w,.,a1 5-141-f 1 .nf -. ...r . 4 , 514: I -1 J:.. .'1:, b ,3f,Al3. 'v'.:3 - ' ' wa., ,, ,J .1 g.1'g,., 'A 1-11, -1 .nm . 111'- ,411 , 1, ,Ll 1f ' 1.1 -- , 1 1 1 'I .uf , A if, . f-1-J, 5.1, ,, 'ang J 94,1151 A M 4, 5 we -. J 1 1 .1 1 J .4 -. 4 L xr .vw gf 'A wr: -1 1 f'r 11 .Lf. . ', , 4-,111 1 1 1 .- -if-.11 ,-:.,'11 5 .lrfv ':1', ,' ' 1 1 -f 7,1--' xi 3 ' iliiah' 1 1 - -3 E411 ,3 EE ' w ' Q - -Q -1-1 r . 'y 1-.',. - ,X --.1nv,?' :gn 1,-. 4- 3 '. :Hg U V4 ' ,ug 5 I 1 D ' -1.:'L -4' - rd., ,- -L.-.W Rx! .1 .3 ,1 1',w ., , 7- mi .- ,J .X v, 1 I jfi ' 111, LJS1'-,k1.11 my 'nw-5 IVF A: j-1 JA Mah' I K -XL' 12' L- ' 3 4 ' -1-1:wW1 14. gif, JI '3'f..5 Ing ri f' v '.:. ' ity' . 4. A-1 . 1 1. .LJ ' 111441 Q . ' 1,--.-uw-.' 1.,r1,'-r Vbii 1 51233 .. , . ,3- Ah me, what uct, that roars so loud and thunders in the index? -Hamlet Ill, iv ,af 9,-.v uf' 'Gaim I.-'Lf'f5f-Lv - .nf .- . 55gf .- .zzfmsg 5'-3 .. .lv uc A: ' 'le' -.A-f,,,-4, ,et ' - 1 -' 1 iff: ,.,.:'m-1-2-'f-Yi r .N-21' .--- .-1- - .:-- sm- fs- . - ' '- f' - .211-... .-f-T -f' . tp , .,.. -x .1---sf ,: ., .' , - '-i,-V, 5? ,.,!:.-B Q , J- ..-H-.FJ-3 , , My W ff... -,,,.-5,T,..- -,,.-K, -- .. , . -- .-- :-- -tt yd'-jj .- e--ff s .' r 4,1-'Af .31-, V I ' five.,-.'. vw 1, V, -- . -- ,,, e.p-, - , -1 - A 1-4,:,,,, fl., , f,,1- -,- .4 'F -1 '- -1 av'-. -- .,... -.-,-, f. . , . - . ,-1,-,. ,, .. 5 '.w1f,,.i f1--gf 5' if-4' .1:. - -1: 1.-35122.15 , z - rf 1 ' 91-,, ,,.--. -..'..- - ,. ' - .rf ' 4- .j,jj.'-:g4,A:S . ' -,.:',,:. A be :rin- ' ' is presented the sixty-eighth volume of the Index. This year, as in other years, it is a record of lite, activity, and ideals at Wooster College in Wooster, Ohio. S is 5 9'l.l 171561 .I Slanqlna 3 55 5 Q 3 Q 1 G 2 F. CH 9 5 9 2 CB F 9 3' ln 3 ri? CON TEN TS Scenes .........Q.................-...-- - 4 Faculty and Administration .,........ l-4 Faculty ........................4------ ---- l 8 Administrative Otticers ..... .... 2 4 Athletics .......................... ---- 2 8 Football ..... ...- 3 4 Basketball ....... ---- 4 2 Minor Sports ..... .... 4 3 Girls' Sports ..... .... 5 8 Organizations ..... .... 6 2 Religious 66 Musical ..... .... 6 9 Dramatics ................. .... 7 4 Student Government .,,. .... 8 O Journalism ................................ 84 Departmental and Elective ........ 88 Social Lite ............................. .... 9 6 Dream Date ..... ....... l O3 Girls' Clubs ..... ....... l O6 May Queens ..,,. ....... l lO Sections ..... ....... l i2 Classes ...... ....... l 24 Seniors ..... ....... l 29 Juniors .......... ....... l 38 Sophomores ..... ....... l 46 Freshmen .... .. fs 39 ,,,f-Fl 'I-f -2?'.ni-'FP-Bi.w S51 .1 .1- .i-gf-a-.r 54 a school steeped in tradition facing tradition if .1 tempt to rneet the year's problelns, to keep its head ,mf 35' 4' 4' If ..,.,e....g 1, 1 , . . Z-415 -spar:-.:fi ,1. -- f . ,... -229. ' 5-'1,19!'S- l- V - ' .m':'17?f::.J 4 65:2 -..,.s:'5'q' - 542 f .- .,sftF'.-.,,p-sv-'A-:fr-31: V--2 'fi' -' :ff ' ' at 1 ', :+?'.g?gg+- ,,-3' .,.z.--'r 1 - . .if .'-L-xiii. wfi-u.z.ir - il '-1-A 5.111 .. - 'f sljfgi-'9JZ,R:.qF .sci r:f.r..'.-',.P,:4:-he ,.-s , f-...-J ,:- vw- .:g,.1-ea. rf -,,- ' A -,gf 5-iii?-'? J- A' ' T Q3 V L! ,zasiv r F! F Z'-u'f.1f' P 5. '- er' 4-2 Ft -fi' ITT'--1' -'fr' '.-:Lease -2- '-fgrfr' '-gm f S.: 1 4 s .g' ,57.,. .A 3,34 353321 ' 4w'4'r-5 Y24E'--.5,+.Tf- 1 . 'sz--. H -i e- ik-:,w.2er',.:'L9-..-f,. w::'4i?fI,-:'-'-r-:.1,- gg: 'rv' L,-H2 a '.2?i5ti'?.i,'.',:79F'idJ,-5-aT,'57' ' ' ' iff? -'QE7?.,'LJ5:?f5 'Lfi xl 4 751' 5'3'f,v ' . ia? '-11 fe F71-T-'T' 'aad f -5893? P 5' if -, If-Q-1 +5 sf- 'pf-:Qf s.afw1.w' f-fwiiilf as E1 ,. ,-,.,, -W 5, . .1 . -. .hi uh- J- ww 4,-... .-.-,, . . . 4--ev-'id f-.inn .1 -ig ff . -,, 1, 4,-..Z-.-5 ., MZ., - ,.n:. IIYW ,i ,V .n , - f',, .:,3- 3:72-'rpg as 2:-1 H -'JL :ri-- .. .-.3-:v - 'ww-, ,- ,..-ess.,-,::ef.f' - f. - .,i:, ,,wqi- is ,- ie- A 'f' ,: -f'-1ff-tf. - .,-- iff. 'ESF . - . 1 1 le forts have tnsptred the Index to record the :nan-ner in nvhtch jolting times. This has been an amazing year. The Index is a record and perspective above hysteria, and its feet on solid earth- lVooster's the various phases of Wooster life have blended to meet This Year. . Roberf Edwards, Edifor Herbert Rogers, Bus. Mgr Headquarters for lVooster's faculty and adlninistration is Galpin Hall, the administration building. Q.i JW4.i Galpin Hall, Wooster's ad- ministration building, was constructed in l928, the gift of William A. Galpin. lt houses the offices of the President, the Deans, and other adminis- trative officials. Like most other Wooster College build- ings, it is of the English collegi- ate Gothic type of architecture. The Deans' Office is a clearing house for colle- giate affairs. Pictured is the reception room, pre- sided over by secretaries Klein and McVay. The office force of the Admissions Office occu- pies the entire south wing of first floor Galpin. Here are kept files of entrance applications, correspond- ence, grades, job and scholarship opportunities -a wide miscellany. Severance Gylnnasiuna is the seat of lVooster's physical education and athletic program. 8 UQIWELVLCQ mlfwwzfzfam Severance Gymnasium was the gift in l9l2 of college benefactor Louis H. Severance. Here are located two play- ing courts, locker rooms, offices, and gymnawunxeqmpnmnt The alma mater: basket- ball fans rise. Jarnmed full of spectators at al- most every basketball contest, Severance Gym- nasium will hold about 2000. Learning rhythm is a part of the girls' physical edu- cation program. Pictured during a gym class are these rhythmists, who learn to .polka and do other folk dances. 1 Q me-S' ,., a 'NA 4 gl N . ui 5 . 1' f E ,-ffl Jflf-n1:'i:.'fi . 4U51,'1-fr-A: ' 1 -are 2 H A .I-fi an 1 ' pf 25' 'L . hx! ' 1'ff. M 177 If , -- --1?-1, 'ik ,iqfg Q Y A- Q?-LEQ a za : n -V:,,f I 1 ,--!..f ,f -fwiqf 'H ,534 5513-' -zwbf iff-ff a -Q ' ,. V-,Zz '-,HV -.2 .' 41 - V- .1 . 'Avg-1 :'i,'!gQ'Q' . i f . . if 7 ' T51 eff' . ' .wife '-M151 ,,.-: A --Y.-'HLA emi - f .fs ' N- ,gfeff-w . ' ,f-,L.'--irc!! -' 1 - 'fll' ':efLEQ,mf5'Y1 3-15' fi- ' 'X A' -r'-k.,,,, s- 1' 1- sl Y-'f , X --oea.7iQ.,l,,.L -ff---. X951 457 ...4 - , , , -. M - ' ' '5- 4 1 if -,iii-M . V, P ,,-M vulv E '- :jlQ7fQfl:'3 'Mk his if? , ' L hs 1 'A -.I-' Wi- ,meager ga ' ,,4-gf. ., 1 g,1f .asf 'fix 5-+ win '91-32 - ,Q-ff. , . 'Q-M., , A', ' f-4: lj-M ,. . KX V ainj l t .M In ' , ' Frist' ' inf eff' :K+-in BQ 1 J Us '5fz'ir'.sf'j 5 F V ,f i ?+g'PJ :.,gWf':-Q., V 3 ,f as-Q In T -i w? 4' .-ff: 3 ,dxf ,ap if 5 'QMS 3 fi ...V 'fn' -v.-ww I ., ,ig '- .Q - f,., ., . , u .. Y V 4 M 2. , QI- 5 L- U -. ' c ' , , .. .B T .fl K. W 1 :N VB Zhi at am Q UAW Many groups and individuals have contributed to the construction and modernization of Wooster's Memorial Chapel, built in l9Ol. Here are held daily chapel, Sunday services, and many other public events. Chapel seating capacity is nine hundred. Required chapel convenes students at least four times a week. Pictured is port of a jam-up at an east door. Services range from devotional to high- ly secular. Choir practice in the chapel with Prof. Rowe directing. The choir, one hundred fifteen strong, practices twice weekly in the choir loft and pro- vides music at Sunday church. Rather sombre in appearance, The Sugar Bowl, aptly dubbed the Shack by students, is the center of Wooster social life. Bill Syrios is part of the Wooster tradition. For twenty-eight years owner and operator of the Shack, he plays an im- portant part in Wooster's recreation. f , 1 The Sback, built by students in l9l O as a bang-out, is now the ex officio seat of college social life. Unlike the impressive college buildings, the Shack is drab, a frame building devoted to fun-making and frivolity. The Union Building, now in construction, will sur- pass it in grandeur, but few will forget the old Shack tradition. lg Slew! Monday morning 10:10. With no chapel services scheduled for Mondays, chapel period is free time. At this time the shack is full of students-and smoke. 5 'rf . '.'Y A The Novel is a novel course taught for the first time this year. Under English professor Braml- tord, students studly contemporary novelists' methods und works. lKciulce's single stairway to second llloor is ui congest ed place between classes Kaulce is unusually con structecl. Five ground floor doorways open to sections which are units within themselves Chief building on the Wooster quadrangle is Kouke l-lall, which is the seat of the l-lurnanities. Built by citizens of Wayne County, Ohio, in l902, it is named in honor ot Captain John l-l. Kauke, o long-time college benefactor. lt is by far the largest and most impressive of Wooster's class buildings. aczfzgfy 6LlfL6!..!4JIOfLilfLi15fl 6Lfi0lfL Popular Deon of Men John Bruere coused cz stir when he began riding to his office ci lo bike to preserve the wciistline ond to conserve gas. r r E W E r 1 l w 5g3,3gjQgg-gwwfzvmwmmwa,.vNmw.vmufm:1f1-mmm,-w1,uw1uww.-v- rw-1 xzmfmm- 1 ,ff , it ff' . f-.. ,F-we-Hue' -1.. . ffifes- is .v:.Q..v3:::..'5I'sbfs :ci .-i,w-z4Q,.2,f- a .1-egg. 3 sweet! riffs- ff ,J ,gi , ly' .1 1, ,111 , I -ji' :-.tv ,Vw i , We iifijntfiif r L, lm f- r - 'fe 1 I 1 ' f -124- W -I ci V. , .4 , Q. mffgjt 5' M11-'--., lf- v 't J' N I ' yi -f ' ' . m e so High light of the facul- ty and administrative year was a decision in January which revolutionized the character of the Wooster curriculum. Once decided, faculty and administra- tion moved with unprece- dented speed to gear the college to a new pace. The examination schedule was scrapped and a shortened academic program put in- to immediate effect. Chief activity among college of- ficials this year lay in or- ienting students and stud- ent events to the acceler- ated schedule. This year had opened as most years do. Frosh were welcomed and oriented by officials, and slaughtered by upperclassmen. New Top: MISS DUNHAM'S CURRENT EVENT CLASS is a new course prompted by the year's extraordin- ary happenings. Restrict- ed to underclassmen, the course filled rapidly. Center: HIGH LIGHT of the 75th Anniversary cel- ebration was the memor- ial dedication to the coIIege's founder by Miss Taylor and President Wis- hart. Lower left: DR. MATEER AND COACH BOLES talk it over after the Anniver- sary banquet. Lower right: DR. SNAVE- LY AND GOVERNOR BALDWIN Ieave Taylor Hall after celebration speech-making. F g Q 2 SF Q Q 222 '. -3 - mfr., ire? vw: 1 5:55, . we BWJXW- bmw. ? X . H a gh. -19 .gm , 4, 1 Mi 9EE H, x.., .4 WITH FIHMNESS IN THE HIGHT lt takes a strong soul to control a chaos, and the war has brought a chaos to the Wooster campus. When Mars is in the ascendancy, disintegration rides the wind. In this whirl of emo- tional and intellectual confusion, the silver-haired figure of Prexy appears to give the student encouragement ond inspira- tion. He faces the paradox without failing. On one day he gives a farewell blessing to some embryonic soldier, sailor, or marine, on the next, he encourages some wondering student to continue his formal education, for well he knows this is not hypocrisy, this is life. Leaning on the Bible, bringing forth the words from his memory and from his heart, he seems to say to each of us: With firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in. . . DURING THE BOOK CAMPAIGN Prexy FROM THE HALLS OF MONTEZUMA- contributed fifty volumes for the amuse President Wlshurt here bids farewell to ment of men in service He IS pictured M 'e enhsfees PUd9e Hole ond Dick with campaigners, Ruth Conover and Bill Gernert Lytle. Yesherduy ii' was inspiving fm recaii fha? Pm-exy 'embodied ul!! The swfaefness and High? Want churucverize fthe Woos?ef iwradiwon. Today what recoUNeci'iv:m is sfill inspir mg, bun? equmlliy reassuring is Hee Qhouxghi' ilfiwif Prexy embodies mi! We courage and Sforthifrudee in Mme SAcoQc5n-irish i'mdN'ion. -L i . fig .Qf56!WZifWVEL.QfVZLL DR. RGY F. GRADY Chemiswy DR. K. VER STEEG .JQQULQQ E. 5. PECK Ark W. E. STONEBURNER Educahion DR. A. 5. TOSTLEBE Ecnnwmics 5? ff' if-'N-4 F. WV. MOORE English DR. V. PERM Philosophy Geoimgy DR. W. I. SCHREIBER ,X DR. E. M. NEWNAN Gufeefx German X Sm . , DR. WI 3. HAH. Hiswory DR. J. M. VANCE Religion i lB- INK ll.Q DR. R. V. BANGHAM Biology DR. M. Z. JOHNSON Political Science DR. C. 0. WNHLLHAMSON Mmfrmemaiics F, 'fix ,...-f L. C. BQLES Physliral Educnkian NEEM. O. ROWS Mum: J. W. 'CDLTHQUSE French W. R. VVESTHAFER Physics DR. F. HI. COWLES Lakin A. .HGH NSTON Sociology . .i 7 Dm. D. G. LEAN Speech Fi. RECHARDSON Spanish and U11-cxhicm M. REM? Psycbmhmgy DR. C. DOUGLASS W'est?mEws?er Zaasior V . , W, E , it .fl .I f.1l'1T'. .t If . ll 1. . V...-'T 'L' 4 , W ,gg jk 5,9 ,917 pry 5 juwmgbgrg gli f gf' if in 5' 59' iw M gfillfsi' J, i1'2zMfs.It:f5f3.a 'Q QQ.-3 :QQ-V gl fl? wg. it IRM WQQ, JDJ uf v?f.1'Mf QQMt'in4 ii Q, ,H . . if K' ff il 2 i' J 'V if f ii i ,w ,lr rr' r if f N 2571 ,ff 'Q f ,xi Ml Qycw iffywi vigil fi fftnbwlgiig or J Pictured above in their seats in the chapel loft are the members of the Wooster College faculty. Chapel programs, compulsory for students, are well attended by faculty and administrative officers. Faculty members are seated by seniority-eldest in point of service receive front seats with the Deans and the President. Z2 The faculty bears the responsibility of preserving Wooster's academic standing, and in this the individual faculty member bears a dual responsibility-to students and to his fellow professors. This year the fac- ulty met in a series of spirited Caucuses to decide on means of meeting an academic crisis produced by the national emergency. l 1 l l r i 4 5' il' ll' c?fmwF'I?tL? fmt :rv 5 5'-rp ,i1pt1p,ffQiff:ff Prf mv? if 7 F7fT1'iQ'f.' -71'--'zzfnfifnfzr mv ffsvm f'TX7p,yp 'Tl 'i mfr i':'fw'e il7?l'7l'J'.7' 1273 N711 .ly I u ,J ,, ' Its decision: acceleration ot the college curriculum, cooperation with governmental requests, and a continued maintenance ot high academic standards. This has cut tor the faculty a herculean task. Front Row: Dr. Mary R. Thayer, Dr. Martin Re-mp, Dr. J. Milton Vance, Rev. Curtis R. Douglass, Dean Wil- liam Westhater, President Charles F. Wishart, Dean John Bruere, Dean Rachel MacKenzie, Dr. Delbert Lean, Mr. John Olthouse, Coach Lawrence Boles, Dr. Roy l. Grady, Dr. Charles Williamson. Second Row: Dr. William l-lail, Dr. Vergilius Ferm, Dr. Aileen Dunham, Mr. Archibald Johnston, Mr. Neill O. Rowe, Dr, Ralph V. Bangham, Mr. Emerson Miller, Dr. Frank l-l. Cowles, Dr, Alvin S. Tostlebe. Third Row: Miss Pauline lhrig, Dr. Ruth Richardson, Mr. George W. Bradford, Miss Kathleen Lowrie, Coach Ernest l-lole, Dr. Elizabeth Coyle, Coach John Swigart, Mr. Whitney Stoneburner, Mr. Daniel Parmelee, Coach Carl Munson, Dr. Wintord L. Sharp, Mr. William DeVeny. Fourth Row: Mr. James Anderson, Dr. Eva Newnan, Mr. Louis Ingram, Dr. Earl Ford, Mr. E. K. Eberhart, Dr. William Schreiber, Dr. Raul Bushnell, Dr. Lowell W. Coolidge, Mr. Arthur Southwick. Fifth Row: Miss Geneva Jacobs, Miss Mary J. Buccalo, Miss Ruth Saddler, Mr. Charles B. Make, Mr. Melcher Fobes, Dr. William Kieffer. Back Row: Mr. Herman L. Meyer, Dr. John Hutchison. Seated: Henry W. Taeusch, Miss Lucy L. Notestein, Daniel C. Funk, William H. Miller, William F. Weir, President Charles Wishart, Bruce Knox, Richard L. Cameron, Arthur H. Compton, Mrs. Alva C. Bailey, FUBNIULATUBS The all-powerful governing body of Wooster College is the Board at Trustees. Responsible only to the Presbyterian Synod of Ohio, this group of men has the final say in matters of college management and policy, faculty appointments, and authorizations of expenditures. Ten members each year are elected by the Synod for terms of three years, vacancies being filled on the rec- ommendation ot the Board. Mrs. Albert D. Frost. Standing: W. Dean Hopkins, John D. Mc- Kee, Howard F. Lowry, William H. Hudnut, J. Harry Cotton, John R. Williams, Arthur F. Blaser. 0F DESTINY . Held in the spring, tall, and winter, its meetings are at present presided over by Arthur H. Compton. Meetings open with a prayer by Prexy and conclude with luncheon at Babcock, but during the session, all is business. Discussions range from questions ot academic policy to the vital matter of smoking in the Union Building-to them all, the Board of Trustees has the answer. YOU'RE A BETTER MAN THAN I, QGUNGA DEAN' DEAN OF THE COLLEGE WEST- HAFER, in addition to other tasks, selects chapel programs. This year, chapels ranged from Eskimo speakers to madrigal singers. LOOKING OVER THE DATE BOOK with secretary Harriett Klein is Dean at Women Rachel MacKenzie. Her job makes her arbiter of college social life. A general clearing-house for Woos- terian affairs is the Deans' Office, presided over by the efficient trium- virate of Westhafer, MacKenzie, and Bruere, From the momentous undertaking of revising the college curriculum to meet the new accelerated schedule to placing a tactful taboo on doubtful social functions, the job is theirs. Theirs, too, is the task of placating irate students, irate professors, irate parents, or just plain irates. THE GOOD DEAN JOHN is Dean of Men Bruere, who keeps the male animal within bonds of civilization. His trying task has made lesser men curl up and die: yet Bruere marches on. ADMINISTRATIVE IIFFICEIIS Behind the wheels of college progress are Wooster's administrative officers. This year they bore the brunt of the gearing of those wheels to the new tempo produced by the college's accelerated schedule. Keeping the mechanics of an institution oiled and running smoothly is a tremendous job at best, but this extraordinary year has increased greatly the manifold tasks of Wooster's administrators. A prospective student's first contact with Wooster is through the office of Director of Admissions Rackey Young, whose yearly campaigning treks bring him in contact with hundreds of high school students. His Galpin across- the-hall-mate, Arthur Southwick, takes up the job from there. As Registrar, Southwick is in charge of college rec- ords which pursue the student through college and of the placement service which aids and pursues him through life. Ray Griffith is in charge of the least-loved of the phases of Wooster life. Officiating behind brass bars, he presides over the collection of college tuition. Treasurer Frank Knox is over- seer of the budget, and bookkeeping lies within the domain of college Audi- GGKEEP 'EM CIIUIININGF' tor Frank Spalding. John D. McKee, as Business Manager, authorizes ex- penditures, but McKee occupies a dual role in administrative affairs. Also Alumni Secretary, his is the task of keeping grads amused, interlinked, and beneficent. Curt Taylor, like McKee, leads a multiple life. Secre- tary of the college, he is also secretary to the Board of Trustees and to the President, where his biggest problem is keeping an intelligible schedule of Dr. Wishart's whereabouts. Director of Student Aid Art Murray doubles as Publicity Director and divides his time between granting board jobs and whip- ping up enthusiastic college blurbs for vicinity newspapers. Donald E. Dicka- son, Assistant Business Manager, whose modest, debris-filled office oc- cupies the slightly outmoded Book Store building, handles the purchasing and dispensing of college materials. Collegiate health is built up by Dr. Jacoby, new head of Hygeia Hall, while at the hands of Mabel C. Little, dormi- tory food chief, it is strained. College librarians, under Miss Elizabeth Bechtel, strive to promote intellectual health. Audlieos' Spmldimg sfniies for Phe hmicHie. Art Mmrr-my snaps alssmissirfan-aw Mmvgmmtr Knox, Knux: whofs Where? Young. Secvemry Cum? Taylor wriies wp the Assiswnf? Business Manazgea' Dickenson 'Hesrefs John D. McKee ugain.TD-ais Mme minufkes. reaches 'ion' as high one. he's Business Manager wifh secvsimfy Armnssihromag. Dr. Jacoby Sihmdaies cmdavers, wan? rnews. Librarians: Kiefifer, Nlesbiw, Bechiei, Dimcirav of Dormiiwzaries Mcmbed C. LEM-Be LCIQCEQI Whifre, McCHell!amd. with waiixerrs Cope cmd Gruber. 1 . 'Tr' Ku 4525.14 Wg i 'U' x - J -L J' n , 1 .'E' JV Y ,I V 3 v 1' . L A 9 .XV- 4.3, q L - I- . -- --1. nw 1- -r , ',' -L, '. xlib' Q L'.x.A Ak .H-,., M- ' '1'- 'r:l',I Q l.- -, -.pg ' M L-J. 1 f 1 V 41 I. ,Hr 2'Tib' gf' 531 ,lL'ir'Y.e'v1gL' ,fgiii .yllf-aikgjfgirffi xjx ff f J' - fr '11v,4v,,:1.-X. ', f - ju :LP I ,fr '- '-T - ':1 .Q- :vt I R '1 Q -' Tj vi 1-J' 4 1 .- .4 g 2 3 5 f 2 Z 4 2 5 2 2 fu Ii 5 -1 1 i 5 1.2 ' H4S5WZ2K-Wfiifkwl:'MYXKQWGVZRGWVAYWMWWMGWWKfQ5Wh MWZ9WW'KiY6NEW5WFQKHNWFAWTSYWWNZHWZWIQWV!fS'33'KZ fRW 3: ' When school reopened this year on September iS, Scot gridders were already hard at work. Pre-school practice had started eight days earli- er, and thirty-one recruits had answered Coach Swi- gart's call. ln the tall, football called for sport fans' undivided at- tention. Cross country had been dropped from the ath- letic program, and enthusi- asts were rapt with the prospects ot a winning grid- iron combination. The mechanics of the tall season were rapidly whipped into shape. The schedule was ironed out, cheerleaders chosen, and a series of bon- tires and other pep rallies planned to spur enthusiasm. The first game ofthe sea- son was a thriller in which Wooster split honors with Bowling Green in a l-4 to 14 tie. A victory over a highly-rated Denison team followed, and then a loss to a powerful Case eleven. Top: A TENSE MOMENT in the Case game is mirrored in the faces of these Scot renters. Upper Center: SCENES FROM DENH- SON-Kate sneaks around left end and Shia-an hits pay dirt. Lower Center: NUMBER ONE ROOTER President Wishart sitson players' bench surrounded by cheerleaders. Bottom: VICTORY SNAKE DANCE after the Mft. Union game is led by Scot laandsmen. 11, M ,- 3 -e -,si V w From then on the season was smooth sailing. The Scots dis- patched Muskingum, Mt. Union, Oberlin, and Wittenberg with comparative ease. In the meantime, athletic Wooster had mourned or cheer- ed the Yankee victory over BrookIyn's World Series con- tenders, had journeyed to Mus- kingum in celebration ot Mi- gration Day, and on October l l had sighed over feminine fash- ions in the Wornen's Athletic Association style show. Basketball highlighted the winter season, sharing honors with the hard-working Scot swimming team, which this season annexed six victories and captured fourth place in the Big Six swimming meet at Akron. The basketball season opened on December 9 in a contest with Findlay titteen days after Wooster lettermen had observed the 27th annual W Association dinner. This game and eighteen others were Wooster victories, the Scots having dropped only two. But Top: WEE WILL Vigrass was borne off the field in triumph after the Mt. Union game in which his two mighty runs made Wooster history. Upper Center: BEAN EXHORTS for victory as the football team makes ready to depart for an encounter with Bowling Green. Lower C e n t e r: CAPTAIN DITCH goes down after a long run against Denison. Scots won I0-2. Bottom: WOOSTER CHEER- ROUSERS: Ruth Kress, Ned Shreffler. Ginnv Clark. Gene 222, fl . 1 - Qi T-wr THE ATHLETIC BANQUET Cll- V mares the football Season. Letters und ' , 'wmefals are 'lwafdedf and fvll W meh feast Center: O P P 0 N E N T swiMMER ' fs-01' 'x::zfi'i2-- V :'f f5::- 1 ' ' ' lumps me SP ' HHS l'ee'S Y'e S - W t is ,A..' 1 Wooster emvyed G Successful season, .V V-::: :-, -X ef . iv t. 1' t-02:f:.,, M - ' :s:1:1:1:iss-zrr,-3:-iretaisazr,:ws-'-' -:Hr ---- , broken recofds' - I -' ' : ' 1 .... - f A Q .... , ,. . , Bollom' A.TW0'P9'NTER lei Wm' ' f' Sfxg. ter. On this play Escher cut ln from - tst Y?2i.Z.,,, fig.:-hs P man W, and sunk the Shot- Q? 5- ' ' .M , xg. QA ' 3' . N' it V, , g,, ,N .2 .,... -r IIN I-' .-4:--s .:. w.M::,,:,::,-,Q-f:,..:i-. , ,af mm,-fry.-sf.m.m:ffqmQfwyigg, ' -'Q' r ,ws t C ,, , , ,. . Y .. U 1 , Q for the second consecutive year ' 1 .1 M,.,,,,M. .,4. .RW N.. Uv. . ,,,...,.w--v--r W S 5 , Q. ,H 'N :sis-I 'A A Q ' f. the team was narrowly edged out of the Ohio Conference title. Highest athletic honors went to Karl Kate, who was named on the All-Ohio and All-Con- ference basketball honor teams, and to Coach l-lole, who with the Fenn game celebrated his 200th Wooster basketball vic- tory, During the football sea- son, Captain Harry Ditch gar- nered a position on the All- Conference eleven. Most important from a social standpoint of the features of this season's basketball wars was a change in seating ar- rangements at home games. For the first time in Wooster history co-ed seating was permitted. The embriefened athletic schedule produced repercus- sions in all phases of Wooster life, and the athletic side was not unaffected. Spring sports were crammed into the new o that a full schedule might be played before Com- mencement May l l. Baseball prospects appeared good despite a possible weak- ness in batting power, and a full squad of tennis aspirants, veterans and newly-hopefuls, answered Coach l-lole's sum- mons to practice. Track, rather program s weak, for the past two years, ' ' It hoped tor a revival, while go , maining squad ber, was an unknown with only one re mem quantity. l tramurals during the year n were largely Seventh Section triumphs. The Kappas con- d quered in the football an basketball loops and bid fair to annex the volleyball crown. ' ' ' lf for Second Section girded itse the defense of its i94l softball title to p by Seventh warriors. Fem Phys-Eds Frolic Girls' athletics were by no d. A full sports season was enjoyed by women sports fans, and the cabin, Women's Athletic Association recreation center, was tre- quented and improved. Play Night, also sponsored by WAA, 'th was extremely popular wi both sexes. As a climax to the women's athletic year, Lois C ' ht, Grove, Martha Mc relg Ilene Smith, and Gretchen h Jhnson were awarded t e o Senior Athletic Award for four erior work in physi- revent a clean sweep means neglecte years of sup cal education. Top: UP AND AT 'EM are ' D le Hudson and his Wooster s a t in a mid- John Carroll opponen game tip-off. Center: GAL SPORTS ADVO- CATES Gloria Parker, Marnie P len are Thomas, and Gwen o models for o Women's Athletic - Association style show. Bottom: NOT MODERN DANCE ' h na py but a moment in t e s p Denison game. Captain Kate is shown sinking a graceful one- hander. l A , we '75 lar?-'9'liM B 4 Sh 872' ,gre yd Appl iff? 'W dh y'i.f- K- A-59' Aww? rw ff: 1 BALL . , ,34,giS:15mi. f 5 ' . - sic. - x t fi- rg-'pr-' -V1 ff' vase- ' s 'tai il' si- ' suv ' :Y Hbr. -- 525?.':. i' M' A' f -i ,:v ' WV - .,., f-ff , .. A r -- , -- , . .,,ye,2.f A .: 5' is 1 . ' ,' it 1 ' T: ' , I ' ,X l , .IV -fs'?t fv.a ,si wif. -ft , -if ft-1.1.51 1 4 1,572.5 3.. . 1- ' , 5-sw-' ' ,, 'I Wish ' :mf H ,. VM... , 2 ,, 4,49 .G W t N it-4' '1-f' A ' em N sf--Mya' . '- Q? . . ' ' Q , ,,. V Coach Johnny Swigart sent his second football squad into the gridiron wars last tall, and the team presented him with his second successful season as Wooster's head coach, Coach Swigart continued his program ot gearing the Wooster team to a more wide-open type at play. Although still stressing astrong ground attack featuring Ditch and Shinn, Swigart came to bank more and more on the passing arm ot Karl Kate. The new type ot play tended to make up for Wooster's lack of Weight and reserve strength and put the emphasis on a passing attack, speed, and de- ception. The sure arm of Kate and the reception of ends Eicher and Deidrick, quarter- back Bill Shinn, and speedy John Healey made the plays click. COACH ,AND CAPTAIN 'talk it over. Together, Swigqrf and'-Ditch led Scots, to five vicjforiesf a loss, ,and igneu tie. tl 3 LETTERMEN Harry Ditch, Karl Kate, Bob Prentice, Bill Shinn, Carle Boyer, Harry Eicher, Bill Bal- loon, John Healey, Chuck Col- well, Elgin Deidrick, Bill Glatz, Don Halter, Mike Horvath, John Smeltz, Roger Stone- burner, Bill Vigrass, Dan Simon, Andy Goheen, Frank Smith, Bill Bingaman. -an-1 X Second Row: Coach Swigart, Bill Balloon, burner, Cl1i,pck,ColwelI, .John W Dick West, Mike Jdhn Healey, Bob Prentice, Harry Ditch, Peidwckf CVOGGI1 5Cl1'r0eder, -Goadhf Charles Weiss, John - Dick Sproull, Karl Kate, Harry Either, E:::2:15::: Q:iprE:19raSard,a?IiMg':i:g1 liv' .Don Halter, Andy! 'Carle !Boyer, Bill, Shinn, -Drg Jacoby. Jahn Baia, scailxjnobingdgh -Third Raw: Cpach' Mu,nson, Roger Stone-1 .Jack Boyce. ' , -A ' .. let 'J' M1 . -Q, M 15-vn'j3,L'cfQ'l.yQ: FIVE TIDIE YVINNEBS It was difficult to make pre-season predictions of Wooster's chances for a successful year. There were too many question marks which, put together, spelled uncertainty for the Scots' prospects. Strangely enough, one of the pre-season question marks was Karl Kate, whose durability was in doubt because of a leg injury suffered in the final game of his junior year. The sophomore linemen, on whom Johnny Swigart was counting heavily, could only remain of a doubtful quality until proven by actual game experience, and only too often coaches have found it unprofitable to bank heavily on sopho- more talent. For the third year Scot hopes were riding on Harry Ditch to make its offense move from his tailback position. ln the preceding two years he had carried the brunt of the attack without injury, and Coach Swigart could only cross his fingers and hope that the injury jinx would miss him for one more season. But Ditch and Kate proved to be among the most durable of the Scot players, the sophomores came through in fine style, and the net result was a season's record of five victories, one tie, and one defeat. Bill Shinn, who quarterbacked the team through the l94l season, was picked to captain the next year's team. Bill called signals, took care of most of the line-plunging duties, and supplied the team with the needed spark to carry it to success. JOHN SMELTZ Tackle CARLE BUYER Tackle DON HALTER Back CAPTAIN HARRY DITCH'S three years of successful tailbacking for the Wooster eleven were brought to a fitting close when the United Press picked him as one of their halfbacks on their All-Ohio Con- ference team. Coach Swigart has hailed Harry as one of Wooster's greatest halfbacks. KARL KATE started his Wooster College football career in his sopho- more year passing the pigskin later- ally from his center position to the Wooster backfieldh and ended up heaving accurate forward passes from his fullback position. Karl was also a brilliant defensive player and a good punter. BILL SHINN ART HOGE Back ELGAN Anz pmcic End HARRY EICHER End Tackle BILL GLATZ Center BILL BALLOON Guard CHUCK COLWELL Guard SENIOR BOB PRENTICE, along with Ditch and Kate, belonged to the elite circle of players who have won letters in all their three years ot competition. Bob distinguished himself in his sophomore and junior years as an aggressive guard, and then was shifted to the center post in his senior year. JOHN HEALEY Baclk DICK SPROUILL MIKE HORVATH Guard JOHN HEALEY and BILL VIGRASS, a Couple of pony backs, came into their own as seniors. Much of the right halfback burden tell on the shoulders of John l-lealey, and he came through in a fine style. Vigross proved to be one of the most elusive broken-field runners on the squad. KARL KATE Back Back BOB PRENTHCE Center BILL VIGRAS5 Back Wooster I4-Bowling Green 14 A veteran backfield behind an aggressive line heavily loaded with sophomore talent gave Wooster too strong a combination for their open- ing game rivals at Bowling Green, but it took a lightning thrust of 70 yards in the final quarter to get the Scots a l4 to i4 tie. With the minutes trickling away dangerously, Bill Shinn carried the ball ZO yards past the line of scrimmage, and when trapped lateraled to Don l-lalter, who sped the rest of the distance. A place-kick by Shinn knotted the count at l4 to l4. Wooster's total of i4 first downs to 2 showed their superiority over their heavier foes. Bowling Green scored on a 75-yard punt return and a pass play that traveled over a dis- tance of Sl yards. Wooster I0-Denison 2 The highly touted Big Red of Denison found their reputation meant nothing to the Wooster team, as the Scots handed them a lO to 2 defeat at Denison. John Healey smashed into pay dirt after Kate's passing and Ditch's ball-carrying had set up the marker. Later in the same period, Shinn booted a perfect field goal from the 35-yard line. Denison got their 2 points in the final period when Kate tossed the ball back of the end zone for an intentional safety in order to remove his mates from danger. i ' 1 i I 6, .52 ' i -i f i 9,51 to fer l ,- . ,.:, . . V, . --ve, . ,- 'Y f 5215. 5 . 5f'f:3if' 3,?i 'f A H ' V .lr . if ' fE.'5?5'.?f I , . . ,. .tsw-, -f -, -- z, . , if ,r---..- :gif N 1' 1' ' i in 1: . i-s' i ft 15 ,,,i 1 .' r w - .i z-Q h 'YK 1-Yi . -..- -as , Y SHINN BUCKS THE LINE against Oberlin but for little gain. Scots wound up with a scanty 9-6 victory. CAPTAIN HARRY MISS- ED THE HOLE on this line-buck. Interference is John Clay l29l. Opposi- tion is Oberlin. Case 40-Wooster 0 A Cose teom with power to spore rolled over their old rivols from Wooster 40 to O. Bob Melreit, hord- chorging fullback, combined his line - croshing obilities with the possing combinotion of Konker to Yurchesken, ond formed on offense thot wos unstoppoble on thot otter- noon. Wooster 20-Muskingum l2 With Coptoin Horry Ditch teo- turing the Wooster ottock with o Jay Lehman Back John Ervin Tackle lOO-yord dosh through the center of the Muskingum teom, the Scots ruined Muskingum's Homecoming Doy gome by o 20 to l2 score. The deodly possing ot Korl Kote gove the Scots their chonce to push over their first score, ond otter the posses hod moved the boll into o position tor the score, Bill Shinn bonged it over. Runs of 43 ond lOO yords by Ditch were responsible for the other Tap: MEN BEHIND THE TEAM are Coaches' Bill Schroeder, Carl iMunson, and Mase Hole. Schroeder puts the frosh through their paces, -Munson is line coach, and Hole has scouting duties. ' I two touchdowns. Muskingurn's most potent weopon proved to be its posses thrown by I-lodden to All- Ohio End Wink Evons, which were instrumentol in both the touch- downs scored by the Muskies. Wooster 'I7-Mount Union 0 Two spectoculor runs by Bill Vi- gross ond o neotly ongled field gool off the foot of Bill Shinn blazed the woy for o l7 to O decision over Mount Union. A Wooster ottock thot piled up yordoge in midfield was holted short of the poyoff stripe by ci stubborn Mount Union defense. Wooster needed the two tricky runs of 31 ond 60 yards by Vigross to score. Wooster 9-Oberlin 6 Turning on the power in the third period, the Scots come from behind to dispose of Oberlin 9 to 6. On the first ploy of the second half, Kote jumped on on Oberlin fumble ond it was Wooster's ball on the l3-ycird line. From there, Ditch rommed over for the score. Loter in the third quorter Bill Shinn kicked o field gool for the decisive three points ond ci 9 to 6 victory. Center: SHINN GETS CHECKED for an short gain over tackle. ' Bottom: MANAGERS DO THE DIRTY WORK Here are managers Boyce, Emmett, and Joseph outtitting halfback West. YEABLINGS TEST VARSITY VALUB Wooster 39-Wittenberg 0 Clicking as never before, the Scots closed their season with a sur- prising 39 to O victory over a sup- posedly strong Wittenberg team. The brilliant play of Karl Kate and Harry Ditch in their final game proved the spark that ignited the entire team. When the smoke cleared away, Wooster had rolled up six touchdowns for their most de- cisive victory in many years. Kate, Shinn, and Ditch tallied two touch- downs apiece for the Scots. Long runs by seniors John Healey and Bill Vigrass were the highlights of the closing minutes of play. rnosi-I sQuAo Front Row: Bill Holleran, Mitchel Carter, Alec Robert- son, Tom Lykos, Paul Weime r, Jim O'Connell. Second Row: Coach Mose Hole, Bill Johnson, Stewart Cooper, Roy Miller, Wayne Hunter, John Renner, Richard Kimmich, John Hill, Coach Bill Schroeder. Back Row: Don Fry, Malcolm Kennedy, Roger Secrest, Bob Dillon, Harold Rutledge, George Murray, Hal Conwell, James Chestnut, William Boyer. Coach Bill Schroeder's freshman team proves an indispensable item in the Wooster football setup, as it gives the varsity a chance to test its offensive and defensive formations in actual competition. -The back- field material last fall proved in general to be fast but small. Among the linemen there were several large freshmen who gave promise of prov- ing very useful to the Scots in the coming years. Lykos, a good plung- ing back, Cooper, Hunter, and Rutledge, among others, stamped themselves as prospective varsity material. , . . , ' T. -sw f : , - 9. H' J - 'zz C. ' .r , ' X , ' .4.::r, A' J Q :,.,.1'7 ii ' H ' ff -' ff' f f 'N 1 f 'P' 1' 5 ig, A 4' Y, - ' F' 'P .1 i f ETBAI I Ze s ,S av M K-13,9351 ,Z , 4 in ssgsfle-355 , 42 I9 T0 REMEMBER: 2 TO FORGET Wooster .,........ 64 Findlay .,,,..... Wooster ....,..... 47 Miami ,.......... Wooster .,........ 43 Cincinnati ..... Duquesne ...... 37 Wooster ......... Wooster .......... 64 Ohio Wesleyan Wooster .......... 62 John Carroll... Wooster ,,......,. 55 Kent ............. Wooster .....,.... 67 Otterbein ..... Wooster .......... 65 Rider ............. Wooster .......... 55 Bowling Green Wooster .......... 82 Wilmington Wooster .......... 62 Wittenberg Wooster .......... 75 Fenn ............. Wooster .......... 49 Case ............. Wooster .,........ 78 Fort Hayes ..... Wooster .......... 68 Denison .....,... Mt. Union ...... 57 Wooster ......... Wooster .......... 58 Kenyon ......... Wooster .......... 59 Hiram ........... Wooster .......... 48 Oberlin ......... Wooster Muskingum VARSITY SQUAD--Bill Vigruss, Don Halter, Dick Craven, Dennis Kuhn, Dale Hudson, Roger Stonebumer, Bob Black, Dick Sproull, l-larry Eicher, Karl Kate, il! Glatx, Jerry Kather- man, Bob Douglass, Dick Crandell, Bob Cope. rf 1 :H ff J 'l?agel45l ll ,V NA 'N 'N 'l Top: SOPHOMOREST Dale' Hudson and Jerry Kath- errhan were vital. parts. of Woosi'er's starting. combine. Bottom: THE 'FINAL CURTAIN was rung this season for graduating cagers Bobs 'Cope and Blacki Doormat Becomes Magic Carpet We'll probably be the doormat of the league, said Coach l-lole in his pre-season basketball forecast. But we'll try to keep the welcome off. And then he settled back to watch the op- position trample over his Scot five- twice. ln the twenty-one games on their schedule, the Wooster varsity came out on the short end only in their contests with Duquesne and Mt. Un- ion, and both of the games were on the opponents' courts. But for the sec- ond consecutive year that elusive Ohio Conference title managed to stay just beyond their reach as Mt. Union squeezed into the title on percentage points, as they played more games than did Wooster. lt was in many respects the most brilliant record ever compiled by a team under Mose l-lole's tutelage. Their percentage of .904 was the best in Wooster history, and after only i8 games of the season were over, the Scots had broken the previous scoring record. They ended with a total of l2l 9 points in Zi games, well over the for- mer record of lO3O set by the '38-'39 team in the same number of games. Mose also had the opportunity of watching his doormat squad push the number of his teams' victories over the ZOO mark. ln the first home game of the year, against John Carroll, Coach l-lole un- veiled his two Sophomore aces, Dale Hudson and Jerry Katherman. Team- ing with the veterans Harry Eicher, Rich Sproull, and Karl Kate, these Sophomores helped smother a good Carroll team 62-43. The team demon- strated what was to be its chief scoring l - T 45 threat throughout the year-a fast- breaking offense banking heavily on a rugged defensive play to put it in mo- tion. Once the fast break was stopped, the Scots depended chiefly on the ac- curate set shots of Captain Karl Kate and the scoring ability of Harry Eicher under the basket. Kate's play was bril- liant throughout the year, and he fin- ished with a total of 285 points. Rich Sproull proved to be a bulwark of de- fense and the key man in the team's passing attack, although his position as back guard hampered him as a scor- ing threat. Katherman and l-ludson proved aggressive, hard-driving for- wards, with Hudson's unusual speed placing him second in the list of the team's scorers. This combination remained intact throughout the year except for a short period when Sproull was out with a shoulder injury. After mowing down their first three opponents, the Scots Left: BiG: UKE pushes in an- other tally for 'Wooster in the hard-fought Denison set-to. Wooster' players in the picture are Kate lon Eicl'rer's leftl, Kaithermarr, and l-luclsorr. fell before Duquesne in a game at Pittsburgh. Apparently off form from the Christmas vacation lay-off, Woos- ter proved no match for the polished Duke team and went down to defeat 37-29. After this loss, the Scots began to win with monotonous regularity. The only serious obstacles in the road to a Conference championship appear- ed to be Mt. Union and Muskingum. ln the game at Alliance, however, Mt. Union's Purple Raiders put on a second- Right: CHlEF OF STAFF rs Darrell Folleft, who heads the corps of managers who are re spunsible for Scot basketball equipment. ' half drive to which Wooster could not reply, and the Scots went down to de- feat, 57-40. ln basketball, as in football, the best game of the season was saved 'till last. Earlier in the season Muskingum had handed Mt. Union its only Confer- ence defeat. Wooster wanted not only the honor of defeating the conqueror of Mt. Union, but was also out to avenge a defeat at the Muskies' hands that had removed the Scots from their STAGE 0NE: NEIDPIIYTE T0 SC01' CAGER Conference lead in the previous season. With their five regu- lars working well together, Wooster managed to build up a lead and maintain it over Muskingum during most ofthe con- test. Then late in the game, Hudson, Kate, and Eicher were removed from the picture via the personal foul route, and Muskingum turned on the pressure and for one brief moment surged ahead, With their backs to the woll, the Scots, featured by Sproullfs inspired play, rallied and pulled a brilliant victory out of the tire, '50-46. FRESHMAN SQUAD Second Row: Coach Schroeder, John Hill prom. Row: Wayne Hunter, Hank Rut- Stan Williams, Bob Homan, Rhoe Ben ledge Louis Eaton, Bill Boyer, Bill Decker, SON, COOCH Hole- , Harold Davidson' Eaclk Row: Stew Cooper, Al Simpson B ll yt e. A promising squad of Frosh basketball play- ers worked hard all year under the guiding hand of Coach Bill S ro e pon his A squad, composed ot Bi l l ob Homan, Rhoe Benson, Al Simps ooper, and Stan Williams, Schroeder t i tomp of approval as future varsity moteria. The Frosh team scrimmaged daily with the varsity and played several games with independent teams of the district. Working with only ten men, the smallest team ever to rep- resent Wooster in Ohio Con- ference meets, Coach Munson succeeded in turning in a rec- ord of six wins against two losses. Scot swimmers captured fourth place in the Big Six at Kenyon, having been beaten out by the Bowling Green swim- mers by a narrow margin of 2 points. The '42 squad was built around four veteran Iettermen, Russ Westbrook, Dan Miles, Captain Bob Dunlap, and cap- tain-elect Arch Duncan. The biggest reason for the success of the team lay in the fact that it was well fortified in all the swimming events, although none of the swimmers were stars of sufficiently high cali- bre to place in high positions in the Big Six meet. Curly Westbrook finished his college swimming career by nosing out Dan Miles for the top scoring honors with 'IZVQ points. Westbrook was o stand- out performer in the 50-yard and lOO-yard free style. Column Two: Bob Dunlap Column One: Arch Dun- Bob Steiner, Phil Hof- can, Bob Lessing, Daniel mann, Russell Westbrook Miles, Coach Munson. Edgar McGee. Top: BREAST STROKERS Bob Dunlap and Phil Hofmann take a brisk work-aut. Dunlap this year captained the Scot swim- mers. Lett Center: MEDLEY RELAY. Lessing takes over as back- stroker Duncan touches off in a practice session. Right Center: STEINER AND MILES swimming the crawl. CAII you can see of Miles is a splash.l Bottom: MUNSE GIVES THE BOYS a start in a tree style job. ln the picture are Bob Dunlap, Bob Lessing, Arch Duncan, and Phil Hofmann. For the second consecutive year, Dan Miles gave a good account of himself in the longer free style events. His point total of 72 demonstrated his value to the team. Captain Dunlap finished third with a record of Sl 2X3 points. Arch Duncan did a good job of backstroke paddling. He succeeded in setting a new pool record for the l5O backstroke. His time of l 249.5 lowered the former mark by two-tenths of a second. ln the shorter free style events Westbrook was aided ably by Bob Lessing, who won his second letter. Phil Hofmann and Captain Dunlap took care of the breaststroke event, and Edgar McGee participated in the baickstroke along with Dun- can. Bob Steiner and Ed Morris competed in the 400-yard free style. Bill Koran took over diving chores and in spite of his lack of experience developed rapidly as the season progressed. Awards were given to four Seniors, four Juniors, and one Sophomore. Seniors receiving letters were Russell Westbrook, Bob Steiner, Bob Dunlap, and Edgar McGee. Juniors winning recognition were Dan Miles, Arch Duncan, Bob Lessing, and Phil Hofmann, and Bill Koran was the only Sophomore letter- man. The team elected Arch Dun- can captain of the l9-43 team, which as yet is hardly more than an unknown quantity. The loss of Westbrook, Dunlap, Steiner and McGee will be ser- iously felt, and the uncertainty of the draft status of some of the Juniors threatens to create gops in the team. 1.-'Sr df' N ALL i L. ' ANL. fi 'I' --.-1-13:21 , 1353.2 r - 4--t ' -T-'r11 '.,1E:'1:g?1fI. 'P 4 .ff-T - if. 7 ?'2i2'.'i-.E'1T2- 'r:5 535:?'f1 .-s . - - --- . .V-, .-,,,--rx. I . h Q.: ,.,1., t--f' . 4 - ..:e. -, - ,1..1- -. ,' -. 44-' . .t fl 1 ,,..:L-'ff 'zh I, JM, , .--- 1 .req-e 'l.-.- .i -2 y.v- ,. -JV.. AEE' 3- xt -5. .. 1. fa l' fx 'Q an I Hopped-up schedule keeps spring sportsters jurnping . - . Baseballers don snowshoes for first encounter April 18. This year seven lettermen answered Coach Johnny Swigart's call for base- ball candidates and, coupled with sev- eral promising Sophomores, struck a fairly optimistic note for Wooster's baseball prospects this spring. With the possibility of greater effectiveness from the pitching mound and tighter defensive play, this year's team may counterbalance its loss in hitting power and better its l94l record of lO vice tories and 6 defeats. One of the biggest problems will ,be to find a replacement for Captain Byron l-lurlbut, one of the greatest power batters in Wooster history. Un- less a new clean-up hitter is uncovered to propel the all-important tallies across the plate with the same consis- tency that Hurlbut demonstrated, Wooster may face a rather meager harvest of runs this spring. The Scots' pitching staff promises to turn in a high percentage of well-pitched games. Jerry Katherman will transfer his tal- ents from the hardwood to the pitching mound to aid the two veteran letter- men, Don Buchanan and Paul Totten. Bob Sanborn, a fine receiver and dan- gerous batter, will again be stationed behind the plate. Clark MacDonald and Jay Lehman, both holdovers from last year, will probably take care of the left side of the infield, with Soph- omores Denny Kuhn and Elgin Deidrick leading the candidates for the two vac- ant posts at first and second base. Bill Vigrass and Bob August are the two remaining lettermen in the outfield. The l94l team was heavily loaded with Sophomores and got off to a rath- er slow start. For the first part of the season the pitching was ineffective and the fielding support shaky. But behind the clever pitching of Lefty Buchanan, the team began to click and finished in a fairly impressive manner. The shortened curriculum schedule had its effects on all spring athletic schedules. The baseball program for this season was shortened considerably from an average of about fourteen games per season to nine. This year's season started earlier, with the first game played on April l8 against Mus- kingum. Top: COACH JOHNNY'S BATSMEN. Back Row: Dennis Kuhn, Jerry Kather- Front Row: Bill Vigrass, Clark MocDan- man, Chuck Weiss, John Ervin, Elgin ald, Don Buchanan, Bob Sanborn, Jay Deidrick, Coach Swigart. Lehman. Bottom: TWO STRIKES ON WEE WILL. Vigrass, peppy Wooster outfielder, was waiting for the big one as this shot was taken. Opposition was Oberlin, who trounced the Scots I6-9 and who later took an ll-l beating in a rematch. 51 '.-1 .,-.. ,qs ,:, z, Y-W 145-va , .g,. , -r-gy:-'Z -Ti gifs- . , - F' , 1: L-f :Lg:gjj1if'giT .f 'L:313A '-1 - T. g 1 3 -, auf-l'..,:seLae:-Q1 ' .- :lv -- Q - i W ' I n 5-F-:J1 -, 1,1-fe H :' ' r- -.' ?'.:- T'-.- 4.12 --' .if-nil 'T .4 V 5-'Ze iw. I,-js 5 1 ' CK All around the cinder path Manson chased the trackmen. All around the cinder path Pop go the records. CINDER BURNERS for the 1942 wars. Front Row: Frank Smith, Dole Hud- son, Roger Stoneburner, Dick Ebright, John Ferguson. Second Row: Jack Muxworfhy, Don Halter, Les Thomas, Hal Streeper, Ed McGee, Perry Narten. Bock Row: John Clay, Rudy Mazorek, John Smeltz, Hank Miller, Frank Rogers, Jim Thompson, Coach Munson. , L i4II'l!1r'-ri-.-. The l942 track squad gathered this year with a rather unimpressive heritage from last season. ln its regu- lar schedule of five dual meets the Scot cindermen had emerged with but one victory, an 87 to 44 triumph over Mount Union. Defeat had dogged the team in its encounters with Denison, Muskingum, Case, and Oberlin. The Big Six meet was rather disheartening. Wooster played host and managed the seemingly impossible task of finishing eighth in a Big Six encounter. The Little Six meet at Denison was less dis- astrous, and the Scots edged into third place. Five lettermen made up the nucleus of this season's track squad. Don Hal- ter, a hurdlerg Luke Hall, in the dis- tance events, Jack Muxworthy, as pole-vaulter, and Hal Streeper, in the dashes, combined with Captain Les Thomas, a distance runner, to set the pace for track aspirants, who included several Frosh numeral winners of last year. Most promising of these newly eligibles were Dale Hudson, a quarter- and half-miler, and Rog Stoneburner, shot-putter and discus man. The track program for l942 was little affected by the jig-time curricu- lum. The customary dual meets were scheduled with Denison, Case, Oberlin, and Muskingum, and while the Big Six meet was slated for May l5 and l6, several days after the Wooster com- mencement, Wooster runners were de- clared eligible for the competition. Top: DOUBLE HEADER. Sports fans enioyed o double treat last year when both baseball and track squads were active against Oberlin and Muskingum. Left Center: OVER THE TOP go hurdlers in the high hurdle event in an early spring meet. Wooster runners Halter and Gebhardt are second and fourth from left. Right Center: MUX GOES FOR A FLYER. Pole vaulter .lack Muxworthy makes one by inches. Best Wooster vaulter, he topped ll' 6 consistently last season. Bottom: THE START OF THE 220 in a dual meet with Muskingum. Wooster runners pictured are McGee, extreme left: Weibusch, third lane, and Drysdale, fifth. 'iily-5:1 ' 'ri V Q4 '13 ' -,Rap ' iii 1 '. , ' -'G 4 . '-'gZiFR3', 'jul'-Q The most difficult task of track coach Munson was the replacement of last year's Captain Bruce Powers, a stalwart half-miler, and dash man Bill Saddler, who accumulated more points than any other Wooster runner last season. Both were lost through gradua- tion. Hill and Dale Boys Get Finger For the first time in recent years, cross country was not included in the athletic program. A discouraging lack of interest in the grueling sport and poor showings by recent Scot squads forced the omission. 194-l TRACK SEASON Denison .............. 72 Wooster ., ....... 59 Muskingum ...... 76 V1 Wooster .......,.... 54 V1 Wooster ............ 87 Mt. Union ....... 44 Case ....... ........ 8 8 Wooster ...,......t. 43 Oberlin ........ SSV1 Wooster .. ...... .45Vz Little Six Track Meet Third Place Big Six Track Meet Eighth Place ' -,f K , , . . .1 .5 - ' --1. . . QF V:'l'a1..-f',i- :MH Vx: wk- 1 . f . ::. affix riff ,- . its -yg,--7 '- ' ' T11 f 41 ' ' D' Q , - -' - .ze ' Lehi' l 'L' . sv':rrY?4:3'111 -1 ,- I , ,.m4'5' ., .- . Q .7 '- 'A nt, 4 f -- ,':.L I Jn- 4 A gal-1 ,. Q,--. i i . - 1-A .1 ' ft ' .', 'L.---GY 5- ..-'E :Q , ' , ,-i,.. -g I ,d , l .. T. ., GULF The Scots' golf squad ot the spring of l94l was torrned from the nucleus of three veteran competitors, Pudge l-lole, Dick Gernert, and Karl Kate. Both Gernert and l-lole brought their illustrious athletic careers to a close by adding golf letters to their already large store of awards, while Kate re- ceived his second golf letter. Dick Wal- lace, Doug Miller, and Jim Stranahan '42 GOLF CANDIDATES Front Row: Coach Boles, Karl Kate. Back Row: Dick Sproull, Howard Yergin, Vernon Chaney. alternated throughout the season in the role ot fourth man. The team chalked up eight victories and tive loss- es but tailed to distinguish itself in either state or conference competition. Kate will be the only letter man to greet Coach Boles this season, so only the rapid development of some new golfing talent can avoid this spring's prospect ot a rather lean season. X. ,Jg35EI3f'5 3 1 W5-P . .,. , K,-,,,,...f Y: . . . -'. 'P 3 ,JV V 'rr tw,-wa:-M. fill? 11357 iw -fl ,ww 'fl HT,-,F -H' A - 1 I if f 'fit .g,g:f,vfy,Wift 072 jfxlg, A V135-'j,,,o ,fga-vf', .2 ,5,:J -iff: 1:1 A tem, if 'f' ' fa J 1 - ' Wx! nf' , 5-:WP-' Awww fb' ' j :V lj -Wg-'1'Cg,:11'?ff Qm.--rr f ffl' 5,1 , iwgafiit fi-5 wi 4fV1T6T'L'4 7? 1 if,y5lft5 B fv.i ,5-if ?3'fa.,s Q ', ,QHFV ' -L-mf-yep -T gLHteQE?' ,KU A 'i it f' -24113 if- I - Q 1 .rfaqeft i15'fsaH - ' , . 3. L' ,wal-QM- C' ,Q---L1153 fn-ef' Q.:-:.1:q.. ,A f 9,243 y Q - ,Jw 'W H-W? ff.: .jvffl pa' ' ci' -- Wayne Lykes and Earl Zeigler led the Wooster racket-wielders to a successful record of seven victories against tour defeats in the l94l season. Lykes, the number one man, and Zeigler, who held down the number two spot, have both been lost through graduation, but the re- mainder of the squad, consisting of Pete Gruber, Bob I-layes, Jerry Stryk- er, Bob Black, and Bob Prentice, will be available for competition this spring. The addition ot the proposed as- phalt courts in back of Kenarden should prove of great assistance to the tennis squad. Besides lengthen- ing the practice period by as much as a month, an invaluable aid in these days of accelerated schedules, the courts will correspond more nearly to the playing surface usually used in the matches. 3 Front Row: Max Hellman, Bob Black. 1 Second Row: Paul Gruber, Bob Mmelancl, Third Row: Bel: Kendall, Johnston Lewis, Coach Hole. Back Row: Bob Hayes, Pete Hanna Left: HERE'S THE START of the long run by John Strong that gave Seventh the edge over Fifth to win the foot- ball chompionship. Coming up-but not fast enough-is Right: CHAMPS-SEVENTH SECTION: Line: Bill Shutt, Don Buchanan, Russ West- brook, Perry Narten. Backs: Bob Douglass, Paul Totten, John Strong, Hal Streeper. 1, - , Jim Reiph fam. '1Z?T7ff'? ' ' Q ANIUBALS Wooster's intramural program gives every Wooster man an opportunity to participate ac- tively in some athletic sport. Great interest is shown among the students, since hardly a sea- son passes without a hotly contested race. Second Snores Softball Scepter ln days before shortened semesters were the vogue, warm spring days provided ample time for an extensive softball schedule. The end of the regular softball season last spring found First and Second Sections deadlocked, each with a record of 8 wins and l loss. ln the play-off game, Second captured the champion- ship with an 8 to 2 victory. Kappas Conquer Crisp autumn afternoons and football are synonymous. This fall there was an unusually well- balanced intramural touch football league, and interest was high from the very start. The race finally boiled down to two un- beaten outfits. Fifth Section, displaying a smooth passing attack, and Seventh Section, flashing a great running style, furnished the principal fireworks. lt was evident that when these two teams met the winner would cap- ture the championship. With Bob Cope leading the Phi Delts, Fifth proved a tough nut to crack, but the Tri Kaps emerged victorious. The margin of victory came in the first half when fleet-footed John Strong intercepted an enemy pass and ran for a touchdown. Third Section held the runner-up spot to these two teams. Intercloss Swimming is Upperclass Victory The annual interclass swimming meet pro- vides Coach Munson with an opportunity to watch prospective swimmers in action. Untried Freshmen and seasoned upperclassmen alike Top: IN THE SPRING a young man's fancy turns to base- ball. Pictured is a spirited softball intramural session. Second Section captured last year's softball crown. Center: ACTION in the tournament gome between Second and Slxth. Fighting for the ball in the picture are Bob Kerr, John Healey, Fred Carr, and John Mellin. Bottom: TOP CAGERS again this year were Seventh Section players. Pictured are lfrontl Andy Goheen, Perry Narten, Coach Kate, lbackl Harry Ditch, Bill Shutt, Elgin Deid- rick, Paul Totten. are given a chance to match talents. This year a close meet found the Jun- iors and Seniors tied for first honors, followed by the Sophomores. Seventh Marches On Basketball is the focal point of in- terest during the winter months. Suf- ficient interest is shown to form two in- tramural loops: the Kenarden and the Douglass leagues. This season, led by Paul Totten, Seventh presented a well- rounded team in the Kenarden league. lt was able to finish the season without a single loss, and to completely out- class all rivals. lts closest competitor was Kenarden Second, which lost its first game of the season to First but vanquished all other opponents. Sec- ond had a mathematical chance to tie things up, but Seventh lived up to its record and defeated Second 28-16. Closely following Second was the Frosh team. Also with two losses on their record, but only five wins, they finished third. ln the Douglass league, Douglass Vll-Vlll led the race with a perfect record of seven wins. The usual intra- mural basketball tournament among Kenarden league teams and Douglass leaders that follows the regularly scheduled season was anticlimatic this year. Seventh easily proved the superior team. The volleyball tournament fills in the days between the close of the bas- ketball season and the opening of'the softball program. The volleyball tour- nament is a double elimination affair which attracts many devotees. i 5 7 MODERN DANCE ADVOCATES Ruth Larnborn and Gloria P'arker strike a pose during a terpsicho- rean interpretation of a musical score. Modem dance is an extra- curricular sports activity in which basic steps and techniques are enlarged upon to interpret clas- , sical and semi-classical music. f .f- ,pi f --'53 55'-lw.f.:f-52: I-WE? A '2 :ww 1- 'T- ,glfii 3 3297! A Qi? N 2 cf fedfrfnmeewfeazff -Green I i we S' SPURTS wr -f 58 AMT EQFDNS SYUJWEHS llFILGDfCEff?. Upper Lett: WOMEN'S PHYSICAL EDU- CATION INSTRUCTORS, Misses Jacobs, Buccalo, Saddler, and Lawrie, enjoy a round of golf on Wooster's excellent nine- hole course. Upper Center: BINKY WOODWARD SERVES as doubles partner Betty Steiner waits at net. Wooster's fourteen tennis courts will be augmented by a third group in back of Kenarden. Upper Right: ARCHERY ADDICTS Elea- nor McElheny, Marge Wiley, and Ruth Kress let fly on the range beside Babcock Hall. Archery is embodied in the regular gym course. Lower Lett: WOMEN'S ATHLETUC AS- SOClATl0N BOARD: Front Row: G. Pa- len, C. Conrad, . Smith, M. McCreigl1t l.. Dunlap. Seconcl Row: .l. Elliott, B Woodward, l... Grove, Gi. Parker, Nl. Tlio- mas, IR. Giele, L. Wilson. Baclt Row: R. Kress, A. Wharton, M. Almrens, A. lFree- man, Miss Buccalo. Lower Right: GA'l'l'llERlNG AT THE CABHN is a favorite diversion at Vtfooslter co-eds. l'-lere are shown Lois Wilson, Marnie Thomas, Nlornie Dunlap, Miss Lawrie, and Annette Freeman belore the fireplace. More than a setting for attractive sports outfits is the women's athletic program at Wooster. Sponsored, vital- ized, and nurtured by the Women's Athletic Association, it is one which offers variety, balance, and wholesome entertainment to the sports-loving co- ed. The Council Fire Circle, last year a vague plan, is now a reality. Sports en- thusiasts, who donned workmen's togs for its construction, now gather about it for discussion, planning, and ritual. The Cabin, where the Council Fire Circle is located, is the center of the Association's activities and its contact with the great outdoors. The Cabin presents a real problem in mainten- ance and improvement which the WAA tackles yearly. The industry of this Left PUSHHNG 'EM UP are girl basket- ball advocates Binky Woodward, Betty Geatung Virginia Lewis, Eleanor Human, and Elizabeth Geer. year's athletes evidences itself in sev- eral additions to the Cabin's equip- ment. Besides the construction of the Council Fire, grounds have been cleared for badminton courts and horse-shoe beds, and a new fireplace has been built. The oard: Sports Steering Committee No isolated project of a few ama- zons, the WAA has an impressive membership. Every co-ed who has par- ticipated in a college sport automati- cally becomes a member of the Asso- ciation and is thus started on the dif- ficult road to the coveted Senior Hon- orary Award which comes to one or two girls chosen from the Senior class for excellence in athletics and qualities of leadership. The ruling body behind WAA activity is the Board, composed of representatives chosen from each sport, which manages girls' athletic of- fairs on the campus. The Board's first Right: NOT PARENTHESES but a duo hand-stand by .lone Needham and Lois Wilson is the subject of the picture Tumbling is u tavorite recreation of Wooster co-eds. and most important function is in the capacity of a steering committee for the Association. Activities Range from Styles to Skating Each fall the Board opens the col- lege year with retreat at the.Cabin, where a calendar of sports for the coming year is adopted. Throughout the year, the Board continues to be active. This year it held a bowling party, had supper at the home of Ad- visor Lowrie, held a kitchen shower for Advisor Saddler, a skating party, an installation dinner, and a supper for Board alumnae. lt joined with the YWCA in presenting a style show and sent a representative in April to a con- vention of athletic councils at Welles- ley College. Besides these social func- tions, the Board was the backbone of the diverse athletic program of the year. To Victor, Spoils, To Losers, a Tournament In the fall, girl archers struggle with the difficult problem of the position of the hands on the bow and arrow under the tutelage of Miss Saddler. Tennis is popular and features a winners' and a losers' tournament, and golf en- thusiasts swing with varied de- grees of skill as directed by Miss Jacobs. Roughest of the sports is field hockey, but the mortality rate is kept low even when en- thusiasm runs high on the hockey field behind Babcock Hall. Athletes Swim under Water, under Lawrie Winter's blasts force even ath- letes in doors, but the athletic pace does not slacken. On Satur- day mornings tumbling and fenc- ing provide entertainment, and during the week Association members develop skill in modern dancing, basketball, volley ball, badminton, and deck tennis. Most popular of the indoor sports is swimming under Miss Lowrie, women's physical education head. Signals: 20, 23, 60 Hike! In the spring, the outdoor sports are revived and baseball introduced. Hiking out to the Cabin is the perennial favorite diversion, and the overnight stays are delightful experiences. Top: EN GARDE. Feminine fencers Ruth Giele and Jane Rogers work out in the Cage. Fencing routine is acquired through arduous Saturday morning sessions. Center: THEY'RE OFF. Aqua-loving co-eds popu- late the pool on Tuesday and Thursday evenings. In the picture Jane Elliott, Margaret Gibbons, Donna Doerr, and Ruth Whiston get off to a start for a free-style race. Bottom: GRETCHEN GETS THE BIRD. The elusive badminton boidie takes a frequent beating from expert badminton fiends. Pictured are Gretchen Johnson and Lois Wilson. lf' 0'LlfLiZ6'LlfiOlfL5 Behind the scenes of the Little Theotre's lavish productions ore the energetic property and set men pictured here at work on booths for the Shonty in ToIIy- HO ll 5571 T' Efi'eca4,Y:, ,, f , X, A30 sow mxf . X gl X X X tN7fx X N N 1 Si C iv it fi 'F X X ,N 1' Q: N W ,N S z N X, K? X Q , NB X . t . ff fW If! ,, , ff f 1-fy:-y:.,. .. ' K l I Y.,- 5 E .aww gigs I 3 in . - X 4. 5- ?e5Wf1 ..- .51 1 ,Q '- u p . . Q.. z 2f4Ei2?se.3i:?'w'-'Q , f ' I we A ' ' 4 , 15 - 1 -JH Fvisfw gfii 1 ll' . ,,9.:45fz::-'H ., va. - I n Q3 X Q K .R ,I X 1 ' . P52 rm- ., ,. ....,.-.Ma on this volume, and departmental and elective clubs, with new members elected, threwclub plans into high gear. WSGA scored a social success with its guest speaker, Princess Sapieha, and Big Four's Week of Prayer speaker was widely praised. The Red Cross played a prominent part among organizations this year. Several drives in its behalf were inaugurated, including a WAA benefit bridge. Among musical organi- zations, the choir's presentation of the Messiah and Fortnightly's opera, Beauty and the Beast, were notable. Organization enthusiasts found this a full and noteworthy year. Lett: PRINCESS SAPIEHA of Poland was U WSGA guest speaker. Woosterites were thrilled to meet the royal author of Polish Profile and Where the Heart Belongs. Upper Center: WEEK! OF PRAYER LEAD- ER this year was Dr. B. l. Bell ot Rhode Island. His job as chief speaker ot the week took him to every dormitory For discussion sessions like the one pictured above. Upper Right: SUNDAY EVENHNG FCRUM tried a new tormula tor its meetings. Stu- dents gathered tor discussions at the homes of faculty rnernbers. The above group is one which met at the home of Deon at Men Bruere. Lower Right: THE FROSH FORUM HAY- RUDE deserted religious phillosophyin favor of hay and hot dogs. Fresh Forum is com- posed ot yeorlings who ore guicled by former minister Ralph Young. 65 -:ig 4-L -- . . ,as .49 fer.-H AT 1f,.,.-wtf' . ef.: - .- 1:1-2-:1'5'ni512L' - . ...ff uri , .ze-55...--:rr-V -' ,ei 52:-ff :-X9 Ji' f '57' Jr: -Pt' ' -ff: .- ee--I .,.,.a-:ff-: ' . , 1 '..'--1, ,, ,, -.heyy -g - ' .-?'iaf.fg.fr-2,-Ziff - -'r?3fE- 4 L--'rg-e-,-f '-r' ---qua if . -' ij. 1 ggfifi. .1513 , 41: -2 - .1 2311.1 5:'j.--.-'ifls frgarfs f.ga'L'- - '?-:fps eff 'L-eu-5-1-:ez if. .T ' :SP-152I..hL f -ff5ff5sf'5'-,,j.5:-i'- EL ' '-24, 5' Leif' t -' BIG-4 CABINET Front Row: Jean Anne Cotton, Marjorie Thomas. Second Row: John Blank, Sora Jean Ferguson, Ruth Rawson, Jane Elliott, Jane Menold, Barbara McCon- nell, Margaret Ahrens, Bill Barr. Back Row: John Smeltz, Robert West, Jim Bean, Haines Reichel, Dr. Doug- lass, Robert Lessing, Jack Strong, President Robert Dunlap. 66 GQSHALL IVE GATHEII BY THE RIVER' Four of Wooster's religious organi- zations are merged into one board of control which makes the plans for the religious year at Odell's Loke during the fall retreat. Sending a student representative to lndia and procuring a leader for the Week of Prayer are the two major functions of the Big Four. This year the United States claimed Wooster's selectee for India, and William Aldrich, '39, has been retained. Dr. B. l. Bell filled the chapel pews with his humorous yet moving talks on the significance of religion and prayer during the week of November 30. A carnival concocted by this four- ring organization entertained the freshmen during their first week here. The carnival frosh mixer was a Big- Four-sponsored introduction, to Woos- ter social life. Then changing costume, the Big Four cabinet presented the first formal function of the year as an op- portunity for the freshmen to meet the faculty. Swing Your Partner YM Style Blue jeans, plaid shirts, and straw hats transformed smooth collegians into cosmopolitan hayseeds. The spon- sors-YMCA. Besides this rural hey- day, the association yearly organizes the wholesale little-brother adoption in the fall and orients the hopefuls with lectures on what not to do. YW Features Tea and Bandages Bubbling with new ideas, the fresh- man girls started a junior YWCA this year. Together with the upperclass YW, they shifted the tea house from the old observatory to the Bennett House, where a sub-station of the Red Cross was established. Besides the regular meetings, the girls played Santa Claus to orphans, who puzzled over the removable whiskers ot the Santa. Faculty Entertains S. E. F. Sunday Evening Forum introduced a new type of split meeting. For several weeks students informally delved into the depths of religious philosophy at the homes of various faculty members. The world situation was not to be neglected, it was thoroughly summa- rized trom the historical, the economic, and the scientific viewpoint. Dr. Arthur Compton from Chicago University examined this last phase. Upper left YMCA Front Row: John Blank, Rob- ert West, Dr. Schreiber, John Smeltz. Back Row: William Joseph, Haines Reichel, John Rut- ledge. Upper right YWCA Front Row: Vae Shutt, Eliza- beth MacMillan, Jean Anne Pierce, Janet Gill. Second Row: Freddie Thomas, Jane Elliott, Jean Anne Cot- ton, Marjorie Thomas, Jane Menold, Jane Stewart. Third Row: Helen Lewis, Carol Scott, Martha Stark, Barbara McConnell. Back Row: Lenore Dunlap, Shirley Parker, Connie Garvin, Martha Milburn, Phoebe Houser, Annette Freeman. Lower left STUDENT FELLOWSHIP Front Row: Ruth Rawson, Jack Strang. Back Row: Jim Donaldson, Margaret Ahrens, Margaret Tewksbury, Helen Phillips, Sara Jean Ferguson, George Mulder. Lower right SUNDAY EVENING FORUM Front Row: Mary Smucker, Robert Dunlap. Back Row: James Bean, Robert Lessing, Jack Boyce. RIVER BANKS ARE GETTING CBOWDED Above FROSH FORUM Front Row: Priscilla Whitaker, William Lytle, Lauralynn P'ark- erson. Back Row: Donald Coates, Mar- garet Young, William Steiner, Don Meisel, Sadie Eveleigh, Mr. R. A. Young. Below CLERICUS Front Row: Don Meisel, Priscilla Hughes, Mary Beebe, Bill Barr, Al Kean, Margaret Coryell, Rus- sel Dean Cope, Gordon Rowand. 68 Second Row: John Glen, Lois Lambie, Ruth Whiston, Sara Jean Ferguson, Ruth Rawson, Peggy Bretschneider, Virginia Lewis, Bill Lefevre. Back Row: Dave Neely, George Gesegnet, Bob Moreland, James Smucker, Dr. Douglass, John Mellin, John Meloy, Bill Jones, Fred Evans, William Lytle, David Talbot, Charles Ireland. Fellowship Delights in Hot Dogs From hot dog and roller skat- ing parties to questions about philosophies of life is the scope of Student Fellowship. At one Sunday meeting Prexy dis- cussed the value of prayer and its various forms. The new advisor, Dr. Hutchi- son, and the cabinet members are bringing this advanced Sunday School again to the at- tention of the college students. Clericus and Frosh Forum Are Aloof Two other active religious groups on the hill have re- mained aloof of the hegemony. Clericus has gradually broad- ened its membership and al- lowed students other than those preparing for the ministry to join. The freshman class has contributed a large number of students interested in this club. So far, activities have been rather limited, for their meet- ings are purely for the benefits which the members receive from speakers and discussions. Stories behind famous hymns and other types of religions such as Judaism and Catho- licism were discussed at the meetings of Freshman Forum. Several foreign students talked about the customs and religious habits of their native countries. Horses and wagons appeared on a special night, and the en- tire group left religious realms for a strawy hayride. fa J . et . - 4 355 . ' i i i at 'KT' T - . -rQ:,s15:iQ. wsv M. 1 ff ' Q -'S , , I I f if H352 X K ii - m f mf s -f '. ,ir Jtrviif fig.. f we - nf- 4 f lQK'r ,f?1 1' Li' V' 5 4 A vg. -Q-' ,-' gs ' tid J 'f f ' er 1 ,L - T-Q. gtf1ft' Q: ' f- fit CAL From bathroom duets to l-landel's Messiah, from a boogie beat to the stinging sweetness of TschailQowsky's concertos-that is music on Wooster campus. The need for something slow and sweet, something hot and swingy is satisfied by the dorm vics, radios, and Bill Shack's nickelodeon. And that side that craves self-expression finds its outlet in the musical organizations. A flair for display and marching can be found in Wooster's kilted band as it plays between game halves. If you play a stringed instrument and love the music of the masters, there is the symphony orchestra. Choir, Men's and Women's Glee Clubs offer a chance to graduate from scales to concert music, and for those who just listen, or sing only in private, there are the guest artists presented by the Wooster Fed- eration of Music. Then there is the Fortnightly Club for both listening and performing. Less-known clubs are the Madrigals or carolers, the ensemble of twenty instrument players, and Pi Kappa Lambda, a new honorary club. Completing the list are the music room -and the after-midnight serenades. FORTNIGHTLY N. Rowe, President C. Sommers, V. Witz- M. Milburn, S. Leonard, G Mulder G Front Row W. Fissell, D. Gault, B. Smith, ler, D. I-lenderson, W. Lefevre. Ohki, J. Bean, T. Bahler, B Hogg Prof R Weldon P. Parmelee, E. Palmer, Mrs. Back Row: P. Gruber, L. Lambie, J. Rowe, Rowe, N. Jury, J. Strong, R. Shobert --il..4ll 1 1 . llforifn gllatly Girowls in Hairrmomiy Beauty and the Beast stepped out from the yellowed pages of fourth- grade readers, brushed off cobwebs, and tested vocal ability in this season's performance by the Wooster Fortnight- ly Club. The opera, especially written for radio, was presented before a studio audience composed mainly of club members. While the beast rehearsed his growls, the club met every other Mon- day night. Music, old and new, was presented to the young Oscar Levants by members of the music department, teachers, and guest artists. Many meetings were dedicated to well-known composers whose fame had to share equal attention with the happy birth- days wished to some embarrassed student. Twice a year black ties and tuxes appeared as the members went formal to enjoy their wine and song. At the end of each year new members are elected into the organization. The membership is limited to twenty-four members - twelve boys and twelve girls. This even number makes the club an ideal date bureau, and it's strictly legal, tool CHOIR Milburn, R. Gilbert, M. Coryell. R. Geddes, H. Reichel, P. Frank W Barr Front Row H Calkins, Prof. Rowe. Third Row: 3. Good, H, H0051 R, Weldon, G. Morton. Second Row G. Parker, E. Palmer, L. B. Rugen, P. Parmelee, D. Hoff, R, Bar- Fourth Row: A. Peck, C. Schroth D Neff Lambie V Witzler, Prof. Richmond, M. land, C. Sommers, D. Reeder, President V. Clark, P. Hughes, G. Spencer N Howe QW? S'lfl'lU lflEFbl'lTS SifllTll.vlflHZTllHr Hli?lfLSi TID flfllllillltllllft lDVlJ'Ql' Angels with Dirty Surplices Heralded by a warning note on the organ, the black-robed choir marches solemnly down the center aisle. For five verses of Jerusalem the Golden they march until the brown choir pews are blackened. The' morning prayer follows and then the anthem, when ninety students set the lights swinging with their reverberating song. But let's look into chapel on a cer- tain Wednesday or Friday afternoon. Now the choir loft is vari-colored with reversibles, jackets, and coats. Prof, Rowe is at the organ directing practice for the Messiah. Again and again one phrase is sung until the sopranos sing it correctly. Finally perfected, the complete version is presented the Sun- day before Christmas. Besides these regular functions, the choir joined the symphony in two concerts this year. Choir practices are voluntary drudg- ery: woe to the girl who is found knitting or the boy caught talking. But choir has its inducements. Members have choice seats in church for viewing new steadies and for counting red hats, they enjoy after-practice tete-a-tetes -and they love to sing. W Steiner l. Yates, R. Irvin, D. Neely, E. Baker,J. Flaxington, F. Fisher,J. Fetzer, Childress, M. Beebe, J. Emery S Parker Glen A Brubaker, D. Hanna, D. l-l. Drake, G. Agricola, B. Dickens, J. S. Lantz, H. Raymond, M. Field E Vaugh Thompson M Tewksbury, R. Rawson. Swan, M. l-lolt. M, Drury, J, Atkinsgn, C Bender A Fifth Row D Lynn,J. Sitler, L. Parkerson, Back Row: S. Ferguson, L. Wilson, M. Robertson, M. Whitcomb. MEN S GLEE CLU Front Row C lreland, R. Pierson, M. Second Row:W. Lawther, R. Richards, W. Back Row: J, Smucker, J. Chestnut, T. Carter President C. Dagg, P. Bramley, Buchholtz, R. Moreland, L. Findley, S. Bahler, D. Zavala, E. Stratton, R.,Taylor,, W Brubaker James Gebharclt, R. Geddes, Leonard, R. lrvin, D. Coates, A. Brubaker, C. Vveygandt, J. Stewart, R. Miller, W. i W Sharp D Zook, G. Bell, Prof. DeVeny. W. Steiner. Orwick, J. Meloy, E. Muller. V E l GHRLS GLEE CLUB Second Row: A. Carter, R. Cutter, P. Back Row: P. Vance, J. A. Cotton, L. Front Row J Gault, D. Henderson, J. Hughes, S. MacDonald, L. l-lering, R. Sfewmtl M' polmerl 0. Judson, W. Qiiveff Robinson V Witzler, L. Alter, J. Kibler, Gilbert, M, Henderson, H. Haas, M. . President B l-logg, J. Vxfhitmer, J. Van Balloon, E. Roberts, J. Cotton, G. Parker, M' Cowell' S' l-lowell' M' Mccrelglrll' L' Eaton M Osborn, M.Milburn, G. Spencer, R. Reeder, R. Vxfetsel, R. Shobert, J, Campbell, C. Compton, D. Gault, l. E Palmer C Lewis. Stratton. Pearce, J. White, J. Branson, M. Bell. Merzfs Glee Club 'Wades in de Water Times Square on New Year's Eve climaxed the Christmas tour of the Men's Glee Club, which began with a chapel program at Wooster. Audiences in Rochester, Buffalo, Philadelphia, Harrisburg, and Pittsburgh tollowed Wooster's example by applauding the voices ot the thirty-tive glee-clubbers, whose program ranged from the tamed railroad song Casey Jones to the spiritual Wade in de Water. Girls' Glee Club Warbles in Cleveland Forty-seven girls dressed in black walk briskly across the stage, their director, Miss Richmond, rises, and the Girls' Glee Club begins its annual chapel program. They do not make an extended trip or appear as often as the boys, but their songs are equally la- boriously perfected tor their concerts. This year the club's itinerary included the Cleveland Church ot the Covenant and the First Presbyterian Church in Wooster. ' WHETHER flllNllll NHHJSHGUQ HL GS Symphony Gives Formals appearing in the dorms on a week night are a sign that the symph- ony is presenting one of its two annual concerts. Cellos, violins, clarinets are seen arriving at the back door of the chapel, while concert-goers enter at the front. Mr. Parmelee mounts the pod- ium, and town and student musicians play the beginning strains ofa concer- to. As the concert ends, the choir joins in a swelling climax. Boincl Bullylwoos Bonds Buy Bonds spelled out in black and gold, plus a defense pageant, won for the Wooster band third prize in the Football for Defense Savings Contest and a prize of defense stamps. The swirling skirts of the thirteen-piece uni- forms always present a colorful panor- ama as the band heightens Scot spirits at football and basketball games. This year it presented one formal concert. BAND Column One: S. Eveleigh L. Elliott, President Fissell, R. Shank, G Rowond, Jl. Blank. Column Two: T. Crow, E Webster, E. Morris, R. Ed- wards, E. Wheelock, J Sproul, E. Schleclrt. Column Three: ll... Scott, L. Lombie, J. Townsend VV. Buchholtz, D. Ferm V. Lewis, R. Hole, A. In- cognitus. Column Four: C. Conn, E. Rugen, A. Palmer, L. Eo- ton, R. Shafer, .l. Smuclc- Elf. Column Five: R. Lee, V. Cllwiney, R. Barnett, .ll Anderton, B. lncognitus Nl. Krelabs. Column Six: R. Eveleigh R. Ginther, R. Hamilton M. Bigler, R. Weldon, R Spangler, H. Conwell, R Ebright. ever ences my Wx .4 xg, J 3 s e. is Y' f' F? q fEWe'l W3il H ATICS Dramatics at Wooster centers around the Little Theatre, and the Little Theatre seems to center around Dr. Delbert Lean, Speech Department head and the genie behind most college dramatic produc- tions. This year, Dr. l.ean's thirty-third at Wooster, he directed two of the college's three ma- jor productions. Maaster Premiers The Qld School First ofthe college pro- ductions this year was the 75th Anniversary Home- coming tplay, The Old School, which received its world premiere as part of the college celebration. Author of the play, ar- dent alumnus Dr. Fred Eastman, was present for the first night, which featured all the fluster of ci Broadway premiere. The Old School revolves around the old question of liberal versus technical education and resolves in- to an unqualified en- dorsement of the liberal Top KAPPA .THETA GAMMA is Wooster's elective dramatic fratern- ty The Man WhoiCame to Dinner was the principal Kappa Theta Gamma effort this seasan. Front Row: Paul Gruber, Celia Retzler, Martha Stark, Virginia Lee. ' 1 Back Row: Robert Marsh,'HerlSert Ro- gers Wulter Krumm, Harry Bigelow. Bottom Page 74: THE OLD SCHOOL was premiered as the opening play on the Little Theatre schedule. Seated: Lois Clowes, Herbert Rogers, Foster Lewis, Clarice Miraldi, John Bathgate. Standing: Walter Krumm, Phemia Center: TWENTIETH CENTURY LUL- LABY was a one-act fantasy present- ed by Freshman Apprentices. Holding the baby is Betty Lou Good. Ethereal figures are Tom Strickler, Benton Kline, and Oscar Olson. Haymans, Jane Menold, John Mellin Virginia Lee, Ray Gillman. Top: LADIES IN RETIREMENT, a psychological drama, -was the Little Theatre's second offering. Pictured are Celia Retzler, Jane Menold, and Helen Kelly, who played important roles. Bottom: THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER, a rollicking comedy, wound up the Little Theatre program. Play ers are Martha Stark, Bob Marsh, Lois Clowes, Charles Ireland, Paul Gruber Harry Bigelow, Alice Neff, Herb Rog ers, and Walter Krumm. arts college. Wooster aud- iences found the work ra- ther slow-moving and too didactic for dramatiza- tion. The performance of the Wooster actors, how- ever, can scarcely be called less than brilliant. Walter Krumm, as the President, was convinc- ingly care - ridden, John Bathgate, a professor with modern ideas, car- ried his part with more than ordinary venom, and John Stalker, as the Pres- ident's eloquent son, seemed inspired. The work of Martha Childress as the President's wife was worthy of acclaim, and Herb Rogers and Douglas Zook turned in their usual good perform- ances as officious busi- nessmen. Good. Wholesome lylutrler -4:lOc per Seat Late in November Wooster's second drama- tic offering was presented. Ladies in Retirement is a blood-curdling, psycho- logical drama built around a fascinating household BEHIND THE CURTAUN SCENES. Left: Celia Retzier, who directed the oll-stud- ent Gum Shoe Hop, goes over author Ed- wards' script with players iseotedi Chest- nut, Duniup, Bllocherg istondingl Park, and Slteod. Upper Right: Dr. Lean, Speech Department Chief, instructs characters in Kappa Theta Gamma? production, The Elsilwiie Fiurewfrle grmers yazmvmerli' wa? .Faire ELWQH Sehaoui, Mon ifho Came to Dinner. Lower Right: Hop cast members wait for their cues. in foreground ore Bob Marsh and Jim Relph, whose humorous love sequence stole the show. siairwreai art Ladies in of a retired actress, her determined housekeeper, and two mad sisters. The production, directed by Arthur Kalten- born, was well-staged, and except for a few slips in timing could scarcely be adversely criticized. The performance of Helen Kelly as the housekeeper was the jewel of the production. Her pre- sentation of the calm, cold-blooded murder and consequent break-up de- serves highest praise. Celia Retzler also did excellent work as the red-haired and kind-hearted hostess. But Alice Neff, as the vivacious little maid, stole the show and earned herself the lead in The Man Who Came to Dinner. liirosh, Bfaeoity lifrwiriiie Early in January Freshman Appren- tices, an organization of yearling drama lovers, took over the Little Thea- tre for a group of one-act plays chosen as representative types of modern drama. The final play presented that night was an extravaganza produced by be-wigged faculty members. Tally-l-lo, the Senate-produced i9-42 Gum Shoe I-lop, was a laugh-filled production laid at draft-ridden' Tally University, where egomaniacal Nean- derthal Mancowitz, excellently render- ed by Jocko Shriver, had everything, in- cluding heroine Bea Udiphel, pretty much his own way. The attempts on the part of Dane Makehay and Gin Phiz to right things in favor of Jim Martin, Tally's blocking back, gave substance to the plot. Llt's just the Gum Shoe Hop Gum Shoe Hops are annual produc- tions which are entirely student effort. Tally-Ho was written by Bob Edwards and directed by Celia Retzler. l-lop music was the work of June Whitmer. The cast was excellently selected from the leads, Gloria Spencer and Scott Leonard, to the bit player, ,lim Bender. Betlrement, guffanved at Tally-110, roared at The Man Who Came to Dinner Hit of the show was an amorous se- quence between comedy characters Nornie Dunlap, Pat Blocher, Jim Relph, and Bob Marsh. A Loaf of Bread, a Jug of Wine -and Whiteside The Man Who Came to Dinner, a fast-moving comedy, was the final Lit- tle Theatre production this season. ln the play, Mr. Whiteside, a rather reluc- tant dinner guest, is forced through an injury to remain semi-permanently in the home of factory-owner Stanley. The manner in which his presence upsets the Stanley household forms a back- ground upon which an imposing pattern of laughs is woven. While the entire cast did good work, that of Paul Gruber as the Woollcottian Whiteside, John Bathgate as Beverly Carleton, and Alice Neff as Maggie were well-nigh excellent. THE GUM SHOE HOP, traditional musi- cal comedy feature of the Little Theatre winter season, is an entirely student pro- duction. TaIly-Ho concerned the at- tempts of students at Tally University to reinstate blocking back Jim Martin iScott Leonardl in the favor of Bea Udiphel lGloria Spencerl. Pictured are: Scott Leonard, Gloria Spencer, John Shriver, Mike Carter, Jim Chestnut, Douglas Zook, and chorus. fgclblgllvgffcg ailceffoaazfcezras' damrafll f1rfi7'aUd c111zi's EZGPGIUKXT Qliarqvraemnti cmrmezr' eennsewrslfoijyv wma? Emi lf dramatics at Wooster cen- ters around Speech Department head Lean, it is equally true that original speech centers around Emerson Miller, who has charge of the argumentative side of forensics at Wooster. Chief seat of argumentation and debate at Wooster is the Debate Seminar class, which supplies college debaters for the year's argumentation wars. Yearly the class discusses two topics, one selected by debate coaches of northeastern Ohio and the other dictated by the National Debate League. Top- ics under discussion this year concerned censorship during emergency and federal restric- tion of labor unions. High points of the debate year were intercollege de- bates with nearby schools and the annual trip to American College in Washington. Delta Sigma Rho, national honorary debate fraternity, this year was largely the province of Stan Coates, who was the sole eligible debater. Membership in the fraternity, however, was swelled late in the season when several Juniors became fitted for the elevation. Freshman Debate Club is the organization which supplies Debate Seminar. An organiza- tion of yearlings who enjoy argumentation, the club fea- Top-DEBATE SEMINAR: From whence come college debut-ers. Front Row: J. Rogers, M. Stark, V. Lee, M. Riddle. Second Row: VV. Hydorn, R. Kerr, D. Zoolc, E. Beem. Third Row: S. MacMillan, S. Coates, H. Rogers, W. Krumrn, M. Baysor, J. Menold. Back: D. Coates, D. Neely, R. Neff, J. Glascow, D. Reed, M. Cremeuns, lstanelingl Prof. E. Miller. 4 i Bottom - FROSH DEBATE CLUB: From whence come De- bate Seminars. Seated: J. Kovaich, V. Miller, H. Davidson, O, Olson, President R. Anderson, E. Morgan, E. Kulules. Standing: R. Connor, D. Cowles, K. Cohen, B. Kline, R. Reiman, W. Lucas, T. Lykos, J. Renner, M. Page, D. Frey, E. Covert, R. Cox, WV. Lyfle, S. Ronsheim. mzfrawss dmmmcef mm llUff1ir.c3,Fmiimgs'wf'trDm, fUr1,viitr.1icfirtzt7zvr,'fw, ifUlfQi:vfe.5'auwml'.. fIL5l7L!4r!fT wifi? gzwzmiirms Mae' tures extracurricular debates and discussions on a variety ot topics. The solo work of the Speech Department, however, is done by college orators, who partici- pate in numerous oratory con- tests. This year Wooster was represented in each of the tour divisions in which competition was held. ln the State Oratori- cal Contest at Columbus, John Bathgate, Men's Orator, cap- tured second place, Martha Childress, College Dramatic reader, also took a second, and Martha Sta rk, Women's Orator, received the fourth place award. The tourth college ora- tor, Haines Reichel, traveled to Cleveland to participate in an intrastate contest. Left: DELTA SUGMA Rl-ll0'5 ENTIRE MEM ERSHHP: Star college debates' Stan Coates. Upper Right: CLASS EXER- CISES are generally formal debates an subjects autlwr- tation, participated in by ized by the American Debate Doug Zoolt, Dorothy Reed, League. Fist-ured, however, Peg Baysar, and Gene Beem. is a panel discussion, an in- Lower Right: COLLEGE ORA- formal method at argurnen- TORS are snapped during a playful in-roocl. Haines Reicltel, College Oratarp Constance Clark, a womeirfs orator, John Batthgate, Men's Cliratorg and Martha Childress, College Reader. STUDENT SENATE Front Row: Jean Anne Cotton, John Clay, Ruth Conover, Anne Wharton, Robert Lessing, Erdine Maxwell. Back Row: Bob Dunlap, Bette Lockwood, John Smeltz, Phoebe House-r, President Gerald Stryker, Virginia Clark, William Lytle. 2,-efmzg ,. . , 1 - 17v5 31 ' e ami f-t'T. :5r1 - If-331.1 'ff' ' . .--- f-uf 1. ., . Q .- .-.L-.er r--i -ff? 155.91-.-'r-. -.fx 1' ie: :A .- 1:24-:hifi i . 1 .-f:lf- .01-3, 'IT' . I ,V jf' , f j':.Z1,Q.',..' ,-- . 1- .fJ'sf'1,g? 5: I E 1 Y -gk -.',, . - 4 +,..--'...- -Q.,-4 fiirifx'-+2: .3 . ':.:f-fit -,ijZ.:, ,F'-xg ,I .- ,he 1-I: - -' ' YA ,:1'g', :- fffv-ziese-,.-Q' ig 'JT rf-iii! V- ,51+ge':1ff 5,-.'.,Q1q5-55-'r 1-nf. , 4 4 '7 7: t fi'-stare V -1' ' 'ffl J - - .. gb., , . .s-- Democracy in miniature highlights Wooster's self-government. Every Monday night at approximately nine o'clock, the thump of the gavel calls the Student Senate to order. Reform is on order as these class representatives discuss ideas for campus functions, new and old. ln another room, the disciplin- ary committee for the girls is meeting. Here the rod of suspended privileges is applied to those oh, so, innocent girls by the stern hand of the WSGA, Here new rules are considered and voted upon. The MSGA, a brother organiza- tion, is unusually busy during Hell Week trying to temper the section ac- tivities to an almost civilized state and during the year in planning stag chap- els where no women are allowed. Each of these organizations has a share in the regulation of Wooster's extra-curricular life, and each is com- posed of students elected by the stud- ent body-representatives of true de- mocracy. Rounding the square corners in Wooster's college life is the .unspoken aim of the Student Senate. With em- phasis on that corner known as social life the Senate started to work this year. The more we get together, the happier we'll be, had its praises sung in the revived college sings. Dr. Char- lie wielded the baton as the students, overflowing the library steps, sounded their A's. Behind the big all-college formals and dances always appeared the financing genius of the board-the board of headaches. Then the Senate adopted the role of talent scout for a wizard to create the Gum Shoe Hop and interviewed tumblers and mega- phone experts for the position of cheer leader. SENATE IS BIISS 0F THE EXTRA CUBBICULAB GUM SHOE HOPS AND ELECTIONS are but port of the field over which the Stu- dent Senate has surveillance. In left pic- ture, cast members of Tally-Ho receive instructions during a set change. ln right picture, Senator Bob Lessing hands out election ballots. This year's Senate altered election methods to heighten interest and eliminate corruption. Migration Day, frosh-soph massacre, and Dad's Day are just incidentals in the life of a senator. A behind-the- scene treasure hunt was conducted by the inventory committee. That human fault of mislaying things had caught up with the Senate, so a search was organized for all lost, strayed, or stolen properties. The rope for the frosh-soph tug-of-war, the whereabouts of those Color Day costumes that keep appear- ing at Hallowe'en parties, and the minor items of paper cutters and stap- lers comprised o small part of the list. Still the list of contributions goes on. There was the Christmas tree in the quad, the renewal ofa faculty play, the installation of fluorescent lights in the gym, and a complete reform in the election procedure- less graft, more student interest. And the final sign of progress was the abolishing of the old stag tradition at the basketball games. The gym floor no longer becomes the universal date-meeting bureau at the sound of the final horn, for mixed cheering sections are the new order. Just another mark of senatorial prog- ress. Self-Government Associations Have Charqo of SECTION PREXIES AND SELF- GOVERNMENT HEAD, who comprise the board of MSGA, meet in stormy sessions like the one below to determine govern- mental affairs. Pictured below are: Les Thomas, Robert Cope, Paul Gruber, Bill Bailey, William Devitt, Eugene Beem, and Presi- dent Robert Hayes. Ode to MSGA The dice that once through Wooster's halls The soul ot Bacchus shed, Now lie as mute in some desk drawer, As though that soul were fled. So sleeps the art of former days, So Glory's thrill is o'er And hearts that once beat high tor treys Now feel that pulse no more. There is a world ot difference be- tween the MSGA and its companion organization, the WSGA, besides the tirst letter. For example, the WSGA spends money during the year and ends with a balance, the MSGA spends money on a dance, and only its pocket- books and the Student Senate's temper stand in the balance. y At ten o'clock every woman instinc- tively does reverence to the WSGA, but the men don't even think about the MSGA. l-lowever, there has been little rea- son tor Tyrant Hayes to exert his authority. Except tor a Voice edi- torial campaign, little dust has been stirred. Besides, a brittle tasces might crack it too heavily tossed about. Actua l ly, Wooster males have needed little discipline. With the years ot background, underground, and ordi- nary ground work that Dean ot Men Bruere has so adroitly poured into the place, one can hardly walk past Ken- arden without noticing a halo about .. .broken here and there into sections. WSGA FVooster's Morals - . . F roshi Counsellors Boost Yeurlings' Morale WSGA: More Than Just Meanies Behind those campus sentences and S.P.'s is the Women's Self Government Association judicial board. The Asso- ciation is not only a yardstick of dis- cipline, the administrative group plans the women's chapel periods, where vocational speakers give little-known professional facts, and performs other unjudicial-like duties. This year it edited a date calendar compiling im- portant happenings. WSGA's red-letter day was highlighted by the visit of Princess Sapieha, royal authoress, from Poland. l- ... ,,,.... 7 Y Frosh Counsellors Are Quiz Kids Advice to the forlorn freshmen given here. Ask us anything you want to know, and we will answer. We are the Freshman Counsellors. We fix sched- ules for the schedule-muddled, we are excellent commentators on what is being worn, and we can tell you every- thing not todo-wellalmosteverything. Our picnics are good get-acquainters, for they help us to know you better, and help you in meeting new girls. And when you have almost forgotten about us, we pop up again to escort you to our First Lady's home for tea. Front Row: Lorna Strawn, Miss Elizabeth Coyle, Administrative President Martha McCreight, Miss Eva Newnan, Judicial Pres- ident Celia Retzler, Dean Rachel MacKenzie. Second Row: Phyllis Clark, Mar- garet Stewart, Annette Freeman, P'hemia Haymans, Elizabeth Geating, Louise Stewart, Clarice Miraldi. Bock Row: .lo Fuller, Margaret Russell, Bette Lockwood, Evelyn Baker, Ruth Twitchell, Jane Elliott, Kathryn Smith, Helen Hibbs. FROSH COUNSELLCRS Front Row: Lois Grove, Dorothy Robins, Ruth Hileman, Mary Margaret Bell, Betty Shreve, Margaret Ahrens. Second Row: Becky Hostetter, Louise Stewart, Mary Osborn, Lorna Strawn, Margaret Sher- rard, Theo Hunt, Eleanor Rogers, Marjorie Thomas. Back Row: President Erdine Maxwell, Madeline Howe, Bar- bara McConneIl, Phoebe Hauser, Betty Platt, Carol Scott. -1 H- l .- ffi? .f s . . '- t'.-A-,E-, as- s - ' ' ., :FIEQ5 ':f'+2fE7?ff4??'5'A?! , sf. 724, Ez? -11 'g.r'Ti:v-': .i- if-f'LEg,k., - .fri ' --JF' N 547-,Ltr 'T'-1 65' - -' 44- .-.ffg- ,, ,aff A f' . L4'f:':1:.'fT.r ie--ff ' sfi?19: Q 1 - ' ' .srl ' -' ,-jf!!-is .:- ,gf :' rl: gf, ,T ', 1- -,. i2L5':, - i'4:32 ,--,.g-. ,ig-...M i - . , ,,-, . ,...-,..,,, ,.,, . 455215-'+1'u1:?-:iff ,f V f ',l5-:if'Li.4f3 .i2' r 4:2231 3? - 3 e: - ' ALISM WOOSTER VOICE The l94l-42 'Voice' intends to pursue a much more vigorous editorial policy than has been the custom of the paper in the past. This was an announcement of policy by the Wooster Voice when its new staff took over in the spring of l94l. Politically isolationist, Editor. Wilder and his staff waxed eloquently aggressive over campus and national issues. lts first cru- sade was a cry against the general apathy which is permeating our campus. This was the first of a series of editorial jolts with which the Voice intended to electrify the campus. In its editorials, one particular cry was to be noted. A strong non-interventionist atti- tude was maintained despite a strongly growing trend of the administration toward the opposite pole. The Voice found itself with a bitter fight on its hands. Most out- standing of its opponents was the faculty- inspired Committee for Freedom and Peace, which published a mimeographed tabloid in opposition. To the bitter comments of this ex officio organ the Voice remained serene except to applaud satires on the Committee. With the declaration of war, the Voice reversed its policy with a front- page editorial: Party lines have been obliterated, and announced its intention of aiding in presenting a united front. VOICE EDITOR Robert Wilder was the man behind the firm V ' t d th' H' oice s an is year. is non - interventionist bent pro- Satterthwaite kept Voice books and held a restraining hand over Voice expenditures. His clutch on the purse strings enabled the publication to emerge with books balanced. With news coverage, the Voice was equally aggressive, scoring several beats, of which its banner-head announcement of speakers for the seventy-fifth anniversary celebration was foremost. Campus affairs were thoroughly aired, and the paper man- aged to keep its perspective in its treatment of the various news items. Upper Left: DEPARTMENT HEADS M. Stark, G, Gray, D. Rickards, G. Ohki, and E. Murdock prepare assignments for next Voice issue. Upper Right: SMIFJNG AS-t SOCHATE EDHTQR R. Crider confers with make-up heads C. Alexander and E. Vaugh, lriset: COPY EDITORS l'l. l-lostetter and J. Hudson check the assignment chart as Sports Editor J. Stranahan Smeltz, J. Nfitello, J. Stalker, goes over a sports list. S. Coates. Lower' Left: Hxilollczu FEA- Lower Riglm'-rx BLISJNESS TURE STAFF holcls o happy STA-FF gets things srroighil get-together: H. Reichel, E. L. Van de Visse, l-l. Bigelow, MacPhee, P. Gruber, J. J.Adoms,l3,l-locus. 85 Index Points with Pride - .. The hand-shaking was hardly over when the Index met Fitz, who represented the Indianapolis Engraving Company, and the ink was scarcely dry on the Indianapolis contract when Jud Rinebold began to call to buy steak dinners and plug the Gray Printing Company. Probably more influenced by the steak than by the plugging, we put our names on the Gray form and then began to select a cover. The final nod went to Kings- kraft, who overwhelmed us with glamorous visualizations of picture covers. The first jolt was by governmental author- ity. The dream of a picture cover was alarm- clocked by an order forbidding the use of cellophane on such publications. Priorities on paper and copper made the printing and engraving problem acute, and the shortage on rubber made the purchase of the vital rubber cement practically impossible. The accelerated schedule invoked by faculty decree in January also brought its problems. Commencement was moved up to May II. Index contracts called for delivery on May 25. If you received your Index before Commencement, we have been successful in adopting an accelerated production sched- ule, if not, we have followed tradition. In aim, the Index has attempted to present this year, through pictures and words, as Wooster has triumphed or fallen. It has been an extraordinary session, the Index hopes to present a true record of this year at Wooster. . t INDEX EDITOR Bob Edwards met the titanic job of following in the footsteps of last year's All-American Index under the accelerated schedule which cut time to a minimum. BUSINESS MANAGER Herb Rogers met the titanic iob of keeping Editor Edwards within a strict budget. His excellent bookkeeping and efficient hand- ling of business matters made Index -making pleasurable. -:rw Inset: THE UPPER CRUST Editor L.Kolmorgen,Assistont of the lndex mass talents: Business Manager J. Adams, Art Chief M. Alsberg, Sports Literary Editor M. Thede. Editor R. August, Production INDEX STAFF MEMBERS lNDEX STAFF-l942. Editor-in-Chief ....,.. ...,... R obert Edwards Production Editor ....... ........ L ois Kolmorgen Literary Editor ,...........,..,....,..,........ Marie Thede Editorial Assistants,.Gordon Gray, Bob Anderson, Barbara Haas, Marjorie Page, Chet Turner Sports Editor .............. ............... R obert August Girls' Sports Editors ................ Marjorie Thomas, Lenore Dunlap Sports Assistants .... Fritz Pfouts, John Stranahan, Dave Neely, Jeanette Sprecher Art Staff ....,.... ..,,..... M argaret Alsberg ichiefl , Pud Stokoe, Meredith - Garth, Carol Scott Forensic Editor ........ ....... M artha Childress gather for a discussion ses- sion. Seated: M. Thomas, B. Haas, M. Benson, J. Need- ham, F. Stead, R. Anderson. Special Feature Writer ...., Business Manager ........... ,,,.,.4 ,M- Standing: M. Childress, J Sprecher, G. Koch, G. Gray W. McConnell, F. Pfouts, M Page, H. Stokoe. .,....,....Paul Gruber ...........Herbert Rogers Assistant Business Manager ............ Jane Adams Advertising Manager ...................... George Koch Advertising Assistants .,..,................. Fred Stead, Jane Needham Typists .,...,.... Mary Jane Benson, Anne Wharton Engraving .....,,..,......., Indianapolis Engraving Co. Printing ....., Cover ................ ........... ....,..,........Gray Printing Co. Kingskraft Cover Co. Photography ...,,......,..,, Bruce MacMillan Cchiefi , Faculty Advisor ....,.. Student Advisor .,,.., Edwin Tillotson, Bill McConnell ........Edward S. Peck .......Eugene Beem 87 1 , -- ff-1 - 1 'ga -53 ' 1 A? MT' if' af -JL 'PK' 4 4 Q K -43, 14 dl . ,. f - x T -Q, Q1 I' -' Q ff ? ' I 'I fl ' wil ' '.-if '- -' nz-,I gf Expt Wu QI' A ,-9415 , P CONGRESSIONAL QUIZZES Prof, Dunham os port of on irstzirvinfiorg igveifigolflxorripnCT3r:ggessrSZ-n in gictgxre ru er, e 1 , n, em, oo es, 253 Vflgsi. wllzess Dunham faces comin-o. . f ...W Geologists and Gymnasts Flock to the Clubs Taking academics out of the classroom is the function of Wooster's elective and departmental clubs. Monday through Thursday are meeting days for Wooster's twenty-two clubs of this type. l-lere, earnest young geologists or mathemati- cians or historians plan extra-curricular activities along lines of their inter- ests. Such organizations as German Club or Classi- cal Club have forbidding titles, but the meetings belie the names. Most of these clubs are closely connected with some de- partment of the college and express many inter- esting phases of the par- ticular subject which can- not ordinarily be expressed due to the limiting factors of time, size of the class, and the covers of the text book. Top-PHI BETA KAPPA Front Row: J. Robinson, Bertha Spooner, M. Hole, N. Powell, Bonita Spooner. Back Row: M. Nayllor, P. Gruber, S. Coates, T. Perkins, J. Bollens, E. Wheeler, M. Milburn. Center-SPANISH FRATERN ITY Front Row: S. Ferguson, Presi- dent H. Phillips, B. Steer. Back Row: Prof. Richardson, D Halter, H. Dutton, J. Van Eaton E. Clark. Bottom-GERMAN F RATERNITY Front Row: H. Dayton, D. Pear- son, J. Robinson, J. Kuhn. Second Row:President N. Powell L. Kornteld, M. Saunders, D Reed, L. Simon, M. Thede. Back Row: Prof. Schreiber, S Coates, A. Spreng, H. Yergin. 89 l.et'r-FRENCZ-l HONORARY Front Row: Mary Osborn, Prof. lllrrig, T3. Spooner, D. McVay. Back Row: D. Robins, li.. Strawra, lR. Lamborn, L. Stewart, G, Arnold. Pretixed by Greek letters are the honorary and invitational clubs. For these the membership is usually small because ot rigid academic require- ments. Heading this group is Phi Beta Kappa, a goal which few attain, but to which all aspire. Honorary French Club, Phi Sigma Iota, is exclusively upperclass-only superior juniors and seniors allowed. At 529 Stibbs Street German is spoken, for here meets Delta Phi Alpha, the national German frater- . nity. South America is also on the Lett-llPlVl'i'if5.TlC.iiNlAl. EDUCATEGN CLUB Front Row: Prnt. Bushnell, L. Grove, R. Crundlell, Presi- dent EB. Lerch, L. Boop, Prnt. Stonelaurrier. Second Row: B. McConnell, E. Maxwell, E. Rogers, L. Strawn, G. Parker, Loclawood, E. irflrzckey. Back Row: Kay Smith, R. Marsh, R. Cope, B. Hogg, ll. Birigarriari, D. llsfuehrier, ll.. Giloian, J. xnfiaite, F. Telxuishan. Right-HBKIVBTATIONAL CLASSECAL Front Row: B. McConnell, President M. Osborn Back Row: F. Teliushan, M. Henderson, E. Vandersall A. Ogden. roster ot international clubs with Sigma Delta Pi as its representative. Ancient Greeks and Romans are imitated in the classical honorary club, Eta Sigma Phi. Kappa Mu Epsilon, where students must be able to boast a B-plus average and the mastery ot ditterential calcu- lus, is the local branch at the national honorary math society. Sigma Tau Delta, Wooster's invitational education club, protesses to teach the teachers of the future. Only the upper nth need apply. Right-lNVlTATl0lNl!5.L MATH CLUB Front Row: NV. Buchl-ioltz, WV. Coffey, J. Hallsett ii Linnell, WV. McConnell. Secon-Ll Row: B. 'i-'Varner, Prof. Meyer, M. Owen Pres! dent Maxwell, Prnt. Folnes, D. Richards. Back Row: Prof. Vllilliamson, E. Nelson, C. MacDonald E. Hoiroycl, R. Douglass, H. Y-ergirl, B. Lerch. .2 . Rush the Rose-Bud to Me, Dominick-Boy The serious and the social are well mixed in the Classical Club. Serious- lectures on the influence of Roman and Greek culture, social-the presenta- tion of the play The Mostellaria by Plautus and the annual banquet where the food of the ancients is reproduced, even to the rose leaves. Shame! French After-Dinner Stories The French Club will improve that faulty accent from a wee monsouor to a nasal oui monsieurf' But its big- gest event of the year is the banquet filled with French food, French toasts, French stories. After all, thirty french- women can't be wrong! V. Mitchell. Upper Left-CLASSICAL CLUB Front Row: R. Lamborn, G. Brittain, P. Haymans, H. Dayton, E. Ehrman, J. Stratton, E. Webster. Second Row: G. Morton, P. Van Duzer, F. Fisher, Bertha Spooner, C. Trump, M. Neely, B. Platt, President B. McConnell, M. Welsh. Back Row: A. Lowry, A. Ogden, J. Mellin, E. Vander- soll, F. Tekushon, B. Caster, M. Henderson, H. Phillips, D. Robins, R. Allen, J. Van Eaton, M. Osborn, J. Lewis, Bottom-GERMAN CLUB . Front Row: B. Woodward, J. Baxter, L. Steigner, V. Shutt, B. Warner, G. Swanson, M. Alsberg, P. Uher, P. Horger. Second Row: P. Hughes, M. Smith, E. Smith, J. McDonald, L. Wilson, T. Walker, J. Emery, D. Pearson, A. Burns. Third Row: H. Dayton, C. Lash, J. Ross, Barbara Ross, J. Kuhn, J. Robinson, Betsy Upper Right-FRENCH CLUB Front Row: R. Hileman, M. Coile, E. Wheelock, P. Johnson, R. Kennon, G. Morton. Second Row: F. Tekushan, M. Osborn, R. Lamborn, M. Neely, J. Mclntyre, E. Beck. Ross, M. B. Hammond. Fourth Row: A. Wedener, L. Russell, P Marker, Prof. Schreiber, C. Schroth, C Dow, P. Blocher, L. Cunningham, J. Reid D. Scheu, Prof. Graebel, L. Remesch, J Bindley. Fifth Row: E. Webster, L. Harper, L Schroeder, G. Gesegnet, T. Baylor, C Sommers, D. Meisel, R. Moreland, R Back Row: President Bertha Spooner, B. Spooner, H. Guevorkian, A. Ogden, B. N. Boker, Betsy Ross, R. Allen, M. Welsh, R. Rawson, C. Miroldi, R. Wetsel. Anderson, H. Reichel, J. Manry, P. Chur- ton, W. Kevan, R. Craven, R. Hoffman R. Reimon, T. Hardesty, L. Schrock, H Guevorkian, B. Burns, F. Fisher, V. Beifuss M. Thede. Bock Row: R. Bricker, W. Joseph, W Havener, R. Brown, W. Osberg, R. West R. Mozorek, President M. Horvath. 91 Uimp hl Llrrrpenl Don't blame that faulty radiator. lt's the German band playing tor the members ot der deutsche Verein. Music the German way is a feature of this club. Bingo parties, recitations by stammering students, and talks about German customs are featured at the bi-monthly meetings. This year a Ger- man version of the Christmas story was reenacted by costumed players during the yuletide season. Fruit lilies Are Not ltlonrislning Social problems, their cause and their cure are the concern of the Soci- ology Club. A lecture on genetics by fruit-tly expert Dr. Spencer, and a talk on nutrition by Dr. Hutchison were the highlights ot the year. Hen Sessien Pity the poor teacher is the cry ot the members of Epsilon Rho. Hiding behind the Greek cognomen is the Education Club - all girls. Student discussions and reports hold sway at their monthly meetings. Top-SOUQLOGY CLUB Front Row: A. Vifcallser, R. Reecler, M. Smith, P. Eis- enberger, M. Srnuclzer, J. Hudson, R. Twitclmelll. Second Row: lB. Lerescl-re, M. Crerneons, President P. Clark, R. Warnoclx, R. Woolf, J. Steele. Baclc Row: Prof. lngram, V. Lewis, V. Cox, B. Roh- relmugl-r, H. l.ewis,.ll. Ross, C. Coppoclc, ll.. Lincoln, M. Thomas, L. Grove, J. A. Cotton, Prol. .lol-nnston. Upper Center- EDUCAWON CLUB Front Row: l3. Spooner, li. Smith, V. Lee. Second Row: D. Foote, President M. Owen, Bonita Spooner. Bock Row: M. Cholfonr, L. Campbell, L. Alter, N. Powell, J. Donaldson, R. Wersel, Prfol. Sronelmurner, C. Clorlx. Lower Center- PSYCHOLOGY CLUB Front Row: J. Steele, C. Helbig, M. Thomas, M. Srnuclzer, lR. Warnock. Second Row: Prol. Sharp, Miss Wesrlund, M. Gwen, President l-l. lrlosfretter, C. Retzler, L. Lincoln, Prof. Rei-np. Bock Row: P. Clark, R. Robinson, J. Broclcmun, lR. Woolf, R. Wilder, Benito Spooner, IR. Reeder, P. Vance, A. Walker. ortom-MATH CLUB Front lkow: E. Maxwell, R. Wetsel, L. l-layenga, B. Russell, J. Pierce, P. Tl-nornos. Second Row: Prof. 'Wil- lionason, L. Horner, M. Owen, D. lceote, Prol. Polves, Prof. Meyer. Third Row: B. Warner, D. Riclmrcls, N. Ruth, P. Kennon, M. Howe, IR.. Rowson, S. Blslhlcziwy, J. Perzer, P. l-lor-ger. Bock Row: D. Reecler, N. Shrellrler, Presrirlenlt B. Lerch, B. Bniley, R. West- laroolx, .l. l-llellxerr. Psych Clubbers Seek Solution Who done it? A murder has been committed at the meeting ofthe Psychology Club. Members have been trying frantically to reach a solution. But look at that suspect squirm as science takes the lead in the form ofa word association test. His long hesitation after the word murder was the key. Mathematicians Make Merry Glamourized math, offered to everyone who can add 2 and 2, is dished out in sugar-coated doses during Moth Club meet- ings in Taylor Hall after hours. Practical applications of math- ematics in navigation and tool design were shown Math Club members. Congressional May Be Willing to Defeat Hitler Resolved: That the United States should take all steps in order to insure the ultimate de- feat of Hitler. Heated debates over this and similar questions can be heard at the meetings of the Congressional Club. But there is one thing all Congres- sional members agree on-that the positions of the pictures on the wall are unethical. CONGRESSl0lXlAl. 'CLUB Clockwise: R. Lessing treading l , S. Coates, A. Linnelll, G. Stryker, Speaker P. Gruber, H. Bigelow, J. Mellin, E. Beem, G. Bryan, J. Lewis, R. West, R. Edwards. PEMIBROKE Front Row: B. Ha s, T. Wollaer, R, Woolf J. Kibler, E.. 'VV'illson. Second Row: W. Oliver, J. Hudson, l. Clowes, President J. Donaldson, ll.. Simon Deon MacKenzie. Back Row: B. Gaurley, S. Smith, S. Fergu- son, M. Tlmecle, D. Robins, E. Geer, E Homon. Pernbrolce Porrmnla The novel is the order of the T day, as members of Pembroke collaborate on a full- length story. Add to the reading of the monthly installment a book report, a critical paper, tryout papers, or original dabblings, and you have a typical meeting. Now spice this with a trip to the theatre and a banquet. The finished product-the year of Pembroke. Red lnla, Stay 'Wiley ilrorn My Ledger T stands for Tostlebe, l-l for Hostetler, E for Eberhart. Pool- ing this financial Wizardry gives THE Corporation, a club for econ majors. Visiting business- men and students discuss keep- ing that red ink bottle away from big business for good. South Pole Gets the Byrd. Panamericanism was the field of investigation and dis- cussion for the members of the International Relations Club. Movies on Mexico, Brazil, and the Pan-American Union were shown, and J. P. Van Eaton spoke on Chile. Humor was added by initiation treatises on Isolation at the South Pole and Where to Find Room to Widen the Panama Canal. lrleil to the History Club? ln Phi Alpha Theta students and professors are on the same footing. History profs and majors are eligible and together discuss such books as Cellini's Autobiography and The Prince. This year club dele- gates attended the national conference at Milwaukee. Top-THE CORPOPATUON Front Row: D. Zoolx, B. Pugen, President R Geddes, E. Maxwell, S. Leonard, P. Wetsel. Back Row: Prof. Eberhort, E. Murdock, P rorsnley, HI. Relchel, Jl. Cotton, R. Talkington E. eeim, M. Somers, Prof. Tosltlelse. Center-HNTERNAT ONAL REl.ATl0lfl.lS CLUB Front Pow: D. Reeder, lHl. Phillips, J. Donaldson President M. Chollant, D. Rolm ns, Pl. Noe, M. Almrens. Second Row: J. Hudson, L. Kornfeld, 0. Judson, A. Borto ii, J. Rogers, M. Calle, L. Plering, H Lewis, B. Rugen, M. Coryell, J. Van Eaton, G. Johnson, M. Srnuclcer. Back Row: Prof. Hail, A. Werner, M. Hellman, G. Rogers, W. lirurnrn, J. Maury, B. Fair, J- Smuclcer, E. Muller, E. Murdock, Y. Choy. Bottom-ll-llSTORY PRATEIRNITY Front Raw: E. Wheeler, A. Harms, IE. Ehrman, T. Perkins. 1 Second Pow: President J. Bollens, Prof. l-lail, Prof. Dunham, Prof. Ellsworth, D. Robins. Beck Row: J. Berry, H. Kelly, M- Allfemf .V- l-llart, F. Eisenberger, M. Clhaltunt, Bonita Spooner, A. Ogden, Betsy Ross, W. Hail. .loctxo Jollllies Geologists A field trip to a gypsum mine in northeastern Ohio was the destination of a Geology Club field trip. At the club's monthly meetings plans for such trips are made, and programs such as movies on oil production presented. Feature of each year is the Christmas party at Dr. Ver Steeg's home. This year Jocko Shriver's imitations high- lighted the party. Westy's oys Physics Club at its regular meetings hears lectures on modern theories de- livered by its members or outside speakers. Most interesting meeting this year was a joint chemistry-physics lecture by Prof. Kieffer. Che-rn lvliafjors 'Wet-ch Gloss-Blowing Few outside of Severance Hall know that the entire name for the Chemistry Club is The Student Affiliate Chapter of the American Society. This awe- inspiring title scares student away from such functions as exhibitions on glass- blowing or visits to important industrial plants. The Catalyst, club news- paper, keeps members up to date along chemical lines. Top-GEOLOGY CLUB Front Row: J. Glasgow, R. Ellaright, D. Buchanan, E. McGee, J. Shriver, R. Bu- chanan, C. Boyer. Second Row: R. Newell, M. Conrey, M Howe, Prof. Ver Sreeg, Prof. Make, J Donaldson, K. Kullkos, l-il. Eicher. Third Row: R. Prentice, R. Stoneburner J. Clay, R. West, S. Coates, D. Coates, R Lee, President C. Dogg, D. Miles, J. Boyce, D. Lnnning, J. Monry, R. Sproull, R Gorton. Last Row: P. Norfreru, J. l-leoley, A. Spreng N. 'vVrigll1'l', S. Cooper, F. Carr, R. May- berry, R. Hoffman, D. Ormond, A. Palmer E. Muller, .ll. Martin, J. Schultz, A. Vferner. Lower Left-PHYSICS CLUB Front Row: Prof. Vvesltlnofer, President W' McConnell. Bock Row: R. Westbrook, R. Block, L Thomas, C. Sottertlrwoite. Lower Right-CHEMUSTRY CLUB Front Row: Prof. Kieffer, M. Hole, llaroll. Grady, T. Hunt, Prof. Chiitttum. Second Row: F. Snyder, R. Dunlop, .l. Boyd, W. Long, President M. Naylor, lR. ll-loyes, JJ. Strung, C. Sotrerthwaite, W. Vigross. Buck Row: . MacMillan, C. Colwell, lF. Carr, R. lryin, H. Grady, Block, H. Von Nloolre, E. Holroyd, D. Hoff, Jl. Derfer, R. Crider, J. Grocly, A. Hoge. ocioz After the social affair comes the rehashing in countless bull sessions. Pictured is a Holden set-to . . . and the inevitable knitting. ,l i W i , Ln 4? 5 5 2 5 ,f 5 5 3 4 3 3 F 1- 9 Q Wgfsffisrrh 2,33 s.,.,,egsg3?gf1mt'e-keflaw 263 22: if wt 1-if WW J 1 wifi' if J: it 7 tg fri4jZii'Q if?f1fZVf5f es 1' 'E .:.i11--fvififff ' NS? 2, W 1-EZ infer 'SUCIAL LIFE The fact that social life is a matter for serious concern has been but re- cently recognized in official Wooster. The old formula of week-end dances and week-day club meetings had been considered a sufficient outlet for young Woosterites. Dancing is restricted to halls possessing an administrative stamp of approval, and the college has never granted such approval to any but college-owned buildings. As a matter of fact, week-day social life at Wooster consists entirely of excursions to the one first-run theatre, academic club meetings, or cards and cokes at the Shack, campus confectionery. The college's social system is extremely antiquated in this respect. This year, however, a giant stride has been taken in the right direction with the con- struction of the Union Building-yet incomplete at press time-a 535,000 structure which plans an everyday so- cial outlet for Wooster. lts completion will mark as significant a step in Wooster social history as was the be- lated lifting of the dancing ban in l932. Stl' Never Ra m But lt Bowes Frosh activities opened this year's social season. The Freshman Mixer and the Big-Four Reception were intended to introduce yearlings to Wooster, but the first all-college social event was a mass sing on the library steps on Sun- day evening, September Zl. Frankie Reynolds' orchestra played for the first clance on the 27th, and a Senate com- mittee arranged for subsequent week- end dances. Rain altered plans for an 'fi'-V y M 3 3 . M., -1' :pf - if 1-STS .. .K 5: Ap 4 , .wx .Q k li? -- -v:,:Ei.Q ' 1 3252 .:-'R ' 1 QT , '. M ' gif-Q , . wx .. if A r Nm .. . ,, z, ,.:, sl -. 1 5' E:-:z:1:. : , +4 l , .' ' ' .- . 5? . - aw 45 f:11-s.::,.1:1- 'f r.Y42.,,,4 , , fi Q ,D QQ sv - :am- - 0. ww Mx WW. ' 4, '5 .,,,, 0? T5 4 C ' .... , ' 5 f - -'-' IX ,265 xv . f W IP Q- . , ' . , A 'NZ 3 I '., ' ,rm A ,, ' I 'f5-ifjf' :gag :gr sq, A in 'L , ' . ,ug If 13 0 3: f M g,:,,-Q9 - :,.1,f:gf-we ' 1 - A1 ff, I w. ' 'gf KP? E ff ' - Q' ,-sd: , -??fPi1 .. - 1 Q31 ' W 4532? M., ff-. ' lm, x fV v. f i? ' ff V ' I gQ?,xfi',,:iE-::', fx 'Y In gif- 's I .' 1 f ,, , 5, 4.5, . s - ,Q A . , . xi, , iw. ,V AX . 1 . A' - 5. .1 Qin- , , , if , N: 7 M' A ' , 4 2 21 . ' 13' . X -.H , 1 M ,- .piffg + if ,f 1 .,. Qi , 'Z ' A, QQ 2, all-college walkout, which was held in- doors. Rain likewise dampened the ardor of dancers on Hallowe'en night who, sponsored by the Men's Self Gov- ernment Association, held the first formal dance. The dance was a double disappointment, for Fletcher Hender- son's snappy orchestra, which had been booked, withdrew, and the colorless Ray Anthony substituted. Co-Ed Eaters Give an Aloganeelc Pep rallies and bonfires gave stu- dents a chance to work off excess exhilaration inspired by a co-ed eating plan attempted in college dining rooms. The 75th Anniversary celebration at Homecoming time this year was an eventful week end, and an all-college dance on Saturday evening was a social high-spot of an otherwise didactic session. Ninth Captures the Golden Round The Dean's Office announcement that Ninth Section had captured the highest academic average caused the Friars to visibly expand, while Girls' Sophomore Court continued to deflate swelling Frosh ego. Girl Clubbers Serve Brimstone Warm fall evenings which had pro- vided an excellent setting for hayrides, picnics, and hiking, gave way to wintery nights. Girls' Hell Week in November tried the patience of girls' club initi- ates, who were forced to dress, act, and speak as ridiculously as possible. On November 7 the week of torture ended with the Holden Formal, most impres- sive of the dormitory hops. Top: BUllLDlNG. Students returning in September found work on the Student Union Building had prog- ressed thus tar. Center: EVER BUILDING. Dedication had been prom- ised for October, but the Union was still incomplete in February. Bottom: FAMILIAR SCENE. Draftee Dick Eicher, like many at his colleagues, returned to spend furloughs with old college pals. Private Eicher is pictured with steady, Betty Shreve. War and Xmas Formal Declared Biggest event of the winter social season was the Christmas formal the evening before the Christmas vacation. Students were, however, shocked by the American entry into the war on December 8, and an intangible pall seemed to hang over campus social events. But as time ware on, the tense- ness dropped and the campus returned to an amazing lethargy toward world affairs. Future Draftees Trek to Town By January, international affairs were ignored except insofar as they affected students personally, and stu- dents renewed a routine of week-end dances, excursions to the theatre, and cokes or cards at the Shack. Reality appeared momentarily with Draft Reg- istration on February l6, but disap- peared with escape into Section Hell Week starting February 23. Beezlebub Reigns February 23-28 Someone once observed that there are two great weeks at Wooster cele- brating different poles. Prayer Week in December urged on Woosterites the route to Heaven, and Hell Week in February made Hades its setting. Nine sections, who pledged some lOl year- lings, managed in spite of Dean of Men Bruere's rigid restrictions to quell ini- tiates. Activities ranged from sixty- mile ride-outs and ordeals by fire to dramatic presentations at local confec- tioneries. The Queen Does Not Dance This year's streamlined schedule wreaked some hardships on Wooster social life, but most social functions Top: THE SOPHOMORE PROM in November had the best worked-out theme of the social life year. Center: HOLDEN FORMAL-GOERS depart for a coke at the Shack during dance intermission. Bottom: CARDS FOR THE RED CROSS. Sponsored by the WAA was a card party in lower Babcock in Janu ary. Proceeds were donated to the American Red Cross W were adjusted. The Color Day celebra- tion was moved up to May 8, Senior Week was shortened and accelerated, and the May Queen was elected in March. A few traditional functions were dropped, as the Senior play and the May Queen's dance, but in the main, social Wooster found little diffi- culty in adjustment. With graduation in May, the earliest date on which a Wooster class has ever graduated, Seniors departed to take places in this year's great battle for existence. This Yeaifs Social Events September l 8 27 Convocation First All-College Dance October 3 All-College Walk-Out l6-l9 75th Anniversary Cele- bration Homecoming 25 Migration Day to Muskingum 3l MSGA Formal November l High School Day 7 Holden Formal 8 Dad's Day i4 Sophomore Formal 20-23 Thanksgiving Recess 27-28-29 Ladies in Retirement December l-7 Week of Prayer i4 Messiah i8 Reading of the Christmas Carol i9 Christmas Formal January 3l WAA Bridge February 6 Douglass Formal l9-2l Gum Shoe Hop 23-28 Kenarden lHelll Week March 6 Holden Annex Formal Babcock Formal 20 W Association Formal 28 Junior Prom April l7 Spring Formal 24 All-Club Formal May 7 Senior Prom 8 Color Day lO Baccalaureate ll Seventy-Second Commencement GIRLS' HlElLlL VVEEK is is time of horror for initiates. ln the top picture, would-be Sphinxes carol after the chapel service. The center picture shows Peanut initiates in the finale of cz show ai' the Shack, and below, new lmps make humble before their elders. 7 Q Q 2, ?i 4 f 2 2? in 3. 5 55 sfi Q! 5 133 Q ' ' i ' D D' kW Shown-tebulating 'part' of the 6815- Dream Date tQu.es- gdnffzlgiid dgrtjailiretilie Z,gilhgJGsnDrxe5g2f. ate ic est r a e iorincinres turned in are some of :he 4-3 sfruclems who 9 G e Y helped administer tl-ie poll. Go Vifest, Young Duster, Q0 W'est Selected as Wooster's dream dates -a girl the fellows dream about and a fellow that girls long for-are Mary Jane and Dick West. Unrelated, un- introduced until the Index made its selection, the two Wests are ideal dream dates. Both are small-town products. Fresh- man Mary Jane comes from Great Falls, Montana, and Dick, a Sopho- more, from Rittman, Ohio. Both are active in college, and both are well above average academically. Their selection was made from a poll in which students indicated their date preferences on questions ranging from their dream date's height and weight to their preference as to what to do on a date, Results were tabulated and compared with questionnaires on which students indicated their own qualifications. There was little doubt about the final decision: in every case Mary .lane and Dick fitted the require- ments more nearly than anyone else. A majority of ballots indicated that the Dream Girl was to weigh i2O pounds and be five feet six inches in Pictured at The Wooster, the towrfs sole first'-run .l.,,.. .,.i.,.m,.. ,i..,, n.: .iii u Dancing received first' preference on both boys' end girls' quesriorinuiresg movies were seconclp walking, i-hirol. height. She must have blue eyes, brown hair. She must be able to dance but not jitterbug, and she must not wear glasses or smoke, but she must be in- terested in extracurricular activities, particularly athletics. On a date, she must like dancing, movies, and walk- ing. On each of these qualifications, Mary Jane West was a perfect fit. Dick West was no less perfect. The Dream Boy was to be six feet tall, weigh between l7O and l75. l-le must have brown eyes and hair, be able to dance. But by a slender margin of ten votes he was not to jitterbug. Girls further pre- ferred a date who smokes, likesclassical music, dancing, movies, and walking. Too, he must be active in athletics and other extracurricular activities. Foot- ball player West fitted these and the other requirements. The dream date couple are frequent daters, although neither are steadies. They are personable, and their chatter during the visualized dream date, pic- tured on these pages, kept the photog- rapher and Index reporters amused. Wooster's Dream Dates are swell people to know, to date-or just to dream of. I7 lLGii'l Dicl: cmci Mary .lei-ae Vtfest pciiwse in their walk up hill to look in Sears' wiriclow. ,I Although riot receiving ci sirile lnallot, studying is the Both boys ci-nal girls questionnaires insisteu. on dates OSH comma? wwe G dak -H-he Wiesh me icyured . ' , P liking athletics Co ed sports lille bowling are popular fi Q Hbmwlsffludy ,mimi -W-,. .QP .J- f-T' JP IRLS CLUBS Aw ,'-L,.f-ggi' -f , zf , ,-v2i.:?:Tf- -ee - ' ,vig ggi ,fr-.fer T-f.s2 '.--Ar.,-rf--f -,-1-we , -- A-fa: -- - --if if .sg , - X ' .' ' j . .,ff,:.,-wg ,- f i -,2. . ..- .,- - i--. --f-'gf 1- ' :L 7- fi-' z' . 'Ir : ' ,P nb- ,-.2, .. .1gi'fFlrl5'Tl:f,fT'Zf ' '. f 35,44-?'?'F ,314 Im, , '05,- , .ssee-'1 ggi.-rss-4 V 44'-3 Lg .ri - :Lag -' . A -,- 5 1- 9 p-DOMINOES 0 To Front Row: Julia Brockman, President Martha Smith, Dorothy Reed, Jean Mclntyre, Tillie Walker, Betsy Warner, Ruth McClelland. Second Row: Mary Margaret Bell, Fannie Tekushan, Eloise Smith, Fern Fisher, Lois Wilson, Phyllis Johnson, Jane Atkinson, Wilma Oliver. Bock Row: Helen Dayton, Mary Bell Kuegle, Priscilla Hughes, Betty Harper, Gretchen Johnson, Jane Ross, Barbara Rugen, Rachel Shobert, Betty Miller. Bottom-SPHINX Front Row: June Whitmer, Dorothy Stewart, Frances Eisen- berger, Mimi Hole, Virginia Hart, Charlotte Conrad. Second Row: Kay Kruse, Phemia Haymans, Joanna Gault, Bette Davies, President Jean Smeltz, Meredith Garth, Lois Kolmorgen, Alice Neff, Peg Craig. Bock Row: Marilynn Eccles, Betty Lacy, Dorothy Lo Roe, Evelyn Baker, Elinor Ehrman, Betty Py, Celia Retzler, Lois Boop, Janet Kuhn. l LL Assorted Dominoes: all sizes The gals with the odd black and white footwear during girls' Hell Week in November were apprentice Domin- oes learning to be good big Dominoes. Once at that state, they shared in Dominosian good times, attended an informal dance, went bowling en masse, attended a formal banquet, and a hayride. DOMINOES AN D SPI-IIN X Silent i?l Wonders The Sphinx Club, named for the silent wonder of the universe, has traded the silence for fun and friend- ship. Among Sphinx get-togethers were on afternoon of bowling iPeg Craig shonel, a football luncheon, a Christmas party, and several gather- ings at the Hole home, which is always full of good food, fun, and sundry pets. PEAN UTS AND PYBAMIIIS lPeal Nutty Doings Despite a couple of set-backs like Mitzie forgetting the pledge at the formal initiation and Sherry fainting in sheer anguish, the Peanuts had a busy and successful year. This year Margaret Sherrard led club activities, and Mrs, F. H. Cowles became, as ad- visor, an integral part of the Pi Kaps. Nuttiest of the Peanut activities was the initiation play at the Shack, where Squeek Reed in long, red under- wear was stellar. Peanuts held other functions besides pledge- torturing. They took over the WAA cabin for a riotous and frigid night, held a Christ- mas bridge party and a valentine in- formal dance. Peanut memories were recalled at a tea for Advisor Cowles as members sipped and chomped in pleas- ant reminiscence. Merry-Go-Round: Egyptian Style Despite a title suggestive of Cleo- patras and pharaohs, the Pyramids managed to have a merry-go-round of light-hearted fun. President Lois Grove steered the club to a full and pleasant year which included a Home- coming breakfast, a rush party at the Black and Gold, a full Hell Week dur- ing which the would-be's appeared in dunce caps anchored with knitting needles, and a waffle supper. The Pyramid informal dance, generally judged to be the most original of the year, was held in Babcock basement, which was transformed from a staid dance floor into BelIe's Amusement Palace. The Bowery theme was com- plete: guests chawed on stogies and candy cigarettes in costumes of Bowery plaids and above-the-knee skirts. 1 Top-PEANUT5 Front Row: Pat Blocher, Mary Betty Hammond, Virginia Clark, Gloria Parker, Pauline Brannan, Phyllis Clark, Margaret Stewart. Second Row: Betty Leresche, Grayce Kirk, President Margaret Sherrard, Barbara Crothers. Back Row: Theo Hunt, Tink Carter, Doris Anderson, Louise Jenkins, Maryalice Cremeans, Carroll Reed, Eleanor Rogers, Lois P'utman, Lucille Cunning- ham, Charis Lewis, Anne Enfield, Virginia Ellyson. Bottom-PYRAMIDS Front Row: Dorothy Henderson, Ruth Giele, Jane Elliott, Rosanne Kennon, Kathryn Smith, Betty Steiner, Barbara Woodward. Second Row: Jean Stratton, President Lois Grove, Bette Lockwood, Betty Shreve. Back Row: Olivia Judson, Ruth Twitchell, Lurenna Alter, Carol TRUMPS AND IMPS Trumps Hit The Deck The Trumps, like their namesake, like to work in a pack. Companion- ability is their keynote, and together they attended church, certain athletic contests and a playin Cleveland. Led by Prexy Ruth Lamborn, the club was socially active this year and held such events as a Christmas tea dance, when the girls gave gifts to their dates, a wintery hen-hike in February, and a party for the club advisor, Mrs. Kieffer. Trump pledges were notable during the initiation period for their card-like appearances. Hearts, diamonds, clubs, and spades were pasted over the ini- tiates' blushing countenances, and strings of cards were tied about their equally blushing necks-Trumps are jokers. l Top TRUMPS 4 Front Row: Jeanne Grandison, Martha Stark, Jane Menold, l Natalie Clark, Pat Marker, Mary Smucker, Jean Hudson. l Second Row: Gwen Polen, Evelyn Roberts, Phoebe Hauser, P'resi- dent Ruth Lamborn, Virginia Lee, Jane Cotton, Mary-Ann Riddle, Gerry Swanson. Back Row: Sib Mackey, Lynne Lincoln, Connie Garvin, Roberta Steele, Phyllis Rubins, Virginia Wise, Barbara McConnell, Jean Biel. Bottom-IMPS Front Row: Louise Stewart, Jane Robinson, Betty Proctor, Enid Robinson, Bobbie Robinson, Mitzi Howe. Second Row: Lenore Dunlap, Carrie Berwick, Marjorie Thomas, President Donna Doerr, Ruth Kress, Margaret Alsberg, Gloria Spencer, Catherine Compton. Back Row: Phyllis Van Duzer, Eleanor Homan, Margo Drury, Marjorie Rydstrom, Dorothy Kuehner, Ilene Smith, Geraldine Morton, Jean Branson, Mary Jane Benson. Imps Are On The Ball Under the prexyship of Donna Doerr, the lmps skipped through a busy cal- endar of events. With the food com- mittee strictly on the imeatl ball, members bid Senior lmps farewell last spring. This fall, having recuperated from nostalgia and indigestion, upperclass lmps welcomed fourteen pig-tailed and black - and - white stockingecl pledges. Taking a cue tram the aforemen- tioned food committee, the entire membership got on the ball-this time a bowling ball-in December at a party at the Wooster Recreation Hall. Champagne bubbles keynoted the lmpishly suave informal dance where Blue Champagne was the theme. CLAN NIEMBEBS ABE HUME-BUDIES The thirteen girls who work for board and room in the homes of pro- fessors or other townspeople make up the membership of the Clan. Early every year, at the home of Dean of Women MacKenzie, Clan members meet, renew friendships, and enlist new members. After this the Clan meets every other week for even- ings of gossip, knitting, games, or just listening to the radio. Until this year the Clan had a rival THE CLAN Front Row: Lottie Kornfeld, Jane Townsend, President Elizabeth Glassco, Ruth Bowman, Marie Allen. Back Row: Marjorie Page, Betty Caster, Betty Waterhouse, lris lmmel. organization of home-bodies called the Natives, who like the Clan met in the homes of its various members, but the pressure of other interests has disbanded this group, which now exists only in a state of suspended animation. The Clan now attempts to fill the breach left by the Natives in supplying town-girls with a social unit to take the place of the camaraderie of the dormitory. Prexied by Betty Glassco, the Clan has evidenced real spirit and unity in its modest undertakings. IO9 Glczoiriw Lmwmisferg Tllzzinwfymgcetewmztfl Lfilismffaiziwzialyl fliiillciltigi fQZDf1afeiem Selected May Queen for i942 was Gloria Parker, a Junior from Rocky River, Ohio. She will lend grace and charm to the role which has been shared by Wooster beauties for thirty- two consecutive years. 1' I F ij, ,Eg ef-SWS 1 .!,E. :7 Yi? -'wi-:i.'hlf ' , vs , , ,.4wfcg'if?sii1,.fe.'4f-' - D- .J 2f'3i'1:T':'2.4li -.F -:-if y uh Q X' ' vgvnmmlfj Adj? p N-n,f'i. W 1 Qgigii-.g:'Ej'7E 4-gig? 5 N -' ' dit - if' if L59 II2 15965 -er' WWE' HELL QWEEK This year Wooster experienced what will probably be its last Hell Week. ln days of yore, this week of section ini- tiation was a time when the lid was off and anything short of downright fratri- cide was legal. Of late, however, a definite reaction has set in. The college faculty declared themselves opposed to the reign of terror, and this year's observance was generally considered a test period for the custom. The week itself was abbreviated, made a verit- able shadow of its former self. An imposing list of thou shalt nots was set forth by the Deans' Office, and outside activities limited to four days. Pledges Bear Bricks, Burlap Monday and Tuesday passed without serious consequence. Pledges appeared in outlandish outfits: Ninth yearlings wore red noses, Eighth, traditional top hats. First's first-year men wore overall jackets, Seventh, Fifth, and Fourth pledges appeared in grotesque neck- Top-ORDEAL BY FllRE-IFulril- ity itself is the attempt of paddle- proclded pledges to extinguish a kerosene-soaked fire in Ken- urdlein Quadrangle with mouth- ifuls of water. Fresh is Dial: Kira-imich. Bottom 1 AN INTRASECTUON BATTLE was precipitated lby an argument' over 'waocl for an or- deal by fire. Pictured is ai portion of the combat area where Fifth and Seventh Secitioinites ex- changed hlows. DN PLEDGE, Bob Holroyd, Right: SECONDS TWELVE PLEDGE5 were initiates practiced froinsorial skill on one uppercluss masters to re- herded into or closet, given two minutes another. Pictured is John Hill getting ex ing statue of Abraham to exchange unolei-wear with each other. brush cut from already-shorn Stanley chapel. ' lnset: PLEDGE ClL.lF'S PLEDGE. Seventh Morse. wear, and Sixth and Third men boasted amazing haircuts. Second pledges toted traditional bricks, and burlap was a general undergarment. But on Wednesday came the start of all-out Hell Week. Scavenger and treasure hunts, ordeals by fire, and various stunts tested Frosh durability. Despite Deans' Office admonitions, brimstone burned brightly. College buildings were entered, pledges cap- tured an outhouse under 22-rifle gun- fire, and the traditional sanctity ofthe library was violated. Dean Denourlces Destruction Friday morning during chapel period Dean of Men Bruere made a terse an- nouncement. l-lell Week was uncere- moniously brought to a close. Frosh were to be quartered, must sign in and out of their dormitory. Men's self- government heads were summoned for a meeting and an official ultimatum was delivered. Five buildings had been broken into, property destroyed and stolen, and limburger cheese generous- ly and smellfully distributed about. Chickens thrown through a library window had destroyed its tranquility, upset librarians, and forced it to close. ln Pace Requiescat After a few feeble twistings, Hell Week succumbed, and thus ignomini- ously passed into history with records of a more flamboyant day in initiation accounts. SECTIQN PLEDGES I-BETA KAPPA PHI Donald Fry, William Lawther, Elmer McCurdy, Richard Spangler, Kenneth Cohen, George Fearnley, Norman Krebbs. II-KAPPA PHI SIGMA Edward Beatty, Ted Ferguson, John Kovach, Malcolm Kennedy, Ned Shreffler, Chet Turn- er, Fred Evans, Hal Davidson, Richard Connor, Robert Gard, Arthur Palmer, Stanley Williams. Ill-SYNAGOGUE Robert Anderson, Mitchel Carter, Halford Conwell, Benton Kline, William Lucas, Thomas Lykos, George Miller, George Murray, Roger Richards, Robert Schuckert, Fred Stead, William Steiner, Harold Vandersall. IV-PHI OMEGA SIGMA Russell Barnett, Thomas Bowman, Gordon Marwick, Norman Wright, Oscar Olson, Clyde Conn. V-PHI DELTA SIGMA William Benson, William Boyer, James Chest- nut, David Cowles, Bill Herbert, Robert Ho- man, Wayne Hunter, Richard Kimmich, William Lytle, Donald Meisel, John Renner, Harold Rutledge, Clark Weygandt. VI-PHI SIGMA ALPHA William Burns, Everett Campbell, Harold De Bolt, Robert Dillon, Louis Eaton, Henry Hill, William Holleran, William Johnson, Carson Kent, Richard Mayberry, Eugene Neff, Rich- ard Reiman, Richard Roller, lra Saum, Ralph Wagner. VII-KAPPA KAPPA KAPPA Alan Simpson, William Decker, Bob Buchanan, Paul Weimer, John Hill, Stewart Cooper, Rhoe Benson, Stanley Morse, James Gebhardt, Logan Findley. VIII-ALPHA DELTA EPSILON Guy Hardin, Glenn Carlson, James Stout, James Stewart, Lorin Shrock, Robert Pierson, Donald Zavala, Robert McDowell, Thomas Hardesty, Chuck Irwin, John Anderton, Ralph Donaldson, Jack Van Eaton, Thomas Strickler, Robert Hoffman, Robert Holroyd. IX-IOTA CHI Nicholas Gerard, George Gesegnet, Samuel Ransheim, Elliott Nachtman, Richard Cox, Calvin Hearne, Wayne Brubaker, Raymond Stokoe, Roger Secrest. Top: FROSH AMUSED Tll-IEIR ELDERS in many initiation plcylets. Pic- tured are part of the fes- tivities in Sixth Section, featuring pledge Bob Johnson. Bottom: THIS EGG FIGHT was Center: THE DEAN KICKED about this and other examples of pledge- week mischief. The Coca- Cola sign was pilfered and fastened to the highest part of Kauke Hall. a slimy affair. Fresh were stripped, armed with hen fruit, and given ci free hand. Results were colorful. Upper Left Upper Right Lower Left Lower Right Front Row: President W. Front Row: R. Larick, J. Seated: G. Gray, R. Hartzler, Front Row: W. Osberg, J Devitt, B. Lerch. Bathgate, G. Hackett. J. Rowe. Prunetti, F. Rogers. Back Row: A. Gervasio, R. Back Row: D. Brown, W. Standing: T. Crow, J. Blank, Back Row: J. Glasgow, D Hayes, C. Alexander, L. Hall. Krumm, R. Miller. J. Scherer, W. Clay, J. Park. Neely, A. Nicholson. v ax VFW TN 9 f ft . N V1 X g i TTU q V'T'l i 'N ci ,' its A... Tv lf.l:lTlE il Am? Eamftles it lJDlllf.HfllDffEilE9 ilgofll li Tlflllllig EHEAXHJ-luNlE It you should ever enter First Section's door in old Kenarden, you'd be sure to receive a rousing welcome it a friend-or a momentary drowning in cold wgtmer should you be toe. Within, you would find that the inhabitaifmts of that hallowed place keep alive the old traditions and cugtoms ot the Betas. You would soon discover a closely knit gro at young men, well diversified in interests and activities. Theiiys would invite you to join in a quiet game ot bridge or a spirited game ot ping-pong, and there's always a bull session on lite, love, or the pursuit of Hitler to get in on. The gentlemen at Beta Kappa Phi, you would discover, are united in the common interest of developing themselves for the future. They are positive in knowing that they will always remember Wooster in years to come, and they hope that Wooster will have cause to remember them-in the future. EDl'l'OR'S NOTE: This and the tollowing section write-ups are done by section representatives. And resemblance to actual conditions-living or decal-is entirely coincidental. 115 Well, Hell Week is over, and I am now a full-fledged and bruised member of Kappa Phi Sigma. Last night l attended my first Section meeting. Big Eck, the sergeant-at-arms, broke up the card games and got the guys started up toward the suite. Prexy Binns called the meeting to order and Long John Mellin read the minutes. Bryan told about the coming Serenade and Andy Lowry'w?y?vo?uen-wowing solos. Meloy, keeper oflthdghips, brought up the unpaid duesmunblilafter the moans had died down, Klhdxllajhd Cort were in a private squabble about the breakfast dance until Sach announced that the faculty frowned on such early morn- ing exertion. JB straggled in from his laundry route just in time to hear Ned come through with his weekly con- tribution, a motion for adjournment. Koch, asleep on the floor, was gently awakened with a kick, and Kidney Bean led the section in singing Men of Kappa Sigma. Well, l've got to copy Fritz's German assignment, so l'd better close. Your loving son. 6 Top Front Row: J. Mellin, R. Lessing. Back Row: P. Churton, J. Healey, J. Meloy, W. McConnell. Upper Center Front Row: F. Pfouts, H. Van Noate, M. Denton. Back Row: J. Bean, R. Shreffler, T. Cortelyou, P. Ecelbarger. i 5 2 K P 1 Lower Center Front Row: R. Edwards, J. Bendel Back Row: A. Lowry, G. Kocl' A. Linnell, W. Lefevre. Bottom Front Row: President L. Thomas G. Stryker, C. Satterthwaite. Bock Row: R. August, R. Neth erton, G, Bryan, T. Cortclgflinq Top Front Row: S. Coates, W. Vi- grass, W. Fuchs, D. Coates. Buck Row: J. Shriver, R. Marsh S. Leonard, S. Jones. Upper Center Front Row: R. Lee, D. Cordova, R. Preston. Bock Row: J. Emmett, J. Mac- Millan. Lower Center D. Lanning, B. MacMillan, R Gorton, R. Kendall, G. Mulder R. Thomas, P. Hofmann. Bottom Front Row: C. Dagg, T. Perkins J. Halkett. Bock Row: J. Boyce, D. Miles R. Dunlap, President P. Gruber, J. Vitella. 1 llmilii QlilAiTfllDTlBlTi3i The Rabbis of Section Ill, in keeping with their ecclesiastical moniker, this year imported an organ to inspire and suspire. Night after night her dulcet tones audibly illustrated the principle of a Major Third. The venerable old girl found herself in the center of the stage at more than one riotous open house. But she did not get to every Section function. She was practically the only Section mem- ber who had Qholljlglffidsense at the Homecoming plclciimbrfelakfast to stay in out of thelrpinj lFlorgetting how lucky she was.llfxa.l'-l.tiJ'rrle, she begged to attend the midnight Christmas din- ner, and then offered her services to the boys on their serenade. Despite her frozen bellows, they managed to have one of the best of the year. The big formal dance again found her o wall flower. Unhappy and angry though she was, she could still say to a mouse that was nibbling at her rear foot, lf you don't like it here, get out. As for me, l like it. ln spite of everything, it's a mighty fine synagogue. I7 Top President C. Bailey, M. Hellman, H. Noe, J. Lewis, E. Murdock, B. Burns. Upper Center Front Row: L. Van de Visse, E. Wheeler, J. Bollens. Back Row: G. Rogers, R. Bricker, F. Lewis. Lower Center Front Row: K. Hovanic, W. Kevan, J. Schultz, R. McClure. Back Row: J. Bender, J. Thomp- son. Bottom C. Tevis, J. Pratt, C. Brant, W. Jones, D. Hanna, R. Moreland. 'E Q 'UE NM The boys of Phi Omega Sigma enjoy their section life. Their advantageous home is one with circling stairs and winding halls in the corner of Ken- arden. Long before Mabel's morsels are placed upon the table, the boys can predict the menu. And, too, the trip to the dining hall requires no venture into the wind and weather. ln Fourth's rooms are held countless bull sessions, and hours of desultory, dili- gent, or desperate study, and it is here that the core of college life is found. In the Sectiongiotif IW-rn much from books, but vastgi nliiliijof things that are not found only text. When the fellows reminiszliily it about a year of study and play--a smooth formal, creaking wagon wheels, the scent of hay beneath an October moon, and the fast and furious table tennis exhibition which highlighted the informal. Still ringing in their ears are .the words of serenades. There were trips to Cleve- land, displays of art, and a bottled cat brain on the window sill, and exploits that can only be told with a wink and a smile. lt is a good life, and an inter- esting one. But best of all, ci fellow knows he belongs. THE LIMBUBGEII LIN GE BS For the Phi Delt, Fifth Section is more than just a name or a place to live. An intangible quality that cannot be placed yet cannot be missed, the spirit of Phi Delta Sigma is a powerful factor in his whole college life. Each year brings with it new traditions to color the pattern of life in Fifth. Each new tradition helps to build that spirit that section life hinges upon. And in this respect at least, l94l-42 has not failed to measu . Bob Cope too er the presidential gavel. Mase e and that famous humor were never acking. Bob West's dad furnished an elk-the section men and gals ate venison. The steady club outgrew its clubhouse -stale cigar smoke lingers yet. Midnight bridge became a favorite. Grades improved lwidespread amazementl. Carle Boy- er's room was left unstacked two nights in a row. Our boys helped keep Scot teams up in there. And last, but far from least, that persistent odor of limburger on the radiator still lingers, just part of the shifting pattern that has marked the lives of the gang in Fifth. Top Front Row: W. Bingaman, J. Stalker, R. West. Back Row: W. Balloon, F. Smith, J. Relph, J. Lehman, W. Orwick. Upper Center Front Row: J. Boyd, R. West, R. Prentice, C. Boyer, J. Clay. Back Row: R. Irvin, J. Ervin, H. worthy, R. Gunther W Joseph Ervin, R. Craven, J. Kathermari, D. Kuhn. Bottom Lower Center Front Row: l-I Grady I-l Elcher Fronl' Row: H. Webb, C. Colwell, J- Smelfzf P e5'de lt R COPE R. cmndeii, J. sfmmhon, R. R- Mczofek SGHPOVH- Back Row: C Robinson R Back Row: M. Horvath, J. Mux- Steiner, R. Sproull Upper Left D. Hudson. Lower Left Ferris Front Row: R. Talkington, J. Upper Right Front Row: C. Weiss, R. Kerr, Lowe, Rlghl. BmdleY, R- Hudson- H. Rogers, J. Berry, F. Conrad, N- Heflner' F Carr D Husted R Beck Back Row:President E. Beem, A. Duncan, W. Buchholtz. Back Row: F, Snyder, C. J Ferguson W Koran -l i, F1 E. - 4 -A -TFT? F' F '. ,J BTTW7 , ict rr o - . rw o ll 3 swam? iS Ifi1f1'JCl,QQLZi7'EyQ7 zum Mare Lifaascfe lifllfi can 120 Oh, there goes that phone again. Why doesn't Beagle answer it? Hello-Gene Beem? No, he's not here. He surely must be popular to get all those phone calls. Someone is calling tor the sweater girl of Sixth. Guess Ray must be asleep again. There go the boys over to the gym: Arch Duncan and Bill Koran to swimming practice, Dale?li?lLT' to basketball. Shack? No, go ahead with Griffin, Talkii., where was l? Fourth for bridge? Just can't be done, Cl, Try Fergie or Beck. Wish l could get down to studying lilige Husted. Ned, do you have to play the vic this afternoon? I don't care if Kerr has to study, I have work to do too. Now, Fred, watch it! You and TJ don't want to get fined for a water tight, do you? No, Buch, don't think I can quite make that show tonight. Hydorn, be sure to tell Conrad, Herb Rogers, and Bob Berry about the meeting Sunday night. What, Dick? Time tor supper already? OK, l'll be right down. l'll have to catch up on that studying tonight. Called practically everything from Seventh Heaven to its most extreme opposite, the Kappas have once more enjoyed the chosen fruits of the proverbial B's. Bound together by strong bonds of fellowship and brotherhood, Seventh has displayed her unsung heroes in all Wopst I even to capturing the Kenarden intramural touclnlt otlalllchampionship. Possessing qualities unequal and unhcllfflighrovgjiicl lluny other campus organi- zation, the Tri Kaps have orlfe ioirelfjgmed themselves with the characteristic cosmopolitan litefm ln Seventh a man without a country is in better shape than a man without an argument. Scholars as well as legal tender takers wallow in the Kappa qualities that lend the Seventh spirit to loyalty for their college and traditional respect and love for Kappa Kappa Kappa. Upper Right Back Row: P.Reis, D. Buchan- Lower Right Black R. Front Row: K. Kate, H. Ditch, igyiin lr-AeiiDOnGld' E' McGee' Front R w W Glatz E A' Hoge' Front Row: E. Nelson, R. Moms slaylor R. Second Row: R. Westbrook, Atkinson, W. Shinn. Back Row J Strong J Loehr M er R. P.Totten, E.Fisher, President Back Row: O. Schrader, W. E Deldrick R Douglass P H. Streeper. Shutt, J. Gebhardt, E. Merkel. Narten N-sftllamwfnszli X we f ...1Ai!lAIit3iiEr Xf ..,l+ 'TTHHE 3 tu- M 3 Upper Left E. Muller, D. Terry, J. Manry, H. Dutton, J. McCondliss, J. Napp, F. Cowgill. Upper Right Front Row: M. Somers, J. Last spring a joint committee of members of Sections Eight and Eleven met and decided to merge as Section Eight. A whole- sale house-moving of the Warburton boys took place, and in the fall of l94l the combined Section began its first year as Livingston Lodge, knoxvn in, the inner sanctum as Alpha Gamma Epsilon. ' Livingston boasts s u obit' -campus house and original social functions. Muraid vklislll' hearths, a game room, a cozy lounge, and comfoltable rooms comprise the physical part of the Section. Socially, its gay house functions were most novel. The mass date in which Colonial girls participated was a high point of the year. This blended with vic dances, open houses, picnics, and a formal dinner-theatre party to complete Section Eight's social calendar. Martin, P. Frank, R. Weldon, Front Row: L. Elliott, R. Lower Right D.Zook,P'resident Clrelond. Sweet-land, D. Reeder, E. Front ROW A BFI-IlJCIlf6I' R Back Row: Z. Brondenstein, l'l0l'0Vd- 3:22325 W Flssell 'l Don Zliiefogesgoglfga lvlgokrjgexall' Back Rowr W- l-OHQ, W- Back Row B Fair V Mitch ' ' ' ' ' MCVGTTY, D- Wullioe, R- ell, D. Alter P Parmelee E Lower Left Johnson, J. Strong. Peters. B EARS lEW Tl 3TEf9g'5 EUMflllUJll'HlE'59 Down the hill a little off the campus is Ninth Section. Boast- ing new accommodations remodeled after a hunting lodge, Ninth intellects, who captured tirst place in this year's scholastic average race, maintain a singular unity. Pride of the house and 5 ' ering place is the lounge, where a new fourteen-play is the chief attraction. Ninth lists as other advant s home-cooked meals served in the house, huge, comtort le , and its complete collec- tiveness. lts active member av own social progressiveness with a unique hay ride, a taculty tea, a theatre party, and several tormal and intormal dances, while the academic highlight ot the year tor the Friars was a program of faculty lectures. Section Nine, as Greek majors and President Bob Dailey iwho has read the constitutionl are aware, is classically known as lota Chi. Upper Left Upper Right Lower Left Lower Right F tk W B F D C Front Row: W. Sharp, L, Front Row: R. Caton, J. Front Row R Shatter R mn ow or Ope' Gibian. Sproull. Brown Back Row C Sommers J. Back Row: T. Bahler, K. Buck Row: R. Nett, W. l-lav- Back Row R Glllman Pres: Wallace D Hott Hawkins, D. Simon. ener, R. Haley. dent R Dailey P Bramley Cfddded The dream is realized. The un- derclassman emerges from the ranks and becomes a Senior. In the picture, Senior Les El- liott anticipates the day of days as he is fitted for cap and gown. R 3, ' gif lg f i FX sary ., v p. XM X :.,.- -,X--W,-ww. A-fi'1 F , fx N 221' 115, fs D .A r - T ,f ,W I ', Af .f.-x,,,x vig V .gn 1.1-,.,sff.,, .J . . 1 - 55 Q 1, N4 4,,k...J,, ' .41 gm 2- 15 1'-f,'oW-zs- ' x .JESS .l: ,,X.. wagwsxw, ,, . 4, - Q - . Arvfkf-:'NE-h lf221?:vv-. W1-Mm-Nr. 3- . 22 ' ? wk,-.G .if '.:... my - Afifpp J, ' -4 ,W ,v.. I--gr if . , 3 , S , 5 ,S Z .,i Z 5 dg?:2w 1 In . , f 4 4 f A 2 'If- L-' 4 nf: , 9.2 . '- .5 'I' ' YAY?-.i 'z 4 vo,,,,-1 ,-,mf-J-, .W .1 .g. 1A f f4 f' -l .47ff'ff i' 5,555 was , e, fx-5.1 :-U A tt ' iff ' 9 ' .fy wt j sm, sgrffeifg With Registration Sep tember l8, this college year opened with an en- rollment of eight hundred titty-one students. The Freshman situation ap- peared well in hand. Doug- lass l-lall and Frosh girls' dorms were filled to capa- city and, at a time when the draft and absorption into industry were wreak- ing hardships on all col- lege enrollments, the loss in attendance ot thirty- seven seemed slight enough. Freshman Week was the first event in the classes' year. Frosh en- dured a kaleidoscope of orientation meetings, ap- titude tests, and health examinations. On Wed- nesday evening, they met Top: ATTENDANCE AT DAHLY CHAPEL is re- quired at all students. llt provides both an ediltying iratlueruce and a gathering place tor the classes. Center: THE HORSE- AND-EZIIDER CONTEST is e teoture ot the annual Froslm - Soph Sacll: Rush. This year, Frosh wollzed oltt with two ot the three events, lout nlroppeal this tilt te more experienced second-yearlirrgs. Lower left: :TUG-OF-WAR demands total coordina- tiow. Yeorllirngs lwcl it, worn the contest, amll confis- cated the rope. Lower right: DRAFT REG- llSTRATl0N in Felaruarv brought- twenty-year-oldls to the lecal police court. each other and wolfing upperclassmen at the Frosh Mixer, which boasted a carnival theme. Saturday evening cli- maxed the week with a formal recep- tion at which faculty shook hands with two hundred and sixty-seven Frosh and their big brothers and sisters. A week later, Frosh enjoyed the Sack Rush, in which the yearlings emerged victorious in two of the three events. With the fury of the school's opening events spent, students had time to look about them. The demise of the Grill, a favorite campus confec- tionery, was widely mourned, gone was the greenhouse between Ken- arden and Douglass which generations of Wooster- ites had used to test their marksmanship, where the YW Tea House had last year stood in solitude, there were now the first feeble scratchings of construction of the long- promised Student Union Building, Curiosity abated, stu- dents settled into a rou- tine of class schedules, club meetings, sorties to the Shack, and week-end dances. Sophomores were first to break the routine with a solid prom which set a pace for later class functions. ln November, l-ligh School Day was held. The event which in former years had been scheduled in April and had featured Upper left: SOPH COURT DEMANDED PENANCEM .lolm Kovciclm, accused of being a cocky l:resl1- man. Upper right: THE BKG- FOUR RECEPTHON intro- duces Fresh to profs whom they will henceforth see from classroom desk- chairs. Bottom: IDART-Tl-'lROVV- ING was or Feature of this year's Fresh Mixer, which had a carnival theme. ln the picture, Emily Kuhlef: scores ci l:ull's eye as Fresh chums, Priscilla Vllhitaker and Margaret Rath, lool: oft. Top: FQREEGXSE STU- DENTS are greeted by Director of Adrruissions liia-:lcey Young. Pictured crre: Angel Vferner, Vene- zuela, Your-ig Soon Choy, Keren.: Marie Tubelis, Lithuania, Angelina Bar- toli, France, Lottie Korn- fellcl, Austria, John imcler- ton, England, ulncll Ralph 128 25.. Young, Noostei'. Eol'i'orri: THE Clllllwlf. MlElNlCEMEl'lT PRGCE5 5lON gives Seniors their last look at 'Wooster undergraduates. ln 'th picture are college offi cials, speakers, arid not alsles who are to recei honorary degrees. E F' spring sports this year starred the Scot football team in an encounter with Mount Union. College officials no doubt felt the gridiron a greater force of attraction than the cinder path. Wooster's Hallowe'en celebration October 3l was scheduled to be a mild affair. ln town, parties were organized to divert rowdyism, and the college co- operated with an MSGA dance to pre- vent the usual show-crashing. Refusing to accept the bait, however, students celebrated both Thursday and Friday nights so thatall could arrange to revel. Theatre proprietors did not term the college plan an unqualified success by any means, and several students were guests ofthe police for the evening. No further theatre raid was made this year by students except for a one-man job in which student Jim Martin made off with 560000 via Bank Night on De- cember 4. Hell Week, section initiation period, in the latter part of February, tamed Frosh pledges, although Dean of Men Bruere's admonition to temper the wind to the shorn lamb was generally followed. Upperclassmenlhad already been tamed by Draft Registration Feb- ruary l6. ln view of the accelerated schedule, the Junior Prom was moved up to early spring and Senior Week was abbrevi- ated to three days. Much of the usual tinsel and grandeur was removed from the Commencement service, which took place on the sped-up date, May ll, Seniors marched through the Cathedral of Elms, heard Dr. Buttrick's Com- mencement address, received their diplomas, and made ready to take their places in a war-torn world. Sophisticated and shock-proof Seniors found the Cliff Alexander Lurenna Alter Clarence Bailey Political Science Music Magi-,en-logics -garet Ahrens Treva Allison Thomas Buhler Mary Balloon English Ldflh Biology Music 4 i I i I Q elina Bartoli Eugene Beem James Berry Robert Block French Economics Geology Chemistry James Bean Mary Margaret Bell Imogene Bingaman Sociology English English :k Bollens John Boyd Julia Brockman Donald Buchanan l'llSf0l'Y Chemistry Psychology Geology Lois Boop ' Charles Brant David Brown English Chemistry Chemistry 129 year's startling developments only slightly surprising...They yawned Lucille Campbell 5 English Mary Lou Chaltant History Vernon Chaney Mathematics , Constance Clark History Elizabeth Clark Spanish Natalie Clark Art Phyllis Clark Sociology Stanley Coates Political Science Charlotte Conrad E English Marion Conrey lf Geology i Sidney Cook I Psychology Robert Cope History Jane Cotton Economics Jean Anne Cotton Sociology Virginia Cox Sociology Richard Crandell Mathematics 4 Ralph Crider Chemistry X Q Margaret Craig -N Sociology Barbara Crothers English Thomas Crow Physics l s S Calvin Dagg s Geology Richard Davies Economics Helen Dayton is English John Derfer Chemistry 4 m- l ,. .W . ,s , '- mr' wiifrfrivnwemxiamafremi fe.w:mm:m gvferiewfziisg SSEHHDUEUUQBZF' .eew.fs1i4wmw,, fzmmli HEFEFWFUNE frm? rvamumm7ic1fnm.es.., 1 442 Class President .Him Vitella drowses co-educationally with Tinlx Carter over on assignment, labors in anatomy Heb, and, as Kenarden headwoirer, rings tor order in the dining room. William Devitt Jocelyn Donaldson Frances Eisenberger Economics History History Donna Doerr Robert Dunlap Les Elliott Sociology Chemistry Mathematics John Ervin Darrell Follett Richard Gorton Chemistry Economics Biology William Fissell Dorothy Foote Robert Geddes Mathematics Mathematics Economics Anne Enfield History Elizabeth Glassco Chemistry l3l 2' 4 4 fllfilycibfllllfli Sfesfmzicwlzf' clwmcayzrm awww :Mme 15z2'a1wm.5id'Li:zn1me-fzrwmm their Zinwgyianr 421155 Wlrmfd, 41.51 , Q Q! ' - , I . Vice-Prerzy Gene Beern holds many campus capacities. He is shown as cheerleader in cu typical pose, as lndex student-advisor, nmol as a reference-seeker iam R-he lib. Lois Grove Margaret Hall Virginia Hart Robert Sociology Chemistry History CHGIHIS Paul Gruber James Halkett Kenner Hawkins English Chemistry Chemistry John Healey Catherine Helbig Mabel Henderson Ruth' Hilf Geology Psychology Latin BIOIOS Paul Hearne Max Hellman Leona Hering Chemistry Chemistry History 132 Ioard to Local Draft Board. . .llut Gibraltar-like, they weathered this, iv Barbara Hogg Music Arthur Hoge Chemistry Mariorie Hole Biology Harriet Hostetter Psychology Madeline Howe Geology Theo Hunt Chemistry Jean Hudson Philosophy Raymond Hudson Economics Gretchen Johnson Political Science Olivia Judson History Naomi Jury Music William Kevan Chemistry Helen Kelly Political Science Grayce Kirk Sociology Janet Kuhn English Mary Bell Kuegle Geology Dorothy Kuehner Biology Roy Larick Chemistry Virginia Lee English Lois Lambie Music Ruth Lamborn French Byron Lerch Mathematics Betty Leresche Sociology Helen Lewis Sociology the war news, the short Senior lVeela, and the commencement service Johnston Lewis English William Long Chemistry Clark MacDonald Mathematics Bruce MacMillan Chemistry Robert Marsh . Speech 5 James Martin g Geology 1 Erdine Maxwell Economics , Roger McCann ' Chemistry Robert McClure Physics Barbara McConnell Latin 1 Martha McCreight English : Edgar McGee lt Geology Dane McVay Y French 2 Edgar Merkel 5' Economics Martha Milburn 3' Music Marc Naylor Chemistry , Mary Osborn ' Latin Marjorie Owen Mathematics Paul Parmelee Music Thomas Perkins Economics Helen Phillips ' History 1, Norma Powell l' German Robert Prentice Economics Lois Putman Sociology t Most trying Senior tribulation uvas possible omission of Senior Prom . . - . : .1. Z , , w if 'Uhr' es E, . , Senior Secretary Eleanor Rogers enjoys o rubber with dorm mates, gets a long distance from Champ, and works on desk in the evening. D0 0l'l'lY Reed Paul Reis Dorothy Robins Jane Robinson H'5l'0l'Y Biology French German Ruth Reeder Celia Retzler Evelyn Roberts Psychology Psychology English Ruth RUMUSOH Betty Rohrabaugh Jane Ross ' Cameron Satterthwaite PSYCIWIOSY Sociology Sociology Chemistry Eleanor Rogers Barbara Ross Barbara Rugen English English Economics 135 ,s I .- f 24 Z 2 Act'uaIly, the accelerated Prom was held and Seniors marched up to get i Treasurer Bob Cope, pictured with steady, Barb Crothers, at the Shock, is a snappy forward on the Wooster quintet. MCl'9UfFl' sheffafd John Shriver Daniel Simon HISNYY Geology Mathematics Befl'Y Shreve John Schultz Jean Smeltz E 9ll5l Geology History Kalhfyn Smith Mary Smucker Murray Somers French Sociology Economics MCl'l'lfCl Smifh Fred Snyder Bertha Spooner 50Cl0l09Y Chemistry French 136 Ilene Smith Psychology Bonita Spooner History Janet Steele Sociology their diplomas in jig-time in keeping with the college speed-up policy. Barbara Edwin Ti Histor Marjorie Art Steer Spanish Robert Steiner Mathematics Louise St ewart English Harold Streeper Philosophy Gerald Stryker Political Science Lorna Strawn French Robert Sweetland Art llotson Chemistry Joanne Van Eaton History Leslie Thomas Physics Howard Van Noote Biology James Vitella Chemistry Ruth Warnock Sociology William Vigrass Chemistry Russell Westbrook Mothe Eldon Wheeler matics Ruth Wetsel Mathematics Y Mary Jane Whitcomb English Jeanne White Music Wiley Virginia Witxler Music Robert Wilder Psychology Ruthmary Woolf Psycho logy Howard Yergin Mathematics I a class meetlng to get a pasture taken worried about the war, Gloria Parker, Lenore Dunlap, Marjorie Thomas, Dick Shaffer, Jim Pope, Haines Reichel. Robert Irvin, William Or- wick, Jim Relph, Lucy Simon, Charis Lewis, Jane Rogers. Mildred Martin, Clarice Miraldi, Grace Ohki, Mary Jane Benson, Gloria Spencer. Jean Stratton, Priscilla Hughes, Betty Harper, Elizabeth Vanclersall, Bill Buchholtz, Fred Carr, Arch Duncan. 139 Mluae .iifeiassiwrr gms W-Um wma? JC'ZfUl'2'EZffiE'xIl7 mm we Seenaaqpzrs Jfwmmzarrs airmail prada an , Eileen Palmer, Dorothy Shie, Alice Neff, Jo Kib- ler, William Hail, Charles Ireland, James Grady. David Thompson, Bill Coffey, Edmond Holroyd, Robert Dailey, Jack Wal- lace. Don Halter, Richard Sproull, Carle Boyer, Gene Murdock, Charles Tevis, Robert Moreland, Lewis Van de Visse. Carrie Berwick, Ruth Twitchell, Barbara Haas, Virginia Lewis, Dick Shreffler, Annette Free- man. 140 their Dlarch queen lformerly Illuyj rejoiced In front row chapel seats- Bob Netherton, Tom Cor- telyou, William McCon- nell, Max Denton, Bob August. Bob Edwards, Glenn Bryan, Jim Bender, Peggy Vance, Martha Ann Fuhr, Alice Walker. Doris Anderson, Corienne Coppock, Mary Alice Cre- means, Dorothy Rickards, Betsy Ross, Grayce Brit- tain. Herb Rogers, Bob Kerr, Dave Husted, George Hackett, Phil Hofmann, Dave Neely. 141 and slept through chapel anywag...Bored, they rejoiced at the opening of l, 4 ll ' 1 i i i Top Row: Lois Wilson, Eleeta Brown, Mary Center Row: Margaret Coryell, Betty Platt, Bottom Row: Don Hoff, George Phelps, Lou Beebe, Lynne Lincoln, Jean Biel, Mary- Gertrude Allen, Jim Donaldson, Dave Phillip Bramley, William Barr, Charles Ann Riddle, Elizabeth Geating, Marilyn Alter, John Manry, Tink Carter, Selma Sommers, Dean Cope, Robert Ginther,Jack Neilson, Joan Powell, Marjorie Mills. Bishlawy, Kay Kruse, Olive Holtz. Muxworthy, Robert Talkington. I ll i l it il 142 1 Dian im im ,Wl'zirn'fiYl'affiin'a1 ilirf M If GLWYIA' .im 5 ima' my :wif ii' 12' fi: im .fm ,rn :Y Wild' an ,, ,, ll?7lC'H l?il 1l 'd2'li':1i.'f ir' M .Tri rf- fm M wh gf we W fihgbf' Top Row: John Clay, Elizabeth Mackey, Center Row: Sue MacMillan, Luke Hall, Bottom Row: Howard Webb, Harry Eicher, Bill Balloon, Robert West, Harold Grady, Tony Gervasio, Walter Krumm, Jay Leh- Robert Sanborn, Dorothy LaRoe, Phemia Frank Conrad, Charles Colwell, Tilly man, Lois Clowes, Geraldine Morton, Haymans, Jean Branson, John McCandliss, Walker, Betty Miller, Wilma Oliver. Fannie Tekushan. Young Soon Choy, Harry Orphan. 143 ,E'5'fpg7isE5'mE5c11wm carnal, W easfmrpnggfezbnzz .s Mnrrhaffeuy Laamauczbrs fznhsazr me-f Roger Beck, John Fergu- son, John Glen, Horace Dutton, Jock Strong, Douglas Zook. Bette Lockwood, Jane Menold, Anne Harms, Os- car Schrader, Bill Shinn, John Gebhardt. Martha Stark, Phoebe Houser, Gwen Polen, Jeanne Mayer, Betty Macphee, Ida Snodgrass. Anita Ogden, Geraldine Arnold, Ruth Cutter, Dave Lanning, Jack Boyce, Dan Miles. 144 rf0AF4?xr'n'Qni7 fine that Eirrwhmy' JUDWTFETUPUEC 6'PA727l'2U'Fl?Lf rmcuwifv' flvrcwmta Iif1LTL7LT V NIU!! ,Eaasemw Stiff-m4ifgefm'.s..V Max Napp, Eric Peters, Dove Reeder, John Stran- ahan, Carol Scott, Scott Leonard, Loa Russell, Janet Cole, Kate Kalkas, John Strong, Perry Na rten, Robert Neff. John Emmett, Dan Cor- dova, John Meloy, John Mellin, Robert Lessing. Betty Py, June Whitmer, Margaret Stewart, Jane Adams, Elinor Ehrman, I-Iratchouhi Guevorkian. 145 . , ' 9'-, 'x Y-:,::X,.. . ,, Q 'ffiiv-2 ' . ' -231 . 'fm 4 2 fi sr-J: 'W' - .- , ' ,lf X , -1' - Q-:::1f5:se:2- x 1 -- , ..,. . , ' -, 1 ' 1. R Q '---Ji-.li W - , - , Y . f- ,Q N -4 ' . , 1 - ' ' A - . qi '5 Il ' I A Q V J 3'iEI '7':? ':4Q- 'Ii f 433 ' ' ' ' , N ,, ,, ., , -. fa- - - , .iff Q' . g , we - ia- , 1,4,.5,.-2 ,.., , .:, - - .. as - W ' V, . ' 'WSJ i g' ' ,' -' - dir:-1 -2 3:I2f5?'- L, ,' -105'- EA x Aw - ., ' Q -'K 1 - ' - .1 H Z' 15. -.:3:'-:v':5, - 1 '- -x ' 4 A ,.,. . 5 fl 5? Q' V 2' 5 ' ,Q - 23 75 , ,:?I yff' - Tx' - EN . ', - Q' . -7, 5 Y ' 1 K , 1 ' . ' ff ' 1 4 ' 'H' - Q H x' 557 4 ,- , , -' 11 J' 5 j ., ' N ' Q! W A' .rx A :- .-,.3nX:-,,- 9, , W-3j,v. , , -K ..,. N. -- off- A X -,ik - . .1 ?. , ' , - 17. . ,. fm S7 :K A ffl' f-'.m'5t'f0 ' -' V. m ff 1 O .. ' T- ' - ' . ! Q .. . i b .Q - .Q 1 X, . -5 ,. 2 , 15:9 Q1 4, , , ., J - -A ,N x g V- :gfv?' X ,,g,,.f2f A Q1 , -is 5 : ' V. 1. - X2 2 . ' ' c'f':rf5' k ' 5 -' , 3 1 ' - x if ZF x f X.,-5 f. -' X T -RW ' ff-if' A P 'v' 1 - N' w -' - :35555-6i57ff5l-II?:611v ' X9 ' 47' if :1f9S'I'Z55-I ' . ff sf xx xv x - 1! ' .1 17 5 ie? N Q - ' - ' - , k R 1 . . . 0 5 3 Q ffl X Q ' . . ' xg fe, . ,., ff 'U ' ' I 'Y ' mi' .4 . . ,,.,5-f1:-.::q.- V- pq gl, Qixk,-. , - . ...,. xx ,A X f f ,. . X S-., Q L 4 Nw 4, X X-15 E is Q, --'- -my 5 W,.,a.X 3 Q-5 , 6 . e 1 X., v-'-S if ,A I. b X 9 ii fy Si . if 4 555 'ab-1 X :fe f A X X , X15 is X Q- :SQ - Q Q if . ' 3? , XX A . S, X qw 1 al ' ax ' .Q --w - ., - - N. ggi f MIN.-f :V - ghd. 'Q gif X K .5 Xxfmx Q , XV x - I Nfiqxg, Q5.:+?'1 A Q x vfifflwx ii. -f ' Y . N ' 3132.1 A 'ii Pie-27?-Q'w 4:4 ,- -fJx.mxgf X -5- Mx' , A xiraagqggrllkballf KHWMEQ' anlffefm r1r'la'ngz'-'a1f'Eenf:fzr'lflrfr' f-iillfzwfavcmf KEELEHE Eglzilllrrzfzizfrinlrll' rmbizmreezsyiw . . -l Z'llLi'mfcfLi.MQ9g Row: Foster Lewis, George Rogers, Thompson, Bob Bricker, Arden Bru- er, Joel Pratt, Norman Howe, Dorothy derson, P'hyllis Rubins, Rachel Sho- , Margaret Alsberg. Middle Row: Joseph Prunetti, Wilfred Osberg, Rex l-lartzler, Al Spreng, Bill Koran, Bill l-lydorn, Bill Glatz, Curzon Ferris. Bottom Row: Roger Stoneburner, Elgin Deidrick, Bill Shutt, Bob Atkinson, Betty Proctor, Jane Needham, Enid Robinson, Marilynn Palmer, John Blank, Rudy Mazorek, Gordon Gray, Frank Rogers, Paul Cox. m1 umvax iii ll Dorothy Pearson, Alice Burns, Mary Virginia Miller, Mary Betty Hammond. Edith Beck, Helen Trunick, Phil Johnson, Eleanor VVebster, Peg Welsh. Bob Thomas, Jim Mac- Millan, John Sproul, Bob Kendall, Bob Preston. Ellamae Rowe, Pat Marker, Jean Emery, Jane McDonald. led avengers with Soph Court uhzeh chustlsed punished persecuted ar Fern Fisher, Verna Wefler, Carolyn Trump, Doris Lynn. Hank Miller, Bob Douglass, Earl Nelson, Andy Goheen. Kristine Mortensen, Ruth Bowman, Jean Stafford. Herb Ervin, Dick Crav- en, Dick Ebright, Arthur Andrews. 148 wmnaeedf Frmslk Qiwmfitr E9 :mmf rm Hifi? L7 Jfitrvc W amz' fig Sim! 'J 1 U-lr7DJ il1GCQ7QDeETBf?1IiIi'fQ Dave Neely, Al Nich- olson, Elmer Stratton, Ralph Miller. Betty York, Louise Jenkins, Pauline Bron- non, Pat Blocher. John Scherer, Bob Johnson. George Mulcler, Betty Steiner. back Faith Whitney, Evelyn Baker, front Elizabeth Geer, Vir- ginia Wise. Jane Elliott, Lorraine Schwartz, Ruth Newell, Virginia Beituss. Sara Jean Ferguson, Ruth Rawson, Margar- et Tewksbury, Vera Louise lrwin. Marjorie Danforth, Bette Davies, Lucille Cunningham, Dorothy Stewart. 149 9'-Pb Peggy Neely, Roberta Steele, Jean Mclntyre, Rosanne Kennon. Mary Simmerall, Fay Maggard. Betsy Warner, Barbara Woodward, Ruth Roh- rabaugh, Nancy Ruth. Martha Coile, Helen Haas, Nancy Lamy, Jean P'aull. fheme Mews an ukzzvrzramf saaeiweessf and prrwarairffiwrff cmvmzpzus smith chance band fund 0 Jean Flaxington, Virginia Powell, Lois Schroeder, Peg Baysor. Phil Frank, Bill Jones, Dan Williams, Dick Lee. Eleanor McElheny, Ethel Kauffman, Marie Benfer, Ruth Gilbert. .Gerry Swanson, Betty Baker, Betty Geesling, Ruth Giele. 150 Morgaret Gibbons, Jeanne Grandison, Betty Gourley, Lois Kolmorgen. back Bill Lefevre, Paul Ecelbarger, Andy Low- ry, front Ernest Muller, Bob Borland. Dick West, John Smeltz, Frank Smith. Martha Childress, Betty Baker, Ruth Allen, Ellen Vaugh, thas gear Earl Hood llleanwlule, rehglous Sophomoros mourned the Robert Brown, Bill l-lavener, Ray Gillrnan, Dick Caton. Peggy Martens, Marie Thede, Alice Robbins, Eloise Smith, Edith Wheelock. Bill Mershon, Vance Mitchell, Fred Cowgill, Zane Brandenstein. Eleanor Homan, Margo Drury, Dorothy Rum- bold, Ruth Kress. 151 Raul Churton, Al l.in- nell, Ed Morris, Ken Hovanic. Virginia Clark, Vir- ginia Ellyson, Meredith Garth, Catherine Compton. Carl Robinson, Dale Hudson, Stanley Jones, Joe Bindley, Ned Hett- ner. Fritz Pfouts, George Koch, Bruce Burns, Charles Weiss, passing of Sophomore Forum cut Student Fallon: slap Instead Jeannette Curtis, Fsther Robinson, Ruth McClelland, Joanne Gault. Anne Wharton, Connie Garvin, Bets Pond, Jeanette Sprecher. Grace Agricola, Louise Harper, Sibyl Mac- Donald. Donald Sonnedecker, J im Glasgow, Bob Hamilton, Russ Haley. 152 Marilynn Eccles, Agnes Dungan, Marilyn King, Betty Lacy. Betty Caster, Elizabeth Blough, Joy Withrow, Margaret Finefrock. Dick Weldon, Charles Schollenberger, Don Coates, Jim Smucker. back Marjorie Ryd- strom, Shirley Smith, front Carroll Reed, Phyllis Van Duzer. broodlng Sophs got thelr chance and gave Freshmen Hell lnfeelij! Jennie Francis, June Shelatree, Louise Re- mesch, Bernice Brile. Pete Hanna, Jane At- kinson, Helen Hibbs, Bill Bingaman. Jimmy Rowe, Jim Park, Frank Harper, Whar- ton Clay. Mike Horvath, Bill Joseph, Dennis Kuhn, Jerry Katherman. l53 lf-'A 'QE fii . , , .19 -4545-3? .cf:f4,,,.1fvcg, .Lv-15.55 Qfgf viii- -if-,::ef1i4? ' fic? . ,vf.1:f1J5:fQ?fS'?f14L , 1 ,5,,g.,g1v'i-',,fg fl- .4 ' ' -gf y r ,- , rf - 152-'yy'1-'J xy-1:23. 11 ,nib 'f 9 Y - --'ea-:5rZ?wf'Gf,'-11' gAi,:a, ,41fr9-Il'-vi' 5- --1 -f-F'-,. as-. .. - r-' -rg .D ., ff- +A.- ':f4'3? - 'qw E 999' .J - -1-' 5 1 .' ' ?fJ1:iEs'1P2 ' 3:,.'f,:-2, i344-?r?11g.r 4' ... gf . , -, :A-gn-:.-,: W, f-rm ms Y,.g.fc1f'b3-7 A . r- QQ., ,Q.4,.,.f,p.r-A, ' , 'H A5 w fi 1-11 W r ' 4. F' f , . ' ,nf ragga mam arm: Z7 QQyf.Qf:f1:a47armarE rz.r:gm5mQr-rfgaassmnfen '11f 129Lfs:R'-Ziiff' 2152 :52F ff1f?Jxf ' ' 622 ' , . rw A'-' I. z 45 ,F vw: Q xl'1. f-x ' ! as 1 W, . 4 '3' if JA, J. 'Q 1 -fy-I-Y 3 W .ff-I- ' , se anF 4 1 A d . 4 T- 4 M 4 Q .M I z Q Q , ' 1 . f ' Y a Q 0 2 SM i , , 5 Hnsefrz YEAIRLUNG HIIGIHIER-UPS PULL TQGETHER Gov u successhnll year. Picrured w rh syn'rI'ooEiu: coke nre owicers Don Meise , Laura Sreigner, IRMH-n Vilrisrnn, and Pwr! Stfokafze. A SPEECH ON THE IRQCK was rhe Soph Court sentence ddivered Wo unrorrunare Fresh, Mike Carter. Moose Miiiler Hlerrb , Heading Soph heckler, ossisrs in rhe presenmrion, which concerned infant care and feeding. rl ar lr 1 i r ff 1 1 T ll 'l l 71 m m, wzzmis.-f, Front Row: C. Bender, P. Oetzel, B. Good, A. Pol- mer, W. Boyer, J. O'Con- nell. Back Row: R. Pierson, C. Weygandt, A. Werner, D. Zavalo, O. Olson, L. Eaton. Front Row: R. Johnson, Martha McClaran, W. Johnson, V. Miller, J. Stewart, M. Miller, A. Kean, Mary McClaran. Second Row: J. Hill, J. l-lotta, R. Connor, P. Ken- nedy, W. Lytle, l-l. Mur- ray, B. Stuckslager. Back Row: R. Conover, M. Goldsmith, M. West, B. Morgan, E. MacMillan, L. Danielson, E. Kuhles. Front Row: V. Shutt, B. Marr, C. Pixler, R. Reiman, R. McDowell, R. Ander- son, M. Page, J. Fetzer, L. Kornfeld. Second Row: B. Water- house, V. Root, R. Cox, R. Hoffman, T. Strickler, F. Steod, K. Cohen, J. Van Eaton. Back Row: R. Donaldson, N. Wright, R. Von Thurn, R. Gard, T. Bowman, S. Williams, N. Gerard, l-l. Field. 155 wgfafiz imc. K firm mire farm surf La eras fraugwe rrmw My Huy f' f?'Z?cy+eQ1?prEicwUm moan?-sal Front Row: R. Whiston B. Martin, J. Hoop, D Garverick, D. Culley, M McClure, V. Tischer, F Thomas, V. Wach. Second Row: J. Sitler, I lmnnel, M. Allen, J. Howe J. Thornas, J. Fuller, J Bowen, J. Baxter, L Steigner. Back Row: D. Meisel, D Talbot, J. McCleave, C Turner, F. Evans, H Davidson. Front Row: H. Calkins, J Reid, D. Scheu, P. Whit- aker, R. Coover, L. Park- erson, M. Stewart. Second Row: L. Brown, L Rolling, D. Dunlap, H Fruend, H. Ringland, J Haun. Back Row: M. Dexter, M Tubelis, S. Lantz, H. van- den Bosch. Front Row: A.Widener, L. Colteryahn, D. Schroeder, Z. Franklin, B. Russell, J. Kenyon, A. Peck, L. Findlev, R. Mayberry. Back Row: M. Neely, C. Francy, A. Fisher, N. Helm,J. Lorirner, E. Kline, B. Chase, E. Cromwell, N. Krebbs. 1 Front Row: S. Sargent M. Kraus, R. Richards, M Russell, R. Spangler, C Conn. Second Row: E. Kunneke V. Helm, M. Kennedy, G Fearnley, E. Burnham, J Thompson. Back Row: G. Carlson, M Holt, H. Vandersall, E Neff, R. Frost, C. May. Front Row: S. Eveleigh, G Rowond, R. Secrest. Second Row: D. Hamilton, R. Eveleigh, E. Schlecht, H. Athey, L. Schrock, T. l-lardesty. Bock Row: G. Dolde, R. Roller, W. Benson, W. Lucas, R. Allison. Front Row: S. Wahlborg, R. Benson, K. Bush, W. Hunter, A. Robertson, H. Rutledge, S. Parker, S. Ronsheim. Second Row: G. Hardin, M. Bush, C. Hearne, P. Weimer, J. Treadwell. Back Row: S. Morse, W. Burns, R. Kimmich, D. Ormond, D. Blackwood. Front Row: B. Dickens, L Compton, D. Neff, J. Gill, J. Fries, A. Burlingham, P Uher, W. Herbert. Second Row: E. Kelsey, M. Field, R. Dornbock, L Hayengo, W. Northup, M Carter, R. Dillon. Back Row: C. Lash, B l-lemisfar, O. McKenzie P. Horger, M. Croft, J Sommer, R. Schuckert, H Hill. 1 Front Row: G. Gesegnet, W. Brubaker, H. Stokoe, R. Buchanan, J. Chestnut, Second Row: P. Kline, F. Hansen, M. Saunders, J. Pierce, M. Dick, H. Chandler. Buck Row: R. Barnett, E. Swinney, D. Mortimer, V. Kroehle, J. Roberts, J. Kolnowski, G. Bell. Front Row: M. Findley, E Campbell, M. King, N. Shreffler, J. Swan, R. Wagner, M. Riebe, B. Kline. Back Row: R. Homan, B Arnold, E. Cavert, M Rath, P. Allen, W. Clitte Front Row: A. Calclwell J. Stewart, H. Palaschalc, M. Reed, C. Schroth, M Stoll, J. Rice, A. Love, P Bretschneider. Second Row: M. Thomson D. Cowles, T. Ferguson, D Fry, J. Kovach, R. Miller. Back Row: L. Scott, G. Marwick, S. Cooper, R Taylor, E. Beatty. 158 , Colonial Club ...... Douglass Hall ...... Hoover Cottage ...... Korner Klub ........ Miller Manor ............. Westminster Cottage.. 'D Q M S l7 girls 95 boys .......65 girls 8 girls l8 girls 8 girls '?V'iEW? Lien l-IL ulusi Upper Left: ASSISTANT JANITOR, stu- dent Charles Ireland, helps out in the library. Here he assists librarian-aide Ruth Reeder, Senior, with a stack of books in the Reserve Room. llpper Center: CAMPUS WORKERS Bill dingaman, John Anderton, Gordon Row- and, and Paul Ecelbarger, four of forty- one students who work part-time on campus, saw wood for college use. Upper Right: LAUNDRY AGENT Jim Relph gets o job from Ned Netherton. Roommate Van Noate looks on. Lower Left: KENARDEN WAITERS rush ll i yy JQL.-ll we on 0 out of the kitchen. ln Wooster's five dining-rooms ll l workers earn their meals. Lower Right: LAB ASSISTANT Marie Thede carves a frog in biology lab to the delight of junior biologists Bert Steele and Jean Mclntyre. ln the office of busy Director Art w Murray is set up the machinery which administers student aid on the campus. An estimate of the percentage of stu- dents who earn at least a part of their college expenses would be but a futile guess, for virtually all of Wooster par- ticipates to some extent in its self- support. Summer jobs, ' which range from ditch-digging on the campus to administrative positions in summer camps, are almost universally held, and during the school year opportuni- ties from unsponsored rackets to board or room jobs are to be had. Pictured below are some of the ways in which Woosterites manage to work J their way through college. 159 INDEX T0 THE INDEX Index to students pictured , 4 Adm,1Qf-e ....................-.----------------,, ---------- S S, 87 l45 Keeney s Cafetena Agricola, Grace ....... ........-------------------- 7 O l 52 Ahrens, Margaret ...... ...... 5 9, 66, 57, 83, 94 129 in Alexander, John C ........ ..........,.,-.-,-.- 8 5, l 15 l29 Allen Gertrude ........, ----------------- l 42 ' Hotel Woo t A11en,MQ,1e ,,...... ..... 1 O9 156 S er Allen, Primrose ...... --------- l 58 Q Allen, Ruth ,......... -------- 9 l l El Allison, Russell ...... .......,.-. ------ l 5 7 Allison' -l-'evo ' ' ' Q9 Known from Coast to Coast Alsberg, Margaret ,....... ..-.---- 8 7, 9l, 108 l47 Alter, David ........... -------------- - l 22, 142 Alter, Lurenna ....... -.-.--- 7 2, 92, lO7, l29 Andefsonf D915 ,,+-,- ,,,,,,,,-------,- 1 O7 '41 Bnulah, a6'Qchf,QL Anderson, Robert ....... ....,... 7 8, 87, 91 l 55 NEXT To SCHINES Anderton, John ...... ........ 7 3, 128 159 Andrews, Arthur ....... ...............,- l 48 Arnold, Barbara ....... ......... l 58 DiStif1CtiVC, Exclusive Arnold Geraldine ...... ..,....... 9 O l44 ' ' S les Athey, Hyla ........... .....,........... l 57 ty Atkinson, Jane ....... ........ 7 O, lO6, 153 Atkinson, Robert ......, ..........,......... i 21 147 At Prices College Girls August Robert ....... ................. 8 7 ll6, l4l ' ' E T P Bower, Thomas ...... ..,..... 6 9, 72, 91, 123 129 Xpect O GY Compliments of THE IDEAL DAIRY Quality Dairy Products 0:0 l33 N. Bever Street Phone 3l9 Wooster, Ohio Member Florists' Telegraph Delivery Flowers-by-Wire . . . Anywhere Jlowm, Shop, BARRETT'S Flowers For All Occasions Phone 600 333 E. Liberty Street WOOSTER, OHIO Bailey, Clarence. ..... . Baker, Elizabeth N ......... Baker, Elizabeth Ruth ...,,.. Ba ker, Evelyn .............. Balloon, Mary .,...... Balloon, William ....... Barnett, Russell ,,,,,,.. Barr, William .....,.. Bartoli, Angelina ...... Bathgate, John ,e.... Baxter, Janet .,.....,,.. Baysor, Margaret ....., Bean, James .....,....... Beatty, Edward ...... Beck, Edith ...,.. Beck, Roger ....,....,... Beebe, Mary Lou ISE ..,...,............. Beem, Eugene..3l, 78 Beifuss, Virginia ......,. 79, 82, 8 ....,,82, 92, ll8 ......7O, 83, lO6 ......35, 37, H9 .....66, 68, 70, l23 l28 ......64, 74, 79, il5 79 3l, 66, 67, 69,116 ......9l i 20, 70 8, 93, 94, 120, 129 Bell, George ,,,,,.,,..,,,,,, ......,.......... 7 2, Bell, Mary Margaret ,,,,,,, ...... 7 2, 83, lO6, Bender, Carol .........c.... ............... . -70, Bender, James ....... Bender, John .,..... Benfer, Marie ........ Benson, Mary Jane ,...., I6 ..,...87, lO8, 1 Benson, Rhoe ........ .......... 4 7, 157 Benson, William .,----- ,.,,,.............. 1 57 Berry, James ............. ........ 9 4, 120, 129 Berwick, Carolyn ....,.. .....,..... 1 08, 140 Biel, Jean .............. ...,........,. 1 08, 142 Bigelow, Harry ....... ........ 7 4, 75, 85, 93 Bindley, Joe ...........-.. ......,...... 9 1, Bingaman, Imogene ..... .,.............. 9 0, 107, 129 Bingaman, William ....,. ...... 3 5, 38, 119, 153 159 Bishlowy, Selma ........ ...................,..,....... 9 2, 142 310614, Robert ,........ ...,.,. 4 2, 45, 55, 95, 121 129 Blackwood, Duane .......,........................ 157 Bmnk, John .,...... ....... 6 6, 67, 73, 115, 147 Blocher, Patricia ,.,. ........... 7 6, 91, 107 149 Blaugh, Elizabeth ,,... .......................... 1 53 B6nenS,JQCk ..,....... ......., 89,94 1 18 129 ' Boop, Lois ....,.,....... ...,..,. 9 0 106, 129 Borland, Robert ...... ........ 7 0 122, 151 Bowen, Janet ..... ................. 1 56 Bowman, Ruth ....... ......................... 1 09, 148 Bowman, Thomas .. .......................,,....,,.... 155 Boyce, Jack ......... ,.,.... 3 5, 40, 67, 95, 117, 144 Boyd, John ..,.... .................... 9 5, 119, 129 Boyer, cone ........ ..,.... 3 5, 36, 95, 119, 140 CLEVELAND' OHIO Bayer, William ,...... .....,,,,......... 4 1, 47, 155 Bramley, Phillip ........ ....... 7 2, 94, 123, 142 Brandenstein, Zane... ..,..,..,........ 122, 151 Brannon, Pauline ., ...........,., 107 149 Branson, Jean ........... ........ 7 2, 108 143 Brant, Charles ,,,.......... ...,...... 1 18, 129 Bretschneider, Peggy ....,., ....... 6 8 158 Bricker, Robert ...... .......,. 9 1, 118, 147 The Commercial Banking B419 Bernice -----9- '--------,,,------ 1 53 Brittain, Grayce .... ............. 9 1, 141 Brockman, Julia .,.. ......... 9 2, 106, 129 and TTUSY COITIPHUY Brown, David ..,..,,. ,....,,.,.. 1 15, 129 Wooster, 01110 C. Cr. Williams .............. President Chas. l. Correll. ,V. Pres. 61 Trust Officer W. 1. Bertolette ............... Cashier C. 1. Kina ............ Assistant Cashier l-lelen E. Allspauqh. .Assistant Cashier Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Member of Federal Reserve System The officers of this bank take a person- al interest in accounts from the College of Wooster and endeavor to render a service that is always courteous and helpful. I Brown, Eleeta .....,. Brown, Louise ....... Brown, Robert ....... Brubaker, Arden .... Brubaker, Wayne.. Bryan, Glenn ......... ..QffffQQ9'1f 1E5 ......70, 72, 122, ,....88, 93, 116, Buchanan, Donald ....... ...... 5 l, 56, 95, 121 Buchanan, Robert. . Buchholtz, William ........ ..... Burlingham, Aileen Burnham, Eloise Burns, Alice ..,.... Burns, Bruce ...... Burns, William ,.... Bush, Kathryn ....... Bush, May ........,.. Caldwell, Arline Calkins, Harriet .....,,. Campbell, Everett ....... Campbell, Lucille ..... Carlson, Glen .... Carr, Fred .......,.. Carter, Alice ,,,..,... Carter, Mitchel ........ ...... Caster, Betty ......... Catan, Richard ...... .72, 73, 90, 120, ......91, 118 .....Qff.90Q Qfff92f'9'2', .,,fQfffQQ57Q'95 .......72, 107, 131 41, 72, 77, 154 109 1 1 142 156 151 147 158 141 129 158 139 157 157 148 152 157 157 157 158 156 158 130 157 139 142 157 153 151 HIGHEST QU LITY Canned Goods Always Reasonably Priced! Leading Families Use Them! Leading Dealers Sell Them! EVERY CAN GUARANTEED The Albert F. Remy Co., MANSPIHLD, OHIO Cavert, Elizabeth ,-,,,- ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 7 8 Conrad, Frank ...... ...,.. 1 20, 143 Chaltant, Mary Louise ...... ,....., 9 2, 94, 130 Conrey, MOI'1On ....--.--. ------4 9 5, 130 Clqqndlerl Helen ,--'-,,- --,-,,--,--,-- 1 Conwell, l'lOlfOl'Cl ,...... .,..,......,.,. L1 1, Chaney, Vernon ...... ,,.,....... 5 4, 73, 130 Cook, Sidney ......4.,,. ..-.-.--------.-------. 1 30 Chase, Betty ,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,.-,-,-,,,,,,,,,,,,- l 56 Cooper, Stewart ...... ..,..,.,,................... 4 1, 47, 95, 158 Chestnut, .larnes ...... ...... 4 1, 72, 76, 77, 158 Coover, Ruth .-.....4 .--!..-44-V44-....v-4Y-4----,--------A.------4 1 56 Childress, Martha ,..,... ,.,...,.. 7 0, 79, 87, 151 Cope, Robert ................ 27, 42, 45, 82, 90, 119, 130, 136 Choy, Young Soon ...... .......... 9 4, 128 143 Cope, Dean .........4............................ L ........... 68, 123 142 Churton, Paul ..........,, ....... 3 1, 91, 116, 152 Coppock, Corienne .... .......... 9 2, 141 Clark, Connie .....,....,..... ..........., 7 9, 92, 130 Cordova, Daniel ........ .........,....... 1 17, 145 Clark, Mary Elizabeth ...........,,,. 89, 130 Cortelyou, Thomas .....,, .................,,. 1 16, 141 Clark, Natalie .,.....s....... ...............,.,. 1 08, 130 Coryell, Margaret ,,,... ............... 6 8, 70, 72, 94, 142 Clark, Phyllis ............,,......s.... .,...,,.,.., 8 3, 92, 107, 130 Cotton, .lane ,,s.,....,.... ..,.........A....,..... 7 2, 94, 108 130 Clark, Virginia .A...,.,,s..........,.....,..... 31, 70, 80, 107, 152 Cotton, Jean Anne .........,.... 66, 67, 72, 80, 92, 107, 130 Clay, John ............ 35, 38, 39, 52, 80, 95, 119, 138, 143 Cowgill, Frederick ...... ..........,,.............,......... 1 22 151 Clay, Wharton .........s.....A......,s.,,...,,.....,.,.......... 1 15, 153 Cowles, David ,..,...., .,.............,........,......... 7 8 158 Clifte, Earl ....... .,,.,...,...,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1 58 Cox, Paul ,,,,,.,,, ............ 1 47 Clowes, Lois ........s ,............................... 7 4, 75, 93, 143 Cox, Richard ,.,..... ........ 7 8 155 Coates, Donald ..,......s...,. 68, 72, 78, 95, 117 153 Cox, Virginia .,...,.., ......, 9 2, 130 Coates, Stanley ,...,,.. 78, 79, 85, 88, 89, 93, 95, 117, 130 Craft, Margaret .,... .................... 1 57 Coffey, William .............,.......,....,....,,.,,,..... 90, 122, 140 Craig, Margaret ,,.,.,,, ,..,............. 1 06, 130 Cohen, Kenneth ...... .....,,,,s,, 7 8, 155 Crandell, Richard ,,,-,, .,..... 4 2, 90, 119, 130 Coile, Martha ....... ...,.. 9 1, 94, 150 Craven, Richard ..,.....,.. ....... 4 2, 91, 119, 148 C016-, Janet .................,. ......................... 1 45 Cremeans, Maryalice ....... ...,... 7 8, 92, 107, 141 Colteryahn, Lorraine ,,,,.,,- ,,,,,,,,,,,,,s,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1 56 Crider, Ralph ,,,.,,...,.,-,, ,,,,,,,,.,,,, 8 5, 95, 130 Colwell, Charles ...........i ...i.. 3 5, 37, 95, 119, 143 Cromwell, Elizabeth ........s.,......... 156 Cornpton, Catherine ....., ..........,.. 7 2, 108, 152 Crothers, Barbara .... .,.... 1 07, 130, 136 Compton, l.er1Or9 ..,...., ....,..,,,,,,,,,, 1 57 Crow, Thomas ,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,-,,, 7 3, 1 15 130 Conn, Clyde -........... ...... 7 3, 157 Culley, Doris Mae .,.....,. ....................-- 1 56 COVWWOF, RlC1'1OVd ...,.. ......... 7 8, 155 Cunningham, Lucille ,..,, ,..,.,.. 9 1, 107, 149 Conover, Ruth ......... ....... l 8, 80, 155 Curtis, Jeannette ...... ................... 1 52 Conrad, Charlotte ,..,.s ...,,,, 5 9, 106, 130 Cutter, Ruth ,,-,.,.. ,,.,... 7 2, 144 SNIITHVILLE INN . Famous for Chicken Dinners State Route 5, 6 miles Northeast ot Wooster SMITHVILLE, OHIO - ALSO - IIEIN IN GFS RESTAURANT Wooster's Finest Dining Room on the Lincoln Highway and U.S. Route 250 WOOSTER. OHIO WE CATER ANYWHERE Compliments of THE Akron Grocery Co. Importer, Roaster, Packer of Fine Coffees Wholesale Grocers Established 1889 Dogg, Colvin ......,,. ....r.. 7 2, 95, 117, 130 Ernery, Jean ......... ........,,..... 7 0, 91, 148 Dailey, Robert ........., ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1 23 140 Emmett, John ..,... ,,...,. 3 5, 40, 117 145 Danforth, Marjorie ..,,, ,,,,,,,,,, 1 49 Enfield, Anne ....... .....,.,.,,,,,,,,,, 1 07, 131 Danielson, Lois ,,,,,,,, ,,,,,.,,.,,,,r, 1 55 Ervin, Herbert ....., ,...,,,,.,,.,,,-,,-,,,,,, 1 19 148 Davidson, Harold ,,,,.. ,,.,,, 4 7, 78, 156 Ervin, John .............. ....... 3 5, 39, 51, 119 131 Davies, Elizabeth .,-,..., .,,,,,,,.,,, 1 06, 149 Evans, Frederick .....,,,. ..,,.-.....,,.,,,-,,, 6 8, 156 Davies, Richard .,,..... ,......,.,......,,,,,,,, 1 30 Fair, Byron .............. .......... 9 4, 122 Dayton, Helen ....,.. ,,..,,.,,.,,,,, 8 9, 91, 106, 130 Feornley, George .....,.. ...,...,.......,...,,,,.,,,.,.,,,,,., 1 57 Decker, William ,,.,.. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,,.,,,-,,-,,-,-, 4 7 Ferguson, John ..,........ ,............................,. 5 2, 120, 144 Deidrick, Elgin ....... ,,,..,.. 3 5, 36, 51, 57, 121, 147 Ferguson, Sora Jean ............., 66, 67, 68, 70, 89, 93, 149 Denton, Max ....., ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,-,- 1 16, 141 Ferguson, Ted ,....,.., .............,.-.,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,rr 1 58 Derter, John ........,, ,,,,.,,,,,,, 9 5, 130 Ferris, Curzon ....., ,.....,, 3 5, 120 147 Devitt, William ........ ,,,,,-- 8 2, 115, 131 Fetzer, Jean ,,.,,. ,,,.... 7 0, 92 155 Dexter, Marion ...,,... .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1 56 Field, Howard ,..... .,,,,,,,,r- 1 55 Dick, Margaret ,..,....... ,,,-,,,,,,,,,,, 1 58 Field, Morcheta .,..,.. ......, 7 0 157 Dickens, Betty Lou ......... ,,,.......,.,......,.,,,,, 7 0, 157 Findley, Logan ....... -..-,,. 7 2 156 Dillon, Robert ,,,.,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 4 1, 157 Findley, Mary ,..,,,,,. ,,,,,,,, 1 58 Ditch, Harry .....,. -,,,-,,, 3 1, 34, 35, 39, 57, 121 Finetrock, Margaret ..... ...,r 1 53 Doerr, Donna ...,.... ,....,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1 08, 131 Fisher, Anne ........... ............ ,,,,. 1 5 6 Dolde, Gene ............. ,,,.----,,.,,,..,-,,,rr,,,,,.,,, 1 57 Fisher, Edward ..,.... .,..,.,.,.,,,,..,-.,,.. 1 21 Donaldson, James ,..,..,. ...... 6 7, 94, 122, 142 Fisher, Fern ...,...,.. ......,. 7 O, 91, 106, 148 Donaldson, Jocelyn .,.,.- ,,,,.,,, 9 2, 93, 95, 131 Fissell, William ....... ....,,. 6 9, 73, 122 131 Donaldson, Ralph ,,,-,-, ,...,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1 55 Floxington, Jean ...., ........,.......... 7 0 150 Dornback, Ruth ,,,,... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,, 1 57 Follett, Darrell ........ ,.,... 4 6, 131 Douglass, Robert .,..... ,,,,.,, 4 2, 56, 90, 121, 146, 148 Foote, Dorothy ........ ,.,..,. 9 2, 131 Dow, Charlotte ,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 9 1 Francis, Jennie ....... ,............. 1 53 Drake, Harriet ...,,, ...,. ,,.,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 7 0 Froncy, Courtney .,,.. l...,........,.,,.. 1 56 Drury, Margo ....,.., ,,,,,,,,,,,, 7 0, 108, 151 Frank, Philip .....,...,, ........ 7 O, 122, 150 Duncan Arch ..., ,r,,,, 4 8, 49, 120, 139 Franklin, Zilpha .,,.. .....,.........,.,..... 1 56 Dungan, Agnes ,---,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,,,,,,, 1 53 Freeman, Annette... ....... 59, 67, 83 140 Dunlap, Dorothy ...... .......................,,,,.................... 1 56 Fries, Jacquelyn ..... ................. 1 57 Dunlap, Lenore ...... ....................... 5 9, 67, 76, 108, 139 Frost, Ruth .......... ........... 1 57 Dunlop, Robert.. ........ 48, 49, 66, 67, 80, 95, 117, 131 Fruend, Helen ...... .............. 1 56 Dutton, Horace ............................................ 89, 122, 144 Fry, Donald .......... ....... 4 1, 78 158 Eaton, Louis ...... ,,,,,,,,,,,,r,,,,,,,..,,...,,.,,,, 4 7, 73, 155 Fuchs, William ....... .............. 1 17 Ebright, Richard ....... ,,,,,, 5 2, 73, 95, 121, 148 Fuhr, Martha Ann... .......... . 141 Eccles, Marilynn .... .....,,.............. 1 06, 153 Fuller, Jo ................ ...... 8 3, 156 Ecelbarger, Paul ,....,. .,........ 1 16, 151, 159 Gord, Robert ........ .............. 1 55 Edwards, Robert .,,,,,,,,,,.,,,-,,,,............,,,, 86, 93, 116, 141 Garth, Meredith ...... ............. 1 06, 152 Ehrman, Elinor ..,,,,,,,,,,.,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,, 91, 94, 106, 145 Gorton, Richard ...... ....... 9 5, 117, 131 Eicher, Harry .... 32, 35, 36, 42, 44, 46, 95, 119, 138, 143 Garverick, Donna ................... . 156 Eisenberger, Frances ,,,,,.,.,,,,,,,,V,,,,,,,,,,,,, 92, 94, 106, 131 Garvin, Connie ........... ....... 6 7, 108, 152 Elliott, Jane ............. ........ 5 9, 66, 67, 83, 107, 149 Gault, Donna Jean ....... .............. 6 9, 72 Elliott, Lester ...,.,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,., 7 3, 122, 125, 131 Gault, Joanna ......... ........ 7 2, 106, 152 Ellyson, Virginia ,,,,,,, .,-,--,-,,,,,,.,,,,4,,.-,,, 1 07, 152 Geating, Elizabeth ....... ............. 8 3, 142 Eveleigh, Ruth ,,,,,,- ,,,........, 7 3, 157 Gebhordt, James ..... ........................ 7 Z Eveleigh, Sadie ,,,,,, ,,,,,, 6 8, 73, 157, Gebhardt, John ....... ........ 5 3, 121, 144 Geddes, Robert .......A Geer, Elizabeth ...e, Geesling, Betty ..... Gerard, Nicholas... Gervasio, Anthony. Gesegnet, George ....... Gibbons, Margaret ....... Gibian, Leslie .......... Giele, Ruth ........ Gilbert, Ruth ........ Gill, Janet .......... Gillman, Ray ......... Ginther, Robert ..... Glasgow, James ....... Glassco, Elizabeth ....... Glatz, William ........ Glen, John ............ Goheen, Andrew ............... Goldsmith, Margaret ........ Good, Betty Lou ............ Gourley, Elizabeth ....... Grady, Harold .......... Grady, James .......... ......7O, 72, 94, 122, ......ffi'1' ......,.68, 91, .......59, 61, 107, ........70, 72, .......74, 123, 119, ......78, 95, 115, ......35, 36, 42, 121, 70, ......35, 38, 57, 121, '75 1 .......95, 119, Grandison, Jeanne ...... ......................... 1 08, Gray, Gordon ........... .................. 8 5, 87, 1 15, Grove, Lois ........ ............ 5 9, 83, 90, 92, 107 Gruber, Paul .......................... Guevorkian, Hratchouhi ...... Haas, Barbara .................. Haas, Helen ......... Hackett, George ...... Hatfa, Jeanne ....... Hail, William ....... Haley, Russell ....... Halkett, James ........ Hall, Luther ......... Hall, Margaret .... Halter, Don .......... Hamilton, Diane.. Hamilton, Robert ....... Hammond, Betty ........ Hanna, Dwight ........ Hansen, Florence ........ Hardesty, Thomas ...... Hardin, M. Guy ........ Harms, Anne ........... Harper, Elizabeth ....... 'fffffff35f'36'Li2f5'2', 3'3l, 89 27, 55, 69, 74, 75, 82, 88, 89, 93, 117, ........85, 87, 93, 107, 72, 15, .........,,,...94, 23, .......9O, 92, 117, 1 ......73, 121, ..........91, 107, .,.....55, 70, 118, , .......94, 06, 131 149 150 155 143 158 151 123 150 150 157 151 142 152 131 147 144 148 155 155 151 143 140 151 147 132 85, 132 145 140 150 141 155 140 152 132 143 132 140 157 152 148 153 158 157 157 144 139 Jim yfwwzq, l47-149-151 N. Buckeye St. Agents Richelieu Products and Birdseye Products Phone 8 Wooster, Ohio Compliments of STYPES DRUG STORE and MARINE ROOM STUDER BBUTHEBS Merchant Millers APPLE CREEK, OHIO Harper, Franklin ..... .,.........,.. 1 53 Harper, Louise ....... ...... 9 1, 92, 152 Hart, Virginia ...... ........ 9 4, 106, 132 Hortzler, Rex ....... ........ 1 15, 147 Haun, Jeanne ......... ................. 1 56 Havener, William ...... ........ 9 1, 123, 151 Hawkins, Kenner ..... .................... 1 23 132 Hayenga, Lois ...... ......................... 9 2 157 Hayes, Robert ......... ........ 5 5, 82, 95, 115 132 Haymans, Phemia ...... .......... 7 4, 83, 91, 106 143 Healey, John .......... ...... 3 5, 37, 57, 95, 116, 132 Hearne, Calvin ....... ................................... 1 57 Hearne, Paul ........ ......... ...... ........... 1 3 2 Hetfner, Ned ......... .............. 1 20, 152 Helbig, Catherine ...... ................... 9 2, 132 Hellman, Max ........ ........ 5 5, 94, 118 132 Helm, Nancy ...... ....................... 1 56 Helm, Virginia ....... .................... 1 57 Hernister, Betty ............. ........,................. 1 57 Henderson, Dorothy ...... ........ 6 9, 72, 107 147 Henderson, Mabel ...... ....... 7 2, 90, 91 132 Herbert, William ........ ................... 1 57 Hering, Leona ......... ....... 7 2, 94, 132 Hlbbs, Helen .......... ............. 8 3 153 Hileman, Ruth ........ ......... 8 3, 91, 132 Hill, Henry .......... ......................... 1 57 Hill, John .,.......... ........ 4 1, 47,113,155 Hoff, Donald .......... ...........,. 7 0, 95, 123, 142 Hoffman, Robert ........ ............................ 9 1, 95, 155 Hofmann, Philip ........ ....... 3 5, 38, 48, 49, 117 141 Hoge, Arthur ......... ................ 3 6, 95, 121, 133 Hogg, Barbara ........ ....... 6 9, 72, 90, 107, 133 Hole, Marjorie ......... ........... 8 9, 95, 106 133 Holleran, William .. ...........................v.. 41 Holroyd, Edmond ....... ....... 9 0, 95, 122, 140 Holroyd, Robert ...... ....................... 1 13 Holt, Mary Alice ........ .......... 7 0 157 Holtz, Olive ........... ................. 1 42 Homan, Eleanor ,,,,,, ........ 9 3, 108 151 Homan, Robert ....... ............. 4 7, 158 Hoop, Jane .......... .................. .............- 1 5 5 Horger, Priscilla ...... ,............................. 9 1, 92, 157 Horvath, Mike ........ ....... 3 5, 37, 91, 119, 145, 153 Hostetter, Harriet ...... ............. 8 3, 85, 92, 107, 133 Houser, Phoebe .......... ........ 6 7, 80, 83, 108, 144 Hovanic, Kenneth ...... ....................... 1 18, 152 Howe, Janis ........ .......................,... 7 3, 156 Howe, Madeline ..... ....... 8 3, 92, 95, 108, 133 swim for Mutual Beneft lt is the earnest endeavor of every otticer and employee of this bank to extend to you the kind ot SERVICE that will create a permanent mutual benefit. Shop, SHOES ...HOSE ...PURSES Fedgiilnlgggosit Thirtyseqjen 0:0 535532554 Years , , Membe, I, Home of Men s and Womens Selby Styl-Eez, Fedegalfleserve O Natives, Active Maid, Daytimers, Bass Mocca- ys em COWSCWGWUQ sins, Aristocrats, Crosby Squares, Hose, Purses, Wg?I?gER' , Banking Rubbers, Keddettes. Howe, Norman .... ............,......,....,.,... 7 O, 147 Kelsey, Eleanor ,.,,. ,,.,4,,,,,,,,,,,4 1 57 Hudson, Dole ...u...... ...... 4 2, 44, 45, 52, 120 152 Kendall, Robert ,,,,. .,,,,,,, 5 5, 117 143 Hudson, Jean ............... ....... 8 5, 92, 93, 94, 108, 133 Kennedy, Malcolm .,..,, ,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,, 4 1, 157 Hudson, Raymond ...,..... ...,...,..,......,,........, 1 20 133 Kennedy, Patricia. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 155 Hughes, Priscilla ........ ....... 6 8, 70, 72, 91, 106 139 Kennon, Rosanne.. .,,,,,, 91, 92, 107, 150 Hunt, Theo .......... ............. 8 3, 95, 107 133 Kenyon, Janet .,..... i,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,, 1 56 Hunter, Wayne ....... ............ 4 1, 47 157 Kerr, Robert .......... ........ 5 7, 78, 120, 141 Husted, David ......... ............. 1 20 141 Kevan, William ..... ..,,.,,..,, 9 1, 118 133 Hydorn, William ........ ..,..............,........,... 7 8, 147 Kibler, Jo ..................,. ,.,,,,,,,, 7 2, 93, 140 lmmel, Iris ............. ............................... 1 09, 156 Kimmich, Richard ,,...... ...,.... 4 1, 112, 157 Ireland, Charles... ....... 68, 72, 75, 122, 140, 159 King, Margaret ..... ................ . 158 Irvin, Robert ........ ............. 7 0, 72, 95, 119 139 King, Marilyn ..... .,............ 1 53 Irwin, Vera .......... .................................... 1 49 Kirk, Grayce ....... ........ 1 07, 133 Jenkins, Louise .......... ................... 1 O7, 14 Kline, Benton ..... ....... 7 5, 78, 158 Johnson, Gretchen ..... ...... 6 1, 94, 106, 133 Kline, Ellen ,........ .............. I 56 Johnson, Phyllis ...... ......... 9 1, 106, 148 Kline, Patricia ..... ................. 1 58 Johnson, Robert ........... ............... I 55 Koch, George ........ ........ 8 7, 116, 152 Johnson, Robert Ray ........ .......... 1 22, 14 Kolmorgen, Lois .... ................. 8 7, 106, 151 Johnson, William .......... ....... 4 1, 114, 155 Koran, William ..... .......................... 1 20 147 Jones, Stanley ......... ................... 1 17 152 Kornfeld, Lottie .... ........ 8 9, 94, 109, 128, 155 Jones, William ....... ................ 6 8, 118, 150 Kovach, John ..... .................... 7 8, 127, 158 Joseph, William ...... ...... 4 O, 67, 91, 119, 153 Kraus, Marietta ............................ . 157 Judson, Olivia ,,,,,. ,...... 7 2, 94, 107 133 Krebbs, Norman .... ...................... 7 3, 156 Jury, Naomi ..... ,.,,..........,..,.............,.... 6 9, 133 Kress, Ruth ......... ............... 3 1, 59, 108 151 Kalkog, Kate ....,,., ,,,,,,.........,.......................... 9 5, 145 Kroehle, Virginia. ................................... 158 Kate, Karl ,,,........... ,..,4,. 3 3, 35, 37, 42, 44, 54, 57 121 Krumm, Walter ..... ....... 7 4, 75, 78, 94, 115, 143 Kgfhermqn, Jerry ,,.,,,, ..,,,............. 4 2, 45, 51, 119, 153 Kruse, Katherine... ............................. 106 142 Kguffmgnl Ethel ,,,,.,,, ,,,,,,,,................... 1 50 Kuegle, Mary Bell ........ .......................... 1 O6 133 Kean, Albert -,,,,,-,,,. ............ 6 8 155 Kuehner, Dorothy ........ ........ 9 0, 108, 133 Kelly, Helen ,---,,,,- ,....,... 7 5, 94, 133 Kuhles, Emily ........... ........ 7 8, 127, 155 Lower the Cost oi Dressing Well . . . Brenner BIQSI PITTSBURGH PLATE GLASS WOOSTER. OHIO 1. C 0 M Clothes and Furnishings Compliments ot For Men and Young Men 674 Carroll St. Akron, Ohio I Compliments of IIEIIII PRINTING COMPANY sIILLv's nmzss SHOP CHARLES H. CROOHRAN PAINT commv SHIBLEY AND HUDSON IDEAL Fnocxs srunfur UNION BUILDING GRAY Ann son I: sTAnIIs nes woosrfn Ftonnt ELLlOTT'S LAUNDRY n. L. QDICKQ MORRISON OAL COMPANY TAURANT MORRISON Visit F airmont's Ice Cream Store 317 E. Liberty Street WOOSTER. OHIO Fairmont's Better Butter Used Exclusively WOOSTER COLLEGE Kuhn, Dennis ........ ....,. 4 2, 51, 119, 153 Love, Anita .......... ................... 1 58 Kuhn, Janet ............. ...... 8 9, 91, 106, 133 Lowry, Andrew ........ ....... 9 1, 116, 151 Kunneke, Edith ..,..... ....... 4 ................. 1 57 Lucas, William ....... ............. 7 8, 157 Lacy, Betty .....,., ........................... 1 06 153 Lykos, Thomas ....... ..........................,.. 4 1, 78 Lambie, Lois ....., .,............ 6 8, 69, 70, 73 133 Lynn, Doris ............. ................................. 7 0 148 Lamborn, Ruth ...,.. ....... 5 8, 90, 91, 108, 110, 133 Lytle, William ........... 18, 47, 58, 78, 180, 155 Lamy, Nancy ..,....... ................................. 1 50 MacDonald, Clark ........ ............ 5 1, 90, 121, 134 Lanning, David... ...... 95, 144 MacDonald, Sibyl ...... 7 .................. 72, 152 Lantz, Sarah ...... ......... 7 0 156 Mackey, Elizabeth ..... ........ 9 0, 108 143 Larick, Roy ........... ....... 1 15 133 MacMillan, Bruce ......... ........ 9 5, 117 134 LaRoe, Dorothy ........ ....... 1 O6 143 MacMillan, Elizabeth ...... ............ 6 7, 155 Lash, Christine... ......... 91, 157 MacMillan, James ........ ....... 1 17, 148 Lowther, William ....... ............................. 7 2 MacMillan, Sylvia ...... ....... 7 8 143 Lee, Richard ....... .................. 9 5, 117, 150 MacPhee, Elizabeth ..... ..............,...... 8 5, 144 Lee, Virginia ......... ....... 7 4, 78, 92, 108 133 Maggard, Faye .......... ............................... 1 50 Letevre, William ...... ............... 6 8, 69, 116 151 Mar.ry, John ........... ....... 9 1, 94, 95, 122, 142 Lehman, Jay ......... ............... 3 5, 39, 51, 119 143 Marker, Pat ...... ................... 9 1, 108, 148 Leonard, Scott ...... ........ 6 9, 72, 77, 94, 1 17, 145 Marr, Betty ............. .................................. 1 55 Lerch, Byron ....... ..,....................... 9 0, 92, 1 15 133 Marsh, Robert ............ ...... 7 4, 75, 76, 90, 1 17, 134 Leresche, Betty ............................................ 92, 107, 133 Martens, Margaret ....... ............................... 1 51 Lessing, Robert... 48, 49, 66, 67, BO, 81, 93, 1 16 145 Martin, Betty ............ ................. 1 56 Lewis, Charis ...... ....................................... 7 2, 107 139 Martin, James ......... ........ 9 5, 122, 134 Lewis, Foster ...... ............. 7 4, 1 18 147 Martin, Mildred ..... .............................,. 1 39 Lewis, l-lelen ...... .................. 9 2, 94 133 Marwick, Gordon ..... ...............................--- 1 58 Lewis, Johnston ..... ....... 5 5, 91, 93, 118 134 Maxwell, Erdine ...... ........ 8 O, 83, 90, 92, 94, 134 Lewis, Vll'giI'1lO ...... ........... 6 8, 73, 92, 140 May, Carol ............. ................................-- 1 57 l.1HCOll'1, Lynne ...... ..................... 9 2, 108, 142 Mayberry, Richard ...... ..........,....- 9 5 156 Linriell, Albert ...... ................. 9 O, 93, 116, 152 Mayer, Jeanne ....... .................-----. 1 44 Lockwood, Bette ...... ....... 8 O, 83, 90, 107, 138, 144 Mazorek, Rudy ....... ....... 5 2, 91, 1 19, 147 Loehr, Jacob ...... i................................. 1 21 McCandIiss, John ...... ............. 1 22, 143 Long, William .... ...... 9 5, 122, 134 McCann, Roger .,........ .....,----'-- 1 34 Larimer, Joyce ..... ............. 1 56 McClaran, Martha ....... ........,- 1 55 AAHakH,Cbrke .,.. .,,.,,,,,,,,,,, 74,83,91,139 Mitchell, Vance ....,.... ..,,.....,.,............ 9 1, 122, 151 Locally Owned and Operated Mara-laffa, Robert ....... ...... 5 5, 68, 72, 91, 1 18, 140 Morgan, Betty .,.,,,.,. .........,,,.,..,,,,,..,,.,,., 7 8 155 Morkel, Gordon ,,.,... .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 3 5, 38 Morris, Edward ..,..... ,,.... 7 3, 121, 152 Morse, Stanley ........ ......... 1 13, 157 Mortenson, Kristine ....... ,..,.,,.,..,,,.,,,, 1 48 Mortimer, Dorothy ....,.. ,.,.,,,.,..,,,,,,,,,,, 1 58 Morton, Geraldine ...... ,,,,-.. 7 O, 91, 108, 143 ' , ' ' Mulder, George ....... ....... ...... 6 7 , 69, 1 17, 149 Hrghest Ouallty Dairy Products Muller, Emesf-M mm-72, 94, 95' 122' 151 Murdock, Eu ene. ......... 8 , 94, 118, 14 1cE cREAM LUNCHES MU,,,,,, 680,26 ,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,, f ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 4 11 Murray, Helen ,...... ......................,........ 1 55 Muxworthy, Jock ....... ....... 5 2, 53, 119, 138, 142 Open 7 PLM. - 12 PM. NOPP' James -1-1---' --------'-'--'--------------- 1 22 145 Narten, Perry ....... .,.... 5 2, 56, 57, 95, 121, 145 Naylor, Marcus ..,,... ,,,-,.,....,..,, 8 9, 95, 121, 134 Needham, Jane .............,....,. 60, 87, 147 Two Stores Neely, David ,.,,,,,, ,,,,,,, 6 3, 70, 78, 122, 141 Neely, David M ....,.. .. .................. 115, 149 Madison A-Ve. rZ1eeI1Yf :AA-OTQOVS1 --------- -------- 9 11 ee y, ITIOYT1 ..,.,.... ,,.,..,....,,.,. Rgufe-S 250 cmd C19Ve1CmC1 Rd' Neff, Alice .........., ...... 7 5, 106, 140 Neff, Dorothy ...,.. ....,....... 7 O, 157 76 South Home 3 Neff, Eugene ...., ,............... 1 57 Neff, Robert ....,... ...... 7 8, 123 145 Neilson, Marilyn .,,,, ................ 1 42 We make our own ice creaml 11161504 EO ---'-------- ------ 9 O' 121' 148 Netherton, Robert ...... ,,...,.. 1 16, 141 159 ' . .... 2 ..... ' --'ff111I ' 4 t'1 5151551355 Mcaafaa, Mary ......... .............. 1 SS ,,,, , ,,,,..,.- MCC1e11O0fi Ruth -------- ----- 1 061 152 1::1 ,.,.rf McClure, Morierie ,--. --4-,----.,-,-,,---------,----- 1 56 zizllz '1 11-2?.5,Qfi:fj:,Ej:f:,- McClure, Robert ....... ...................................... 1 18, 134 :,f:1fi1i .,.f i '1'1':1 1112151555132 'li ' , Macaanall, Barbara .......,,,,. 66, 67, 83, 90, 91, 108, 134 ,,,, . Ayi, 1115901705111 W11110m ------- ---'---'-------------- 8 7' 901 95' 141 ,.,.,: 5 fag?-s 5 MCCfe1Q11ffM0ff11G -A.tt4 4,,.,-,4 S 9112183 134 'fo' ,.,jgigig3gg,35Qifgif 655556434-rg MCD0f1O1df Mefgefef f,---- ----------------------------- 9 1 148 Maoawall, Robert ,,..... ......................,....,.,, 1 55 Mac-rea, Eaaaf ...,,....., .,...... 4 8, 52, 53, 95, 121, 134 g 'iii ,,,,, , McElheny, Eleanor. 150 Mclntyre, Jean .,.... ...... 9 1, 106, 150, 159 McKenzie, Olive ...... ........................ 1 57 McVay, Dane ,......,...... ,....,..,....,.. 9 O, 134 McVetty, William ,........................................,.......... 122 Meisel, Donald .......,.... ..........,. 6 8, 91, 154, 156 Mellin, John ....... ........ 5 7, 68, 74, 88, 91, 93, 116, 145 Meloy, John ....... ............ 68, 72, 116, 145 Menold, Jane ........ ......,. 6 6, 67, 74, 75, 78, 108, 144 Merkel, Edgar ,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,......,,,,,... 1 21 134 Mershon, Willar ...... Milburn, Martha ...,.. 67, 69, 70, 72, 89 151 134 Miles, Daniel ....,. ..,... 4 8, 49, 95, 117 144 Miller, Henry .............. ...,,......... 5 2, 121, 148 Miller, Marilyn .,......,,.... ........................ 1 55 Miller, Mary Elizabeth ...... ............., 1 O6, 143 Miller, Mary Virginia ....... ........................ 1 48 Miner, Ralph ,,,,.,,,,,,,,,, ....,.. 7 2,115, 149 154 Miller, Roy ,,,,,,,,, ...,.,........... 4 1, 158 Miller, Virginia... Mills, Marjorie ..... ........78 1 155 142 'C Qnaiaimdizw ' The Trade Mark Identifying A Ouality Line of HOUSEHOLD RUBBER GOODS THE WOOSTER RUBBER COMPANY Wooster, Ohio Peters, Eric ............ ........... 1 22, 145 Q ' 1 , P-fours, Frederick. ........... 87, 116,152 1, Phelps, George ........................... .142 , -A S ' ..... ....... 6 7899194134 fi, .T , Phillips, Helen , , , , J' K :M ,M A-2?-Y g x Pierce, Jean ........... ............ 6 7, 92, 158 3 , , ,' Q 7:5 Pierson, Robert ...... .......... 7 2, 155 --1 , if ' -4 -'I K6 1 5:-71 Pixler, Constance ............,......... 155 .1 1 - ,. - 41 1 5 Q ,A ,Isl fx, ' T Q110 1 Platt, Betty .,....... ..............., 8 3, 91, 142 -f-1..,' fu, 13173 nv fx 1 . ,, 'E ,iifjg JZ ,,3 f41,, ' ' Q: Polen, Gwen ........... ....... 3 3, 59, 108, 144 11.-.1 11-1 ' ,,, f' 4 ' Pond, 5112015611 ....... ................. 1 07, 152 ' ' J W ' 1? Pope, James ....... -............ 1 39 , Ag ,W ' ,X X ,, -,1 'LF ' Powell, Joanne ........,...... .142 I ' , 17211: 1f4 T J 7' Powell, Norma ....... ....., 8 9, 92, 134 5 ' fl ' fy 7 1x1 'l t Powell Virginia... ........................... .150 wif 7 '-- 1111 ' ' ' ,GN I H k , 1,2 X - Pratt, Joel ......... ....................... 1 18, 147 TgQ 7 ' - P-fenfaee, Robert ........ ....... 3 5, 37, 95, 119, 134 - 1 G9 .1 R ....................... 117,148 ffgatlsfactlon , Q Ereston, Bobert 108 147 , 1884, 19 1 ,,, rector, etty ...., -4------------------ , SIHCG ' Primem, Joseph ....... ........ 1 15, 147 Putman, Lois ......... ....... 1 07, 134 PV, Betty ----------- --4------'------------- 1 O51 145 Rath, Margaret ........ ............................ 1 27, 158 FOI' Y0uI1g MCH and VVOIHCH Rowson, Rum .,..,,,, ,.,,.,, 6 6, 67, 68, 91, 92, 149 Reed, Dorothy ..,....,... ........ 7 8, 79, 89, 106, 135 L Reed, Joan Carroll ....... ................... 1 07, 153 A Reed, Margaret ......... ............................... 1 58 Reeder, David ,,,,,,,, ,.,................. 7 O, 92, 94, 122, 145 Reeder, Ruth ....... ..........................,..... 7 2, 92, 135, 159 fllt S Relehel, Haines ,.,,,,,,,,.... 66, 67, 70, 79, 85, 91, 94, 139 Reid, Janet ............... ..........................-.....---. V ...91, 156 ' QQ Reiman, Richard ....... ....... 7 0, 78, 91, 155 Buy Quallty D D Newell, Ruth ........ ......... 9 5, 149 R R Nicholson, Alan .. ....... 1 15, 149 I I Noe, Howard ........ ...... 9 4, 1 18 N Northup, Winona ............ 157 N O'Connell, James... ............... 41, 155 K K Oetzel, Patricia .. ........................... 155 Ogden, Anita ....... ........ 9 0, 91, 94, 144 ' C Ohki, Grace ....... ............ 6 9, 85, 139 3 oiaver, waime ...... ....... 7 2, 93, 106, 143 ua It Olson, oscar ........ ............ 7 5, 78, 155 C q y C amend, David ....... .......,....... 9 5, 157 A A Orphan, Harry ....... ..................... 1 43 C C Orwick, William ......... ............. 7 2, 119, 139 O O Osberg, Wilfred ......... ............... 9 1, 115, 147 L L Osborn, Mary ...... ......... 7 2, 83, 90, 91, 134 Owen, Marjorie .... .................. 9 O, 92, 134 A A Page, Marjorie ........ ...... 7 8, 87, 109, 155 n Palaschak, Helen ....................,,.. 158 - Palmer, Arthur .... ......... 7 3, 95, 155 G I Palmer, Eileen ...... ...... 6 9, 70, 72, 140 Palmer, Marilynn .........................................,...... 72, 147 Park, James ..........,.................,,...,....,,,,,,,.,, 76, 115, 153 Parker, Gloria ........ 33, 58, 59, 70, 72, 90, 107, 111, 139 Parker, Shirley .............................................. 67, 70, 157 S ti Parkerson, Lauralynn .........,..,.....,.,,.,..,..,,,,,,, 68, 70, 156 Parmelee, Paul ....... ...... 6 9, 70, 122, 134 POU'1fJe0'1 ---------- .................,...... 1 50 Needlepoint, Stamped Goods, Yanw Pearce, Isabel ......... Pearson, Dorothy ........ Peck, Annamarie ..... Perkins, Thomas ........ .........89, 91, 148 156 .......89, 94, 117, 134 On the Square Wooster, Ohio Reis, Paul ........... Relph, James ......... Remesch, Louise ....... Renner, John ,......... Retzler, Celia ..,... Rice, Joanne ......,.., Richards, Roger ......... Ricka rds, Dorothy ........ Riddle, Mary-Ann ,...A Riebe, Marian ........... Ringlond, Hope ...... Robbins, Alice ........ Roberts, Evelyn ......... Roberts, Jeanne .......... 121,135 nss56,76,119,139,159 Robertson, Alexander ...... Robins, Dorothy ........ Robinson, Carl ....... Robinson, Enid ....... Robinson, Esther ....... Robinson, Jane ....... Robinson, Ruth ...... Rogers Eleanor ,..... Rogers Franklin ........ Rogers, George ....... Rogers, Herbert ........ Rogers Jane ............. Rohrabaugh, Betty ...... Rohrabaugh, Ruth ........ Roller, Richard ......... Rolling, Louise ,........ Ronsheim, Samuel ........ Root, Virginia ........ Ross, Barbara o.... Ross, Betsy .,........ Ross, Jane .....,....... Rowand, Gordin ........ Rowe, Ellamae ...... Rowe, James ....... Rubins, Phyllis ...,.. nnnssnuuussssnnns91,153 unzuuNnunuHnnnunnuuH4l,78 2usn74,75,76,83,92,1o6,135 suusssnsusususunnnn 158 .nnnnnuzuHHHuun72 157 u2N285,9o,92,1o7,141 ssusH2nun78,1o8 142 .ns2uns.n2nnu2 158 HUUHHU 156 .uusnnnn 151 nnu72,1o8,135 snnssnssuuuucnc 158 nsunsHNnnnU41,7o,157 uns83,9o,91,93,94,135 nsuusunUNu35,119,152 ssnnnnnnss1o8,147 nnnsunuunususnn 152 MsnM72,89,91,1o8,135 .suuuUuun92,1o8,135 .us2u83,9o,1o7,135 UunsssUsUs52,115,147 .UHnuuuuHznn94,ll8,l47 .snn74,75,78,86,12o,141 .HNuHuHHuu6l,78,94,l39 uHnnnnunnn2uHu92,135 nun 150 Us 157 .nuns 156 UHUU78 157 Munson 155 .UUUUUQ1 135 .ussuuu91,94,141 usuH91,92,1o6,135 uuu268,73,157,159 nsunuuunnnun 148 nss69,115 153 .usnu1o8,147 Rugen, Barbara ....... Rumbold, Dorothy ....... Russtll, Loa ..........,. Russell, Margaret ....... Russell, Mary ....... Ruth, Nancy ..,.......,, Rutledge, John ..... , ...... Rydstrom, Marjorie ....... Sanborn, Robert ......... Sargent, Sally .......... . ...... Satterthwaite, Cameron .... Saunders, Marion .......... Scherer, John ........ Scheu, Doris .............,. Schlecht, Eleanor ...,.,,..,,,.. Schollenberger, Charles ........ Schrader, Oscar ................. Schrock, Lorin .....,....... Schroeder, Dorothy ..... Schroeder, Lois ........... Schroth, Catherine ...... Schuckert, Robert ,,..... Schultz, Jack ........... Schwartz, Lorraine ..... Scott, Carol ,,........ Scott, Lois .,....,... Se-crest, Roger ....... Shaffer, Richard .s..... Sharp, William .......,. Shelatree, June .............. Sherrard, Margaret ....... Shie, Dorothy ,,,,,.....,., Shinn, William ......... Shobert, Rachel .,..... Shreffler, Ned ,............ Shreftler, Richard ....... Shreve, Betty ,....,..... Shriver, John ........ Shultz, Jacob ....... Shutt, Vae ....,. nHu73,94,1o6,135 .HHsUus1o7,151 ssu91,145 .snnu83,157 .UHHUUUUHUUHQ3 2usssnnsu92,15o nsnn41,47,67,157 .ns2n31,1o8,153 s2nssnnuu51,143 Hnnunnnunusunu 157 snnU84,95,116,135 H ..,.,,,,.,...,,,,, 89 158 n22115,149 nnn91,156 nuun73,157 nouns 153 .HUHIZI 144 UMMQ1 157 .nnhnnn 156 snsnnnu91,15o uunu7o,91,158 unuunsun l57 .uuuNnnnn95,118 .snnsnnsuuunn 149 .uusn67,83,1o7,145 .HHUHNHMUUH73 158 uHzzUnUuz4l 157 unu73,l23,l39 .nnnun72,l23 .UHUUHHUMHHIS3 nnnsnsunn83,1o7,136 .nsnnnnspunuunnnu 140 35,36,39,4o,121 144 snnnnns69,72,1o6,147 unnnnn31,92,158 HUUuuUnuH116,14o .hsn83,1oo,1o7,136 nnn77,95,ll7 136 nnUsUN2unnunl36 Hsun67,91,155 THE C0llIER PRIIITIIIG lI0ll1PllIW PRINTERS T0 THE COLLEGE or woosrzn UJUUSTER, OHIO ' i-I TF CSIAPi-If SNYDER STUDIO Camera and Gift Shop East Liberty at Bever Phone 16 Shutt, William ....... ....... 5 6, 57, 121, 147 Simmerall, Mary ,...... ....................... 1 50 Simon, Daniel ...,...., ............. 3 5, 136 Simon, Lucie ..,..... ....... 8 9, 93 139 Simpson, Alan ......... ................ 4 7 Sitler, June .......,,. ..,.,....,...,.......................... 7 0, 156 Smeltz, Jean o..., .,................................. 8 5, 106 136 Smeltz, John ,,,, ...... 3 5, 36, 52, 66, 67, 80, 119, 151 Smith Eloise ........ .....,.,.....,...,.,.........,.... 9 1, 106 151 Smith Franklin, ...,,.. 38, 52, 119, 151 Smith Ilene ..,..... ..,.....,....... 5 9, 108, 136 Smith, Kathryn .,,,... .....,.. 8 3, 90, 92, 107 136 Smith, Martha ....... ....... 9 1, 92, 106, 136 Smith Pauleen .... ........,...,.............. 6 9 Smith Shirley ............ ,,..,,..............,.... 9 3, 153 Smucker, James ..,..... ...... 6 8, 72, 73, 94, 153 Smucker, Mary ,...... ........ 6 7, 92, 94, 108, 136 Snodgrass, Ida ,,,..... ...,.,..,...,.,,.......... 1 44 Snyder, Fred ........ ........ 9 5, 120, 136 Somers, Murray ......... ,,.,,,--,,.,.. 9 4, 122 136 Sommer, Martha ......, ....,..............,,.,...... 1 57 Sommers, Charles .......,, .,..,.. 6 9, 70, 91, 123, 142 Sonnedecker, Donald ....... ............,..,..,......... 1 52 Spangler, Richard .,.,,,... ,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,, 7 3, 157 Spencer, Gloria .......... ., ........ 70, 72, 77, 108, 139 Sprecher, Jeanette ......,, ..,......,,,,..,,,,,,,,,, 8 7, 152 Spreng, Al ....,............ .........,,.,............t,, 3 5, 89, 95, 147 Sproul, John .....................,....,........,.........,,. 73, 123, 148 Sproull, Richard .,.....,.... 35 37, 42, 44, 54, 95, 119, 140 Spooner, Bertha ,...........,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,,,- 89, 90, 91, 92 Spooner, Bonita ...... 89, 91, 92, 94: 136 136 Stafford, Jean Stalker, John ....... ...,,,,,,....,,....,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 8 5, 119 Stark, Martha ....,.. ,.,.,. 6 7, 74, 75, 78, 85, 108, 144 stead, Fred .,....... ........,.....,,..,.......,.. 7 6, 87, 155 Steele, Janet ...,.,.... ,,.,,,......... 9 2, 136 Steele, Roberta ...... ....... 1 08, 150, 159 Steer, Barbara ...,.... .,.,,......,.. 8 9, 137 Steigner, Laura ...... ,....,... 9 1, 154, 156 Steiner, Betty .....,,. .,,..,,,,.., 5 9, 107, 149 Steiner, Robert ...... ......... 4 8, 49, 119, 137 Steiner, William ..., ,..,.,.......... 6 8, 70, 72 Stewart, Dorothy .s..... .....,.,....... 1 06, 149 Stewart James ....., ....,,..,,...,,..... 7 2, 155 Stewart Jane ....,,.. ,......,..........,.... 6 7, 158 Stewart, Louise ............ ...... 7 2, 83, 90, 108, 137 Stewart Margaret ....,.. ,......,...,,,. 8 3, 107, 145 Stewart Marjorie ........ .,..,..,.................. 1 56 Stokoe, Raymond ...,. .,...............,......... 8 7, 154, 158 Stoll, Margaret ..,,,,.,, ........s................................. 1 58 Stoneburner, Roger .....,...,..,. 35, 38, 42, 52, 95, 121, 147 Stranahan, John ....... ..,,,..,..................... 8 5, 119, 145 Strang, Jack .....,..,. ........ 6 6, 67, 69, 95, 122, 144 Stratton, Elmer ,...,. ...................,...,..... 7 2, 149 Stratton, Jean .,.., ...... 7 2, 91, 107, 139 Strawn, Lorna .s,,, .............. 8 3, 90, 137 Streeper, Hal ....,. .....,.. 5 2, 56, 121, 137 Strickler, Tom ........ .,,,................ 7 5, 155 Strong, John .......... ............ 5 6, 121, 145 Stryker, Gerald ...... ...... 8 0, 93, 116, 137 Stuckslager, Betty ,.,,.,.. ....................... 1 55 Swan, Jeanne ....,...,,. ........ 7 O 158 nlcit nmsren WOOSTER The Weideman Company Established l86l Cleveland, Ohio le, A 1 Headquarters for , j - I Hart Schaffner 6, Marx Manufacturers and Distributors of Clothes Weideman Boy Brand Quality Foods Swanson, Geraldine ......... ........ 9 1, 108 150 Thede, Marie .,..,..,.,,,,, ,,,,,,,,, 8 7, 89, 91, 93, 151, 159 Sweetland, Robert ........ ........... 1 22 137 Thomas Fredericka .,,,. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 6 7, 92, 156 Swinny, Esther ,,,,... ............... 1 58 Thomas Jeanne ,,-,,-,,,,A,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,, ,--,,,,-,A-Av,,,,--- , 156 Talbot, David ,,,........ ..,.,.,...... 6 8, 156 Thomas, Leslie .,.,,,,,.,-,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 5 2, 82, 95, 1 16, 137 Talkington, Robert ..... ........ 9 4, 120, 142 Thomas, Marjorie .,.. 33 59, 66, 67, 83, 87, 92, 108, 139 Taylor, Robert .,,....... ....................... 7 2 158 Thomas, Robert .,,,...,..,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, -.,,,,,,-,--, 1 17 148 Tekushan, Fannie ,,,,,.. ........ 9 0, 91, 106, 143 Thompson, David ,,,,,,, .,..,,,,,., 7 O, 140 Terry, Dan .,,..,,..,..... ....................... 1 22 Thompson, James ..,, .,-,,, 5 2, 1 18, 147 Tevis, Charles ,..,-,.,,........ ........... 1 18, 140 Thompson, Janet ,,,,,,,,,,,,,., ,,,,,,--,.,, 1 57 Tewksbury, Margaret ........ ....... 6 7, 70, 149 Thomson, Miriamlouise ........ 158 watches diamonds W. T. WATSON F H HAM I U N Cptometrist for 25 Years I I I - Expert Eye Serv1ce Ieweler Watch Repalrlnq 215 E. Liberty St. Wooster, Ohio 153 E. Liberty Si. l3l1O1'19 513 Tillotson, Edwin .... ............. 1 37 Uher, Phyllis ............ ,,.,,,,,,,, 9 1 157 Tischer, Virginia. ................ 156 Vance, Eleanor ........... -,,,,,,, 7 2, 92, 141 Totten, Paul ,,,,... ,..,,., 5 6, 57, 121 Vanden Bosch, Helen .,....,., ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1 56 Townsend, Jane.. ......,.... 73, 109 Vandersall, Elizabeth ......,. ,.,,,,, 9 O, 91, 139 Treadwell, Jane ..,,,, .............. 1 57 Vandersall, 1-larold ........ ,.....,..,..,., 1 57 Trump, Carolyn ,,,,., ........ 9 1, 148 Van de Visse, Lewis...,. ,,,,,, 85, 118 140 Trunick, Helen ,..,,. .......... 1 48 Van Duzer, Phyllis... .......... 91, IO8 153 Tubelis, Marie ........ .............. 1 28, 156 Van Eaton, Joanna.. ........ 72, 91, 94, 137 Turner, Chester ...... ......................... 1 56 Van Eaton, John ............ ....................... 8 9 155 Twitchell, Ruth ......... ........ 8 3, 92, 107, 140 Van Noate, Howard ....... ....... 9 5, 116, 137, 159 Q T H E S H A C K Cne of the oldest and best-loved Traditions of the College, closely allied with College Social Lite X SCHINE'S 1VICLC1in G1'0Ce1'Y CO. WOOSTER THEATRE 9 0.0 Carload .lobbers of Fine Fruits and Vegetables 6 6,0 McLain Grocery Co. Massillon, Ohio Vaugh, Ellen ........, .............,..,,.......,,,,,,,,,,,,, 7 O, 85, 151 Vigrass, William ............ 31 35, 37, 42, 51 95, 117 137 Vitella, James .......... ...............,..,.... 8 5, 117, 131, 137 Von Thurn, Robert ..... ..,,,....................,..,...,..,,,..,, 1 55 Wach, Virginia ..,.. ,,,,,, 1 56 Wagner, Ralph ........ ...,.... 1 58 Wahlborg, Shirley ...,... ,,,,,,.,..,,,,,,,,,,,,. 1 57 Walker, Alice ,,,,,,. ,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,A 9 2, 141 Walker, Tillie ,,.,,,,, ,,,,,,,, 9 1, 93, 106, 143 Wallace, Jack ,.,,... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1 23 140 Walline, Douglas ,,,,...., ,,..,..,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,--,,,,, 1 22 Warner, Elizabeth ....... .,,,..... 9 O, 91 92, 106 150 Warnock, Ruth .............. Waterhouse, Elizabeth ..... Webb, Howard ...,,,.,,.,,.,, Webster, Eleanor ......... .,,,.,,,92 09 119, 73,91 137 155 143 148 Wefler, Verna ,,,..,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1 48 Weimer, Paul .,...... ,,,,,,i,,,,,,,,,,.,,,, 4 1, 157 Weiss, Charles ....,. ,,,,,,,,,,, 3 5, 51, 120, 152 Weldon, Richard ,.,... ,.,,,,,,, 6 9, 7O, 73, 122 153 A Theatre of Distinction Utmost in Pictures Welsh, Margo ret ..,,,,.. Werner, Angel ...........,.............,,,,,,,,..,,. 94, 95, 128, West, Mary Jane .................,,,,,,.,.,,,... 103, 104, 105, West, Richard .... 35, 38, 40, 91, 103, 104, 105, 119, West, Robert ..........,.,......... 66, 67, 88, 93, 95, 1 19, Westbrook, Russell ...............,.,.. 48, 56, 92, 95, 121, Wetsel, Ruth .....,,,. Weygandt, Clark... Wharton, Anne ..,.... Wheeler, Eldon ..... Wheelock, Edith ...... Whiston, Ruth ,...... Whitaker, Priscilla Whitcomb, Mary Jane. White, Jeanne ......... Whitmer, June .,... Whitney, Faith ......,. Widener, Anne ..... Wilder, Robert ........ Wiley, Marjorie .... 91, 92, 94 ...59, 80, 107, 146, ............89, 94, 118, 91, ...,...68, 154 ......68, 127, 70, 90, ....,.72, 106, .....,.,e4, 84, 92, ..,,......59, 107 148 155 155 151 143 137 137 155 152 137 151 156 156 137 137 145 149 156 137 137 THE Ulm. llI1I1HT CUIIIPHIW Wooster's Quality Department Store Xxmiscnoiyy, Where You Shop With Confidence :mm 'Pig Wi ISSN' SINCE 1879 f from the Land O Corn Ji: 1 Ahw- f - ' Rath's Black Hawk Bac- t, 1. -5 an and Black Hawk l , I- x Kbvfygip- Tend'r Ham are extra- ' 'WI' ' Wll1rLn11,v0flr good - preferred by families everywhere. 7 gif TZ if - ,,,, All Rath Fine Foods have a sweet, mild and delicious flavor as a result of corn-fed meat and Rath's exclusive processing. THE RATH PACKING GU., Waterloo, Ohio Dawson Photographic Studio + + We have been making Photographs for INDEX use for over 48 years Freshman Debate .......... Freshman Forum Cabinet ........ ..,.,. 78 68 Fortnightly ......................... ..,,,, 6 9 German Club .....,............ ...... 9 l German Honorary ,,.... ,,.... 8 9 lmps ..............,......... lndex ........,,........,....... .........lO8 -87 Invitatonal Classical ........ ......... 9 O Invitational Education... .... .. 90 Invitational Math .,....... .,.r.. 9 O Kappa Theta Gamma ...... ...... 7 4 Math Club .,..,.,.......,,.,, ...... 9 2 Men's Glee Club ........ ...... 7 Z MSGA Board ,,,,,,,,,,. ...... 8 2 Peanuts ...,.......... ...... l O7 Pembroke ..,............ ...... 9 3 Phi Beta Kappa ....... ...... 8 9 Psychology Club ........ ...... 9 2 Pyramids ............ ...... l O7 Section One ..... ...... l l5 Section Two ........ ...... l I6 Section Three ...... ...... l l7 Section Four ..... ...... Section Five .. .... .. Section Six ....... ...... Section Seven ...... .....- Section Eight ........ ...--- Section N1ne ........ ------ Section Pledges ....... ...... Senate ................... ------ Sociology Club ....... ------ 118 ll9 120 121 122 l23 ll4 so 92 THE WAYNE COUNTY Williams, Daniel ...... ........,..,.............,.....,,,,,,,,,,,., I SO Williams, Stanley ................................................ 47, ISS Wilson, Lois .................. 59, 60, 6l, 70, 9l, 93, IO6 142 Wise, Virginia ...,... ..,,...,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,.,.,.,,,,,, l O8 149 Withrow, Joy .......... ...,.,....,,.,,,..... l S3 Witzler, Virginia ........ .......... 6 9, 70, 72, l37 Woodward, Barbara .... ......... S 9, 9l, lO7, lSO Woolt, Ruthmary ........ ............... 9 2, 93 l37 Wright, Norman... ........... 9S, ISS Yates, Lewis ......... ....................... 7 O Yergin, Howard ....... ....,. S 4, 89, 90 l37 York, Betty .......,.,..., ............,,,. l 49 Zavala, Donald ........ ................................... 7 2 ISS Zolnowski, Jean ...... ...........,.............................. l S8 Zook, Douglas .................... 72, 77, 78, 79, 94, lZ2, l44 Index of Organizations Band ............................................................ ...... 7 3 Big Four Cabinet ......................................... ...... 6 6 Board of Trustees ,,,,,., ............ 2 4 Choir ..................... ........ 7 O-7l Clan ................... ......... l O9 Classical Club ....... ...... 9 l Clericus ............ ...... 6 8 Congressional ...... ..---- 9 3 Debate Seminar.. .....- 78 Dominoes ............, ...... l 06 Education Club ........ ------ 9 2 French Club ......... . ------ 9l French Honorary ........... ------ 9 O Freshman Counsellors ...... ------ 8 3 NATIONAL BANK All Banking Services Commercial Trust - Saving Established in l845 Oldest and Largest Bank in Wayne County' The Wooster Preserving Co. Wooster, Ohio Ask for OUALTTY FOOD BUOKEYE and WOOSTEBS FANCY Brands PIOKLES-Sweet, Sour and Genuine Dills Catsup, Chili Sauce, Preserves, lelly
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