quallty drugs and vllf-rrrxvalf. Twp rvgix- tf-re-cl plnarmac-isis iw svrwl you. . LEO ROSSE l-UIII' D1'11yg1'.vf 51.1109 1.9116 PHUNE T5 CITY UF FAYETTE IYXX li'l l'lf. lln- 4-mlnly sl-ul ul' llmsarcl vmuuly. Nlissuuri. is ai l'1'i4-mll5. K'lllllIl'l'4l. lbI'HQ.fl't'SSlX1' vily xsilll ai population nl' Zlfmllll. 'l'lu- mnununily lill- is l'l'llll'I'l'il uruuml its gmul sl-lumls and K'lllll'l'll1'S. 'l'ln- 1'1-we-ulimuul lin-ililie-s an- :ml surpassm-cl in any vily lll1'S2illl1'SlZ4'lllflrllgfll- mul llu- stale-. X In-xx Sklllllllllllgl pml. u lllUlll'I'Il l'ully-llglllc-cl allllc-lit' lie-lrl. all ul llu- vily park. mul ai lu-ul. ln-auliful lnim--llnlv gUll'mu1-sv al llll' 1-rlgv nl' llln' m'llX. lln- Illllllli' lIllllll1'Sill'4'UNlIUllHllfl upvlule-cl by Ilu-1-ily. ami 11-cl,-lnlly a lu-xx null-r IPlll'llll'illlHll SySll'lll was 1'HllSll'llCll'll ul a 1-ns! sw-ll mn-1' SITU,lNNl. 'l'lu- lillrulimu plaml alum- 1-ml Sillllllll. A Good Town br a Home and an Education l'rm'1- lu Yours:-ll' 'llllul SilYlIlQS . , ffmzrlf-.w nf' 'xml Uuznlllx' I -an lie- ll'ul ' ' L ls 1 , THE F YETTE THE TRE . Q LEMONS GROCERY 1 9 1 5 f,'UlIllJII'lIll'lll-N' QI' l 1-1' Q lllxllflll 5'l'W 35 Francis A. W1'i1fl1l lil N NXININIXX hlIXIDIuS 'I'lll-I ICQZUXHNII- F' ml. Exim, XXIll'I'li mm lflbli sxxll-Ll-is 81 C00 5 l ll XXI? ' flff. f X'l'XlNlfll lfl liNlSlllfl5 IZHII sl-Nlmlvz xml IG Iilll.l.lCllS 'ru IN I'HIl liIi1iHXI-IIIINH XX l'I'll Nlfxl lll,H'l'll. , V H :Xl mums 1-'on f.lf:x'rH,x1, lXilllflll3.lll YN inflow Sluulv Co. Cm I I.-mf lx XXS KN lll'l'Y Xllgsuylql Page' I-I uf Q? dak 5255255 ugly fx 555535, ,:5:5:5:E' Q 4 2255555 . +V' f :5:3:5:,:,:5:g:5:51g' .,:5:5:.- K . -125251: .. l ,I f- sk l 125555: I-S , QE X x V1 NL :ss S3 3' X Q 5 Nr . ar A N5 FUR Slfluuzlc PH! lNli O2 IT TAKES MORE THAN SKILL Filling pI'PSCI'ipliUIlS is El trust. Un Our wOrk CICIJPIIKIS tllv I'PCOYPI'y Of Illillly sick pmple. SO we strvss Dxuctrlless and inlvgrity in Order tO he wOrlhy Of' that trust. ,wg x. A ff -j W Dale:-s tOp O11 pleasant 0Yt'Illllg'S with dl'llClOllS lfte-r-tl10-slum snacks. , I Fu-vellp'.v I-'irxl 51l.l'-C011dl.lI.UIIPd Slorf' For r1I0f0l'l.l1g Cnnzjbrf - - CUUIWW uf- SIN CLAIR FAYETTE H.C LUMBER COMPANY GASULINE SINCLAIR IDENNSYLYAXNIA YUPH VY,-XNTS .HUC SATIS- MOTUR OIL FIIED, NOT MICHIQLY FILLIQD. HOME OIL CO. V CONIPLICTIS LUBRICATION SERVICI4: XI A CORNELL lrwanaqel. FAYr:TT14:, XIISSOURI ' Pg I-I3 For Y01Il'llPClNll Ilzxiy-1011 . . Jlflllglerers ry ,. euners 9 S Tlw homo of Qlf-XLI'1'Y Pa.v1'e111'1':0f1 llilk YYORK lmotll in Luunclry uucl Cll'kllllIlQ' und CH.-Xlll'S j y . , l IVSSIIIQ. SIN-Wlll'l'li IJAIIH l3ooNy'1LI.r: XIISSUVHI PUUNP3 M Incliviclualizecl ervice . . . :X l-I'll'IlKlly illlvrcfst in you and your wel- furc- not only lwlps us to lill your uvvcls. but ulso ussurvs you ol' Complvlv SilllSllill'll0ll. Hur IWl'S0llill ,Q'lIElI'2llllf'P plus products ol' ilu- lnigrlwsl quulity is our QIIISWCI' to your lumlwr ll04'flS. Como in. lvl us sc-1'vv you. LA CROSSE LUMBER CO. J. l.. Wl4:,x1'lllf:ns. llunugvr l,IIUNl'I I IU lfu F:'r'l'rf:. NIISSOPRI 'l , 'N 'N S Atkins Manufacturing OVTIIIG I C J ll GRIGSBY SERVICE Om! 2' F' STATION llIII'INlll :lx LS-DISI Nl'li4'Z'l'AN'l'S 7'f1i1w- llmlf- lxxo lx lylmlcn l'nonu:'1's 'l SlilCl,lJY l'liUl7ll1'l'S , l lllln l,oc:L's1' PHONE a3ll llXRl.lll1lflSl3X. Nl xxxralfin Co1,u11s1ox. Nllssolrm I I-I I 9 When It s Aw INSURANCE CUNSKIJI' THOMPSON KI N C A D E 0,CONNOR gl P O W E R S OLIVE AT BEA-xlm10NT ST. Lows. Mo. I I2rf QUALITY MQW? I ali. I I Q 1 I W , clepends on fl't'SIlIlt,'SS. Relllclu- ' ,K Iwi' that you cam buy I.I'0Sl1, deli- . '- J 'Q' . . . , . , XX NX, I f QSO' . CIUUS fooclstulls at 5IxIIllllill1 s. I b v I. ev ,,,-. Xb IIE 'E , , , ff- ,.'g:?1!'7'1fw I II 0 also Ilavv fI9IlClOllS snuclgs l l for picnics and IIIICIIIIQIII fvccls I' I I ,, I ' : I.. ,j ,PSX - I as wvll as lor In In-lwm-n mvzlls. --':-4 .L H' 1 E1- -EEE ' SKILMLIVIA I FM 1s'r'1'1f: NI ISSOITRI I 3, WWW VI-17 iq lm - Q I W' Y I QE - 5 E Quan L ,iiigx The Sclxool Ilmi' places Stuclelxls 'WW CHILLICOTHE BUSINESS COLLEGE CHILLICOTHE, Mo. Wffffga Q 4 'TX' 5 -fx '34-N-f3f'N 'Ty . .l -gh 51 ' .I dim A- .I l .. .fx I .,,,,A Zy l II5. El: I u lwng 1 'y y' -IIII . -,Q LIIIIEQI I . , A. ,, V2.3 ,J J: any - -,-- 4.,.fA5,.. ,LJ 2 ,wx w-,' -- x ' I- 'flxj . . L . fi L .W .ll lv Em., . THESE EIGHT BUILDINGS COMPRISE THE LARGEST, BUSINESS COLLEGE PLANT IN AMERICA , 145 DENN EN Y and BIRKHIMER The Hera!! Drug Slorf' 'l'lQLl-imloxllz 66 NN liS'I'liRN VXION 'l'liLliliRfXl'll Ulfl-'ICIL I 'l'l'II.lil'IIUNIC 150 MORTONS SHOPPE HAWKINS SHOE . . , . SHOP cm'LM'h Wu Q B vrlv' 'l'Yl'liXl UL' I8 .g 1. UU. 1 Q. .A g Ul H1 D Y W N v My XIUTTO 5' M 'IALI X Norm Too Good Hun, fimlu U. li. lloxwmxs. Prop. Say It With Flowers . . . H111 FlU1l'f'l'.k'1f :fll'.N'flflP.S'iN 131711111164-N' For 1L'I'Pl'-V Ul'l'Cl.N'l'OlI SCHN ELL FLORAL CO. ZS STORliS 2 I xx lC'I II HOUXYII I FIRST C ALL A- 0 0 0 X'-if Fon xii 504,57 'rlmsm m5LlC1ol's I-'owns Slclwls: oxT 'NHL Colson S Cafe Diva nn I3 nur: The Sllzaolenlfv Cl1o1'c'e Mrs. Clifford? Coffee Shop nI'IIl16'l'6' Ezwxv Meal is a Pleasanl .llenmr-v Fn'1':TT1 XIISSOURI P A U L ' S SANDIIICII small Sleakx Slmrl U1'rlf'r.s' Puomc I28 21-Ilol'R Sl-:m'11:l 7 FAYETT E WELDING 'I AND Clothing W0 TI X MACHINE WORKS X f ISSTXBLISIIICII H395 7 Ji., 11 IIIWMW. Q I V V I .siI.Ir' 451911 v f WELDING ' If ft WW I Shoes If ,m , ge Q 2 , ..oo.h T ooooo THIS IJINEST IN NYELDIIYIZ CHAS, H, LEE SINCE IQI3 F,n'15TTl4:, Nlo. NI. H. ISIUIZIIIIXIY F.wl1:T'rli. IXIISSOITIKI Bolfs 66 Station Hummer Products . . Iflour I I Ira lkllll IIISCUII, SP6c'iali:ef1' Lll1Jl'lIl'UlI.0l2 Pwwakff Corn BIA-aI Gold Nledal F1-mls LEE 'TIRES BA1-fl-EBIES .I. I. Case Iniplvulvnts Iuwu-4-ries-S4-mls-Baby Cllivks-Iiifling: Horses BOB VVILHOIT PHUNF ohm YOUR STORE and UURS I Rowland Rivkm-its P 147 BHANNOCK HALL :xfllllllllSlI'8llUll7 Art liusiness-Corn1111,-rev l'll'1lIlUlIllCS7l'lllgIllSll llislury-KInu-l'll1llm-Ill llvliginn Central College FAYETTE. NIISSOIRI 13 Nllssol nfs l,l'I,XlJIXfi LIBERXI. ARTS lllflll lxllQXI,I'l'N xl' Lou COST Special Session Willa lln- zulllilinm ul' ilu' F-pm-vial Session, lJl'gIlIllllIIgf Nlay 20 . . . . . Q w . u aural Hblllllllllllg lor llllU1'll su-vks, 4.1-nlrzil Lnllcge- Ulll'I'S4yUlIllQI men and XUlIlll'll am unusual Ulllllbflllllllf lu 1-mllplm-lv lln-ir 1-ullm-ge vcluva- lion all an mm-ln varlivr m':1l1-mlm' flalv, l'N1'Il ln-l'uI'm-1111-ling: 4-alll-cl ln mll1l'u'x wrxlm-. 1 . llrzullmliml may lH'iillillIl1'lllllllXl'I'4'Qlll2il'S1'llll'Sll'l'SHllll lllI'W' Npvviul sl-ssinns. xsilll lln- l'Ulll'S1' fully upprmvrl and aw-11-clilm-fl as in ilu-n-gulau'pImn41l'1-iglnl se-luwslws. Slmll-mls lhllmxillg lllis 'Xll-M-ar Plan will saw frmn S60 ln NTB in uv! uul 4-usln l'n1'vavln Spl-vial Session alll-ncll-cl. STREAMLINED T0 MEET WAR EMERGENCY FINE ARTS-LIBERAL ARTS- SCIENCE-COMMERCE CURRICULUM FULLY APPROVED AND ACCRISDITED Central College is fully approved and aeerecliliecl lay the AlIlPI'll'ElIl Association ol' University Women. the Association of American Univer- sities. and the Nortll Central Association of Universities and Colleges. Central College is a Cl1tlI'l0l' Illlllllllfll' ol' the Nlissouri College Union. For Complete lllllUI'lll2lll0ll write the enrollment SPC'I'Pliil'y, Central College. Fayette. Missouri. SCIENCE HALL Biology CllGllllSlI'y Geology lXlatln-ina! Pllysies Pg 1-I9 lies! lilly is lizzirlc Keller Motor Co. Hllllfk .S'01'r1'rf' NX lam' 5IlDl-I FQI' xml: l n'r:'1'T1c Nllssol HI l'r1ox1fI32 NIIHIQS PIIHIQXIX IIUSIEIH RICKETTS' SHOE STORE Nl'Il't'.N'f Slylfm- in l ool11'ml' liom. Ii. lllflil-Q'I I'S. l'mp.. Class 'SSI CLK ITIIIXI laallCA'l'Se' SHOES EOR MEN WHO THINK IN TERMS Ulf ljIfXLl'I'Y O TULLY CHENOWETH CLOTHING CO. Slyf0.v of Tllllflyu llllllIIfCl1'fIll'l'l'N mul ll l1nl0.v11le1'.w of l'I,l Nl lil NH IIICXTINKR VY.X'l'lfll YYUIHSS Sl l'l'Ll liS Pl Xllfs .Xlli-CUNDl'l'lUNING lfljl lllxl ICYI' mul STK Jli ISHS Nou ilI'1'1'Hl'fllilllX mx :tml lo x :sul our lllUfl4'I'Il slnmwomlls. N. O. NELSON CO. 13100 Ill xnxx Xu-3. ST. l.ol'1s f,'o111pl1'111m1l.v of Hotel Howard 'XND Stylist Beauty Shop Fayette Co-op NIILL .NND IQLIQY-X'l'Uli Pnoxxc .1 w v l5IC,Xl.I'IRS IN ltxmx S1-:lan or' ALI, kno .nn ll wma loimxo l'lEl'IDS P COM PLI M ENTS Qf FAYETTE ICE 81 CDAL CO. I'IAYE'I l'E, M Issoum . KI III . . ,Il l- ee -6 ' -mg, ff 'alll um...- ,.,- I. I 12. ,.,-,. STAIYII SEIU ING LICIC FIN IC FOODS STAIYII SAYING MUN EY IIEIIPSI' lim- funds lash- Iwlle-I'. vnsl you la-ss and IIlt'Y.l'l' In-114-r for xml. Ask I , FLOUR UNIICORBILY IEINIC fur Ll4:l'1 IIILUQIJS at your ,mm-nl-x'. QUALITY H. D. LEE COBIPANY Ii mms IIIITY C 1 3 t W 0 I, t h V 9 S To 'I'HlC Sl 'CCICSS UF 'rule ' 1912 RAGULIII The IVYJIIIFIIVIS ' Q 5,1011 f,4lIIlllIIlIl1'IllS Qffflf' I STANDARD OIL CO. FAY1f:'rTr IXIISSOUBI qwnpwm Mattingly Bros. Stores Co. SCHOOL SUPPLIES - NOTIONS DRUG SUNDRIES - FRESH CANDIES .'IIIlll2Clg6l'. I. L. YARNER YUIII l'fX'l'HUNAGIi IS AI'l'HliCl:X'l'ED PEACOCK BEAUTY SHOP C Puoxl-3 2312 THE GRILLER To Central students who Come audgo Your fI'IQllflSlllIJ and putrollage is our dcflight As ugaillst tlw uncertain tides of life you row May you IIOYPI' fool the distress ofa losing light DIXIE GRILL 'lwlauzplloxri 308 l,'o111pl1'111f'l1l.v of Churchill Nltlllllfllflllfillg Co. ,I IIIIIII-l.lll'lllf'I'l'N of Iioxuf-ox lhwlxxsxul Flxlsn. Thoms- I-Lou: IIILXSSIIIJIDNI SICALICR. AL,xDD1N H. F. ROSE ELEC'l'lllCAL SHOP IJIQALIAIR Fon I Rl4,iIlDAlIilC. PIIILCU RADIO ,xxn A-Xml-.-X-iloT1c WAX AND JENKINS NIISIC CO. 1,01-ul HP,Jl't'.W'IIfllll.I'f' if. ll. J wvllzlwox llncxm' F. Home timsaow, Mo. 'l'omcKx Iixxsoxs To Tllli Sl url-:ss or 'rm-I IQIQ IIXIIUIWIN C0llllllCl'l'iZlI Trust Co. .llVIllIH'l' l 1':l:'r1ll IM-povil lrlwllrrll I,nrporulmn I1'.n'lf:'1 1'l4: XIISSUPHI I Q'ol11'l0.vlv If f BEAT RICE CREAMERY BooNv1LL14: NIISSOURI l I l 4 Complinzenls rj l COLLEGE CROFTERS 1llIClIllIfCll'llll'iI1g JENYELERS AND ENGR -XVERS KA1ws,xs CITY AIISSOIIRI I IEIRCJ PI'S FIRE CUNTRUL SERVICE -- QIATIOIIL DEFEISE' 'E:1 5 ' 3. 'I' fl: o 1 ,I -,K r ugll FIRE DEFEISE , 4. 3-Z' :' ' ' ' . ,,.. ' ,. v ' 3?ffry ,j:'1E5f5rE3'4 '-'1's: 1-if -' I I lil:::-:3:-:-:fi3'52:5gff:515 .. ':3.-.Q 3 X 5 -.-:-.- ' : v , t , ', C , ' Q l 5 1 ' 3 I P I lf r Wow. If 3 V if 096 -. '41 A - 1 s FIRE DEPARTNIENT SPPPLIICS SPRINKLER SYSTENIS ALARNIS l EXTlNGI'lSIlERS SERX ICE FAY1-:TTIQ RIISSOURI GREYHOUND SUPER AND Yllll SAY E Yl'l'fXL WAR NIATERI A LS Ti N J. WIIEIN YI llf TRAYEL IH' IEREYIIUIIND You clo an se-nic-v for yourscll' and for ,'XIIl4'I'lC2l Nllfxll you Illilldt' your trips by flI'l'f'llUllIlfl Supvr- COtll'll lIlSll'ilfl ol' lay private' cur. In-causv you not only suvv urlluul IIIOIIPX lllI'UlIQll lll'Pj'llUlIIlfl,S low llklI'PS lnut you ulso lwlp l'OIlSl'I'YP IIlill0I'lillS vilnl to our wan' 1-ll'orl. llI'4-Iyllibllllfl c-un lrunsport Illilllj Inns-s lllOl'P lJilSSt'llg.f9I'S pvr gallon ol' gusolinv. per pound ol' rulllwr or nn-tul lllun is possilrlv by unlo- IllOlIll1'. l,lI'I'ylI0lIIIIl is going ull-out in the wan' cllorll. llI'illlSIJOl'l,lllQ troops uncl sm-1'x'ic-v nn-n unrl clvll-uso work- c-rs. lull lwmllse travel is u IIlUI'lllP lmuilclvr l,l1f'I'0lS room for you unfl every ollwr JxIll0I'lL'iiIl lo go Ilrvy- llflllllll. ' W' 'A' 1 5 , ' T I wr I5 GREYHOUND. Page' 15,3 0 l'i1 -ec x-'fx' ggfiofogzczfzfiicafzgf Qfouu ,lilllllly Casey 4 I ,I Q' 2 Q V ,I A 9 ffl ' ' Q ii ,- t. - IAA , . 1 DFS-ivan NX i 1 41135 - 59 0 . 5 1 S A 1 ' 'Eh M f 5 ' ,safe f ...ff 4 tmp ,W 5 ...ig it it ... gggwsw Mixitg? -L if t ' Gif tt . ,V ffw 4 ig' i lf Am . . . and along the gentle, rolling slopes of Central's campus, the name and fame of BURGER-BAIRD is known to such fel- lows as Al Thurman and his staff. Mem- bers of Boards of Publication. college and university officials and professors, know of the ability and integrity of tl1is company. For over half a Century we have served faithfully the schools of America. A com- plete understanding of the problems con- fronting an editor and business manager of a yearbook, is ours. So, against that day when you, too, will be buying photo-engravings, fix in your mind the name BURGER-BAIRD. Join BURGER PM can at .U I M ca, lillllllllllf- ARTS Blillli ff' at U lttlihili t EW i the ranks of those from Arizona. litah, Kansas. lllissouri, lllinois, New York, Maryland. and many other states, who know from experience that we are the engravers of the Middle Vllesl. For good printing plates, fthe bestj, for unexeelled service tanywhere in Amerieaj, for an interpretation of your ideas, for an understanding of your problems and ob- jectives, for all those things you expect from your engraver tand morej, look to the Heart of America and BLil'ttiEH- BAIRD. We stand ready to serve! ll'l'l.fP. wire or phone, for an fzppoinfnzenl zeillz our represelliatlre. vt.LJ, , :nn KANSAS clTY.Mu. i QJQDII Wlhlf ZGECZ 931179 GCDCDD TASTE n the coming months and years all of us will give up, temporarily, more and more of the Fine quality to which we have become accustomed. But this does not mean that vve need relinquish our sense of good taste. It simply means that vve must exercise greater ingenuity in the selection and use of the materials and facilities at our disposal. ln printing it means that paper and materials will be limited in quality and variety, and there will be tevver nevv type faces developed. Thus, the true art of the capable printer will become more important: his superiority vvill be emphasized by the ingenuity with which he creates vvorlcs of beauty in spite of these limitations. ln selection, arrangement and spacing of type, in painstalcing pressvvorlc, and in artful combination of available papers, inlcs and materials, the capable printer will Find the means to inspire a greater demand for his services among those who appreciate Finer things. lvll D-STATE PRINTING CQMPANV Printers, Binders and Cover-lVlal4ers for School Vearboolcs JEFFERSON CITY, MISSGU RI '15 -lv- .nw a Q.:-Rm: . :,j.AJ. .f, . x' 1 9: 13,7 New f -4- -, 5, 'gin , ' li ,, . ', ,,, -1 ,,x. , .f 4 1 . ,X -Q' 4 M1 1 V , ,. ,..x,A .. .I ky . ., , , ' - f A Q l. 1 72, 0, .Ale . -... V, . ..!'. ' -. , , .Q ., :IW - 'Q ,715 ,1-R -' V , 1, wr ,i . ,. T5 ' A' , .T-, 5' ' ' ,Z t - f' ' af? , , -,.. 4 I-I ,.., U .. Q.. . 5 'ff ,f.y,Af, + -mn, ., 1 -1222, 4. Iv ,. 3 .Q-r'.-' 'iii A 'yr 1 t.',.4-L, I' -. N.-. '--f -sf 31,12- .7 t. , mb, , f , ,.f,gi,:' 1-. .. 'L -,. 5 , U- 1, . J'..:,.f:'- 1.,',1,: ',: f:-:Al 1 - Q ,. QQV liji' 1151 ' .- J. V -if . J, . '. , -. v v ,V., N, .-.. J, J 7 ' S A In gd r 1'1. , ' 1 Y' Agn! 311 i 19 GA 7 ' -SE .r k, v An. ..,35y I if -La ffm J , f, U4 QV wwwkx E we if M Qfwia E Q ,f Ni Qfwf fy Q is WSW dwg, ff agjmhki W2 ff GQWZQWMG ,W M' 2 'A Q , V N, ,' x' y ,,, . at -YQJU,VE thumbed through it . . . you a may have read it . . . at least you now p , N have formed an opinion . . . We hope it . is favorable . . . We realize the imper- fl fections are many . . . we haven't done N all we intended to do . . . We couldn't . . . We've had our troubles, our quarrels . . . but all of it . . . the hours of work, the new experiences have been fun . . . The result, this book, is yours to do with 747 4 what you Will . . . y Editor. iw W to if fi Lv-'W 2 fr-yy QL mx 770 Manu Q .rw W - 2?
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.