Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN)

 - Class of 1942

Page 1 of 184

 

Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection, 1942 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1942 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collectionPage 7, 1942 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection
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Page 10, 1942 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collectionPage 11, 1942 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection
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Page 14, 1942 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collectionPage 15, 1942 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection
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Page 8, 1942 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collectionPage 9, 1942 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection
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Page 12, 1942 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collectionPage 13, 1942 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection
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Page 16, 1942 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collectionPage 17, 1942 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 184 of the 1942 volume:

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Ufi me ,. :ag 4. ev J -r.: ' - W 'F' Q2 012503 4,1 fc .U 535 58 as i G EQ.. Q,:.m-5 D cn -S1-we... . .f .....- z . 2 5 'ffl'-1.25 CGS ' ' Pl .4 .2 I. . , 5 U G 'G 42 .2 1-1 J,-, 5 w 5 Tu T. 271 .. 'g U1 41 an rn cn F-1 GJ Q3 f-4 -C ill n-1 P1 51 G Masquers 1.2.3.-4. Pres.3 Social Science Club1 Earlham Post 1: Inter- GI. ld J n tional Relations Forum 1.21 Peace Fellowship 21 E.C. Club 3,41 Re- USWO, 1 Em? I I . I publican 1.3.41 Democrat Club 21 Archery Club 1.2. Individual Winner Little Y Pres.. 1. Y:W.C.A. 2.3.4, Phoenix 1.2.3.4, Mask and Mantle - - - - 1.2.3 Sec. 43 P1 Epsilon Delta 3 Pres., 4 Treas.1 W.A.A. Board 3 3.4. Class Swimming Team 3, Class Hockey Team 4. , , Archery Manager: Gesangverem 1.23 A.W.S. Board. 4 Pres.' Student BUUIS. Ruth 19 Senate 3. 4 Sec. Treas.: Sargasso Staff 4 Sec.1 Philosophy Forum 31 Little Y 11 Y.W.C.A. 4. World Fellowship Chairman: Science Club Winner of Old Line Oratorical Contest 41 Sister Beatrice 2 12.3.42 Peace Fellowship 3.4: Day Dodgers 12.3.41 WAAA- 1.2.3. Family Portrait 31 Our Town 41 Hamlet 43 Everyman 4 Hiking Mgr. 4. V.Pres.1 E.C. Club 31 Jacket 41 Republican Club 31 Commons Committee 334, Sargasso Staff 4. Breithaupt' Jack-not pictured Guernlgebb, tWa?7'11g4 Old L' C t st 123 Peace Contest 193 Winner 11 1- 1:13 d ID Dd 1IgI3I4 eaes .....1 me one ..I .-. I Briggsorc 6:13 an 1 ay 0 g rs 19 Tau appa Alpha 3 Sec.. 4 Pres3 Mask and Margtleff3.411DI3oardls:di1ub 5 3.4 V.P .1 Sa . Staff 4 A s't. E itor3 Post ta . ews ' orl 513111511 C1Ub 12.3.41 50161169 Club 2.3.42 Y.W-C-A. 1.23.41 Pl106I1iX Epsilon!-efilphal-gPl?st41 Cross Cimuntry 41 Track 11 Men's Precedent 41 Day D0dEeI'5 1.2.3 C1355 CHI-713111 Of 5W1mm1Ug Team 32 C1355 CHP- Committee 41 Ionian 41 Y.M.C.A. 1.2.41 Peace Fellowship 1.2.3.4 Treas tain Of BBSk6tba1l Team 21 C1855 C3lD1H1l'1 Of 1335919311 Team 3- International Relations Forum 2 Sec.. 3 Program Chairman. 4 V.Pres. Brower' Robert 18 Plays 1.23 I-Iamlet' 41 Imaginary Invalidf 41 Everyman' 4: Re- Choir 1.21 Democrat Club 1.2,3.41 Classical Club 2 Pres. 3 V. Pres.: pubhcan Club 3' Democrat Club 3' Ye Anglican 4' Student Senate 43 Philosophy Forum 2.31 Debates 23 Oratorical Con- . . test 31 Y.M.C.A. 1.2.3.41 Social Science Club 2.31 Radio 1.2.3.41 Indiana H3191 W11113m I , University 15 Ionian 4I geace4FegolvAvsl'iip fl gqresb 2.3h41t Seiretaliiy .2. Pres? . en 3 cooo e ropes...,res1en 3 oir: C3mPb911. Frances C311 I I 20 Anglican 2.3.43 Mask and Mantle 2.3.41 Freshman Week Staff 2.4 Science Club 2.3. Sec.1 4 Social Chairman: Y.W.C.A. 1.2.3.4. Freshman Ciass president Campbell, Robert - 18 H I M th Science Club 1.2.31 Day Dodgers 1.2.31 Band 1.2.33 Choir 1.21 Y.M.C.A. 3lg1'0V9. 31' 3 I I 1.2.3,41 Dennis Chemistry Award. Band 1.41 -Archery Club 1.41. Peacen Fellowship 1.2.31 Spanish Carr Susan 20 gub lg Ph1losophyTForunl 1DLxttle ty glalgngtsli AYWWS6 Roaxids E1 ass 1 mm eam 1 emocra ic u .. 1 . . . . . . 1 1 Mask and Manue 3- 4- Pres-3 Phoenix 2-3-AL Pres-3 W-A-A Bflafd 4- Old Lin: naratoiical Contest 41 Dav Dodgers 31 Science Club 3.41 Sec.: Philosophy Forum 31 Student Senate 3.43 Freshman Week Staff Sargasso Staff 4I ' 3.43 Sargasso Staff Feature Editor 43 Imaginary Invalid' 4. Cloud Russell-not pictured Haworth' Margaret I . I . I 'Science Club 1: Republican Club 1: class Treasurer 4' Wilmington College 1, Choir 2, Republican Club 2.3,-Peace Fellow- ship 2, Spanish Club 2.4, Y.W.C.A. 1.2.3.4. A.W.S. Boald 4. Coggeshall, Dorothy 21 I Y.W.C.A. 1.2.3.41 Democratic Club 2.3.43 Classical Club 3.41 Science HI11. -101111 I I Club 41 Social Science Club 4. Choir l.2.3.4: Peace Fellowship 2.3: Y.M.C.A. 41 Gesangverem 4. C0151 MYY011 18 Hoov r Miriam 'Varsity Club 1.2.3.-1: 101112111 3.4. COINS- SGC. eplmenix 3 v.Pres. 4 v.P1-es.: A.W.S. 1.2.3 Board 4. Y.W.C.A. 1.23.41 C L H Women's Precedent Committee 3.4 Co-chairmang Spanish Club 2.3.4 OX. 0We I I 1-9 Social Chairman: Republican Club 1.2.3.4: Peace Fellowship 3.41 Pffaffe Fe110WS1'llP 1. Treas- 2 Pres.. 3.4: Bundy Hall Council 2.3: W.A.A. 1.2.3.4 Basketball Manager: Freshman Week Staff 3: Double Choir 1.21 Band 1.2: Orchestra 41 Debate 1.31 International Relatlons C1111, 3: EICI Jacket 4I Forum 31 Winner of Extempore Contest 11 Winner of Winner's Contest 31 Winner of Old Line Oratorical Contest 2: Hamlet 41 Ionian Jones Guv W JI. , . . - . I , ., . 4' Freshman Week Staff 3' Mens precedent Commlttee 4' Varsity Club l 2 Social Chagrmani 3 Sec. 4SP1ss.1 lgreslugrlaii Xgfzek Dilks Eleanor 21 Staff 2.31 Ionian 3 Corresp. ec.. V.Pres.1 tu ent ena e 1 ass ,E-Z:'iVtgCiP5.3k2,3.41 Science Club 1.2.3.41 Philosophy Forum1 Republican Treas' 3: precedent Commlttee 3'4' Y'M'C'A' 2'3'4' u . . , . . . Klute Thomas Eckey Wilhelmma 22 'M 1 .-1 M ti 234- s ' C1 b 4- YMCA 4- B -d cl b 34. Y.W.C.A. 1.2,3,41 Choir 1.2.31 String Ensemble 1.21 Band 21 Mask and asc an an e ' ' ' mance U ' ' ' ' ' Gal S U ' Mantle 2.3.4, Sec.1 Social Chairman of Class 31 Gesangverein 1.2: Stu- . . dent Senate 41 A.W.S. Board 4. V.Pres.1 Masquers 1.2.33 Sargasso Layden. W11113m I I Staff 4. Y.M.C.A. 1.2.3 Cabinet. 41 Republican Club l.2.3.4: Science Club 1.2.31 I I Camera Club 11 Gesangverein 1.21 Men's Precedent Committee 3.41 Farmer, Wllllam 19 Student Senate 4 Pres.: Sargasso Staff 41 Freshman Week Staff 3: Day Dodgers 1.2.3.4. 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W ----, . lg ' ts f' X W' 655.5 ix' , i 1 x w 1 1 -J -oi, cu E . 'E .E cu on up cus GJ E 34 .3 2 4-v E 'S Q.. 'U -Z3 5 as O 2 'U cv .9 GJ Q E Q5 56 Q 3 O an ng :E Q.. I .p-4 10-7 3 s: ..-. 5 'U 'cs ai 3 E 4' 3 E cu O 5-4 Q: Q4 9' F4 'Cf :cs +5 : -' 33 .2 2 H S o 3 2 o CU 3 this campus so that We might organize We have Withdrawn onto events and their antecedents into some kind of vision-some these 'O v-4 O O GJ .-G -4-7 From Europe and America, from an on 'cs an v1l 3 o Q .M hted clear-sig dies, from West In he states and the islands of t H1 al' W states and the the East and the Midwest-Boston, Bronx, Bloomington, Brookville- e have come faculty. W and nts de place. Stu his t to II19 We have co +1 O CI +2 GJ IP: 'U ci C5 of the world, C5 GJ P GJ -v-4 v-1 GJ L4 GJ r-C 4-7 -4-7 --1 r-4 e can feel a where W here from it or sheltered from its currents. We have come to harbored in many aspects, diagrammed Carp, where We can see it at large, who S9 by tho fc: GJ .E C5 P-4 or we GJ Po Q C5 uf book in OI' aps ffl blackboards or cl O profess to see its relations more clearly than We do. We have come to NS Ns U .-1 La-4 ..-1 TJ 2 CD F' --4 ,.w 'U rf .- C1 DD r- -4 ..-1 D ..- .-4 :-1 ..- .-a O .E CJ ,.. 'U 3 c il GJ 5 .- P14 ci is 4-I ci K I. 'cs : cu .SI o 4-3 cu 3 'U C: cs 'U C1 ru '6-3 W 'ci 'T' -4 O 5 2 -4 -4-P H-4 O 6.0 CI .v-4 D .-4 111 I 3 E o V' 8 , cu 94 E E 5 3 '-5 cv U' 2 U5 :E un .E 3 2 3 'SD fa .3 Q -O-7 -0-9 'U 'S is O Q, o Q. Q F' -TQ S 3 ED 2 -E ' --4 : B 5- so w 3 w L. .- ,, 5 5 Q .: : - I' 55 QI H 2 v-3 75 struggle 8. el. a struggle for lif 6 tim This world he ft gO plisli the livin hen this struggle has quieted living. But w of undance ab find a surer to from war to something less than war-when this destruction is fin- ished and something is begun to reshape it, Earlham will still be here. And perhaps, as professors explain to us this hatred, we will see the thing beyond it that is no longer hatred. Perhaps our watching at Earlham will prepare us for that. Not for great things-we don't expect that. But for going out into that world, with a clue to its coldness, and some intimation of its warmth. WE WEE AEE SE IEE AT EAELE. E-- I 194, EEE WHEM Till YEAR HA. GEEWX FULL 0E ELIMAX AND FINALITY, AEE PIIESENTIEG THIS Sargasso that we have made--not as a hook, merely, but as a rich portrait of the Earlham in which our lives revolved for this one great hectic superb time. Back in that portentous Freshman Week when our class was born-and wrapped in its green swaddling clothes-we were already named with the name of this year-the class of '42. That name was a symbol of our destiny-a sort of anticipation of this year and its significance. All through those years when w ere struggling as minor characters UD on campus-when we were weaned the Precedent -committees, when we hunted our first Senior picnic, when completed our physical ed. and foreign language requirements, passed our ior Gralsg and finally when we greeted our last crop of Freshmen in Septe ber '41, this year has been the horizon at which we aimed our ambition. And w that the years of the calendar have merged into our year, and what we h e become is what we were imagining for ourselves, we have made this boo about the days and nights and the state of affairs that came out from ouri agination and grew real to us in the roaring course of this year. The Circles 0P to of class of ual, : Pr or i n' '42 to '41g to all grads of last 4 years. the making of this book than filling pages with type made under the living of this and photo-engravlng. This book 1S e of moment by moment out of Time things we were . A book is by men who the happening give it theu' We are the men have lived this final year, and this book-our shape Sargasso. year-and have papers, and bound the knives and the binding presses that have given it this form. There is form in it that is subtler than that- something of ourselves-because this is the way we looked at things while they were happening. That is as much the making of the book as anything the staff la- bored over. And so in presenting this book we are presenting ourselves-the uni- que accumulation of fellows and girls who were coming and going around Earlham as Seniors in 1942. It is somehow warmly and fondly that we lay down our personalities on these pages. There is much that we remember together. You must know us-as we begin to know each other, now-we who have made this book. Alma Alley is that charming bit of personality with the smile that won't come off. She is the one we remember in Earlham chapels for her music-especially those of us who heard her sing Oh Johnnie. Eileen Balfe came walking up D Street, knitting bag in hand-the gal who could knit mittens in any prof's class. She's a clever person, and always ready to boost our Alma Mater. A flash of a quiet maroon Oldsmobile is the setting for Babe Corsi. He certainly has been a persistent fellow and it looks as if that econom- ics major is paying off already. Dick Balfe is the fellow who finds loopholes in law cases. Babe and Dick study quite often in the libe with Bob Brower. Remember the Alma Alley Richard Balfe Eileen Balfe Robert Campbell Myron Corsi Robert Brower r 1 S 4 i I i . E i l 18 Thea Briggs typical business men's suits, the tie pins-and incidentally, Bob is a connoisseur of antiques, and loves 'em. Here is Bob Campbell, too, with his car, hair, and smile which really have to be known to be appreciated, at least Frances Cail thought so! On this page We have the editor of our book, tall Earl Fowler. His inspirations, always tinged with the modernistic, have given us our class banner and have help- ed us over many spots where our minds seemed devoid of ideas. We admire his abil- ities and his graciousness of manner. Even when it comes to burlesquing Hamlet C lj the depth of character and intelligence you always associate with Earl are there. William Farmer Valarie Barrows l Earl Fowler Ruth Binns Lowell Cox Lowell Cox is always a big help when you want to burlesque, too. lt's surprising to us that he hasn't made a Rudolf Leeds editorial with his Workers of the World, Unite! It's rather typical to picture him here surrounded by girls. Valarie Barrows probably doesn't mind-used as she is to one-woman-all-men classes. Ask Va- larie to do anything for you and her generous nature will comply. One girl on cam- pus who can really let down her hair and wear gypsy colors is Thea. If we could all be so carefree! And ask any Yankee trading shotguns and loving class picnics and he's sure to know Bill Farmer. Remember Binzo, too-always ready to go. Her class spirit rides in the wake only of her athletic fervor. All of those in Rural Sociology class will recall one brighteyed girl defending the rural population against both the text and the professor. Fran Cail Campbell, this is, one of those constant and steady people- And this delectable bundle of zoom and Swish is Sue Carr. We heard her characteristic laugh, so full of rollick- ing and then gone so suddenly, and immediately she came into our circle. Things get done with Sue around! The economic, politic, journalistic card-shark, Wayne Guernsey, is well known to all who have ears to hear as the serious orator with deep voice and many gestures. These boys have ambitions-Wayne, Bill and John. Bill Frances Campbell W. Noble Greene Susan Carr W yne Guernsey William Hale John E, Hill led our Freshman activities with the same zest, seriousness, and friendly flirting with which he manages the most difficult situations, while John is recognized for his conscientious leadership and his fondness for blond hair. And can he sing a merry tune! Noble Green and his wife live at Fountain City Can ambition already come true, perhapsj. Here, without a double, is our man of many roles, Archibald Quince Klute- hero, prompter, gravedigger! He manufactures personalities on stage, cartoons his Way through classes, and goes to and fro each day like the rest of these illustrious 20 'Ihornas Klute Dorothy Coggeshall Eleanor Dilks Guy Jones 21 day-dogers. -Guy Jones, man of many E's , presi- dent of the Varsity Club, accountant de luxe but best remembered by some because they rode in his exceptional Model A - Dorothy Coggeshall, the girl with the husky voice, who breezed into our class from California-and Eleanor Dilks, frequen- tress of the biology lab in Bundy basement, she knows her Buick and her fraxinus quadrangulata. Billie is the first of the Seniors to land a job. She appreciates people and we appreciate her-the characteristic tongue in cheek and side remarks! We recall the hours she spent on class programs, picnics, and the other jobs we turned over to her. Stupendous is the only word that would begin to describe the number and magnitude of the things Bright Spot Fuller does. She flashes around the campus, the busiest day-dodger abroad. A friend to all, a cheery Hi-Girl , red hair, and a poncho under the stars, so Lois lives her life! Someday we'll heed the Gorman wit and subtle wisdom. Libby's another of those people you get to know when you're a Senior, never to forget. Her class spirit was never lacking-even when it came to drafting a hockey team! Teasing and subtle wisdom. yes-and speaking of wisdom, what prophet can tell us who will be able to fill the sudden McCoy's place with next year's Freshman girls? Here, too. we see Ralph McCracken, who manages anything from the dishwasher to the track team to the Sargassos fi- nances in a strictly businesslike manner. and al- ways prefers Bundy to Earlham so far as we can see. Bill Layden had a technique of his own. As a Fresh- man he made it his ambition to learn everyones name. In that we know he got as far as Test. Far enough! Bill is a B.M.O.C. in more ways than one. Red-haired i'Robinhood Rollf. president of Mask and Mantle and star of the baskets. the boards. and the bases, is mystery personified. Self-confident and temperamental, he is an Earlham actor of the highest caliber. Conscientious Johnny-on-the-spot Awigm 2 '-ll' ll U 1 Y abr- ----A -- - - if l Hoover is a good sport, and as captain of the Sen- ior hockey team, she did her best to make the Seniors win. We liked her as co-chairman of the Women's Precedent Committee this year. Ah, the Royal Order of the Probies Club loses its last member with the graduation of Louis Marstaller. When he goes home, he has the long- est ride east-to Freeport, Maine. Louis, a mem- ber of the Sargasso literary staff, thought of all the things We shouldnlt print. To fly among the - ll l No. Tall People 1 Nojililork for Efollege No. Having Cars 5 1: NO. Mis ll No. Female I No. Commuters S , g x 1 Q I No. Wear-Glasses Y' j 1 k . A . , f I i ...Q 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 clouds far above the earth is Marte's aspiration. Will-o'-the-wisp, capricious, she plasters her walls with pictures of airplanes and hopes to get into commercial flying. June's natural loveliness is delightfully refreshing. Smiling, June is as brilliant and competent as she is feminine. She has played leads across the footlights during four years for Earlham audiences. This year she has been our Homecoming Queen and president of the A.W.S. Franz with his European background makes us know that the days of King Ar- thur and chivalry are not yet gone. A cultured linguist, he is a connoisseur of classi- cal music and art. 22 Wilhelmina Eckey Robert McCoy Elizabeth Gorman Lois Fuller Ralph McCracken William Layden We have another classmate, Margaret Haworth, who has only been with us three years. Margaret is gracious and has a deep understanding for her friends. Her brown eyes flirt. Investigating the latest evidences of Eleanor Lyans' ambition Qshe of the exaggerated wisecracksj, we find she finished her requirements for nurse's training last October and is now polishing off a couple of years of college.- Among our talented is super-swimmer and Queen, Marilyn. Her wit and humor are unmatchable, and her efficiency is the secret of her gracefulness. John Rourke, Earl Schwyhart, and Gordon Smith have been come and go men. J ohn's presence on campus is quiet enough, but there is a touch of potential Irish dynamite, too. Earl handles the Earlham hook-up with WKBV, the film projectors, and is connected 23 Louis Marstaller Martha Hargrove June Griswold Franz Roehr Robert Rollf Miriam Hoover Margaret Haworth Janet Roberts Earl Schwyhart 4 it Gordon Smith Marilyn Miller John D. Rourke with other hook-ups and projects around Earlham. Gordon, the Deacon, has been undecided as to what his vocation should be, and has changed his mind so far every semester. Dottie Reeder-all round college girl-whose interests include sports, dramat- ics, literature, and anything Earlham, is a jolly bundle of joy who always sees the right side of everything and the best in everyone. She's a trim girl with a swinging stride and a head full of ideas. And Mary Smith, conscientious, and hard-working though she is, and always ready with a helping hand for anyone, still finds time to see her giant from New York. Gene Stevens should fit in here as a serious worker and is to be remembered as one of our best boosters. Not to be outdone anywhere is the Hquiz-kid of quiz-kids -a conversationalist plus--learned in many fields- our one and only Mary Polk-a real gem. Polk and Haworth hold down their cor- ner of the dorm despite all intrusion. And meet Doc Smelser-one swell guy, and probably the smoothest dresser of ye old '42, He was our Sophomore president, but the Chem lab is almost his greatest love- Then of course with much rever- ence we mention our dual personality-the man with the soft persuasive voice, many cars and romances-but a truly real football player, remember Phil Smith -honorable mention All-State! Tracy trumpets our Senior year as class president. Any hour of the day-at chapel, dishwashing, E. H. Office, and the perpetual jibe is going strong. Here's the ambitious fellow, Tracy, several businesses on the side, many responsible positions f and some irresponsible onesl , and he sees them through with determination. Helen Dorothea Reeder Eugene Stevens Mary Polk Phillips B Smith Mary E. Smith Wayne Smelser Wessel has been day-dodging back and forth for several years as a special student home economist. She furnishes our class with specials in disposition and cooking -which go together after all. Mildred Jane, graciously giving of her dietetics knowledge and her time. re- freshes all of us who know her. Bill and the pursuit of happiness we always asso- ciate with Mildred Jane. ,QY C ax?- l l Ernest Tracy Helen Wessel Mildred Jane Test William Thistlethwaite Eleanor N. Lyans John Thorne Mary E. Ryle Three times a president, Bill Thistlethwaite proves himself capable in executive ways. Maybe it is because of Bill's sincerity that we keep on electing him. It is hail fellow well met to greet John Thorne striding the sidewalk to Carp. Try to keep track of him and you're better than we are. Any man who has changed majors four times and spent a year at the U. of Hawaii ought to be interesting enough for any- one, eh? We are glad to know Mary Ryle. We like her sparkling personality and the way she says nice things about everybody. But no acquaintanceship would be complete until she sang, and was heard, and greatly applauded. Jane Turner Leonard Weyl William Wolf Winifred Wright Russell Whitmore History wizard Leonard Weyl is a native of Frankfort, Germany, and the pos- sessor of a distinctly British accent. Proud, a talented artist, an ambitious pre-med.. Lennie gives his devotion to the causes nearest his heart. Sweet, feminine Winnie goes out next year to teach Home Ec. and English. We'll guarantee that all the pu- pils will love teacher, too. Hey fellas Turner is the girl we see ambling all over the campus in her lab coat, singing and whistling the newest swing job. A one-man team, a great pal is Janie. As a general organizer, as our class social chairman, and as the co-writer of our class songs, she's tops. Russ knows his Esquire up and down-just ask him! And he certainly looks as if he reads the ads. To med. school his path leads. And now clear the way for Prexy's rival politician, executive Bill Wolf. Bill and l are about the best politicians in school, admits Prexy. As president of the Student Senate. Bill has devoted his time and work as middleman to reach an equitable agreement between students and Board of Trustees about the embryonic Earlham commons. John Howard Williams doesn't spend much time on campus Joe-ing and buzzing John H, Williams We who are .eniors at Earlham around, but he is a true friend, an absorb- ed biology student, and a home-loving man it would seem. Virginia Raiford, Russell Cloud, and Joe Garoffolo belong in our Senior class, though they are not pictured. Ginny, whose happiness and despair, and gifted tongue make her a dialect actress of tem- perament and ability, is camera-shy. Rus- sell is only to be found on the road be- tween here and Connersville, whence he comes and whither he goes unobtrusively. And Joe, the football man, whose ability the army recognized by deferring him so that he might finish the season, has gone to the service. But While this year lasts we are the Seniors at Earlham. Not for long. Already some of us have had to break off with this year unfinished. There are disasters and surges of effort in the world that overshadow our climax. We are probably the last class that will come out of Earlham as it is, having taken a leisurely four years to graduate. Earlham will follow a new vision of herself and meet time with achievement. And the world's absorbing demand for crusade and striving will strike leisure out of our lives for this time. But while this year lasts it will become to the end our year to experience-and to hold. This book we have made to hold the unfolding experience of this year. The editor brought from Iowa the idea for our monk's cloth and fabrikoid cover. The second color used throughout was discovered on the dust jacket of a recent book. The paper is one hundred pound number one white enamel stock-the headings are Onyx, the body type is Textype. The layouts were inspired from Harpers' Bazaar, Fortune, the Sears Roebuck Catalog, and the thin air. But the labor in- volved was the swift clear grasp of the day and hour and swift moment as we knew them in the moment of their existence. This labor has been accomplished by making ourselves into a somewhat nebulous staff of Sargasso. We who are Seniors at Earlham Photography is vision for our book-vision become forever in an instant. Leonard Weyl was providing our photography, until the government deprived him of his Leica and the use of our Graflex. Then We had to look beyond ourselves-to Ruthanna Borden, to Leb- by, to Miss Castator, for our photographs. Sue Carr and her Features Staff, Billy Eckey, Tom Klute, and Bill Thistlethwaite, got together with the Editor and almost anyone else who was interested, and talked over the design, the intention of the book, theories of layoutg points of view, the balance of copy and photos. Research Editor McCoy and Winnie Wright, Marilyn Miller, and Bob Rollf, his staff, dug out the raw materials, the data, the items we needed to have at hand. Dottie Reeder, Louis Marstaller, Mary Polk, Lois Fuller, and Ruth Binns, the first being the editor and the rest being the staff of the literary division, took the raw materials and Wrote them into undying phrases that respoke our earthly thunder. Tracy, with Layden, Turner, and Eileen Balfe, did the dirty work of arranging and organizing the mechanical process of the production. And McCracken, who took over Guy Jones' well prepared position as Business Manager, gave us the financial support that enabled us to carry out our schemes, even when they were a little Wild and impractical. Bill Wolf and Wayne Smelser helped Mac. But the Editor's real in- spiration was his secretary, of courseg and his right hand man was his assistant, Wayne Guernsey. Without June he could not have con- ceived nor comprehended, in our sunken, dismal office, the sweep and meaning of the shapeless thing that our book was in the beginning. Without Wayne, he could not have accomplished the tedious and technical com- pilation and dealing that Q'-, - CAHDIAU STATISTIUSQ HAVE Y0 HEARD was necessary. Then as the deadlines rushed by and our staff stirred itself into purpose and effort, we began to believe there was a shape, and to watch it come and to make it ourselves, until our book emerged one day with what we had put in it and enclosed it in. We who are Seniors at Earlham in 1942 are presenting this Sar- gasso that we have made. Not as a book, merely, but as a rich portrait of the Earlham in which our lives revolved for this one great hectic superb time of our lives. JANET ROBERTS lEditor's Note: Fortunately there is enough space here to include a word about Janet Roberts, who returned after an extended absence just in time to graduate with our class. We hadn't forgotten her, even after all that ti1ne.l . . . that 372 of the senior class go steady ? And that at least 1490 of the senior girls are wearing engagement rings? When we were freshmen they always told us Earlham was the place to get a man! 292 of our class seem to be unable to make up their minds whether Bill or Bob is their favorite, so this 2922 get around a good deal in varied company. The book-worms and the my-heart-belongs-to-Daddy type make up 2624 of the senior ranks. These man-haters and woman-haters and unclaimed jewels stay at home much of the time or else hobnob with members of their own sex. Ah, fair Earlham romance, 822 of us who will be graduated are already married: what a class have we! what a cem. have we! what other things too numerous and private to mention have we! THE EEE HME THE EEGINTITE of a EEGIEEITG and LATER 31 What are these Freshmen? A self-confident, strange, babbling mass that suddenly appears at the heart of our campus . . . A flurry of faces and forms that come and go without hesitation, appropriating as their own our familiar paths and stairs . . . A great weight of bag and baggage straining upward in Earlham Hall elevator . . . An end- less line that moves with the monotonous click of the attendance camera, labeling unfamiliar face with unfamiliar name . . . A strag- gling series of preoccupied groups proceeding in shifts from library instruction to aptitude tests to physical examinations. A full dining room that overflows to East and West . . . Perhaps it is in the dining room that this chaotic mass begins to define itself. The strangeness is suddenly a little less. Together there are sings in the evening, parties, tours, with a strong undercurrent of staff members, who set to work to boom the Freshmen into the surge and swing of Earlham before the tide of returning students comes. Reception under the willow, Mrs. Dennis' swaying lanterns. poor Frazier whose mother, aunts, and sisters all went to Earlham . . . Registration . . . More tests . . . The class' sideshovt '... And somehow the days of the Freshman's Week are numbered-disintegrated- absorbed by the returning population which brings with it routine. stability, familiarity-and precedent. Alice Pemberton Alice Mary Ranck Emily Haines Jane White Janet Howell Marietta Post Alice Payne Mark Kishego Seth Eikenberry Frank Hombrook Ellen Drace Lelia Marstaller Rachel Bruning Peggy Collings Mary Hunt Cicely Canby Betty White J o Streland Elizabeth Leszkiewicz Meg Bowman Jean Pratt Jessamine Campbell Mary Robbins Frances Robbins Bill Brown Martha Mayer Lillie May Russell Helen Thompson Red freshman handbooks can be seen protruding out of hip and vest pockets-a startling bit of color against the white clothes of Freshman waiters. g'Alma Mater, Alma Mater -the theme song of l ll!! : .1 xsmel-24955 , -xi Freshmen for September and October continuously brings us to our feet. Wallop Wabash - Beeeeaaa-t Rose Poly, one. two, three, four . . . -Dusty Rhoads leads a line of chanters which weaves through the dining room. Pale faces against green collars . . .shapely calves dressed in green garters . . RuthA.nne Gorman Beatrice Finch Dorothy Armstrong Ruthanna Borden Wilford Frazier Warren Corwin Dorothy Britton Barbara Markley Ruth.-knna Farlow Madeline Chapman Patricia Randall Kenneth I-larger Cy Courtney Bill King Robert Marvin Dick Cain David Hepburn Robert Wixom Arthur White Donald Stanley Peter Frank Kirk Roberts Marcia Darkus Mary Strack Marjorie Lindley Wanda Freeman Barbara Hyne Glen Hymer Bill Wildman Harry Nickelson Ray Davis Donald Denny Donald Morris Eugene Michael Herbert Pettengill Robert O'Maley Alice Bell Kaye Kirk Louisa Pendleton Martha Peery Vincent Lakusso Carlyle Hill Robert Allen Dick Cummins George Werner calves dressed in green garters . . . CDon't wear your garters downtown, girls, be- cause there are men who stand on street corners, and Earlham women . . . D Starched collars for the game . . . harle- quin colors smeared on too-schoolgirl com- plexions . . . bird cages . . . the inevitable lampshades . . . Mary StoWe's two-tone job . . . unmistakeable evidence of the vigilance of the committee . Then the tense night in Bundy . . . loud, imperious voice summoning next victim and next FIRST ROW: Elizabeth Parker, Mary Helen Calbert, Mary E. Walls, Jean Vilberg, Ann Sproul, Barbara Horne, Fritz Wiegelmesser, John Nicholson, Richard Burlingame, Harvey Buckman, Patricia France, Faith Maris, Sarah Joyner, Phyllis Kaighn. SECOND ROW: Mary L. McMin.n, Sarah Winklepleck, Rosalie Morton, Betty June Martin, Eloise Nifer, Carolyn Griffith, Willadene McMa.ha.n, Phyllis Porter, Marion Alexander, Barclay Bowman, William Conway, William Dillon. THIRD ROW: Raymond Lowes, Harold Rothennel, Walter Zabel, Wilbur Rodenburg, Mary Stowe, Jean Ratliff, Helen Dodd, Gerry Golden, Betsy Pedersen, Helen Steadman. FIRST ROW: Keith Hensley, Lowell Petry, Dudley Stinson, Hugh Patrick, Bonnie Clevenger, Martha Wood, Helen Ferris, Richard Graves, James Day, Robert Cheatham, David Blyler, Lawrence Rhoads. SECOND ROW: Dorothy Hirschfeld, Jean Lawrence, Marguerite Steane, Alice Smith, Charles Draver, James I-lanning, Elaine Smith, Carolyn Maddox, Russell Grant, Leanna Barker, Mary Beth Kissick, Violet Masters, Dorothy Lueder. THIRD ROW: Jon Thornburg, Dale Tyler, Martha Gilmer, Madeleine Nicholson, Patricia Hanes, Rebecca Stuck, Sally Land, Tom Smith, Earl Estes, William Guernsey, Keith Schwyhart, Ralph Partington, Marlin Cameron. ' victim . . . the halting steps . . . the gruell- ing scene under the bright light . . . re- sounding whack . . . resulting in: green caps, name posters, the crescendo of ten steps and a yell that signifies the last five minutes of any class period on Friday. Freshmen always take up more room than any other class-in chapel, at the games, in the lunch line. Potential energy which the upperclassmen seize and set to building bonfires, distributing Earlham Posts, selling candy at the games, buzz- I ,,,.n adm The Fra hmen hopping for E. C. office. Get a bunch of Freshrnenn- All Freshmen out - 'cFreshmen sit together in the bleachers-and yell! - Freshman on the phone! There are more Freshmen in classes than the rest, because Freshmen don't cut classes-at least for a month or so. The breakfast line is clogged with Freshmen, because Freshmen don't miss breakfast at first. There is a high percentage of Fresh- men in Chapel, because they have been sold tickets by enterprising Sophomores. There are more Freshmen in the cem. because, lured by the glass tombstone they remain, quickly enchanted by the beauties of the spot. But, to cut out the exaggeration. The real importance of the Freshmen is that they every year are the source of many things. The source of the future college population. The source of a new spirit at Earlham, through which, alone, she grows and succeeds more greatly. The source of renewed beginning, that looks forward with purpose to the things that Earlham can give, and makes the giving of them a full time job for the profs, and not Whimsy. They are, in fact, replentishing of the resources of opinion, desire, manpower, originality, thought, and spirit that have been depleted by the spring exit before. CSource of beautiful women, too, if you can get in there soon enoughj The great unknown factor in the beginning: personality. The strangeness of Freshmen is not that we don't know their names. It is that acquaintance is not a sudden thing. The interplay and competition and development that display the per- sonalities of those involved are keenly interesting to us. Because then the green- ness disappears-there is comfortable companionship and mutual appreciation and mutual accomplishment. It can't be known what would happen if there were no Freshman Week Staff looking forward to this acquaintance and adjustment. The traditional picnic at Prexy,s farm gathers the Staff. There are many instructions-the whole to func- tion in a detailed program designed with experienced thoroughness. Train-meet- ers and bus-meeters, and then the Heart committee itself, give a lot of technical in- formation, place the Freshman in his room, name him, assign him, cross-register him. The Staff is guide and reference through those days. FRESHMAN OFFICERS: Jean Lawrence, Carol Maddox, Dusty Rhoads, Bea Finch, Fritz Wiegelmesser. The Freshman week staff The Fra hmen Great help, indispensable, in fact, is the little red bible, the Handbook. Student Senate project, Y M-Y W edited. Here are recorded, by the Handbook committee, the details. Innumerable details that define for the Freshman his new environ- ment. Together with captions: Be on time-read bulletin boardf' The popularity of this volume extends beyond its intended audience. An important instrument by which the Staff wards off the uninteresting questions and still accomplishes its purpose of giving Freshmen the necessary technical information. But not only technical information. The fellows and girls who were on the Staff this year, being the ones who first met the Freshmen fellows and girls, were per- sonally responsible for impressions and attitudes that keep Earlham a community from generation to generation. These Freshmen are worthy. As Worthy as we are of being at Earlham, now. We are well acquainted. JUNIOR OFFICERS: Bill Heywood, John Mills, Sarah Hornbrook, Laura Lindley, Barbara Bogue. THH .IITIHHU THIHH TTT of THE HHIH TH HLHHY' WHOLE slew of good athletes, male and female. Journalists, actors, the POST Editor, Chloridia dancers. Music and political science- geology and Home Ec. Brains and beauty, these Juniors. They say. Third year is a year in which there is a shaping toward climax. One place where Third time's a charm doesn't necessarily apply. In this third year are fellows and girls who have been Freshmen- have made their beginning then and passed through that painful, free time. They are the ones who became Sophomores, and survived. Now they have reached full upper-class status-a definite advancement that includes the Wearing of cords, more evenings for the dorm girls, and the privilege of sitting behind the Seniors in chapel. FIRST ROW: Barbara Bogue, Rex Anderson, Carolyn Lukens, Gene Ellington, Lucy Higgs. SECOND ROW: Ralph Elliott, Gene Smith, Wilma Fessler, Sarah Hornbrook, Nesbert Dehoney. THIRD ROW: Bettie White, Anna Hays, Edwin Jordan, Roy Hamilton, Marian Bye. 'Q 'ZIV - 5 Q.1KiJ QF' l w ' 4 ' 4 F: .. ns. Juniors know the ropes. The process of college living is by this time familiar and natural. Youill never see a Junior exerting energy except where it will do him the most good. Such businesses as regis- tration, the menu, laundry, semester exams, have become familiar. and no variation is anymore a surprise. Juniors are either used to things as they are, and satisfied, or intent on acting upon some con- cern they have harbored for three years. The Juniors are neither beginning nor ending. but they have at- tained something in the way of experience and privilege for them- selves Beyond that, the label of J umorism is only a vague designation of time passed, credlt hours accumulated, and reputatlon gamed with Miss Long and the Deans There IS no quality that makes them d1S tingulshable out of the college mob Proof is, that the Junlors, like the William Heywood Carol Dowdell Rosemary Morrow John Mills Marcus Hadley Barbara Hagie Ruthanna Davis Al Brumbaugh Anne Merrill Peggy Blackburn Harry Miars Hartwell Jewell Patricia Bond Elizabeth Reynolds Carroll Boyle rest of us, answer to such innocent questions as You're a Freshman, 47 5, 977 hh I aren't you., or How does it feel to be a Senior. T e Juniors play so many roles that it's hard to be sure. -1 3' FIRST ROW: Winifred Harris, Monna Jean Rollf. Betsy Ross. Norwood Vail, John Schmidt. SECOND ROW: Willard Scantland, Betty Craycraft, Roydezi Parke, Dorothy Northrup, Ralph Richter. THIRD ROW: Frank Burnet. Ellis Lippincott. Margaret Holroyd. Frances Mayer, Mary Louise Study. Spirit and noise, zoom of team on field and floor. This year the Juniors set the pace! They fill in the organizations, the social events, the varied por- tions of college life with an interested and vital crowd. And three years is long enough time to develop lasting friend- ships. The groupings that have found themselves within three years FIRST ROW: Mauvis Johnson, Mark Ray- port, Justine Catron, Suzanne Wallace. SECOND ROW: Mary Mesner, Charles Laudernann, Laura Lindley, Ed Robinson. Marie Porter Joe Steck James Yount Margaret Pomeroy James Goar Bill Rogers Emmett Stegall Henry Lebovitz Denver Clouser 049' are small. Cut across the Registrar's alignment. These are the group- ings that are tangible. Evident at noon and at rush tables-in the libe on the seven-thirty bus. These, Juniors have found. Leadership comes from their ranks where responsibilities have settled. Appointments creep into schedules. Steadies emerge and are spotted. Faculty occasionally recall a first name. Majors and vo- cations are chosen. Junior Orals are a foreshadowing of finality. The road to glory lies ahead. Frank Weirich Gladys Binns Sara Kratz Martha Merritt Charles Hiatt Betty Bowen Martha Calvert Joe Payne Jean Ann Hamm Fred Hall Elinor Pennell Eleanor Evans THE t'0Pll0M0ltEt Not here, but somewhere we should like to see fully discussed the question of whether the Sophomore feels a let down or a build up when a Freshman class appears below him. Most people think of it as a build up. But perhaps it is only a build up because of a let down. Or FIRST ROW: James Bond, Paul Beisner. Helen Ford, Heidi Heubner, Camilla Hewson. SECOND ROW: Mariana Fogg, Barbara Sims, Rufus Kendall, Robert Wiechlnann, John Butler. THIRD ROW: Marjory Wolf, Marjorie Brown, Pamela Nelson, John Jones, Hubert Shields, Robert Taylor. SOPHOMORE OFFICERS: John Rogers, Bernie Coe, Betty Corbett, Betty Pennington, Clarabel Hadley, 44 ,J ef E '-ho: wiv let that go. These Sophomores are a sort of main- stay around here. Still a large class, but hampered neither by the added responsi- bilities of one more year, nor the inex- perience of one less year, they get around. There is the traditional Sophomore spirit -an unbounded sense of display, experi- ment, untraditionality. There is plenty of an- ..'.?' ' .ff ' ' ' FIRST ROW: Ellen Stanley. Mary Ellen Schmidt. Eleanor Beck- man, Eleanore Edwards, Phyllis Greene. Betty Wood. Elizabeth Corbett, Warren Alexander. John Stout. SECOND ROW: Torn Dudgeon. Robert Smock. Don Endicott, Ann Dougherty, Elizabeth Moore. Marjorie Van Etten. William Foster. Lucian De-Shong, Charles Wilson. THIRD ROW: Lucile Johnson. Martha Burns, Elaine BeYard. Norris Wisehart. Joseph Binford. Mary K, Laurent. Caleb Zimmer- man. Eldon Farmer. - t I ? . A1 g . MT, 'Ninn ll Ill ll Ill ll Ill I III -I Ill brains, plenty of humanity. The gamut of their activities and interests is the whole gamut. Class lines loyally held. But they are neither be- ginning nor ending. No out- ward circumstance that dis- tinguishes them from the rest of us. They are process. Process that knows its direc- FIRST ROW: Jeanne Ross, Bettie Hargrave, Ellis Breitenbach, James Butler, Jack O'Maley, SECOND ROW: David Jewell, Martha Bragg, Barbara Bull, Constance Fosler. William Moore. THIRD ROW: Robert Miller, James Rourke, Mary Pike, Robert Scott. FOURTH ROW: Constance Cryle, Clarabel Hadley, Barbara Barnard, Virginia Alford, Jean Peene. tion and begins its pursuit. That lends a touch of seriousness-sometimes. Cars in the dorm, cannons on the Heart, the bell at some ungodly hour while half of Earlham FIRST ROW: Helen Overton, Marjorie Hormell. Robert Jefferis. Julianne Richards. William Butterfield. Richard Brown. SECOND ROW: William Gingery. Jesse Overman. Jack Hart. Nancy Dilks. Betty Jane Stevens. Melvin Russell. THIRD ROW: Dorothy Mills. Elbert Jones. James Turner. Eunice Crawford. Martha Smith. Rosemary Jenkins. Josephine Olmstead, X H S- lv I ku .lf Tj 1 F -Z- J . m 's.. f Hall watches.-itls the Sophomores. Phe- nomena of broadening responsibilities. Great feed-ers and fad-ers. But they have become a part of Earlham by this time, with more of it before them than behind. An enviable position. FIRST ROW: Bernard Coe, Eugene Stinetorf, Charlotte Hueber, Doris Garner, Donald Joslin, Betty Pennington, John Rogers. SECOND ROW: Virginia Evans, Dorothy Webb, Priscilla Hoff- man, Phyllis Stallsmith, Marjorie Macklin, Kathryn Henley, Esther Wright, Hubert Zerkel, Arthur Wagner. THIRD ROW: Jane Egan, Ruth Kinkel, Marian Hadley, Anne Powell, Betty Stewart, Katherine Drischel, Ruth Applegate, Robert Painter, Ted Parker, Al Rigsbee, Earl Smith. LIFE 1 1' HE current Senior class, being of an inquisi- tive turn of mind, and possessing both argu- mentative and inventive genius, Qyeah, that's usj posed this question some time ago. To wit- why are We, or what makes us, as Earlham stu- dents, different? What is there about our four years of what is called Life here, that results in us? Now that's quite a problem even when one possesses, as we do, at least some of the outer in- dications of exposure to a college education- such as notebooks of various shapes and sizes. neat piles of old exams, both flunked and un- flunked, and many textbooks still resplendent in their unmarred, unopened newness. Pettyness We began at the beginment and figured very carefully all the way from the psychological ef- fects of Precedents on the very young and un- formed minds of the Freshmen, through the set- tling influence of studies, athletics, dramatics, and work, to the hectic rat-race, trailing slightly sweat-soiled clouds of glory, known as the Last Year In College. The answer, as the Sociology classes usually conclude, just depends-don't ask the Seniors what on. But we really felt it was quite unfair to pass more or less quietly from Earlham scenes without adding these ideas to the accumulation produced by the great and lowly and housed in that octagonal edifice, the Libe. Card game South window Earlham in private: day and night Well, to proceed, the 1942 aggregation's been foolin' 'round campus for four years now. So what? This is what happens. This and more, you merry little underclassmen. Now We're only Alumni, while you continue to wrap Earlham security around you like a wool blanket on a cold night, smothering the half- mad, yelling, fighting world down to a muffled roar. Save us a corner, while college life contin- ues, for more years than we care to live, to turn small, green Brussels Sprouts into very large, fine cabbagesg to give us four years of life that will flavor with richness the years that come after Commencement. -U 1f' 3I?' R'H A '- ' The Den How is it done? Thus: Take one raw, crisp, sprightly highschool graduate, turn over to the Precedent Committee, brown Well on one side then cool and season with coke and cookies from home. Having reduced to proper consistency, edu- cate in the following accomplishments: How to eat a la earlhamg make friends Csee Earlham Hall Lobbying procedurej g mess around the com- mons with noise, and the Libe without, how to bone, cram, and grind, and to listen to speakers from that odd place, the outside world. Then he must learn dress and posture-to avoid cleaning saddle shoes after carefully nursing them to a properly ripened state, to Wear class insignia, Gyp shop gathering 52 W 1 l l ,4 Ii Joe likes Earlham food Jim moves in whatever they may be, with nonchalance and easeg to slump, sprawl, amble, twist, or turn with the required worldly abandon, and without suf- fering any major dislocations. And to go home for vacations and come back, playing bridge all night both waysg to use the kicking post. the Cem., and Carp to the best advantageg and to prepare any subject during the Chapel program, according to the best methods. Somewhat more formal than this is the in- fluence of various kinds of work on the rather large percentage who are on duty at some time or another in the Libe, kitchens, athletic fields. the Dairy, the offices, and the stables. One picks Imi- This d0esn't really happen This doesn't happen often up the finer points of feeding that screaming ag- gregation that comprises, at any other than the noon hour, the student bodyg of supplying any book on any subject from the reserve room, stacks, or reference shelves-without the minor essentials of title or author, and with only the general subject, the size and the color of the vol- ume as cluesg of locating as many girls for boys, as the case may bej as is necessary at 7: 30-by the use of the same method as with booksg of drawing all kinds of lines on all sorts of playing fieldsg and of dressing up any horse to match any one of our riding co-eds. There are two other influences-or, more formally, curricular items-which contribute to li Some of the Day Dodgers Eat, sleep, work, and play the evolution of the well-rounded, finished Earl- hamite: namely, DayDodging and Campistry. The first includes catching buses-7:45 a.m. and others-in snow, cold, rain or sunshineg Den loafingg and pacifying one's family when they suddenly find themselves the proud possessors of a flitting shadow who appears in the late dusk to raid the icebox, and retire, flopping slightly from sheer weariness, only to emerge again at unholy morning hours, gulp coffee, grab books, and desperately chase a bus while gobbling a doughnut. The second item-Campistry-is a fa- vorite major field which, with a comprehensive, every Earlham student covers more or less com- Q pletely. It may be, and usually is, taken under one or more student instructors. If followed carefully this recipe should pro- duce a real Earlhamite with four years of exper- ience under his belt which simply can't be dupli- cated. But still deeper, under the froth of slang, clothes, dates, and kidding, they all will acquire, as we have, that happy sense of security in the protected world of Earlham College, where the benevolent ghosts of Daddy Hole, Dr. Woodward, and many others, stand guard in the shadows of tall elms and spreading maples. From their years to ours, and from ours to yours, this is the Life. Shining morning face Steam shower .Epi- THE FAC LTY ND llllt CLASSES l ITH 'I'HElI T EARLHAM COLLEGE we get our knowledge. There are an estimated twenty- five gallons of de ink slung per nine months here. An estimated four hundred and fifty da pens pooshed an estimated three hundred fifty miles each. An esti- mated one hundred reams of typing paper curl around the rubber coated rollers of the typewriters here, to emerge with the impression of much UD information C?J. Many books are checked out of our Library, and returned late. Reserve books may be taken out over night, and rushed back in the morning, making us late for our eight-olclocks. A sufficiently large and rather competent faculty takes up res- GEORGE D. VAN DYKE CLARA COMSTOCK Acting Dean of the College and Professor of Physics Dean of Women and Professor of Physical Educatioi for lVomen -7- - I . ' X - - . ,- ' ' William E. Berry . Prof. of Religion ' K S -1 ' - 'f 4' Prof. of Greek and Acting J , ' fn! f 1' f'fz . Q jiiffff f f' 1 V -' V .ff '4 George J. Gebauer ' 'n V .p ' ' Ass't. Prof. of Latin 1 , 'Q 4 if fi J' ' x ' ' 1. al f 5' rf ai f if , X.. n 4 , Aw. . r 1. 'X , . 7' ' V ,ff-ff',igfa,1fg.. tyranny? .yn 1 aff' : I , i , A Z1 Elmira Kempfon xi x Instructor in Art idence in Carpenter Hall every week day, and from that strategic position attracts young men and women from all over the campus, the city, and the surrounding territory. On many otherwise pleasant and normal days, many Earlhamites remain indoors to visit from one classroom to another. All this scholarly activity is proof that Earlham is, in fact, an educational institution. Classes, profs-the whole activity of schooling is the backbone of our days. There is the thing that brings us together-the purpose without which there would not be this accumulation of buildings and professors and students. It is a purpose that is so elementary and obvious in the set-up and habit of our life here that we soon learn to put it between eating and sleeping and give it as little effort. Like eating and sleeping, it becomes a normal event of every day's happening, and We think no more of its being the core of our life here than we think of missing breakfast or eating lunch. Study is embodied in the structure of Earlham. This campus spreads and gath- ers our group of buildings into a focus of education, a knot of endeavor toward knowledge. Carpenter is the heart of this educational plant-a building whose shape and volume is made for administration and instruction. Beginning with Physics, it stretches up through math, language, economics, literature. history to- ward the higher levels of art and music. There are the rooms and halls that we Millard S Markle Murvel R. Garner Ernest Atkins Wildman George A. Scherer PTO Of 131010921 Prof. of Biology Prof. of Chemistry Ass'r. Prof. of Clzemisrr I I Claude L. Stinneford Prof. of Economics Anna May Griffin Instructor in Shorthand and Typewriting ' . I '-- Milton E, Kraft Ass't. Prof. of Education fill with ourselves, shifting and dividing and distributing ourselves according to the bell and the schedule. There are the offices from which our professors emerge at four minutes past. There is the colonnaded wing that serves as a prelude to the President and the Deans-the comptometer and typewriters and desks, files, counters, machines, camouflaged by colonial furniture, oil paintings, blue lights and partitions of crossridged glass. Some rooms are strange to us: PreXy's law library, the music room with its white-ruled blackboard, the choir storeroom where Stage- craft meets, the Physics lab Cto most of the girlsj, the sewing room C to most of the boysj. But all of this brown-floored, quietwalled space is made for us to meet and dread in-a place equipped for the most intimate conference of student and Ass't. Prof. of English. Charles E. Cosand P1 of of English on the William N Truebloocl Foimclation r--onsr- professor, or the most wholesale academic failure and success. There are other centers of study here and there on the campus. Parry Hall stacks a lot of chemistry into a little space. Its sagging doors somehow manage to hold out over-jealous chemistry students after hours-its soft worn steps some- how survive the strain of the mass exit when the funny can buzzes for lunch-its awkwardly arched windows somehow breathe in enough air to keep experimen- ters alive in spite of their vile concoctions.-Bundy basement is crowded with bi- ology. The pipe-filled locker-lined corridor leads from labs to lecture rooms, widens into an exhibition hall with stuffed, petrified, modeled, bottled, and otherwise preserved specimens on display, and finally is lost in a maze of offices and labs and storerooms. The dorm seems to weigh heavily from above, and gathers some of the characteristic odor of formalin. The libe has an atmosphere of public hush and private concentration from eight a.m. to ten p.m. There is study in most insidious form. Wide flat tables spread themselves in a neat clutter of chairs. Books stand ready for reference. Ruby Davis Prof. of English C45 5-0' E. Merrill Root Prof. of English Anna Eves Q! A John R. Peters 1 Instructor in Geology James Thorp Acting Prof. of Geology Not pictured William Perry Kissick Associate Prof. of History James Arthur Funston Associate Prof. of History and Political Science with their thick shoulders bearing their names and authors. The stacks rise from ground to roof like a prison tier, lit by the strange light that filters through the glass floors. The Whole is made to be a place where knowledge may be transferred from one container to another with as little loss as possible. From these places where it is brewed and given out upon the world, study spreads to the most intimate parts of the campus. Wherever there is a desk in Bundy or in Earlham, some term paper may be written, or some typewriter may transcribe in prose or poetry. Wherever there is a soft chair, there may be a long lesson comfortably read, or news or literature comfortably digested. The break- fast line provides for a few last-moment glances before 8:00 o'clocks. Chapel may be a climax of studious effort. A bench, a hill, the shade of a tree, a commons booth or a bus can make a suitable surrounding for study in any form. But those who own and operate our study, those who move us to it and give it character, are the faculty. With them and for them we accumulate notes, def- initions, rules, facts, interpretations, and explanations that embody our knowl- edge of many subjects. But, more than that, their attitude and their experience go into our accumulation. They mold and develop our interest. Listening to Prof. Root's lectures, as he shyly interprets Cyrano's love for Roxane, We decide that English isn't so boring, after all. We pick up Funstonls method of outlining every- thing, and are so interested in hearing point 3 under A in his daily lesson that we forget to listen for the 12:30 dinnerbell. Like Berndtson, we come to think of such innocent and beautiful things as music and free will and synapses in terms of his shocking examples and shocking exams. And While Bruner waits. with his Florence Long Associate Prof. of Mathematics and Head Resident of Earlham Hall Louis Fein Instructor in Mathematics and Physics and Head Resident of Bundy Hall 1 l Ethel Mae Miller Asst. Prof. of Home Economics Elsie Marshall rof, of Home Economics and Dietitian .um df' I f Q? -1 . ., A., .Q Auretta M. Thomas Assyt. Prof, of Modern Languages Martha Pick Ass't Prof. of Modern Languages Arthur Matthew Charles Prof. of Modern Languages tongue in his cheek, for our thoughts to catch up, we can feel our prejudices and our interests re-arranging themselves in the light of his latest disclosure. Knowing the professors is part of our education. All of our Earlham culture is colored by their personalities-on and off duty. Their classroom behavior is re- flected in our methods and beliefs-and beyond the formality of class , they model for our critical taste in character. Mr. Cox, synthesis of tempest and calm-actor, singer, artist, father of four-seethes alternately fire and oil on the troubled wa- ters, In his three-ring performance he enacts an entire operetta by himself. And, tipping the chairs in the front row and wrapping his foot around the rostrum, or perhaps leaning against the windows, Cosand lectures interminably on Beatrice and Dante visiting Paradise. How does he manage to lecture in such detail without any notes?-Everybody knows Miss Longg it's her job to be known. When David comes down from Chicago to see June, we always make bets whether Miss Long or June will greet him first. Lithe, and more attractive than ever with her new hair-do, she deserves more than she gets from us. Mr. Gebauer is known for his quiet and subtle wit, but when winter came his dense fur coat made him con- spicuous far across the campus. Lauretta C. Mosier Instructor in Modern Languages Edwin J. Pattee Ass't. Prof. of Modern Languages '-1 A. O. Vioni Instructor in Band Marjorie Beck Lohman Instructor in Piano C. Willard Kisling Instructor in Organ and Theory of Music Dail W. Cox Prof. of Voice Gentle, kind, understanding-thatls our Dr. Garner. We all go away a little better for having known him. Watch him with his little Bea Anne or out on a field trip. We all can take a lesson in living. And gentleman Doc. Berry, who, no matter what dumb mistakes we make, does a cover-up job to save our faces. Ruby Davis, good sport, gladly played guinea-pig so that the rest of us could enjoy a certain student chapel and the Day-Dodgers, Quiz Program. Not only did she sit bravely alone among a group of profs of the male gender, but she stole the show with her brilliance and ability at quick organization.-Who says the Ph D's don't know what's going on! 'if Prof. Charles, Miss Marshall, and Dr. Markle have been a part of Earlham for so much of their lives that they exemplify the very spirit of the college. Professor Charles, handsome, erect, patrician, sponsors the college cause in everything from buying its hogs to chauffering its travelling entertainers. Miss Marshall's career has varied from phys. ed. to foods Prof. Now as dietitian of the college and man- ager of the dormitory, she is always worried when there aren't enough trays or silver in lunch line. She bears the responsibility of feeding and seating an always varying college population. Dr. Markle is best known for the patter with which he accompanies the movies he shows. We realize that his influence and ability extend beyond Bundy basement and the Faculty parlor when the Audubon society throngs to the campus. A heavy tread down the hall usually announces Prexy, the man of many ac- complishments-one of which, lately announced, is composing poetry about the road as he heads toward spots where Earlham interests lie. He meets us over a Frederick I-licks Norbert Silbiger Arthur E. Berndtson I7lSfT1LCfOT H1 VIOUH Instructor in Speech Instructor in Philosophy aw '- Charles M. Woodman Instructor in Religion Kathyrn Weber Instructor in Physical Education for Women J , Owen Huntsman Director of Physical Education for Men rostrum at chapel and dashes out of town, leaving Susan to take care of mnurner able details, and Funston to take care of the News course Dr Scherer goes run Edwin P. Trueblood Professor of Speech and Supervisor of Athletics, Emeritus fs-...,,,,-g ning into Parry Hall, hat slanting over his eyebrows and his toneless whistle fol- lowing after him. He proceeeds into the classroom where we sit and watch the chalk accumulate on his coat. And then we meet Grville, or he catches us, and in that nice way of his he has us signed up to enter the next speech contest before we realize it. Mr. Kisling eases our nervousness, as we sit on the platform, by a prelude of brilliant organ music. Someday it will be interesting to look back and remember our impressions of those many hours in class-the strange ideas that accompany our wandering attention. When Spring comes with all its suggestiveness, we sit in Miss Comstocks Art apprec. class and wonder if her hat on the chair wouldnlt just fly out of the window and away. Or we sit in Pattee's class where we can just see the tops of the pines over in the cem, and forget whether aller is conjugated with etre or with avoir-it doesn't seem to matter. The 1:20 drouse period is best spent in typing where we have to sit up straight and pay attention while Miss Griffin. watch in hand, does the rounds. Kraft's classes are really rare: the side-show is worth the David K. Bruner FQ pi Prof of Soczology ,1 Howard C. Morgan Ass't Prof. of Speech and English E. Orville Johnson Instructor in Speech l i 5' i Mtv iq 6 AZ, l Mfr ' If l V -32? --ef-s ' i l i Sarah Geist Elizabeth Jenkins Dorothy Bond Opal Thornburg Acting Librarian Assistant Librarian College Nurse Registrar and Secretary of the Faculty price. Dr. Kraft curls up with his yard-stick, or caresses the stand with his limber fingers. He makes us squirm when we don't know our lessons. If you can't pro- 70 nounce the difficult euuuuuuu with your lips rounded, you'll learn from Miss Pick. A great believer in imitation, she practices pronunciation in front of her classes with a little mirror, much to everyone's delight. European in procedure, her classes are a colorful change from the usual. Math was a Htoughl' class until Lou Fein started illustrating his motion problems by telling of his own exper- iences in a Model-T going to Indianapolis 'fat variable speeds, sometimes not mov- ing at all. And Mr. Kissick makes his classes Search for the cryptic meaning of his layer cakes, time lines, and X's in circles. L F Ross H. P. Ross Virgil F. Binford Robert N. Huff College Phystczan College Physician Business Manager and Super- Ass't. to the President intendent of Buildings and Grounds 1' 1 No one seems to want to admit that he studies around here. At 4:00 the halls are full of hurrying students, and then suddenly empty. The tennis courts and Reid, Constock, and Van Dyke fields throng with sports-men-and-Women. Meet- ings, games, social events, and feeds fill our evenings and half the nights. But still like a shadow that hangs behind us in the form of exams and D-Warnings, there is the undercurrent of classes and faculty that shapes our days here at Earlham. l .1 ATHLETIC AT EARLHAM HE Athletic scene on Earlham Campus . . . where the Marauding Maroons show their true value . . . the melting pot of energy, enthusiasm, and emotions . . . where brawn holds its own with brain . . . and the one place where our school shows spirit and loyalty through the heat of competition . . . pride in victory and sports- manship in defeat . . . where everyone knows when they hear the old victory bell, that we've been victorious once more . . . the roaring bonfires with freshman doing the snake dance . . . the athletic squads rate keen student support and gain fair results in competition . . . each player carrying on that spirit of sportsmanship which is Earlham tradition. In the crisp air of autumn afternoons come shouts during hours of rigorous practice . . . the barking of signals . . . smack of leather and hurtling bodies along with the shrilling Whistle of the referees . . . the rush down the field . . . the crack of clashing sticks . . . and in the distance . . . up hills and down . . . with the rhyth- mic pace they have set for themselves are the Cross Country boys . . . the very essence of stamina and en- durance . . . empty bleachers are soon filled . . . the crowd roars as the ball arches, then ripples through the net . . . enthusiasm is high . . . each team highly hopeful 'till the Victory is won . . . the crack of the gun as the gals hit the water-swimming their Way to a new high in the Intercollegate Telegraphic Meet . . . the incessant chattering of the infield as the umpire yells play ball . . . the crack of the bat and the smack of the ball into the catcher's mitt. Yes-Athletics at Earlham where Earlham men lose gracefully and win with honor! NOTE: Bob Allen pole vaulted one afternoon. Mr. Garner put him on a strip of movie film. We made some enlarged negatives from his prints, and then made prints of our own, taking every second frame out of the strip. We sent these prints to the engraver, and they made a series of eighteen cuts from them. These cuts are printed at the top of each odd-numbered page. The point is, that Cif you haven't discovered it by this timej you can reproduce Mr. Allen's jump in action, simply by flipping the pages, proceeding from the front to the back of the book. And helll go into reverse if you do. REVIEW of the Tlllll of llA'l'TLE in Men's Uportv When school opened in September, ten football lettermen and a number of promising new-comers slipped into their rnoleskins to toughen up for a seven- game schedule. As the squad went through practice sessions in September sunlight, it became apparent that Coach Huntsman would have an adequate first-string eleven but would be lacking in reserve strength. On September 27, Defiance College from the Buckeye state came over to raise the curtain on the grid season. The Quakers turned in a creditable opening performance, topping the Defiance aggregation by a 13-0 margin. The Quakers' two counters came in the second quarter, one on a run by Rex Anderson and the other when Neb DeHoney caught an end-zone pass. Runs by Anderson and Captain Garoffolo were outstanding in this encounter. The next Saturday the Quakers journeyed to Franklin to meet the Franklin Grizzlies. The hosts won out 14-7 to give Earlham its first defeat of the season. Neither squad could get much spirit on the muddy field, but the Grizzlies hit pay- dirt on two occasions with long passes. Earlham evaded a shut-out when Denver Clouser caught Jack Wagner's long pass in the closing moments of the struggle. Senior lettermen Garoffolo and Smith. x. r 76 B L Q Ortwein, Garoffolo, Coach r l Huntsman: the strategists, Wabash's Little-Giants, our old rivals, came into town the next week-end for the annual battle. In this encounter we were downed 14-7 by the visitors. The Quakers battled the Wabashmen on better than even terms in the first half, scoring on Gene Ellington's run after Bill Gingery's intercepted pass. It was nip-and-tuck until extra weight and reserve strength of the Cavemen began to tell in the final quarter. The visitors scored twice, late in the game, to clinch the affair. Next, the encounter with the Evansville Purple Aces on Reid Field. On the opening kickoff Rex Anderson took the ball and galloped the length of the field to give the Quakers an early advantage. This was too good to last, for the Purple g . 3, SQ i 4 . 'g ill I: ,': ry . u R . ..3 ff,-2ii?Af5'S4f?Tf'7gQif A, K4 1 - ,,, 1 Us' AX X an :ei . , I, -. ' ' fx, N ,W ' M, f 1 f 521 V MW di? MX I ,E-,iz-1 .. friyj 'gq fi' f' iv' 'Tig 1 1+ if M, w-'mm A 24efgfri,,Ze,fysP23,53'iQ, www-21411 M Link A3 , M. Aces got their smooth working backfield in gear in the third stanza and began to march. The visitors registered twice in the third quarter and in the final quarter to win 27-7. The Quakers got back into the win column by de- feating Rio Grande 18-0 in a ragged encounter on Reid Field. The visitors had been labeled the Winless Win- ders , but the home boys had trouble downing them until the attack started rolling late in the game. Homecoming! A day when old grads return to a campus golden with leaves to renew old memories and to sit in the Homecoming football crowd. A dreary day it was this year for the football fellows, the hockey gals, and Queen June and her court on the bleachers. The painted banners which marched before the eyes of the crowd and the paper maroon and white mops were shak- ! E , . C 1 5'-' en desperately in moments of excitement but mostly held limp in hand. However, lVIum,' in button hole, most of us pulled a blanket closer for warmth and stuck out the afternoon to see undefeated Rose Tech meet Earlham and win 27-0. As finale to the season, the Quakers travelled to meet the DePauw Gridders in their new stadium. The Tigers let fly numerous passes in the falling snow and turned loose a running attack from a Tn formation to win 32-0. The final game of Garoffolo, fullback, Phil Smith and Denver Clouser, linesmen, was over with the last whistle. Letters were awarded to Joe Garoffolo, Rex Anderson, Gene Ellington, Ellis Breitenback, Robert Haas, John Mills, Jack O'lVIaley, Joe Steck, Phil Smith, James Turner, and Harold Wright. The squad. honey. Anderson. Ellington. The backfield: Garoffolo. De- W, .. if About the time of the half we would invariably be- come aware that the cross-country boys were pacing in- to the final laps. Around the track we watch them ap- proach, clear the way, and stretch the tape to breast the diaphragm of the winner. Coach Dave Hawk had three veterans, Bill Rogers, Roy Hamilton, and Eddie Jordan along with newcomers Earl Smith and John Rogersj on his squad as the season opened. A winning combin- ation of men it was. Led by Bill Rogers to an undefeated season, and the capture of the Little-State title at West CROSS COUNTRY TEAM: Earl Smith, Bill Rogers. John Rogers. Roy Hamilton. Eddie Jordan Lcaptaind. Not pictured. Wayne Guernsey. Q ,f 'F E 'f L pt. ,X . N.. 's '- fx' - 1 I U5 ja r I ' M f5'F7 ' ' -+R' 1 Lafayette, winning over Butler, DePauw, Indiana Central and Ball State! In the National meet at Lansing, Michigan, we made a creditable showing. Prospects seemed fine for basketball when drills began at the end of the foot- ball season. Coach had Bob Rollf, Rex Anderson, Ned DeHoney, Gene Ellington, and John Mills, and the new material was promising. The field house echoed with the thump of bouncing balls, the swish of nets, and the yells of the hardwood hopefuls. Weeks of preparation and then the open- ing encounter with the Engineers of Rose Tech. A look at the season would lead one to believe that the 1941-1942 record of the Quaker netters was not of Indiana Conference caliber. The squad had good players for every position, good spirit, and fan support, but when the team hit the floor all was in reversia! One proof of the ableness of the squad is the feat accomplished by Rex Ander- son. He tallied 201 points during the playing season-set a new record by extending Coach Huntsman's previous mark of 196 points. Captain Bob Rollf was called to the army in mid-season-a serious loss- and Neb DeHoney was put on the sick list after the Cedarville game which was one of the few Quaker victories. The trip east spot-lightedl' the campaign with a win over Swarthmore. CThey still talk about it in the East, and how they rang the victory bell back home!J Win 34-30 ' ' ' Ellington Leads H-'1S5F'FZ:g:' Cagers to First BALL snnzl League Triumph L- Lcwkrvxlla nm Huey , , 'rs own Tm: Annu On snmx ommfu Y' by Fm-.1 www: :mtv , , .. s M I 3555 -V - . 5 5 To-B .,.. ., , 4 6 aroomngs hw Bob Martin, Gene Ellington, Rex Anderson, John Mills, Charles Wilson. Jack Hart, Bob Rollf, Bob Taylor, Jim Butler, Ellis Breitenbach, Neb Dehoney, Buddy Patrick, Ted Parker. IAILHAII F057 I For Eastern Tour Invaders To ,Meet Rider, Susquehanna, Swarthmore swnmmc users Ax: M cmcnuzn sscwsr: or ,f ' msurrrcuyr mrsnssr Qi -ww-rm., U.: xwquuvuugemun 35-my s ex 4 .N , . .. sxaunwwnfqxail' ! , ,.'5 Q ' f 'LJ How well we remember-Bob Martin's expression when Huntsman an- nounced the starting lineup, and he was in it: Gene Ellington squaring off with Odel of Taylor, we would have had to pick Gene up with a spoon if the fight hadn't been stoppedg Doerner of Evansville evading Earlham defenseg Phil Ort- wein taking over at Morristown after organizing such a good intramural programg Buddy Patrick and his fancy Dans from the center of the floorg Breitenback mis- sing his pivot shot consistentlyg Johnny Mills and his first and ten attitudeg Bob Taylor who practiced every night and then found out he wasn't eligibleg those , A rip roaring preliminaries played by thefreshmen and J. V.'sg the girls in Greens- burg, Pennsylvania, who almost lured the team astray, the playing of student man- ager in the Indiana Conference, and lastly, Huntsman chewing gum as fast as the players ran. The Navy V-7 leaves Earlham most of this year's team for the 1942-43 squad. Swimming became a major sport this year for McCammon, Burlingame, But- ler, White, Butterfield, Rhoads, and Wixom, under the coaching of Krum Jordan, athletic director of the Richmond Y.lVl.C.A. The Quaker water-dogs swam them- selves into shape to meet DePauw and Ball State. Frank Burnet and Charles Mc- Carnmon did most of the scoring, each taking first in their respective speciality. Burnet the 150 yard back splashg lVIcCammon the 200 yard breast stroke . . . Re- turn meets were cancelled because of a lack of interest and the withdrawal of Charles lVIcCarnmon from school. F 87 When the call came for track, slightly over a dozen Earlham men appeared on Reid Field as candidates for the spring sport-but the Quaker cause was not lost for among the candidates were stellar Rex Anderson-high jumper, hurdler and all around mang the Rogers brothers-distance runners extraordinary: Mark Kishego, Earl Smith, Ed Jordan-the middle distance runners: and also points- gatherers as Bob Scott, Bob Allen, Jon Thornburg, Jim Butler, Bill Gingery, Earl Estes. Other coaches might have been dismayed at the task of building a winning track team from a dozen men, but our mentor of the cinder paths proceeded to develop a squad of thinlies of which we are proud. Viewing their record of one loss and five wins, it might be said through a famous figure- Never before have so many owed so much to so few. The Maroon thinlies dropped their first concert, and Rose Poly left the field with a winning score of 69-62 after taking the relay. The outstanding event of the meet was the high jump in which three men cleared the bar at six feet. Back on the winning side of the ledger, the thinlies nosed out Wabash to start their Victory string. This was the only meet held on foreign grounds. The fi- nal score was 69-62. Taylor was the next victim, falling by a score of 47 le-83 Va. In this meet Bill Rogers came close to cracking the mile record with an outstanding performance. The Depauw thinlies were taken into camp by a 76-55. In this meet blond Bill Rogers lowered the school record in the half mile to 2: 00.5. This triumph marked the first time the trackmen had downed both Wabash and DePauw in one season for a number of years. Hanover's Hilltoppers were taken into camp 801f2-50 V2 on the following Sat- urday. The Quaker's power in the track events more than matched the visitors' power in the field events. In the last meet of the season, Wittenberg was downed 751f2--551f2. The defeat of the Ohioans marked the fifth straight win. Huntsman then began grooming his performers for the annual state meets. Outstanding performers were Rex And- erson who averaged around twenty points per contest, and Bill Rogers, who was never defeated in the half mile or mile, and anchored the relay team to many a win. STANDING: Lou Fein, Charles Wilson. Del- bert Duckworth, Art Wagner, Jack O'Maley. Henry Lebovitz, Guy Jones. Marion Alexan- der. Bill Berry, John Mills, Ralph Dean, John Schmidt, Paul Beisner, Frank Weirich. KNEELING: Neb Dehoney, Jim Turner, Bob O'Maley, Bob Martin, Ted Parker, Jesse Overman. Wilford Frazier, George Van Dyke. The first mdoor baseball practices brought out what looked to be an all-star squad potential power reported 1n quantity Out on the field the first games scheduled were played and lost with seeming l1ttle reason for the losses other than that the team failed to click or lacked enthusiasm. Our better hitters were slow in warming up-and, coupled with mediocre pitching, even a slight disadvantage could not be overcome. Pitching the winning game of the Quaker nine was Ralph Dean, Centerville freshman, who set his old schoolmates from Hanover College down 14-5. Jack O'- Maley worked in the hill part time and turned in several good innings. Guy Jones, after four years of varsity playing, was awarded the Senior play- er award. A faithful, consistent player, he was shifted from the mound to the out- field for the bulk of this year's games. Under Phil Ortwein, assistant in the Physical Education Department the in- tramural program got off to a good start with Cross Country running taking the individual honors. Colder weather approaching, six-man football teams were organized from the four intramural groups and named the Auks, Yuks, Taks, and Sigos. The Yuks proved to have the bulk of the best players and won most of their football games. Moving into the fieldhouse for the basketball program, they had to fight to keep the Auks away from the team title. Spurring the non-varsity fellows was the feminine attention given them from the sidelines. Good crowds added new life and pep. Leading player in the winter division was Bob Smock. Intramurals slip into softball with the approach of Spring, and interest in ten- Parke and Hill demonstrate for the fenc- ing class, which developed many enthusi- asts this year. X. 13' Dudley Stinson, Harvey Buckman, Bill But- terfield Ralph Richter, John Stout. nis is high as the sun begins to warm the courts. We entered tennis, this year, without a veteran and still emerged on the upper bracket of the Conference standings. Tay- lor fell to us and we played to a tie with Wabash. Ralph Richter and Bill Butterfield shar- ed number one rnan honors. Harvey Buck- man, Dudley Stinson, John Stout, and re- serves Fritz Wiegelmesser and Art Wag- ner carried the rest of the load. Earlham's superior courts brought the 1942 State Tennis Meet to our campus again. Crowds gathered as the best college tennis stars Won and lost and the tourna- ment came into the finals. Winning in the first round were Stout, Bucknian. and Stinson. Next year promises an experi- enced team! WIMENK SPURTC: the Course of the Year rf. .. T Q4-s, , NSPIRED by competent coaches, enthusiastic interest in field hoc- key, wonderful weather, and the promise of a good varsity team, hockey got off to a successful season early in September. The fresh- men class boasted new material-a few experienced players who had taken an active part in hockey competition in the East. All classes Cexcept the studious seniorsj had full teams out to win and the class tournament was an exciting onwthe juniors vic- torious. The seniors, in spite of their lack of players, came through the season Cor should We say the Whole yearj with a fine spirit of play and sportsmanship which in itself was unbeatable. The afternoon of the annual exhibition hockey game the glad- to-be-back fans and hockey enthusiasts gathered from far and near in spite of the rain to witness the battle of sticks with North Shore of Chicago. Commy's girls did themselves proud. Stickwork, endurance, I, Coach Comstock I 1 I . l 1 l l 1 1 i N i 4 V 95 good defense, skill and steadiness, and splendid teamwork character- ized the game as one up to Earlham's reputed high standard. Dottie Reeder, as W.A.A. Hockey Manager, worked with class captains Hoover, Kinkel, Kratz, and Kaighn boosting hockey with an enthusiasm sincere and fine. On Honorary Varsity this year were: Dorothea Reeder, Miriam Hoover, Ruth Kinkel, Elinor Pennell, Elea- nor Evans, Sarah Hornbrook, Martha Merritt, Marian Bye, Anne Powell, Sarah Kratz, Dorothy Mills, and Margaret Blackburn. STANDING: Powell, Kinkel, Evans, Mills, Reeder. KNEELING: Kratz, Bye, Hornbrook, Blackburn. F- Y, ,,,, . -Z? ' jg,-,M,W,,,,,,,,m ,,,, , W ,W , ,., . ., x -,K4 I t vm 1 , v V. . ,gf QP-X. ,,.!! 5- . :S I V e- 'wg , g .q A, , , ,,: . V, V dr? f 5 i 3 ,i -syn.. - A . ra.-sim. . nfs, TOP: VOLLEYBALL-Hornbrook, Evans, Bogue Merrill, Merritt, Pennell, Kratz, Blackburn. CENTER: BASKETBALL-Bogue, Merrill, Pomeroy Minus the women's gym and in spite of the fact that we had to dodge baseballs, pole-vaulters, hurdlers, dash men, and put up with hog shows and what not, Earlham women rallied and came through their basketball season with a splendid team,-talented enough to beat the University of Cincinnati in the Cincy Play Day last March. The undefeated juniors were again victorious and for the second time their set of numerals was burned into the basketball panel in the W.A.A. lodge. The sophomores gave their opponents a close battle typified by hard, quick passes, and uncanny shots from Mills, Powell, and Smitty. The seniors were justly proud in having a full team for every game-and the freshmen were not to be sneezed at, with Maris and Kaighn at their head. A little delayed, due to Manager Hoover's comprehensive, the basketball banquet finally arrived with class songs all to the tune of Deep in the Heart of Texas and quick speeches by class captains Briggs, Lukens, Mills, and Chapman. And in the fieldhouse this year we held our volley ball tourna- ment, managed by Ruth Binns. Who won?-that's right, you're right -the juniors did it again-plenty of material, plenty of practicing! Right along with basketball and volley ball through the winter afternoons Earlham women played at swimming, badminton, ping pong and had a few hare and hound hikes to keep up their fight for future 'fysical fitness. Led by Marilyn Miller, W.A.A. swimming man- ager, our swimmers entered the National Intercollegiate Telegraphic Swimming Meet, placed Earlham, and made us proud. The geology v Kratz, Higgs, Lukens, Pennell, Blackburn, Hornbrooki Evans. BOTTOM: HOCKEY-Merrill, Merritt, Evans, Bogue, Hombrook, Blackburn, Bye, Kratz, Lukens, Pennell. 96 bus rides to the Y pool every Tuesday afternoon, the passing of swimming tests, the wheeling and racing of sprinters in practice for class teams, artificial respirators!-the pool offers good fun all year round. The juniors doomed the senior morale by destroying their proud, victorious record held for two years. The seniors' last hope went up in the splash. Their pride was dampened-and had it not been for the cap and gown to restore our fair class ego, none of us might have Won an A on posture day. As Spring rolled around and the 1942 Sargasso went to press, spring sports were well under way and tournaments soon to start. The women's phys. ed. department boasted the largest enrollment 3629 - - - in spring sports for many years. Tennis again ranked high in popu- larity and players were fortunate in having early weeks in April in which to swing the racquet and feel their form. The ladder tourna- ment promised to be exciting. When the greens were mowed, bags of clubs and balls Cprecious this yearj were dusted off and the dan- delion sprinkled campus was soon dotted with golfers in colorful skirts. Archery on the new range south of the lodge drew shooters both in the autumn and in early spring. Narrow white lines will soon mark the trim green fields and train- ing for the track and field meet will begin. Baseball enthusiasts will be practicing daily. Chapman pitches the freshmen-batting them into shape for keep competition. Happy day when class is dismissed to attend a real Earlham game across the lot-Bud just as anxious to go as the rest of us. Airy days to hike down Clear Creek Hemancipating the American legs -making up for the bounce that is to go with the last lost golf ball and deflated basketball . . . Riding We will go with the aid of Prof. Charles' horses. Breakfast rides! And although the horses do have a Way of eating a hole in the W.A.A. treasury, we'll love thern heartily, as we love all the vigor of sport. at mail r - e e I' P0lt'l'ltAI'I' Fleet-footed, not only in track, but on the foolball field and on the basketball floor, Rex Hunk Lee Anderson is hailed by many as the greatest male athlete ever seen on the Earlham campus. Guards de- plore their lack of height and limited number of hands as they try to stop his on- rushing tosses from all spots on the floor. During the 1941-1942 basketball sea- son he broke the scoring record, accounting for 201 points. This mark bettered by six points the mark set by the present Coach, J. O. Huntsman. One of the first to join Earlham's navy V-7, Rex will be back with us next year. Who knows what records he will set then! Roni--An entirely different type of player, Bob has contributed greatly to the success of teams in his own unique way. Calm and unhur- ried, he was effective both on offense and on defense. He was a mainstay on the Quaker Nine for three years, being able to play any position on the field, and he would have been co-captain of the baseball team had the army permitted him to finish the school year. Given the Varsity Club award for being the most valuable senior player on the basketball team, Bob is excellent proof of the value of sports in the life of the college youth. ' ' Recognized for her swimming by Earlham and by nearby cities and counties, Marilyn Miller paced the Maroon and White women to a high place in the National Intercollegiate Telegraphic Swim- ming Meet this year. Earlham finished third in the group of schools under one thousand enrollment and seventh in the total group. Marilyn, always the same, never ruffled or excited, has been one of the most valuable members in the Quaker swim. Good wishes and admiration go with her as she leaves to begin another type of life. ers.. Tall, blond, and a sticker for training rules, Bill is the new half- g l mile king at Earlham, having set a new mark this year, 2: 00.5, for the distance. During the cross country season he finished first in all the sched- uled meets and led the team to victory in state competition against schools much larger than Earlham. Bill, also an excellent student, finds time to devote to activ- ities outside the classroom. He has another year to run for the Maroon and White and we look to him to set another record in track. ,vu . .a I J G I Jumpin' Joe was one of these slow easy-going persons who 00 00 could always seem to get just as much done as the person who hurried. For four years he played on the football team, and he received the coveted EH blanket for the services he rendered during that period. He also play- ed on the baseball and basketball teams, winning letters in both. Joe was the typical college athlete and will be hard to replace in the hearts of those who knew him. We are sure he is doing the same good work with Gene Tunney at the Navy Training Station. Penneu--Penny, a Westtown grad., spreads an Eastern glow about wherever she goes-leading the women riding enthusiasts in her official capacity as the riding manager of the W. A. A. She plans for the care of the horses and gives riding instructions to the girls. In addition to the stable activity, she was a member of the Women's hockey varsity, where, speeding to- ward her opponent, tackling and dodging, she was really in therev leading her team. Not like other girls, she delights in doing things supposedly not meant for the weaker sex. A member of the Women's Hockey varsity, Eleanor Evans was in the forward wall and instrumental in scoring Quaker tallies through the opposition's goalie. Extremely fast and aggressive. centering the ball with a long hard drive, El never quit play or gave up until the final whistle. Not content with just hockey, she is a good basketball player and takes an active part in the other activities of the women's athletic program. Gu Four years on the baseball team is the proud record of this Quaker y hurler who moved up from the sand lots of Richmond to become a pitcher for the Earlham nine. Guy was captain during his senior year and re- ceived the player award given by the Varsity Club. An assistant in the depart- ment of Economics, he plans to do post grad. work in that field. Better known as Pot, Lois is one of the best known and liked women on the campus. Assistant to Miss Weber in the Physical Education department, President of W.A.A., and an ardent sports enthusiast who loves the out-of-doors in true Scout fashion. She runs up points for the senior swimmers. Lois plans a leadership or teaching position in phys. ed. Versatile, speedy, playing a grand dependable part in any Earl- nham line-up, these class Dottie as one of the best all-around women athletes on the campus. You see her wherever women are engaged in some athletic contest. She was leading scorer in the basketball tournament, and is equally at home on the hockey field, tennis court, and baseball field. Dottie can be counted on to do good work and, sophomore that she is, she will be an indis- pensable member of Earlham's teams for two more years. Jordan--Eddie Jordan, as captain of the Cross Country team and main cog in the track activity of the Maroon and White, piloted the 1941 Cross Country squad to a very successful season. Both he and the squad completed the campaign with an enviable record. Steady and dependable, he runs with a stride beautiful to watch. One of the busy men on the campus, he has had posts on the campus newspaper and will direct the 1942 fall term for the Day Dodger association. Dottie Reeder, serving three seasons on the hockey field with 1 the Earlham varsity hockey team, contributed to a smooth running defense. We could always count on her to be right there, backing up her own left wing and tackling with a calm sureness. She was the hockey manager during her senior year. The team will feel a great loss in Dottie, not only from the standpoint of playing, but also because of her personal appeal. Dottie held a high office in almost any organization of which she happened to be a member-a born leader. 'PHE ATHLETIC URGA I A'I'l0llU With trays of food, and nothing but business UQ on their minds, the fellows in their Maroon and White sweaters head for the East dining room for their regular bi-monthly meeting. The Varsity Club, an outstanding Earlham organization, is made up of those athletes who have won their letters in one or more intercollegiate sports. Initiation into the group is always amusing, and sometimes strenuous-the newest recruits climb trees and scan their line by flashlight, search- ing half the night for the coveted letter hidden somewhere on campus. ILE: 53 VARSITY CLUB. STANDING: Breitenbach Turner, Stout. McCoy, 'McCracken. Wilson L14 honey, Mills, Steck. KNEELING: J. Rogers, B, Rogers. Miars. E Smith, G. Jones. Gordon. Weirich, Gingery Jack Butler. ..4v - J. O'Ma1ey, Ellington, Wright. Anderson. De- Rogers, E. Smith, Mills Highlighting the season, of course, is the awarding of the E blankets to the outstanding Senior member of the football and the basketball teams. This year Father Lard Garaffolo, and Bobby Rollf, profited, respectively, and left our fair Campus to do their bit to physically educate Uncle Sam! The Varsity Club concession at football and bas- ketball games, where spectators mingle, drowning their sorrows and their joys in cokes, is the means by which the club makes money to use for improvements in Earlham's athletic system. The Homecoming Banquet reunites former muscle men, who tear apart the afternoon's game and compare each play with the one they made way back- believe it or not. Earlham games, then and now, are good to remember. Membership in the Double E Club is the ambition of any versatile athlete. A purely honorary organization for lettermen of two or more sports, the Double E meets with the Varsity Club and joins them in all their activities. DOUBLE E, STANDING Ellington Anderson, Dehoney, Breitenbach SEATED: J. O'Maley, B Rogers J Play for fun . . . fun fun for fun's sake . . . class tournaments . . sports banquets with songs, jokes, candles and all the trimmings . . . the thrilling Exhibition Hockey game Cin spite of the sleetj . . . tea in the Lodge-a roaring fire . . . Dormitory Fund F rolic . . . war, and our campaign to keep fit . .. Belinda Bulge posters . . . Play Day at Cincy-victory in basketball . . . then in the spring: tournaments in golf, tennis, baseball, track and archery Juniors victorious in the swimming meet . . . Marilyn leading us to third place in the Central U. S. Telegraphic meet . . . a beautiful morning for May Day . . . a lovely Queen . . . and last of all-clirnaxing a very successful year- the W. A. A. banquet. Carrying on healthful and recreational activities for the benefit of those on Earlham's campus is the yearly objective of the Women's Athletic Association in its many varied activities. Membership in- TOP LEFT. W.A.A. BOARD, STANDING: White, Turner, Hornbrook. SEATED: M. Smith, L. Lindley, E. Evans, Weber, Hoover, R. Binns, Briggs, Fuller, Calvert, Reeder, Pennell, Kratz, Blackburn. TOP RIGHT: EE CLUB, STANDING: Hoover, Fuller, M. Smith, R. Binns, Turner, Briggs, Merritt. SEATED: Reeder, Bye, Hornbrook, Evans, Pennell, Kratz, Blackburn. BOTTOM LEFT: E CLUB, TOP ROW-Hornbrook, Evans, G. Binns, M. Smith, R. Binns. Merritt, Turner. SECOND ROW: Reeder, Fuller, Mills, Polk, Blackburn, Briggs. TI-HRD ROW: Hoover, Pennell, Bye, Kratz. BOTTOM RIGHT: EC CLUB: Hoover, Pennell, Hornbrook, R. Binns, E. Evans, Kratz. s, s X. ' . cludes all women students. The board meets the first Tuesday evening of every month to look into the future, and to plan each sport season long before it arrives. With its officers, the sports managers, Commy and Bud, the sport year is directed. Although only one white flannel jacket with the E. C. monogram was seen on campus the major part of this year, several were awarded at the annual W. A. A. banquet held early in June, and were seen the last few weeks of school. The striking E. C. jacket is the highest award given by W. A. A. and is won only after four years of conscientious effort and participation on the part of the girl in four or more sports. She must be named on two honorary varsity teams and accumulate 3000 points. This year's membership in E. C. Club includes: Ruth Binns Qwho became a member as a Juniorj, Miriam Hoover, Eleanor Evans, Elinor Pennell, Sara Kratz, and Sarah Hornbrook. These E. C. girls represent wholesomeness, fine sportsmanship, and good health. The E. C. Club presents the E. C. cup on which each year is en- graved the name of the Senior girl who is chosen as the best all-around senior woman, the award being made on the basis of her scholastic rating, athletic ability, and campus activities. This Senior is chosen by the Junior members of the W. A. A. Board, meeting with the directors of Physical Education. Awards at the annual banquet are made to those who have been active in various sports, have been interested in sports for sports' sake, and have met certain requirements. Any member of the W. A. A. may receive her class numerals fthe first awardj when she has earned 500 points. The second award-a large maroon and white letter-shows that one is a member of the E Club. Requirements for this are 1000 points, playing on class teams, and active participation in three ma- jor sports. A limited number of girls are members of the Double E Club, for the winner of EE must have earned 2000 points in at least three sports, and must have been selected as a member of a major honorary varsity. The E with the bar is indicative of continued interest and active participation in a varsity of sports. TAB LATIII 1941-42 FOOTBALL SUMMARY Team Defiance Evansville Franklin Wabash Rio Grande Rose Tech DePauw 1941-4 Team Rose Tech Ball State Cedarville Hanover St. Joseph Evansville DePauw Wilmington Rider Wabash Taylor Wabash Franklin DePauw Rose Tech Susquehanna Swarthmore Rider Opp. E.C 0 18 27 7 12 7 14 6 0 i 18 33 0 32 0 2 BASKETBALL SUMMARY Opp. E.C 46 31 42 40 42 66 42 39 51 38 69 35 44 30 38 47 39 33 55 38 38 34 45 33 41 28 30 34 57 43 43 36 47 49 59 52 BASKETBALL, INDIVIDUAL RECORD, 1941-42 G FG PF Player FT TP Anderson, R. 18 78 45 201 Patrick, B. 18 46 19 111 Ellington, G. 18 28 22 78 Wilson, C. 17 21 32 74 Martin, B. 15 28 8 64 Mills, J. 18 18 15 51 Breitenbach, E. 14 12 5 29 Dehoney, N. 3 13 3 29 Rollf, B. 8 9 3 21 Parker, T. 14 9 2 20 Wright, H. 5 5 2 12 Hensley, K. 2 2 0 4 Gordon, B. 3 2 0 Weirich, F. 5 1 1 Taylor, B. 2 1 1 Butler, J. 5 1 1 Overman, J. 4 1 0 Schwyhart, K. 3 0 1 Rodenberg, W. 2 0 0 Elliot, R. 1 0 0 1941-42 CROSS COUNTRY SUMMARY Undefeated in six meets. Won Little State Meet at Purdue. Fourth in Big State 25 20 38 42 32 22 20 2 10 5 1 0 1 2 1 4 1 1 0 0 Participated in the National Meet at Michigan. Oct. 4-Oberlin-wet grounds over E.C. course. Bill Rogers won in 24:27. E.C. took third, fourth and fifth places also. Oct. 18-Manchester-over Manchester course. Bill Rogers won in 18:28 Oct. 11-Wabash-over Earlham course. Bill Rogers won in 25: 36 Oct. 25-Ball State-over Earlham course. Bill Rogers won in 24:00, best time of season. Nov. 1-DePauw-Greencastle course. Bill Rogers won in 19:13 over 322 mile course. Nov. 8-Little State Meet at Purdue Nov. 15-Indiana Central-Earlham course. Monteya QICJ won with Bill Rogers QECJ second 24-32 21-35 19-36 16-39 17-38 27-28 1941-42 BASEBALL SUMMARY Team Opp. E.C. Franklin 9 3 Miami 9 2 Ball State 7 3 DePauw 11 4 Taylor 19 8 St. Joseph 18 4 Hanover 5 14 Ball State 10 5 Butler 18 2 Indiana Central 9 5 1941-42 TRACK SEASON Team Opp. E.C, Rose Poly 68 63 Wabash 62 69 Taylor 471K2 831f2 DePauw 55 76 Hanover 501f2 801!-2 Wittenberg 55V2 75V2 Little State-E.C.: 5th place, 101!2 Big State-E.C.: 3 points Player Dehoney J. O'Maley Dean Alexander Duckworth Jones Martin Beisner Frazier Berry Mills R. O'Maley Parker Weirich Turner Overman Wagner Wilson Team Totals Player Frazier J. OlMaley Jones Dean Turner Weirich points EARLHAM COLLEGE BASEBALL 1942-COMPLETE RECORDS BATTING AND FIELDING RECORDS G I AB A PO 7 30 12 10 89 39 8 29 12 3 5 R H Vg. 3 5 417 10 14 358 2 4 333 0 1 333 10 13 .325 2 7 291 8 11 289 4 4 267 0 2 250 2 5 238 1 6 207 BB W 0 3 10 89 40 9 59 24 . 10 89 38 . 9 37 15 . 5 11 3 . 3 50 21 . 10 69 29 . 7 60 31 7 .196 7 51 21 0 .143 9 56 23 4 .130 9 64 27 4 .111 5 23 11 2 .091 1 1 1 0 .000 2 3 0 0 .000 355 60 .267 PUIHHNG RECORDS cs IP I1 sci 1 3 1 3 4 2 14 213 20 4 25 38 3 26 36 1 4 1f3 7 5 15 25 90 127 0 0 1 0 0 1 TRACK RECORDS 100 Yard Dash-Conrad, 9.8 seconds, 1910 220 Yard Dash-Conrad, 21.4 seconds, 1910 440 Yard Run-Brown, 50.4 seconds, 1913 880 Yard Run-B. Rogers, 2 minutes, 00.5 seconds, 1942 Mile Run-Jones, 4 minutes, 32.6 seconds, 1937 2 Mile Run-Jones, 9 minutes, 43.4 seconds, 1938 120 Yard High Hurdles-Ivey, 14.8 seconds, 1922 220 Yard Low Hurdles--J. Parker, 25.1 seconds, 1926 High Jump-Ivey, 6 feet, IV4 inches, 1921 Broad Jump-Conrad, 22 feet, 10 inches, 1910 Pole Vault-Walker, 12 feet, 4 inches, 1939 Discus Throw-Cope, 136 feet, 9 inches, 1934 Shot Put-Johnson, 42 feet, 6 inches, 1920 Javelin Throw-Balestrieri, 177 feet, 11 inches, 1938 Mile Relay-Stanley, Barnhart, Brown, Conrad, 3 minutes, 25.4 seconds, 1910 A. :E fxvg. 1 2 .938 21 4 .925 4 1 .857 2 0 1,000 17 18 .690 5 4 .734 1 6 .908 4 2 .931 2 0 1.000 9 3 .912 0 2 .714 21 11 .732 0 2 .883 2 2 .800 6 4 .778 0 1 .941 0 0 .000 0 0 11000 95 62 .852 1. 511114. 0 0.00 2 549 3 756 2 792 0 323 2 954 9 740 T SOME time in the final nights of rehearsal we dis- Q covered that the best place from which to watch 'L Hamlet during the scenes we weren't on, was from the loft. We lay on our stomachs on the slatted floor, or leaned on the ropes, while June made her sweet-sad madness, and Rollf and Fowler slashed through the duel till the Queen died of poison, and the King was stabbed. Couple of stage hands there, relaxing after having pulled up the cemetery drop and draped the green curtains at the top of the steps. The balcony crew rested from swinging the light-streaming spots after the soliloquies. We could see Norbert's Cshlj Cbaldj head where he sat offstage, his script and his handkerchief well in hand. And through the dark space-wall of the proscenium, curtained, and bright-edged with the foots and borders, there was a sense of audience. The stage was small and bright below us, and the scene moved across it like the pulse of summer-sweep of light and shadows-sudden tense dark--a voice that cried from softness to fury. And something gripped us with a sense of greatness. This gravedigger, this ghost, this old Polonius, they were ourselves, they were living in us. These great people of Shakespeare lent to us some- thing of their greatness. We were ourselves caught in master drama-drama as we had never known it on our small crowded stage. yt ui-.-.-....-.-. But when we came down and out into the audience, when the whole thing was over, we found that something had been done to Earl- harn. There had been a feeling of it since Our Town. Not only for us in the loft. And now there were eager people who gathered props, searched for costumes, experimented with make-up-a crowd that ducked the pipes and hurried with business below the crowd that spread in the auditorium above. Earlham had tasted a rare pleasure that left her hungryg with a hunger that crowded the days of this year with drama, and wouldn't be satisfied in a crowded year, or in a time at all. And so this year we spent long hours in rehearsal with Prof. and with Norbertg we switched cycs and overloaded the rheostats and built steps and hunted from here to Indianapolis for candelabrag we made wind and thunder and the voice of God, we lived in the heavy sweet perfume of grease paint and clogged the plumbing with mascara. Be- cause in a few words spoken before pink-lobster wallpaper-a few hours of losing ourselves in time and character-we found more truth and beauty than in many textbooks and much dull knowledge. We wanted to do great things this year, and small things greatly. Civic Theater's Our Town was an opportuity for some of us, and for 110 E 4 l 1 l the rest of us it was something masterfully done that made us believe again in the possibility of greatness-here on our stage and peopled by ourselves. The first thing we tried was not great enough-we need- ed more faith in our ability. Button, Button, M Sz Ms fall presentation. gave us much farce, much loudness, a touch of insanity, and acting that was as good as the parts would allow. We laughed a lot, but we were not satisfied. You Canit Take it With You was a riot with DePinna de winriah by virtue of his premature fireworks. The townsfolk had most of the parts Cthis was the second Civic Theater productionj. but we did the young lovers and the xylophonist, or whatever he was at the moment. Still, it vvasnlt our work, and we couldn't let it go at that. We wanted no second-hand triumph. Camilla Hewson translated Sudermanns Die Ferne Princessin and made it into The Princess and the Poet. The speech department, Theater Apprec, the Pride and Prejudice back- drop, and a Silbiger touch made it into quite an acceptable chapel play. It was accepted-with the usual expressive whistles and penny- pitching-much to the disgust. But that was the last of that. because we discovered that there was too much being given us. too earnestly. for us to waste with a whistle. 111 Seniors' 'LValiant l lil Eve-rymani' Finale Now in the meantime we had something up our sleeve that no one thought we were capable of. Except us. Our publicity fell flat, and so did the Hdiptheria epidemic that threatened to jettison the whole project. But it so happened that we were quite capable of Ham- let-capable of three performances that stirred us and set the Whole school off on this high enthusiasm. When it was over and nothing left of it but the castle looming out from the back wall, We didn't Want to give it up. We hoped we would suffer its greatness again. But Rollf went to the army, for one thing, and We couldn't feel right about it without him. And so instead we made other drama and comedy for our satisfaction. Like the Imaginary Invalid. That one started with Burnet, Le Malade, snoring fitfully on a high bed in front of the Ford-Jenkins- Coe stylized Louis the something-th set-phantasy. It went on for three of lVloliere's amazingly funny acts, with D. Reederis Toinettish an- tics, Beline Catron's honey-sweet shout-Whining, the horribly incom- petent doctors, Sweet Sue and Slim Jim escaping the shadow of the convent into the sunshine of love, Hale and Weyl and the others. And it ended with an ensemble by Miss Mozartl' C or Miss Gilbert and Sullivanj Sims. Entirely successfully. But we didn't finish with the 1 l l e 1 i 1 i K L LLL. ,- i 1 Invalid until, some weeks later, Kokomo had enjoyed it as much as we did. Then the Speech Department had its ambitious fling. Prof. Mor- gan, whose mind seems to accumulate for him the most vast amounts of work ever displayed on the Earlham campus, chose five acts of five famous plays to make into an evening's entertainment for all. We had no doubt that The Play was The Thing. There was Counsellor Stegall at Law QRicej, Marco Lebbo's Millions CO'Neillj, Jenkins, Alexander, Barnum-Saroyan and brothers and sisters too numerous to record Subway Circus, Abe Butter Lincoln in Illinois with Betsy Pedersen CSherwoodD, and Richards-Wagner in time of Winterset CAndersonD. That was a great deal for an evening, and especially the last two were a great deal. A great deal of tenderness and rough warmth and lofty bitterness and strange beauty. Everyman was most completely our own. They were our own ideas that We fought for against Norbert's fond dreams. That we built into a broad and changing stage, and clothed and draped and lighted. It was hard for Emmett to learn his lines, and Barbara couldn't crystal- lize her part. Artie got nose-putty in his eye-brows. Drace nearly split out at her Marnmon torso on a particularly violent contortion. We 113 Mask of Death Juniors' Fatal Beauty The Boards Club couldn't get benches. We couldn't get tights. And the banquet scene couldn't be danced, sung, or acted at all until the last days. But in time there were the props gathered, the costumes finished, the make- up devised, lights mapped and guided and located, stage completed. We gathered in crews and committees, and a nucleus of actors, and went into the final production. We saw rich Everyman's callousness, and his Motherls sad de- votion. We saw his flaming paramour and his selfish friend. There was a scream of terror and Death appeared between the high draped cur- tains. The banquet was caught for a moment in stark half-light and then swept into darkness. We saw Everyman's friends and cousins and his money-god desert him. Then Good Deeds and Faith saved him from the Devil and went up with him into a clean white light. The blue platform shadowed against the sunlight sky. After that we did The Valiant, H er Fatal Beauty, Parting at Ims- dorf, and The Happy Journey, in a sort of non-decided competition between classes. The Valiant was done by '42, and the rest in order. These plays took the place of the old class chapels, and gave more and more of us a time and place on the stage. Mask and Mantle had expanded in proportion to our enthusiasm. By the time of the spring play it was a choice group of Earlham,s ex- perienced and talented, but very busy, actors-a reservoir that prof- ited from the overflow of our ambition. As far as any organization 114 kept through this dramatic year, Mask and Mantle kept, holding it- self as an honor for skill and interest. There was the spring play to be done, as M and M's vehicle in creative representation-to be done with finish and earnestness. The play was Dan Totheroh's M oor Born. The actors were Barbara Bull, Ruthanna Borden, Elizabeth Moore, Bill Tillson, Bob McCoy, Marian Hadley, and John Rogers. The Boards Club set bare clerical ugliness with an overcast of nostalgic beauty, wind, and heather QCaliforniaj. The mood was unrelieved-Tillson drivelling a torn letter between his fingers-Bull sinking open-eyed to death. The impression was stark, but fervent-not pretty, but good. Little Women, Trial of Mary Dugan, Death Takes a Holiday, The Swan, were more Civic Theater than Earlham, but into these we put some of our most ardent moments. In them we were seen and watched by a larger community than our own. We graduated already into a sphere that put us in touch with reality-that made us on a plane of performance, past mere preparation. Faith in our ability was the fresh incomparable genius of Norbert Silbiger. Because we tried great things, and tried to give as much of ourselves as he did, we accomplished great things. This year is an age in drama for Earlham. We found it a highest experience. Whether it is an episode, or the beginning of an episode, remains to be realized. 115 V' W-- IVIoor Born rehearsal Moor Born performance NATIONAL COLLEGIATE PLAYERS Earlham Chapter: June Griswold, president Robert Rollf, vice-president BOARDS CLUB Royden Parke, president Jack Butler, vice-president Wayne Guernsey, treasurer fxe MASK AND MANTLE: Prof. Morgan, M. Hadley, Tillson, J. Rogers, Parke, Weyl, Alexander, Marstaller, Carr, Wagner, McCoy, Klute, Borden, Griswold, Reeder, Fowler. L ' - 3 -2 - 'f- .i fvv - 1. l 4 i 1 A l H J J I PWHE day is alive with music from early morning until late at night All in Carpenter Hall. Organ music pervades the classrooms- a musi- cal background for recitations and lectures. In Goddard the do-re- mi's echo down from Prof. CoX's studio. Flute, violin, and the faint stir of piano notes mingle in the Goddard atmosphere. You may hear music coming from the Art Studio any hour of the day. While music apprec. class listens to Carnegie records, others wander in to while away an hour, and Henry Ford turns out a profusion of colorful posters to the tempo of the Schehemzade Suite. But music is not confined in Carpenter. It drifts out the windows and is hummed into the dormitory showers where it bursts forth again. Music is found in gatherings about the pianos-song or chop- sticks, hymns or jazz-Earlham hall jitterbugs roll up the association roorn rugs in the evenings after dinner. The music majors are a good natured lot. They have to be HSpot- ted during freshman Week, their talents are in demand thereafter. The Richmond community as well as the campus acclaim their utility and skill and ask for it so that the right utouchl' may be added to the program. Music for the plays, for vespers, pajama parties, Chapels, re- citals. Rusty's accordian beside the campfires, Johnny and her saxo- phone, Don Morris and his violin, Kratzie and her organ! Wednesday evening after everyone attends cabinet meetings and social gatherings, Prof. Kisling gathers together a small group of twenty-five or thirty people and orchestra rehearsal begins. The hour and a half of practice is usually spent in playing suites and symphonic movements-a bright addition to music endeavor this year. A much smaller group of only ten members meets on Tuesday and is formally known as String Ensemble. Gentle Mr. Hicks with his white hair, fondness for rondos and minuets, and his long baton which I l Orchestra rehearsal always wants to flick the music stand, directs this talented group. They not only play for Chapels at Earlham but for programs at other schools. They presented a South American program of tangos and lively Spanish music early this year in town. Then there is that fine and music-making group of Earlham stu- dents, the Choir! The grotesque and exaggerated faces of Mr. Cox -such an important part of the singing-are missed by the chapel audience. During choir practice that gentleman demonstrates with temperament the posture one should assume in singing by sitting on the piano and letting his feet fall none too lightly on the keys. Is it any wonder the piano has to be tuned so often? He conjures up some Carnegie donated books, records, and phonograph String trio Morris Byrd and Graves musical person with whom he has made appearances, and after some dissertation choir practice proceeds. The choir sang for Christmas Vespers and for Chapel. Monday evening the newly formed Y. M. C. A. Boyls Glee Club rehearses, and incidently serenades the two or perhaps three play rehearsals in adjoining rooms. Chapel gave them an ovation. The Trio-Sims, Calbert, and Wood-take the bright spot at dances, do do do, de-do, do-do! Original arrangements by Sirns, solos by Calbert-pop-u-lar. The efforts of the Band are seen to advantage at Earlham football, basketball, and other athletic events. All the football enthusiasts know I The Band 1 Wood, Sims, and Calbert blues in the night that Vioni uses his unruly hair as a part of his band-leading tech- nique. Frank, temperamental, he's an expert conductor and can swear in several different languages. Student directors take over the leader- ship often. And always at the game band members have refreshments, and drink one and all to the success of the team-or to the jolly good fellows of the Band. Sing along and make music! It's part of Earlham life! ---P-pp. JUURNALI NI and LITERAT RE HERE is no telling what will stir the pencil riding lackadasically on the ear of an Earlhamite of literary inclinations.-Those pines out the Window, Prexy's latest statement, or the fleeting glimpse and sudden in- sight which provokes the seen together this week are S. and M. From the lofty 4'Ago, before there was this roar and chaos Ccreated in a night of agonyy to the notes scribbled on the back of envelopes from the Dean's office Cor shouldn't we credit a billet-doux as literary endeavor? D-so Earlhamites struggle for self expres- sion. Men of the feather flock together to meet their deadlines, make their A's and to find another great fel- low whose mind runs in the same channel. In the five spacious, quiet, orderly rooms under the library are located what the Post Staff humbly call their offices, where on just any Sunday, that day of peace and rest and reading funny papers in pajamas, we find the fourth estaters Cotherwise known as the staff of the Earlham Postj burning the midnight oil. Out of the rough disorder of a flood of news stories, interviews, chapel reviews, club meetings, and news of other such events, the editorial staff-composed of Burnet, Schmidt, Guernsey, and Rourke-bring the re- fined order, such as greets the eye of John Q. Student on Tuesday afternoons, when the Post hits the Campus. The reporters' stories go through the editorial mill, and come out ready to run with headline, deck, and sub- heads in beautiful Post style-according to the rules laid down in the Post style book, the 'ibiblen for all Post reporters. When this work is completed-often early Monday morning-the green shaded lamps go out in the base- ment of the Libe, and the major part of the work is over. Then, on Monday night the galleys come back from the printer, and the staff again convenes to read the proof. The corrected galley goes back to the printer's on Tues- day morning, the paper is set up and run off early Tues- day afternoon. And finally, Richter, in charge of campus deliveries, and Marty Merritt, pick up the thousand odd copies and distribute them in the men's dorm, D. D. D., Earlham Hall, and to all the subscribers. Thus Earlham is i'Posted7' each week. The Post Advisory Board has a general advisory pow- er determining the policy of the Post. The Board Journali m and Literature POST EDITORIAL STAFF: Editor-in-chief-Frank Burnet Managing Editor-John Hawks Schmidt News Editor-Wayne Guernsey Feature Editor-James Rourke Sports Editor-Frank Weirich Assistant Sports Editor-William Gingery Exchange Editor-Margaret Bowman BUSINESS STAFF: Business Manager-John Stout General Circulation Manager-Martha Merritt Campus Circulation Manager-Ralph Richter Typist-Jean Peene POST ADVISORY BOARD: Faculty Representative-Miss Davis Secretary-Earl Fowler Post Representatives-Frank Burnet, John Stout 124 executed its power to appoint editors this year when Uncle Sam decided he needed Jim Goar more than our Campus. His vacancy was ably filled by Frank Burnet. An honorary journalistic society founded in 1933- E.A.P. has as its purpose to initiate, foster, and en- courage higher standards of journalistic endeavor on Earlham campus. Membership in this most worthy so- ciety requires three semesters' work on the Earlham Post, chairmanship of the Freshman Handbook, or mem- bership on the Sargasso Staff. Highlighting the year was the annual Post-E.A.P. dinner. Luther M. Feeger of the Richmond Palladium spoke of the newspaper in wartime. Gathered for the evening at some faculty home near campus, or around a warm fire in the Lodge, and chat- ting comfortably and informally with others also inter- ested in literature and journalism, Ye Anglican has the characteristic of being something entirely aside from the rest of the college world. There is no particular parlia- mentary procedure-but Dottie Reeder's pleasant pre- siding and John Schmidt's humorous minutes make it even more enjoyable. Last fall, new members proved their worth by pre- senting a program of animal poetry with a display col- Literature and .lournalim 2, b4'f'if fLl'.'fisrW j,gsa:f.e1. f ' ,mf , A' 1 fi . 1 f ' -' ' ' 1 X ' A Q AK- Q. E.A.P. OFFICERS: Ralph McCracken-President Lois Fuller-Vice-President Susan Carr-Secretary-Treasurer POST REPORTERS: Mary Mesner. Robert Painter. Camilla Hew- son. Peg Pomeroy. Bill Gingery. Leonard Vlleyl. Bill Rogers. Gerry Golden. Ruth Far- low. Dick Cummins. Pat Randall, Fritz Wie- eelrnesser. Sara Kratz. Connie Fosler. Bill Guernsey. Art Wagner. YE ANGLICAN: Dorothea Reeder. president. Eleanor Lyans. Suzanne lVallace. Earl Fowler. Heidi Heub- ner. Wayne Guernsey. Mary Louise Study. Camilla Hewson. Franz Rohr. John Schmidt. secretary-treasurer, Martha Calvert. Patrifia Bond. Not nictured: Marx- Mesner. x'ice-presi- dent. Bill Hale. James Bond. Frank Burnet. lected from Earlham Hall residents. Program meetings of original work throughout the year lent interest. The most interesting contribution of the organiza- tion is the annual summation and publication of a 6'Scrapbook of the best creative writing done by the student body during the year. The '4Scrapbook', is the practical application of a desire to provide an outlet for literary expression. With it the society succeeds in being a broadening and uplifting influence to all who are in- terested in literature. North, South, East, or West and all points in be- tween, including our own campus, the Earlhamite pro- vides to students of yesterday and today interesting and up-to-date information concerning Alumni Clubs, changes of address or position, news of Earlhamites, marriages, engagements, births and deaths, along with accounts of events on the Campus. Published quarterly, the Earlhamite, older by ten years than any other alumni magazine in the United States, is awaited anxiously even by present students. The editor, Miss Opal Thornburg, is held in high esteem by both alumni and present stu- dents. Ah yes, how good it is to see some things in black and white! Jonrnali m and Literature 126 WLOQUENCE! Wordy people and windy Chapels! Soap box orators! Far flung trips to state contests. Students in the speech depart- ment make their presence felt and demand the public eye. Tipping his chair in the back row, and roaring laughter, Orville enjoys his classes. The variety of subject matter should save any speech professor from reading the Readefs Digest. Prof. takes the back of the room, with his box of cards, while freshman after freshman and a few lone sophomores, who conscientiously want to be made over, retreat be- iPEECH! hind the rostrum and speak for minutes. It seems to be traditional that people make speeches at Earlham. Few people graduate without having made a speech of some nature or another. A bonfire and they cry, Uspeech! speech! a banquet and captains and toastmasters and presidents rise to make becoming re- marks, or the E blanket award is acknowledged. SPEECH Uratory, Debate, etc. EXTEMP. CONTESTANTS: Steinberger, Robinson, E. Zones, Marstaller, Hall. DEBATERS: Robinson, Hall. Payne, Guernsey. I For some, however, there are points to be won, a major to bet achieved. Speech, oratory, and debates challenge and fire these peo-I ple to participation. Clf not, Orville fires themlj In debates the resolution read, Resolved that all labor unions in the U. S. should be regulated by law. At home and abroad our teams debated. The men's affirmative team captured the Ohio State Debate Tournament, an honor for the year. Joe Payne and Wayne Guernsey debated the affirmative and Fred Hall and Ed Robinson teamed on the negative. Women's debates suffered from the unavoidable interchange of debaters. Clarabel Hadley, Marion Hadley, Wilhelmina Eckey, Jean Ann Hamm, Alice Rank, Helen Dood, Ellen Drace, and Eloise Nifer were all members of the teams at one time during the season, and despite all, they won the majority of their debates. The Women's Old Line Oratorical Contest held in December was won by June Griswold with her oration, Balancing Worlds. In Feb- ruary the state contest was held, this year at Earlham, and here June brought Earlham recognition as winner of the silver medal in a stimu- lating contest of meritorious speeches. Tom Dudgeon, Charles McCammon, and Elbert Jones took first, second, and third places in the men's Old Line Contest, and due to Tom's enlistment and lVlcCammon's transfer to Illinois, Said Jones became our orator for the day in the state contest. His sincere oration was HA Third Alternative in the Present Crisis. A winter and a spring chapel are always set aside for the EX- tempore Contest when windy students vie for recognition as quick organizers and convincing speakers on subjects ranging from the im- material to the currently provocative. Prof. Johnson gives out the topics to inquisitive callers at 6: 30 in the morning, and the time from then until chapel is spent in various ways-all for the sake of a name engraved on a cup, a new cup this year. Clarabel Hadley went quietly to Manchester with her oration for peace, At the Crossroads, one Friday night, and returned to wake the school with the news that she had won. 128 llratory, Debate, etc. Our speakers and expostulators of renown are initiated into ex- clusive Tau Kappa Alpha by the familiar and well worn procedure of soap-box orations when initiates must orate vociferously on any subject put to them by the crowd. The fraternity is honorary, mem- bers being admitted only after they have represented Earlham in numerous debates and speech contests. Wayne Guernsey and Joe Payne are the only members at present. Others eligible have not paid the initiation fee, it is rumored. Earlham has made its place in speech this year. Winner of the affirmative in the Ohio State Debate Tournamentg winner of the silver medal for Women's Oratoryg the winner of the peace oratorical contestg honors have come our way. The speech department under- takes a great deal for its size. From year to year the traditional con- tests are carried on by a relatively small number of students. We ad- mire those students who have the nerve and the ability to think on their feet.-Those who can rise to the occasion and express their con- cern, persuade, and demonstrate the best in public speaking.-Those who can lead a round table at Institute. The speech students inevitably lead debate in family chapel when questions are thrown open to the floor.-An argumentative, demanding group, ever ready with an opinion. They speak, we listen. Women orators: June: and the debaters: Clarabel Hadley. Marian Hadley, and Billy Ec- V i i 1 w N N key 59:- iz fi SUME SPECIAL I TERE T ACTIVITIE. F SPECIAL interest are what We call the Special Interest Clubs, which carry classroom learning out into noontime or Week-end appreciation. Both the language clubs, Gesangverein and El Club Espagnol, give us a chance to practice the fine art of conversation in another tongue-with the added enticement of Hinformality, food, jokes, and programs, to quote Miss Pick, who presides at the French table. ESANGVEREIN, under the student leadership of Rosemary Morrow and John Schmidt, has met twice a month for a general good time talking and singing in German. Christmas was made more merry by their caroling and the heavy wreath which swung on Earlham Hall door. Gesangverein ls 5 I El Club Espagnol 111: VY7, ,,Y A ,-.--.s-. .,-m.-,-r ,N ., ..-l -xref ,MM- The weekly tray-luncheon meeting of El Club Espagnol are Spanish in atmosphere. Conversation covers the general range of col- lege interests and dips into Spanish customs and Spanish history. Spanish picnics are always in order, although the food furnished l doesn't always have that Spanish tang. The college audience looks forward each year to the Pan American Chapel. , Dr. Charles, Miss Pick, Miss Thomas, and Mrs. Mosier keep the T conversation going in these clubs! V OR those whose special interest is artistic expression-whose hands l Q move more quickly than the tongue-there is the Art Club. The T Art Club was reorganized this year, through the enthusiasm of l Helen Overton, Rosemary Jenkins, and others, and an ambitious pro- . gf, 1 I i 1- AB' '-If 417 .E V Q11 ,Fu 7 vw sl The art club and art in general Marie looks at art i K gram of sketching parties and trips to local art galleries was planned for the Spring. But the art activity in Earlham is too enthusiastic and too various to be confined in an organization. The Faculty Parlor ex- hibitions, the interestingly cluttered studio, the scene and poster makers, spread their art from basement to attic in most of the college buildings. ELL-KNOWN camera fans Lebovitz, Rayport, Hadley, and Bor- den run the Camera club wherein all things, people, events, and happenings can prove interesting if seen with imagination. Pro- grams are varied and regular Monday night appointments. Climaxing the year's squints and snaps and studies is the Spring exhibit and the awarding of the Myrick Medal. Pictures speak for the SARGASSO. The Camera Club- This is the lens . . . BB The Science Club AN'S desire for scientific knowledge is never satisfied. Science Club fans import speakers of more or less scientific renown and set aside Monday evenings to gather and listen. Or cook up a program of scientific UD magic to amaze one another. The club has a staunch following. THESE FOOLISH THINGS are what we will remember of 1941-42: The Commons The Dorm Drive All-College Plays-Dramatics in general Diamonds Letters from the draft board The mountain of coal out by the engine house Displays and flowers in the library A new tree in the triangle Vespers The new study room in E. H. A long distance telephone in E. H. Two lunch lines A new track record for the half mile Huntsman's basketball point record broken by Anderson Swarthmore beaten in basketball No women's gym The Senior Picnic minus a chase A new and modern night watchman on wheels Miss Griffin engaged A hog auction in the field house And lastly, graduation of the class of '42 T a small democratic college like Earlham we become aware of the concerns of our fellow students. Any organized expression which ripens and grows out of the concerns which others hold can scarcely escape our attention. We know well a far greater number of students than we would in a large university. We know the ideals, interests, and pattern of life of each other. We know that beneath the gaiety there is often a depth which allies itself to a concern. The Quakers a century ago had a concern when they met to consider the founding of a Friends' School in Y M Cabinet Y M-Y W Vespers Indiana. It is only natural that there are students at Earl- ham each year with a similar wish to grow in sweetness and light so that they may be better able to live the Quaker concern. So we find a large number of students active in the Friends' Churches or attending the little silent meeting for worship in Carpenter Hall. We find a body of students tightly bound in fellowship by their conviction that peace, and not force, will win a better world. Each year there arise student groups among us to sponsor the cries of the outside world: see the plight of Chinese students as they carry on their study without the sheltering walls of a university-see the need for missions abroad, the need for educated men-heed this call from the American Friends Service Committee for students to spend the summer in Mexico working and experiencing a fellowship with our border neighbor- the call of the state for men to enlist-Johnnie's call for blood donors-Sally Geist's call for books. Sensitive students have responded to the calls of the world outside. Boys have felt it their concern to en- Planning a frugal meal list. Knitting in hand, the girls go to classes. A frugal meal, and contributions of money totaled 9'p40.81, which was sent to the World Student Service Fund. College is an opportunity. No other place is better suited to the molding of ideas and beliefs. Here we are free to think as we will. Here our plastic young minds are startled to deeper growth. We find concerns disrup- ting the calm routine of classes-classes forsaken and forgotten for the moment. Or We find a few students to whom the whole educative process means the advance- ment and furthering of a concern more broad in its out- look, firmly rooted in thought and belief. Adventurous it is to find a fellow with ideals like your own! Together there is strength and fellowship and pur- pose. And so the slim thread of a concern draws into its circle students of similar outlook-the Y. M. C. A., Y. W. C. A., Peace Fellowship, Political Clubs, and the ln- ternational Relations Forum and Institute. With each month bringing new ideas for old activ- ity done in a new wayj the Y's this year have sprung FRHENDS MEETXNG QHNUXXY 14,-lu ANN tfkkm ut MMNJX f-w:'rN'YrR emu The Classical Club The Philosophy Forum awake to meet campus needs with new enthusiasm. Get into the running! Join up-belong! We need talent, leadership, and pep! Variety is on the program this year. Big Brothers and big sisters, freshman handbook and women's precedent committee to make the freshmen welcome. Sunday afternoon vespers-the brightly col- ored Noel tree Cwith the neon blinkj and lovely Christ- mas vespers in candlelit Goddard.-May Day breakfast on the rain sprinkled Heart, mad Hallowe'en and swim- ming parties-the drive for the World Student Service Fund-Let's go! Say, this joint Y. M.-Y. W. enterprise works swell. How about a Y. M.-Y. W. retreat?-Wehi, May 24, in the college truck! Way last Spring and this Fall the Y. W. and Y. M. Cabinets Crespectivelyj made merry, met about camp- fires and discussed plans. In addition to co-operative ac- tion, each Y carried out an ambitious program of its own. Goals in view, they came through the year draw- ing a large group of students into active participation. Leadership we didn't recognize before-now experi- I- IJ I I ' - If I l 'tfI1X'1Y '- 5 4 .fb h ,K : - . -,I ences-working with people! There are values in activity which gives us these. The every-other-week vespers - remember Al Brumbaugh's snowbird hikes in the melted snow-Bob Painter leading folk dancers-the book nook in Earl- ham Hall. New ideas materialized this year! The freshman Y's -organization of freshman en- ergy-that nice caroling late at night and early, very early in the morning Cwhen voices are not always at their bestj. Doughnuts at Little Y tea-room-two for a nickle-male labor on the morning of May Day break- fast. Push, purpose, and personality have given to the Y concern a vigor which we hope will continue. The Peace Fellowship was a crusade which began our freshman year. Bill Hale and Earl and Lowell with Bob Wissler, Mary Ellen Woodward, and Esther Winder began the Thursday noon meetings, and through the four years the Freshmen who grew into Seniors, Bill, Earl, and Lowell, have watched its growth, molded its The International Relations Forum - School of the Prophets Snow White and the Quaker Hill rough riders thought and organization. This year beyond all others the incentive has been real for us to clarify our thoughts on war and peace. In the east dining room over lunch trays, and at other times upon occasion, students meet to discuss the Civilian Public Service program, the C. O., and the re- ligious basis of pacifism. C. Hadley, E. Stanley, E. Jones, J. Bond, and E. Fowler can constitute a panel discussion for anyone interested. The Friends Meeting in Muncie was appreciative of their leadership. The concern of the Peace Fellowship reaches be- yond the boundaries of the campus. At Quaker Hill they have dug, hoed and planted on Saturday mornings a C. P. S. garden. Vegetables for the C. P. S. camps!-Also cookies made at Ruthanna's house. Mark Rayport has kept his Townsend Center leadership group going through high and low tides of enthusiasm. Purely rec- reational, square df ncing got a start at Quaker Hill and soon various groups of personalities were taking the seven o'clock bus to swing, turn, and weave all evening 1110 to the tune of records and Lowell's calling Cwhen he re- membered-otherwise they kept swingingj. Marge Wolf, Earl and Jim, and Lowell spent their summer in work in Ohio, Iowa, and Mexico where they attempted to live their concern. Others look forward to similar service work this summer. Political clubs miss the frenzy of a campaign year, We are Republicans and Democrats, but this year we hardly know each other apart. We do remember, how- ever, that Joe Payne is a Republican and Bill Wolf a Democrat with concerns that smoulder. Those allied with the International Relations Forum are concerned that our outlook while in college be not constrained to an environment of buildings and bound- aries, frontiers and oceans, but that it reach beyond and seek to include an international understanding and a concept of international peace. Heidi and Fritz gave a program talk before the forum at one, and Mr. Funston reviewed Mission to Moscow by Davies at another of the program meetngs this year. A group cf students at- ! i x South half of a Peace Fellow ship meeting tended the International Relations Forum at Muncie. And our own Institute is a concern of Prexy's that is adopted by the whole school for at least four sessions. The old Quaker word concern seems Well to ex- press these causes and ambitions that move among us and make us greater than ourselves. Where the problems of the world are settled i N ' THE CAMPAIGN - AN ALL- CULLEGE CUNUEIH HAT a new residence hall for Earlham women stu- dents will be an assured fact before the opening of the fall quarter is confidently expected by President Dennis and the trustees. As the Sargasso goes to press, over two-thirds of the necessary 3,225,000 has been paid or pledged. The campaign for the new dorm received its or- iginal impetus from the Richmond Earlham Auxiliary Women many months ago. The trustees took up the challenge last September and set the machinery in mo- tion. Former President Herbert Clark Hoover, holder of an honorary Earlham degree, accepted the titular lead- ership in the capacity of chairman of the honorary sponsoring committee. Since then over 600 alumni and former students have been active in raising the funds in many states from Boston to Los Angles and from Washington, D. C. to Seattle. Over 1,500 gifts and pledges have come in al- ready. President Dennis personally has raised about half of the total to date, and has Worked indefatigably from coast to coast, making inspiring addresses and se- curing outstanding alumni leadership. So far, a least 905 of the funds has come from Earlhamites. One of the high lights has been the inspired and brilliant work of the present students in organizing a campus campaign which has yielded over 36,000 in student pledges alone. The lion's share of the credit goes to general chairman Eddie Jordan, '43, co-chairman Winifred Harris, '43, senior chairmen Bob McCoy and Elizabeth Gorman, junior chairmen Harry Miars and Martha Merritt, sophomore chairmen Bernie Coe and Charlotte Hueber, and freshman chairmen Bob Allen and Helen Dodd. These chairmen were ably assisted by class committees totaling seventy members, all of whom deserve real credit. Many human-interest incidents have illuminated the cross-country campaign. There are two small New England future Earlhamites who are saving part of their allowances to insure themselves a comfortable and beau- tiful home for four somewhat distant years. Other Earl- ham devotes have given up items ranging from sigarettes to telephones, and including gasoline, tires and time in order to continue the pace set by the Indianapolis dis- trict on oversubscriptions. Most certainly past, present, and future students will be able to count this addition to the college as its own, brick by brick. ...-..- ll0llEIlNlllllN'l AND PRECEDENT at Elllllllllll lnmesting People ol li0llli'l'lllllPlll LOCOMOTOR-President William C. Dennis. our usually hur- ried, somewhat flustered fountain-head of final appeal: beloved for his typically professional pecularities and original method of pedestrian locomation. Government BOARD OF TRUSTEES, STANDING: Edward D. Evans Homer L. Morris, Rufus M. Allen, Charles M. Woodman, Chester L. Reagan, Laurence Hadley, Atwood L. Jenkins, Murray S. Barker, Charles L. Stubbs, Charles A. Reeve, SEATED: Albert L. Copeland, Walter C. Woodward, Pauline Staint McQu1nn, William Cullen Dennis. - - 5 -W wiv--- .L ...... LAST SAYERS-Trustees. August, they hold Earlham's fate in capable and kindly hands. Their Earlharn and our Earlham, so alike yet so very different. Two generations successfully meshed into a governing body of last-Sayers. CONTROL VALUE-Earlham girls' ever-present help in times of fun or trouble is Clara Comstock. Equipped with the traditional clear eye and steady hand, and that long distance View of all problems that makes their solution so much easier, she interprets Earlham, acts as control valve of The Earlham Seminary. l l l Roll taker Van Dyke Control value Comstock 146 STUDENT SENATE Bill Heywood, Joe Payne, Bob Brower Ernest Tracy, Wayne Srnelser, Laura Lind- ley Susan Carr Lois Fuller, Barbara Bogue, Jane Turner Dorothy Mills, Jack Hart, Peg Pomeroy, Bill Layden June Griswold, Mildred Test. Government ROLL TAKER-George Van Dyke. Definitely agreed, a very good egg who rises to occasions in spite of dampened spirits, possess- ses a bleacher vocabulary surpassed by none. Physicist Dean, governor of the chapel roll books, he knows the names of about three girls Cal- though he's getting betterj. BENEFACTORS-Earlham and Earlhamites believe in student government. Many have the opportunity before leaving Earlham of membership on one of the councils-noisy, debating, provocative councils that most of us meet intimately in one way or another. Student Senate lifts its head and holds its important place on the campus. This year it has sprung awake to larger undertakings. The Commons became a reality as the result of energizing action among Qand uponj the students and trustees. Now the walls of the women's gym feel the reverberations of music and dancing feet instead of the bouncing basketball. Student Senate swings and skates and the long y-1-sq -v-1 ' COMMONS COMMITTEE, STANDING: Ernest Tracy Cchairmanj, Bill Layden. Bill Heywood. SEATED: Mr. Binford, Monna Jean Rollf, Mr. Van Dyke, Miss Comstock, Laura Lindley Csecretaryj. Not pictured: Joe Payne. Bill Wolf, James Goar, Jean Ann Hamm. June Griswold, Miss Marshall, Mr. Stinneford, Mr. Funston, blown Senate meetings at four in the afteroon are indicative of the energy of this body of campus leaders. The Senate represents all groups on campus and serves as the means of voicing student opinion. Friday chapels are sponsored, the student activities fund is apportioned, and this year, the voice of the students carried to the ears of the trustees as they accepted invitations to meet student representatives at the banquet table. In spite of a persistent loss in membership, the Senate has seen its term through. The Commons Committee was formed this year. A committee composed of faculty and student representatives, it is responsible for making and enforcing rules for the Commons. MAINTAINERS-The dorms are the sanctuary of Earlham and Bundy Hall Councils-councils which greet us upon arrival in Sep- tember with a royal Welcome and a book of rules. Confusing at first, most of us manage to work college regulations into our schedules sooner or later and the process of living together moves from day to day with less-eventful-than-might-be ease. The purpose of the coun- cils- to promote and maintain the highest standards of college life in matters pertaining to student life and conductn-has been honestly worked upon this year by presidents June Griswold, Bill Wolf, and Bill Layden. limvrnmenl INITIATORS-Smelser and the strong boys kept the freshmen fellows stepping in tune with Earlham tradition, and the Turner- Hoover combination turned out a spritely group of lassies bedecked and besmirched, but proud! And agitation spent itself in the tall stories and vivid descriptions sent home. Earlham Wouldn't be quite the same without precedents. College life calls for the buffoonery and the lampshades and the pants worn inside out. All add to the zip of fall days. Backed by student opinion, which holds to the traditional picture of what freshman activity must be like, and led by goals of high Earlham citizenship, the precedents come, flourished, and are spent each year. A slender thread runs through our government at Earlham-a thread which began in 1859 with the founding of Earlham as a col- lege. It is a time-honored thread. May Day, Homecoming, the Senior Picnic, the victory bell are all woven into it. The tradition which OFFICERS: Bill Layden, president John Mills, vice-president OFFICERS: June Griswold, president Wilhelmina Eckey, vice-president Gene Smith, secretary Josephine Omstead, treasurer 149 TOP, B. H. COUNCIL: Marlin Cameron, Earle Estes, Charles Wilson, Louis Marstaller, Dick Tracy, Rex Anderson, Neb Dehoney, Bill Layden, Wayne Smelser, Earl Smith. John Mills. BOTTOM, A. W. S. BOARD: Gene Smith, Marian Hadley, Elizabeth Gorman, Josephine Olmstead, Eleanor Evans, Sarah Hornbrook, June Griswold, Mildred Test, Carolyn Maddox, Margaret Haworth. li0l'l'l'lllllPIli Government passes from senior generation to freshman governs us honorably and ties youth after youth into a long line of Earlharnites. fa, - . A. OFFICERS: Wayne Smelser, chairman OFFICERS: Jane Turner, Miriam Hoover, co-chairmen 11:61 A 150 THE UCIAL EWHIRL IKE Red Skelton we wail,- Now they tell us! For four years we've had those sickening spells of vertigo-blind stag- gers if you will be pleloiang all right, com- mon. Then suddenly we discover at Earl- ham a social whirl my my and well well! They's several sorts 'n kinds of these here Whirls in sech, seems as tho'. Brother you ain't kiddin'. Yes it seems as tho therels y df' ,xN YJ H1 ii A 151 three or four big ones Clike those striped bass you almost caught last summerj. Then there's any number of insignificant ones, the significance dependin' on the people involved, imbroiled, tied in, et al. So, since the Bible promises the least shall be the first someday-that isn't exactly accurate, but anyhow-welll start With, mmmmm-the big ones. CPiglJ Of course even to hanging out on the Heart for Fresh- for instance Freshman week, when the main idea is to straighten out the dizzy Frosh by counter motion. It lasts a Week and sometimes longerg and chronologically we really ought to mention the Whirls those upper-class College-men will per- Hornecoming atmosphere June as our august November queen Whirl on horseback x 'N M sist in giving the new blonds on campus even to hanging out on the Heart for Fresh- man Week service. They're small affairs in most cases only referred to here because their collective action seems to be circular. or circulating. By the time the pretty fall leaves are twirling down fhmm, poetic no lessj the round Cmore or less merry and sometimes go-J of classes has turned routine and we absorb a couple of more circles like class hayrides. mixers. Big- Little Sister or Big Brother parties or brawls as the case may be. These have their dizzy beginnings when the food col- lects from the front kitchen. back bitchen. bull pen, and pantry-and cars and pas- sengers-and sometimes the food-gets there-mostly! Yes! Before the leaves have time to settle comfortably they are sent skipping all over again in the rain under umbrellas with somewhat misdi- rected but very energetic rakes in prep- aration for Homecoming-another large hunk of whirl. Soon the campus swarms with people, flags, posters, banners, chilly breezes, blankets, food, and crepe paper whirling in concentric circles around the queen and her court. lt would seem that after this severe attack of week-end we could gratefully start a new paragraph. So then we spun off on the outing to Spring Mill Park-the whole college off N il' Whirl by night Bridge to the wilderness on a whirl, and we saw caves by lantern light and bats and blind fish-not really blind but just no eyes because of being in the dark and not needing to see so they dropped their eyes-And it was fun and snowy and back we came to fall into the early winter slump-Earlham noses nice and red and now we have to hold hands in mittens.-Back into the more or less quiet- ly moronic pastime of roller skating which also goes in circles, and Tuesday night dances and Student Senate Swings Cchrist- ened thus by some alliterative English ma- jorj ping pong, bridge,-that musician's mental metronome that gets 'ern all sooner or later, our juke box, of canned joy, oh Booth bunch Commons whiil Y --- ---- --A-4 aff- V --- -- Y - -- -Y-7 lyric sweet and hot-around, around! It would seem that our college whirl is com- posed of many circles-someone's always throwin' rocks in our pool. Throughout the year the ladies of Phoe- nix strive to be ladies Chad you noticed?Q and Ionians persistently seek to become members too-is it wisdom they want? Ionian roars laughter and Phoenix echoes down, and whirled away is that hour from 7 'till 8. Pretty soon the sun, he gets nice and warm and the girls get that astounding Color-all over or nearly so-and the boys air out their scalps with the result that W , I ! Coca-cola concentration Outing whirl she's pretty apt to ignore that real nice guy. The gypsy spirit moves in and total class cuts move up and up, the cem blooms again, and it ain't all flowers either. The moon shines bright on Earlham coeds clos- ing doors quietly on rules and propriety- ah Spring. In Bundy-tonk, golf clubs, tennis rackets, steam showers-bull ses- sions. Bet Bundy has sectioned the uni- verse into frozen slices for microscope slides any number of different times. Any- Way you slice it it's still-Bundy bull. Eventually, same as housecleaning' and measles, we elect to elect anything and everything to anyone and everyone, or vice versa. Then evolves a May Queen, Dinner dance dinner Hearty breakfast Phoenix band Escourting the Queen Maid Marion makes Marilyn May Queen ' -'-' 'zi ' f Robin Hood and a lot of bright colors gyr- ing about on the Heart and we have May Day and about this time the green light fred if you're thinking of chapel broad- castsj says Go to every club in school and its picnic season. Picnic anywhere on any or no provocation. Top honors to the Senior Picnic. Just wait a minute, buddy, 'till we put Adolph back in the can, and we'll give you a real chase. Lesser picnics, hikes, and wildwood wanderings begin at the Clear Creek pipe with a westward twist. It's the time of year when you try to study with I'll Remember You, ap- plying to anything but French verbs or generic names, emerging from radios here . AFM . v Miz- ' 'V MMV! Ionian societie Fire sale? and there. And Marie bursts out of the commons swingin' high 'n sweet. And somehow that winter formal that he felt pretty swell about at the Blanket Hop and Dorm Drive Dance looks pretty ratty. And gosh you have to have something to cover the Mask and Mantle Dinner Dance to say nothing of the Soph-Sr. banquet. You'd think we never get off campus but you ought to see the reorganization proceed- ings when the lights come up in the Tiv. balcony. The territory can't be covered what with people riding. bicycling. bird tripping, sauntering to Millers-and some folks just hold hands. 462 At any rate you see, Earlham can still whirl and set you down downright dizzy! Seven-thirty bus Balance and swing A EARLHAM IIIREUTURY Before you get to the end of this book, you ought to know that we are indebted, for their ideas, cooperation, and encouragement in the production of this '42 SARGASSO, to Mr. Funston, fac- ulty advisorg Roy Hirschburg and A. L. Bundy, photographersg Jac Ochiltree, of the Kingsport Press, H. M. McGuire, of the Jahn dz Ollier Engraving Co., Carl Shellhouse, of the Oxford Printing Co., the entire SARGASSO staff, and the underclass- men who became a part of it, and to the following AllVEIt'l'l ERS A Cameron, Marlin, 122 W. 9th St.. Rushville, Ind. Alexander, Marion, R. R. 1, New Paris, Ohio Alexander, Warren R., 737 S. 8th St., Richmond, Ind. Alford, Virginia, R. R. 2, Eaton, Ohio Allen, Robert Earl, 119 S. 21st St., Richmond, Ind. Allen, Robert R., 223 S. 15th St., Richmond, Ind. Alley, Alma J., 316 S. 12th St., Richmond, Ind. Anderson, Rex, 1158 Vernon St., Wabash, Ind. Applegate, Ruth E., R. R. 1, Spiceland, Ind. Armstrong, Dorothy, Langhorne, Pa. B Balfe, Eileen, 444 S. W. 2nd St., Richmond, Ind. Balfe, Richard, R. R. 1, Box 85, Richmond, Ind. Barker, Leanna, R. R. 1, Westfield, Ind. Barnard, Barbara, 116 E. Brown St., Knightstown, Ind. Barrows, Valarie, 122 Chelmsford Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Beckman, Eleanor M., 818 W. 7th St., Anderson, Ind. Beisner, Paul, Ansonia, Ohio Bell, Alice, R.R. 3, Sheridan, Ind. Benedict, John, 6 Forbes St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Berry, William, R. R. 2, Box 387, Richmond, Ind. BeVard, Elaine L., 614 S. Race St., Marion, Ind. Binford, Joseph, R. R. 1, Greenfield, Ind. Binns, Gladys, 1908 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Binns, Ruth, 1908 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Blackburn, Peggy, New Paris, Pa. Blyler, David, 702 Thomas Ave., Riverton, N. J. Bogue, Barbara, R. R. 2, Box 76, Indianapolis, Ind. Bond, James, 19 N. Wood St.. Greenfield, Ind. Bond, Patricia, 19 N. Wood St., Greenfield, Ind. Borden, Ruthanna, 36 W. Winter St., Delaware, Ohio Bowen, Betty A., 522 Glencove Ave., Highland Park, Illinois Bowman, Barclay, Box 3, Cambellstown, Ohio Bowman, John, Box 3, Cambellstown, Ohio Bowman, Margaret, 151 W. Hortter St., Germantown, Pa. Boyle, Carroll, Poseyville, Ind. Bragg, Martha, New Paris, Ohio Breitenbach, Ellis, R. R. 1, Connersville, Ind. Breithaupt, Jack, 418 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Briggs, Thea, Greenwich, N. Y. Britton, Dorothy, 4639 Greene St., Philadelphia, Pa. Brannenberg, Richard 231 S. 6t.h St., Richmond, Ind. Brower, Robert, Hagerstown, Ind. Brown, Billy, Westcott Hotel, Richmond, Ind. Brown, Marjorie, R.R. 19, Box 823, Indianapolis, Ind. Brown, Richard, 201 N. 12th St., Richmond, Ind, Brumbaugh, Allen, 257 Sheridan St., Kendallville, Ind. Bruning, Rachel, 45 Prospect Rd., Dayton, Ohio Buckman, Harvey, George School, George School, Pa. Bull, Barbara, 2203 E. Main St., Richmond, Ind. Burlingame, Richard, 384 Lake Park Drive, Birmingham, Mich- igan Burnet, Frank, 11 Jackson St., New Rochelle, N. Y. Burns, Martha, 2939 N. Talbott, Indianapolis, Ind. Burton, Ralph, 224 S. W. 3rd, Richmond, Ind. Butler, James, 5460 University Ave., Indianapolis, Indiana Butler, John, 1011 Woodbine Ave., Oak Park, Ill. Butterfield, William, 252 W. 76th St., New York, N. Y. Bye, Marian, Ringwood, N. J. Byrd, Robert, 321 N. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. C Cahoon, William G., Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Cain, Richard J., 19 Woodruff Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Calbert, Mary Helen, 1505 College Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Calvert, Martha J., R. R. 10, Box 236, Toledo, Ohio 161 Campbell, Frances Cail, 322 College Ave., Richmond. Ind. Campbell, Jessamine J., 303 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Campbell, Robert H., 322 College Ave.. Richmond, Ind. Canby, Cicely, A., Greenwood Farm. Hulmeville, Pa. Canney Leo, 53 Pleasant St., Woburn, Mass. Carr, Susan L., 67 S. 14th St., Richmond, Ind. Castaneda Belen, Libertad 4, Holguin, Oriente. Cuba Catron, Justine, 231 E. Haven Ave., Richmond. Ind. Cavender, Billy, 725 N. 10th St., Richmond. Ind. Chapman, Madeline L., Bloomingdale, Ind. Cheatham, Robert, 5054 Madison Rd.. Cincinnati. Ohio Clark, Tracy P., 1318 E. Main St.. Richmond, Ind. Clevenger, Bonnie Lee, R. R. 2. Centerville. Ind. Cloud, Russell A., R. R. 6, Connersville. Ind. Clouser, Denver W., 107 N. W. 11t.h St.. Richmond. Ind. Coe, Bernard, 705 Thomas Ave., Riverton, N. J. Coggeshall, Dorothy F.. 132 N. K St.. Needles. Calif. Collings, Margaret A., 21 W. St. Charles Rd.. Lombard, Ill. Conover, Grace M., 606 S. W. A St.. Richmond. Ind. Conway, William, Lewiston. Minn. Cooper, Jr., Berry W., 303 W. 12th St., Anderson. Ind, Corbett, Elizabeth J., 29 Chester Pl., New Rochelle. N. Y. Corsi, Myron, 218 N. 18th St., Richmond, Ind. Corwin, Warren. 289 Merion Ave., Haddonfield. N. J. Courtney, Cy, 28 S. 18th St., Richmond, Ind. Cox, Lowell, 123 N. Mill St., Fairmount, Ind, Craver, Dolores A., 300 W. Main St., Richmond, Ind. Crawford, Eunice, R. R. 5. Brookville. Ind. Craycraft, Betty J., 1724 E. Main St.. Richmond. Ind. Cross, John H., 19 S. Wabash St.. Wabash. Ind. Croyle, Constance, 609 E. Main St., Portland. Ind, Cummins, Richard, 2230 S. E St., Richmond. Ind. D Darkus, Marcia J., 1229 Portage Ave.. S. Bend. Ind. Davis, Ray L., 307 College Ave., Richmond. Ind. Davis, Ruthanna, 307 College Ave.. Richmond. Ind. Day, James A., 1216 S. Walnut. Muncie, Ind. Dean, Ralph, R. R. 1, Centerville. Ind. DeHoney, Nesbert R., R. R. 2, Mooresville, Ind. Denny, Donald A., 521 Richmond Ave.. Richmond. Ind. DeShong, E. Lucian, R. R. 6, Greenfield, Ind. Dilks, Eleanor, R. R. 1. Box 72, Richmond, Ind. Dilks, Nancy H., Spring Grove. Richmond, Ind. Dillon, William E.. 32 S. 11th St., Richmond. Ind. Dodd, Helen M., Box 434. Berea College Hospital. Berea. Ky Daugherty, Anne. Liberty. Ind. Daughterty. Margaret. Liberty. Ind. Dowdell, Carol, R. R. 6. Mountain View Rd.. Trenton. N. J. Drace, Ellen J., 8100 Ardmore Ave.. Chestnut Hill. Pa. Draver, Charles G., 444 S. 9th St.. Richmond. Ind. Drischel, Katherine. R. R. 1. Hagerstown, Ind. Dudgeon, Tom H.. 938 W. 3rd St.. Rushville. Ind. Duckworth, Delbert, 113412 E. Main St.. Richmond. Ind. E Eckey. Wilhelmina. Mt. Union. Iowa Edwards, Eleanore V.. 422 Greenleaf St.. Evanston. Ill. Egan, H. Jane. 409 Fishers Rd.. Bryn Mawr. Pa. Eikenberry, L. Catherine. 5-155 Hibben Ave.. Indianapolis. Ind Eikenberry, Seth 5-155 Hibben Ave.. Indianapolis. Ind. Ellington, Gene. R. R. 2. New Castle. Ind. Elliott, Ralph, Milton, Ind. Endicott, Don R., 220 W. -ith St.. Rushville. Ind. Estes. Earle E., North Hill Rd.. Harrisville. Rhode Island The Oxford Printing Company PRINTERS and PUBLISHERS Oxford, Ohio Most Modern Equipment and our Expert Craftsmen make it Possible to Produce this Excellent SARGASSO It Pays To Save The Service Qf Your Bank In selecting your banking home it is important that you choose an institution from which you Will always be certain to receive not only unquestioned protection but also careful individual attention to your every requirement. The officers of this institution are always pleased to be personally consulted on any banking or financial matters and to place their experience and knowl- edge at the disposal of the customers. SECO D ATIO AL BANK Members of Federal Reserve System and Federal Deposit I'nsurance Corpo-ration, ILLIAMS DAIRY Distributors Of Superior Dairy Products In The Richmond Area. Milk - Cream - Chocolate Milk Buttermilk - Butter - Cottage Cheese Phone 30692 Abington Pike ALL CAMERA SUPPLIES FOR THE 1942 SARGASSO CAME FROM THE Richmond Camera Shop 'Everything Photographicv 10 South Eighth Street Evans, Eleanor, Medford, N. J. Evans, Virginia M., R. R, 17, Box, 266, Indianapolis, Ind. F Farlow, Ruth Anna, 105 Elm St., Paoli, Ind. Farmer, Eldon L., Fountain City, Ind. Farmer, William W., 101 S. W. 15th St., Richmond, Ind. Ferrero, Manuel, Maximo Goniez 84, Holguin, Oriente, Cuba Ferris, Helen H., Milton, Ind. Fessler, Wilma, 619 Goodwin St., New Castle, Ind. Finch, Beatrice A., 100 Virginia St., Chevy Chase, Md. Flitman, Esther, 423 N. Lockwood Ave., Chicago, Ill. Fogg, Mariana, R. R. 1, Salem, N. J. Ford, C. Byron, R. R. 3, Box 132, Richmond, Ind. Ford, Helen L., 1603 S. Washington, Kokomo, Ind. Fosler, Constance, 20 S. 22nd St., Richmond, Ind. Foster, William, Spiceland, Ind. Fowler, Earl L., 410 Columbia St., Falls Church, Va. France, Patricia A., 803 W. First St., Marion, Ind. Frank, Peter, 48 John St., Ilion, N. Y. Frazier, Wilford, Gregory, S. D. Freebairn, Alonzo, 1504 Woodland Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Freeman, Wanda J., 8 S, 12th St., Richmond, Ind. Fugita, Dorothy, Lihue Kanai, Hawaii Fuller, Lois, 1200 Harris St., Richmond, Ind. G Gaible, Janice, 220 S. 23rd St., Richmond, Ind. Garner, Doris E., 546 W. South St., Winchester, Ind. Garoffolo, Joe South 9th and N Ft., Richmond, Ind. Gilmer, Martha, 718 S. D. A St., Richmond, Ind. Gingery, William, 210 S. Ritter Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Goar, Jr., James V., R. R. 7, Frankfort, Ind. Golden, Gerry L., 300 N. Easthaven, Richmond, Ind. Gordon, R. Robert, R. R. 2, Lynn, Ind. Gorman, Elizabeth, 944 N. Audubon Rd.. Indianapolis, I.nd. Gorman, Ruth Anne, 944 N. Audubon Rd.. Indianapolis, Ind. Grant, Russell, 430 Pearl St., Richmond, Ind. Graves, Richard H., 227 S. Grant St., W. Lafayette, Ind. Greene, W. Noble, Box 100, Fountain City, Ind. Greene, Phyllis A., 118 Oxford Ave.. Dayton. Ohio Griffith, Carolyn, 1833 Commons Rd., Richmond, Ind. Griswold, June, 262 Bakerdale Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Grosvenor, Virginia, 15 S, 23rd St., Richinond, Ind. Guernsey, Wayne, 724 E. 24th St., Indianapolis, Ind. Guernsey, William A. 724 E. 24th St., Indianapolis, Ind. H Haas, Robert, 1408 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Hadley, Clarabel, R, R. 5, Wabash, Ind. Hadley, Marcus, R. R, 5, Wabash, Ind. Hadley, Marian, 1419 Beechcrest St., Warren, Ohio Hagie, Barbara, 164 S. 20th St., Richmond, Ind. Haines, Emily, New Burlington, Ohio Hale, William ., 96 Comstock St., Wabash, Ind. Hall, Frederick, 906 N. Main St., Auburn, Ind. Hamilton, Roy, 520 N. 22nd St., Richmond, Ind. Hamm, Jean Ann. 416 Race St, Marion, Ind. Hanes. Fred, 825 W. Marion St.. Elkhart, Ind. Hanes, Patricia, 17 S. 20th St., Richmond, Ind. Hanning, James, 402 W. 3rd St., Cambridge City, Ind. Harada, Roy, Box 131 Holusloa, Hawaii Harger, Kenneth, 711 S, 13th St., Richmond, Ind. Hargrave, Bettie R., 339 Lesley Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Hargrove, Martha, 1604 Bonnycastle Ave., Louisville, Harris, Winifred, 624 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Hart, Jack, 502 Mathews St., Kendallville, Ind, Haworth, Margaret, R. R. 1, Wilmington, Ohio Hayes, Anna, R. R. 1, Markleville, Ind. Henley, Kathryn, 5808 E. New York St., Indianapolis, Hensley, Keith, 117 N. 16th St., Richmond, Ind. Hepburn, David, Hopewell Jct., New York Heubner, Heidi, 1640 Guilford Rd., Columbus, Ohio Hewson, Camilla J., 4109 Plainview Dr., Des Moines, Heywood, C. William, Dublin, Ind. Hiatt, Charles. 428 S. 23rd St., Richmond, Ind. Higgs, Lucy, Cloverland, Brookville, Ind. Hill, Jr., Carlyle, St. Martins Rd., Merchantville, N. J, Hill, Elinor, 478 S. York St., Elmhurst, Ill. Hill, John, 504 N. W. 5th St., Richmond, Ind. Hirschfeld, Dorothy, 335 Wadsworth Ave., New York, Ky. Ind. Iowa. N. Y. Hoffman, Priscilla Anne, El Mirador Ranch, Pasadena Calif. Holroyd Margaret Ravenna, Ohio Hoover, Miriam, New Castle, Ind. Hormel, Marjorie, R, R. 2, Richmond, Ind. Hornbrook, Jr., Frank, 519 S. Ind. Ave., Kokomo, Ind. Hornbrook, Sarah, 519 S. Ind. Ave., Kokomo, Ind. Horne, Barbara, 72 Roosevelt St., Garden City, N. Y. Howell, Janet, R. R. 4, Springfield, Ohio Hueber, Charlotte, 400 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Hunt, Dorotha, 219 Grey Ave., Greenville, Ohio Hunt, Mary, 5617 Philadelphia Dr., Dayton, Ohio Hymer, Glenn, 241 S. W. 3rd St., Richmond, Ind, Hyne, Barbara, R. R. 2, Box 12B, Spring Grove, Richrn ond, Ind 16 A FESTIVAL OF HITS THE YEAR ,ROUND AT YOUR RICHMOND THEATRES - - TIVOLI - - STATE RITZ - - HUDSON - - INDIANA awhere You Always See A Good Show Ti111e and Distance Are N0 Longer Obstacles N575 . Ill The Path Of Han s AIlW'3l1L'ClllClltS And .ACIIIQVQIIICIIIS The TELEPHONE Is AMERICA'S CONTRIBUTION To PROGRESS THE RICHMOND HOME TELEPHONE COMPANY Hirshburg The fine photographs by Hirsh- burg are not a luxury-they are a necessity. Time will prove this fact. In the years to come, Hirshburg's beautiful portraits can not be measured in dollars and cents, their value will be inestimable. 6cSllIlSl1iIlC,, aShad0w,' Adam H. Bartel Company Dry Goods - Hosiery - Underwear Perfection Work Clothing We Sell To Dealers Only J Jefferis, Robert W., R. R. 1, New Castle, Ind. Jehle, Marguerite H., 3055 N. Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. Jenkins, Rosemary, Clarksboro, N. J. Jewell, David, 108 E. 67th St., Kansas City, Mo. Jewell, Hartwell, 108 E. 67 St., Kansas City, Mo, Johnson, Lucile, Losantville, Ind. Johnson, Mauvis, R. R. 1, Box 523, Dayton, Ohio Jones, Elbert, R. R. 5, Frankford Rd., Lebanon, Ind. Jones, Jr., Guy, 722 S. W. A St., Richmond, Ind, Jones, John, 730 N. Bancroft, Indianapolis, Ind, Jordan, Edwin, R. R. 1, Bellefontaine, Ohio Joslin, Donald, 525 N. Colorado Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Joyner, Sarah Ann, R. R. 1, Elizabethtown, Ind. K Kaighn, Phyllis, 28 N. Stenton Pl., Atlantic City, N. J. Kendall, Rufus, 124 N. High St., Covington, Ohio King, Jr., A. William, R. R. 1, Box 73, Richmond, Ind. Kinkel, Ruth E., Watertown Rd., Middlebury, Conn. Kirk, Kaye, Summit Ave. Broomall, Pa. Kishego, Mark, 803 Mott St., Kendallville, Ind. Kissick, Mary E., Salisbury Rd. South, Richmond, Ind. Klute, Mariellen, 420 S. 21st St., Richmond, Ind. Klute, Thomas, 1317 S. B St., Richmond, Ind. Kratz, Sara, 1328 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. L Land, Sally, 2006 E. Main, Richmond, Ind. Landon, Margaret CMrs.D, 337 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Lane, Bob, 21 S. 8th St., Richmond, Ind. La Russo, Vincent, 175 Fargo Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Laudemann, Charles, 3786 Aylesboro Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Laurent, Mary K., 527 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Lawrence, Jeanne, 706 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Layden, William, Morristown, Ind. Lebovitz, Henry, 813 Lake Dr., Baltimore, Md. Leszkiewicz, Elizabeth, 276 Washington St., Braintree, Mass. Lindley, Laura, R. R. 2, Russiaville, lnd. Lindley, Marjorie L., R. R. 2, Paoli, Ind. Lippincott, Jr., Ellis, Medford, N. J. Lowes, C. Raymond, 539 W. Main St., Richmond, Ind. Lucas, Morril, New Paris, Ohio Lueder, Dorothy, 1208 Lincoln Ave., New Castle, Ind. Lukens, M. Carolyn, Waynesville, Ohio Lyans, Eleanor, The Colony, Woodbine, N. J. M McCammon, Charles J., 505 E. Chestnut St., Robinson, Ill. McClelland, Louis E., P. O. Box 164, Richmond, Ind. McCoy, Robert, New Vienna, Ohio McCracken, Ralph, R. R. 2, Fairmount, Ind. McMahan, Willadene, 406 N. W. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. McMinn, Mary Louise, 504 S. 15th St., Richmond, Ind. Macklin, Marjorie, Bryant, Ind. Maddox, Carolyn, 22631 Seabrooke Ave., Euclid, Ohio Maris, Faith, 1102 W. 10th St., Wihnington, Delaware Markell, Lee, 244 S. 4th St., Richmond, Ind. Markley, Barbara, R. R. 3, Box 150, Richmond, Ind. Marstaller, Lelia, Box 252, Freeport, Maine Marstaller, Louis, Box 252, Freeport, Maine Marston, Patsy R., 510 S. McClure St., Marion, Ind. Martin, Betty June, 102216 Main, Richmond, Ind. Martin, Robert, 316 S. 23rd St., Richmond, Ind. Marvin, Robert, 308 E. 79th St., New York, N. Y. Masters, Violet, R. R. 1, Connersville, Ind. Mayer, Frances, 408 Kinsey St., Richmond, Ind. Mayer, Martha, 408 Kinsey St., Richmond, Ind. Merrill, Anne, 376 Park Ave., Leonia, N. J. Merritt, Martha, Ridgewood Terrace, Chappaqua, N. Y. Mesner, Mary, East Canaan, Conn. Miars, Harry, R. R. 2, Wilmington, Ohio Michael, Eugene, R. R. 4, Liberty, Ind. Miller, Elvin, 337 Lincoln, Richmond, Ind. Miller, Marilyn, 70 S. 18th St., Richmond, Ind. Miller, Robert, 211 S. 11th St., Richmond, Ind. Miller, Russell, 301 S. 14th St., Richmond, Ind. Mills, Dorothy, 27 Bonneyview Rd., West, Hartford, Conn. Mills, John, R. R. 7, Box 618, Indianapolis, Ind. Mills, Robert, 300 Columbus, Wabash, Ind. Moore, Elizabeth Ann, Elks Country Club Rd., Richmond, Ind, Moore, William, 100 S. 22nd St., Richmond, Ind. Morris, Donald, 705 S. 14th St., Richmond, Ind. Morrow, Rosemary, 1130 E. Main, Muncie, Ind. Morton, Rosalee, 715 W. Main St., Richmond, Ind. Myers, Sarah Ann, R. R. 2, Alexandria, Ind. N Nelson, Pamela, Residence Park, Palmerton, Pa. Nickelson, Jr., Harry, 815 Peacock Rd., Richmond, Ind. Nicholson, John E., 1307 Noyes Dr., Silver Springs, Md. Nicholson, Madeline, 1901 Reeveston Rd., Richmond, Ind. Nifer, Eloise Mae, 319 N, 13th St., Richmond, Ind. Northrop, Dorothy, Cheery St., New Paris, Ohio 166 CLOVER FARM STORES SPECIALIZE IN - - - CLEAN, MODERN STORES QUALITY MERCHANDISE COURTEOUS TREATMENT THRIFT - - PLUS SATISFACTION Sponsored By JOSEPH A. GODDARD CO. a-53 ANOTHER CLEANING JOB BY Peerless-Wilsoll Cleaners We Do It Better EARLHAM AGENTS- ERNEST TRACY VIRGINIA ALFORD The Harris Produce Co., Inc Wholesale Distributors -Poultry -Kraft Cheese -Miracle Whip Dressing 6060 - PHONES - -1332 -,.- .573- THIS REFRIGERATED DISPLAY CASE A PRODUCT OF GENNETT and SONS 1 Main Street Drive In - Free Parking - Phone 2151 It's A Jam Session With BUTTERNUT COOKIES and HONEY BOY BREAD Baked By The Richmond Baking Co. O Olmstead, Josephine, 68 Main St., Oakfield, N. Y. O'Maley, Jack, 22 S. W. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. O'Maley, Robert, 22 S. W. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. Ortwein, Phil, R. R. 1, Noblesville, Ind. Overman, Jesse, Amboy, Ind. Overton, Helen, Ravinia Park, Richmond, Ind. P Painter, Robert, Collins, N. Y. Parke, Royden W., 126 S. 13th St., Richmond, Ind. Parker, Elizabeth, N. Washington, Knightstown, Ind. Parker, Philip, 215 N. Jefferson, Knightstown, Ind. Partington, Ralph, Bloomingdale, Ind. Patrick, Buddy, R. R. 4, Connersville, Ind. Payne, Alice, 740 Hawthorne Rd., New Castle, Ind. Payne, Joseph, 740 Hawthorne Rd., New Castle,Ind. Pedersen Betsy, Three Acres, Zionsville, Ind. Peene, Jean, Rhinebeck, N, Y. Peery, Martha M., R. R. 1, Thorntown, Ind. Pemberton, Alice, West Branch, Iowa Pennell, Elinor, Wawa, Pa. Pennington, Elizabeth, 2105 St. Joe Blvd., Ft. Wayne, Ind. Petry, Lowell, 3435 Van Buren St., Chicago, Ill. Pettengill, Jr., Herbert, 28 8th St., Portland, Maine Pike, Mary E., R. R. 2, Centerville, Ind. Polk, Mary, 1311 Vine St., New Castle, Ind. Pomeroy, Margaret, 311 Duffy St., Plainfield, Ind. Porter, Marie, 308 Union St., Liberty, Ind. Porter, Phyllis, 742 Peacock Rd., Richmond, Ind. Post, Marietta, Stanfordville, N. Y. Powell, Anne, 3901 Wisconsin Ave., Dashington, D. C. Pratt, Jean, R. R. 2, Schaghticoke, N. Y. R Raiford, Virginia, 1618 Shadford, Ann Arbor, Mich. Ranck, Alice M., Fountain City, Ind, Ranck, Robert, R. R. 3, Box 156, Richmond, Ind. Randall, Patricia Ann, R. R. 1, Pendleton, Ind. Ratliff, Margaret J., R. R. 2, Fairmount, Ind. Rayport, Mark G., 3351 73rd St., Jackson Hgts., N. Y. Reeder, Dorothea H., Columbus, N. J. Regensburger, Marianne, 667 W. 161 St., New York, N. Y. Reynolds, Elizabeth, R. R. 6, West Chester, Pa. Rhoads, E. Lawrie, 700 S. Lincoln Ave., Park Ridge, Ill. Richards, Julianne, 1034 N. Main St., Tipton, Ind. Richter, Ralph, 117 S. 5th St., Richmond, Ind. Rigsbee, Alfred S., The Maples, Arlington, Ind. Robbins, Frances, 1221 S. A St., Richmond, Ind. Robbins, Mary, 1719 S. E. St., Richmond, Ind. Roberts, Edwin Kirk, Marlton, N. J. Roberts, Emma, R. R., Blackwood, N. J. Robinson, Edward, 248 S. W. Fourth, Richmond, Ind. Rodenburg, Wilbur L., R. R., Centerville, Ind. Rogers, John R., P. O. Box 6, West Newton, Ind. Rogers, L. E. Bill, P. O. Box 6, West Newton, Ind. Rohr, Rollf, Rollf, Ross, Ross, Franz J., 97 Lockwood Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Monna J., 237 S. 14th, Richmond, Ind. Robert K., 237 S. 14th, Richmond, Ind. Betsy Ann, R. R. 3, Eaton, Ohio E. Jeanne, 1127 Sheridan St., Richmond, Ind. Rothermel, Harold, R. R. 2, Richmond, Ind. Rourke, James F., 320 S. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. Rourke, John D., 320 S. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. Russell, Lille Mae, 3001!2 S. W. 3rd St., Richmond, Ind. Russell, Melvin, 718, E. Main St., Bradford, Ohio Ryle, Mary E., 38 Fort Wayne Ave., Richmond, Ind. S Scantland, Willard A., 411 N. W. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. Schmidt, John H., R. R. 1, Corydon, Ind. Schmidt, Mary Ellen, 2461 Packard Rd., Ann Arbor, Mich. Schwyhart, Earl E., 65 Grandview Ave., Ridgewood Hts., Day- ton, O. Schwyhart, F. Keith, 65 Grandview Ave., Ridgewood Hts. Dayton, O. Scott, Robert W., 18 Colonial Ave., Moorestown, N. J. Sharp, Donald, 209 S. 6th St., Richmond, Ind. Shepard, George L., R. R. 1, Batavia, N. Y. Shields, Hubert, W. 11th and Cordey, Jonesboro, Ind. Sims, Barbara S., 5456 Hibben Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Simmons, Malcolm, R. R. 1, Box 16 7-B, Cambridge City, Ind Smelser, Wayne H., 319 Western Ave., Connersville, Ind. Smith, Smith, Smith Smith Smith Smith smnhj Smith, Smith 1 Alice E., 409 S. 15th, Richmond, Ind. Earl L., Westville, Ohio Elaine, 25 S. 19th St., Richmond, Ind. D. Gene, R. R. 5, Portland, Ind. W. Gordon, 716 S. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. Martha, 225 Glenn Court, Richmond, Ind. Mary E., 225 Glenn Court, Richmond, Ind. Phillips B., 38 Webb St., Hammond, Ind. Walter T. 825 N. Harrison St. Rushville Ind. Smock, Robert Fi, North Gospel, Paoli, Ind. y 168 Sproul, Ann, 20990 Thorofare Rd., Grosse Ile, Mich. Stallsmith, Phyllis, R. R. 2, Hartford City, Ind. Stanley, Donald, R. R. 5, Wabash, Ind. Stanley, Ellen L., R. R. 5, Wabash, Ind. Steadman, Helen, 311 N. 20th St., Richmond, Ind. Steane, Marguerite, 103 Steele Rd., West Hartford, Conn. Steck, Joe, 524 S. East St., Plainfield, Ind. Stegall, Emmett, 820 W. Main St., Riclunond, Ind. Steinberger, Clarence, 22 Jackson St., Berea, Ky. Stevens, Betty Jane, 710 W. Main St., Richmond, Ind. Stevens, Eugene, 710 W. Main St., Richmond, Ind. Stewart, Elizabeth, Willowemoc, N. Y. Stewart, Nellie, 426 S. 23rd St., Richmond, Ind. Stinetorf, Eugene, 345 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Stinson, Dudley, 900 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Stout, John, W. Main St., Paoli, Ind. Stowe, Mary L., 127 S. Sugar St., Clairsville, Ohio Strack, Mary E., 2914 Orlando Ave., Middletown, Ohio Streland, Josephine, Langhorne, Pa. Stuck, Rebecca, 131 S. W. 10th St., Richmond, Ind. Study, Mary Louise 105 N. 9th St., Richmond, Ind. T Taylor, Robert, Hagertown, Ind. Test, Mildred J., Spiceland, Ind. Thistlethwaite, William, 624 Indiana Ave., Richmond, Ind. Thompson, Helen, 102 S. W. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. Thornburg, A. Jon, R. R. 1, Williamsburg, Ind. Thornburg, Virgil, 12 S. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. Thorne, John, 741 S. W. A St., Richmond, Ind. Tilson, Bill, 312 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Tracy, Ernest, Morristown, Ind, Turner, James, 149 S. 6th St., New Castle, Ind. Turner, Jane, 929 N. 12th St., Richmond, Ind. Tyler, Dale W., R. R. 2, Eaton, Ohio V Vail, Norwood B., 30 Norwood Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Van Etten, Edward, 520 N. W. 2nd St., Richmond, Ind. Van Etten, Joan Dubbs CMrs.J, 520 N. W. 2nd St., Richmond, Ind. Van Etten, Marjorie, 1320 N. D St., Richmond, Ind. Vilberg, M. Jean, 232 Taney St., Gary, Ind. W Wagner, Arthur, 721 Walton Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Wagner, Jack, 823 N. 10th St., Richmond, Ind. Wallace, Suzanne, 123 S. 13th St., Richmond, Ind. Walls, Mary E., 344 N. Washington, Knightstown, Indiana Webb, Dorothy J., 1215 Walnut St., New Castle, Ind. Weirich, Frank R., 123 N. W. 3rd St., Richmond, Ind. Werner. George K., 333 S. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. Wessel, Helen P., 103 Hawthorne Ave., West View 123, Pa. Weyl, W. Leonard, 1819 W. Polk St., Chicago, Ill. White, Arthur W., 400 Westmont Ave., Haddonfield, N. J, White, Bettie, R. R. 3, Rushville, Ind. White, Betty A., Fountain City, Ind. White, Lea Jane, 601 W. Plum St., New Castle, Ind. Whitemore, Russell M., 31 S. Denny St., Indianapolis, Ind. Wickes, Maxine, R. R. 2, Cambridge City, Ind. Wiechman, Robert C., 322 S. 19th St., Richmond, Ind. Wiegelmesser, Fritz, 6800 Eastern Ave., Takoma Park. Wash- ington, D. C. Wildman, William, 416 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Williams, John H., Abington Pike. Richmond, Ind. Willoughby, Howard, 306 W. Main St., Richmond, Ind. Wilson, Charles, M., Spiceland, Ind. Winklelpleck, Sarah Ann, Smith-Esteb Mem. Hosp., Richmond. n . Wisehart, Norris E., 1710 Grand Ave., New Castle, Ind. Wissler, Franklyn C., 605 Chilton, Niagara Falls, N. Y. Wixom, Robert, 710 Carpenter Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Wolf, Marjory, 4432 Ashland, Norwood, Ohio Wolf, William, Morristown, Ind. Wood, Betty L., 3775 Broadview Dr., Cincinnati, Ohio Wood, Martha 3775 Broadview Dr., Cincinnati, Ohio Wright, Esther, 810 Euclid Ave., Marion, Ind. Wright Harold K., 153 Academy St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Wright, Winifred C., Duanesburg, N, Y. For Fine Toiletries And Drugs Try LUKEN' , 1 C. Over Sixty Years Of Service - , .- -,Q-TA f--f . r --wang. FINE JEWELRY ADDS THE SAME TOUCH TO THE WELL-DRESSED PERSON THAT Y - - COLLEGE DOES TO AY EDUCATION Yount, James, 427 Kinsey, Riclgmond, Ind. NVQ Invite You To Consult Us Zabel, Walter J., 122 S. 14th St., Richmond, Ind. Zerkel, Jr., Hubert, 607 Monroe St., Decatur, Ind. Zimmerman, C. S., Eldorado, Ohio J E I N S K C 4 o 726 Main Street - Phone 2406 Home of the Blue Lantern Gift Shop 169 -R' 'I T . lt-1' 511 -2 The Hathaway Press Printing-The Art Preservative Phone 2241 10 S. 9th Street AUTHENTIC STYLES PLUS PROVEN QUALITY MERCHANDISE At Loehr St Klute Clothiers Richmondis Outstanding Store For Men TEMPORARY LOCATION IN THE LELAND BUILDING, 17 MAIN STREET FACULTY Allen, Rufus, 232 S. 15th St., Richmond, Ind. Baylor, Ford, 117 W. Main St., Richmond, Ind. Berndtson, Arthur, 503 S. 16th St., Richmond, Ind. Berry William E., 447 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Binford, Virgil F., Nat'l Rd. East, Richmond, Ind. Bond, Dorothy, Earlham Hall, Richmond, Ind. Bruner, David K., 300 S. W. 3rd St., Richmond, Ind. Castator, Susan, Earlham Hall, Richmond, Ind. Charles, Arthur M., Henley Road, Richmond, Ind. Coate, Myra Jane, Spring Grove, Richmond, Ind. Comstock, Clara, 109 N. 10th St., Richmond, Ind. Comstock, Elizabeth, 109 N. 10th St., Richmond, Ind. Cosand, Charles E., Natil Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Cox, Dail W., 806 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Davis, Ruby, 27 N. W. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. Denn.is, William C., 228 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Druley, Pauline, Milton, Indiana. Eves, Anna, 27 S. W. 10th St., Richmond, Ind. Fein, Louis, Bundy Hall, Richmond, Ind. Foster, J. D., 800 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Funston, Arthur, 410 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Garner, Murvel R., 450- College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Gebauer, George J. 219 S. 16th St., Richmond, Ind. Geist, Sarah, Earlham Hall, Richmond, Ind. Grant, Mrs. E. D., 330 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Griffin, Anna May, Earlham Hall, Richmond, Ind. Hicks, F. K., 20 N. 14th St., Richmond, Ind. Hoffman, Elizabeth, 444 W. Main St., Richmond, Ind. Huff, Robert N., 106 S. Easthaven Ave., Richmond, Ind Huntsman, J. Owen, 426 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Jenkins, Atwood, 609 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Jenkins, Elizabeth, 37 S. 19th St., Richmond, Ind. Jenkins, Helen, 609 Nat'l Rd. West, Richrnond, Ind. Johnson, Orville, 400 S. W. 5th St., Richmond, Ind. Kempton, Elmira, 75 S. 17th St., Richmond, Ind. Kisling, Willard, Carpenter Hall, Richmond, Ind. Kissick, W. Perry, Salisbury Rd., Richmond, Ind. Kraft, Milton E., 27 N. W. 7th St., Richmond, Ind. Laird, Florence, Earlham Hall, Richmond, Ind. Landon, Kenneth P., 337 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Lawrence, Mary, 624 S. W. A St., Richmond, Ind. Lohman, Marjorie Beck, 2313 Main St., Richmond, Ind. Long, Florence, Earlham Hall, Richmond, Ind. Mack, Ellen, Earlham Hall, Richmond, Ind. Markle, Millard S., 528 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Marshall. Elsie, 70V2 S. 16th St., Richmond, Ind. Miller, Ethel, Earlham Hall, Richmond, Ind. Morgan, Howard C., 923 W. Main, Richmond, Ind. Mosier, Lauretta O., Winchester, Ind. Pattee, Edwin J., 800 Nat'l Rd. West, Richmond, Ind. Peacock, Amelia, 312 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Peacock, Mary, 800 W. Main St., Richmond, Ind. Pick, Martha, 82422 Nat'l Rd, West, Richniond, Ind. Roberts, Emma, Earlham Hall, Richmond, Ind. Root. E. Merrill, 120 S. W. 8th St., Richmond, Ind. Robinson, Eleanor, 47 S. 15th St., Richmond, Ind. Ross, L. F., 51 S. 15th St., Richmond, Ind. Ross, H. P., 220 S. 19th St., Richmond, Ind. Scherer, George, 446 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Silbiger, Norbert, Bundy Hall, Richrnond, Ind. Stinetorf, Floretta, 345 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Stinneford, Claude, 408 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Thomas, Auretta, Fountain City, Ind. Thornburg, Opal, 400 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Thorp, James, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. Trueblood, Edwin P., 331 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Van Dyke, George D., R. R. 2, Box 16a, Richmond, Ind. Vioni, A. O., 224 S. 22nd St., Richmond, Ind. Weber, Kathryn, 115 N. W. 7th St.. Richmond, Ind. Wildman, Ernest A., 416 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Woodman, Charles M., 240 College Ave., Richmond, Ind Woodward, W. C., 223 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT FOR ALL SPORTS BREHMIS Wholesale - Retail Outfitters Of The Fightin' Quakers 528 MAIN STREET PHONE 1747 SOCIAL ACTIVITIES OF EARLHAM AND RICHMOND FOCUS AT THE INVITING L E L A N D H O T E L One Of Indiamfs Finestt' THE PAUSE TILNFREFRESHES ..... IN BOTTLES The Aristocrat Of Ice Cream IT'S RICH CREAMY DELICIOUS Wayne Dairy Products, Inc. Visit Our Dairy Store At South Sixth Sz A 171 MILLER BROS. STANDARD OIL PRODUCTS H Have Proven Their Superiority WHOLESALE EXCLUSIVELY EVERYTHING FOR THE STUDENT AND TEACHER AT Bartel, Rohe 81 Rosa Co. OFFICE, SCHOOL AND JANITOR SUPPLIES 921 Main Street YOU CAN FIND WHAT YOU WANT AT Rohe's Jewelry Shoppe Main gl Ninth, Next To Tivoli FINE J EWELRY-WAT CHES REPAIRED Tl1e J. M. Coe Printing Co. Phone 1388 1117 Main Street Buy Them At Evans Standard Service CORNER FIFTH AND WEST MAIN Go To 10 North Ninth Street- If You Wish To See Better Or To Get Your Glasses Repaired Edmunds, Optometrist 10 North Ninth Street SAY IT WITH FLOWERS GAUSE FLORIST 1100 National Road West Phone 3239 The 1942 SARGASSO IS Bound In A KINGSKRAF T Cover Designed By The Staff, And Produced By KINGSKRAFT COVERS 325 West Huron Street Chicago, Ill 172 Appealing To The Co-eds With Fashion-Right Apparel Graysoifs Dress Shop At Ninth and Main Compliments Of M. J. Quigley Sl Sons Prescription Druggists 400-402 Main Street Richmond, Indiana NEI-II aQYAln 0 EULA MAL CROIYII ' A A flip U l , P RVT PQK OUR VALUES AND OUR SERVICES ARE ALWAYS AT YOUR DISPOSAL .I. C. PENNEY CO. VlSlt Our New Location At 45-47 N. Main EARLHAM STUDENTS AND FACULTY AGREE THAT THE American Bowling Alleys ARE THE BEST IN TOWN - AIR CONDITIONED - SOUNDPROOF On South Eighth Just Off A Street Notice The Outstanding Photography Of The Underclass Panels-They Were Snapped By- B U N D Y S T U D I 0 EARLHAM MEN Make KINGS Your DON'T SAY BREAD First Stop For New Styles SAY KINQYS MEN9S SHQP CORNTOP or HOLSUM 724 Main Street MADE BY DIETZEN'S Fully Equipped To Take Care Of Flowers For All Occasions Your Car's Every Need Lemfmas Flower Shop Crome Super Station 1015 Main West First and Main Always Right Always Right STANDARD PRODUCTS Compliments Of - - - THE EARLHAM CQMMONS Social Center for Earlham Students and Faculty 'TLL MEET YOU AT THE COMMONSW Compliments - - - THE CLASS OF 1942 'UAHN 8. 0llIIER AGAIN JAHN 8: llllllill lENGRAVIN ll lI0. w Ar 5 Qc ., .JM I ',,,g, - J? vi F .t1,':!.-I -.5 . . ,s 5 y Ss 1? 1 -n hr 1, I .fy aff' .'. .'w. gs nk ,.,. r K n 'o .., L1 J l..4l5. aj is 9 1. ,Y O 4 X nur ' ' V , , 4 , ' i' + -V 'N' .- A 1 : - '1 7' 'ii' Q , 'C 'ff V 5,15-' H. v Q ' L .s 'R- v . p I . 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Suggestions in the Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) collection:

Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

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Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

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Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

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Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

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