Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN)

 - Class of 1943

Page 1 of 184

 

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



Page 6, 1943 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collectionPage 7, 1943 Edition, Earlham College - Sargasso Yearbook (Richmond, IN) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 184 of the 1943 volume:

i I f 1 Q i 1 1 4 4 E s I f i l, I ii F I v Q 1 , 1 1 3 1 5 T 5 1 J J I i i 2 . 'e - . . ' :w..-euu1'nm1s',u:m1mu.am1a,4wwmes4,nn:an , ' ' ' ,.w i I f 1 Q i 1 1 4 4 E s I f i l, I ii F I v Q 1 , 1 1 3 1 5 T 5 1 J J I i i 2 . 'e - . . ' :w..-euu1'nm1s',u:m1mu.am1a,4wwmes4,nn:an , ' ' ' ,.w wi - -E E -,, EDITOR JOHN HAWKS SCHMIDT ACTING EDITOR MARK RAYPORT BUSINESS MANAGER EDWIN JORDAN lv IHE SINIHH HHSS, NINHHN HHNUHHI HNH FHHIY IHHH, PHESENIS VHlUMl XXXVII HI .... z fn R Gllfjif EHHIHHM EUHW HIEHMHNU, INHIHNH f X ff 4 1,4 Af ff I I W, W fa? fl? 1 ,ff ,- '45 ':'j2:-' X I 7 4x1 .,. f, ff? V asf I! 1 ,, ,, wg? f 1, owe J what you u t I Qui l-HS, once more, is Earlham's TirsT war yearbook , Seniors in I943, we made iT Tor ourselves and Tor The school. The book is noT a social calendar any longer, buT an aTTempT To discuss by word and picTure This year now becoming a memory. During These lasT Twelve monThs, Earlham has known a reason- able share oT normal campus liTe. AmidsT pressure, Tarewells and Tun, we wiTnessed our own, slow TransTormaTion: noT iusT The re- acTion To ouTside Torces beyond our conTrol, buT The growTh oT a new consciousness, The coming-of-Torce oT an ideal, The ulTimaTe crysTallizaTion oT Earlham's philosophy and underlying spiriT. We aT Earlham This year have been Touched by someThing greaTer Than ourselves: as a group, we have sTood up Tor an idea: because conscience counTed more Than maTerial, we have endan- gered our liTe as a insTiTuTion and reTused To Train men in uniTorm. Curs was The unproTiTable righT To diTTer, To serve wiThouT Tollow- ing The crowd in order To aTTirm ThaT our principles were deep and sTormprooT. Men who hang on crosses do noT have To say much .... We may be on The righT way. We are noT marTyrs yeT. Nor were we unanimous in our sTand. Many could noT reconcile Themselves To The decision. BUT Earlham has become such ThaT There were Tew indeed who TelT +ha+ iT was noT The decision oT The True Earlham. Few who doubTed or Tailed To admire The sinceriTy oT The men and women who seTTled The issue. ThaT, in essence, is The spiriT of Earlham. i dC.f871d til rh e d ea rh your right to say iff' -X 'oltizire ThaT spiriT Torms our background. Your way is noT my way, buT our goal is The same. And I shall Try To sTudy your road To improve my own. ThaT is why This school educaTes Tor liTe. IT also inTorms Tor deaTh. We have noT wiThdrawn on This campus To live in a haven oT Tolerance. We do noT escape The exTernal currenTs and conTusion. BUT here we can learn, and waTch Those who do The living. IT liTe is an advenTure, we shall Tace iT wiTh courage and wisdom. We shall leave sTrengThened when iT is our Turn. Our world Today is much like a building in ruins. When iT was made, They used deTecTive raw-maTerials. Somewhere along The line, one oT The TenanTs proceeded To Tix up his Tloor a liTTle beTTer, and made The whole sTrucTure come down. The a+her TenanTs sued him To The Tull exTenT oT The war, and now They are all wiThouT a rooT above Their heads. We come al a very opporlune lime. We have sfudied lheir pasl, also known as The rnislrakes lhey made. We are old enough +o be lis- lened To. We have brains and energy. Moreover, we are lhe ones who are going lo live longesl in The new building. I+ is only lair 'rhal il be adapled To our needs. Bur our weakness is Thaf we do no+ know whaf kind of a building we wanl. We know well rhal we do nol wanl anolher collapsible edifice, a slage sei wifh only a 'Front We in Jrurn do nol wanf lo send 'rhe nexl P4 Y I -P: '- x 1 A.. V generalion lo warp lo nurse again race lwalred and boundary conscious nalionalismg lo use up our minds and liearls in deslruclnon Unless we are ready lo presenf our suqqeslions flue old blue prinrs will be pulled oul, modified, and followed. We need lo lormulale our vision ll should be universal and bound .4 1 74 KWMV 1, if. iff? . QW. IS' I 1 J ., ,A sw.. 5 A 25 . ., ,, I '73, 'Sigh 'I' 1- ,35 , . I. , Q. 05 f , .4 .k. ,I ,, v,V '. A Al 'il less in iTs concepTion: iT will Try To reshape The world because we are young. IT will include The dreams oT The world - basic dreams oT Tree- dom, oT love and plenTy, dreams ThaT have never died. WiTh Them we will mix our own desires, our careless, modern Tancy. The vision will be lilce an immense paTTern where each elemenT has a place. lT will be a pracTical ideal, boTh The Tool and The plan. Through iT we shall lcnow whaT The cenTuries say againsT The hours. AT Earlham, where we have wi+hdrawn wiThouT escaping The Tever oT The world, we have Touched upon The knowledge oT The world. As we organize iT, we may be given To see beyond The presenT. The de- Tail will Tade ouTg we shall Tind Timeless values, TruThs. When This de- sTrucTion is Tinished, once more They will emerge inTacT. Then, as we shall begin To use Them-Earlham may hav prepared us Tor ThaT-we will go ouT inTo The world, wiTh a clue To iTs coldness, and some inTima- Tion as To iTs warmTh. FRESFIMEN . . . . I2, SOPI-IOMORES JUNIORS ....... Ib, SENIORS . . ADMINISTRATION: STUDENT . . FACULTY . .. .. 38 .. ..I4, ...32. IIHSI CONCENTRATION LITERARY . . . . 44, SCIENTIFIC . . . . . 55. ARTISTIC . . . . . 68, FORENSIC . . . . . 75. FUNCTIONAL .. .. . 78, DPAMATIC .. .. .80 CONCERNS . ..86 AOITATION IN GENERAL ,. . .IN TI-IE DORMS .. IN CARP .. . . IN THE LIBE .. ON TI-IE CAMPUS . . . .ON TI-IE DOWNBEAT . . BY TI-IE WAY R E C R E A T I O N FOOTBALL. .... 1 1B, CROSS COUNTRY BASKETBALL .. . . , 126, TRACK . . . BASEBALL ..... 134. WOMENS SPORTS SPORTRAITS ...... I4I, AT1-1, ORGAN. IHEHIIUN For Jrhe sake of paflern and plan, Jrhis book arbilrarily divides info rhree comparlmenrs lhe inrerdependenl paris of Jrhe life of four classes. This life is Earlham: buildings are nor a college. Jusi as Carp, The dorms, and lieldhouse lose meaning and purpose in The absence of slrudenrs, so Jrhis book approximales rhe subiecl malrer. Bul if l'he conlenls of Type and plales are able To recall To memory logolfen delails, lo redefine shapes worn oil by lime, lhis book will have achieved irs purpose, To mark rhe end of a beginning. The nex'r few pages will presenl Earlham's four classes, and lhen 'rurn To Jrheir life which made lhis book. Freshman Fashions Sfandingz BurneTT, R. Moore, Conover, Milley Chapman, Campbell, L T B ST l C ith PT All M'Th Si'r'ring: I. OverTon, WOTF, Driver, Ross, Jo SmiTh, I-loerner, Eisernan, PidpaTh. Normally our Freshman year is The Time when we wriTe home To our parenTs ThaT we are on an essenTial Homecoming commiTTee , only To discover ThaT everyone else in school is Too: This year, however, our Freshmen have been elevaTed To posiTions OT prominence hereToTore unheard OT in Earlham circles-iusT as a resulT oi warTime necessiTy raTher Than as a resulT oT any sudden gen- erosiTy on The parT of The upperclassmen. NeverTheless, They have noT managed To escape com- pleTely from The usual sudden, and comfusing loss oi high school big-shoTism , which prepares Them Tor Their TuTure useTulness on campus. IT is aT TirsT slighTly unseTTling To mosT oi us To be sTranded, Tar Trom The proTecTing wings oT our loving and indulgenT parenTs, Thrown on The none-Too-Tender mercies OT These sTrangers hailing Trom all parTs oT The world leven Trom Brooklynl. We learn, Trom sTudying, eaTing, playing, living and working wiTh Them-yes, and by being precedenTed by Them-whaT an exciTing advenTure college liTe can be. I ,jg By The Time we've lived Through The sudden TransiTion Trom The ioys oT Freshman week To The rigors oT iusT being a Frosh Tor a while, we have begun To Talce our places in The scheme oT Things here aT Earlham. We Torm a large parT oT The cheering secTion during The TooTball season, and ex- horT The Team To Wallop Wabash as we pace our way across campus. We do help prepare Tor l-lomecoming, and our Tellows are a real TeaTure oT The 'l'iv rush , as They march on Richmond in Their loud pajamas. The girls oT '46, This year, gave The oTher classes some sTiTT compeTiTion in aThleTics, bacled up by The men, who made a real conTribuTion in Their own Tields. And aThleTics wasn'T The only deparT- menT where '46 leTT iTs marlc: in music, speech, dramaTics and all oTher exTra-curricular acTiviTies The Frosh were ready, willing, and able. All in all, They have spenT a good year in preparaTion Tor The leadership which They will oTTer in The unpredicTable days ahead. 1 . 11 kqx FREST-TMAN CL-XSS C: Presidehl N Vile-Presidesf Becrefarx . Treasurer 'N Social Chaim-Q N S+anding:Collings, Marlley u , Vxfiforn, Esfes, Arnrill, J. While, Arrnsfrong, A. Payne, . Ferris, Haines, Johnson, Bell, Praff, Slowe, Meg Bowman. Borden. Siffing: P, Porfer, Vilberg, Sloane, Dodd, Sleadrnan, Kaighn, Maris, Maddox, Gorman. CLASS OFFICERS R. O'Maley C. Maddox .J. Vilberg 'fffff ...,, J. Day n:R.R.Allen,l-l.Dodd SOPHOMORE Presidenl' .........., Vice-Presidenf ....... Secrelary ... Treasurer .... Social Chairma B rlg Partingfon, Nicholson, W. Wildman, Allen Harkness. il reflec- l-lell Day -no Somehow when we lhinlc ol 'rhe Sophomores, we iusf nafurally lhinlc of lion on fhe characler ol Jrhe worfhy class ol '45. There's sornelhing aboul' a Sophomore lhal sig- nifies joyous abandon and a devil-may-care oulloolc on life. This in Spire of The lacl lhal in our second year we come info our own as one of The privileged classes and learn lo Jralce advanlage ol our privileges-iusf ask 'rhe Freshmen. We lake our places on commilfees much for granled, we decide on our rnaiors, and gel acquainled wilrh one or Jrwo advanced courses in various deparl- me-nfs. sufficienlly lo organize The Sophomore-Senior ban e curb our you lhlul exuberance Tradilionally vf queT, and enjoy ourselves sTaidly Tor a change. We gloaT over Juniors Trernbling beliore Their orals and Seniors sweaTing over Their comprehensives. We Torrn TasT Triendships and go in Tor exTracurricu- lar acTiviTies. ln oTher words, we generally enjoy liTe .... This year's Sophomore class wenT in Tor picnics and slcaTes as well as The TradiTional hell-raising during Homecoming, and was The TirsT one To be descended To The TirsT Tloor of Goddard, when our shrinkage ruled ouT The use oT The balcony. As a class, '45 didn'T do so well in aThleTics, aIThough supplied wiTh several ouTsTanding aThleTes. They made Their main conTribuTion in The Time arTs . PaTience and The Messiah dernonsTraTed Their musical TalenTs, and in dramaTics and arT as well, They consisTenTly delivered The goods. X I il 'H J UHNOR CLASS OFFICERS Fresidenf . ,,,,,.,,4 ..,.. B . Coe Vice-Presiderif .... ,. Marian Hadley Secrefafv ..,,,..,. D. Mills Treasurer ... ..,..., .. .Earl Smifh Sccial Chairmen B. Sims, Jaclc Bufler .-' Firsf Row: Wrighf, l-ler1ley.Cook, L. Johnson. Second Row: B. Penningfon. l-lormel, Applegafe, Sfallsmifh, l-largrave. V. Evans, Webb, M. Smifh Powell, Tanalca. Sfanding: E. Smifh, D. Mills, R. Miller, Jaclc Bu+ler, E. Moore. Sfouf. DeShong, Burns, Coe, C. Hadley, Sfewarf, Fosfer, Marian Hadley, BeVard, Sherer, Fosler, Risgbee, Ford, Sfevens, Beisner, Corbeff. - llllllllll When we were Juniors , we had more fhan fhe usual share of mighfy responsibilify around school, due fo fhe sudden deplefion of Senior ranks. Buf even in normal fimes, fhe Junior year is fhe one of energefic and wide-awalce acfivify. Any Junior class has solidified info a cohesive unif, since by fhaf fime, all fhe sfudenfs who plan fo fransfer or leave school before graduafion have done so. Among fhe group leff, friendships are forged which are fo lasf fhe resf of fhe college course, and for years beyond. Around February, we see consciousness of fhaf Earlham insfifufion The Junior Oral Exam, dawning upon The Junior mind. Fingernails grow shorTer as we ignore The lcind advice oT The Seniors and wonder whaT we could possibly sTudy To prepare our- selves Tor The ordeal. Then comes The brighT day, apparenTly aT The mosT inconvenienT mo- menT Tor everyoneg we spend an only slighTly uncomTorTable guarTerhour wiTh a genial group oT TaculTy members and emerge wondering whaT all The Tuss was abouT. The class oT '44 embodies much dramaTic TalenT. To wiT, Eugene Q'Neill's Where The Cross is Made given Tree beTore a large and appreciaTive audience, as well as leading roles in all-college and lvl 84 lvl producTions. Theirs, Too, is aThleTic abiliTy and a gay class mood. The Juniors puT one over on all oT us and sTarTed ouT The year wiTh The TirsT class parTy. According To reliable auThoriTies, BuTch and Lou Fein were a mess aTTer The pie-eaT- ing conTesT, buT everyone was happy. NX here The LT. M M ll Reynolds, Ferrero, Freebairn, Parke, M. Porfer, F. M Growing up is a process fhaf occurs af Earlham fo one group of people every four years as surely as big May Day or measles epidemics. This year fhe class of '43 characferized fhe resulfs of fhis ageles process. If mighf be said fhaf in almosf every phase of our life we progress from green obscurify fo blessed mafurify buf as seniors in college we are especially aware of fhe feeling of smug safisfacfion, yef anficipafion fhaf comes fo us. Few of us have been exposed fo fhe full and alive experience of four years af Earlham, as shelfered and peaceful as if may be, wifhouf leaving a liffle of ourselves and emerging wifh more self-confidence, a sense of responsibilify and fhe essen- fial affifude of cooperafion. Qur firsf year leff us as rafher dubious survivors of fhe unusually powerful precedenf commif- fees and wifh many new friends. We were enfhusiasm personified. Many of us mef people from ofher parfs of fhe counfry for fhe firsf fime and we began fo feel guife cosmopolife. When we were Sophomores we made noise-good clean and loud noise which irrifafed our el- ders. Problems in campusfry were our main worry wifh big May Day running a close second. Lulcens, B. Whife, Lindley, G. Smifh, M. Merriff, Marcus Hadl f Our ihird year in college saw us begin 'ro assume some of 'rhe responsibiliries of life in a more serious manner. l94I broughi ihe war and we were forced To be more serious-minded. Cognizani of Jrhe iaci ihai our days were numbered, we feverishly began +o cram siudy and play info as many hours as possible. This, our senior year, has been more disiinciive rhan any oiher. We have gloried in being looked up 'ro by underclassmen and shared much in common wiih 'rhe laculiy. These rhings were maierialized by leadership in organizaiions and by such inspiring occasions as The iaculiy breal- lasi and Prexy's garden pariy. Our ranlcs were sadly depleied and disorganized by rhe draii which swepi Earlham as well as oiher small colleges. Ivlany oi our men were unable io gradu- aie wiih The class. The acquisiiion of The quarier sysiem leii liiile 'rime for anyihing buf srudye ing and we couldn'i seem io aiiain hall our goals for The year. In spiie oi ihese odds we had as much lun as any senior class. We clamped down on unruly freshmen, led lhe parade 'ro rhe Tiv rush, reigned ai a rainy, 'rhough gala May Day, and carried on wiih rhe rradiiional Senior picnic wilh midnighi hilariiy and nosialgic reminiscences. June 2I will see us leaving our dear old Earlhamu relucianrly, yer eager and ready lo gc our and conquer new worlds, coniinuing ihe eiernal process oi growing up . S.-5 S Hun- ani nuff- 'Q-s 'ca ' 4 - ' -' ' 'Q P'-e V. Secre Tre Soci :UV SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS OF BU denl ....,,..,...,,. IP. Andersonl, E. J d lSp gl ine F oenl, ,,4,,.,..,,,.,.,.. ,..,,...... L Ldly 'CE Viil 5,-. . E'.. . al Cha . . 1 i Calverl l f ...,,,,.......,...,..,....,.. M S H rnbrook E P i'iei'Eii''gi'','iQ1 i ii-i'al i'f's',5' gl .. .... . ENV! El, . lfl OV1 , BFCUS GY N THESE pages, we have lried lo lay down our col- lege personalilies. ll is like selling a mileslone al lhe mosl opporlune poinl: al lhe slarl ol a road, al lhe lool ol lhal slope everyone ol us will lollow, and lry lo lollow upwards. We know one anolher ralher well aller lour years logelher. Almosl loo well lo have noliced lhe changes lhal look place in every one ol us, slowly. l-lowever, we will soon be scallered over lhe globe, and allhough we may meel, none ol us will lind lhe classmale lhal he lell on comrnencemenl day: lhere shall be new lines in our laces, a new expression in our eyes, probably a new oullook. Here, lhen lo be able somelime lo iudge lhe pres- enl in lerms ol lhe pasl, is lhe allempl lo lix and presenl ourselves as individuals, lhe people we were in college, al Earlham. John l-lunl is lhe good-nalured, good humored newcomer who joined our class al lhe beginning ol lhis year. On week days, he looks like a lellow slu- denl, and we know him as lhe Duke in Palience and lhe lellow who saved Prol. Cox's lenor seclion. Bul he melamorphoses inlo a lull-lledged minisler every Sunday. Sugar 'n spice-and a measure ol philo- sophical disposilion lhrown in-lhal's Winnie l-larris as we know her. One ol our mosl aclive day dodger girls, she has lhe lriendly habil ol remembering peo- ple. She deserled Earlham in December lor a hus- band in Wesl Lalayelle. Key man Brumbaugh is John l-lun? Winlfred Harris Marlc Rayporf Pells A r lvlarqarel Pomeroy Allen Brumbauqlw Caroline Lulcens Palolw Q' l llllllllllll rgaref Holroyd M l- M f Charles l-lialf -'vs ar! headed for fhe Naval medical corps. Buf we'll besf remember AI as one of lhe bosses of Earlham's dairy and as a veferan hiker and habifue of The biology and chem labs. Ponnmie is one of Earl- ham's versafile coeds-a good sfudenf, afhlefe, so- cia whirler and reporfer. All These she does wifh equal ease and success. Come fo us from Willa- meffe, Oregon, Rae Azumano has quiefly made herself one of us fhis year. We noficed her charm and unassuming efficiency, and having become bef- fer acquainfed wifh her found infelligence and a delighffully crifical sense of humor. On fhe pre- ceding page we have Mark Rayporf, who was once infroduced in chapel as one of The busiesf men on campus . He couldn'f deny if, eifher-Sc. Cl., Y.lVl.C.A., Phil. For., E.P.F., Posf Adv. Bd., and square dancing-nof fo menfion 'rhis lowly volume -affesf fo his wide range of inferesfs. Mark, who speaks four languages, is a perfecfionisf, 'a genfle- man of The old school and a frue cosmopolifan. The Luke of Duke and Luke is a pracfical ioker of fhe firsf wafer. Buf we also know Carolyn as an earnesf sociologisf, wifh an oufgoing personalify and a friendly approach fo people. If you see a quickly moving blue Ford, look for Ralph Richfer af fhe wheel. Ralph, who leff for fhe Army Air Corps in fhe middle of fhe winfer ferm, has a sfrange sorf of humor fhaf isn'f always immediafely obvious, buf underneafh is a serious infenf fo come fo a new undersfanding wifh physics and mafh. Laundry man Sam lshikawa came fo us fhis year from Whiffier fo become one of our leading senior hisforians. He says he likes Indiana, buf we rafher fhink any Californian would prefer Califor- nia's climafe and landscape. We know him for his quick enfhusiasm for any good cause and besf of all, a well nourished sense of humor. Peg Holroyd is fhe preacher's kid who 'reaches fhe kiddies re- ligion and sfraighfens ouf lovers' quarrels. She's also an aufhorify on Richmond High School Baskef- ball. They say Peg's headed for fhe Waves, and she oughf fo make a good sailor. Here's anofher fufure Navy Docfor, Mose Hiaff. He has a big hearf and a Ford and an easy going manner fhaf geTs him places. And we've never seen anybody blush guiTe ThaT Thoroughly. Our varsiTy goalie, lVlarTy lvlerriTT, is noT only an aThleTe, she also has had an exTensive execu- Tive career wiTh The PrecedenT CommiTTee, PosT, Sargasso and many oTher organiza- Tions, besides lceeping The keys To Geneva. We saw EmmeT STegall, one oT Earlham's mosT eligible bachelors, sTarT ouT as an En- glish maior and change inTo an accomplished musician almosT overnighT. And EmmeTT seems aT home in eiTher medium: Goddard's sTage will TesTiTy To his musical and drama- Tic TalenT displayed Tor Tour years before The Army caughT up wiTh him. l-lere we have BiTTen Bowen, philosopher oT sorTs, who Tinally hiTched wiTh her philosopher Triend, Freddy l-lanes, in The summer oT '42. She sTarTed The chiclcenl epidemic-re- member? Joe Payne seldom sTepped ouT oT his role oT class poliTician unTil his senior year, when iT ran close second To a newly developed coed underTal4ing. DebaTer and republican, one oT Prexy's inTimaTes, Joe had a neaT way oT Tallcing himselT ouT oT a TighT spoT, and we all remember his plead- ing voice wiTh iTs many crescendos. Loolc Tor BeTsy Ross when you hear WhaT's The dirT, lvlyrT? She has oTTen been on hand To welcome The new Freshmen, and holds down a iob ThaT brings in a loT oT coin- cashier aT brealcTasT-where she caTches up on The laTesT novels. Any class would be proud To have an aThleTe lilce Rex An- derson in one oT The Three sporTs in which he so successTully compeTed. No one will TorgeT The Thrill oT waTching Rex run The high hurdles, race Tor a Touchdown, or sinlc an impossible shoT Trom a melee beneaTh The baslceT. The longesT sTanding member oT The Gyp Shop Tirm, l-lunlc leTT a diamond behind when he wenT inTo The Navy in lvlarch. We remember Sarah l-lornbroolc as one oT The mosT energeTic and viTal oT -.AE Teqall Elizabe- BeTsy Ross ,lo 1 T hP hl-T Rex Anderson :ar E of our all-round girls. l-ler faTal beauTy won her renown as our l942 Homecoming Queen, Though she mighf also have been known as The Blond Blifz of Comsfock Field. Sarah is always There when help is needed, and she can pull anyone ouT of a TighT spof before he knows whaT's hap- pened. Lonnie Freebairn is anoTher one of The preaching members of our class. In keep- ing wiTh his preaching, he's one Casanova dileTTanTe who aTTended Family class. Libby Reynolds is everyone's friend, including The Armed Forces, whose morale she keeps high wiTh flighTs of V-mail. And They also benefiT from her efficiency as home eco- nomisT in The form of delicious home-made fudge. EI Evans is a dashing figure on The hockey field or baskeTball floor and can she churn The wafer in The swimming pool! EI is noT only a sfar in Tunic, buT she is also a champ in The classroom. IT you need sympafhy look for El. When Bundymen gaThered in unusual numbers in The Gyp Shop, you could be sure ThaT Duke was eifher pushing a new sale or enferfaining The boys wiTh his varied and unending reper- Toire of aah . . . sfories. Buf Duke was really aT his besf in The Thick of a Tough scrap for a baskefball, or racing Through The Tackle on The gridiron. l-le's The Tough- esT, sTringiesT, scrappiesT player Earlham's seen in many a day. Now Gussie has al- ways been The mosT volaTile, versafile mem- ber of The class of '43 - always on hand To lead a cheer in his inimiTable fashion, or To raise our spiriT aT a pep rally, picnic or bonlire. ln any class lunclion, you could counl on Gussie's being llie life ol Hue par+ . Wilma Fessler would be Jrlie an- swer +o a business man's prayer - elllicienl slenograplier and accounlanl de luxe willw a boundless supply of energy. Pally Bond's liands seem lo be deslined lo wrile lime fragile lyrics Thai skie composes. And lfier wry liumor, or an occasional de- laclwmenl, go well willw lwer sell-composure. We're convinced llial lvlarcus l-ladley is pixilaled, and we ollen envy liim lor il. l-laving cauglwl liim being serious, we know lfie can be, bul liis good liumor is always a deliglillul memory. We all liked Jolinny lvlills because lie liad a good sense ol liu- mor, and l'ie look lwis work and play seri- ously. Jolinny was an old wlieelliorse on +l'ie maroon line for four years and a clean consislenl player on llrie baskelball floor. Lislen for boogie-woogie al odd liours ol llwe day and you'll probably discover biol- ogy-ben'r Pickle on llie ivory. Slwe keeps llfie girls on l'ier floor well enlerlained willn lier wil, and we undersland Anne's a masler of rlwe genlle arl ol reparlee. lvlucli as slwe loves Earllwam, Gene Smillw seems lo liave a soil spoi lor weekends in lier liome lown. Sl1e's versalile, a capable oiciicer, a liome economisl, and a dependable allw- lele. As a bridge sliark we recommend Dagwood Vail. Easy going and reliable, lie could be counled upon lo lend a lwelp- ing lfiand 'ro any commillee clwairman on llie verge of breakdown. HHHS F M Henry LeboviTZ RuThanna D F' d Luci' l-li Frances Mayer is a day dodger wiTh a liTe oT her own - and we don'T see much oT her on campus. She is a TrequenT in- habiTanT oT The Iibe, and maiors in English. Lebby oT The perpeTual camera and nu- merous sTage personaliTies, adds a dash oT spice To our memories oT '43, We lilce his engaging Tranlqness and The way his camera sees Things. PubliciTy oTTice, The PosT and baseball occupied a greaT deal oT his Time This year. Well girls KraTzie, is one oT The mosT acTive girls on The campus: mu- sician, aThleTe, scholar, and Teacher lshe geTs paid Tor iT, Tool. And she is The pro- pelling power oT Sunday Vespers. VVarmhearTed and Triendly To all - ThaT's how we Thinlc oT RuThanna Davis. She malces us Tee! aT home, wiTh her enThusiasm and her ready laughTer. BoTh on campus and oTT she's also one oT The l3usiesT people we lcnow. lT seemed ThaT Bob l3yrd's mu- sical TalenTs were almosT wiThouT limiT. We'd heard him play in church and in chapel, buT The besT perTormances oT his versaTiliTy were The diTTiculT running piano accompanimenT Tor Prodigal Son and his clever improvisaTions Tor our FaTal Beau- Ty . Bob was one oT The indispensables oT The class oT '43, Lucy l-liggs is a cuTe William Heywood Mary Mesner Lorlys Edgar Rogers liTTle WAAC however you spell iT. Member OT Phoenix, she was in charge OT The scrapboolcs Tor hospiTalized soldiers. We missed her alerTness and sense OT humor during The spring guarTer. Bill l-leywood is one OT The sons OT '43 OT whom energeTic way. PresidenT OT Bundy l-Tall Council and The STudenT SenaTe in his senior year, Bill was The besT we had Tor mecliaTing TaculTy-sTudenT diT- Q, Terences, and during his reign, college acTiviTies .2 really received a badly needed shoT in The arm. Bill had a rare TalenT Tor geTTing along wiTh peo- ple, and his genial bearing on The plaTTorm or even in a Bundy Bull session was never laclcing. When we Thinlc OT Mary, we remember her passion Tor philosophy, Those haunTing lyrical TragmenTs ThaT seem so much her own. On The oTher hand, we lcnow she has a dual personaliTy - wiTness her lively TeaTure sTyle which has graced so many a column OT The POST. Mary's opporTuniTy came when she goT The ediTorship during The lasT halT OT her Senior year. Anyone who has seen Bill Rogers ouT on The Traclc would be willing To piT him againsT The besT cindermen. l-lis running Torm was always The TeaTure OT any Earlham meeT, and he paced Earlham Teams To many vic- Tories during his Tour years parTicipaTiOn. l-lidden by Two impossible TirsT names is his Triple personaliTy OT a sporadic arTisT, an acTive geolOgisT and an able camera man. Bill also became Bundy presidenT in his senior year succeeding l-leywood. AnOTher schizophrenic subiecT is Rosemary Morrow, Teacher and sociologisT. AlThough she is never one To paT herself on The ba zlc, her Triends recognize in her The sTeady persisTence ThaT will help her reach quieTly The goal she picks and The earnesTness OT purpose To give direcTion To her liTe. l-luberT Zerlcel TransTerred Trom DePauw, neverTheless he was a Terror on any arena: TooTball, baslceTball, or even in a good Bundy rough house. A Navy man, Zeke hopes To do his parT in The medical corps. Vivazious eyes and smile and you have Penny. 9 , we are mosT proud: a calm eTTiciency and an A i v W r sr You don'T have To Tell her To geT a horse Tor if There's one around she'll be on iT. Vlfhen The-re's noT, she's dashing around making dozens oT goals, bas- keTs or runs. For preTTy ball handling on The hardwood our voTe goes To Neb Del-loney wiThouT gualiTicaTion. OuTside oT The aThleTic arena Though, Neb really Took his maTh seriously, buT iudging Trom Thea'sineviTable smile, iT wasn'T The sole obiecT oT his conTemplaTions. Barb Bogue is one oT Miss Bond's mosT charming paTienTs. A Typical college girl, she has graced mosT oT Earlham's royal courTs and has had a sTeady summer career aT Ayre's Telling The new co- ed whaT To wear and showing her how iT should look. The auThor oT JusT Be- ing Frank was mosT aT home in The sporTs world and Tor a year in '42 did a capable iob aT The reins oT The sporTs deparTmenT Tor The PosT. This Tall we saw Frank ouT Tor TooTball and Tor a graduaTed armchair sTraTegisT, he did good iob. Peggy Blackburn, The exuberanT acTress oT l-ler l:aTal BeauTy -The dash- ing hoclfey player-also is The TaiThTul accompanisT oT Gesangverein. Peg's an ardenT ad focaTe oT arising early To bear The lasT bell Tor breakTasT. UnpredicTable Marian Bye is besT known as one-halT oT lVlarTy and Bye . Shes an ouTsTanding hockey player and a whiz in accounTing, wiTh greaT aca- demic abiliTy and inTeresT. John SchmidT is The Tall and shy boy who Tinally emerged Trom Bundy in his senior year To enjoy college liTe Thoroughly. A sTrong and sTraighT ediTorial policy while boss oT The PosT, ediTor oT The Sar- gasso unTil he goT draTTed, one oT Anglican's mosT acTive and TalenTed members, l-luberT Z l l Barbara B g Frank W h Elinor P II 0 Bl Ifb Nesberf Peqqv Marian B John Sch d'l W alelo S. Zimmerman Carol Dowdell Beffie Whife Royden Parke llllllllllllll John could be relied on for informafion in any field, from railroads fo English lif via German culfure, fhe whole spiced wifh a qenfly penefrafing irony. Zimmerman, his briefcase and his Ford seem a'l parf of fhe same unify. Wifh his church on Sur'- days, Earlham on fhe ofher days, we manage fo see a good deal of him and in four years he has definifely earned our respecf for his careful ore- parafion and sfellar classroom performances. Them fell us Dr. Markle had a fierce fime wifh hm in GB.-Carol Dowdell, fhe efficienf, energefic guar- dian of fhe lunch line and femporary 'head' of fhe diefefics deparfmenf, loves an arqumenf-buf be-fs fer, she can fake if as well as dish if ouf. The girls call her Beffy Bufler, buf shes rea x one of a long line of Vkfhifes af Earl-am. Semi. 's one of fhe girls, a cheerful roommafe faxrg car' in afhlefics all year round. Sfaoe manager Parse also found fime fo sfrile up a band besides helo- ing, or subsfifufing for Prof on se-sera a l-coleoe producfions. Also fencing insfrucfor ard arfsf we lilce him for his mixfure of folliness aro seriou hard worlc. Manuel Eerrero Manuel Eerrero goT in everyone's hair back in our Treshman days when we were Trying To speak his English, bu+ now we've gained much respecT Tor This naTive Cuban because he's an accomplished maThemaTician, physicisT and singer. Peggie Dough- erTy's a prominenT day dodger, buT she's oTTen seen around The dorm. An experT on Tashions, Peg always looks The parT. Sue Keach leTT us Tor a year buT reTurned as a senior To parTicipaTe acTively in college plays. She also wroTe The Freshman class play. Sue is preparing To Teach. Erom The ranks oT '44 we acquired wise-cracking Elinor l-lill. A conscienTious and ouTsTanding sTudenT who claimed a Spanish DepT. medal and a Bryn Mawr scholarship all in one chapel program! Gladys Binns has been day-dodging in and ouT oT The Toods lab ever since our Treshman year. One oT The assisTanTs oT The dieTeTics depT. she piTched in acTively during Miss Marshall's illness. The girls discov- ered The TasTe oT her hospiTaliTy when she moved inTo The dorm Tor The spring quar- Ter. MarTy CalverT is one oT Those people who do everyThing on campus, wiThouT Tuss and TanTare, buT always commendably. As Y.W.C.A. preside-nT This year, her Triendli- ness and sinceriTy Tound ample opporTuniTy Tor expression in service. Roy l-larada came To us lasT year, also Trom WhiTTier, Caliifornia, bringing wiTh him a broad grin, and some beauTiTul l-lawaiian leis. l-le's The lad who ThreaTened To Take his classes by cor- respondence Trom Bundy, aTTer surviving his TirsT Indiana cold snap. Roy rapidly made Triends in Bundy and in Earlham aT large. PoeTry is noT The leasT oT Mary Louise STudy's many inTeresTs. She is a proliTic wriTer wiTh a knack Tor original phrasing. Mary speeded up on us and Tinished in December, hoping To do graduaTe work Ia+er. If you need any songs or dances arranged, see Marie PorTer. We like her per- sonalily andfappearance, which combine well To give an impression oT coordinaTed grace and compacT pulchriTude. Live-wire BurneT, acTor, wriTer, iournalisT and iolly-good- Susan Keach Gladys Binns Roy l-larada MargareT DougherTy Elinor Hill MarTha CalverT Mary Louise STudy 44.5 Q-.'5 vr ff? -IEW' fellow, is known for his philosophical furn of mind as well as for his humor and able imifafions of prof. sfudenf or friend. Erank finished in March, iusf one iump ahead of Uncle Sam's Army, leaving fhe Sargasso liferary sfaff minus his fender affenfion. We're confinually amazed af fhe number of fhings Eddie Jordan crammed info his four years af Earl- ham-an oufsfanding day-dodger wifh a lof of in- fluence on campus, he has held innumerable im- porfanf posifions in college organizafions, climax- ing fhem all wifh fhe presidency of fhe Sfudenf Senafe fhis year. As a high ranking member of fhe Varsify club, Eddie capfained fhe Quaker cross- counfry feam fo possession of fhe Liffle Sfafe crown af Indianapolis in I942. Eddie pracfically financed fhe Sargasso wifh his ferrific sales line, buf knew how fo keep business from inferfering wifh his law sfudies under Prexy and Eunsfon. Mon- na Jeanne Rollf has if on fhe ball whefher you wanf her help in fhrowing a dance or doing your Erench. Alfhough her major was le Francais she was awarded a medal by fhe Spanish depf. for her ex- cellenf work fhere. We can always counf on a good fime when Moio is around. Eour members of our class are nof picfured here: Ellis Lippincoff, Laura Lindley, Marshall l-lodgson and Bob Painfer. Lippy claims fhaf his philosophy conforms fo fhe lines of why should life all labor be , buf we fhink fhaf scienfific problems will be of pressing inferesf for him. Graduafe sfudy af Johns l-lopkins is nexf for Lipp, and fhere he vows he'll gef on fhe ball. Fifi Lindley impresses us wifh her composure, and we wonder how she man- ages if, considering all she has fo do. Laura fook over capably in fhe dining-room when Miss Marshall was laid up: fhey say a diefifian should be prepared for all emergencies and she proved fhaf she was. Transferred from Colorado U. af fhe beginning of fhe winfer ferm was Marshall l-lodgson, who came fo Earlham fo ioin fhe CPSTC. Though some of us knew him af Wesffown, we are awed by his amazing sfore of informafion and opinion. Bob Painfer, ex-'44, caughf up wifh our class and will graduafe af fhe end of fhe summer. Oufdoor man-no picnic is guife ifself unless Bob fries fhe hamburgers-foofball player, an ambifious pre-med, fhings sfarf going when Bob is around. Thus, from green obscurify fo blessed mafurify we have progressed fo our climax as a class. Maybe we are a liffle more mafure fhan fhe classes fhaf graduafed before us. A neafer disorder fhan ever be- fore confronfs us as we leave Earlham fo meef our share of joy, of fear and love, of hunger, ambifion, de- sire and hafred-in brief: of life. Eranlr Burnef Marie Porfer Monna Jeanne Rollf Edwin Jordan .. BHHIllIl-llll A n, Calvi,-iT, Earl S-m,Th, S DENT SENATE: lvl, Hadley, Rigsbec-, P. PorTer, Coe, Calberf, J. O. Bond, Harris, B, Rogers--V. Press Rallf, Jordan, l-lornbroole-Sec.-Tr R R ' ' ' ST T C H dl J J R g THMTTTRM ii i s i H H ART oT acquiring a liberal educaTion is learning how To malce rules and Then live comTorTably under Them. To This end we organize ourselves inTo various governing bodies To puT democracy inTo pracTice on The campus. MosT Tar-reaching and versaTile oT These is The STudenT SenaTe, which represenTs The sTudenT body as a whole. IT is The organizaTion which sponsors Those sTudenT chapels, slcaTes, and Tuesday evening Commons dances, To menTion only a Tew oT iTs acTiviTies. The Commons iTselT grew ouT oT a SenaTe concern lasT year, and, while iTs managemenT has since been Turned over To a special sTudenT-TaculTy Commons CommiTTee, noTa- ble This year Tor The rearrangemenT in hours, The SenaTe sTill mainTains parenTal inTeresT in iTs worlc. The SenaTe plays an imporTanT parT in recruiTing new sTudenTs Through The planning oT a day each year when Richmond l-ligh School seniors are inviTed To visiT The campus and see a real live college in acTion. Anofher Senale concern, urged especially by firsf ierm's presidenl Bill Heywood, was +he inifiafion of +he Music Apprecialion hour, held every o+her Wednesday evening in +he sfudenf parlor. Bill graduaied af lhe end of The Fall quarler, buf 'rhe music confinued and is enioyed by a ra'rher small buf persislenf and enfhusiaslic audience. The Senafe also ar- ranged +o have copies of The Posf senl +o Earlhamen in +he armed services and in C.P.S. Afier Bill l-leywood gradualed, Eddie Jordan was elecied Senaie presidenjr, and added 'rhe honor of being Jrhe 'firsl Day Dodger ever lo hold lhis pos+ +o his already Ieng+hy lis+ of Earlham achievemenls. During +he spring lerm, Jrhe Senale also formed a comrni++ee +o regisler blood donors for lhe Red Cross Blood Bank, a proiecf +ha+ was well supporied by 'rhe school a+ large. lIlIN Eddie Jardsnf ax, ixom, ac u er . res.. . ire. --Pres., Anderson- reas. UNDY l-lall Council is organized mos? democralically, mainly, il would seem, To police lhe men's dormilory. ll is made up ol sludenls elecled lo membership, all classes being represenled by men chosen by Them. A relalive peace and guiel selrled over Bundy hall under Bill l-leywood's presidency. Tangible signs of The councilis worlc began To appear early in The year in The form of shower currains and lor The associarion room, whal seemed lo be armor-plaled wasre-paper baslcels. As usual il loolced as if successful sleurhing and subseguenr paddling or lining were lhe am- bilion of The council. l-lowever, Bill was energerically carrying our Jrhe hidden purpose of Jrhe council, lwhich is ro be a bumper-slale belween laculry and dormirory menl consislenlrly suggesling improvemenls in lhe furnishings and houselceeping of Bundy hall. Bill Rogers succeeded lo l-leywood in January. Wilh Jrhe decrease in lhe number ol men, The larewells grew noisier and more lreguenrly lerhal la rrashcans, lighlbulbs and millc- bollles. Fines and paddling did nor conlrol 'rhe 'ride unlil The beginning ol April when no more men were on The verge of leaving. l - f f,f'AlAlllEE: lac? Builer C. Had' I mfg. BUNDY HALL COUNCIL: Bill l-le-yvfoodAPre ll: lll Lylfle, J. Mills, Overman, DeShong4S-ec., Mar H d I'W' JkB+l-VP AWh' BR fi-.mir - A.W.S. BOARD: Wood, M. Brown, B. Cleven- M. Merri , . ennin on, . ennin on- Social Ch., Lindley-V. Pres., C. Hadley- l-lE primary TuncTion oT AWS is supposedly To guide The behavior oT our Earlhamisses, buT Time will probably show ThaT This year's greaTesT conTribuTion was To The TuTure oT Earl- ham .... The board voTed To donaTe all noise Tines To The dorm Tund, and iudging Trom The sound waves bouncing around Earham l-lall, iT iT weren'T Tor prioriTies The new dorm would be in use already! Ah well .... c'esT la guerre .... ln line wiTh The general sTreamlining oT liTe These days, The TradiTional AWS roll-call meeT- ing which used To begin aT IO:3O and lasT inTo The larger hours oT The nighT, has been replaced by a snappy session sTarTing aT 6:30, much To The delighT oT laTe-sTudiers and early-reTirers alilce. Under presidenT Sarah T-lornbroolc The business meeTings were indeed conducTed briskly and eTTicienTly .... and you didn'T hear anyone obiecTing. Several oTher progressive changes were made This year, such as The slighT alTeraTion oT dorm closing hours To allow Tor The habiTual Tardiness oT The Indiana Railroad sysTem. All in all, The pace seems To have been seT This year Tor Their good reTorms in The TuTure. S iTs name implies, The lnTerdorm Council is a coordinaTing body, made up oT represenTa- Tives oT boTh dorms To deal wiTh maTTers concerning The welTare oT boTh our houses . lT does noT become TuncTional unTil a speciTic problem arises ThaT requires iTs services. lllemember The periodic epidemics oT waTer-Throwing Trom The windows oT boTh dorms, or The weighTy problem oT wheTher The ladies should be allowed Their slaclcs and curlers aT Sun- day brealcTasT, while The genTlemen squirm in Their unaccusTomed coaTs and Ties7l E G ... E. Jordan X P derT , M, l?ollT W. l-larris T r .... , J. YounT M Dzugnerw, J. O Malay COMMONS COMMITTEE: Standing: Jordan, J. A. Fun sTon, Virgil BinTord, Jaclf BuTler, J. Payne. SiTTing: E, Moore, RolIT, Dr. Dennis, Miss ComsTocln, G Van Dyke. -'Adv V 'QW T I pare-wav' ' kj ., ' , . :. ..'L-4' f M Jn, f V ix We 2 'l ' ' A , X V vt- ' I 'Tv , W.. i ff, .. L, , gf y Aw -.tit , Fi,VT. N.. HOSE sporadic noTices ThaT appear on The bulleTin board: Day Dodger meeTing aTTer chapel . . . imporTanT! Turnish a clue To The acTiviTies oT anoTher branch oT sTudenT gov- ernmenT on campus .... or should we say. halT-on. These hybrids TransacT Their business wifh a minimum oT organizaTion, managing To geT Things accomplished in spiTe. or because OT ThaT TacT. Their cooperaTion is enlisTed in all college proiecTs which do noT concern dorm sTudenTs exclusively. They helped wiTh The Wiorld STudenT Service Fund and The Red Cross campaigns, and managed This year To sponsor Their annual college dance, despiTe The more- Than-usual obsTacles oT circumsTance, l-IE PrecedenT COmmiTTees are responsible TOr inTrOducing The Treshmen TO Earlham TradiTiOn .... who could have TOrgOTTen ThaT .... and They do iT wiTh a bang .... needless TO say where! MarTy lvlerriTT and her cOmmiTTee gOT TOugh wiTh The Treshman girls in TradiTiOnal reTribuTiOn Tor insulTs suTTered in Their Own cO-ed inTancy, and racked Their brains Tor new and subTle reTinemenTs OT The usual meThOds OT TOrTure. WhaT They came OUT wiTh was mainly calculaTed TO provide menTal anguish TOr The recipienTs, as iT never Tailed TO deTracT TrOrn Their girlish beauTy. EnTOrcemenT OT men's precedenTs resTs On The principle OT saTeTy in numbers: headed This year by Duke EllingTOn, The cOm- miTTee numbered TOrTy. AT ThaT raTe iT wOn'T be lOng unTil all The men, excepT The Treshmen OT cOurse, are On iT .... Never- Theless, unless The presenT TOrms OT physical TOrmenT are changed, These numbers are probably iusTiTied, TOr even a Freshman can Turn when goaded suTTicienTly, as sOme upperclassmen learned TO Their dismay upon Occasion. TENS PRECEDENT COMMITTEE J OM l y ST T Anderson, Brumbaugh, WOMEN'S PRECEDENT CQMMITTEE1lv1.Me'r ' kIT B TLb'T Sfd RTTTB er, urne, e Ovuz, sen, ea man, O , Ogue, cl: J P y D l-l y J R 3 d Ell OT Chairman. J OWEVER much we may vegeTaTe and philosophize abouT liTe aT Earlham, There sTill remain innumerable deTails and rouTine Taslcs ThaT musT be perTormed To keep The college machine run- ning smooThly. For a college is as much a business enTerprise as iT is an educaTional insTiTuTion, and in These days especially, if The one Tails, The oTher is done Tor! This, Then, is The raison d'eTre of The adminisTraTion wing in CarpenTer, where Prexy as chieT engineer, Tries To mainTain a healThy balance beTween The supply and demand oT The various ingredienTs ThaT nnalce The Thing run, while The deans, our personnel advisors keep The parTs well-oiled and TuncTioning smooThly. These local imfluences are Tempered and aided by The TrusTees, who meeT Tour Times a year and assume The noT-incons siderable responsibiliTy Tor mainTaining amicable relaTions wiTh The larger body oT Friends which sTand baclq oT The insTiTuTion and Tor inTerpreTaTion oT Earlham To The world in general. Their decisions apply To The college as a whole. Where lasT year They auThorized The Commons, This year They had To deal wiTh The inTiniTely more essenTial guesTion oT wheTher or noT men in uni- Torm would be allowed on The campus Tor Training. The ouTcome was negaTive, Thus seTTing The course, Tor beTTer or Tor worse, in keeping wiTh Friends' TradiTional peace TesTimony. DirecTly responsible To The TrusTees is William C. Dennis. l-le's a good business man, our Prexy, wiTh an ear To The ground and an eye To The TuTure .... like any good lawyer .... and he has a deep concern Tor The TradiTions oT Earlham. ln a TighT place he shows us how To TighT poliTely Tor our ideals. A deTermine-d man oT principle, he is only lcnown To mosT oT us, de-spiTe his oTT- made assurance ThaT he is never Too busy To see us , as The energeTic and preoccupied genTleman who can sling an apT chapel inTroducTion, and whose oTTice has a perpeTual air oT iusT having been sTaclced. gi 1 BORQT O5 Q EEST Sfanding, ara , - . . SH 9 N ' ' x x 1 ,X ya - . l GEORGE D VAN DYKE CLARA COMSTOCK q he College a d Professor of Physics Dean of Women and Professor of Physical Educafion for Women UR mosl inrimale conlacls in Jrhe wing are wirh Commie and George, ro whom we lake our problems and from whom we hear abour our nor-inlreguenr misdemeanors. ln Jrhe course of her long career ar Earlham, Miss Comslock has acquired a repularion for being all lhings To all women. l-ler personal in- reresr in us covers everyrhing from how we're gerling along wilh our roommale To Jrhe job we wanl 'rhis summer. And as if being fosler-molher ro l99 girls weren r a lull 'rime job, she manages ro find lime To keep an eye on women's sporls and chaperon in- numerable dances. She believes in sell-delerminalion for slu- denrs, buf will give us her own rar? brand of advice if Jrhe occa- sion warranrs ir, and we are always assured of her sympalheric underslanding. George Van Dyke, known ro us as Dean, physics prof, base- ball czar, and chief rooler, may have had a decreasing number of men ro oversee 'rhis year, bur his problems seem ro have in- creased in inverse rario. We all sighed wirh relief when he man- aged lo scrape 'rogelrher a baseball ream . . . if would have broken our hearTs To see him wiThouT someone To cheer Tor! Advising The Army and Navy reserves on The campus was an imporTanT parT oT his work This year. Member oT The Trio, Dennis-l-luTT-Van Dyke, he helped Tellows To geT in as much oT a college educaTion as They possibly could beTore The draTT caughT Them up. George is always glad To have Tel- lows come and see him, and The problems puT beTore him are usually weighed in The impersonal Terms oT delivering The goods , oT living up To your conTracTs or obligaTions honesTly. We're usually ready To Tol- low The sTraighT and narrow again aTTer a shorT inTer- view wiTh George. Opal Thornburg, who, in Two minuTes TlaT, can lay hands on The answer To any Technical problem deal- ing wiTh Earlham's scholasTiciTy, is our eTTiciency ex- perT. We go To her Tor advice Trom our TirsT Fresh- man regisTraTion daze up To The Time when we counT up our upperclass hours Tor graduaTion. Also auThor and well-inTormed hisTorian oT Earlham, biographer oT Earlhamen in The service, she adds The ediTorship oT The EarlhamiTe To her many acTiviTies. AdverTising is imporTanT in any business, and spark- plug Bob l-luTT is on his Toes every minuTe To keep The world aware oT Earlham's virTues. l-Tis worries in- creased This year Too, as The DormiTory Fund pledges were Turned over To him Tor collecTing, buT his char- acTerisTic calm remained unruTTled. As member oT The Trio-on-draTT-maTTers, men in The process oT leav- ing could counT on his help and advice To obTain de- TermenTs. l-le is Prexy's righT hand man and his oTTice is one oT The liveliesT rooms in Carp. One oT The mosT inTluenTial men on campus .... especially abouT The TirsT oT The monTh .... is Virgil BinTord, who has aT his TingerTips any sTaTisTics you mighT wanT abouT The Tinancial sTaTe oT The college. l-le puT on a good enTerTainmenT Tor us aT The hog show, Too, reTlecTing his successTul inTeresT in Earl- ham Farms. Indeed, according To him, we have on The campus all The maTerial ThaT would be necessary To make Earlham a maior agriculTural college in easT- ern lndiana. Meanwhile, he is Trying To Tace The pres- enT siTuaTion by making Earlham a ciTy selT-suTTicienT wiTh regard To meaT, dairy and garden producTs. Z 'FQ 1 , ' fjffxy ,, ' 'va '42 1,, 1 i1 6,13 C ff. .. ' A., I 115 f ,1 41 1 f 1 1 41 f 1, I 14 A , ,Wa 1 1 1 ' 7 1 1' f 1 I A ' 1 4, , 1 :rp 1.1 EAD oT The deparTmenT is kindly ProT. Cosand. A guieT scholar he conducTs all his liT. classes on The lecTure basis. l-low does he manage To say so much so well in his quieT monoTone, knowing how many oT his so-called sTudenTs make a poinT oT never lisTening? lT's decenT oT him noT To ask poinTed guesTions in class To embarrass The dream- ers. Cosand TeaTures English drama and one oT his course in Shakespeare is a rich heriTage To Those who care. Many oT us came To Earlham wiTh a surprising ignorance oT The moTher Tongue. And iT was Miss Davis who Took us in hand and sTraighTened ouT our grammar. Under her we learned where To locaTe preposiTions and modiTiers, and our spliT inTiniTives were reuniTed. Vlfe also picked up a greaT deal besides The subiecT. BUT aTTer our sTruggles wiTh grammar as Treshmen, we Tound ThaT Miss Davis conducTs classes in liTeraTure as well. Old English is her specialTy. Ah! The Venerable Bede .... I TNH ISH ANGLICAN: Slanding: M. Calverl, J. O B d P M R l M R l SH g M ss Davis, Miss Thornburg. Hew- B nd, Robbins, B, Wildman, Sludy. Earlham's poel laureale is E. Merrill Rool. l-lis several published volumes spread his name beyond our campus, bul we lcnow him here lor his unassuming modesly and courlesy, and lor his amazing vocabulary. Freshman courses wilh Rool are dillerenl lrom lreshman courses any- where else, while advanced and crealive comp. allracl mosl ol Earlham's mosl promising wril- ers. Each lerm Prol. Rool has a philosophy course ol one sorl or anolher, and in lhem we come lo lcnow lhe man beller almosl lhan lhe subiecl. Which malces il even more inleresl- ing. l-le is lruly worlh knowing. Miss Eves conducls her classes guielly and ralher inlormally wilh Friendly simplicily in lhe brighl and cheerful corner room wilh lhe many windows. She's aboul lhe only prol. lo have her ollice in lhe classroom, and all her boolcs lining lhe walls help creale a lilerary almosphere. Miss Eves has courses in bolh composilion and lileralure, bul one ol her besl is conlemporary lil. She's a crealive wriler loo, and has been well-known in Richmond lilerary circles. Weaves inlricale pallerns on her hand loom lor relaxalion in her spare lime. Grammar is vilal lor an educaled person. An apprecialion ol our splendid lilerary heri- lage is a rnarlc ol cullure which endures lor lile. Bul il is lhe crealive wriler, eilher he who hopes lor a lilerary prolession, or he who merely dabbles , lhe crealive wriler who handles lhe language, and helps build il, he il is who draws lhe mosl lrom lhe sludy ol English. Ye Anglican is lhe organizalion lor such lalenled lor almosl lalenledl lilerary lollr, who galher monlhly in lacully homes lo read and discuss lheir worlc and wail lor relreshmenls. Though membership is limiled and by invilalion only, lhey aren'l as exclusive as il sounds. FSS., FS. OO , F. OO . ml ff-pf-f f fl l-TMAN HANDBOOK STAFF: G. 'V 'J Vfrifi i W Si-Md -Bus Mg D Shong. T EZTTCP lf- L STX- FF' Winfer F ll P -'-H14 J i- if P i f r P f A P M 1. 1. CLJV 5 :.fpf.f 'J J fe Ed. lA.E.?Ac,icr P.P.Farlmf ,-L , ri P f Ed l lEll.,i A, 'Naqner .Q . .. ,.,. ft Na gner P.f'.F9anda'l S fh, Rayporf-Ed? Spring rvi.E,M lima H. I. Lebovifz PA, Farloff T' A Pand ll llllllll llllll A Bible for beginners is fhe Freshman Hand- book, which annually greefs newcomers as Soon as fhey arrive in fhe fall. lf fells every- fhing. Conscienfious freshmen guard fhe handbook wifh fheir lives, nof only because fo be caughf wifhouf if means a licking, buf be- cause if is fhe only handy way fo find ouf everyfhing an Earlham sfudenf musf know abouf anyfhing exfra-curricular. Very offen upperclassmen, even seniors, may be seen hunfing a handbook. The Y's publish fhe book every year, and fhis fime They received an unexpecfed bargain, Though freshmen may nof know if, ofhers who have seen previous books can realize how refreshingly differenf was fhe edifion, prepared fhis year for fhe Class of '46 fo cuf ifs wisdom feefh on. TRONGHQLD of Earlham's Fourfh Esfafe is fhaf basemenf room in fhe libe, where fhe weary Posf sfaff labors every Sunday affer- noon and evening, under green-shaded lighfs, unfil fhe small hours of Monday morning. lf's a well-organized bedlam. From one weekend fo fhe nexf, fhe big, U-shaped fable is never cleaned off, buf The ediforial sfaff always seems fo find whaf's needed. lnformalify is fhe keynofe. Every now and fhen a reporfer darfs in wifh eifher an excuse or a sfory. lm- mediafely he's pounced upon by copy-hungry edifors, who, affer his deparfure, make sarcas- fic remarks abouf fhe qualify of fhe wrife-up -or fhe quanfify .... Two elderly Under- woods bang ouf copy, powered by ediforial POST ADVISORY BOARD: SchmidT, Sims-Sec., Rayporl-Chm., l 'l'C F- POST BUSINESS STAFF: Jack I-IarT, Ifiladys Binns ISpring Bus. Mgrs., Flores, MerriTT, 5Teane. POST CIRCULATION STAFF: FaiTh Maris, Marcus Hadley IA. Brumbaugh ISpringIl. ToreTingers. lNo one oT The sTaTT knows The proper sysTem as TaughT in Typing classes, buT we assure you ex-ediTor John I-lawks was TasTer wiTh hunT-and-peck Than a good many noT-so-poor Typing sTudenTs.l During The aTTernoon noThing much hap- pens. SchmidT and Rourke never could break Their reporTers in To meeT a deadline. ATTer Rourke came Ivlesner, TirsT woman edi- Tor since our sophomore year, buT reporTer's habiTs don'T change. AbouT 4:00 The edi- Tors usually Take Time ouT To resTore Their bodies or souls or boTh aT vespers or in The commons .... BuT Then evening Talls and The Tempo mounTs. By IO:3O, when every- one has leTT excepT Caplan or BuTTerTield or Goodman wiTh sporTs, The ediTor and managing ediTor are a liTTle swamped. IT all happens aT once, and There are so many Things sTill undone. Ye ed usually waxes a liTTle desperaTe .... No sTreamer This weekl ThaT's going To play heck wiTh The page one makeup-and whaT can we do Tor arT? Around midnighT Rourke geTs up wearily, Thinking oT The long walk home. Wifh a ruler he whacks The green lighT- shades inTo someThing resembling The opening bars oT The Barcarolle, and siTs down To The desperaTe grind oT wriTing heads, even Though The ideas don'T TiT The space. More work. Then around I:3O a hopeTul and apolegeTic noTe To The prinTer, and anoTher PosT is puT To bed. Monday nighT The galley prooT is reTurned and one doesn'T know iT iT was ediTors or prinTers who were responsible Tor The maioriTy oT The raTher ghasTly errors. BuT aTTer The correcTion oT The prooT, The ediTorial sTaTT resTs wiTh lighT hearT. Their work Tor The week is done, and The business sTaTT Takes up The iob .... For even Though no one geTs paid anyThing lexcepT belaTedly The prinTerl This iournalisTic work Takes a good deal oT money, and The business sTaTT can'T loaT. I-larT kepT his accounTs in good order and was able To keep The PosT Tinancially solvenT Tor a change. BuT iT wasn'T easy. Gladvs Binns suc- ceeded him aT The beginning oT The spring Term. There has To be adverTising. I-lere we have GiTe STeane, IvlarTy MerriTT and Carlos Flores, who spend Their aTTernoons poliTely and persuasixeh pes- Tering Richmond businessmen To buy space .... AcTuaI cash subscripTions Trom alurnni ano Triends don'T amounT To much in revenue, buT iT's imporTanT To geT a wide circuIaTion Tor The FosT, and FaiTh Ivlaris has a iob on her hands keeping all The mail subscribers saTisTied. Marc I-ladley and when ho 1 i 1 1 one else would, Rourke, boTh Tended To campus circulaTion. Meaning a bus Trip every Tuesday aTTer- noon To The Pennsy depoT Tor CollegiaTe DigesTs and anoTher To Van ZanT and War'Tel's Tor PosTs. Then a desperaTe half-hour geTTing Them all passed under dormiTory doors and s+iII making dinner . . . . MosT aTTenTive readers are members of The advisory board-Miss Davis, Barbara Sims, Mark RayporT, and The ediTor and business manager. Their iob is To TormulaTe policy and keep The sTaTTs sTaTTed despiTe The conTusion oT a war year. The advisory board wisely remains in The background, mainTaining a waTchTul alooTness in co-ordinaTing The work oT The campus newspaper. The EarlhamiTe is The mosT widely disTribuTed campus publicaTion and also claims The TurTher disTincTion oT being The oldesT alumni magazine in The counTry. Miss Thornburg Takes Time OTT Trom her duTies as regisTrar To puT ouT an aTTracTive, news-Tilled quarTerly. There's usually quiTe a rush To The booksTore when a new issue is announced. Seniors especially, beginning To know alumni oT re- cenT years, oTTen Tind news oT a parTicular alumnus or alumna, which makes The EarlhamiTe inTeresT- ing reading .... BUT whaTever you have-Freshman l-landbook, PosT or EarlhamiTe - Earlham seTs ' greaT sTore by iTs l:ourTh EsTaTe. The everlasTing Thrill oT seeing one's name in prinT, The sponlraneous search Tor dirT in The gossip column, The serious and ThoughTTul reading oT an ediTorial, and The TranTic hunT in The l-landbook Tor an obscure Earlham l-lall house regulaTion, or +ha+ Tinge oT helpless regreT upon learning of The whereabouTs oT a recenT grad, which has now replaced mere social curi- osiTy in scanning The EarlhamiTe, oT reading wha+ previous generaTions oT EarlhamiTes are doing- all This is a parT oT Earlham's appreciaTion Tor her FourTh EsTaTe. Things-sTubby pencils, ancienT TypewriTers, reams oT cheap copy-paper, grey linoType slugs, greasy prinTers' ink: inTangibles-The hundred Things which make up The college week or year, The ThoughTs sTudenTs are Thinking, The hopes They enTerTain, The ideas They are working Tor, evenTs oT liTe-all These The FourTh EsTaTers' magic compounds inTo a Tangible, permanenT record on black and whiTe. l l N M 7 T TTT-Tii'T3Q'TT l ',-1 7 l .-- l f ,l PosT REPoRTERs: ' ' Randall ' Mauch 1 f-via, Yofciee H i . . , -N Seane ' ri smnh , Walls 1 Farlow I 4 Terrell 1 pw --fA-' Wieqelmesse N 'T A' Caplan - . Ballinger ' Cummins l Pomeroy SHHHHSSH 0 In - wwmiw 'L . X Q 54 6' T af -und. ,m.,7 ff ' Schmid? and PayporT A yearbook is usually puT ouT in deep dark mysTery: a Tew privileged souls know someThing abouT iTs conTenTs and pay Tor Their knowledge wiTh Torced labor. And even They know whaT The Tinal ref sulT looks like only a Tew hours ahead oT The sTudenT body. lncoherenT biTs or baTches oT engraver's copy are supplemenTed by a worse disorder oT prinTer's copy and Tall inTo place on The whiTe pages as The year progresses: The whole is Tucked away under a cover oT obvious originaliTy and Tinally delivered in Time Tor auTograph hunTers and collegiaTe sou- venir chasers. Or else The sTaTT misses a deadline and The prinTer loses a Tew men To The draTT and The pages oT The book are never enlivened by The come ouT on Time. ink oT Triends and sundry. Good books never This year's sTaTT ToughT The draTT, The budgeT and camera supply raTioning. The lasT Two were Tinally vanquished. BUT The armed land oTherwisel services proceded unchecked among The people who worked on The I943 Sargasso. John Schmidt and collaboraTor aT large-To Them was enTrusTed purpose. Eddie Jordan, business manager, who sTuck To his posT and puT up unTlinchingly wiTh The vagaries oT ediTors and budgeT, mainly The Tormer .. . . And Then The various sTaTTs who did The dirTy work. l-lelen Ford was head of The arT sTaTT and The ediTor's privaTe secreTary. The main iob oT lay- ing ouT The book, oT giving shape and paTTern To The pages was handled by her, wiTh assisTanTs lvlar- Tha CalverT and RuTh Anne Gorman. Those cameras ThaT clicked nighT and day To caTch Earlham liTe on The move were manned dur- ing Fall Term by Mark RayporT and ThereaTTer by Bill Rogers, wiTh RuThanna Borden covering The more inTimaTe aspecTs oT Earlham l-Tall and l-lenry Business manager and assisTanT: Eddie Jordan and MarTha Merriff. Phohugrapher Bill Rogers. ediTor-in-chieT, and lvlark RayporT-acTing ediTor The main responsibiliTy Tor decisions oT Torm and Lebovirz shooling lhe ad seclion. The lirerary angle was handled by Rosemary Morrow, Anne Merrill, Camilla l-lewson, Rae Azu- mano and Jim Rourlce, under The supervision of Franlc Burnel. Men's sporrs were done by Franlc Weirich and Dan Goodman, while Sara Kralz and Elinor Pennell conlribuled The feminine Touch 'ro arhlelics. The research slafl, long on worlc and shorl on glory, was essenlial for 'rhe worlc of The olher slaffs. ll was headed by Sarah l-lornbroolc, afler Bill l-leywood lefl school, and consisled of Barbara Bogue, Lucy l-liggs, Belsy Ross and Gene Smilh. Marian Bye and Marlha Merrill worlced wilh Eddie Jordan on lhe business end of Jrhe en- Jrerprise. The lasl man ro be on The iob was circularion manager Bye, who had charge of mailing boolcs ro men in rhe armed services and C.P.S. SARGASSO STAFF: l-lornbrook, Merrill, G. Srnilh, Morrow, M. Calvert Borden, Bye. r-l J cl F d L b +1 S Higgs, G. Smifh. Always Earlham has been a church-relaTed college, buT we don'T boTher To be dogmaTic abouT iT. Freshmen some- Times wonder iT we're going To converT Them To Quakerism. However one religion class here is suTTicienT, usually, To show Them we don'T care how They Think, provided They do Think. Dr. Woodman doesn'T Teach many classes, and probab- ly only The religion maiors know him very well. BuT all oT us recall his sermons in chapel every so oTTen Through The year. A IoT oT us know Dr. Berry Tor The amazing varieTy oT religion classes he oTTers-a new collecTion each Term IT seems almosT. l-le Teaches Them conscienTiousIy and well, even Though knowing many oT his lisTeners are merely Tak- ing Their religion reguiremenT and noThing more. BuT Tor Those who do give Their enTire aTTenTion, There is always a greaT deal oT Tood Tor ThoughT .... Then There's Greek. l-le really specializes in ThaT. Numerically The classes are small buT anyone who heroically seTs ouT inTo The Greek New Tes- TamenT is a serious sTudenT. And There's saTisTacTion in ThaT kind oT course. lvlosT Greek sTudenTs are prospecTive minis- Ters, or in The case oT The modern Greek class, poTenTial CPSTC members inTeresTed in reconsTrucTion, or oTher re- ligion majors. And speaking oT religion maiors, some oT The more earnesT among Them have organized The School of PropheTs, which meeTs regularly wiTh members oT The religion TaculTy Tor philosophical or religious discussions. .4 I-IEY ask everyone fo fake fwo years of foreign language af Earlham. If has somefhing fo do wifh a well-rounded liberal educafion. There are even some language ma- iorsg and we all envy people like l-lirschfeld wifh her nafural abilify fo speak fhree languages and read a couple more. lvlosf of us sfagger fhrough fhe reguiremenfs and fhaf's all. Under Ivliss Pick we gof German and Erench. lf was somefimes exguisife forfure, buf afferwards we were glad, because we had learned. We were glad foo, fo have known Miss Pick. She really is guife a cosmopolifan, wifh Ausfrian birfh, long residence in France and England, a round-fhe-world odyssey, wonderful knowledge of India, and a sincere inferesf in humanify everywhere. Buf she always insisfs fhaf her sfudenfs speak 'rhe language like na- fives. And if's nof easy-even wifh moufh exercises and mirrors .... Mr. Paffee-beginning Spanish or advanced French, or any of several ofher romance language courses. Paffee's classes are generally conducfed in an easy-going manner and one is surprised how much he really learned wifhouf apparenf efforf .... lvliss Thomas has puf in fwo decades wifh Spanish af Earlham. She has wafched ifs popularify grow and blossom, unfil, in a Lafin-America con- scious generafion if has become one of Earlham's mosf popular and fimely subiecfs. Spanish sfudenfs are grafe- ful for her consfanf supporf of El Club Espanol .... Pro- fessor Gebauer was in his second year here as Lafin prof. when he wenf fo Vifashingfon for war work, and his classes found fhemselves surrendered fo Mr. Paffee. We don'f require long years of Lafin anymore, buf many sfudenfs sfill realize whaf a valuable sfudy if is. 'fi f? lHN lT's The besT baclcground Tor lan- guages, including The English .... ProT. Charles has given ThirTy-eighT years To Earlham. Now he heads The deparTmenT oT modern languages. and specializes in German liT. ATTer The TirsT and second year beginners have been weeded ouT, he usually Tinds a handTul who will share wiTh him his inTeresT in GoeThe or Theo- dor STorm. Wi+h ProT. Charles The grammar is noT so imporTanT as baclc- ground and Teeling. l-lis sTudenT days in Germany, ah, yes .... lT is he who has been responsible Tor der Gesangverein, and despiTe The hard Teelings oT war, This liTTle club lceeps singing. All gualiTies oT German sTu- denT lwiTh or wiThouT singing voicel gaTher every oTher Monday To lceep alive old German Tollc songs and STu- denTenlieder .... AnoTher language group is EI Club Espanol. Those per- ennial noTices abouT meeTing in The EasT dining room Tuesday noon: The Spanish singing, conversaTion boTh TluenT and brolcen - aided by The Eerreros, who lcnow whaT iT's all abouT - The Spanish movie and chapel play: one oT The liveliesT groups on The campus This year. llllll 3' PHILOSOPHY FORUM: Cecere, royd, I-Iirschfeld Reqensburger W PeDBdT I-lkssl-I son, lRayporT-V. Pres.l AVID Bruner warned us when we Took Sociology IA To look ouT Tor new horizons , and They keep popping up in all his classes in proporTion To our own inTeresT and iniTiaTive. 'Ihere's a special aTmosphere in a Bruner class compounded oT inTormali- Ty lhe calls us by boTh names, Ouaker Tashionl personal anecdoTes llike The bedbugs- in-New York sTory and Tales oT The good old days on WPA in Pennsylvanial and a heal- Thy broadmindedness oT ouTlook, always wiTh The salT barrel handy . I-lis evening classes aTTracT social workers, non-proTessional Townspeople as well as The usual run oT sociology maiors, and are marked by occasional Tield Trips To such insTiTuTions as The CounTy WelTare DepT., Family Service Bureau and EasThavenl IT we overcome our naTive inerTia suTTicienTly we may someday see The world as Bruner sees iT and have some idea oT whaT oughT To be done abouT iT. In a serener aTmosphere, Tinged wiTh The glaring porTraiT oT KanT, The mysTic Toun- Tain, and The Time charT crowded wiTh philosophers, we grapple wiTh The deeper prob- lems oT liTe under ArThur BerndTson's able direcTion. I-le leadeTh us beside The deep waTers , and someTimes, To our amazemenT, we plunge in. WheTher we go To class is our aTTair, unTil The day oT iudgmenT, buT There's liTTle incenTive To cuT on Spring aTTernoons when we meeT in The Cem: in The sTill air we can hear I3erndTson's mind Ticking oTT ideas precisely as he leads us Trom one concepT To iTs logical successor. Perhaps his sTudenT's-eye-view oT liTe is a hangover Trom his own noT-Too-remoTe sTudenT days. Anyway, we admiT ThaT Though his courses are meaTy, The exams are Tair and his Tolerance is almosT unbounded. More inTormal are The meeTings oT The Philosophy Forum in The gemueTlichkeiT oT The BerndTson's College Avenue aparTmenT, where any subiecT may become The Topic oT discussion. The educaTion deparTmenT nicely demonsTraTes The synThesis oT sTudy and Technical applicaTion in The liberal arTs. From Those hazy beginnings in ed psych ilIusTraTed by raTs in mazes and dogs barking aT bells, we evenTually progress To ThaT ThroaT-TighTen- ing TirsT day oT sTudenT Teaching and The shocking realizaTion ThaT The wiggling class beTore us is whaT we were a mere Tour or Tive years ago. KraTT believes in analyzing The process oT Thinking, and one Tine day we are sTarTled To Tind our wandering ThoughTs being used Tor class demonsTraTion. Impressions oT The gay old days oT sTudenT liTe aT mediaeval universiTies, KraTT's descripTion oT a baby as a vegeTable, PlaTo's Republic, and spiriTed aTTacks on Dewey's much-maligned philosophy oT educaTion Tuse in The amalgam Trom which we emerge To a job as Tull-Tledged Teachers. I1HIlUSllPHY, SUEIUIUEY, J -'ug J. W. Bond, W. Tesf, J, Payne. y l'i l VL!-,TlQllAL PELATVDUS FOPUM: Dr, Dennis, Dr. Wianf, Prof. Funsfon, Jordan, ' fave l3'?Cl'l'1i 'T, Marcis l-ladlef, Rigsbee, Wizorn, W. Wildman, Pendlefon, C. Had- , Ccf, P. A. Delis, Francis l-lole, Miss Long, Morrow, Hodgson, Regensburqer, ' O E d B ' ri r 4. . Dfl Eli E. ANY of us never venfure beyond l-lisfory of Civ and Confemp in fhe deparfmenf of l-lisfory and Po- lifical Science. We form our ideas of profs and subiecf maffer from fhese infroducfory courses, realizing slowly fhaf hisfory rnusf be a science since if does nof answer all ifs why's and how's. The 'reachable facfs, however, form a large body, fo us a memory drill fhaf we dread fhrough high school prejudice. Our aversion, however. does nof lasf very long. l-lisfory of Civilizafion under Perry Kissiclc gives us a quiclc once-over of fhe fundamenfal developmenfs of human life since fhe eolifhic period. lln fhe process we may acquire a fasfe for anfhropology, economics of any of a number of relafed subiecfsl We can'f complain fhaf Prof Kissiclc doesn'f give us a chance fo do ore fhan is emecfed of us, wifh flnose voluminous assiqnmenfs-fhe reserve books in fhe 900s-equalled only by fhe syllabus. He is a genuine idealisf who isn'f afraid fo say whaf he fhinks in class and does so frequenfly, and even if we don'f agree, we admire him for if. lnfernafional law is Prexy's home ferrifory. We may smile af his enfhusiasm af fimes, buf we really can'f DAILY NEWS: H. l-lornbrook, Jones. R. R. Allen, Cook, Flores, Buclcman, Cummins, VVesley, Dr. Dennis, Grawols, Sfraffon, M. M. Bowman, Sfudy, E. O. Johnson, Frazier, Schmidf. Riqsbee. I I i i 56 help envying him his knowledge oi lhe subiecf. l-le keeps us up io dare in rurrenl everns, aria 'nei cance, in Daily News, probably ihe mosi widely ailended of his classes. You haven'l had your money's worlh al Earlham if you have noi had Coniemp under fxrihur Fufro also 'reaches American Government l-lisfory, and Foreign Relaiions. This year he fool ever +he se' oi German Cullure, originaled in March for C.P.S.T.C. men. ,ll .r., l-lere are courses presenled wilh painsialcing obieclivily, allhough 'rhe Friendly and pacilisl lOuClT r a fell beiween senlences. Seen lhrough Funs+on's eyes, hisrory becomes an analysis ci Lhe arnbffians ard ,, of The shorlsighiedness of ihe men who were given lo rule, or oi men in general. ll is an irgrrcal f somelimes, buf more oilen an implied provocafion lo rise above lhe level oi our errorions. Once u lime il was lhe nose oi Cleopaira: now lhe whims oi a congressional invesiigaling commiliee IJ' or ballles. One by one, lhe cogwheels of hislory are broughl lo lighi in Funslon's classes. Organized 'ro exlend our 'rhinlcing beyond lhe campus and naiional boundaries 'ro quesiions oi vfcrld significance, lhe lnlernalional Relalions Forum, under ihe presidency oi John Schmidt had a very sp -.A 1.1- if, ,U round-'fable discussion in collaboralion wiih 'rhe Peace Fellowship on Armisrice Day. Joe Payne, f.fi+h Fri i i l I l l i i Wiegelmesser, valianlly clung lo his poini oi view in lhe face oi lough paciiis? opposilion irorn +he ix' and from fellow spealcers Eugene Mills and Camilla l-lewson. l-leaded by Eddie Jordan-whafl him again-ailer John Schmidl leil, another meeling was held where Dr. Paul Wianl, an archilecl and missionary relurned from China, l'Old aboul developrnc-n+s in lhe Orient lead' ing io lhe preseni Sino-Japanese war, The deparlmenl oi l-lisiory and Polilical Science annually presides over lhe lns+i+u+e oi Foreign aria? held again This year in May. li is a concern of Prexy's. Sludenls 'ralce il lo hearl lsoonlanepugly, or nor is a olher queslionl realizing fha? a valuable pooling oi iniormaiion and opinion is one oi she drec' ci r L lions ihai Earlham can malce 'foward solving ihe presenl Crisis. 6 fl id 545 l l lllll llllllll , N. ' C N, lilillv A biography oT The biology deparTmenT is a sTory oT iTs guardians, ProTessors lvlarkle, Gar- ner, and Dilks. Millard Markle is The mainsTay oT The Bundy BasemenT biology lab, and a pillar oT The college. An Earlham graduaTe, he has been proTessing biology since IQIO. l-lis classes run smooThly, sTarTing aT prompTly a Tew minuTes aTTer The second buzzer, wiTh a brieT inTroduc- Tory period devoTed To announcemenTs and relaTed subiecTs. ln charge oT all Three Terms oT G. B. This year insTead oT The TirsT semesTer, Dr. lvlarkle had To sTruggle paTienTly wiTh such here- Tical TundamenTalisTs as did noT admiT The necessiTy oT evoluTion. As a laboraTory Technician Dr. Markle is aT his besT. l-lis course in bacTeriology is an in- spiraTion To The humaniTarian and puncTilious Technician alike. Public l-lealTh is a iunior size bacieriology course Tor The amaTeur, buT The Tall Term course in lVlicroTechnigue may besT be described as King size . This was The class which-aTTer much labor and pracTice wiTh +ha+ rniniaTure guilloTine, The microTome-produced hi3Tological slides To arouse anybody's enThusi- asrn. ln some cases These were even good. The GrowTh oT Biology, more Than any oTher, bears The imprinT oT his personaliTy and is very dihTerenT under Dr. Garner. Murvel Garner was and will again be The i.1spiraTion oT many a sTudenT: a philosophical as well as a pracTical scienTisT. l-lis greaT hum 1niTy and his kindly inTeresT in oThers are The TraiTs which are admired immediaTely by Those who know him. IT is wiTh This gualiTy oT spiriT and in keeping faifh vvifh his belief in fhe sacredness of man's personalify and his righf fo live fhaf he has leff us femporarily fo acf as direcfor of a CPS. camp. Buf fhere is a generafion of sfudenfs who will recal fhe Physiology class where fhey played games fc demonsfrafe scienfific phenomena, fhe Seminar ur- der fhe frees in fhe spring, fhe lecfures which seerrieo rambling and informal buf sfuck in fhe mind because of fheir infellecfual sfirnulafion. If is a fascirafifg sfudy in human psychology and leadership for a for' mer G.B.er fo lisfen in on one of fhe heafed discus- sions on evolufion, heredify or any confroxersial sub- iecf, and fo realize fhaf in spife of fhe inferse dis- cussion fhe argumenf is proceeding iusf as Dr. Gamer knew and planned if would. Professor Dilks-whose name offen rescu CE across campus affer a brighf 'lGocd Morrirgl l- capably fook over in fhe absence of Dr. Garner. lr keeping wifh a deparfmenfal fradiiionl Eleafor is an Earlham grad and of course a convinced evolufionis' She knows a lof, also knows and admifs vfhaf she does nof know. Anfiprofhrombin, or ichfhyopferqguc' or similar long scienfific words are nof high in Elea- nor's favor. Along wifh fhe classes she prefers good anglosaxon monosyllables. Many are fhe sfuderfs who know fhe chick more infimafely fhan ever befcre fhrough her infroducfion fo if in embryology. Under her experf fufelage, physiology and comparafie anafomy were also fhoroughly learned and recfeff bered. T5r5k5 F333 :'i-'L 7 'af -3 . HEMISTRY headguarTers and laboraTories are in Parry l-lall, a square box surrounded by bushes, siTTing halTway beTween Bundy and Earlham l-lall. There are various degrees oT ac- guainTance wiTh chemisTry. The girls in The EasT wing oT Earl- ham merely have an olTacTory-shall we say un-aesTheTic-con- sciousness oT The science. MosT Freshmen escape iT and Talce biology To cover Their science reguiremenT. The unhappy Tew, premedics and home economisTs, who have To Talce iT, cover The subiecTs wiTh diverse amounTs oT enThusiasm and disappear: The deparTmenT's records alone bear Trace oT Their passage. And now The Tield is cleared Tor The majors, who reign in The building and own The iab's besT eguipmenT. They know all The ropes: The sTocl4room has no secreTsg The acid boTTles, new glassware, The dusTy large Tlasks and The alcohol cabineT in The basemenT are Tamifiar ground. The command over Their world oT changes and novelTy is TascinaTing. For chemisTry is a new world. Or else a new ouTloolc. The Thing ThaT malces la chemisTry diTTiculT is The demand upon your imaginaTion when you Tind ouT ThaT an unassuming Table or chair is a mass oT inTiniTely small parTicles wildly racing around. The iniTiaTes call This ouTloolc The elecTronic Theory. One may sTarT philosophizing anew abouT The naTure oT Things once iT is masTered. .BuT chemisTry has yeT a loT To show. ,..-..- 1 l K. Robeds, D. Garner CHEMISTRY LAB ASSISTANTS: E. SmiTh, Graves, M. Brown, R. Miller, VVixom. V ChemisTry is a versaTile Two-man deparTmenT, where a group oT sTudenT assisTanTs look aTTer The deTails. ErnesT Wildman specializes in organic chemisTry buT usually shares in The TirsT year course. l-Tis keen sense oT humor keeps us on our Toes in class, as elemenTary misTakes or dumb quesTions are subTly repressed boTh by a nuance in The explanaTion and his ready Trank laughTer. Advanced sTudenTs soon Tind ouT ThaT Dr. Wildman Teaches a pracTical philosophy QT organic chemisTry. The basic concepT is ThaT any organic compound can be made Trom anx oTher organic compound, and The rules oT The game are simply To be memorized Trom The TexT. George Scherer-Freshman Chem., QuanT., Qual. and Physical chemisTry, dairy and CP. S.'l'.C.-also direcTs beginners in Their laboraTory advenTures, VVe never saw any one reach The scene oT an explosion iminiaTure, oT coursej wiTh quiTe ThaT same lighTning speed .... Classes under Dr. Scherer run smooThly, exams usually are obiecTive and Thorough. George Scherer and son Jimmy are Two oT The mosT TaiThTul members oT The Science Club. This group oT varying size meeTs every oTher Monday To Take in movies, Talks bx ST.- denTs and TaculTy, on subiecTs oT equally variable diversiTy. A TradiTional Brawl in The Lodge sTarTed The season in The Fall and The Spring picnic broughT ouT once again The Tul men'- bership oT The Science Club. PHYSIIIS Hlll llHlH. Down in The subTerranean regions oT Carp, among The haunTs oT chorisTers, Masguers, and sTage props, are The physics class room and lab: TreguenTed almosT solely by Earl- ham's masculine elemenT, physics classes have had a larger Than usual enrollmenT This year because oT The Training re- guiremenTs oT The miliTary reserve program. l-lere George Van Dylce, by his conscienTieus explanaTions and descripTive gesTures, clears away some oT The mysTeries surrounding such esoTeric Terms and vecTors, l4ineTics, and Thermodynamics. By This guieT suggesTions we have been saved much TuTile labor and many embarrassing misTakes in our lab experimenTs. And ThaT , Miss Long assures us again, is purely an ar- biTrary device , wiTh ThaT reTerring To a number oT pos- sible anTecedenTs in her maTh classes. For many years lvliss l.ong's pleasanT appearance and gracious personaliTy have helped ease The shoclc oT lO:45 and ll:4O Freshman lVlaTh classes, who discover To Their chagrin ThaT They have TorgoT- Ten wheTher x Times x equals 2x or xg. Malcing cerTain ThaT everyThing Trom guesTions To answers checks Miss Long also gives us insighT inTo every angle oT The ubiguiTous Tri- angle in Trig, and inTo The inTri:acies oT l-ligher Algebra and Advanced AnalyTic GeomeTry. ATTer The Calculus course, we eiTher decide iusT To drop The whole maTTer or else, hav- ing survived, believe we can Take anyThing maTh has To oTTer. Physics and maTh are The Two more Tormal Tields oT Lou Fein's acTiviTies, and iT is obvious ThaT maTh came To him Tar Too easily, Tor we go Through a hard course under him. ln an inTormal way, The basic principles oT physics and maThe- rnaTics are Torced inTo us and digesTed mechanically by some, buT easily and well by oThers. By This l mean ThaT . . . . usually Tollows The inTroducTion oT an incomprehensi- ble mass oT symbols lcnown as a general Tormula. Explana- Tions are implemenTed wiTh inTeresTing examples Trom every day life. Lou Fein preTers maTh To physics and The maTh maiors are only a Tew oT his many Triends. IPURRED on by llie lirsl snowless days ol spring llrie geologisls i spend lab periods and ollier spare lime roaming llnrougli llme Wlwilewaler valley and llie VXfesl lvlain slreel gravel pil in searcll lspecimens lor llie lamous required rock colleclion. One always opes lor a lrilobile because lliey do exisl, bul llme usual liaul lrom ne supposedly lossil-ricli Wbilewaler limeslone is a pile ol braclwio- iods and corals. The gravel pil lias a lair enougli assorlmenl ol iraniles and sandslones, wliicli, combined vvilli llie oll-llie-record iurcliases lorm lormer sludenls, make up llwe necessary liundred pecimens .... lnside a classroom adorned vvillw a large Union Pa- ilic map and slides ol severa nalional parlcs, and in llie Bundy base- ienl lab willi ils colleclion ol roclcs and ores, Geology IAB slu- enls learn aboul llieir Mollmer Earll'1,ll'men, now, and in llie probable Jlure. Earllmam lias always lwad a good geology deparlmenl and as conlribuled a large proporlion ol ll'1e men on llne Uniled Slales oil survey. Tlniere aren'l many geology majors, lliouglw. Nlil'lG ad- anced courses aren'l easy .... Mr. Pelers, lwlwo also liead-resided 1 Bundyl liad geology classes during llie summer and aulumn lerms illie absence ol Francis l-lole, on leave lo sludy al llie U. ol Wis- onsin. Francis came back in January and lilled neally inlo college le. We leel al ease wills lnim al once. A cordial way, a sense lliumor, liis unusual enllwusiasrn lor llis subiecl malce geology un- er liim a lliorougli experience. GEOLOGH L-X gan Hendre' a ARU-lAlV1'S physical educafion deparfmenf is sfaffed by some of fhe college's besf-lcnown and besf-loved characfers: J. Owen l-lunfsman, whose voice would sfill be adequafe if classes were held in Lewissohn Sfadium: Clara Comsfoclc, guardian angel and founder of field hockey af Earlham and mofher-confessor fo all fhe girls: facifurn buf friendly Bud Weber: and George, fhe roofinesf' roofer af any afhlefic confesf, elsewhere fhe mosf dignified dean and professor. These professors are a parf of fhe Earlham fradifion of which we are proud. All buf one are Earlham bachelors, in fhe academic and nof fhe marifal sense. Dean Van Dylce did nof affend Earlham buf he has been wifh us for fhirfeen years, and is fruly a parf of fhe Earl- ham scene. lf wouldn'f be surprising if he were fhe chief confribufion fo fhe facf fhaf our feams do beffer af home fhan on fhe road, for he is always af hand and never spares eifher his voice or his opinion of fhe referee. Coach J. G. l-lunfsman is lcnown for his humorous chapel fallcs, wifh fheir guainf grammar, and for his amazing afhlefic abilify and fhe records he brolce in his youfhful days as a Quaker afhlefe. Clara Comsfoclc is really an Earlham in- sfifufion. She earned her AB. here and since fhaf fime she has devofed herself fo Earlham girls and fheir afhlefics, as well as helping fo bring hoclcey fo an imporfanf posifion in fhis parf of fhe counfry. ln her worlc Bud Weber, an Earlham grad who has faughf here since I936, is of greaf assisfance. She can handle anyfhing from swimming classes fo folli dancing wifh compe- Powell, Corbeli, Harvey, Kaighn and ? lllllllll llllllllllll fence, and always seems like one of Jrhe girls . Besides a wide variely of sporrs, lhe college ollers a number ol courses in Jrhe leaching and a minislering ol physical educalion deparlmenls, and lhe physical care and Jrraining ol sludenls. Wil' 'rhe class in gymnaslic exercises is given, Jrhe halls ring wilh lhe sound of marching commands. T winler many sludenls lcepl up wilh currenl affairs, lying Themselves up in slrange and i-.croer lcnols in Coach's Firsl Aid class. Commie and l-lunlsman have Their sludenls ol Physical Exam a Diagnosis so well lrained 'rhal 'rhe nexl generalion ol gym sludenls will even play a scienliiic gan' 'riddley-winlcsl One of Bud Weber's mosl popular courses was Rhylhms, which observers ewpeclec. produce a group of budding chorines, buf lollc dancing and lapping soon legislaled over Jrhe Rode influence. This was a class lhal was rarely cul, as co-eds dropped 'rheir boolxs ro picl up a lex-. c ers on Jrhe imporlance of being rhylhmic in exercising. Even a rare male observer adnwi++ed phi slruclor Porler had somelhing rhere. Physiology class is 'rhe common meeling ground ol physical educalion, home eccncmcs a biology maiors, and if does have some very aflraclive lealures. For example, Jrhex max haxe lo F: hands in Jrhe inleresl of scienfific endeavour: somerhing +o do wirh lhe speed ol rerxous imc. s lllllllllll Hlll Economics is The domain OT ArThur Claydon, OT Tree-climbing Tish and waTer-swimming squirrel Tame-The proT who really malces use OT a blaclc-board. We've seen single words spread halTway across The board in Business Cycles class, buT I don'T suppose we TOrgeT Them quiTe so soon. ClaydOn's courses are repuTedly hard, his lecTures well implemenTed wiTh quOTes and reTerences. ln Bundy Tea sessions, we really gOT TO lcnow Claydon and iT was There ThaT we learned abOuT The graduaTe liTe aT PrinceTOn, and The Time ThaT he commiT- Ted The unpardonable sin OT addressing a busy New York cop on Times Square as cOnsTable . Bundy l-lall's AssociaTiOn room had noT seen a social aTTair Tor a long Time when he gave his Tea Tor The economics sTudenTs. And we all lcnow Claydon as The Tellow wiTh courage enough TO wear sTriped polo shirTs or TO pep up The dining-room wiTh a demOnsTraTiOn when he is sTOOd up on behalT OT a happy haircuT . Business AdminisTraTiOn-The Typing and shorThand parT OT iT-is under Willard Kisling. lmporTed Trom his primary Tield is The meTronome which Ticlcs The beaT in Typing rhyThm drills. Kisling requires greaT accuracy on any lcind OT paper and is always willing TO explain when The going geTs Tough. lT's usually up TO The sTudenT TO brealc The ice and sTrilce up a cOnversaTiOn: The response is mOsT Triendly, aT any Time OT day or. . . nighT, Tor Kisling is one OT The busiesT prOTs on The campus This year. WM 2 gaTe EMOS Trom The l-lome Ec DeparTmenT: The essence oT Earlham domesTiciTy, Miss Marshall and Miss Miller, To- cused Their abiliTies upon new problems oT warTime living. These Two womanly leaders crammed The regular curriculum wiTh pracTical augmenTaTion which The record number oT TiT- Teen maiors earnesTly digesTed. Even a masculine elemenT invaded The deparTmenT, when Food ChemisTry was iniTiaTed wiTh Dr. Scherer managing The TesT-Tube coolfs. A one-acT Tragedy occurred in icy January when Miss Marshall slipped and brolre a leg. BuT The EarlhamiTes did noT sTarve: Misses Binns and Lindley Took over The dieTeTics reins smooThly and capably. From bed, To cruTches, To wheel chair, To recovery was The saga oT The Fall and Rise oT Miss Marshall , and The deparTmenT regained iTs TradiTionA al member. The man-power shorTage sTrucl4 The dining hall: men abandoned aprons Tor Uncle Sam, and Temales Took- over Table-waiTing. RaTioning, lilce rigamorTis, seT in ard The Tood class enTangled iTselT creaTing innovaTions in meaT- sTreTchers. The class also discovered ThaT honey and mo- lasses were sweeT, Too. Miss Miller, concenTraTing on domesTic arT, lcepT up her usual energeTic pace and adopTed new schemes oT cloThes- conservaTion, and TexTiles. Design class Taclqled Red Cross sewing .... wiTh The discovery ThaT paiamas are noT necesa sarily liTTle dainTy Things. Senior women, aT The A.A.U.N'V.- sponsored meeTing absorbed more abouT TexTiles oT The l3uTure . The increasing imporTance oT The child-care pro- grams was also recognized as Miss Miller sTimulaTed her Child DevelopmenT class To Talcing Tield Trips To local day nurseries. lllllllllllll. OT course everybody lcnows ThaT Earlham is noT a conservaTory oT music, buT Trom The all-college sing To commencemenT, music Tills our liTe in school. We come across iT in chapel, piano noTes Till The wings oT Carp, sTream Trom iTs windows any Time oT The day, and Carnegie CollecTion Tiends send sym- phonic chords down The sTair-cases. The organ accompanies some oT our classes, some- Times iT is Burn's harp. Lowly insTrumenTs such as The Commons iulqe-box and BeVard's ukelele play Tor us in our more Trivolous momenTs. Musicians on The campus are in consTanT demand, be iT To spice a Leland meal, or To enTerTain a gang oT rug-cuTTers. And we wonder, when we lisTen To The more TalenTed, wheTher any amounT oT work and pracTice could ever qeT us To play equally well. Be- ker, Jack BuTler, Milley Chapman, Bell, Rigs- bee. E. PenningTon, J, CalverT, E. Walls, Ton, Taylor, Tv1arsTaller. cause we know ThaT any BeeThoven has To have a period oT apprenTiceship, and so, maybe .... 7 The Tormal side oT music is handled-guiTe inTormally-by Mrs. Lohman, ProTs Cox, l-licks and Kisling. Willard Kisling is one oT The busiesT members oT The TaculTy and also one oT The new arrivals. Since his coming he has Taken over Teaching a large number oT musical courses, organizing insTru- menfal groups, Teaching our aspiring young organisTs, and piping us inTo and ouT oT chapel. l-lis musical knowledge and abili+y are The more remarkable because mosT oT iT was acquired aTTer he had already had a sTarT in a career oT business adminisTraTion. And The music maiors say ThaT he is one oT Those reTreshing Teachers who noT only knows his subiecT Thoroughly, buT is able To imparT his knowledge To oThers. They missed him more Than The resT oT us when illness kepT him ouT oT school during parT oT The WinTer Term. - - - . A very imporTanT Though inconspicuous characTer in The Earlham musical scene is pianisT Mar- iorie Beck Lohman. A household, a church choir and lessons aT home keep her away Trorn The cam- pus excepT Tor Two days a week, and she only is acguainTed wiTh a small porTion oT The college company. l-lowever, she is The Tirm Triend and conTidanTe To all Those she does meeT. And TorTu- naTely Tor her sTudenTs, she is noT one-sidedly a musician: she can spread a gorgeous Table. ProT Cox and lvlrs. Lohman have produced several ioinT programs oT piano and voice. Few concerT-goers will soon TorgeT l-lunT and STegall and Improving Songs Tor Anxious Children . Pa- Tience also appeared on The program oT Dick Brown's and EmnneTT STegall's Tarewell reciTal. The Three-piano reciTal, represenTing monThs oT play and pracTice Tor abouT Ten piano sTudenTs, was an inTeresTing deparTure Trorn The ordinary. WhiTe-haired Frederick l-licks genTly led The sTring ensemble Through a busy year. Besides provid- BAND: STraTTon, PendleTon, SuTherland, Bar- Madeline Chapman, Johnson, Parke, ParTing- ing indispensable accompanimenT To The choir's Mes- siah , They Turnished a nucleus Tor The PaTience or- chesTra and presenTed concerTs oT Their own. I-Iaydn's QuarTeT No. I3 and MozarT's Eine Kleine NachT- musiI4 are well-Irnown on Their reperToire. During The TooTbaII and basIceTbaII seasons The Band was prominenT, helping us To spur on The Teams. IT was probably The mosT discussed group on The campus The nighT They played The Alma MaTer Twice when our opponenTs were Trying To Tinish The game as TasT as possible so They wouIdn'T miss Their Train. Missing on campus This year-MaesTro Vioni oT The Tlying hair and TIuenT vocabulary, ably replaced by direcTor-in- sTigaTor Royden Parlce. MosT oT us Icnow Dail Cox besT as The spare Tigure on The Goddard sTage, leading us Through our TavoriTe hymns. A Thorough-going and inspiring musician, he is The dominanT Tigure in EarIham's musical scene .... his exacTing buT oTTen unorThodox direcTion oT choir is proverbial. This voIaTiIe maesTro led his singers Through a busy and successTuI season, involving plenTy oT boTh hard worlc and Tun: I-IandeI's Messiah and GiIberT and SuIIivan's PaTience . The Messiah was presenTed by a large group The IasT Monday oT The Fall Term. The STring Ensemble, wiTh I.uciIe Johnson and Bob Byrd aT The piano, ac- Burns and Pedersen hai-ping on Their Tavor:Te sublecT. STRING ENSEMBLE: W. F , f . STE-aoman iMarsTaIIer, Ferris, Piclrering, C. I-Ianso F li I-I p n, ran , Hadley, By companied The oraTorio. ProTessor Kisling also Toolc parT, playing The PasToral Symphony on The organ. NaTurally all Three hours oT The work were noT sung, buT The maioriTy oT The choruses were perTormed, wiTh selecTed airs and reciTaTives being sung by R. Brown, STegall, KraTz, STowe, M. T-lunT, Webb, Keys, and Sims. The perTormance wenT over well, buT The singers had no doubT ThaT They had enjoyed iT more Than The audience, and ThaT T-Tandel's beauTiTul mu- sic had To be sung To be undersTood in iTs perTecTion. PaTience may have been a leT-down Trom The spiriTual level oT The Messiah , buT iT was a climax in all oTher respecTs. From The TirsT line rehearsals in The evening, when The chorus wiTh parTial scores sTood bewildered, waTching The leads go Through Their anTics, To Those evenings on The sTage where Dragoons and Maidens all wore Tull baTTle dress,and ProT. Cox his rehearsal plaid shirT wiTh suspenders- The casT peneTraTed iTselT wiTh The subTly wiTTy, yeT broadly comic aTmosphere oT The scripT.. As he TreguenTly Told us, The sTory was a saTire upon The aesTheTicisms oT Qscar Wilde and Alger- PaT and l-lelen--campwsiron Tor Tum violins Lucy, Dee, ani WT ' 'rw' 'V' 'cf' non Swinburne lwho couldn'T be aesTheTic wiTh a name lilce ThaTll, buT according To ThaT eminenT PosT reporTer, ArThur BerndTson, iT was also a saTire upon women and Their chieT occupaTion .... love. We never Tired oT Those rehearsals or perTorm- ances because new meanings would spring Trom lines so Tar simply memorized and mechanically re- peaTed. Ad libs by STegall and Peckham made iT hard To lceep a sTraighT Tace under The borders, and iT was TempTing Tor The lovesiclc Maidens To Try some close harmony on Their chanTs in The wings. LiTe baclcsTage was exciTing lwhaT oT Mary STowels sTage TrighT and Royden Parlce's cymbalsl, buT, oT chorus. wo someTimes envied The audience who could see all oT The opereTTa, even The scenes ThaT we were in. The spiighTly and sparkling score was very kindly -ireaTed by The musicians. Edwin Jay, Earlharva nigh'- waTchman, was a valuable addiTion To The casT as The haT Tipping soliciTor who advised l3unThorne ' To puT himseiT up To be raTTled Tor by The maidens. PaTience was given Three Times and The cas' 5, ThaT Ticl4eTs should be sold Tor a Toui-Tn perTcrn'- ance, where polysoloisT Cox would Taxe a The cams including The orchesTra's. The success oT boTh 'ilxlessiari and lPaTiercell was largely due To ProT. Cavs experience, know- kb Siowe. Sirns, M. Hun lfeys. edge and sincere deTerminaTion To produce only The besT, see ? Voice and sTage direcTions, hu- morous criTicisms or inTormal minisTraTions Tull oT paTernal vigor were The varied loT oT The sTudenTs worlcing under him on These producTions. Nor did The Choir resT during The Spring Term. In spiTe oT conspicuous weakness in male voices, They appeared Tor The Third Time This year, To give a Sunday aTTernoon reciTal made up oT songs, sa- cred and secular: The usual run oT maTerial Tor choir pracTice polished up Tor perTormance. TempTaTion was sTrong Tor The chorisTers To mas- sacre ProT. Cox's all-Too-well-lcnown TavoriTe llll song, an arrangemenT oT Old Folks aT l-lome . And The Sopranos and bassos will long remember nighT: Osborn, Dougl'ierTy and Ford. 'rhe quiclc-paced Border Ballad wilh high noles To malce any flule jealous. The Prol's Music Apprecialion class reaches many slrudenls oulside The deparlmenl, who learn l lo appreciale music wilh a smile. And lake il l l . ' from me, a Cox class is never dull. CAST OF HPATIENCEH Pafience Bunfhorne Grosvenor , Lady Jane, Lady Angela Lady Sapphir Lady Ella Dulce ,v...,..,,, Colonel , , Maior ,, ,, , Chorus of Raplurous Maidens Chorus of Dragon Guards Grosvenor 81 Co. Double bass wifh .lane --Oh, so. . .all buf! l l 73 Bah! boil Mary Src.-fe, Ann Dauqre Errmnel' Sleqali Bill Feilr GH Dil Bro-'fn lfernrn Sn-5 Mary Huff June T-: Barbara See Helen F o e Porfer Evelyr Penn rg Sarah Krafz, Pufhanna Far , Jann l-l r Jern Ta A' 9 'fc HHl ArT aT Earlham holds an elevaTed posiTion, sprawled in The spacious and inTriguingly disordered TourTh Tloor sTudio, iusT under The skyliT rooT oT CarpenTer. STaTues, heads and skull glower clown aT The ordinary morTals who come here To play The records oT The Music AppreciaTion collecTion. Numer- ous vases and plasTer TruiT, or halT-done skeTches conTribuTe To The aTmosphere oT The slender room. l-lere Elmira KempTon holds sway, showing our aspiring ar- TisTs how To use color and Torm, and sending Them ouT inTo The college world To caTch The shape oT such a preposTerous subiecT as A Dull lVlomenT . ArTisTs emerge Trom Their hibernaTion, Too, in The spring, and may be seen sprinkled abouT The campus wiTh Their easels and oTher esoTeric paraphernalia. This is The period when Earlham T-lall, a slighTly decadenT beauTy, reappears on The walls oT The sTudio oTTener Than a Power's model in Vogue. lT mingles like an underTone wiTh sTill liTe arrangemenTs and TainTly recognizable charcoal porTraiTs oT Tellow arTisTs. l-lisTory and research in The Tield is handled by ElizabeTh ComsTock's ArT AppreciaTion classes wiTh The help oT The liTTle arT room Tucked inTo a remoTe corner oT The libe. ln The ArT depT. They pass Their Tinal by parTicipaTing in The annual Spring ExhibiT. And speaking oT exhibiTs, The ArT Club, wiTh l-lelen QverTon as presidenT, visiTs The collecTions in Town, brings speakers and noTeworThy works To The campus ThroughouT The year. RESHMEN - loTs oT Them -Take TundamenTals. lT's The course by which mosT oT us came To know The speech de- parTmenT. Nearly everyone is exposed To iT aT one Time or anoTher. Johnson and Morgan boTh handle The hordes oT would-be speakers. Classes are mosTly Treshies, wiTh a sprinkling oT conscienTious sophs, and even one or Two upper- classmen who hope To correcT Their erring ways beTore iT's Too laTe. Those classesl l3irsT inTroduce yourselT. Then de- liver an oraTion on The virTues oT The old home Town. C5eT subiecT maTTer you're inTeresTed in, They say. 'l'haT brings on hobbies. And on one day There's usually a classTul oT reasons why They came To Earlham. lprobably ouT oT re- specT To Orville, who's also E.C.'s Tield represenTaTive.l AT TirsT, Two minuTes is all eiTher speaker or audience can sTand, buT as TundamenTals draws To a close we're able To hold TorTh Tor eighT or Ten minuTes wiTh considerable Tinesse. And Those momenTs oT sTanding sTiTTly in grim silence behind The lecTern during The TirsT weeks are gone. GesTures aren'T quiTe as awkward-some almosT look naTural. Qnly one Thing, Though - speech proTs really should do someThing abouT Readers DigesT. We all read iT anyhow, wiThouT have ing iT hashed over in specches .... Then There are some speech maiors, and oThers who go on To greaTer heighTs oT Torensic glory. lT's guieT-hours in Goddard when speech sTudenTs broadcasT over WKBV. And in The Spring when Trueblood award checks are handed ouT To debaTers. we wonder iT There isn'T someThing To speechmaking aTTer all. l3uT even Though we could use TwenTy dollars and even Though mosT oT us are called on somewhere, To make a speech, we're conTenT To leT This greaTer glory pass by .... Speech proTs are busy people. Morgan has his dramaTics, and Orville his debaTers. And even ProT Ed, Though reTired Trom acTive Teaching, is proTessor emeriTus, in recogniTion oT The years he gave To building up The speech deparTmenT. And he was always busy Too. Ask him abouT Earlham's TirsT TooTball Team. l-le was one oT Them. 5 LINE: C. Hadley, Fosfer f. T K A.: C. Hadley, Bell, IM. Hadley, J. Payne. F l MPORE: Sfanding: J. Payne K ling: Prof, Johnson, Hadley. lHl HHTHHNETS Hi lHl YTHH The elemenfs of vocal expression were eloquenf- ly exercised fhis year as fhey are each year. Prof. Morgan pleaded iusf as vehemenfly in behalf of more exfensive preparafion in speech classes and Orville Johnson coached and enioyed fhe resulfs of his speal4er's accomplishmenfs as enfhusiasfically as ever. Alice Ranclc, Helen Ferris, Leanna Barker, and Marfha Peery on fhe second feam, and Clarabel Hadley, Vera Shipleff, Alice Bell and Marian Had- ley-varsify debafers, wresfled wifh evidence, ar- gumenfs, fallacies, solufions and briefs concerning fhe proposifion, fhaf fhe Unifed Nafions should esfablish a permanenf federal union wifh fhe power fo fax and regulafe infernafional commerce fo mainfain a police force, fo seffle infernafional dis- pufes and fo enforce such sefflemenfs, and fo pro- vide for fhe admission of ofher nafions which ac- cepf fhe principles of fhe union. Wifh such a quesfion, heavy argumenf was in evidence wifhin and wifhouf fhe realm of formal debafe. Affer meefing Wiffenberg and Capifal Univer- sify in pracfice debafes, fhe lasf four debafers frudged off fo fhe annual women's Ohio Sfafe De- bafe Tournamenf. Here fhe Earlham feams held fheir own againsf feams from colleges and univer- sifies all over Ohio, alfhough fhey failed fo emerge wifh fhe cup. Lafer in fhe year fhe men's feams debafed fhe same guesfion. Joseph Payne, Verlon Ballinger, James Greenfield Bond and Gene lvlills vied for honors af fhe men's fournamenf and won a maiorify of fheir debafes. The men had an unusual pracfice fhis year and held up well when fhey mafched wifs wifh glib feminine feams from Indiana Sfafe Teach- ers College. A gay feafure of fhe season was furnished by fhe frip fo Greencasfle where fwo women's and fwo men's feams debafed againsf DePauw wifh an oufcome of fhree ouf of four decisions rendered fo Earlham. The varsify debafers, bofh men and women, re- ceived generous prizes from fhe Thomas C. True- blood Debafing Tesfimonial Fund and The season was pronounced a success. MENS VARSITY DEBATES: NegaTive: Ballinger. J. Payne A'FI'irmaTive: J. O, Bond. E. Gne January morning on a chapel pro- gram, The sTudenTs oT Earlham beheld Clarabel I-Iadley and Bill FosTer Trying ouT Their enTries Tor The TradiTionaI Qld Line OraToricaI ConTesT. The conTesT was held aT Wabash This year where Clarabel ges- TicuIaTed and oraTed herselT inTo second place among The women wiTh her oraTion enTiTIed, STar Gazing . Bill, by his sym- paTheTic modulaTions, Took Third place in The men's conTesT wiTh his subiecT, Give Us This Day Our Daily Bread . Earlham is always proud oT The high rank oT her oraTors among speakers ThroughouT The sTaTe. Gnly one ExTempore ConTesT was held This year insTead oT The usual Two. The conTesT was held during chapel, March I7 wiTh Joe Payne, Gene Ivlills, Lucian DeShong, Bill EosTer and Clarabel I-ladley parTicipaTing. These energeTic persons received Their Topics aT six ThirTy o'cIock on The morning oT The evenT. PowerTuIIy and convincingly each sTepped Torward and delivered a Tive minuTe discussion on some currenT Topic. IT was Clarabel I-lad- ley's speech, Morale BusTers , an analy- sis oT The hoarding problem, ThaT conced- ed Top honors To her. I-Ier name will ap- pear engraved on The ExTempore Cup below The names oT previous winners. Nega ATTer such a verdanT season oT speech acTiviTy, new names were placed on The eligibilify IisT oT Tau Kappa Alpha. a na- Tional Torensic honorary TraTerniTy. The only person holding membership earlier in The year was Joe Payne. William Eos- Ter, Alice Bell, Ivlarian I-ladley, and Clara- bel I-ladley, however, were added To The IisT. To be eligible a speaker musT be aT IeasT a sophomore and musT parTicipaTe in Three inTercoIIegiaTe decision debaTes or win an oraTorical conTesT. ATTer iniTia- Tion, members proudly wore The gold key which signiTies The highesT degree oT To- rensic aTTainmenT. Earlham eIocuTionisTs noT only exercise Their powers oT ThoughT, imaginaTion and Teeling buT They receive, also, greaT pleasure Trom Their parTicipaTion. Trips To VViTTenberg, CapiTaI, DePauw and oTher schools always Turnish addiTional in- cenTive To The aspiranTs oT speech recog- niTion. There musT be some EarIhamiTes nearing educaTion iT The sTaTemenT holds True ThaT The primary characTerisTic oT an educaTed man is his abiliTy To speak his own language wiTh eTTiciency. Nl.'lflMEIfl S VAPSITW BEBKTES: T . Bsll, lvl. Hadley Affirmalfivez Sri: 9 G. 'TED f I X The hospiTal . . . . where we wenT during Freshman week and Tilled ouT columns and columns Tor our healTh record and iT was all abouT cur innermosT workings and whaT our moTher's moTher died oT and aTTer iT was all down in black and whiTe we didn'T Teel so healThy any more .... where we meT Dr. T-I.P. , whose humorous good-naTure helped us as much as The pills, and Dr. l..F. who gave us pre- scripTions plus sympaTheTic undersTanding .... where we Tound a new signiTicance Tor l3oTTled in Bond as we re- call The dark-haired nurse who was digniTied and gay, who scolded and pampered us in 24-hr. shiTTs .... where en- ThusiasTic men paTienTs would limpingly come ouT oT The elevaTor and smile Through Their pain when holding ouT a sprained ankle To Nurse Bowman. We venTurod There one morning wiTh a sore ThroaT and The nurse said sTick your Tongue ouT and she pressed iT down wiTh a Tongue blade and looked TurTher and TurTher back: Then we prayed abouT The breakTasT. The scales are up There Too, and remember ThaT when we goT weighed we TelT The scales musT be wrong buT we could Take oTT Two lbs. because iT was righT aTTer dinner and Two more because oT cloThes. We go To The hospiTal Tor sympaThy like The morning we woke up wiTh agony in our sTomach and we knew iT was all over, buT The nurse iusT looked aT us and asked whaT we had aT The Teed lasT nighT and how did she know abouT ThaT? .... or To geT cold pills ThaT TasTe like moTh-balls, cough syrup ThaT a cough is beTTer Than, band-aids and beauTiTul liTTle liTe-saving pink slips. ERE we geT mosT oT our serious sTudying done. One never can Tind a place aT one oT The reading-room Ta- bles abouT Two evenings beTore exams. Of course There are always Those TorTunaTe Tew who driTT immediaTe- ly Through The sTudious Throng, and in Tull view oT The ieal- ous scholars, proceed To enioy The besT oT The New Yorker . Behind The desk Tower glass-Tloored shelves, a wonderTul place To geT an elecTric shock, and Tine Tor read- ing in absoluTe privacy. UpsTairs in The middle, under The dirTy skylighT, is The newspaper room. l-lere Earlham reads iTs Tunnies-also The Times , which Prexy assures us is Tull oT documenTary maTerial. The old reserve room has been closed This year, and The rooms housing The valuable collec- Tion oT Quaker liTeraTure are generally locked Too. You can geT a key, Though, Tor The William Dudley Foulke room, and sTudy in The aTmosphere oT a genTleman's library, wiTh armchairs, lamps and no Tireplace. ln The basemenT are To be Tound magazines lancienT and currenTl, old newspa- pers, maps, duplicaTes, Sargasso sTaTT, and one or Two couples sTudying in The wesT room. lvliss GeisT runs her library eTTicienTly, assisTed by Miss Jenkins, Mrs. STineTorT, and The many library girls who sTamp your books and send ouT The pasT-due slips. The libe's a grand place To geT someThing accomplished, or To have a good Time, which- ever you will. And, incidenTally, if you like sTaTisTics, iT conTains abouT 64,000 bound volumes. vs' V, '51 SHA Xfjjf ,. ,N ,K .1 xi 4 The Seven Deadly SiV'lS Embers from Jrhe leaf-raking, Tiv rush, lhe mus+-men+ion foolball viclory and olher home- coming doings were rekindled Saiurday p.m., by ihe Jrradiiional homecoming play. Mask and Manile unmasked and dismaniled lheir Jralenrs for The Romanlic Age , or All Thai glilrlers is noi gold , or las ihe Soc. class would sayl, Beware of 'rhe romaniic fallacy . A. A. Milne's play was digesri- ble homecoming fare, noi foo sally or peppery. Prof. Morgan veieranaied lhe performance whose warm glows peneiraled lhe alums, undergrads, and Thar oiher caiegory of Earlhamiies, ihe grass- green lrosh. As Melisande, Jrhe romaniic-minded maiden, Marian Hadley allernarely emoied and reifrigerared as 'rhe occasion rose. Ellen subrly spiced her parr as lhe hypochondriac Mrs. Knowle, in rhe able Drace manner. And, who can forgel Rulhanna Borden, as Melisande's plain-iane cousin. Rerniniscenrly speaking, ihe casl boasled some male characlers, creaiures which habilaled Earlham in rhe early Eall era, since 'rhen an exiinci species. Bronx-bred Arlhur Wagner laudably porrrayed rhe prince-charming .... in fact he could have been ideniilied wiih The London upper layer, for all we know, excepr by his fellow Bundyiles. Earl Smiih, John Rogers and l-lenry Lebovilz handled iheir roles adegualely, while Jim Rourke as Em, rhe srupid boy, had us almosl convinced of his unique l. Mask and Man'rle's offering marked omega To l-lomecoming, '42. Came January, inifiafing fhe all-college producfion of fhe season. lvlarlowes Dr, Fausfus was fhe presenfafion. A dimly-lif Goddard, fhe Friars' chanfing in fhe candle-lif procession for fhe prologue and epilogue, Arfhur Wagner's solid performance . . . all fhese fragmenfs linlced memorably. In fhe fifle role, Arfhur Wagner was fhe solar plexus of fhe heavy drama which reached ifs heighf in Fausfus' deafh soliloquy. As fhe soul-selling philosopher, Arfie gen- erously gave-ouf . John Bruner as Mephisfophilis proved a capable guardian devil, aided by gruesome make-up arf. Challced-up as ofher sfandoufs: Bob Moore, Kennefh Sherer, and Jim Rourke as comic elemenfs - appreciafed breaks in The heavy afmosphere. Oddly enough, we Earlham women nofed fhaf fhe feminine players were unusually silenf. Buf Barbara Sims and Paf l-lan- son as visions of l-lelen of Troy and Alexander's paramour, respecfively, were lush examples of Earlham's fairer elemenfs . . . need more be said? Our minor proiecfions fo Gife Sfeane and Susan Keach in fheir angelic lgood and bad an- gelsl roles. Dr. l:ausfus remains as Wagner's farewell performance . . . . a sfandard-seffing piece of worlc for fufure Earlham disciples. Winfer limped ouf hesifafingly and along abouf March, Oliver Goldsmifhs comedy, She Sfoops fo Conquer gave if a genfle shove. If was spring infer! lude, or preface fo spring exams fime. l-lowever, a well-chosen casf plus good cosfuming and seffing furnished fhe foniceneeding audience a liff . We re- call Bob lvliller's effecfive eye-brow-liffing fo caricafurize fhe bewildering mo- menfs of elderly Mr. l-lardcasfle. Our discovery: a hair-raising performance need nof involve cranial foliage. Add l-lelen Dodd's confribufion as fhe brow- liffer's spouse. John Bruner musf be menfioned for his usual success in his parf opposife vivacious lvlonna Jean Rollf . .. . also newcomer Marlc Shaw was an en- couraging addifion fo fhe Earlham sfage. Charming was l-lenry Ford as fhe currenf inferesf of fine-fellow l-lasfings. Furfher nofes: l-larold Cobble hearfily B and Shaw have if ou? wifh Cobble She sfoccis is i::raue' Belwix+ Life and Dealhu The Boor enioyed himself as impish Tony Lumplcin, and Laurie Rhoads upheld Sir lvlarlow's dignily. Exams were nighl-maring all conscienlious sludenls when Jrhe Junior class cushioned Jrhe lension wilh Jrhe exclusively-sludenl presenlaiion of Where Jrhe Cross ls Made . Eugene Q'Neill's psychological drama handled by direclor-player Arlie Wagner lcall me Orsonl and slage-manager Bernie Coe creaied wilrhin us a receplive mood for lhe gravily of cram- +ime . Two lealures s+rucl4 our fancy: The eicleclive lighling and Jrhe no-Jrarilll-al-door propo- silrion. Leading characlers Bill Bullerlield, Barbara Sims, Kennelh Sherer and Arlhur Wagner did credil lo Jrhe Juniors. Chapel hislory was made April 3. Remember 'rhal Friday chapel al which sludying, lcnil- ling, leiler-reading, subversive challer and cal-napping were nil? To Slegall and Drace wenl 'rribule for 'rhis rare evenl. They bombarded The usually placid horde wi+h Jrheir dynamic in- lerprelalion of Chel4ov's comedy, The Boor . Gasps emanaled as Emmellr Slegall energelic- ally smashed Earlham lurnilure in lhe process of woman-haling, snaring and gnashing. Bu? Ellen Drace rescued Jrhe silualion by defrosring Jrhe hearl of her credilor. lThe moral: l+'s wiser +o 'Tric Pcrrifinlic Agci' I K. RoberTs-Pres., Jack BuTler, ID. STanley-Sec.I BOARDS CLUB: J. Rogers, Sherer, Coe, Nicholson-V. Pres., send a collecTorI. The indispensable- man voTe wenT To KenneTh Sherer Tor realisTically playing Luka, The Vodka- bearing servanT. Royden Parke and June Tucker added To The hilariTy. ThroughouT was inTerspersed direcTor Dail W. Cox's Tlavor . . . well-seasoned humor. Opal Thornburg's BeTwixT LiTe and DeaTh , given during The summer ses- sion may have sTarTed Earlham's l942- 43 dramaTic season. IT could also have been an aTTerThoughT To lasT year's Civic TheaTre work: a giganTic pageanT where ciTy people invad- ed Goddard. The spiriT was enTirely sTrange and new, diTTerenT Trom any previous college producTion -a sorT oT TransiTion sTage Trom The Imaginary Invalid To Dr. FausTus. The casT-ranging anywhere Trom Tour To sixTy-eighT years old-responded To direcTors Morgan and Cox wiTh unTiring cooperaTion. Based on Jesse STuarT's Men oT The lVlounTains and oTher books, The play displayed, via his deaTh scene, and will-reading, and Tuneral, The philosophy oT liTe oT The aged head oT a KenTucky mounTain clan. ln an accuraTe aTmosphere oT corn and selTish narrowness, The conclusions oT The ancesTor were revealed To a plenary Tamily meeTing ITormed oT The leads supporTed by a hundred or so human propsl shocking The ones and delighTing The oThers. Deeply True conclusions, They were speaking oT a biTTer exisTence Tilled wiTh an arTiTicial Terror oT God and blinded by a miserly resTrainT Trom The good and real Things oT liTe, and poinTing The way To a modern sinceriTy. The presence oT playwrighT Thornburg and auThor STuarT, and The dedicaTion oT The play To Nam relieT drew a sympaTheTic audience To Goddard audiTorium and insured The local success oT The perTormance. . i 1 , - T A A A number oT specialisTs Till The wings oT The sTage and The basemenT oT Carp beTore, during and aTTer each perTormance. Names on a program, or iusT a general phrase oT recogniTion are Their onlx conTacT wiTh The public. The audience applauds The casT, who menTally share Their glory T-.iTh The indis- pensable sTage crew behind Them. Thus, Tor insTance, we have The Boards club. Boards is a fledgling of Mask and Manfle-conceived ouf of necessify and dedicafed fo fhe fechnicalifies of sfaging a play. lfs eighf-or-so members are fhoroughly af home in fhe afmosphere of lashed flafs, grids, cycs, spofs and ropes which fo an ouf-sider, appears as chaofic and incomprehensible as fhe iargon fhey use fo describe if. These worfhy genflemen build fhe sefs for Mask and lvlanfle and all-college plays, and fheir labors are rewarded affer each lvl 81 M producfion by a sfeak dinner. The club is so far exclusively male leach member having done af leasf one ferm's sfage work and been vofed in fhereafferl and fhey say fhey gef more done fhaf way . The lvlasguers are anofher vifal appendage of drama af Earlham-for where would our grandfafhers, devils and Irish maids be wifhouf fheir false noses, nof fo menfion fhe sfraighf makeups fhaf keep our ingenues from looking foo dissipafed by foofs and borders. Given fhe reguired nose puffy, crepe hair, and grease painf fhose lvlasguers can deck us ouf so even our faculfy advisers don'f know usl These ladies lfor in fhe genfle arf of makeup fhe feminine fouch is unsurpassedl sef no enfrance requiremenfs fo fheir sociefy beyond an inferesf in fhe skill fhey pracfice and fhe possession of a make-up kif whose confenfs are slighfly more varied fhan fhaf of fhe average coed. The liffle blue and silver insignia which Prof. pins up before each performance of a Mask and lvianfle play has become an Earlham fradifion. Likewise, fo a smaller group, fhe mysfic handclasp and huddle of casf and crew wifh a murmured benedicfion from Prof. which pre- cedes fhe opening curfain. Behind fhese symbols sfands one of Earlham's mosf prominenf organizafions, whose ranks may be enfered only by piling up poinfs for work done in varied fields of dramafic endeav- NATIONAL COLLEGIATE PLAYERS: Wg QUERS: J. Clevenqer Eisernan. Peery eel R Davis Nicl, Pe-eder A. ROEEVTS F- Sm th Wolf, Gorman. MASK AND MANTLE: Froni Row: Beisner, E. S Th RolllWqerEM re : le Lebovifz, l-lamrn Coe Marian Had- I y Prof Morgan. ir P rke, J. Rode-rs, Ford, Borden Drace. or. Only bona fide Mask and Manllers can acl in an M 81M produclion, alrhouqh barbarians are permilled ro work on The produclion crew and gain poinrs foward membership. Barbarians are eligible, loo, for parricipalion in lhe new born insrilulion of All-College Plays , which was placed lhis year under The proleclive financial wing ol Mask and Manlle. For some membership in Jrhis club means a chance lo work on creariye energies and bask in 'rhe momenlary splendor ol a lead, a walk on. or an assislanlr direclorship-lor olhers il may be rhe galeway 'ro Nalional Colleqiale Players, pinnacle ol dramalic recoqnilion al EC. u ,5n,,OO. ix ,- 5- X 4? .-f .. f W: X E , X T . f Y. W. C. A.: Standing: C. Hadley, P. Bond, E, Evans, M. Merrlff, D. Mills, Olmsfecl. Siffingz Gorman, M. Hadley. M. Calverf, B. Penninqlon, Rullwanna Davis, Sfeadman, Cal- berf, Howell, Pralf, Krall LITTLE Y: Osborn, Haramy, Driver, M-auch. E. Penninqlon, D. Hall, D. Wilclman, Moran, Nick, Peelle, Weishell, A. Roberfs, P. Smelser, D. Merrill, Reeder. l l 0 , ..,. aa. '-ht A x 4 I . life? IITHNS Y.W,AY,M. Vespers STABUSI-IED because early Quakers had a concern fo found a Friends school in Indiana, Earl- ham is perhaps peculiarly fiffed by ifs long fradifion of Quaker ideals of service and brofher' hood fo our social consciences. The very word concern has a Quaker flavor, which soon comes fo express fo Friend and non-Friend alike our deepesf inferesfs and whaf we do abouf fhem. A concern, in ifs original meaning, usually originafes wifh an individual and when ofhers share his inferesf, fhey are drawn fogefher, finding friendship, sfrengfh and mufual sfimula- fion in fheir common cause. ln fhis way we form many of our mosf lasfing friendships, for fhey are based upon values which we share and upon mufual sfriving. These friendships and fhe concerns behind fhem enliven and enrich our college days and may crysfallize fhe enfire and only fhings fhaf will remain fo us affer our educafion will have slipped our memory. Some of us came fo Earlham definifely planning fo use all if offered beffer fo prepare our- selves for living ouf our concerns. Qfhers were more or less unconsciously moved by new ex' periences af college fo become concerned over a special problem. This is one beaufiful fhing abouf college-fhaf we have fime fo formulafe new inferesfs and ideas, fo develop fhem and argue over fhem and even discard fhem if fhey do nof prose fheir worfh. Qur concerns represenf a searching for fhaf which is good and fundamenfal Er life, no maffer whaf road we fake fo reach our goal. Perhaps fhe firsf graduafing class fo be seriously affecfed by fhe presenf war, ue of '43 have given more conscious fhoughf fo our real concerns. Many of us have already volun- feered or been draffed for fhe armed services, while ofhers have felf called fo serve by go- Y.Tv1.-Y.W. , - ing To Civilian Public Service Camps, by doing Red Cross work or Training Tor reconsTrucTion. To us especially, college has meanT an opporTuniTy and adequaTe environmenT To orienT our personal Thinking abouT The presenT world crisis and our relaTion To iT. Weekly many oT us Tind our way To one of The several Friends or oTher churches in Town, while a small group seeks inspiraTion aT The liTTle silenT meeTing aT Carp. LargesT oT The organizaTions TradiTionally represenTing concerns are The Y.M. and Y.W., whose varied acTiviTies Touch many phases of our campus lives. On a beauTiTul Tall week-end They held a ioinT reTreaT aT Quaker l-lill To plan acTiviTies Tor The year. OuT oT This grew The Y-sponsored barn dances, wiTh reels, polkas and squares. We developed our own calling TalenT-Lowell, Mark, Bill or Cam, wiTh Bud Weber helping ouT. Open house Tor TaculTy members aT Bundy: The new choir aT vespers, The LiTTle Y Tea Room wiTh cocoa and rolls Tor nighT-owls, gay May Day breakTasT, IO:3O p.m. paiama parTies Tor dorm girls and Their Day Dodger Triends, wi+h DoTTie FuiiTa demonsTraTing a hula in The besT approved Tashion. These are wiTness To The geT up and go oT The Y's. Children's cloThing and recreaTion maTerial Tor The Japanese-American inTernmenT camps were conTribuTed as TickeTs To The paiama parTy. And who could TorgeT The weekend KenneTh and Elise Boulding were here, and The Y.W. Tea Tor Elise when all The girls saT around in The associaTion room eaTing cookies and discuss- ing The Modern Woman-Married buT UseTul . Our own Y.W. cooperaTed wiTh The Rich- mond branch in helping wiTh l-loly Week services This year. IT was a red-leTTer day Tor The Y's when The World STudenT Service Fund drive, Tor Tunds To be used Tor sTudenTs abroad and Japanese-American sTudenTs, wenT over The goal. JUNIOR Y: Bruner, Ray C. Davis, Carr, J, Moore, R. Ginqery, D, Johnson Y.M.C.A.: Froni Row: Riqsbee, L. E. Req- ers, Graves, Bufferfield. Back Row: Painfer-Trees., Coe. J, Rogers -Sec, Wixom, E. Smifh-Pres., Jack Buf- ler, J. O. Bond, lRaypor1'1. W , Qiii uf .V Sk, n W v WiTh a common desire To promoTe peace, Though noT all were paci- TisTs, members oT The Peace Felllowship meT over lunch Trays Thursday noons in The easT dining-room To discuss paciTisT philosophy, problems and acTion, wiTh Time ouT Tor Marc l-ladley's Too embarrassingly deTailed min- uTes. Hilarious rides in Snow-WhiTe, The Quaker l-lill Truck, Took us To dig poTaToes in our CPS. garden aT Quaker l-lill. Chase Conover, STanley T-lamilTon, CaTherine Bruner as well as numerous TaculTy members gave much help in leading discussion and sTimulaTing our Thinking. Qver Thanksgiving week-end several Fellows alTernaTely scraped OTT old painT and washed Toys in a visiT To The Planner l-louse work camps in Indianapolis, operaTed by The A.F.S.C. BuT raTioning diminished The usual number oT conTerences aTTended during The year by members oT The group. AlThough The Fellowship was noT direcTly aTTiliaTed wiTh iT, many individual members cooperaTed enThusiasTically wiTh The local lnTerracial Group which worked To improve race aTTiTudes and pracTices in Richmond. Organized To exTend our Thinking beyond The campus and naTional boundaries To guesTions oT world-wide signiTicance, The lnTernaTional Re- laTions Forum had a very spiriTed round-Table discussion in collaboraTion wiTh The Peace Fellowship on ArmisTice Day. Joe Payne valianTly clung To his poinT oT view in The Tace oT Tough paciTisT opposiTion Trom The Tloor and Trom his Tellow speakers. AT anoTher meeTing, Dr. Paul WianT, an archiTecT and missionary reTurned Trom China, Told us abouT develop- menTs in The OrienT leading up To The presenT Sino-Japanese war. i Tiff' An ouTsTanding developmenT, Tor which some oT us had greaT hopes, was The TormaTion oT a Civilian Public Service Training Corps aT Earlham. For The lasT Two quarTers oT The year Ten boys classiTied as C.O.'s, some oT whom had come here especially Tor The course, were sTudy- ing problems and backgrounds Tor posT-war reconsTrucTion worlc. When iT was Tinally Tound necessary To limiT The number oT men in such uniTs To l2O, Taking These Trom older men already in C.P.S. camps, They were in The midsT oT Their program, and had pooled Their resources To buy an old ialoppy Tor volunTary auTo mechanics pracTice on SaTurday mornings. They conTin- ued wiTh as much oT The program as possible under The direcTion oT George Scherer, unTil They were called To camp. Training Tor reconsTrucTion: Hodgson, In Peckham, Burks, Dr. Scherer, LyTTle, E. Q Mills, Cox. Marcus Hadley. : ' . QA EARLHAM PEACE FELLOWSHIP: D. Wildman, E. Mills, Haines, RidpaTh, Milley Chapman, STanley, l-larlxness, Ford Hewson, EsTes, Cox, Ferris, Bell, PraTT, P. Bond, M. Hadley, M. Brown, J, WhiTe STowe. Bowman, Marchaland. RequiescanT In Pacem I. 1+ 5 -5 Q Qsfyxg 5 z:f!,w'ls'tf OQKING baclc over our years aT Earlham .... years paclced wiTh everyday brush-your- TeeTh, cuT-a-class, cram-Tor-an-exam rouTine, There seem To be cerTain Things ThaT sTand ouT: diTTerenT Tor each oT us, yeT sTrangely The same in mass eTTecT. We wouldn'T oT course sTop aT I l:4O daily and say To ourselves, Now we are living up To Earlham TradiTion by go- ing To The cem Tor a cigareTTe , or whaTever we happened To be doing aT The momenT, we iusT do Things here because They seem The naTural lor unnaTurall Things To do! IT iT all hangs TogeTher wiTh some semblance oT uniTy, iT's noT our TaulTl Nor can we accepT praise Tor The Torm which emerges Trom The Tormlessness oT our middle-oT-The-road exisTence . . . True, per- haps, ThaT we came here as gallanT youThs and maidens, benT on snaring an educaTion, a high paying iob, or a sTeady' '... buT True also ThaT we didn'T worry much abouT ThaT aTTer we goT here. This is a TruTh abouT Earlham only inasmuch as iT sTicl4s ouT oT our daily lives lilce The TradiTional sore Thumb . . . and wheTher we majored in Philosophy, Economics, or iusT plain CampusTry, we sTrayed aT Times Trom The sTraighT and narrow . . . no percenTage in a FRESHMAN NVEEK STAFF: Sfanding: Te a Ri s e oe Wixom ims S g II, g b e, C , . S , Rollf, Jordan, D. Mills, Stevens, RuThanna Davis, M. Brown, Marian Hadley, C. Had- ley. Greene. SiHing: Vilberg. STeadman, Maddox, Gorman, ArmsTrong, M. Calvert R. Al- len, Harris. STeane, P. PorTer, Dodd, J. R gers, D y O groove . . . whaT's liTe wiThouT an occasional blind daTe wiTh l3aTe? . . . We were caughT up in The whirl oT social liTe, The clubs, debaTes, dances, slcaTes, and hockey games which go To make up such an imporTanT parT oT our liberal educa- Tion . . .we culTivaTed a vague acquainTance wiTh lab. and libe, buT rarely boThered To go The second mile. . . Tor The mosT parT we spenT our energy hoping The proT would be laTe so we could wallc ouT, or reading The New Yorlcer insTead oT l-larry Elmer Barnes . . . ln This respecT we weren'T so diTTerenT Trom The run oT The mill sTudenTs every- where who spend lor used Tol Tour years avoiding any painTul inTimacy wiTh Tormal educaTion . . . only ThaT we did iT Earlham sTyle, and maybe goT away wiTh more oT iT Than some .... Now Talce The dorms, Tor example.. . 2 lT iusT wouldn'T be Earlham if we couldn'T beeT abouT The anTs in our . . . lwearing apparell and The showers ThaT give ouT every so oTTen. IT any oT our sisTer insTiTuTions have These aTTracTions, They lceep Them a darlc secreT. Dorm liTe supplies mosT oT our maTerial and social needs. Everybody does iT, buT whaT is dorm living . . 7 lT's whaT The girls do Tor a minimum oT eighT hours daily lby requesTl and The Tellows as The inner man requires .... lT is a rou- Tine announced by The invariable bells which drive us, bleary-eyed and sTaggering, Trom The brieT securiTy oT sleep, only To reward Those who malce The brealcTasT line wiTh ToasT and coTTee a la Earlham . . . or muTTins and iam on Sundays ..... IT is dashing To an eighT o'cloclc and sleeping Through iT aTTer we geT There . . . The IOO- d . Wri Wlwal nexf, Bill? Before- W V Y Afler yard sprinlr back for lliose slarved souls willi I I:4Os. I+ is wearing slacks on Safurday and lies on Sunday, being genflemanly in appearance and Throwing wafer behind Miss Long's baclc. Poslr-lunclm drowse period, a+he-rwise known as I:2O, spenl in Hue libe or Carp, inferrnission 3 i 1 l i J F 5 4 J H J hle, B. Clevenger, Bruning, experi lcmflers, l Jo Smilh . . . ? for mail, followed by a general exodus al 4:00 ro educale ourselves physically. Condilioned or commandoed for a sirenuous hour, we lry lo paciliy our proresling frames wi'rh a h shower, and Then by bell, fo dinner. . .and even alirer all ihal rhey slill wan? To s+and us u Loaf or dale, Till libe and sludy hours inlerrupi . . . and grudgingly Try lo concenlrra for a few hours, fill, exhausled by lhe lerrilic menlal slrain, we seelc 'rhe haven ol Co mons, Gyp shop or Geneva. From lhen on il's leeds or bull sessions, inlerspersed wifh casional lracases wilh our nighlwalchmen, or midniie srudy hours lor Jrhe conscienlious le unlil we succumb lo Jrhe lures ol bed, only lo be awakened by a rarher well-balanced gro of serenaders in close harmony. Occasionally Bundy l-lall is enlerrained by an open meeling ol +he council, who rewa The allending audience wirh ice-cream bars. Earlham l-lall inhabilanls profil by The Y paiama parlies. Ollen Day Dodger girls are invired Too, and lrealed lo Cgden Nash, C P o o+ nl Te fn- C- w, UP rd W's O Porler, Sims and Calberl, Johnson, Mills, and Hadley, Kaighn, l-lanes and numerous orher co lb Woman' rowning glory l le n- Temporary celebriTies. BunclyiTes Turned slighTly BriTish This year lClaydon's example or The in- Tluermce of The war siTuaTionl as Tea became The popular I I:OO p.m. clrinlc. The sTudenT parlor cor1sTiTuTes The cenTer Tor some oT our privaTe life. There we spend calm hours wiTh vlsiTors, wITh a Toursome Tor bridge, or wiTh our Triend oT The momer1T. We go DoTTie FujiTa does a hula. Onloolzersz Wright ,W . The Rabbif club has a feed Friend OT EdiTor, Roommalre oT EdiTor, CrediTor oi EdiTor There Tor The music appreciaTion hour aTTer supper, and, in our lighTer moods Tor boo- gie-woogie, or gruesome-Two-some dueTs on The piano . . . and The girls wishing ThaT The doors aT The end oT The hall, marking The limiTs oT no-man's-land were closed! Yes, The parlor has varied uses. Each week has iTs paTTern, Too: Trom Friday aTTernoon Treedom To Monday morning droop: Tuesday evening rush Tor The laTesT ediTion oT lmpropaganda lor whodunwhaT l. SaTurday morning in laundry or lab: The dead silence in Earlham l-lall on SaTurday even- ing aTTer The seven-ThirTy bus carries oTT all buT The dormed and sTudious . . . The early morning pallor on every cheek aT an El-l. Tiredrill, land how Those NasTy Boys look onl: ringing The TronT doorbell aTTer we missed The lasT bus . Several air raid drills pro- vided a biT oT suspense and Trouble in boTh dorms. And always, as we begin and end The college year, The halls Tull oT Trunks. From The Thrill oT doing our own inTerior decoraTion in The Fall To whaT Bruner calls The prim-mor- dia urge oT Spring house-cleaning, The Dorms were our homes, and-we can'T help iT -we raTher love Them. To Carp, Trom all corners oT The green acres we Tread The Tamiliar paThs, boTh oTTicial and unoTTicial . . . Daily we enTer ThaT shelTered door a score oT Times, oTTen ob- served by Tellow sTudenTs dangling Trom The windows in brighT array f... Goin To Carp implies hopefully calling Tor mail aT The p.o., aTTending class, seeing Deans or ProTs Tor oTT-The-record sessions . . . cluTTering up The music sTudio and pracTice rooms, or iusT goin' To Carp Tor no good reason. WhaTever The hour oT The daxi or nighT, we Turn righT as soon as we pass The inside doors lis iT insTincT or condiTioned responsel To inspecT The Tan mail board. An experT glance aT The biTs oT paper oT odd caTegories Midnighf bo'rher and we know who has a library line. a bill, or maybe an in- vife To somelhing formal. Then comes +he bullelin board: many's Jrhe lime we wormed our way Jrhrough 'ro see if any of our classes had been cancelled, or where lo sir in chapel. Monday, Wednesday, Friday, we loiler our way info Goddard Chapel: where we Jrry nor fo lel The speaker in- ierfere wi'rh our leller from home or from Jrhe one and only . . .where we find sancluary in a momenr of mediralion for our privale Jrhoughrs, and where occasionally somelhing new is added lo our srore of wisdom by lhe speaker. There Roof read his immorral essays and Funsron explained Geo- poliricsg rhere sludenlrs presenled lheir concerns, or re- leased hoarded lalenls as seniors leered al Jrhem from The cenler from rows lnow more Jrhinly populafed Jrhan of yorelg where roll-lakers sublly slrained Their necks Jro check righlr laces wirh righl places: where Jrhe Earlham family mer in a subconscious inlegralion and espril' de corps. Perhaps in Thai lfifleen minule sirelch berween chapel and class we walk Jrowards Nalional road and 'rhe ou+side world , always pausing al lhe kicking poslr. Those of us whose wishes came Jrrue inlroduced lhe olhers lo lhis Earl- ham inslilufion-lhe Jrechnigue is simple: a vigorous kick, W 10' Gyp Shop, Inc. paTronized by Cobble, sis D Y si p e if fi M y a wish in mind and Tongue in cheek supposedly does The Trick .... hard on our shoes buf Tun! ResulTs? JusT ask The seniors and grads .... BuT Try as we mighT, we usually end up meandering in The direcTion oT The libe. Our ac- quainTance wiTh This ediTice has been limiTed This year lwiTh The excepTions oT Superman Tans, daily news s+uden+s, and couples who enioy The comTorTs oT home in The Foulke room,l To The main Tloor and basemenT. No doubT ThaT's why iT looked so crowded and indusTrious dur- ing exam week, wiTh all oT us in TogeTher, signing yellow slips Tor reserve books lwhen we can lay hands on Theml glaring in unaccusTomed disgusT aT Trivolous souls who dare To whisper, and cramming Tor dear liTe . . . some keen observer said iT sTarTed earlier This year, Too .... l3uT on The oTher hand, remember Those sTolen momenTs oT snooze, broken only by an inTiniTesin1a' anT crawling over our noses, or how easy iT was To be disTracTed by almosT anyThing, including The blonde across The Table . . . how so many people managed To cemenT a beauTiTul Triend- ship over a discarded book in The liTTle N.W. basemenT room, and we couldn'T help being IaTe To class, or even missing iTs compleTely, because ThaT darn clock was oTT again .... Carnegie collecTion Music Apprec1aTlon hour: Ferris, A. Payne, ParTingTon, Taylor, MarsTaller, R. Miller, Sellrner, Marchaland. We lilce, Too, The Teeling of wallcing by The libe on a spring evening, a nicely digesTed assign- menT Tuclced under our belTs, and seeing The lighTs and aura OT concenTraTion, To breaThe a sigh ol relieT and head Tor The Commons or The cem .... Nobody ever Tried To prove iT, buT There mighl' be a nice correlaTion beTween The repuTaTion oT Earlham as a maTchbox and The convenienT locaTion ol The cerneTery. Everyone knows ThaT Cupid is an ouTdoor boy, and Thrives on moonlighT and soTT breezes whispering Through The pines! BUT, believe iT or noT, The cem is more To us Than iusT a summer subsTiTuTe Tor The sTudenT parlor .... granTed ThaT is one ol iTs imporTanT luncTions. l-low could we appreciaTe BerndTson's nice syllogisms beginning all TombsTones are grey unless we were siTTing on Them during class? Where, also, would we Tind Tlowers Tor our hair,-in and ouT OT season-and whaT would Fresh- man weelc be wiThouT The Glass TombsTonel The cem's all righT Tor a pinT-sized hilce, buT when we geT The urge Tor The greaT open spaces Theres always The woods beyond. The creelc To Tord lor Tor amaTeur TighTrope wallcers, The pipe To cross . . . nol recommended immedialrely aller lunchll The woods . . . ah yes . . . ah wilder- ness, ah cows and poison ivy! We'd nof be surprised lo hear 'rhal commando and condilrioninq had Cul down Jrhe number who Indulge in woodland rambles .... aller ali, enough is enough. ll is nice fhough, one way or anolher, To gel away from il all every so ollenz when we're in There will be chapel 'today Suspen Tha Qoaalefs lol a more sociable mood we board The bus by Bundy To Take in a show in Town. We greeT Mac and his co- horTs wiTh The easy TamiliariTy oT long, if casual, ac- guainTance, and lose ourselves in The liTe oT Richmond, Indiana. AT Times lilce These we begin To realize Thar Earlham is a Tiny universe oT iTs own. bounded and in a sense removed Trom inTimaTe conTacT wiTh The ouT- side world by broad campus and open counTry. Though our inTeresT in The ouTside world may be acuTe, we oTTen Teel as if we were in The world, buT noT oT iT. . . unTil realiTy in The Torm oT a draTT summons Tor a roommaTe or sTeady rears iTs ugly head .... Qne elemenT ThaT prevenTs us Trom crawling inTo our cozy liTTle hole and pulling iT in aTTer us is The day dodgers, ThaT large and energeTic segmenT oT The col- lege populaTion which leads a Jekyll-l-lyde exisTence, linking us To The ouTside . IT They are in a degree shuT oTl Trom The joys oT midnighT Teeds and Tiredrills, They malce up Tor iT by living Their own lives, which we seldom share. ApparenTly The college TrusTs Their pa- renTs To have Their besT inTeresTs aT hearT. The girls Too, are The envy OT many a dorm lass who musT whis- per her TearTul goodnighTs aT I l:IO sharp on SaTur- fcan iT be The Trees days. The day-dodgers are The ones who complain mosT loudly abouT having To come all The way over iusT Tor chapel and noT a single class all morning! l.oTs oT The day sTudenTs worlc in Town, and They're noT The only ones. Many oT us crowd The early busses on SaTurdays going To Town To Toil in local business esTablishmenTs, and a goodly pro- porTion oT Those leTT behind will be working oTT employmenT granTs Trom The college. ln addiTion To This, we sTudenTs have Tried To help ouT in The man-power shorTage lno, girls, This is a diTTerenT onell which ThreaTened This year righT on campus. We dug poTaToes, blasTed sTumps, made ice cream and obTained The raw maTerial Tor iT aT The Tarm, piclced apples, cleaned Carp and The libe in The early, early hours oT morning. All This in addiTion To The general run oT iobs: sTamping daTes in innumerable boolcs, Teeding endless caTeTeria lines, Trying To connecT The righT man and girl aT ,,Q,,. H2 Qi l-T rs.-3 5' N COMMONS: Pyle, Wood, Finch, Shaw 6:40 any evening, or iusl belore a big dance, supplying slcales lor roller arlisls, delivering laun- dry, driving lhe girls lo swim class in lhe geology bus, wriling lor lhe publicily ollice and lyp- ing in lhe wing , wailing lables, and washing dishes . . . lhese, all exlracurricular, are nol only a parl ol our educalion, bul even help lo make il possible. Relaxing lrom our labors, we recreale recklessly in an aslounding number ol ways. Some- limes il is iusl iiving lo lhe Commons' iulce-box or lalcing lime oul lor a gab session on lhe Earlham l-lall sleps .... bul we also manage lo whip oll numerous lormal allairsu . . . . . planned in delail and promoled wilh enlhusiasm. Nol so numerous as lhey would have been Claydfinf l 77 DAY DODGERS: Tiossem. G. Allen, Mclvlahan, E. Moore M. Mayer, C. Hadley, Hewson, D. Wild man, Fosler, B, Marlin, D. Webb, R Marlin, Parlme, Peclcham, Bolcenkamp Conover, Hodgson, Rufhanna Davis, M Kissiclc, H. Overlon, Grosvenor, Rollf, W Freeman, Slevens, Hormel, Michael W. Wildman, J. Hunt M. Smilh, B. Sian ley, Slinelorf, Pike, l. Overlon, Laurenl P. Porfer, Ranclr, Bull, Masfers, Werner, Ferrero, Garner, M. Hadley, Beisner, E Miller, Sherer. DAY-DODGER PARTY: A. Dougherly. Parke, Rosalie Fein, Applegale, Webb. Lou Fein, J, O'Maley, Campbell, Rollf, Laurenf. if we were a diiclerenl sorl ol place, as we soon discover .... The Social Whirl, ol which Prexy perennially says, Don'+ lei your sludies inlerlere wilfh your educalionu, has been lcnown by some as lhe Earlham Whirl 'em. lr has several dislin- guishing characlerislics, such as lhe laclc ol lralerniries and sororilies lwe do have Phoenix and Ionian, of course .... l Bur mosl ol our organized social lile is on a campus-wide basis, and consisls in lhe main of good clean lun ol lhe Type approved by lruslees .... And whal wilh lewer Big Men on Campus, lhe gals have lo learn To enlerlain 'rhemselves .... or al leasl lo go our and grab rhe available escorl malerial lirsll Freshman weelc marlqs Jrhe year's lirsl social aclivilies, including lhe beginning ol lhe con- linuous rush ol privale enlerpriseu in lhe EH. ollice. We all remember lhe rush ol gel- ling lo lcnow Earlham lhal slarled lhal momenlous Thursday when we lirsl descended on rhe- campus .... idenlilicalion by everylhing bul fingerprinls, all-college sing, regisrrarion, and visils To lacully homes, inlelligence lesls, and visils +o lhe cem .... As soon as classes gor well under way lmeaning lhal 'rhe Freshmen had discovered which ol Carp's slairwaxs led 'ro For lhe sake of appea We won The next day l-l.R.l-l. I-lornbroolc which room and 'rhal Comp. didn'+ meel on Thursdayl class parlies slarled Taking place. '44 led lhe parade 'rhis year, and from all reporls Jrheir hobo parly by Clear Creek won lhe race on every counl. The Sophs were nexl, slaying nearer home for a picnic al The Lodge wilh a skale aller- wards in lhe lieldhouse. Then The mighly Seniors, in lhe Lodge loo, inslead of Prexy's farm: lhe day dodger ailair, also in lhe Lodge, described as a Thing 'ro remember g and lasl bul noi leas+ . 'rhe Frosh, al lhe beginning of lhe Winler lerm. The really big evenT oT The Fall was Homecoming, Friday aTTernoon, wiTh no classes and plenTy oT hard work . . . why does iT almosT always rain? . .We armed ourselves wiTh rakes, all buT The lucky Sophomores, and plied Them Till every leaT had been added To The pile, every pile converTed Trom baskeT To Truck, and The lasT Truck driven away. The l-Tell-benT ran around heckling The lv1an-wiTh-The- Rake, while a selecT Tew helped ga+her AuTumn's loveliesT leaves Tor The Queens crown. Then, less Tired Than if we had spenT The day over a book, we crowded around The TradiTional bonTire, cheered wiTh Gussie, and marchedfhardly-ran-at all-This-year To Town Tor The Tiv rush , To be rewarded Tor our pains wi+h ... Cairo l The dim grey hours oT SaTurday saw us up To decoraTe The campus Trom Na- Tional To The Tieldhouse . . . and The Qld Grads, responsible Tor all This Tuss, be- gan To pour in. The big game sTarTed, Sarah was displayed and crowned, and aTTer supper we Traipsed over To Goddard To see lvl and Tv1's RomanTic Age , which we appreciaTed, despiTe our weariness. IT wasn'T so long ago ThaT Earlham didn'T dance buT These days iT's a diTTer- enT sTory. We may noT have a Tormal a week like some schools, buT we man- age To survive . . . l-lops, Swings, Frolics, and Whirls are always cropping up. The E-BlankeT l-Tops were abouT The biggesT dance evenTs oT The season-The blankeTs being snared by Hunk and Duke lwho esTablished a precedenT by geT- Ting his in absenTia Through courTesy oT Lukel. And when an E-BlankeT l-lop be- comes a girl's inviTe dance, broTher, ThaT's newsl We did leT The men inviTe Tor The day-dodger's WinTer Whirl, Though. More inTormally, There were The dinner-dances, especially The candle-liT ones WinTer Whirl Duke ir' absaruia a+ Thanksgiving and Valen+ine's day . . . The Senafe Swings in Jrhe Commons, and +he sudden oulcropping of square dances, variously sponsored, where we learned lo swing our parlner and reel lhal gal in lrue counlry slylel And in Jrhe Spring lhere was May Day again .... shorl buf sweef as ever allhough +he rain forced us lo ea+ indoors .... we remember 'rhe lense wondering before The queen was an- nounced, and Jrhe counlry lassies dancing around 'rhe maypole, while a choral group sang May Day songs and l-lobby l-lorses cavorled .... The luscious brealclasl al gaily decoraled fables and Bogue smiling graciousy in response To our lor she's a beauliful May Queen .... if was worlh gelling up lor! Of course Spring also brings lhe Seniors To a head, so To speala, and we did our besf 'ro honor Their eminence. The Faculfy did Jrheir share al lhe Elks Club brealdasl, wi+h fhe inevilable Jroasls and speeches, for which we also arose before our accuslomed Sunday hour. . .and Prexy polished 'rhem oil during commencemenl weelc wilh his garden parfy receplion. Maybe we did miss lhe old slyle Senior picnic, now immorlalized in slory for poslerily, buf in spife of handicaps ranging from shorlage of gas and slealcs To shorlage of men, we managed 'ro have a darn good lime This year al Earlhaml Reel fha? an-l and I donf care Dancing in lhe darl: Mood Indigo Funnies for The Faculfy Siender, fender and fall Bogue Bye Calverl' CalberT DouqherTy E. Evans Gorman Greene C. Hadley M. Hadley Harris l-lamm Lindley KraTz l-lornbrook Lukens Moore Mills X l-TOENIX SocieTy is oTTicially known as a group oT women sTudenTs who are inTeresTed in The improvemenT oT liTerary pursuiTs and parliamenTary procedure, buT There is some quesTion as To The naTure oT The liTerary pursuiTs. Especially when The ladies rneeT wiTh Their broTher organizaTion, The Ionian Socie-Ty, The pursuiTs acquire an aThleTic Touch, buT The procedure survives in The TumulT. Members give conTlicTing reporTs on Phoenix. A greaT deal oT hoT air on one hand. Scrapbooks, and kniTTing Tor The Red Cross and Service CommiTTee on The oTher. lT is apparenT ThaT The ladies are keeping up wiTh The Times and making Their conTribuTion To The war eTTorT. The scrapbooks leTT a wake oi Torn and scaTTered magazines around Earlham l-lall and iTs environs. l3uT iT would have been a very sober soldier indeed who did noT enioy The side-spliTTing carToons pasTed in aTTracTive brighT paper books. The Phoenix chapel program wiTh iTs barber-shop guarTeT, blues singers and chorus was one oT The high spoTs oT The year: wiTh perTormances like These The SocieTy, The oldesT organizaTion on campus, is conTinuing in a long and honorable TradiTion. sssler iggs lmsied I 3 PHIHNIX FT' I 3 X xxnl Powell M. MerrH l' PenneU Roll? M. Porfer Richards Sims S+SVSV1S B, Ross 6. Smiih Sfewarf Whwe W. Heywood Brei+enbach Jack Bufler J.Har1' Anderson DeShong Overman Jefferis Ellingfon HiaH Cummins Jordan Del-loney J.O'Maley R.O'Maley Weirich I3 1 Z a If ONIAN is flue campus' male liferary organizafion. lvleefings are conducfed 55 E every fwo weelcs fluaf luave for flueir purpose nof only flue promofion of a cor- !! recf knowledge of parliamenfary procedure, buf also a sfimulafion of liferary ! falenfs. l-lowever. flue liferary funcfions of flue club usually luave fo waif unfil affer flue business session wluiclu fakes up flue bulls of flue fime befween 7:I5 and 8:I5. Tluis pre-liferary session is fradifional wiflu lonian, because in if, members of flue organi- zafion are fined or punislued laccording fo flue financial condifion of flue clubl for mis- deeds of every descripfion. Tluose in flue inner sancfum call flue process burning and in flue course of flue process flue erring member is called upon fo defend luimself. Buf lue usually luas as muclu of a cluance of escaping as a gladiafor in flue arena, for lue seldom can be lueard above flue din of fluose demanding flue penalfy, and if is rare indeed fluaf flue men of lonian furn fluumbs up and lef flue defendanf off Scof free. Forfunafely flue iurisdicfion of lonian does nof exfend beyond flue meefing room and genflemanly coruducf is nof required affer 8:l5. Toward flue end of eaclu meefing liferary dufies are lueard from newly inducfed members, and if is luere fluaf lonian proves ifself fo be broad-minded and democrafic-because nofluing is barred as flue subiecf for liferafure. L. E. Rogers Younf W. Smelser J. Payne J. Rogers Fosfer Sfouf Parker R b uqs ee l Zerlel G1 -A -Pri' . 4: 1 . g. Z . '- '?. 52 - ' Y, .W .. V n-V 1,2 N We 1 , 4, G 1 1 f 11 , 1 1 . 1 . 1 1 401 , 1 12 V 1' 1' 5 4 I f ,ill 9 1 'fl 7 1,11-vi , Z V if 1 1 ,1 'I fm' 1,236 1 , 3 . . 1f'l M1f :-1 ? ' ii' wif I - 2 ' If if c 1 ,agar 1 .1 , ,: f' 1 . 112 17 f 4- , ,, 1, I, 1, , Z . v, 'f11 lf A .w ,112 yef 11471 ZX, A xv, I? 1f IHHIHHU EHHSS EHUNIHY HHSKHHHH IH H EKU. HHSEHHH WUMWSSPHHI3 SPHHIHHIIS I I U N HIH.HHHHN 144 Co-capmins: J. Mills, Anderson and Coach Hunfsman Anderacn J, MIUS l-lE name oT The Earlham Quakers is one widely known in aThleTics circles oT The midwesT. We have gained a repuTaTion Tor ourselves, noT as a powerTul record smashing group, buT as a hard TighTing, sporTsmanlike eleven. Earlham men go The Tield noT primarily Tor vicTory, buT Tor The higher rewards oT aThleTic parTicipaTion. Win or lose, The Maroons know when They have played a good game and Therein lies The greaTer and more lasTing saTisTacTion oT inTercollegiaTe TooTball. VicTories are by no means The sole criTerion oT good TooTballg raTher good TooTball is The neT beneTiT oT a season's play To The members oT The college Team. Ask any oT Them. They Tell you wiTh one voice ThaT iT was a loT oT work, buT aT The same Time someThing worTh remembering. And This goes beyond a recollecTion oT The ouTcome oT each game played. lT is more like The end producT which comes in considering The sea- son as a whole. To sum up as brieTly as possible, no words come nearer expressing The spiriT oT Earlham Teams Than Those oT This year's co-capTain, Johnny Mills, when he said: We play aT Earlham Tor Tun, noT Tor wages . The '42 TooTball season goT To an early sTarT. BeTore regisTraTion l-lunTsman had more Than a score oT chargers reporTing Tor The TirsT pracTice sessions. Those who donned The whiTe helmeTs beTore The oTTicial call were noT oT The experienced varsiTy, and Tor a Time presenTed a maior challenge To menTors l-lunTsman and Fein, and co-capTains Rex Anderson and Johnny lvlills. Several leTTermen were included in The group and They readily reTurned To Their berThs on The line. Anderson was abouT The only backTield hope and a new combinaTion had To be builT wiTh The VVabash sTar as a nucleus. Bob lvlarTin and Gene l-lar+, boTh Trom Richmond, along wiTh a couple oT Treshmen, Tilled The empTy posTs. VersaTile Jim Turner was available Tor duTy eiTher in The Torward or rear wall oT The deTensive or oTTensive machine. Earlham opened The l942 season againsT a powerTul Allegheny college eleven and dropped ThaT conTesT 32-O. Unable To halT The opposiTions' running and passing aTTack, The Quakers could only admiT a superior driving Torce and TighT as besT They could. 'lime aTTer Time a member oT The Earlham line would break Through and grab The runner, only To be shaken oTT. ln spiTe oT The deTeaT, aT leasT Two oT our men disTinguished Themselves. ln The Torward wall, Gene EllingTon displayed some Tine blocking as did Dave Jewell who wenT inTo The same To prove his worTh as a regular sTarTer. Miller EllingTon Del-Toney W 'T Mfr G. Hari f 1 v M ' V 'iii 7. . Mills Turner . ' Be-esner Ginqrfry Pafriclc VICTORY ON I-IOMECOMING DAY Much To The pleasure oT a large Homecoming crowd, The Quakers came Trom The ranks oT deTeaT and downed a Defiance college eleven I9-O. IT was Jimmy Turner who TirsT crossed enemy Terri- Tory Tor The Maroon and WhiTe gridders. I-Ie scored aTTer a series oT runs had puT The ball in scoring posiTion. VeTeran Neb Del-loney place kicked The exTra poinT and The march was on. Early in The second quarTer Bob MarTin pulled down a DeTiance punT and reTurned iT To The visi- Tors' 24-yard line Trom where Anderson puT The pigskin in posiTion Tor Gene ElIingTon To carry The ball inTo pay dirT. The educaTed Toe balked and Del-Ioney's Try Tor The exTra poinT was no good. The Tinal score was I9-O. ROSE POLY RUNS RAMPANT IT was a sad day Tor The Touring eleven when They invaded The Rose Poly gridiron. A pair oT lighTning-TasT backs and a sTalwarT line gave The Engineers The power To deTeaT Earlham 69-7. Eddie McGovern, who Turned in The TinesT perTormance oT The year by scoring 43 oT his Team's poinTs, gained naTion-wide recogniTion Tor his play ThaT day. LaTer he won The Indiana ConTerence scoring championship Tor The l942-43 season. Earlham's lone score came aTTer a Rose Poly Tumble puT The ball wiThin 38 yards oT The goal line. Rex Anderson carried The ball on Three successive plays To score. The Try Tor exTra poinT was good. The Quakers played in spurTs, buT hardly ever as a Team. When The line was TogeTher, The backTieId bogged down, and when The backTield had a good opporTuniTy To geT inTo scoring posi- Tion The line cracked. The Rose Poly oTTense worked like a charm and leTT The visiTors in a diTher by using many reverse and laTeral plays. WABASI-I WINS 37-7 Playing one OT The besT games To daTe, The Quakers losT To a powerTuI Wabash eleven in a conTerence game on The CrawTordsviIle gridiron by a 37-7 score. The league leading LiTTle C5ianTs played superb TooTball againsT The less experienced Maroon and WhiTe buT did noT display any QT The sTuTT They used when They downed The mighTy Rose Poly Team. Earlham was in scoring posiTion early in The TirsT quarTer, marching To The Tive-yard line w?Th Tv-.o plays leTT and goal To go. A pass was inTercepTed To end The ThreaT and iT was noT unTiI laTe in The second period ThaT The Quakers scored. I-IuberT Zerkel recovered a Wabash Tumble and Two plays laTer They scored via a pass Trom I-IarT To Anderson. Neb Del-loney kicked The exTra poinT. Again in The TourTh quarTer, The Earlham squad goT under way, buT, aTTer reaching The nine-yard sfripe, were sfopped by a fumble. If was in fhis en- counfer fhaf Johnny Mills played fhe besf defensive game of fhe season and wifh Bob Miller was able 'ro sfop fhe Wabash sfeam roller from faking foo much ferrifory. DEPAUW DOOD IT 45-O If was hard fo believe fhaf affer playing such a fine game as Crawfordsville, fhe Quakers could receive such a drubbing as fhe DePauw Tigers gave fhern on Reid field. Two plays affer fhe kickoff a Tiger back carried fhe ball 57 yards fo score. The fally was 7-O before fhe dusf could seffle from Del-loney's firsf kickoff. From fhere on if was DePauw all fhe way excepf for fhe fhird period which furned info a sfalemafe. Freshman Dick Gingery managed fo gef fhe pigskin fo wifhin six yards of DePauw's goal line buf fhe fimer's gun kepf fhe Quakers from whaf promised fo be a fouchdown. HANOVER 5I EARLI-IAM I9 Earlham was powerless againsf fhe much heavier and speedier l-lillfopper eleven when fhe fwo feams mef on fhe l-lanover field. Before fhe Quaker offen- sive could gef rolling wifh any power fhe hosfs had puf fhemselves info a comforfabe lead by geffing one of fheir backs across fhe goal line four fimes. If was Rex Anderson who came fhrough for fhe losing Quakers when he ran back a kick-off 90 yards for a six poinfer. Lafer in fhe ball game he made anofher long run of 60 yards fo cross fhe l-lanover line. Veferan Neb Del-loney fallied fhe ofher Quaker score behind fhe work of his feammafes. TT, Givan, Kissner, Good n, Wagner, PainTer X. 'N-4 gi. MORAL VICTORY A cOmpleTely revamped Team wenT To The Oberlin ToOTball Tield The day Quakers meT The Yeomen on Their home grounds. The home Team was expecT- ing To run The Quakers back againsT The goal posTs and keep Them There Tor The aTTernoon buT much To The surprise OT The Over-elaTed Oberlin gridders The Earlham line held wiTh all iT had and gave everyThing in reTurn. This was undoubTedly The besT game OT The season Tor The Maroon and WhiTe even Though They wound up on The shorT end OT a 26-I3 score. The TilT noT only broughT The currenT grid season To a close buT also was Tinis Tor The careers OT The Two Quaker co-capTains, Johnny Mills and Rex Anderson, who had played Tour years under The E. C. banner. Anderson carried The ball Tor bo+h OT The Earlham Touchdowns and Del-lO- ney kicked The exTra pOinT. The game was in no way reminiscenT OT previ- ous games. This concluding encounTer OT The season wiTh The mosT powerTul Toe broughT OuT The besT we had. IT was The happy climax To a series OT de- reaTs and more nearly indicaTed The True meTTle OT The maroonmen. The baTTle Tor The inTramural six-man ToOTball championship was ToughT mainly beTween The Auks and Yuks. The Yuks Topped Their ersTwhile rivals I9-O in Their TirsT rneeTing as liTTle David LyTTle scored Three Touchdowns. ATTer ThaT The Auks, made up OT Doc Frazier, NewTOn Wesley, DelberT Duck- worTh, Gene Williams, Kenny Jones, and Dan Goodman, remained undeTeaT- ed Tor The remainder OT The season. NewT Wesley's ball carrying gained yardage cOnsisTenTly, making him The ouTsTanding player in inTra-murals. The climax OT The season came in The Tinal game, when The Yuks, TighTing desper- aTely in The Tinal minuTes To overcome a one poinT deTiciency, were Topped by The valianT Auks. The schedule and oTher deTails OT The season were ably handled by assisTanT phys ed direcTor Lou Fein. ARLl-lAM'S cross-counlry leam, one ol lhe besl small college squads in lhe counlry, remained undelealed in dual compelilion lor lhe second conseculive season, and proved ilsell lo have whal il lakes. Coached by Dave l-lawlc, caplained by Eddie Jordan and usually led across lhe linish line by Bill Rogers, lhe harriers won lheir lour dual meels handily and caplured second place in lhe Lillle Slale meel al Buller. Four velerans, Caplain Jordan, Bill Rogers, John Rogers and Earl Smilh placed well up in each meel, while lreshman Ray Davis did his bil. Eranlc Burnel, John Nicholson, and Brilisher Kenny Jones also ran in inlercollegiale compelilion. ln lhe meel wilh DePauw, Caplain Jordan and Earl Smilh lied lor lirsl while Bill Rogers oulsprinled DePauw's besl runner lo lalce lhird place. Earlham's mar- gin ol viclory, 24-3I, was comlorlable, if nol large. Aller lwo meels had been cancelled, a malch wilh Manchesler College was arranged. In lhis clash, lhe Earlham harriers scored lhe almosl perlecl conquesl CROSS COUNTRY TEAMS Jordan-Ca l., Nichol- P son, Burnel, Ray C. Davis, B. Rogers, E. Smilh, Jones, J. Rogers. 54 Coach Dave l-larsl by faking fhe firsf four places and sixfh. Bill Rogers, refurning fo fhe form which gave him fhe Liffle Sfafe crown lasf year, ran away from fhe ofher men fo friumph easily. Eddie Jor- dan, John Rogers, and Earl Smifh crossed fhe finish line af almosf fhe same fime wifh fhe fwo lasf named being fied for second. Franlc Burnef placed sixfh. ' Againsf Wabash, Earlham's 24-31 vicfory was highlighfed by a specfacular sprinf for firsf place. Bill Rogers and Perry of Wabash alfernafed in fhe lead unfil Bill puf fhe pres- sure on af fhe end fo win. Jordan, John Rogers and Smifh finish fhird, fourfh, and sixfh respecfively. Nexf came fhe Liffle Sfafe meef in which Earlham finished second fo Bufler. Bill Rogers placed fhird in fhis evenf being followed by brofher John in sevenfh place. Srnifh in elev- enfh, and Jordan in fwelffh. The final meef of fhe year wifh Oberlin was decided by fhe narrow margin of fhree poinfs, wifh Earlham fhe winner 26-29. Bill Rogers again led fhe pack fo vicfory. For fhe excellenf record of fhe feam Coach Dave l-lawlc deserves a greaf deal of credif. The desire fo win for Dave was one fhing fhaf lcepf fhe harriers going well. Bill Rogers, x-.ifh his mafchless sfride and fremendous endurance was fhe oufsfanding runner, as his record of fhree firsfs and a fhird shows well. ln infra-mural cross-counfry Ronald McCloud and Mark Kishego showed plenfx of abilifv and finished well ouf in fronf of fhe ofher runners in The big evenf. BASKETBALL TEAM: Ellin Ton, Anderson. 6. l 'larT, BreiTenha:h, MarTin, Jim uTler, Zerlnel, ach unTs- q B Co H man PaTriclc, Johnson, Macy, STamper, Day, Sherman, Dean, Parlferl E, Mills, SchwyharT, Del-Toney. IKE March, Earlham's basl4eTball Team roared like a lion aT The beginning oT iTs season, buT The end was raTher lamb-lilce. ATTer winning six oT The TirsT seven games The neTmen did a compleTe abouT Tace and came ouT on Top in only Two oT Their lasT ThirTeen conTesTs. The TirsT Tew games oT The season will always remain as precious memo- ries-memories oT ThaT 40-39 vicTory over Wabash, The only conTerence deTeaT suTTered by Them:-memories oT Manager Jim BuTler coming inTo The WilmingTon game and hiTTing Three Tield goals, which pulled The game ouT oT The Tire:-The hearTbrealcing deTeaT aT The hands oT DePauw, when, sparked by dynamic Duke EllingTon, The Team rallied To Tie The score, only To Tall aparT in The Tinal minuTes1-Then The Thrilling win over CenTral Normal when l-lunlc Anderson and Gene l-larT each sank a Tield goal in The lasT Tew seconds To puT us in The lead. WilmingTon and Taylor were Two more Ellingfon Del-loney friumphs-and everyone fhoughf we were going places. Then came one of fhe craziesf games we ever played on any baslcefball floor. The nefrnen broke fhe Earlham scor- ing record by hiffing for 78 poinfs, and l-lunlc Anderson scored 26, more fhan he had ever made in an infercollegiafe confesf, yef Defiance raked up 93 poinfs fo cop fhe fussle. A couple of fheir forwards, Lord and Krouse, scored 34 and 33 markers respecfively, which shows whaf can happen when Bob lvlarfin, your besf defensive man, fouls ouf in The early parf of fhe game. Pafricl: Marfin 'HRX '. 4., H . 5' ,. KX Q ll BreiTenbach, Dean Following This was a sloppy maTch wiTh Franlclin, which we losT by Two poinTs. And Two nighTs laTer, as a clincher To ThaT dismal week-end, a much superior Peru Naval Team ouTclassed The Qualcers, 48-43. A dead-eye-Diclf by The name oT Klee sanlc 2O poinTs, and really sTole The show. And Ball STaTe walloped The Team aT Muncie To spoil Jim Day's homecoming , IT seemed aT ThaT Time ThaT Earlham had reached The depThs. A 52-38 Triumph over Oberlin gave us a shoT in The arm. l-lowever The shoT was noT suTTicienT, as we wenT Through a disasTrous weelc-end righT aTTer ThaT. On Fri- day, we bumped inTo DePauw again, and Don Jones. Jones was leaving Tor The Air Corps The Tollowing day, so he gave Earlham a Tond Tarewell by Tossing 43 poinTs Through The hoop To help DePauw win 89-54. NexT To ThaT, even l-lunlc's I6 markers ThaT evening loolced puny. The Tollowing nighT we encounTered whaT Wabash called sweeT revenge , buT we considered iT an awTul dose oT medicine. Their 5l-29 conguesT was a biTTer pill To swallow-buT swallow iT we did. , AnoTher deTeaT, This aT The hands oT ST. Joseph's, was TasTed beTore we heard The glorious sound oT The vicTory bell again. Bernie l-loTTman scored 22 poinTs Tor his Team, and we couldn'T musTer any deTense, so ST. Joe ran away wiTh The game 5I-43. Our lasT win oT The season was one ThaT meanT a loT To The boys. They couldn'T sTop Their old Nemesis, FooTsie l-lendricks, buT They boTTled up The resT oT Their opponenTs and Tinished The game by scoring Tiye poinTs in The oyerTime To emerge yicTorious, 35-34. Our Tinal Tour games ended The wrong way. DeTiance sTopped us 56-52: PaTTerson Tield overran us 58-4l and won The reTurn game which was played Tor chariTy. The lasT conTesT oT The season saw Franlc Jean oT l-lanoyer lead his Team To vicTory wiTh 3I poinTs. There was some consolaTion, Though, in The TacT ThaT l-lunlc brolce his record by scoring 27, and Buddy PaTrick hir Tor 23 markers. A season record oT 8 vicTories and I2 losses was noT good, puT There were plenTy oT good games played as The boys all did Their besT. THHEK The Track Team oT i943 was noT as good iudging by meeT scores, as ThaT oT The previ- ous year, buT iT was good none The less. The loss oT men who were expecTed To come baclc was appalling To coach and aTh- leTes alilce. Each man shouldered a liTTle biT more To balance The loss, realizing ThaT oTher colleges were in The same predicamenT. NeverTheless, losing Anderson, John Rogers, ScoTT, Kishego and Thornburg To The services was discouraging. l-Towever, The number and qualiTy on men ouT Tor Track was noT To be considered below sTandard. The leTTermen Tormed a nucleus around which This year's Team was builT. WiThouT a doubT, The ouTsTanding compeTi- Tor Earlham produced This year was CapTain Bill Rogers, probably The greaTesT middle dis- Tance runner To aTTend school here. NOT only a runner, Bill scored consisTenTly in The high- iump. l-lolder oT The Earlham halT-mile record aT The sTarT oT The season, Bill seT ouT To craclc iT again, and puT on one oT The TinesT exhi- biTions ever seen on Reid Field, when he ran Tor The mile championship, againsT Time, noT compeTiTion. l-lis brillianT iudgmenT oT pace and his beauTiTully long sTride enabled him To break The Earlham record, as he covered The disTance in 4 minuTes, 32.l seconds. 1154 - Field men: Miller and Allen Bill also won consisfenfly in fhe fwo-mile, and could run a fasfer 440-yard dash fhan any- one else on The squad. l-lis running as anchor man on fhe relay feam was, lilce everyfhing else he did, superb. There was no one who could mafch Bill in fhe disfance runs, buf af leasf one man on fhe squad was iusf abouf as versafile. Eddie Jordan scored in anyfhing from fhe hundred- yard dash fo fhe fwo-mile run. and he usually did. l-lis lengfhy sfride aided him no end, and when fhaf failed him, he could sfill sprinf on gufs . Eddie filled in beaufifully fhe holes le-ff by fhe manpower shorfage, by broadiumping successfully and doing fhe low-hurdles wifh ease. Yef he had nof parficipafed in eifher of fhese evenfs before fhis spring. Earl Smifh, consisfenf and sfeady, buf nof af all flashy, was an irnporfanf cog in fhe Hunfs- man machine. l-le usually followed Rogers across fhe finish line, or won when Bill didn'f compefe. Backing up fhese men in fhe disfance runs were sophomores Keifh Schwyharf and John End of The beqmnung- Beginning of lhe end- Why, of course Nicholson, who pushed Jrhe slars 'ro belrler limes, and Dan Goodman one of Jrhe greenesl of alhleles al lhe slarl ol The season and a prelly good hall-miler al lhe end ol il. In lhe shorl dislances, 'rhe Quakers had never been slronq, buf 'rhis year lhere were some excellenl prospecls. Don Johnson was developing inlo a craclceriack quarler-miler when lhe armed services caughl up wilh him. And Ed Casey and Bob Keyes bolh did some line worlc. in 'rhe hurdles as well as The dashes. Earle Esles had plenly of slurl in The hurdles, and he came Through wiTh poinTs TreguenTly. ln The Tield evenTs, Earlham could boas+ oT Two especially good men, each oT whom oTTen goT much less crediT Than he deserved. Bob Allen's work in The pole vaulT was almosT overloolced, mainly because iT was so Tine. Bob won or Tied Tor TirsT place in almosT every meeT, and pracTically goT To be Taken Tor granTed. l-lis iavelin Throwing was noT up To his vaulTing, buT iT was good. Big Bob lvliller was one oT The Tew pleasanT surprises Coach received This year. One oT The hardesT worlcing men on The Team, Bob became an experT aT The shoT puT. l-lis discus Throwing was good, and, Though you mighT wanT To see iT To believe iT, iT is True ThaT he ran a speedy hundred yard dash. Neb Del-loney was good aT The discus, pole vaulT, and iavelin Throw, buT iniuries hampered him ThroughouT The season. Jim BuTlerworl4ed hard aT shoT- puT and discus, and Jim Bond proved himself a Tine high jumper, one oT The besT Earlham has had in recenT years. Marc l-ladley was a poinT-geTTer in The high lump and hurdles. Judged by any angle excepT The won and losT record Tor The season, Earl- ham's Traclc Team was a success oT which The enTire school may be proud. Q man, Cobble, ar er, os er. HHSll2lHll When The Army EnlisTed Reserve was called To acTive duTy, There was Talk ThaT Earlham would abandon baseball, buT as long as There were nine men who were willing and able To play The game, and George Van Dyke To coach The Team iT was an acguired TacT ThaT Earlham would puT a nine on The Tield. And There weren'T many more Than nine players ouT when pracTice sTarTed, buT The enThusiasTs who came were regular and worked consisTenTly. Sophomore Bob MarTin oT Richmond was The leading all-around player on The squad, and did more Than his share oT The work. A good hiTTer and an excellenT Thrower, MarTin played Top-raTe ball in The ouTTield, and did a crediTable iob on The mound. l-lis speed in piTching would have been more Than enough To make him a good moundsman, if he had The oTher asseTs To go wiTh iT. BuT lacking conTrol and a good curve ball, Jake more oTTen Than noT was on The shorT end oT The score. Bill FosTer also handled some oT The piTching duTies, and very well, Too. l-le showed a loT more power Than mosT people would expecT. SomeTimes in The cluTch, Coach Van Dyke would call on Freshman Max Sherman To wing 'em in, and lvlax usually came Through. Behind The baT Tor Earlham was Big Paul Beisner, who could hold on To almosT any sorT oT piTch and grab mosT pop-Touls ThaT were wiThin sighT- ing range. Paul's weakness in The Throwing deparTmenT was a handicap, buT he succeeded in overcoming iT parTially. CompleTely inexperienced yeT Tull of The vim and vigor which goes a long way in making up a successTul organizaTion, was The Team's inTield. BASEBALL TEAM: Alexan er, yTT MosT oT The season, iT had Treshmen on TirsT, shorT and Third, and a conver'Ted ouTTielder on second. John GOTT, The Tlashy Tielder wiTh The Tlashier smile, held down The iniTial sack very well. Second was Taken care oT by Ted Parker, who always did a bang-up iob on Tielding ground balls, and pop-ups and making double plays. AT shorTsTop was one oT The beTTer naTural ball players who has come To Earlham in The lasT Tew years. Possessing a parTicularly sTrong Throw- ing arm and some keen baseball sense, Max Sherman was wiThouT a doubT, one oT The Tinds oT The year. AT The hoT-corner was Dave l.yTTle, a powerTul boy Tor his size. l-lide TomiTa, who sTarTed in The inTield, was unTorTunaTe in having a severe leg iniury in The very TirsT game oT The year. The loss oT l-lide was hard To swallow, buT iT was iusT one oT Those Things an unlucky Team has To Take. The ouTTield oT The Team was a good, if noT a shining example OT how baseball should be played. Cal Cobble, whose good-naTured grin was always evidenT on The Tield, kepT his Team conTenTed wiTh some solid lead-oTT hiTTing and a swell iob in The ouTTield. CenTer and righT Tielders Gene Mills and Jesse Overman snagged Tlies capably, and The Tormer especially, came Through wiTh Timely hiTs. The bench subsTiTuTes were oTTen more Tun To waTch Than The acTual game. For wiTh Two Top-raTe comedians like Bob Moore and Doc Kendall, The sideline side-show was a sTellar aT- TracTion. And lasT buT noT leasT, we musT menTion Marion Alexander, who could Till any po- siTion in an emergency, and Till iT well. To Coach Van Dyke and his assisTanT Lou Fein, goes a word oT congraTulaTions Tor geTTing The mosT ouT oT The boys. And To The boys, goes crediT Tor some hard work, which showed ThaT They had whaT iT Took when The chips were down. ell, Maris, Blackburn, M. Merrill, Arrnslrong. ng: D. Mills, Kaiglwn, Powell, Bye. SENIOR HOCKEY TEAM: Slanding: G. Smillu, S 'l Silhng: Lulcens, Merrill, Blackburn, Bye, Evans, B llllllll Hllllllll l-loclaey al Earlliam llwis year occupied llwe place ol lwonor among Fall sporls for women as in any ollier year. Tlwe lwoclcey lield l'1ad been given some vilamins for llie grass lasl spring, and nor only did llwe grass grow bul also produced some rallier large worms wlwiclw would nor slay rolled down. Tall: aboul bumps! Tlwe clear briglil weallwer brouglml all relurning lwoclcey enllwusiasls our lo Comsloclc lield as well as a large group ol experienced Freslimen. ll wasn'l unlil llie mid- dle ol llie season llial Coaclies Comsloclc and Weber and Manager Kralz gave up frying lo lind an oulrside leam lor llwe varsily lo play. Bud and Commie were bolli lieard lo say ll1al il was loo bad llriere wasn'l one since 'flue malerial lor a varsily was unusually good llwis year. The lack ol an Exlwibilion game willw an oulside leam didn'+ hinder llfie enlhusi- asm lor llwe class Jrournamenl. Manager Kralz aided by pepping up llle liglwling zpiril willi praclice games belween classes. No class could say llwal lliey didn'l liave plenly ol cliance lo praclice logellier lliis year. ln llwe final games all llwe HONORARY HOCKEY VARSITY: Sfanding: Haw- classes were ouT wiTh Tull Teams. There wasn'T any doubT abouT The games being good, all you had To do is loolc aT The scores. The Seniors goT in a ruT and couldn'T geT ouT or be goTTen ouT winning all Their games wiTh The same score oT 3-O. They won The championship Tor The lasT Time. KraTzie and social chair- man Bogue added To The spiriT oT play by Turnishing Tea and coolies aTTer each game in The lodge where The vicTors and vanquished mingled. Miss ComsToclc was TreguenTly seen ouT Telling The Teams noT To Tace Their own goal, noT To Turn on The ball, and To geT in There and play and enjoy iTl Bud seconded Miss ComsToclc's pleas and added many oT her own. The l-loclcey BangueT was The climax To a grand season and leTT us al' wiTh a paTrioTic Teeling even Though we missed The Tun oT a big game. The Honorary VarsiTy was announced as Tollows: PxrmsTrong, Maris, Kaighn, l-lowell, Mills, C. l-ladley, Powell, Blaclcburn, Bye, G. Sm'Th, and M. MerriTT. These girls are To be congraTulaTed on obTaining This honor, and Tor carrying on Earlham's TradiTion oT good sporTsmanship, enioymenT, abiliTy, and cooperaTion on The hoclaey Tield. BaslceTball was played in Trueblood Field l-louse under Bud's direcTion. Regu- larly aT 4:I5 girls rislced Their lives To cross The boys Tloor To geT To Their own. PracTice was held regularly excepT Tor The usual inTerrupTions7 a hog sale, The Preble CounTy Tourney lTor which large bleachers were spread generously over our Tloorl, and The Day Dodger Dance. The general complainT was, VVhy does iT always have To be our side oT The Tloor. Besides The Field l-louse, The Com- mons was reclaimed by The Physical EducaTion deparTmenT. The beginners played baslceTball There on Two days a weelc spending mosT oT Their Time dodging The booThs along The walls. Sarah T-lornbrook, baslceTball manager, sTarTed an inTramural TournamenT which was held aT nighT. The Teams, Tive oT Them, were composed oT noT more Than Three members Trom one class. The Seniors hoped ThaT ThaT would keep The NORARY BASVETBALL M SrniTh, D. Mills, M. Hadley, Howell, VOLLEYBALL: STanding: C. l-Tale. N Q ,P II S'TT' M H l P C rx' i ing: . age, . cwece T s rue. l l I X-X . 'L oTher Teams Trom geTTing Too good. l-leaT and lighT made iT necessary To play The games aT The same Time as The boys. Thus we were accompanied by masculine shouTs Trom The nexT Tloor. Who won The class TournamenT? No one seems To be quiTe sure. BuT as we see iT, Three Teams Tied Tor TirsT place, each wiTh Two wins. The Seniors were beaTen Tor The TirsT Time in Their baslceTball hisTory by The Freshmen by a score oT 24-23. The TacT ThaT iT was only by one poinT did noT lessen Their Teeling oT deTeaT. The Freshmen in Turn were beaTen by The Juniors, and The Juniors were beaTen by The Seniors. This leTT second place To The Sophomores, much To everyone's surprise. Thus The baslceTball BanqueT broughT TorTh many more songs oT vicTory Than usual. Powell, lvl. SmiTh, lvl. l-ladley, l-lowell, Mills, and Kaighn were announced as The members on The l-lonorary VarsiTy. This year again due To lack oT Trans- porTaTion, There was no opporTuniTy To play a Team aT The CincinnaTi Play Day. The Volley Ball TournamenT was won This year by The Juniors. A misTalfe in scoring in The game beTween The Seniors and The Juniors made iT necessary To do iT Twice, which was hard on The Seniors. The Juniors wiped Them up in The second gamel The TradiTional rivalry beTween The Two classes had always added a loT To The TournamenTs and This was no excepTion. The Seniors did penance Tor losing by going on healTh rules in an eTTorT To be sure oT winning The l-lealTh cup. The individual winner oT The Ping Pong TournamenT was Sarah l-lornbrool. Could be iT is a habiTg she won lasT year. We sTill Thinlc iT was PvT. Phil QrT- wein's coaching ThaT did iT. The Swimming classes, held aT The Y.Ivl.C.A. conTinued This year as usual on Tuesday aTTernoons. The TaiThTul old Geology bus carried The swimmers To and Trom campus Through rain and snow. Classes in liTe saving were aTTended by some oT Earlham's women sTudenTs. This Spring The horses were no longer eaTing a hole inTo The W.A.A.'s Treas- ury. The Fall season was shorT buT enioyed by all. Laclc oT men To care Tor The horses made keeping Them diTTiculT. For The duraTion The horses have leTT Earl- ham's campus Tor anoTher pasTure. The halls This year were Tull oT groans Trom members oT The condiTioning class. This idea had been simply To geT everyone inTo good physical con- diTion. lT seems To some however ThaT Bud raTher enioys seeing people suTTer and so had devised diTTiculT and sTrenuous exercises Tor her classes To do while she counTed. An obsTacle course was seT up, also one oT her ideas-over and under which The members had To race Trying To caTch up and pass ThaT imagis nary compeTiTor, Their own record. From The uncomTorTable expressions seen aT The dinner Table in The evening we're sure ThaT The class served iTs purpose. Too bad Bud doesn'T eaT here. Archery Manager Bye was ouT early in The spring rounding up people To prac- Tice Tor The lnTercollegiaTe Archery lv1eeT. This year again Earlham women ral- lied around The TargeTs on ComsTock Field To Try To raise our lowly sTanding. Track pracTise began wiTh many sTudenTs Trying To see if The bunch sTarT or The elongaTed sTarT is The besT Tor Them. Greek goddesses disguised as Earl- ham maidens hurled The iavelin and The discus Tor greaT disTances. SwiTT runners leapT over The hurdles spending Too much Time in The air. Everyone was ouT To beaT El Evans in The running evenTs. We heard Coach l-lunTsman bargaining wiTh Commie Tor her. You know men are so scarce and Those long legs. Maybe Coach could Tell us how many sTeps To Take beTween hurdles. Baseball again! AT The beginning oT The season The Seniors were eyeing The Freshmen suspiciously. They noT only loved iT buT They were good. Eiseman, l-larvey, D. Wildman and WeisheiT sure knew how To baT ThaT pill. Everyone was geTTing ouT To pracTise Tor everyone wanTed To win The TournamenT. ln a shorT Time one didn'T need lines To Tell where The bases were. l-lope The holes won'T be Too deep in The hockey Tield! AT The beginning oT spring The Tennis courTs looked as iT They needed some rolling. Bud knew how To geT iT done, drawing on her classes To Tind able and willing helpers. lT was a chance To geT a Tan and sTill beTTer exercise. EnThusi- asTs cropped up rapidly, sTarTing To pracTise Tor The annual Tennis TournamenT. All we needed To worry abouT was where are The balls? 1 l l i , '11 i r. n fu 4 .'V 5 dv il. . 1 'I ' all , fl 1 'lx s 119 if ' . , U V ' Iv! .3 xefzf 4 Slllllllllll REX ANDERSQNZ l-lunk was lhe dream alhlele ol Earlham: lhe kind ol player who comes along once in a lilelime. Undoubledly lhe besl EC. alhlele and held by many as lhe grealesl ever lo come lo our campus. Loose and relaxed al all limes, he always played al his besl under lire. Op- ponenls and leammales could go inlo lhe air, bul cool and collecled Ren wenl on doing his parl ol lhe leam work wilh experl calm elliciency. l-lis abilily paid dividends. l-lis record shows: lhree lellers and lhe E blankel lor loolball, co-caplaincy ol lhe squad in his senior year besides gaining more yards lhan any previous Earlham man. To lhal add lour years ol varsily bas- kelball, lhe was lhe one who broke Coach l-lunlsman's scoring recordl and consislenl high scoring in any lrack evenl wilh lhe caplaincy in his lhird year. Alhleles iusl don'l come any beller lhan lhis nalural . PEGGY BLACKBURN3 Peg is lhe gal who can wallop lhe ball inlo lhe cenler ol lhe hockey field lrom lhe wing. ll you wanl skill wilh a lillle power, she's lhe one you need. A home run a day keeps lhe doclor away according lo Peg. She knows how lo keep lhe lorewards lrorn making a baskel and has a lol ol lun messing up lheir passes. She didn'l really slarl lo play guard unlil her senior year bul lhal doesn'l mean she isn'l loosl Jus' suggesl somelhing and Peg will do il. ll you need a player lor any game iusl ask Peg, you'll hear her say, Sure, l'll do ill NEB DEl-lQNEYg Big, jovial Neb was one ol lhe mosl popular boys on campus, bolh in alhlelics and oulside. An assel lo lhree. and somelimes lour leams, Neb's presence in lhe game meanl a lol lo players and lans alike. In loolball, he was a marked man all lhe lime because ol his pass-calching abililyq and his conlribulions in lhe way ol poinls aller louchdowns were regular and helplul. The second besl scorer on lhe nel leam. Neb showec almosl unmalchable lighl and zeal when il came lo grabbing lhe ball ol? fne backboard or calching il belore il wenl oul ol bounds. l-le played hard lasl, rough baskelball, and look plenly ol bumps lhroughoul lhe season al- ways lo come up smiling, ln lhe spring lhis year Neb's lirslbase aspiraligng had lo vie wilh his desire lo be a winner in lhe discus lhrov and pole vaul- and he did well al all lhree. BARBARA Barb occupied lhe bench lhis year SP3 Mase lhe l-lonorary Varsily as lhe besl player in lhe Senior Cheering Sec :'. 3' wasn'l her laull she wasn'l in lhere pilching wilh lhe resl ol us as she do las' year. The Doc caughl up wilh her. Barb has a lighling spri' ana ca': es on quickly lo lhe slralegy ol lhe game. May be she didn'l play hockey before she came lo Earlham bul she knows how now. when a laugh bunch :5 5: wards presenl lhemselves in baskelball, Barb grils he' lee-lh ana goes aber lhem usually coming oul on lop. She knows how in basebal loo. Baro really enioys a good ganre well played whelher il is lcsl or wen. She ough' lo-look lo whom she's engaged-Hunk Anderson Q'f Y--1. sg. 4+-r -- 4 ,. . MC. , f 4' f f J is , ,4 . L, 4 'Y F , 2 - f f ,f , 7 2 ,nz WM AM GENE EI-I-lNG'I'QNg Earlham's ball ol lire , Duke Ellinglon, possessed lhal inlangible assel ol college men school spiril . Like nobody else he could shake Quaker leams oul ol lheir lelhargy whenever lhey needed il. Possessed ol an indomilable desire lo play lo win, Duke wilh his quick, callike movemenls and encouraging voice, inspired his leammales lime aller lime, especially when lhe chips were down. We'll never lorgel lhe nighl he came oul on lhe baskelball lloor againsl DePauw, scored lhree quick lield-goals, and sparked a lruly greal Earlham rally. l-lis deparlure lrom lhe hardwood in mid-season was one ol lhe discouraging evenls ol lhe year. ln absenlia. however, Duke was awarded lhe coveled E blankel al lhe baskelball hop, lhus receiving deserved recognilion lor lhe services rendered on Quaker leams. MARIAN BYEg Bye may have a shorl legs bul lhey sure go lasl. When she plays righl hallback on lhe hockey leam lhe opposing wing soon linds oul lhal she is lhere lor she has a scrap on her hands. She won'l give up and she knows how lo use a lell hand lunge-so wings beware. She knows how lo loss a baseball around and how lo sock il a hard one loo. The Seniors sure need lhe poinls Bye brings in lor lhe lrack leam. Bye is one manager who can show her leam how, lor she is an old hand al Archery. EDDIE JQRDAN3 Eddie proves lhe lallacy ol lhe slalemenl, l've so much lo do lhal I can'l possibly go oul lor alhlelics. Probably lhe mosl aclive man on campus, Eddie slill has plenly ol aclivily lell in his legs, and he shows il. As versalile as lhey come, he can run any dislance lrom one hundred yards lo lwo miles, and score in each. We saw him broadiump lhis year and wondered whelher he had nol missed his vocalion. Caplain ol lhe cross-counlry leam lor lwo years, Eddie encouraged many a beginner who was aboul lo laller and wilh his lorcelul, regular slride, he led his leammales lo an imposing slring ol viclories. ELEANQR EVANS: EI is known by lhe girls as lhe laslesl lhing on campus. Firsl place in all lhe running evenls in lhe lrack meel lasl year won her lhis honor as well as being lhe lndividual winner ol lhe meel. She has been lell wing on lhe l-lockey Varsily lor lour years and has gained more lhan her share ol yardage. She's lops in baskelballg iusl ask any guard. They're sure lo say, She lops me by live inches . She puls pep and lun inlo any game she plays and she plays lhem all. ll she lhinks lhal she isn'l good in a sporl she'Il gel oul and work unlil she is. Where EI is lhere is sure lo be lun, a good scrap, and may lhe besl man win! JQI-IN MILI-S3 One ol lhe hardesl working alhleles ever lo hil lhis campus, Johnny wanled lo be, and always was, in lhe lhick ol lhings. This rough, lough, and yel comparalively lillle, man gave his hearl and soul as well as his physical slrenglh lo each ellorl he made on lhe gridiron, hard- wood, or diamond. Johnny came oul ol many a loolball lussle ballered or bleeding and hardly recognizable, yel he could, and would, gel up lrom lhe ground and deliver a bone-crushing lackle, or lhrow a key block al lhe cor- recl psychological momenl. l-lis abilily on lhe gridiron was recognized when he was elecled co-caplain ol lhe leam in his senior year. A born leader, Johnny gol as much playing oul ol his men as any human could, and always gave as much as he himsell possessed. ,wk P at F 1 43' ...A , ,X f N B Sarie , also called The Blonde Bomber , sure has a loT on The ball-any ball. In her second year of playing hoclfey she macle The Honorary Varsify, which is a real accomplishment anyone will admiT. Baslcefball finds her one of fhe besT guards on The floor and don'T Think ThaT she can'T play forward if she wanfs To and score some poinfs, She swings a mean Tennis racqueT wiTh a loT of power on The ball, Five sefs of Tennis and maybe you can geT her To sif down for a while. Shell Try any+hing' noThing's Too hard or Too easy. When you hear a healfhy chuclle on The hoclcey field, you'll lrnow Sarie has her sficlr on The ball! The greaTesT disfance runner To affend Earlharn gfnce Tom Jones, Bill did a Top-raTe job aT cross-counfry and Traclr for four years. Defeafed only once in dual compefifion in his lasf Two years of cross-counfry, Bill showed his True caliber by winning The LiTTle STaTe crown in his iunior year. FaiThful and deTermined in his Training Tall, blond Bill Rogers seemed builr for running. l-lis long, graceful sfride as he led his Teams To vicfori-es was beauTiful To wafch. We heard opposing harriers say Thaf if was dis- couraging To run againsT him because he sfill seemed To Talre if so easy affer Two and a half miles or so. ln his junior year Bill also defhroned Jones The former half-mile lcing. This year, due To man-power shorTage on The Traclc Team, Bill Took To high jumping and became one of Earlham's scorers in Thaf evenT as well. SARA KraTzie sure lcnows whaf a hoclcey sficlc is forl Maybe her sTiclc is magnefic To The ball for all she has To do is To sfick if ouf and The ball sTarTs going in The oTher direcfion. Perhaps she charms balls, for The baslcefball sure lcnows where To se+Tle when iT leaves her hands and and we do mean info The baslcefl Even The Tennis ball lrnows how To hif fhe corner of The courT iusT inside The whiTe line. ln baseball we find The ball drooping inTo her caTcher's miTT or sailing ouT To second base. She-'s made her share of home runs Too. If someone is sfanding on her head or walking on her hands iT will be Kralzie. l.asT year's swimming meeT found her splashing her way To vicfory and Individual Winner. Krafzie doesn'T say much she ics gefs in There and does iT. She lilces To laugh af+erwards af +he lucli, src she made. Big, huslcy Zelce esTablished himself we-ll during 'ne Two years he aTTended Earlham. l-lis worlv on The gridiron as ar en: was commendable, and his punfing was iusf abouf The besf ve had. Cn 'ne hardwood, he exhibiTed real Talenf, which, unfor+una+ely yas no' reccgfzea, l-le was a flashy ball-handler, a pre+Ty good shoT, and one of The oeT'er oe- fensive players on The squad. l-le had in him fhe sul? To become a s'a'. Affer Tour years aT Earlnafn, Penny has cc cyyuife a swifT change arfisf, for one minuTe she is canferrg a:r:ss cu s owing The ofher riding enfhusiasfs how and The 'ev fore o: e: her Tunic, she is whamming hocliey balls info The Qoal. l-ler speed 'se ' im ' iusf To dressing, Though, as anx forward Trxing To ge' aroufa 'T' - baslceTball courT can Tell you. She vas a flash exen in her 'r . me' '- for she was capfain of The Freshman hockey Team. and knee' v ' TournamenT. When mosT of us were having a sochemve sax reached new heighfs by being crowned Queen of The Tees. X Race- versafile, Thar small bundle of clynamife leaves us all-D'ea 'ess Hllllllll HHIIHNIZHIIHNS VARSITY CLUB: Jordan, Jack Bull S l Ch Earl Smifh-Sec., Ander- son- res 5 ES, NoTices appear Twice a monTh on The TronT door oT Carp and on The buIleTin board in lunch line, and by l2:3O The Tellows in Their maroon and whiTe sweaTers are assembled Tor business in The EasT dining room. Members oT VarsiTy club, They are aTh- leTes who have won Their leTTers in one or more inTercollegiaTe sporTs. The iniTiaTion inTo The group is always an advenTure. IT Talces place aT nighT. The aspiring members scan by Tlash- lighT every square TooT oT Terrain, Tree or rooT along a line, search- ing unTil The small hours oT The morning Tor The coveTed leTTer hidden somewhere beTween Two poinTs on The campus. VarsiTy club oTTiciaTes aT aTheTic evenTs, and iTs members man The colce sTand on Reid Tield and in Trueblood Fieldhouse. l-ligh- lighTing The social season is The awarding oT The E bIanlceTs To The ouTsTanding senior member oT The TooTball and baslceTball Teams. This year, Anderson and EllingTon pulled down The coveT- ed prizes, respecTively, and leTT To use Them in The Navy and Army. VarsiTy club also sponsors The annual l-lomecoming bangueT where Tormer muscle men Tear aparT The aTTernoon game and live over The plays They made way baclc when. Membership in The Double E club is The reward Tor ver- saTiliTy in a+lwleTics, as Two or more leTTers won in inTercollegiaTe sporTs are required To be admiTTed. The club is purely honor- ary and iTs members join The VarsiTy club To elecT oTTicers and sponsor social aTTairs. P ., J. Rogers Social Chu Ellrngfori, YounT, J. OMaley, Miller, ET STouT, Overman, Klshego, Bulnferfield, BreiTenbach, Coe, Jim Bufler, DOUBLE E CLUB: Jordan, Anderson, J. O'MaIey, ElIingTo T B fkm rw R R Allen R O'Maley J Mills Weirich L E Rogers Jim BuTler E. SmiTh J. Rooers I., E. Rogers, J. Mills Tu I UVFIEV, U, 5 . . E.. I E.C. CLUB: Pennell, KraTz, E. Evans, Hornbrook. E.E. CLUB: Sfending: Hornbroolc, M. MerriTT, E. T Evans, Powell, Bye. SiTTing: C. Hadley, Pennell, M. Srnifh, D. Mills Bogue. E. CLUB: STending: Hornbrook, Merrill, C. Had- ley, Bye, MarTy Smifh, M. Hadley, M. MerriTT. E. Evans, Powell. SiH'ing: G. SmiTh, Pennell, Greene, D. Mills, Bogue. 'i-. '-'Zi I g : I' .Y--f The W.A.A. board meeTs The TirsT Tuesday evening oT each rnonTh To male The pla all The sporTs, Tun, and recreaTion. 'A g.. L his WiTh Pres. Evans in command, and Bud and Comrnie aT The helm, our crew guided iTs s safely Through The roclcs and sTorrns oT war To The shores OT healTh, happiness, and good manship, Tor which The W.A.A. has always sTood. Never Too proud To concern Hsef i-his M wi- fs scoff- nfs Cu liTTle Things oT life, The W.A.A. has ever won our hearTs wiTh liTTle biTs oT Tun sr X over The enTire year. There were The barn dances in The Tieldhouse, Tor women uhh and niTl-- ouT men .... Board picnics in The Spring and Fall, where in The spring we remembered all oT our Tall ambiTions, and saw how much or Ii++Ie we had done .... Treasure hunTs in The snow x-.ifh 1: C Iolypops Tor prizes .... parTies in The lodge, where we all popped corn around The Tire .... Teas in The lodge aTTer The hockey games, where we all saT and re- played every game .... The sporTs' bangueTs, wiTh The capTains and managers looking aT ioke books in The library, while The resT oT us racked our brains Tor songs aT one minuTe beTore six .... Bud and Commie singing Their Tamous dueT aT The baskeTball banqueT .... Ivlay Day, wiTh all The Trimmings .... Yes, The W.A.A. did IoTs oT big Things , buT iT was The IiT+Ie Things ThaT really counTed. The W.A.A. recognizes iTs enThusiasTs by Three honorary organizaTions, The E, EE, and E.C. Clubs. The girls in The E Club are mosTly sophomores and iun- iors, who have begun playing on class Teams, keeping healTh rules, learning sporTsmanship, and only incidenTally piling up I000 poinTs. By The Time girls have become iuniors and seniors, and have more memories oT aThleTic accom- plishmenT To look upon, They have been able To acguire 2000 poinTs, and have become members oT The EE Club. The much cherished E.C. Club, aTTained mosTly by seniors only, is The crowning goal oT all, as shown by The beauTiTul whiTe E.C. iackeTs, proudly worn by each oT Their Tew TorTunaTe possessors. The class oT '43 is proud To be able To show Tive iackeTs Tor They indicaTe noT only good sporTsmanship and aThleTic abiliTy, buT even more, ThaT The owner has seen and grasped some oT The Tiner opporTuniTies and privileges ThaT Earlham has To oTTer. The Tinal Two coveTed awards oT The W.A.A. are The E.C. Award and The Pos- Ture Award. The E.C. girl is The senior girl who is ouTsTanding in all-round cam- pus acTiviTies, and The PosTure girl is The one who has exempliTied The require- menTs oT her award in all oT her Tour years aT Earlham. I3uT even Tor The girls who never aTTain such heighTs oT glory W.A.A. has meaning, inasmuch as iT gives Them an opporTuniTy To work oTT energy, To have Tun wiTh sporTs, and To geT To know each oTher beTTer. And keeping healTh rules is good inner discipline , a worThwhile Thing wheTher or noT iT is Tollowed up wiTh crediT or recogniTion. WOMENS ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION BOARD: CorbeTT, D. Mills-Sec., Weber- Ph s Ed DirefTor I-Iornbrook G' SrniTh Binns Y T KT Cl TP Il Greene, M. , 146 SIHIISIIIS I942-43 FOOTBALL SUMMARY I942-43 BASKETBALL SUMMARY Team E.C. Opp. E.C. Opponenl E.C. Opp. E.C. Allegheny L 32 O Cedarville W 2 I 4I Defiance II-Iornecominql W O I9 Wabash W 39 4O Rose Tech. L 69 7 Wilminglon W 45 49 Wabash L 37 7 DePauw L 39 36 DePauw L 45 O Cenlral Normal W 37 39 Hanover L 5I I9 Wilrningron W 35 39 Oberlin L 26 I3 Taylor W 36 42 Defiance L 93 78 Eranlclin L 34 32 Peru Naval Base L 48 43 Ball S'raJre L 50 33 Oberlin W 38 52 DePauw L 89 54 Wabash L 5l 29 S+. Joseph L 5I 43 BASKETBALL I942-43 - INDIVIDUAL RECORD Franklin W 34 35 Player Games EO. E.T. T.P. Defiance L 56 52 A666666 20 I io 44 264 Pa++erSOf1 Held L 58 4' pamck I7 63 I6 142 Palferson Field L 37 35 D6H6n6y I9 46 34 126 Hanover L 78 73 Marlin 20 39 I3 9I I-Iarl 20 28 9 65 Breilenbach I6 25 9 59 Dean I6 I4 8 36 Zerlcel I7 I4 5 33 Ellinglon 5 9 6 24 Buller I4 I I I 23 MINS '6 8 4 20 I942-43 cRoss-coUNTRY SUMMARY Parker 5 2 O 4 I, Johnson 2 O 2 2 DePauw 3I Eannafn 24 Schwyhar+ 2 0 O O Manchesler 39 Earlharn Io Bulferfield I O O O Wabash 3I . . y Eadiam L4 2nd Place in Li'rIIe Slrafe Meer M66y 4 o o 0 Oh I. 29 E rib T .6 Day I 0 o 0 em 5 al A I47 ZF 2 3 Sum of flie Summer sfudenfs LASSES on flue campus .... Prexy rigged ouf in boofs, breeclies, alpensfoclc, ef al ..... Confemp complefe in seven weeks! .... embryology under Dillcs, wiflw infensified lecfuring by Garner, baclc liome from C.P.S. camp for fen days .... enfliusiasfically amafeur 'rennis .... only six fables in ffie dining room lsliadow of flwings fo come?l .... flwose long, warm, and alfogeflier beaufiful July evenings .... a greaf deal of sincere sfudying on infensified courses . . . . and 'rlwe perfecf flowering of Earllnam cooperafive and social life. These flwings were Summer Session l942. Earlf1am's adminisfrafive powers had sensed flue need for speeding up educafion, 'ro give sfudenfs as muclw as possible in flieir sfiorfened span of college life. The final goal possible lwfiiclw lafer was acfually aclfiievedl was flue four-ferm year. Buf before fl1is idea became facf, fliey produced ffie Summer Session. lllllllll Slllllll Every allempl was made lo have il- The real Earlham . Seven weeks-in which lo cover a whole year's or a semes+er's worlc- emply hallways and dining room, an enroll- menl ol 85 because many counleol on work- ing summers lo finance 'rhe nexl nine monlhs educalion. On June I8, as lrain ancl bus ancl family car rallied info Richmond, new freshmen came eager To gel an early slrarl on lheir college careers. lfxnd lhey never knew, Q lucky chaps, whal if really means lo be a freshman. Thai is, no'r un'l'il Seplemberll There were posl-grads, worlcing loward degrees, or merely for lheir own salisfaclrion. And lhere were lhose of us who were conlenl' wilh a genlle push Toward gradualion. The Summer Session was Tun because il was new. Also a challenge: lo beal lime al ils game. ln lhal respect il was a fore-lasle of lhe guarler syslem. Classes six days a week and lhe same class on every one of lhose six days - somewhal slaggering al iirsll-wilh aflernoons moslly free excepl for labs. The facul- ly had wisely scheduled classes for mornings only, wherever possible. Trying l'o con- cenlrale on Jrhe coniugalion of a dusly and obscure verb or exlracling a cube roo'r would have been lulile wilh all of a splendid cool summer aflernoon righl oul beyond lhe open window. Picnic Anofher picnic Small classes were The rule. Some were normal size, buf mosT numbered five or six, and several prospered wiTh as few as Two, or even one sTudenT. This was always joyful. Knowing you were responsible for filling hall a class period wiTh your knowl- edge, iT Took almosT as much preparaTion as The professor needed for his share of The meeTing. And iT didn'T do anyone any harm eiTher. BUT we did noT rush inTo our sTudies and cuT ouT leisure. Tennis courTs were busy afTernoon and evening wiThouT resT. NOT The experTs. Qnly everybody who could borrow a rackeT. And The individuals and pairs who sTudied beneaTh The Trees - never allowing Their inTellecTual pursuiTs To become a burden eiTherl The evenings afTer dinner when we gaThered on dorm sTeps, and couldn'T seem To break up The par- Ty Till abouT eighT lwhen some simply had To buckle down To work, wiTh many regreTsl. FrequenT suppers on The campus wiTh The faculTy land The anfsl. And The all-college hikes. Assemble abouT four in The affernoon, follow Prexy and his riding booTs down inTo The wilds of WhiTewaTer or some oTher valley, walk leisure-lx along, admiring fauna, flora, and each oTher's company. Then, abouT exhausfion Time sTumble on some disTanT and lonely localiTy To find supper prepared in The wilderness- well, almosT prepared, by Miss Marshall and her sTaTf. Cook The picnic supper, walk, or ride home. And fhaf was an all-college hike. Faculfy foo unlimbered fheir ioinfs and we gof fo know several of fhem beffer. And af fhe end, early in Augusf we fopped if off by giving a play. Everyone did somefhing, if only fo appear on fhe sfage as a rural characfer. lf was Regisfrar Thornburg's dramafizafion of Jesse Sfuarf's mounfain sfory, Befwixf Life and Deafh . The aufhor was fhere, and also guife a crowd, on accounf of Navy relief. We gave a lively and amafeur performance. Like any ofher ferm, fhe Summer Session ended wifh finals and incomplefes - e.g. fhe four fellows who fried fo cover a year of quanfifafive analysis in seven weeks and didn'f! Qur Summer Session was nof an oufsfanding success, nor a failure. Those who affended enioyed fhemselves, and mosf of fhem found if worfhwhile as well. An experimenf, buf no maffer whaf fhe final verdicf, if sfands, fhis Summer Sessionfa parf of Earlham and a parf of our year. L..,.. - IN MIIIHIIIHII I-Ieidi I-Ieubner, whIIe she was wiIh us, here a+ Earlharn, Iaughf us a gre-ef deal abouf beaufy and freshness and oId Germany and pure spontaneous warmfh. And, when she abrup+Iy sIepped ouf info I+, Iaughf us a greaf deal abouf deafh. A p r II 2, I Q 2 3 Ocfober IQ, IQ42 THE CLASS OF 1943 THE STUDENT SENATE lHHlHHM MTN IN lHl Slllllll ARMY David Blyler, ex'45 John Bowman, ex-'44 Ellis Breilenbach, ex-'44 Keirh Brier, ex-'46 Roberl Brower, ex-'42 Richard Brown, ex-'44 John Bruner, ex-'46 Harvey Buckman, ex-'45 Frank Burner, '43 Paul Bymasrer, ex-'44 Melvin Clark, ex-'43 Tracy Clark, ex-'43 Russell Cloud, '42 Cy Courlney, ex-'45 Richard Cummins, ex-'45 Warren Corwin, ex-'45 Jack Cross, ex-'43 Ralph Dean, ex-'45 Paul Dunlap, ex-'44 John Farr, ex-'43 Edward Federico, ex-'42 Carlos Flores, ex-'46 Gene Gaible, ex-'42 Dave Garrison, ex-'43 Richard eangefy, ex-'46 Roberl Haas, ex-'44 Donald Hale, ex-'46 Frederick Hall, ex-'43 James Hanning, ex-'44 Gene Harl, ex-'46 David Hoelscher, ex-'43 Hal Hornbrook, ex-'46 Roberl Jelileris, ex-'44 Anlhony Johnson, ex-'42 George Kinnard, ex-'43 Joseph Knose, ex-'42 Charles Laudemann, ex-'43 Charles McCammon, ex-'44 Ronald McCloud, ex-'44 Lee Markell, ex-'45 Elza Milner, ex-'43 Joseph Payne, '43 John Phillips, ex-'42 Roberl Rollf, ex-'42 John D. Rourke, '42 Melvin Russell, ex-'44 Huberl Shields, ex-'43 Roberl Sielkin, ex-'43 Roberl Smock, ex-'44 Emmell Slegall, '43 Dale Sloul, ex-'42 Sluarl Tanner, ex-'44 Marvin Vigran, ex-'44 Arlhur Wagner, ex-'44 Cleo Weaver, ex-'43 Frank Weirich, ex-'43 Willoughby, ex-'44 James Younl, ex-'43 ARMY RESERVE CORPS UNASSIGNED Edmund Casey, '46 Rufus Kendall, '45 Theodore Parker, '45 NAVY Warren Alexander, ex-'44 Robe-rl Allen, ex-'45 Rex Anderson, ex-'43 Joseph Binford, ex-'44 Barclay Bowman, ex-'45 Byron Carr, ex-'46 James Calverr, ex-'46 Alberl Corsi, '42 Carl Crouch, ex-'44 Robe-rl Fleming, ex-'46 Joseph Garoflolo, '42 Roberr Gellinger, ex-'43 James Haverkos, ex-'44 Glenn Hymer, ex-'45 Harry Nickelson, ex-'45 John Thorne, '42 John Todd, ex-'43 Ernesr Tracy, '42 Arrhur While, ex-'45 William Wolf, '42 Harold Wrighl, ex-'43 NAVY RESERVE V-I Verlon Ballinger, '46 Neil Burnelr, '46 Jack Buller, '44 Bernard Coe, '44 Roberl Keys, '46 Charles Knauber, '46 Roberl Miller, '44 Kennerh Smilh, '46 NAVY RESERVE V-5 Joseph Brown, ex-'43 Delberl Duclcworlh, ex-'44 Roberl Scoll, ex-'44 William Tillson, ex-'42 NAVY RESERVE V-7 Allen Brumbaugh, '43 James Buller, '44 Nesberl DeHoney, '43 William Fosler, '44 Charles Hiall, '43 Edwin Jordan, '43 Henry Lebovilz, '43 Eugene Slevens, '42 John Sloul, '44 Huberl Zerlcel, '43 MERCHANT MARINES Winslon Lepperl', ex-'43 MARINES Paul Blei, ex'4-4 Ralph Caplan, ex-'46 Thomas Dudgeon, ex-'44 Donald Endicoll, ex-'44 Wilford Frazier, ex-'44 John Jones, ex-'44 Lawrence Kirlc, ex-'44 Charles Livelsburger, ex-'44 Edward Robinson, ex-'43 Jon Thornburg, ex-'45 MARINE RESERVE CORPS, Ill-D Andrew Cecere, '46 Roberl' Marlin, '44 COAST GUARD Joseph Bland, ex-'43 Frederick Roe, ex-'43 Roberl Taylor, ex-'44 AIR FORCES Richard Balle, '42 Richard Burlingame, ex-'45 lArmyl Denver Clouser, '42 IAI Myron cam, '42 IAI Gene Ellinglon, ex'43 lNavyl Ralph Elliol, ex-'43 lAl Byron Ford, ex-'44 INI Charles Gaslcill, ex-'43 IAI John Geyer, ex-'42 IAI James Goar, ex-'43 IAI William Guernsey, ex-'45 lAl Fred Hanes, ex-'43 IAI Roy Hamillon, ex-'43 IAI Roberl Harding, ex-'44 Keilh Hensley, ex-'46 lNl Herman Hirsh, ex-'46 lAl Keilh Holzaplel, ex-'43 David Jewell, ex-'45 IAI Guy Jones, '42 IAI Roland Kamp, '42 my Mark Kishego, ex-'45 IAI Torn Klule, '42 IAI Roberl' Lawrence, ex-'43 IAI Roberl Marvin, ex-'45 IAI Russell Miller, ex-'44 lAl Jaclc O'Maley, '44 IAI James Phelps, ex-'42 lAl Ralph Richler, ex-'43 lAl John Rogers. ex-'44 lAl Lowell Rool, ex-'42 IAI James Rourlce, ex-'44 IAI Earl Schwyharl, '42 INI Wayne Smelser, '42 INI Gordon Smilh, ex-'42 IAI Joseph Sleclc, ex-'43 INI Dudley Slinson, ex-'45 INI Richard Taylor, ex-'44 William Thisllelhwaile, '42 lAl llenlalivel Richard Thomas, ex-'42 Clifford Wall, ex-'42 INI Charles Wilson, ex-'44 lAl AIR CORPS RESERVE Bill Rogers, '43 W.A,A.C. Lucy Higgs, '43 W.A.V.E.S. Judy Lielzman, ex-'43 NON-COMBATANT SERVICE Wayne Guernsey, '42 A John Hill, '42 Harry Miars, ex-'43 llenlalivel John Schmidl, '43 C.P.S. Earl Fowler, '42 Richard Graves, ex-'45 Marcus Hadley, '43 William Heywood, '43 Carlisle Hill, ex-'45 Marshall Hodgson, '43 Franlc Hornbroolq, ex-'45 Harlwell Jewell, '43 David Lyllle, '46 Roberl McCoy, '42 Henry Maier, ex-'43 Eugene Mills, '46 John Mills, '43 Norwood Vail, ex-'43 William Wildman, '45 Roberl Wixom, '45 -W 250 Phoenix 3. Marshal 4. REX ANDERSQN Hisfory and Physical Eclucalion Bundy Hall Council 3.4: Class Presidenl 4: Freshman Weelc Slail 3.4: Ionian 2.3.4: Spanish Club 2.3: Varsily Club I.2.3. Pres. 4: Double E Club 2.3.4: Republican Club 2.3: Foolball Caplain 4: Foolball Blanlxel winner 4: Track Caplain 3. REIKO AZUMANQ Home Economics and Sociology Willamelle I.2,3: Sargasso SlaPl 4. GLADYS BINNS Home Economics Gesangverein l,2: Posl SlaFf. Business Mgr. 4: Peace Fellowship 2.3: Science Club l.2.3: W.A.A. Board. Treas. 4: E Club 4. MARGARET BLACKBURN Home Economics and Physical Educalion Gesangverein l.2.3.4: Peace Fellowship I: Science Club l.2.3,4: W.A.A. Board 3.4: Y.W.C.A. Cabinel, Vocalional Chrm. 3: Double F Club 3: E Club 2: EC, Club 4: Class Play 3: Choir I. BARBARA BOGUE Home Economics and Physical Education A.W.S. Board 2: Class Social Chrm. 2.3: Freshman Weelc Slafl 2.3: Phoenix I.2.3, Vice Pres. 4: Precedenl' Commillee 2.4: Span- ish Club l.2: Sludenl Senale 3: W.A.A. Board 4: Double E Club 3.4: E Club 3.4: Class Play I. PATRICIA BOND English, Sociology, and Hislory Ge-sanqverein l.2. Social Chrm. 3, Treas. 4: Masquers 3.4: Peace Fellowship l.2.3, Vice Pres. 4: Sargasso Siall 3: Ye Anglican 2.3. Vice Pres. 4: Y.W.C.A. Cabinel 4: Class Play 3: Dr. Fausius: Die Ferne Princessin: Choir I: Iniernalional Relalions Forum 2. ALLEN BRUMBAUGH Biol'-'Dev Gesanqverein l.2.3.4: Precedenl Commillee 4: Science Club 2.3. Vice Pres. 4: Y.Ivl.C.A. l.2.3,4: All-College Play 3: Band 2.3: Republican Club l,2,3: Pos? Sfalil, Campus Circulalion Mgr. 4. FRANK BURNET PIIIIUSOPIWY Bundy Hall Council 2. Sec. 3: Posl Slahf 2.3: Freshman Weelc Slalil 2.3: Ionian 3.4: Maslc and Ivlanile 2.3.4: Sargasso Slail 3.4: Spanish Club 3: Sludenl Senale 4: Ye Anglican 3.4: Y.Ivl.C.A. Cabinei. Vice Pres. 2.3: Varsily Club 4: Class Play 3: Imaginary lnvalid : Whal a Lile : Family Porl'rail . MARIAN BYE Home Economics Posl Slaii 2.3: Phoenix 3. Execulive Commillee 4: Sargasso Slali. Circulalion Mgr. 4: W.A.A. Board 4: Double E Club 2,3.4: E Club 2.3.4: Lillle Y Cabinei I. ROBERT BYRD Music Freshman Weelc Slalil 3.4: Siring Ensemble l,2.3.4: Choir l.2.3.4: Chapel Organisi 3.4. MARTHA JANE CALVERT Enqlish and HiSl0fY Class Sec. 4: Freshman Weelc Slail 3.4: Phoenix 2. Sec. 3. Crilic 4: Sargasso Sialll 4: Sludenl Senale 4: W.A.A. Board 3.4: Ye Anglican 2.3, Sec. 4: Y.W.C.A. Cabinel 3. Pres. 4: Band 1: Choir I. RUTHANNA DAVIS Sociology and Home Economics Freshman Week Slalzl 3,4. Ivlasquers 3.4: Peace Fellowship l.3.4. Vice Pres. 2: Spanish Club I,2. Vice Pres. 3. Pres, 4: Y.W.C.A. Cabinel 3, Vice Pres. 4: Slring Ensemble I.2: Choir l.2,4. NESBERT DEHONEY Geology and Physical Educalion Varsily Club I.2.3.4: Double E Club I.2.3.4: Ionian 3.4: Span- ish Club l.2.3.4: Precedenl Commillee 3.4: Bundy Hall Council 3. MARGARET DOUGHERTY SOCFOIOQY Day Dodger Social Chrm. 4: Posl Siafl Reporler 4: Phoenix 4: Palience 4: Choir l.3.4. CAROL DOWDELL Home Economics Arl Club 3: Gesangverein 2: Peace Fellowship 2.3.4: Science Club 3.4: lniernafional Relalions Forum 4. GENE ELLINGTON Hislory and Physical Educafion Class Social Chrm. 4: Freshman Weelc Siall 4: Ionian 2.3. Pres. 4: Precedenl Commiflee Chrm. 4: Spanish Club I: Varslly Club 2.3.4: Double E Club 2.3.4: Republican Club l,2.3. ELEANOR EVANS Hisfory and Physical Educalion A.W.S. Board 3: Freshman Weelr Slafl 4: Peace Fellowship I: Phoenix 2.3.4: Science Club l,3: Spanish Club l.2,: W,A.A. Board 3. Pres. 4: Y.W.C.A. Cabinel' 3. Sec. 4: Double E 3,42 E Club 3.4: E.C. Club 4. MANUEL FERRERQ Physics and Malhemalics Camera Club l,2.3.Z Science Club l.2.3,4: Spanish Club I,2,3 Sec. Treas. 4: Trial by Jury I: Choir I.2 3.4. WILMA FESSLER Home Economics and Commerce MARCUS HADLEY Bundy Hall Council Circulalion Mgr. 4: Fauslus : Inler-Dorm ELIZABETH BOWEN Chemistry 3.4: Gesangverein 3: Pos? Sfall Campus Peace Fellowship 3.4: Y.M.C,A. 3.43 Dr. Commillee 4. HANES English Phoenix. Marshal 2. Crilic 3. Sec. and V. Crilic 4: Precedenr Commilfee 3. ROY HARADA Peace Fellowship 3.4: WINIFRED HARRIS Day Dodger, Social Biology Science Club 4: Y.M.C.A. 4. Home Economics Chrm. I.3: Freshman Handbook Sfafl 3: Freshman Week Slafl 2: Phoenix 3: Class Play I: Republican Club 2.3. WILLIAM HEYWQOD Hisfory and Mafhemafics Bundy Hall Council 2, Pres. 4: Posr Slail 2.3: Class Presidenl 3: Freshman Weelc Slall 3.4: Ionian 2.3.4: Sargasso Slalil, Research Ed. 4: Sludeni Senale 3: Pres. 4: Y,lvl.C.A. I.2,3.4: Y.M.C.A. Cabinel 3: Commons Comrniilee 3. LUCY HIGGS Home Economics Phoenix 3. Vice Pres. 4: Sargasso Slali 4: Lillle YH Cabinel' lt Band I. ELINOR HILL 5P l5l' Posl Slali 2: Camera Club 3: Gesangverein 4: Spanish Club l.2. Pres. 3: Peace Fellowship I: Choir 2. MARSHALL HQDGSQN Mafhernafics and Economics U. ol Colorado l.2.3,4: Peace Fellowship 4. MARGARET HOLROYD Religion Peace Fellowship l.2,3: Philosophy Forum 2: lnlarnalicnal Rela- lions Forum l.2,3. SARAH HQRNBROOK Home Economics and Physical Education A.W.S. Board 3. Pres. 4: Class Sec. 3: Class Treas. 4: Freshma' Weelc Slall 2.4: Maslc and Manlle 4: Phoenix 3.4: Sargasso Slay Research Ed. 4: Spanish Club. l. Social Chrm. 2: Sludenl Senale Sec.-Treas. 4: W.A.A. Board 3.4: Double 'FN Club 3: ' F' Club 2: E.C. Club 3.4: Class Play 3: Choir I. JQHN HUNT Sociology and English Choir 4: Palience 4. DONALD HUTCHISON BIPIWV SAMUEL ISHIKAWA Hisfory and Economics Whillier l,2.3: lniernalional Relalions Forum. Vice Pres. 4' Y.M.C.A. 4: Peace Fellowship 4' Homecoming C:-rmvfee 4. HARTWELL JEWELL SOUOIOQY EDWIN JORDAN Polilical Science Day Dodger Pres. 4: Posl' Slall, Reocrier 2 Feahxe Sc. 3' Cass Pres. 4: Ionian 3. Crilic 4: Pre-cedenr Cc ee 34' Sargass Slaii. Business Mgr. 4: Sludenr Se-fa'-e Xie Pres. P'es. Varsily Club l,2.4, Sec. 3: Double 'E Ccb 34' 'er':-'fa a Relalions Forum l.2.3. Pres. 4: F.A.P. 3.4: C:m ::'s C: '7s'e 4: Cross Counlry Caprain 3.4. SUSAN KEACH English Mask and Manlle 4: Freshman Week SlaFl 2: Homecoming Com- millee 2: Dr, Fauslus 4. SARAH KRATZ Home Economics and Physical Educalion Posl Slall l.2. Sporls Ed. 3.4: Freshman Week Slalil 2: Mask and Manlle 4: Peace Fellowship I: Phoenix. Marshal 4: Sargasso Slall 4: Science Club I: W.A.A. Board. 3. Hockey Mgr. 4: Y.W.C.A. Cabinel 4: E Club 2.3.4: E.C. Club 3.4: Choir I,2.3.4. HENRY LEBOVITI Economics Camera Club 2. Pres. 3.4: Gesangverein 2.3: Posl Slall. Asso- ciale Ed. 4: Mask and Manlle 3.4: Precedenl Commillee 4: Sargasso Slall 4: Class Play 3: All-College Play 3: lnlernalional Relalions Forum 2. LAURA LINDLEY Home Economics anid English A.W.S. Board. Sec. 2. Vice Pres. 4: Class Vice Pres. 3.4: Fresh- man Week Slall 3.4: Phoenix 2.3. Pres. 4: Sludenl Senale 3: W.A.A. Board. Social Chrm. 3: Lillle Y I: lnler-Dorm Com- millee 4: Commons Commillee. Sec. 3. Pres. 4. ELLIS LIPPINCQTT Chemislry and Malhemalics Freshman Week Slall l.2: Ionian l.2.3.4: Y.M.C.A. l.2: Science Club l.2.3.4. CAROLYN LU KENS SUCIOIOQY A.W.S. Board. Sec. 4: Phoenix 4, Marshal 3: Spanish Club l.2: Y.M.C.A. Cabinel 2. - FRANCES MAYER EHQHSI1 ANNE MERRILL BIOIOQY Gesangyerein l.2.3. Vice Pres. 4: Peace Fellowship I: Sargasso Slall 4: Science Club 4: Treas. 3: Choir l.3.4. MARTHA MERRITT English and Sociology A.VV.S. Board 4: Posl Slall. Adverlising Solicilor I.2.4: Circula- lion Mgr. 3: Peace Fellowship I: Phoenix 3. Treas. 4: Precedenl Commillee. Chrm. 4: Sargasso Slall 3. Ass'l Business Mgr. 4: Spanish Club l.2: W.A.A. Board. Vice Pres. 4: Lillle Y I: Y.W.C.A. Cabinel 4: Double E Club 3.4: E Club 2.3,4: Choir I: Epsilon Alpha Pi 3.4. MARY MESNER Philosophy and English Posl Slall. 2.3. Fealure Ed.. Managing Ed.. Ed.-in-Chief 4: Ye Anglican 2.4. Vice Pres. 3: Choir 3: Inlernalional Relalions Forum 3.4. JOHN MILLS Hisfory and Spanish Bundy Hall Council. Vice Pres. 3: Posl Slall 2.3: Class Social Chrm. 3: Freshman Week Slall 2.3: Ionian 2.3: Peace Fellowship 2.3,4: Spanish Club I.2.4. Sec. 3: Varsily Club l.2.3.4: Y.M.C.A. Cabinel. Service Chrm. 2: Y.M.C.A. l.2: Double E Club 2.3.4: Republican Club I.2.3. ROSEMARY MORROW German and Sociology Gesangverein l.3.4. Sec. 2: Posl Slall, Reporler l.2: Peace Fel- lowship l.2.3.4: Philosophy Forum 2: Sargasso Slall: 4: lnlerna- lional Relalions Forum l.2: E.A.P. 2.3.4. ROBERT PAI NTER 5i0lO9Y Peace Fellowship 2: Science Club 2.3: Varsily Club 4: Y.M.C.A. Cabinel 3. Treas. 4: Y.M.C.A. 2.3.4: Hamlet , Choir 2. ROYDEN PARKE SPQGCI1 Arl Club 4: Boards Club l.3.4. Pres. 2: Mask and Manlle 2.3.4: Masquers 3: Peace Fellowship 2: Y.M.C.A. 3.4: Class Plays l.2.3.4: Band I.2.3,. Direclor 4: Choir l.2.3.4: Nalional Collegiale Players 3. Pres. 4. JOSEPH PAYNE ECOHOWWCS lnlercollegiale Debale l.2.3.4: lnlernalional Relations Forum l.2.4. Pres. 3: Y.M.C.A. l.2.3.4: Republican Club l.2. Pres. 3: Bundy Hall Council l: Ionian 2.3. Pres. 4: Tau Kappa Alpha 2. Vice Pres. 3. Pres. 4: Social Science Club 2.3.4: Sludenl Senale 3: Commons Commillee 3.4. ELINOR PENNELL Malhernalics and Physical Educalion Class Social Chrm. 4: Freshman Week Slall 3: Peace Fellowship I: Phoenix 2.3.4: Precedenl Commillee 2: Science Club 2: Span- ish Club l.2: Sludenl Senale 2: W.A.A. Board 3.4: E Club l.2.3.4: E.C. Club 4: Class Play 3: Riding lnslruclor 3.4. MARGARET POMEROY English Posl Slall. Reporler I.2.3: Phoenix 3.4: Sludenl Senale 3. MARIE PQRTER Music and English Freshman Week Slall 3: Phoenix 2.3.4: Choir l.2.4: Trial By Jury I: Palience 4. MARK RAYPORT Biology New York Universily l.2: Camera Club, Vice Pres. 3.4: Posl Ad- visory Board. Pres. 4: Freshman Handbook Slall. Ed. 4: Masquers 3.4: Peace Fellowship 3.4: Philosophy Forum 3. Vice Pres. 4: Sar- gasso Edilor: Science Club. Program Chrm.3. Pres. 4: Y.M.C.A. Cabinel 4: Class Play 3: Choir 4. ELIZABETH REYNOLDS Home ECOHOHWCS Masquers 2.3.4: Peace Fellowship I: Science Club l.2.3.4: Lillle Y Cabinel. RALPH RICHTER Physics and Nlalhemalics Winner ol men's single lable lennis lourney I: Democralic Club 2: Posl Slall 2.3: Y.M.C.A. 3: Camera Club 3: Tennis leam 3: Science Club 3.4: Philosophy Forum 3.4. LORLYS E, ROGERS Geology and Economics Camera Club 2.3.4: Bundy Hall Council. Pres. 4: Posl Slall Re- porler 3: Ionian 3.4: Prececlenl Commillee 4: Sargasso Slall, Pholography Ed. 4: Spanish Club l.2.3.4: Sludenl Senale. Vice Pres. 4: Varsily Club l.2.3.4: Y.M.C.A. Cabinel 4: Y.M.C.A. l.2.3.4: Double E Club 2.3.4: HamIel 3: Track Caplain 4. MONNA JEANNE ROLLF FYQDCI1 and SP-wish A.W.S. 2.3: Day Dodger. Vice Pres. 3. Vice Pres. 4: Class Social Chrm. 2: Freshman Handbook Slall 3: Freshman Week Slall 3.4: Mask and Manlle 3. Sec. 4: Phoenix 3. Pres. 4: Precedenl Com- millee 4: Commons Commillee 4: Sluclenl Senale 3.4: Mask and Manlle Plays 2.3.4. BETSY ANN ROSS Home Economics and English Freshman Week Slall 2: Phoenix 3.4: Sargasso Slall 4: Demo- cralic Club I.2. JOHN HAWKS SCHMIDT English and French Gesangverein l.2.3.4: lnlernalional Relalions Forum l.2.3.4: Re- publican Club l.2.3: Baseball Mgr. l.2: Earlham Posl 2.3. Edilor 4: Ye Anglican 4. Sec. 3: Sargasso Slall. Edilor 4. GENE SMITH Home Economics and Physical Educalion A.W.S. Board. Sec. 3: Freshman Handbook Slall 4: Freshman Week Slall 3: Phoenix 3.4: Sargasso Slall: Spanish Club l.2: W.A.A. Board 4: E Club 4. EMMETT STEGALL English and Music Freshman Week Slall 2.3: Mask and Manlle I.2.3: Choir I.2.3: Y.M.C.A. I.2.3: Philosophy Forum 2: Republican Club l.2: Class Treas. I: Peace Conlesls I: Freshman Handbook Commillee 3: Gesangverein 3: Pi Epsilon Della 3: Ionian 3.4. MARY LOUISE STUDY EUQHSII Choir l: Lillle Y Cabinel I: Masquers l.2: Spanish Club 2.3: Philosophy Forum 2.3: Republican Club 2. BETTIE WHITE Home Economics and Physical Educalion Phoenix 3.4: Spanish Club 3. Social Chrm. 4: W.A.A. Board 3.4: Choir 2. JAMES YOUNT BIOIOQY Yell Leader l.2.3.4: Y.M.C.A. 3: Republican Club 3. HUBERT ZERKEL English Ionian 3. Vice Pres. 4: Precedenl Commillee 4: Varsily Club. Pres. 4: Double E Club 4. CALEB ZIMMERMAN Hislory and Economics A C The edi+or and business manager o+ +he I943 SARGASSO wish +o express +heir apprecia+ion +o 'rheir s+a++ who gave generously o+ +heir +ime +o help +his book 'rake shape. We also wish +o acknowledge +he help received in +he +orm o+ sugges+ions, encouragemen+, pho+ographic equipmen+ and +echnical advice +rom A. J. Funs+on, +acul+y advisor: Roy Hirschburg, senior pho+ographer and Richard Meek, o+ Richmondg A. E. Gage o+ +he Jahn 8: Ollier Engraving Com- pany along wi+h Ed Kase and Ray Rusk: H. F. Becke++ of 'rhe Kingspor+ Press: F. W. Papenhagen 0+ The Defiance Prin+ing and Engraving Company: V. F. Bin+ord, o+ Earlham: fhe underclassmen who became par+ of +he s+a++ as +he year wen+ on: and +rom +he iollowing Hllllllllllll Alexander, Marion, R.R. I, New Paris, Ohio Allen, Glenna-Marie, 5544 S. Trumbull Ave., Chicago, Ill. Allen, Rober+ R., 232 S. l5+h S+., Richmond, Ind. Amri++, Rober+ Sidney, Highga+e, Jamaica, B.W.l. Anderson, Rex Lee, lI58 Vernon S+., Wabash, Ind. Applega+e, Ru+h Evelyn, Spiceland, Ind. Arms+rong, Doro+hy, Langhorne, Pa. Azumano, Reiko, Earlham, Indiana Ballinger, Verlon, Jr., I02 S. 2ls+ S+., Richmond, lnd. Barker, Leanna, Wes++'ield, lnd. Barnes, Ru+h Ann, 2I Universi+y S+., Wes+ La+aye++e, lnd. Beisner, Paul, Ansonia, Ohio Beisner, Richard, 2l24 GlenCour+, Richmond, lnd. Bell, Alice, Sheridan, lnd. Bender, Donald. I27 N. I7+h S+., New Cas+le, lnd. Ben+on, William J., 304 N. 22nd S+., Richmond, Ind. Berry, Vililliam H., R.R., Richmond, lnd. BeVard, Elaine, 6l4 S. Race S+., Marion, lnd. Binns, Gladys, l908 Na+ional Rd. Wes+, Richmond, lnd. Black, John W., 8 S. Easfhaven Ave., Richmond, lnd. Blackburn, Margare+, New Paris, Pa. Blyler, David N., 702 Thomas Ave., River+on, New Jersey Bogue, Barbara, R.R. 2, Box 576, Indianapolis, lnd. Bokenkamp, G. William, I32 S. Eas+haven Ave., Richmond, lnd. Bond, James O., Whi+es Ins+i+u+e, Wabash, lnd. Bond, James VV., l0l S. 8+h S+., Richmond, lnd. Bond, Pa+ricia R., Whi+es lns+i+u+e, Wabash, Ind. Borden, Ru+hanna, 36 W. Win+er S+., Delaware, Ohio Bowman, Barclay, CampbeIls+own, Ohio Bowman, Margare+ Mary Ann, R.N., Box 3, Campbells+own Bowman, Meg, l5l Wes+ Hor++er S+., Philadelphia, Pa. Bragg, Mar+ha, New Paris, Ohio Brei+enbach, Ellis. R.R. I, Connersville, lnd. Brier, Kei+h, I27 S. 5+h S+., Middle+own, lnd. Brown, Doro+hy, I70I N. Ri++er Ave., Indianapolis, lnd. Brown, Mariorie, l70I N. Ri++er Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Brown, Richard J., R.R. 2, Richmond, Ind. Brown, William B., Wesco++ Ho+el, Richmond, lnd. Brumbaugh, Allen, 257 Sheridan S+., Kendallville, lnd. Bruner, John H., 4646 PleaSan+ Run Pkwy., Indianapolis, lnd. Bruning, Rachel, 4493 N. Morris Bvld., Shorewood Village, Milwaukee, Wis. Buckman, Harvey, George School, Pa. Bull, Barbara, 2203 E. Main, Richmond, Ind. Burks, David D., 82l S. Harvard Ave., Villapark, lll. Burne+, Frank, ll Jackson S+., New Rochelle, New York Burne++, Neil C.. I33 S. Eas+haven Ave.. Richmond, lnd. Burns, Mar+ha B., 2939 N. Talbo++ Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Bu+ler, James H., 5460 Universi+y Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Bu+Ier, John, IOII Woodbine Ave., Oak Park, III. Ohio Bu++er+ield, William M., 5 Abbing+on Ave., Ardaley, New York Bye, Marian, Ringwood, New Jersey Byrd, Rober+, 32I N. 7+h S+., Richmond, Ind. CaIber+, Mary Helen, l505 College Ave., Indianapolis, Ind Calver+, James D., I II5 Key S+., Maumee, Ohio Calver+, Mar+ha Jane, lIl5 Key S+., Maumee, Ohio Campbell, Shirley Ann, 2IO8 E. Main S+., Richmond. lnd. Canby, Cicely Ann, Greenwood Farm, Hulmaville, Pa. Caplan, Ralph, 306 Elm Rd., Ambridge, Pa. Carnes, Rober+ K., I726 Na+ional Rd. Wes+, Richmond, Ind Carr, Byron D., Sou+h+ield, Mass. Carring+on, Ann M., 59 Bonair Ave., Wa+erbury, COnn. Carroll, John, 468 Riverside Dr., New York, N.Y. Casey, Edmund C., R.R. I No. 225, Jonesboro, lnd. Cecere, Andrew, 509 Lenora S+., Pi++sburgh, Pa. Chapman, Madeline, R.R. 2, Box I, Bloomingdale, Ind. Chapman, Milley, R.R. 2, Box I, Bloomingdale, lnd. Clark, Georgia, 34l S.W. 3rd, Richmond, Ind. Clevenger, Bonnie L., R.R. 2, Cen+erviIle, lnd. Clevenger, Janice A., 2l00 Franklin, Columbus, Ind. Cobble, C. Harold, 24I0 Floyd Ave., Richmond, Virginia Coe. Bernard, 705 Thomas Ave., River+on, New Jersey Collings. Margare+ A., 2l W. S+. Charles Rd., Lombard, ll! Conover, Joseph, 606 S.W. A. S+., Richmond, Ind. Cook, Mary Grace, 2708 S+ephens S+., Dearborn, Mich. Copeland, Max E., Spiceland, lnd. Corbe++, Elizabe+h J., 35 Elm S+., New Rochelle, New York D Cour+ney, Cy D. F., I02 N. l5+h S+., Richmond, lnd. Corwin, Warren, 289 Merion Ave., Haddonfield, N. J. Cox, James E., 805 Peacock Rd., Richmond, Ind. Cox, Lowell D., I23 N. Mill, Fairmoun+, lnd. Crawford, Alice K., 624 S.W. A, Richmond, lnd. Crawford, Eunice, R.R. 5, Brookville, lnd. Croyle, Cons+ance. 445 N. Audubon Rd., Indianapolis. Ind. cfo W. H. Insley Cummins, Richard, 2230 S.E. S+., Richmond, Ind, Davenport Margery F., R.R. 4. Box 324, Richmond lnd. Davis, Charles R., l2I8 Woodlawn Dr., New Cas+le Ind. Davis, Ru+hanna, 307 College Ave., Richmond, lnd. Day, James A., l2l6 S, Walnu+ S+., Muncie, lnd. Dean. I.. Ralph, Cen+erville, lnd. Deiibaugh, Rosie R., R.R. 2, Richmond, Ind. DeHoney, Nesber+ R., R.R. 2, Mooresville, Ind. DeShonq, E. Lucian, R.R. 6, Green+ie-ld, lnd. Dillon, Richard, Spiceland, lnd. Dodd, Helen M., Berea College HosDi+al Berea. Ki. Dorgan, William L., R.R. 4, Richmond, lnd. Dougher+y, Anne, 4I6 College Ave., Richmond, lnd. Dougher+y, Margare+, 4l6 College Ave., Richmond lnd. Dowdell, Carol P. B.. Moun+ain View Rd., Trerfan New Jer Drace, Ellen J.. S100 Ardmore Ave., Ches+m.+ Hil Pease Pa. Draver, Charles G., 444 S. 9+h S+., Richmond I-a. Driver, Mildred, 2092 Wes+burn Rd., Eas+ Cleielano Oh: Duckwor+h, DeIber+, Il34I,f2 E. Main, Richmond lnd. Dunlap, Paul L., R.R. 3, Richmond, lnd. RErRieERAToRs GENNETT and SONS I Main Slreel PHONE 2I5I I l'r's A Jam Session Wilh BUTTERNUT COOKIES and HONEY BOY BREAD Balced By The RICHMOND BAKING Co. E Egan, Jane, 409 Fishers Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Eiseman, Mary A., 4600 Sfanlord Sl., Chevy Chase, Md. Ellinglon, Gene, R.R. 2, New Casfle. Ind. Erbs, Mary Jane. l38 S. Easlhaven Ave., Richmond, Ind. Esfes, Earle E., Norlh Hill Rd., Harrisville, Rhode Island Evans, Eleanor, Medford, New Jersey Evans, Virginia, R.R. I7, Box 266, Indianapolis, Ind. F Farlow, Rulh Anna, I05 Elm Sf., Paoli, Ind. Farmer, Eldon L., Founfain Cify, Ind. Ferrero, Carmen, Maximo Gomez 84, Holguin, Orienle. Cuba Ferrero, Manuel, Maximo Gomez 84, Holguin, Orienle, Cuba Ferris, Helen H., Milion, Ind. Fessler, Wilma M., 6I9 Goodwin S+., New Caslle, Ind. Finch. Beafrice A., IOO Virgilia Sf., Chevy Chase, Md. Fleming, Robert 202 E. Is1S+., Paoli, Ind. Flores, Carlos, 4 Collage S+., Poughkeepsie, New Yorlr Fogg, Mariana M.. R.D. I, Salem, New Jersey Folger, Virginiarose F., I2 N. 6lh Sl., Richmond, Ind. Ford, Helen L., I603 S. Washinglon. Kokomo, Ind. Fosler, Conslance, 20 S. 22nd S+., Richmond, Ind. Fosrer, William S., Gallipolis, Ohio. Franlf, Pe-+er, 48 John Sl.. Ilion, New Yorlr Frazier, Willord, Gregory, Soufh Dalcofa Freebairn, Alonzo G., ISO4 Vfoodland Ave., W.S. Pillsburgh, Pa Freeman, Charys Ann, 734 College Ave., Racine, Wis. Freeman, Wanda J., B S. l2+h, Richmond, Ind. Fuiila, Dorothy, Box IO3I, Lihue. Kauai, Hawaii G Garner, Carroll E., 450 College Ave., Richmond, Ind. Garner, Doris E., 6lB N. Broadway, Greensburg, Ind. Garrison, William, I5I6 W, Walnul. Kokomo, Ind. Gingery, Richard W., 2IO S. Riller Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Givan. William, R.R. I, Plainfield, Ind. Gol-i, John S., 9I8 Locus? S+., Middlelown, Ind. Goodman, Daniel. IO24 Noyes S+., Evanslon, III. Goodwin, Gwendolyn, 439 N. Washinglon, Danville, Ind. Gormar, Rulh Anne, 944 N. Audubon Rd., Indianapolis, Ind. Granl, Russell E., 430 Pearl S+., Richmond, Ind. Graves, Richard H., 227 S. Granl S+.. Wes? Lafayelcle, Ind. Grawols. Marian S., 23I2 Ewing Ave.. Evansion, Ill. Greene. Phyllis A., I'B Oxford Ave., Dayfon, Ohio Griflilh, Carolyn, I833 Commons Rd., Richmond, Ind. Grosvenor, Virginia, I5 S. 23rd S+., Richmond, Ind. Guernsey, XfVilIiam, 724 E. 24+h Sl.. Indianapolis, Ind. H Haas, Roberi, I4OB Nalional Rd. W., Richmond, Ind. Hadley, Clarabel F. Qualfer Hill, Richmond, Ind. Hadley, J. Marcus, Oualcer Hill, Richmond, Ind. Hadley, Marian L., I4I9 Beechcresl, Sl., Warren, Ohio Hahn, Donald, R.R. 2, Camden, Ohio Haines, Emily L., New Burlinglon, Ohio Hale, Donald, 650 S. IOfh SI., Richrnond, Ind. Hall, Adrian, BOI S. I0'lh Sf., Richmond, Ind. Hall, Donna J., III4 Church Sf., New Caslle, Ind. Hamm, Jean Ann, 4I6 S. Race ST., Marion, Ind. Hanes, Elizabelh Bowen lMrs.l, 522 Glencos Ave., Highland Parl: Ill. Hanes, Fred, 825 N. Marion S+., Ellcharf, Ind. Hanson, H. Palricia, 5306 Windsor Lane, Kansas Cify, Kans. Harada, Roy R., Holualoa, Hawaii Haramy, Dorolhy Jane, 3228 Washinglon Blvd., Indianapolis, Ind Hargrave, Beffie R., 339 Lesley Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. I-larlcness, Eleanor C., I5 Maple Wood Dr.. Gasporf, New Yorlc Harris, Winifred, 624 Nalional Rd. W., Richmond, Ind. Hari, Gene, 2I3 Pearl, Richmond, Ind. Hari, Jaclr, 502 Malhews Sl.. Kendallville, Ind, Harvey, Dorolhy A., 406 W. S+a+e SI., Media. Pa. HaI'lieId, Debby, Cenlerville, Ind. Hawkins, Marlowe S.. Jr., IOO FT. Wayne Ave., Richmond, Ind. Heiser, Helen, Liberly Rd., Richmond, Ind. Hendren, Celia F., 9l3 Rivard Blvd., Grosse Poinle, Mich. Henlexy' Kafhryn, 5808 E. New York Sl., Indianapolis, Ind. Hensley, Keiih D., l055 N. B S+., Richmond, Ind. Hewson. Camilla J., I347 29ih, Des Moines, Iowa Heywood, Roberl E.. Dublin, Ind. Heywood, William, Dublin, Ind. Hiafl, Charles M., 428 S. 23rd S+., Richmond, Ind. Hieger, William E., Jr., R.R. I, Founlain Ciiy, Ind. Higgs, Lucy, CloverIand , Brookville, Ind. Higuchi, Chisako, Sleilacoom, Washinglon Hill, Carlyle, Colwick, Merchanlville, N. J. Hill, Elinor S., I0l Pennsylvania Ave., Downingfown, Fa. Hinshaw, Mary Helen, 3I5 S. 9Ih S+., New Casile, lnd. Hirsch, Herman, Poseyville, lnd. Hirschfeld, Dorolhy, 608 W. l89I'h S+., New York, New York Hodgson, Marshall G. S., 42l College Ave., Richmond, Ind Hoerner, Elizabefh O., 704 Franklin Sf., Keokuk, Iowa Holroyd, Margaref, SIS E. Riddle Ave., Ravenna, Ohio Holzapiel, Roberf. 604 Peacock Rd., Richmond, Ind. Hope, Joyce L., 366 Union SI., Soulhporl, Ind. Hormel, Marjorie, R.R. 2., Richmond, Ind. I-lornbrook, Frank L., Jr., SI9 S. Indiana Ave., Kokomo, lnd. Hornbrook, Sarah F., SI9 S. Indiana Ave., Kokomo, lnd. Hornbrook, W. Hallie, 5l9 S. Indiana, Kokomo, Ind. Howell, S. Janel, R.R. 4, Springfield, Ohio Hudson, Hollys P., I65 S. 20'lh, Richmond, lnd. Huff, Elizabefh B., IO6 S. Easlhaven Ave., Richmond, Ind. Hunf, John M., R.R. 2, Richmond, lnd. Hunl, Mary E., 6030 N. Main S+., Daylon, Ohio Hulchison, Donald R., Ill N. 9'rh, Richmond, Ind. Hufchison, Emory I-I., Ill N. 9Ih, Richmond, lnd. I lshikawa, Sam, 446 N. Washinglon, Whillier, Calif. J Jerferis, Roberl W., R.R. I, New Caslle, lnd. Jehle, Margueriie. 3055 N. Meridian Si., Indianapolis, Ind. Jewell, David, IO8 E. 67Ih, Kansas Cily, Mo. Jewell, Harlwell, IO8 E. 67'rh, Kansas Cify, Mo. Johnson, Donald, R.R. I, Lebanon, Ind. Johnson, Esfher, 227 W. Main SI., Mooresville, Ind. Johnson, Lucille, Losanfville, lnd. Jones, Dorofhy, R.R. 2, Milan, Incl. Jones, Guy, 722 S.W. A SI., Richmond, Ind. Jones, Kennelh A. N., Heciors River P. O., Jamaica, B,W.l. Jordan, Edwin, R.R. I, Richwood, Ohio Joslin, Donald, 525 N. Colorado Ave.. Indianapolis, lnd. K Kaighn, Phyllis C., 28 N. Sienion PI., Allanlic Cily, N. J. Keach, Susan, l02 S. Easfhaven Ave., Richmond, lnd. Kendall, Rufus B., I24 N. High S+., Covinglon, Ohio Kenl, Loffe, 930 Fiilh Ave., New York, N, Y. Keys, Roberl, 2275 Walnul SI., New Caslle, Ind. King, Alberl W., Jr., R.R. I, Box 73, Richmond, Ind. Kirocofe, Roberf, 433 S. Illh, Richmond, Ind. Kishego, Mark, 803 Moll SI., Kendallville, Ind. Kissiclc, Mary E., Salisbury Rd. S., Richmond, Ind. Kissner, Russell, 233 Euclid Ave., Delaware, Ohio Knauber, Charles F., 6I2 S. lblh S+., Richmond, Ind. Koehring, Lufher N., 208 N.W I0rh SI., Richmond, lnd. Kolger, Karl, 300 N. l9+h, Richmond, Ind. Kraiz, Sara C., l328 Chesrnui S+., Philadelphia, Pa. L Laurenf, Agnes J., 527 Nafional Rd. W,, Richmond, lnd. Lawrence, Jeanne L., 706 Nafional Rd. W., Richmond, lnd. Lebovih, Henry I., 8I3 Lake Dr., Balfimore, Md. Lindberg, Chrisline A., 858 Lincoln Blvd., Sanfa Monica, Calif. '-7.1- .--.-'. ':.,X.,f.gg...' -2. J -'.-'.-3:1-if? ' WILLIAMSEHDAIRY Dislribulors of Superior Dairy Producls In Ihe Richmond Area Milk - Cream - Chocolale Milk Bullermilk - Buller - Collage Cheese Phone 30692 Abinglon Pike Dry Goods - Hosiery - Underwear Perfeclion Work Cloihing We Sell Io Dealers Only ADAM H. BARTEL COMPANY Lindley, Laura J., R.R. 2, Russiaville, lnd. , . - -- Lippincoii, Ellis R., Jr., Branch Sl., Medford, N. J. Lukens, Carolyn, Waynesville, Ohio Lyans, Eleanor A., Reid Memorial Hospifall Richmond, Ind. Lyifle, David, 5729 Dorchesler Ave., Chicago, III. M Macy, John W., Slraughn, Ind. Maddox, Carolyn, 2263I Seabroolce Ave., Euclid, Ohio Marchaland, Barbara, R. 2D. I, Greenwich, N. Y. Maris, Faifh, IIO2 W. lOIh Sf., Wilminglon, Del. Markley, Barbara J., R.R. 3, Box I50, Richmond, lnd. Marksbury, Paul, I2O N. W. I Si., Richmond, Ind. Marsfaller, Lelia E.. The Maine Idvll, Freepori, Maine Mariin, Elizabeih J., I022lf3 Main SI., Richmond, Ind. Marlin, Richard, R.R. 2 N.Cen1'erviIIe,lnd. Marfin Roberl C., 3I6 S. 23rd S+., Richmond, Incl. Masfers, Violei L., Connersville, lnd. Mauch, Elizabefh L., 242 Loraine Ave., Cincinnali, Ohio Maver, Frances R., 408 Kinsey S+., Richmond, lnd. Mayer, Marlha M., 408 Kinsey S+., Richmond, lnd. Mendenhall, Keilh, l4Ol Railifl, Richmond, Ind. g ,. , gr . FOR BETTER Pholographic Supplies, Books, Siaiionery Greeling Cards and Founlain Pens RICHMOND CAMERA and BOOK I0 Souih 8I'h Sfreel' RICHMOND, INDIANA Formerly Nicholson's Book Siore ru Complimenis oi M. J. Quigley 8: Sons Prescripiion Druggisis 400-402 Main Sireei Richmond, Indiana Merrill, Anne, 376 Park Ave., Leonia, N. J. Merritt Doris, Ridgewood Terrace, Chappaqua, N. Y. Merriii, Marlha, Ridgewood Terrace, Chappaqua, N. Y. Mesner, Mary E., Easi' Canaan, Conn. Michael, Eugene, R.R. 4, Liberiy, Ind. Miller, Leroy E., 337 Lincoln, Richmond, Ind. Miller, Leaiha, 30l S.W. 3rd Si., Richmond, Ind. Miller, Roloeri I-I., 400 Brookside Dr., Dayion, Ohio Mills, Doroihy, 27 Bonny View Rd., Wesi I-lariiord, Conn. Mills, Eugene S., R.R. 7, Box 6l8, Indianapolis, Ind. Mills, John E., R.R. 7, Box 6l8, Indianapolis, Ind. Milion, Grace F., 222 S. l0ih Si., Richmond, Ind. Miichell, Susan E., BIZ W. Main, Richmond, ind. Moor, E. Lorena, College Corner, Ohio Moore, Clyde, Hollansburg, Ohio Moore, Elizabeih A., Ellfs Couniry Club Rd., R.R. 3, Richmond, Ind. Moore, John E., Boi S. Tompkins Si., Shelbyville, Ind. Moore, Roberi M., Elks Couriiry Club Rd., R.R. 3, Richmond, Ind Moran, Pairicia A., 223 W. 9'rh Si., Connersville. Ind. Morris, Donald, 705 S. l4ih, Richmond, Incl. Morgan, Lois, 5I3O N. Winchesier Ave., Chicago, Ill. Morrow, Rosemary, Il30 E. Main, Muncie, Ind. Mullen, Benjamin J., 3l4 N. IOih S+., Richmond, Ind. Murray, Willis, R.R. I, Cambridge Ciiy, Ind. McCammish, Janice M., 328 E. Washingion S+., Winchesier, McCloud, Ronald I-I., XlVesT Newion, Ind. McMahan, Willadene, 405 N.W. 7ih Sl., Richmond, Ind. N Nibarger, Kaihryn. 407 Naiional Rd. W., Richmond, Ind. Nicholson, I-larry, BIS Peacock Rd., Richmond, Ind. Nicholson, John E., I307 Noyes Dr., Silver Spring, Md. Nick, Ann, 829 Lexingion, Dayiori, Ohio Nieman, Emilyann, Lynn I-Ioiel, Lynn, Ind, O Oldham, Orville, II2 S.W. 7fh, Richmond, Ind. Olmsied, Josephine, 68 Main S+., Oakiield, N. Y. O'Maley, Jack I-I., 22 S.W. 7ih, Richmond, Ind. O'Maley, Roberi, 22 S.W. 7ih, Richmond, Ind. O'Rorlre, Joseph, I7 Beliord Rd., Rochesier, N. Y. Osborn, Marian, I67 S, Lincoln, Orleans, Ind. Oiis, Virginia Tacke, I233 Ralliii, Richmond, Ind. Overman, Jesse V., Amboy, Ind. Overion, I-ielen M., Ravinia Park, Richmond, Ind. Overion, Isabel, Ravinia Park, Richmond, ind. P Painier, Roberi l'l., Collins, N. Y. Park, Byron J., 300 S.W. Slh S+., Richmond, Ind. Parke, Royden W., I26 S. l3ih Si., Richmond, Ind. Parker, Philip T., 2l5 N. Jefferson Si., Knighisiown, Ind. Pariingion, Ralph, Bloomingdale, Ind. Pairick, Buddy I-I.. R.R. 4, Connersville, Ind. Payne, Alice, 740 l-lawihorne Rd., New Casile, Ind. Payne, Joseph, 740 l-lawihorne Rd., New Casfle, Ind. Peckham, William I-I., RD., I, Easi Ivlillsboro, Pa. Pedersen, Beisy, Three Acres, Zionsville, Ind. Peelle, Ina J., R.E,D. I, Sabina, Ohio Peery, lvlariha M., R.R. I, Thorniown, Ind. Pendleion, E. Louisa, R.R. I, Middleiown, Ind. Pennell, Elinor G., Wawa, Pa. Penninqion, Elizabeih, 2l05 Sl. Joe Blvd., Pori Wayne, Ind. Penninqion, Evelyn, 2lO5 Si. Joe Blvd., Fori VVayne, Ind. Peiers, Ray, 42 S. l4ih, Richmond, Ind. Peierson, Lois E., 2l7 l6ih Si., Wilmeiie, Ill. Perry, Lowell, Jr., 227 N. lO+h Si., Richmond, Ind. Pickering, Aileen, 2l5 E. Souih Si., Sidney, Ohio Pike, Mary E., l-lawihorn Farm, R.R., Cenierville, Ind. Pollard, William I-I., Jr., 444 Prospeci Ave., Kenclallville, Ind. Pomeroy, Margarei E.. 3II Duffy, Plainfield, Ind. Porier, E. Marie, 308 Union, Liberiy, Ind. Porier, Phyllis, 742 Peacock Rd., Richmond, Ind. Posi, Mariella, Slaniordville, N. Y. Powell, Elizabeih A., 390i Wisconsin Ave., Washingion, D. C Praii, Jean M., R.E.D. 2, Schaghiicoke, N. Y. Puiholi, Mary L., 2I6'f2 S. bih Si., Richmond, Ind. Pyle, Julia A., 4I7 E. Charles Sl., Muncie, Ind. R Ramey, Elizabeih J., 3lB S.W. D Si., Richmond, Ind. Ranck, Alice M., Founiain Ciiy, Ind. Ranck, Roberi C., R.R. 3, Bok l56, Richmond, Ind. Randall, Palricia A., R.R. l, Pendleion, Ind. Randolph, Wilson, R.R. l, Founiain Ciiy, Ind. Raypori, Mark G., 69I0 Yellowsione Blvd., Foresl I-Iills, N. Y. Ind Reeder, Mar+ha A., Columbus, N. J. Rees, Doris M., 2208 W. IIl+h S+., Chicago, III. Regensburger, Marianne. 860 W. l8ls+ S+., New York, N. Reynolds, EIizabe+h C., R.D. 6, Wes+ Ches+er, Pa. Rhoads, E. Laurie, 700 S. Lincoln Ave., Park Ridge, III. Richards, Julianne, IO34 N. Main S+., Tip+on, lnd. Rich+er, Ralph, II7 S. 5+h, Richmond, Ind. Ridpa+h, EIizabe+h, Wes++own, Pa. Rigsbee, Alfred S., The Maples , Arling+on, Ind. Robbins, John M., Na+ionaI Rd. E., Richmond, Ind. Robbins, Mary, I7I9 S. E S+., Richmond, Ind. Roberfs Alice W., Evesboro Rd., Marlfon, N. J. Rober+s, E. Kirk, Evesboro Rd., MarI+on, N. J. Rodefeld. William, R.R. 2, Richmond, Ind. Rogers, John R., P.O. Box 6, Wes+ New+on, Ind. Rogers, L. Edgar, P.O. Box 6, Wes+ New+on, Ind. Rollf, Monna Jeanne, 237 S. l4+h, Richmond, Ind. Ross, Be+sy, Ea+on, Ohio Ross, Es+her, 220 S. I9+h S+., Richmond, Ind. Ro+hermel, I'-larold, R.R. 2, Richmond, lnd. Rourke, James F., 320 S. 7+h S+., Richmond, Ind. Ryan, William, R.R. 2, Richmond, Ind S Schmid+, John H., Box III, Cromwell, Ind. Schwyhar+, F. Kei+h, 65 Grandview Ave., Day+on, Ohio Sellmer, F. Margaret 54I5 Cen+raI Ave., Indianapolis, lnd. Shallenburg, Myr+Ie, 326 N.W. 5+h, Richmond, Ind. Shaw, Mark D., II4 Tren+on S+., Melrose, Mass. Sherer, Kenne+h E., IOI Pearl S+., Richmond, Ind. Sherman, P. Max, 932 Locusl' S+., MiddIe+own, Ind. Sherrow, Beverly, 3I9 S. 9+h, Richmond, lnd. Shields, Edwin, R.R. 2, Hagers+own, Ind. ShipIe++, Vera F., I5l2 S. 9+h, Richmond, Ind. Shor+, Warren, R.R. 2, Cen+erviIIe, lnd. Simpson, Florence I-I., I839 N. Meridian S+., Indianapolis, Ind. Sims, Barbara E., 5456 I-libber Ave., Indianpolis, Ind. SIciving+on, Jo Lena, 2I5 W. II+h S+., Connersville, lnd. Smelser, Phyllis, 3I9 Wes+ern Ave., Connersville, Ind. Smelser, Wayne. 3I9 Wes+ern Ave., Connersville, Ind. Agnes E., Richmond S+a+e I-Iospi+aI, Richmond, Ind. Smifh Smi+h Smi+h. Smi+h, Smi+h. Smifh, Smi+h Smi+h Smi+h Earl L., Wesfville, Ohio Elaine, 25 S. l9+h, Richmond, Ind. Frances E., 520 Wayne Ave., Greenville, Ohio D. Gene, R.R. 5, Porfland, Ind. Josephine E., 2238 N. New Jersey S+., Indianapolis Kenne+h E., 629 Richmond Ave., Richmond, Ind. Mar+ha F., 2225 Glenn Cour+, Richmond, lnd. WaI+er T., 825 N. Harrison S+., Rushville, Ind. Sproul, Anne, 20990 Thoro+are Rd., Grassa lla, Mich. S+aIIsmi+h, Phyllis R., R.R. 2, I-Iar++ord Ci+y, Ind. S+amper, Rober+ J., I2I N. 5+h S+., MiddIe+own, Ind. S+anIey, Donald, R.R. 5, Wabash, lnd. Sfanley. Elizabe+h A., R.R. 2, Box I2I, Richmond, Ind. Sfanley, Ellen L., R.R. 5, Wabash, Ind. S+eadman, Helen, 2I7 N. 20+h S+., Richmond, Ind. Sieane, M. Marqueri+e, I03 S+eeIe Rd., Wes+ Har++ord, C S+eqaII, Emme++, Chesier Pike R.R. 2, Richmond, lnd. S+evens, EIizabe+h J., 7I0 W. Main, Richmond, lnd. S+ewar+, EIizabe+h J., Willowemoc, N. Y. S+ine+or+, Eugene A., 345 College Ave., Richmond, lnd. S+in+son, Dudley, 900 Na+ionaI Rd. W., Richmond, Ind. S+ou+, John T., Paoli, Ind. S+owe, Mary L., I27 S. Sugar S+., S+. Clairsville, Ohio S+ra++on, Marilyn J., R.R. 2, Knigh+s+own, Ind. Sfuck, Rebecca, I3I S. W. I0+h, Richmond, Ind. S+udy, Mary Louise, IO5 N. 9+h, Richmond, Ind. Su+herIand, Pa+ricia, NcNabb, III. T Tanaka, Henry T., I505-A W.R.A. Tulelake Proiec+, Newell, Calif. Tauer, Thomas J., 6I4 S.W. A, Richmond, Ind, Taylor, James R., 800 W. Main, Richmond, Ind. Taylor, John S., River Rd., Brunswick, Maine Terrell, Mary L., New Vienna, Ohio Thorne, John, 74I S.W. A S+., Richmond, Ind. Tiossem, Mary E., Paullina, Iowa Tomi+a, I-Iide+o H., 37-5-D W.R.A. Proiec+ Hun+ Branch, Twin Falls, ldaho Torchiana, John, 902 Elmwood Ave., Evans+on, III. Tracy, Ernes+, Jr., Morris+own, lnd. Tucker. June M., Box 44. Plainfield, Ind. Turner, W. James, I49 S. 6+h S+., New Casile, Ind. Turner, Jane, 929 N. I2+h, Richmond, Ind. Y. , Ind. onn. B R E H M ' S Ou++i++ers of +he Figh+in' Quakers ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT FOR ALL SPORTS Wholesale - Re+ail 528 Main S+ree+ Phone I747 AUTHENTIC STYLES PLUS PROVEN OUALITY MERCHANDISE A+ LOEHR 8. KLUTE CLOTHIERS Richmond's Ou+s+anding S+ore +or Men F nn n V wx 5 n V n nnnn . wYJ,f+' yy, W H, V :gg' 5!,X W M, ... ,' 'N ,'1f,V,WyM 5' , f W if , iv H x W- wi ., .V .K ! VQ WW ,,.. 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X X f 1 f 1 A X68 X '13 ' k 71 ,V V , , , 1 X, f F 1 1 x X 'f xxx X X M f ff M n . n W f X X Z ff I 2 ' is ix XXX mf x f X 4 WX fn xx WN x 'r Mm N X X 1, 'V ki ' ' IQ W ,N v , ff X X f Y f nw 1: xml v ' X n N fm W iff mmf ff XX ,L ,yWQfp,,,,,, W 1 E U n 1 X nn W f W ,yr : X2 H ' E W MM W W X N if ' ,W n ,X,- 9'7Qwf ,ff T? V iff'fV, fff,Af',,n .. ' ' X , J f W?-' V Q , .mf ' X 5441 1, 12 ' ,'f,f!Wlff'! W' f7Wfi'fg1+2. ff Y W 2 W 1 n - A -. ,X LQ :mf ffff' , M f W ' 1 n H 'f' 'ff-'f , ' iz: ,.XX X X f ,, f 74. . , ,ff ,W 1' nnnnn , 1 Wf ' A Q , fl 3 alwa s to the Fwy! , ,1 , nl Jfxii f y fb V f fic :N A f '1 'f ' HW ,xlfzfilziiiivii x .' f Fr 6249562 fer , ear 00 S FF 1 Makers of Fine Printing f ,PH 4.-' P1a2CSfOfBlaCkHHdCO10f ?!i n n 4 V llfjhfgi wwwASH1NGfON 1 3 f-.H w. . A, in-:sew Y ' fn. 1 'f f ' in - Q1 + Ram ---o-Q--arch'-Q-Q-mQ---Q--.---,.,,,---...,..-.-.,.,..-.-.,,,,,.,.,.,..,.-.,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,, ,, ,, 1333, ., ,, D ,, i H i n Y i I L r E 5 i I A I64 i 1 Appealing Io TI'1e Co-eds With FASI-IION-RIOI-IT APPAREL Grayson's Dress Shop AI' Ninth and Main SOCIAI. ACTIVITIES OF EARLI-IAM AND RICHMOND FOCUS AT TI-IE INVITINC5 I.eIand Hotel One of Indiana's Finest THE EARLHAM COMMONS Social Center for IfarII1am Students and Tacult The fine phofographs by Hirshburg are noi' a luxury-They are a necessi+y. Time will prove 'rhis fad. In years Io come, Hirsh- Iourg's beaufiful porfraifs cannof be meas- ured in dollars and cenls: 'rheir value will be inesfimable. HIRSHBURG EVERYTHING FOR THE STUDENT AND TEACHER YOU CAN FIND WHAT YOU WANT Bartel, ROl'l2 81 Rosa CO. ROITCFS Jewelfy Shoppe Olliice, School and Janilor Supplies W Main 8' NMI Nexf To Tivoli ' 92' MEIN 5+ree? FINE JEWELRY - WATCHES REPAIRED FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS STANDARD OIL PRODUCTS i Have Proven Their Superiorily LCITIOH S FIOWCI' BUY THEM AT IOI5 Main Evans Standard Service Always Righl Always Righl CORNER FIFTH AND WEST MAIN El. souK Wwe! Rm, CAMERA SHOP THE GIFT SHOP 923 Main Sfreef in The LED-wo Hom IUCHMOND' 'ND'ANA ' 47 Soulh Ninlh Films ' Cameras 0 Pholographic Supplies Elizabefh Biclgoocl Frames ' Sfalionery 0 Greefing Cards Ibb Miller Brothers Hardware Company wHoLEsALE EXCLUSIVELY 4 SAY IT WITI-I FLOWERS Gause Florist EDDIE JQRDAN-Earlham Repre5efwIaI'Iv3 I IOO NaIIonaI Road Wesr Phone 3239 R1oHMoND's BUY worm PENNEY'S Where Ihriffy Shoppers Shop We Clofhe Ihe Enrire FamIIy FOR FINE TOILETRIES AND DRUGS TRY I.uI4en's Inc. Over Slxfy Yeafs of Se-wI:e'I VIGRAN'S LADIES SHOP RICHMOND S SMARTEST STCRE FOR CAMPUS CLCTI-IES 'lli pays To save The Service of Your Banlc ln selecring your banlfinq home ir is imporfani lhar you choose an insiiiuiion from which you will always be cerlain io receive noi only unqueslioned proieciion buf also careful individual aiienlion io every requirement Tre omcere oi' This insliiulion are always pleased 'ro be nefcerelly corisalfecl on any banlinq or financial mailers ard le place lheir experience and knowledge al lhe dis' al fre fuzlorners. SECCND NATICNAL BANK Members of Federal Reserve Sysiern 'md Federal Deposif Insurance Corporafion in ,dpfmwzazffzw We lalce This opporlunily To express our apprecialion of 'flue splendid work performed, and Jrlwe cooperalive spirif displayed by 1'l1e many Earlliam sludenrs who have been employed in our faclory during summer vacalions for many years pasl. We are glad 'ro number among Jrlne mosf valued members of our presenf slalil many Earlliam Alumni. We Waqm WMM FOR YOUR ENTERAINIVIENT TIVOLI RITZ I I I kgcnun STATE INDIANA THEATRES THE PAUSE THAT REFRESHES . . . . ,f-5 figxf-X gym ff 5, I f m E u 3 13,2 idx Q f 1L: if Ilife g C mznvx JL C.'f'.4,62Z EIL IN BOTTLES The ArisIocraI of Ice Cream IT'S R I C I-I C R E A M Y D E I. I C I O U S WAYNE DAIRY PRODUCTS, Inc. VISII Our Dairy S+ore a+ Sou+Iw Six+I1 and A N E HI RQYAL P R PBK CLOVER FARM STORES SPECIALIZE IN 0 CIIean, Modern Siores 0 Qualify Merchandise 0 Courieous Treaimeni 0 TIiriI+ - - Plus Saiisfacfion SPONSORED BY JOSEPH A. GODDARD CO. Muncie, Indiana , -r',. a -AFI Complimenfs of THE RICHMOND HOME TELEPHONE COMPANY, Inc. N I Vx I EARLHAM STUDENTS AND FACULTY AGREE THAT THE American Bowling Alleys ARE THE BEST IN Town Air conaaiaanea sounapfoaf On souih Eighlh Jusi on A sifeei Earlham Men Make K I N G S Your Firsl Slop lor New Slyles King's Men's Shop 724 Main Slreel Go lo I0 Norlh Ninlh Slreel- ll you Wish lo See BETTER Or lo Gel Your Glasses REPAIRED Edmunds, Optometrist I0 Norlh Ninlh Slreel U Uyesuqi, Edward T., Earlham College, Richmond, Ind. V Vail, Norwood, 300 Norlhwood Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Vigran, Marvin, 321 S. l9lh Sl., Richmond, Ind. Vilberg, M. Jean, 232 Taney Sl., Gary, lnd. W Wagner, Arlhur, 72I Wallon Ave., New York, N. Y. Walls, Mary E., 344 N. Washinglon Sl.. Knighlslown, Ind. Webb, Dorolhy J., 25 S. I5lh Sl., Richmond, lnd. Weirich, Frank R., 123 N.W. 3rd, Richmond, lnd. Weisheil, Phyllis I-l., R.R. 3, Connersville, Ind. Werking, Lois, II N. 2Olh, Richmond, lnd. Werner, Ferdinand, I27If2 S. lllh, Richmond, Ind. Werner, K. George, 333 S. 7lh, Richmond, lnd. Wesley, Newlon K., Earlham, Ind. Wesl, Doris E., 327 W. Oakwood Ave., Bucyrus, Ohio While, Arlhur, 400 Weslmonl Ave., Haddonfield, N. J. While, Bellie, R.R. 3, Rushville, lnd. While, Jane Dulaney, II3 S. lllh, Apl. B, Richmond, Ind While, L. Jane, 60I W. Plum, New Caslle, lnd. While, Thad F., il3 S. Illh Sl., Richmond, lnd. Wiegelmesser, Frilz, I47 Avenue B, New York, N. Y. Wildman, Dorolhy F., R. I Box 244, Richmond, lnd. Wildman, William E., R. I Box 244, Richmond, lnd. Williams, Eugene, 3I2 Richmond Ave., Richmond, lnd. Wilson, Lowell W., 32 S. 2nd, Richmond, lnd. Wissler, Margarel, 605 Chillon Ave., Niagara Falls, N. Y Wixom, Roberl L.. 7l0 Carpenler Lane, Philadelphia, Pa Woll, Virginia, Morrislown, lnd. Wood, Elinor A., Box 226A, Valley Falls, Rhode Island Woodward W. Roberl, Earlham, lnd. Wrighl, Eslher, BIO Euclid Ave.. Marion, lnd. Wysong, Kalherine C lMrs.I, 326 S. I6lh Sl., Richmond n Y Yollee, Conslance, l9O0 3rd Sl., Harrisburg, Pa. Younl, James l-I., 427 Kinsey Sl., Richmond, lnd. Z Zabel, Waller J., I22 S. I4lh Sl., Richmond, lnd. Zerkel, I-luberl, Jr., 607 Monroe, Decalur, lnd. Zeuch, Virginia, 2244 E. Grand Ave., Des Moines, Iowa Zimmerman, Caleb S., Eldorado, Ohio The J. M. Coe Printing Co PHONE I388 I I I7 Main Slreel DON'T SAY BREAD SAY Corntop or Holsum MADE BY DlETZEN'S IHIIIIIY Illllllllll William Cullen Dennis lI929l ,... Wesf Main Sfreef Presidenf and Professor of Infernafional Law George D. Van Dyke lI930I .......4....., R.R. 2 Acfing Dean of fhe College and Professor of Physics Edwin Prifchard Trueblood II888l ..4.4....... ColIegeAvenue Professor of Speech and Supervisor of Afhlefics, Emerifus Arfhur Maffhew Charles II904l ..... I-Ienley Road Professor of Modern Languages Elsie Marshall lI904I ....... 7Olf2 Soufh I6fh Sfreef Professor of Home Economics and Diefifian Millard S. Markle lI9l0l. .528 Nafional Road Wesf Professor of Biology Clara Cornsfock lI9 I 5I .... I09 Norfh Tenfh Sfreef Dean of Women and Professor of Physical Educafign for Women Charles E. Sosand II9I9l. .527 Soufhwesl' A Sfreef Professor of Engllsh on fhe William N. Trueblood Foundafion Ernesl' Afkins Wildman ll9I9I .........,.... R.R. Professor of Chernisfry E. Merrill Roof lI920l. l20 Soufhwesf Eighfh Sfreef Professor of English 'Murvel R. Garner lI923I .... 450 College Avenue Professor of Biolo y Ruby Davis Ill-l?25I. . .27 Norfhwesf Sevenfh Sfreef Professor of English Dail W. Cox II930l ...... 806 Nafional Road Wesf Professor of Voice William E. Berry lI936l ...... 447 College Avenue Professor of Greek and Acfing Professor of Religion Claude L. Sfinneford II937l Professor of Economics David K. BrunerlI94Il. .300 Soufhwesf Third Sfreef Professor of Sociolo Arfhur M. Claygdon lI942I ............ Bundy I-Iall Professor of Economics Florence Long lI9I4I ........ ..... E arlham I-Iall f d H d R d f fE lh H Il Associafe Professor of Mafhema ics an ca esi en o ar am a William Perry Klssick lI928I ....... Abingfon Road Associafe Professor of Hisfory James Arfhur Eunsfon II93 I I. .4I0 College Avenue Associafe Professor of Hisfory and Polifical Science Aureffa M. Thomas II9I8-I923. I926I ......... CoIIegeAvenue Assisfanf Professor of Modern Languages Anna Eves lI9I9I. ..... 27 Soufhwesf Tenfh Sfreef Assisfanf Professor of English I-Ioward C. Morgan lI929l. .923 Wesf Main Sfreef Assisfanf Professor of Speech and English Opal Thornburg II923I ...... 400 College Avenue Reqisfrar and Secrefary of fhe Faculfy Marfha Pick lI92II ..,. 842If2 Nafional Road Wesf Assisfanf Professor of Modern Languages Efhel Mae Miller II929I ............. Earlham I-Iall Assisfanf Professor of Home Economics J. Owen I-Iunfsman lI'?35l .426 Nafional Road Wesf Direcfor of Physical Educafion for Men Edwin J. Paffee II936I .,...........,. Bundy I-lall Assisfanf Professor of Modern Languages and Head Residenf of Bundy Hall George A. Scherer II936l .... 446 College Avenue Assisfanf Professor of Chemisfry Milfon E. Kraff lI937I , 27 Norfhwesf Sevenfh Sfreef Assisfanf Professor of Educafion George J. Gebauer lI94Il Assisfanf Professor of Lafin Sarah Geisf H9351 ........ .. .Earlham I-Iall Acfing Librarian I73 Kafhryn Weber I I 936l ,.......,....,....... Norfhwesf Sevenfh Sfreef Insfrucfor in Pl-ysical Educafion for Women E. Orville Johnson lI937I .......,............ . .. .......400 Soufhwesf Fiffh Sfreef Insfrucfor in Speech Francis Doan I-Iole II940I.6I5 Nafional Road Wesf lnsfrucfor in Geology and Curator of fhe Museum Arfhur C. Berndfson lI94II. . .508 College Avenue lnsfrucfor in Philosophy Louis Fein lI94Il ......... 42II,'2 College Avenue lnsfrucfor in Mafhernafics and Physics and Assisfanf Direcfor of Physical Educafion C. Willard Kisling lI94Il ....,,.........,.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . .400 Soufhwesf Third Sfreef lnsfrucfor in Organ and Theory of Music, Insfrucfor in Typing arg Shzrfrard Elizabefh Jenkins lI94Il ..,... 37 Soufh I9fh Sfreef Assisfanf Librarian John R. Pefers lI942I. .. ......,. Bundy I-Iall ' q au a R 4 ra d H Insfrucfor in Geolo y an ea e an a'l Eleanor Dilks lI943I ...........,.. Abingfon Pike Insfrucfor in Biology PART TIME INSTRUCTORS Frederick K. I-licks II924I ..,. 20 Norfh l4'rh Sfreef Insfrucfor in Violin Elizabefh Comsfock II93 II. l09 Norfh Tenfh Sfreef lnsfrucfor in Aff Charles M. Woodman lI933I.240 College Avenue Insfrucfor in Reli ion Elmira Kempfbn lI937l ...... 75 Soufh l7fh Sfreef Insfrucfor in Arf Mariorie Beck Lohman ll94II ..,.....,....... ......................23I3EasfMainSfree+ Insfrucforin Piano OTI-IER OFFICERS Virgil F. Binford .... A ........ clflafionial Road Easf Business Manager and Superinfendenf of Bur o ras 2 J L .s as Roberf N. I-Iuff ...,.. I06 Soufh Easfhaven Avenue Assisfanf fo fhe Presidenf I-larry P. Ross ............. I03 Norfh I8+h Sfreef College Plwsician Louis Francisco Ross ........ 5l Soufh l5fh Sfreef Colle e Physician Mary Lawrence ....... 624 Soufhwesf A Sfreef Posfmasfer and Manager of fhe College Book S':re Dorofhy Bond .....,.............. Earlham Hall College Nurse ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTS Susan Casfafor ..,................ Earlham I-Iall Secrefarv fo fha Presidenf Susan Carr ,...........,... 67 Soufh l4+h Sfree' Secrefary fe fhe Dean Cafherine Dennis Grafflin Se-:refarv fo fhe Dean of Women 1 D X y Agnes l-lole .....,....,. 6I5 Nafional Road Wesf Secrefary fo fhe Regisrrar Elizabefh I-Ioffman ........ 444 Wesf Main Sfreef Bookkeeper V Jean Ann I-Iamm. .. ... ..... Earlham I-Iall Secrefary fa fhe Assisfanf H P O I f I9-42 43 '7fze lefiance painllflng, Z Zngfaawlnq Ga DEFIANCE, Ol-HQ Printers ol High School and College Annuals lor Qver Thirty Years Garner, Murvel, Facull, ,, Buckman, Harvey '45 ....,,.... 56, I44 A Alexander, Marion '45 ............,. l34 Allen, Glenna-Marie '46 .............. l03, l04, IO7 Allen, Bob '45. ,,.............,..... ........ 32, 56, I3l. I44 Allen, R. E. '44 .............,,..,..,..... l48 Amriff, Sidney '46 .......... I4, 60, I48 Anderson, Rex 43 ..,...,.......,...,,.... ........23, ll4, ll8, I27, l4l, I44 Applegale, Ru+h '44 ,,,,,,,, I6, 67, 94 Armsirong, Dee '45 ,,.................. l5, 7l, 95, 96, I36 Ari' Club .,,,....,,.......,..,,.,.............. 74 A. W. S. Board ............ .......... 3 5 Azumano, Rae '43 ........ ..,,.,,,., 2 I B Band .............................. . .......... 69 Ballinger, Verlon '46 ....,,. ,,.,,,. I 48 Barker, Leanna '45 ,,.,,..,................ 69 Beisner, Paul '44 ............................ 85, IOO, l2O, I34, l35 Bell, Alice '45 .,.,., l4, 69, 76, 77, 9l Berndison, Ari-hur. Faculty ,,,, 54, 55 Beffy, E., Faculiy .... 5l, 88 BeVard, Elaine '44 ....,....... I6, 53, 98 Binford, Virgil, Business Mgr. ..36, 4l Binns, Gladys '43 ,............,.... 30, I46 Blackburn, Peg '43 ,..,.,.,...........,,... ..,.......,.28, 53, 60, 108, l36, l4l Blyler, David '45 ........................ I48 Boards Club ........,...,,..............,... 83 Bogue, Barbara '43 ,,,,..,.,,,,.,.,.,...,.. ............l9, 28, 37, ll2, l4l, l46 Bokenkamp, Bill '46 ..............,....... 77, IO7, l48 Bond, Dorolhy. College Nurse ....,., 78 Bond, Jim O. '44 .......................... 45, 77, 89, l00 Bond, Jim W. '45 ..,..,.......,.. 56, lOl Bond, PaH'y '43 ............................ 45, 53, 86, 96, l48 Borden, Rulhanna '45 ...... I4, 50, 85 Bowman, Peggy '45 ......,,,,,,.,,, 56, 78 Bowman, Meg '45 .,...,..,, I4, 9l, lO5 Breifenbach, Ellis '44 ....,,.............. lO, l l4, l26, l28, I44 Brown, Doro'l'hy '46 ,....,......,. I3, l03 Brown, Mariorie '44 .................,.. 53, 6l. 9l. 95 Brown, Dick '44 ............., 73, 94, Ill Brumbaugh, Al '43 ........................ 37, 53, IOO, l48 Bruner, David K., Faeulfy ....,,,,,,... . l48, l49 Bruner, John '46 ,,,.,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,. Sl, 89 Bruning, Rachel '45 .,,..,,,,Y.,,.,,,,,,,, 97 Bull, Barbara '44 ..,...,.., 84, l07, l48 Bundy Hall Council ...............,...... 34 Burks, Dave '46 ...... 9l, 94, l00, l48 Burnel, Frank '43 ...,.,..,,,, 3I, 37, l24 Burneff, Neil '46 ..................,.,.,, ,l2 Burns, Marlha '44 ,,.. I6, 70, 98, I48 Burler, Jim '44 .......,..,.,, 37, l26, I44 Buller, Jack '44 ,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,, 34, 36, 83, 89, II4 Bulferfield, Bill '44 ,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,. 89, Ill, I44 lllll Bye, Marian '43 .,.......................... ............28, 50, ll2, l36, I42, I46 Byrd, Bob '43 ........................ 26, I48 C Calberl, Mary Helen '45.. ....... .. 86, l09, l l l, l I2 Calverf, Jim '46 .............,........ ..... 6 9 Calverf, Marlha '43 .................... 30, 32, 45, 86, l46 Campbell, Shirley '46 .................. I2 Canby, Cicely '45 ..,...,. 53, 79. I30 Caplan, Ralph 46 ,,,,.,,,,.,,,,,.,,,,.,,. 48, l48, l5O Carr, Byron '46 ,.......,..................... 89 Carringlon, Ann '46 ..,........,,,.,.. IO3 Casey, Edmund '46 ...........,., I2, IO3 Cecere, Andy '46 ,..,.................... 54 Chapman, Madeline '45 .............. 69 Chapman, Milley '46 .........,....,...., 53, 69, 79, 9l Charles, Arfhur M., Facully .......,, 52 Choir .,,,,,,.,,,,..,,.,,,.,,,,,,.,,,.,,,,,,,,, H72 Claydon, Arlhur, Facully ..,,.,,,,,,,,, 66 Clevenger, Bonnie '45 ....,, 35, 74, 97 Clevenger, Janice '46 ......,,.. 85, IO3 Cobble, Harold '46, ..,.......,,... 96, lOl, l34 Coe, Bernie '44 ..,..........,,.,, .. ,, , 32, 83, 85, 89, I44 Collings, Peg '45 ..,,,,,,,,,,,, I4, 59, 94 Commons Commiiiee ,,,,, ,, .36 Comslock, Clara, De-i'1OfWOrn2n 40, 64, l48, I49 Conover, Joe 46 ...,........,..,.. IZ, IO7 Cook, Mary Grace '44 .,..,..... I6, 56 Corbeif, Elizabelh '44 .....,..,,...... 65, l03, l05, l46 Corwin, Warren 45 ....,,.... ,. .94 Cosand, Charles E., Faculty f,,,,,,,, H44 Cox. Dail W., Faculty ,.,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 68 Cox, Lowell Special ,..., ,,.. 5 5, 9l, 94 Crawford, Eunice '44 .......,,,..,,,. l48 Croyle, Connie '44 ..,.....,. 53, 79, 98 Cummins, Dick '45,,46, 48, 56, ll4 Daily Davis, Davis, Davis, D News Course ,.,, , Ray 46 .,,..,..,............. 89 Ruby, Faculty ..................... l48 4-4. Rulhanna '43, 45, 47, .........26, 56, 85, 86, 95, Day, Jim '45 ..,. I4, 60, 95, IOI Day Dodger .............................. Day Dodger Officers ..,............., Dean, Ralph '45 ,............... l26, DeHoney, Neb 43 .......... , , ,, 28 I9 l26 I2 l4l ,ll4,l, , 7 Dennis, William C., Presidenf ...,,,, 38, 56, 57 DeShong, Lucian '44 ,.,...........,.. .. 34, 46, 76. ll4 Dilks, Eleanor. Faculty ....,,,,,,.., 59, 60 Dodd, Helen '45 ....,,,, I4, I5, 53, 95 Dougherfy, Anne '44., ,......,, 72, II2 Dougherfy, Peg '43 ,,,.,, I9, 30, 36 Dowdell, Carol 43 ...................... 29 Drace, Ellen '45 .....,.........,...... 82, 85 Driver, Mildred, '46 .,,,,,.,,,,..,,....... 86, 98, IO3, lO5 E Eiseman, Mary '46 ..,,,...,,, ,, ,l2, 85 Ellingfon, Duke '43 ,,,,,,,.,,..,,,...,..,.. II4 Il9 IZ7 I42 ............24, 37, , , , Esles, Earle '45 ......,.,.,,,....,,....,.,,,., 90, 9l, I33, I44 Evans, Eleanor '43 ,,,,,..,..... ,.,...,...24, 95, ll2, I42, l45, l46 Evans, Virginia '44,,, ,,,,,, I6, I7, 67 Eves, Anna, Faculfy ...... F Farlow, Rulh Anna '45 .,......., .48, 60 Fein, Louis, Faculfy ..,,,. ,, Fein, Rosalie ...... .. ......... .. Ferrero, Carmen '46 .......... Ferrero, Manuel '43 .,,,,,,,,, , 62, I34 IO7 .53 ,,l9, 30, 53.60, IO7 Ferris, Helen '45 ,,..,. I4, 7l, 9I, l02 Fessler, Wilma '43, 24, 9I, ll3 3 l06 Finch, Bea '45..., I5, l0 , ,lI0 Flores, Carlos '46 ,,... 47, 56, I08 Fogg, Marianna '44 ....,, Ford, Helen 44.. ,, ,, .. ..l6, 50, 72, 74 Fosler, Connie '44 .,... ....., .59 ,85, 9l I6, IO7 Fosfer, Bill '44 ,....,.. I6, 76, Il4, I34 Frank, Peler '45, ,,,, 59, 60 Frazier, Wilford '45 ....., .,., Freebairn, Alonzo '43 ..,,,,,,. Freeman, Cherry '45 ,, Freeman, Wanda '45 ,.,..,,.,. Freshman Class Officers , Freshman Handbook Freshman Week Slaif.. Fuiiia, Dorofhy '45 ..,...,...... Funslon, J. Ar+hur, Faculty G Garner, Carroll '46 ,,,,, Garner, Doris '44, ...... , Gebauer, George, Faculf, Geisl, Sarah, Librarian... Gesangverein H, Gingery, Dick '46 ,,,,,,,, ,l3 Givan, Bill 46, ,...,.. Golii, John '46, .,...,,...., 96, Goodman, Dan '46 , Gorman, Rufh Anne '45, ,I4, 53, 85, S6 Graves, Dick '45. 6l, 88, S9 Grawols, Marian '46 , . Greene, Teddy '44 .. 295, 96. l l2, l37, Grosvenor, Virginia '45.. H Hadley, Clarabel '44 , 56, 76, S6 Hadley, Marcus '43 . .. .. 20,2 Hadley, Marian '44, ,...,. . .....l6, 77, S5, 36, Haines, Emily '45, ,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, l4, I5 9l, Hall, Donna '46 ......... ........ 5, 34, 47 70, l48 .56, l48 ,.24, 5l 53, l02 270, IO7 ,, ,,,,, ,I3 ,, ,, .46 ...95 .98, 148 36, 57 . ,,,.. l0w . ,6l 58, I49 52, I4S ,, .,..., 79 ., 53 89, l20 , ,, ,l23 lol I34 53, IZ3 QS. 'l'l2 991448 56 I03 I-15 l-1: l07 llf l3' 9l, I33 llf l-15 9' l3O PD Hamm, Jean Ann, V Hanes, Be+'ly '4'3, ,' i Hanson, Pai 45 , ., . 70 Harada, Roy '43 , Haramy, Jane 46 ,. .. Hargrave, Beflie 44 lb 1: l0. 7 4 Harkness, Eleanor 45 , Harris, Wini 43 ,. r',., ll2 f. 7 I G0 34- I .1 2l 32 3' ll2 oi: Hari, Gene '46 ,,,,, F20 l22 l26 Harf, Jack 44 ,,,..,, ,. 47 ll4 Harvey, Do'Hy 46 if Hawk, Dave . , .. l25 Hendren, Celia 46 63 90 Henley, Kalhryn '44 , l6 7l 92 Heubner, Heidi 44 , ,, ,, l53 Hewson, Camilla '44 ,,.., 45, 46, 50, 54 9l l07 Heywood, Bob '45 94 l3' Heywood, Bill 43 27, 34 ll-4 Hialf, Charles 43 22, l '4 323 Hicks, F. K., Fsz.--, Higgs, Lucy 43 U lE 26 'U i3 Hill, Carlyle 45 , C3 44: Hill, Elinor 43 , 30, 53 Hinshaw, Mary Helen 4- Hirschfeld, Dolly 45 5 Hodgson, Marshall 43 56 Hoerner, Libby 46 l? 22 Holroyd, Peg 43 Hole, Francis, Fa:.', Hope. Joyce 46 Hormel, Marjorie 44 Hornbrook, Frank 45 Hornbrook, Hal 4: Hornbrook, Sarah 43 53 7 l 20, 23, 35 ..i Ll: Howell, Jane+ 45 5 Huff, Rcberi N.,-Kss's'er' ': Hunf, John 43 2l Hunl, Mary 45 Hunfsman, J. Owen, A-- . -4- - C-r H9 lnrer-:i: C3.. 1A' lr'err'ar': a' 99 E' Ionian , , H , . lshikawa, Sam 43 ,, 22, :: J Jeicieris, Bob 44 Jehle, Margueri+e 45 Jenkins, Elizabefh, L : Johnson, Don 4: Johnson, Lucile 44 Johnson, Oi-vIlle,12 Jones, Kennefh -1:, Jordan. Eddie 43 .,3l, 33 3: ' ac' I' C F55 K Kaighn, Phyllis '15 Keach, Sue 43 i 1 4 30 Kemplon, Elmira, Faculty ...,. 74, 148 Kendall, Rufus 44 ,,,,,,,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,.. 109, 134, 148 Kenl, Lolle '46 .,...,...,,................. 53 Keys, Bob '46 ,,,,.,,,.,,.,,,.. .......,,, I 30 Kishego, Mark '45 .,..,......,,........, 144 Kisling, Willard. Faculty ..,,..,.. 66, 68 Kissick, Mary Belh '45..59, 104, 107 Kissick, Perry, Faculty ,........,..,,,,,,, 57 Kissner, Russell '46 .,............,.,,,, 123 Krall, blTl1'1'0H E., Facully ,.............. 55 Kralz, Sara '43, ,..........,.............,. . ,. ,...... 26, 72, 86, 112, 143, 145 L Laurenl, Agnes '46 ,,.,......,, 103, 107 Lebovilz, Henry '43 ,,..,.......... ,,..., 134 Lindberg, Chrisline '46, ,,,,,, 79, 130 Lindley, Laura '43 ,...,..... 20, 34, 112 Lohman, Mariorie Beck, Faculty ,,,, 68 Long, Florence, Faculty ..,.,..,, 62, 148 ., i........... ........ 2 6, 37, 50. 85, Lukens, Carolyn '43 .,......,,..........,. ,,.,. 19, 21, 35, 109.112, 136 134 Lyltle, Dave '46 ,,,,.,,.,.,,,, 34, 91, M Macy, John '46 ..........,,,,,.., 101, 126 Maddox, Carolyn '45 ............ 14. 53 Marchaland, Barbara '46 ............ 91. 98. 102 Maris, Failh '45 ,,..,.............,.,,,,,,,. , ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 14, 15, 47, 109, 136 Markle, Millard S., Faculty ,,,,,.,., 58 Markley, Barbara '45 ,,,...,..,,.,,,.,,r. 14 Marshall, Elsie, Dietitian .....,. 67, 148 Marslaller, Lelia '45 ...... 51, 69, 102 Marlin, Belly '45 ,,.,,,,,,,,..,,,......,. 107 Marlin, Bob '45 ,,,,,,,,,.,..,.............. 122, 126, 127, 134 Mask and Mantle .........,,,,,,,,,,.,,,, 85 Masquers ..........,.,,,,..,,,................. 85 Maslers, Violet '45.,, ,,,.A..... 94, 107 Mauch, Belly '46 ,,,,,,,..... 48, 74, 86 Mayer, Frances '43 .,..................., 23 Mayer, Marlha '45 ,,,,,,,,............ 107 McMahan, Willadene '45 ..,,,,, 3107 Merrill, Anne '43 ,,,,,,,,.,........,....... . ,..,,.,,...... 18, 25, 50, 53, 136, 145 Merrill, Doris '46, ,...................... 86 Merrill, Marly, '43 ,,,,,,,,.............. 146 .. . .22, 35, 37, 49, 86. Mesner, Mary '43, .. ........... 27, 46 Michael, Eugene '45, ,,,, ,,,,.,,,,,, I 07 Miller, Ethel. Faculty , ,,.,.,,,, 67, 148 113. Miller, Bob 44 .,.... ., ..,.........., ,,,,,,,,17,61,81,119, 131,144 Miller, Elvin '44 ,.., , ,,,, 51, 107, 148 Mills, Dolly '44, .. ..,.,............. , 316, 37, 86, 112, 136, 146 Mills, Eugene '46,,, ,,,,,,..,.,,,,,r, . .76, 91, 94, 120, 126, 134 Mills, John '43..,, .. ,.,......... . ,...,, 25, 34, 118. 142, 144, 148 Milchell, Belly '46 ...................,..,, I2 Moore, Bob '46, ,, ,, ,,....l3, 134 Moore, Fid '44, ,,,,, ,,,, ,.,, , , , 16, 36, 84, 85, 107, 112 Moore, John '46 , ..,, ,51, 89 Moran, Pat '46 , , ,,,,,,,,,,,, H86 Morgan, Howard C. Faculty .,,,,, , ,..... 75, 84, 85. 148 Morgan, Lois '46 63, 103, 140 Morrow, Rosemary '43 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , , ,......... . 27, 50, 53, 96 N Nalional Collegiale Players ,,...... 84 Nicholson, John 45 ,,.,,,.........,.,,,,, 60, 63, 124 Nick, Ann '46 ..........., 13, 74, 85, 86 O Olmsted, .lo '44 ,,,,.,,,.,. .,.............. ,.,, ,...,....... 86, 103, 113, 137, 148 O'Ma1ey, Jack '44 .....,.,..,..,,...,..... 37, 109, 114, 144 O'Ma1ey, Bob '45 ........................ 109, 114, 144 Osborn, Marian '46 ,,,,,,,, 72, 74, 86 Overman, Jesse '44 ,,,,.................. 37, 114, 134 ,135, 144 Overlon, Helen '44., ,74, 107, 148 Overlon, Isabel '46 ,,,, .,,,,,..,. 1 2, 107 P Painler, Bob '43 .....,,,, 89, 123, 148 Parke, Royden '43 .....,,.,.....,......... 69, 74, 84, 85, 107 Parker, Ted '44 ..........,. 115, 126, 134 Parlinglon, Ralph '45 ,,,. 14,69, 102 Palrick, Buddy '45 ,.,,,, 120, 126, 127 Pallee, Edwin J., Faculty ....,.,, 52, 53 Payne, Alice '45 .,.. 14, 53, 102, 130 Payne, Joe 43 .......,,,,,.,,............... 323, 36, 37, 56, 77, 115 Peace Fellowship ........................ 91 Peckham, Bill '44 ....,. 56, 91, 96, 107 Pedersen, Belsy '45 ,,,,...... 15, 37, 74 Peelle, Ina Jeane '46 ,,,,,,,,,,........ 85, 86, 105, 130 Peery, Marlha '45 .,,..,,, 85, 98, 148 Pendlelon, Louisa '45 .r..,, 56, 69, 79 Pennell, Elinor '43 ,,,,,.,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .......,,,2O, 28, 113, 143, 145, 146 Penninglon, Belly '44, 316, 17, 86 Penninglon, Evelyn '46 ..., 35, 69, 86 Pelers, John, Facully .,,..,.....,. 63, 148 Pelerson, Lois 46 .,,,, , ,.,,,.,,,, 12 Philosophy Forum ......, .,,,,......,, 5 4 Phoenix ,,,,,,,,,,...,,..............,.......... 1 12 Pick, Marlha. Faculty ..,,.,...... 52,148 Pickering, Aileen '46 ,,,,,,,,,,,a,,,.,, 109 Pike, Mary '44 .,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,, 53, IO7 Pomeroy, Peg '43 ,,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 21, 48, 15, 136 Porler, Marie '43 ,,,,,A,,,,,A,,,,,.,,.,,,,, .,,..18, 19, 31, 73, 113 Porler, Phyllis '45 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,, 32, 95, 107 Posl, Mariella '45 .r...,,,,, 67, 98, 130 Posl' Advisory Board ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,., 47 Posl' Business Slall ,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 4 7 Posl Circulalion Slall ,,....,.........,. 47 Posl Eclilorial Slalil ,,,,,, ,, M46 Posl Reporlers ,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 4 8 Powell, Anne '44 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,A,,,,,,, .......,..65, 96, 113, 136, 137, 146 Prall, Jean '45 ........,, 14, 67, 86, 91 Precedenl Commillee-Men .... 37 Precedenl Commillee-Women 37 Pyle, Julia '46 .....,...,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 106 I R Ranck, Alice '45 ........ ,,,,., 1 07, 148 Randall, Pal '45 .,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 48, 53 Rayporl. Mark '43 .,,,.,..,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,, 3 46, 47, 49, so Reeder, Marlha '46 ,,,,,,...,,,,,,,,,,,,, . ..,, W ,,,.........,,,,. .85, 86, 90, 130 Rees, Doris 46 .,.......,.....,......a. 12, 98 Regensburger, Marianne '45 ....,. 54 Reynolds, Libby '43 .... 18, 19, 24, 60 Rhoads, Dusly, 45 ,,,......,...,...,.,..., 59 Richards, Judy '44 ...... 79, 113, 130 Richler, Ralph '43 ............,.., 21, 110 Riaps+h Belh '46 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,, 12, 91 Rigsbee, A1 '44 ..,,.....,.................... 32, 69, 89, 94, 115 Robbins, John '46 ..........,.,,,...,,.,,. 12 Robbins Mary '45 ,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 45 Roberls, Alice '46 ........................ 86, 130, 138 Roberls, Kirk '45 ,,....,,.,,,,. 60, 61, 83 Rogers, Bill '43 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ...,27, 49, 89, 114, 124, 130, 143 Rogers, John '44 .....,,,,.,.,,,,.,,,.,,,., , ,........... 32, 83, 89, 115, 124, 144 Rollf, Moio '43 ,,,,,,,..,,.,.,,.,,.,, ,,,,,.. , ,.,,,,,,,..,,, 31, 32, 36,81,85, 113 Rool, Ada .................,......,.........., 45 Rool, E. Merrill, Faculty ......... 44,45 Ross, Belsy '43 ,,..,,,, 19, 23, 113, 136 Ross, Eslher '46 ..,.......,.......a......... 12 Ross, 1 '1. P., College Doctor ..,..,,,... 78 Ross, I.. F., College Doclor ...,......... 78 Rolhermel, Harold '45 ,,,,..,,,,,.,, 104 Rourke, Jim '44 ,.,.....,.., ,..,.,,., 4 6, 50 S Sargasso Slall ...., Z. ,,,,,, ,,,,, 4 9, 50 Science Club ,.,....................,,,.... 60 Scherer, George, Faculty .....,, 60, 91 Schmidl, John 43 .....,..,..,.........c,. ..,..,,,..,,28, 46, 47, 49, 56, 150 School ol lhe Prophels .........,.... 51 Schwyharl, Keilh '45 .......... 130, 132 ' 102 Sellmer, Fem 46 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Senior Class Officers ,...,,,,..,,,,,,,,,. 20 Shaw, Mark 46 .......,.....,,,,,,, 81, 106 Sherer, Kenny '44 .... 16, 82, 83, 107 Sherman, Max '46 .............. 101, 126 Shlplell, Vera '46 ,.,..,..............c..... 77 Sims, Barbara 44. ..,.............,..... .. ..,.....16, 32, 47, 73, 111, 113 Skivinglon, Jo '46 ......,,.,,, 53, 74, 79 Smelser, Phyllis '46 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 86 Smilh, Earl 44 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .,16, 61, 85, 89, 124, 144, 151 Smilh, Frances '46 ......,.......,,,, 48, 85 Smilh, Gene 43 .,........,......,,c,,,,,,,. 25, 46, 50, 113, 146 Smilh, Jo '46 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 12, 97 Smilh, Kenny '46 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 12, IO7 Smilh, Marlha '44 ,...........,,,.,,,,,,,, 107, 137, 145 Sophomore Class Ollicers .,........ I4 Spanish Club .....,......,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 53 Stallsmith, Phyllis '44 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 98, 105, 137 134 Slamper, Bob '46 ,.,,.. 101, 126, Slanley, Belly '46 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 53, 107 Slanley, Ellen '44 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 79, 98 Sleadman, Helen 45 ,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 37, 53, 70, 74 Sleane, Gile '45 ,,,,,,,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , ,,...,....,,, 15, 47, 48, 53, 95, 100 Slegall, Emmell '43 ,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,, 53, 73, az, 84, 143 Slevens, Belly Jane '44 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 95, 107, 113 Slewarl, Belly '44 ,,,,,,....,..,,. 16, 113 Slinelorl, Eugene '45 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, IO7 Sloul, John 44 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 32, 37, 114, 144 Slowe. Mary '45,,Z .,......,,, 14, 72, 91 Slrallon, Marilyn '46 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,,, 56, 69, :as Slring Ensemble ,.,,, ,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,.,, 7 0 Sludenl Senale .,.,.,,.,,....,,,.,... ,.,,,,32 Sludy, Mary Louise '43 ,,,.....,...,,,, 45, 56, 148 Sulherland, Pal '46 ,,,..,,,,,,,,..,,,,,,, 69 T Tanaka, Henry '44 .,..,,.........,.. 59, 17 Tau Kappa Alpha .........,..,.,......... 76 Taylor, John '46 .............. 69, 73, 102 Terrell, Mary Louise '46 .............. 48 Tesl, Wall .,...,,..,,..,,..,....,,,,,......... 56 Tiossem, Mary Ellen '46 ..., 107, 130 Thomas, Aurella, FacuIty..........,... 53, 148 Thornburg, Opal, Registrar ,,,, 41, 45 Trueblood, Edwin P., ........,.,...,... Professor Emeritus ,,ee..,,,.e .e.,,.. 7 5 Truslees ..,...,.......,................,,....... 39 Tucker, June '46 .................... 53, 73 Turner, James '44 .....,,,........,...,..... 94, 120, 121, 144 V Vail, Norwood '43 .....,,,........,,,,,,,. 60, 148, 150 Van Dyke, George D., Dean ........ 62, 134, 138. 150 Varsily Club ,,,,,,,,.,,,..,....,,,a...,.,. 144 Vilberg, Jean '45, ..... 14, 15, 34, 35 W W.A.A. Board , ,..,,,..,.................. 146 Wagner, Arl '44 .,,...,...................,, 80, 82, 84, 85, 123 Walls, Mary '45 ...,.......... 15, 48, 69 Webb, Dolly '44 .... 16, 37, 72, 107 Weber, Kalhryn, Faculty ....... 64, 146 Weirich, Frank '43 ...... 28, 114, 144 Weisheil, Phyllis '46 ,,,,.,,...,,,,,...,... 130, 138, 148 Werner, Fred '46 ............,........... 107 Wesley, Newlon '45 .................... 56 Wesl, Bounce '45 ....,,......,.,,..,,,..,,. 53 While, Arl '45 ,,,,.u,.,.,........,., 34, 148 While, Bellie '43 ..29, 53, 113, 146 While, Jane '45 ............................ 90, 91, 97, 130 Wiegelmesser, Frilz '45 .,.... 48, 111 Wildman, Dolly '46 ...................... 13, 86, 91, 94, 107 Wi1dman,Ernesl, Faculty ,,,...,,,,,,, 60 Wildman, Bill '45 ..., 14, 45, 56, 107 Wixom, Bob '45 .....,,..,...............,.. 34, 56, 61, 89, 95 Wolf, Virginia '46,.l2, 85, 103, 138 Wood, Elinor '46 .......... 35, 106, 130 Woodman, Charles, Faculty ....... 51 Wrighl, Eslher '44 ..,.,.,.,........, 16, 98 Y Ye Anglican .,,..,,. ....... 4 5 Y. M. C. A ......,,...... .,.,...,,., 8 9 Y. W. C. A .,,,c....,,,,,,,, ,.......,..... 8 6 Yolfee, Candy '46 ....,............. 48, 53 Younl, Gus '43 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,...,...,.,. , ..,.............., 24, 36, 37, 114, 144 Z Zabel, Waller '45 .,,.....,......... 37, 51 Zerkel, Huberl 43 ..,. ,,,...,...,...,..... ,.......28, 115, 119, 126, 130, 143 Zeuch, Virginia '46 .............,.,.... 148 Zimmerman, Caleb S. '43 ....,....... 29 E 9 C Q v- F c E I I F E e U. I I u . V1 5 1 I 2 I 5 5 5 E I E i '- W 1 v f ' J, c 5 . A ,W 7 x , A p ,,,.x 1 w -PJ v ? M.1?'fw


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