University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) - Class of 1947 Page 1 of 411
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This Page Intentionally Left Blank ELS • What cigarette do von smoke, Doctor? That was the gist of the question put to 113,597 doctors from coast to coast in a recent survey by three independent research groups. More doctors named Camels than any other cigarette. If you ' re a Camel smoker, this definite ence for Camels among physicians will not prise you. If not, then by all means try Camels. Try them for taste ... for your throat. That ' s the T-Zone test (see right). Your T-Zone Will Tell You... The T-Zone —T for taste and T for throat —is your own prov- ing ground for any cigarette. For only your taste and your throat can decide which cigarette tastes best to you... and how it affects your throat. CAMELS C ofthei 7a2ccor R..1, Reynolds Tobacco Co, Winston-Salem, N. U. sri I ,I;Kci the 1947 ial- haatbeA co ten. Bob Caldwell the judges agreed, tvitb , Your 1947 JAYHAWKER cover is different—it has a past! Last spring the new staff decided that there should be a contest—a competitive effort to create a design for the 1947 cover that would be truly tive of the University. Miss Majorie Whitney, sign Department Head, liked the idea and gave her approval to a cover design contest to be sponsored by her department. Assistant Professor Arvid R. Jacobson gave his complete cooperation and enthusiastically assigned the project to his summer session design class. At the end of two steady weeks of work, more than a dozen excellent designs awaited the decision of the judges. Miss Whitney and Miss Helen Skilton chose the winner and Robert W. Caldwell, Senior Fine Arts major from Dodge City, collected $10 and a free sub- scription to the JAYHAWKER. Combining simplicity and originality, the new cover will be made of light cream colored leather embossed with concentric lines. Raised maroon ters will spell out JAYHAWKER 1947 in a complete sweep from bottom to top. The S. K. Smith Company of Chicago contracted for the manufacturing job and specifications call for delivery before the Christmas holidays. Sweating it out during one of the hottest summers on rec- ord, Professor Arvid Jacob- son ' s design class worked two sweltering weeks in July de- signing covers for the JAY - HAWKER. Selection of a winner by the judges was the toughest fight of all. Though only one design is being manu- factured, the Editor will al- ways be grateful to a fine class of artists who gave untiringly of their efforts and received only his thanks. 4 THE JAYHAWKER U Five years ago this December 7th millions of stunned Americans arose abruptly from their Sunday dinner tables and crowded around their radios. World War II was already several hours old and hundreds of our countrymen had already paid with their lives. As hill students listened, appalled and angry, they couldn ' t help wondering what their respective fates might be. Now, with the bloody holocaust a gruesome memory, the story can be told. For those of us who returned, university life is a stepping stone into a hope-filled future. For those whose names here follow, life on Oread was a climax to Eternity. To their glorious let them never be forgotten, this, our 1947 annual, is respectfully dedicated. Mud soiled hands place the white cross of Calvary in Memory, GI shoes which covered the Continent—walk no more, empty footsteps and blood-traced stains remain The quick, who are left, their movement is slow and sad, A serial number represents life no more, an impression that bears to God—men ' s hopes, of—Not again in Vain! Past the fields of supreme sacrifice; long strides carrying them to victory—now bring their return, High shoes for saddle shoes, wools and khaki for gabardines and plaids New faces with unknowing emptiness, fill the horizon of scanning vision, Long sought memories are gone; an awareness of great change, nothing old to be had! Carry on, from where we left off, No! We must refresh ourselves anew, Youngsters went away, men came back, laden with thoughts of a great ideal, Experiences—close to the heart; their buddy in death—gave them life, His life and theirs; the intangible power of knowing—making life what they feel. With honor and sense of duty, fulfillment of a sacred trust, The past is ever bearing on the present, from college dorm to campus Army-styled bull sessions, cocked hats, bow ties and socks to match, Medals of valour to letter pins, their deaths—govern our every will. We still stand in lines, walk among the crowds; strangers at our own doorsteps, Friends we knew once are gone, old places are shadows of the Past, Gloomy days which followed the nights of living hell—and not knowing, Are filled with light, still we can ' t absorb; beating hearts remember—still ones, at half mast. Yes, they have given us their right to live, and ours indeed! GRANT GORDON THOMAS FALL NUMBER, 1946 5 WILLIAM HOUSTON ABBOTT, Kansas City, Mo.; killed as a result of enemy action while aboard a cargo ship; Jan. 4, 1945. WILLIAM WARNER ABERCROMBIE, Hiawatha; killed flying a torpedo plane in battle of Mid- way; June 4, 1942. HARRY JAMES AKERS, Coffeyville; killed in North African plane crash; March 15, 1944. WILLIAM CHASE ALBRIGHT, St. Joseph, Mo.; missing in action after flight off Palau island; Jan. 25, 1945. DOUGLAS OTHA ANDERSON, Lawrence; missing in action after special mission from Kwajalein; Feb. 26, 1945. RICHARD C. ARENTSON, Kemmerer, Wyo.; killed in action at Vohberg, Germany; April 27, 1945. CLAUDE ELIAS ARNETT, JR., Emporia; killed on beach at Iwo Jima; Feb. 19, 1945. JOHN FREEMAN AUSTIN, Black- well, Okla.; killed on maneuvers in South Carolina; Summer, 1944. WILL IAM THOMAS BAILEY, Kansas City, Mo.; miss- ing in action in loss of U. S. S. Wichita; October 29, 1942. LAURENCE GENE BARBEN, Kansas City; killed in air battle in which 35 of 37 bombers were lost; Sept. 27, 1944. ALLEN HENRY BARSTOW, Topeka; died in U. S. Navy Hospital, Portsmouth, N. H.; Sept. 23, 1943. JESSE RAYMOND BATTENFELD, JR., Kansas City, Mo.; killed in plane crash while enroute from Seattle; Feb. 15, 1945. WILLIAM BROOKE BAUER, Kansas City, Mo.; killed in plane crash at El Toro, Calif.; Dec. 14, 1944. JOHN L. BECKNER, Colby; killed while flying anti-sub- marine missions in North African Theater; Aug. 28, 1943. ROBERT GEORGE BELLAMY, Colby; killed in action with marines on Okinawa; May 10, 1945. TOM EUGENE BENNETT, Holton; died as result of wounds received near Metz, France; Mar. 29, 1945. WILLIAM ANDREW BEVEN, Muscotah; killed on flight from Reno, Nev.; Jan 5, 1945. JOSEPH TIPTON POSSI, Arkansas City; missing in plane crash off Florida coast; Dec. 5, 1945. GLENN ARNOLD BREMER, Lawrence; killed in plane crash en- route to bombing mission in Germany; May 12, 1944. WALLACE JAMES BROCKETT, Atchison; killed in plane crash in Japan; July 22, 1946. ANDREW PORTER BROWN, Alton; died of infantile paralysis in Panama City, Florida; Nov. 3, 1942. HARRY HOFFMAN BROWN, Wichita; killed in bomber crash in California Aug. 16, 1943. DEAN LEEROY BROYLES, Belleville; killed in action in Italy; April 13, 1944. MALCOLM JAMES BRUMWELL, Leavenworth; died of wounds received at Hickam Field Hawaii; Dec. 14, 1941. SAM BERNARD BRUNER, Lawrence; killed in San Diego; Feb. 1944. FRANK J. BUCK, Kansas City; shot down in plane over English Channel; Sept. 6, 1942. HENRY SIDDON BUNTING, Parsons; killed in action while navigating for a Liberator bomber based in Italy; Aug. 15, 1944. ROBERT LUTHER BURCHINAL, Formosa; Mediterranean area (details un- known) ; April 27, 1944. HOWARD REYNOLDS BUR- NETT, Coldwater; shot down in flames over Iwo Jima; Aug. 7, 1944. CURTIS ANDREW BURTON, Topeka; died of infantile paralysis in New Orleans; July 18, 1944. ERNEST WILLIAM BYE, Topeka; killed in action aboard a Japanese transport in the Pacific; Dec. 15, 1944. KENDALL CARL CAMPBELL, Garden City; lost in Battle of Coral Sea; May, 1942. PAUL ALEXANDER CANNADY, Yate s Center; died in California; July 21, 1944. ALVIN GEORGE CARSTEN, Stockton; killed in mid-air collision near Hutchinson; May 28, 1945. DONALD HOUSTON CAYLOR, Horton; missing and later reported killed in Germany; Feb. 1944. RICHARD PAYNE CHENOWETH, Kansas City, Mo.; plane crash near Kelly Field, Tex.; Sept. 30, 1942. ROBERT EUGENE CHILSON, Topeka; shot down over Guadalcanal; Aug. 30, 1942. RUSSELL JUNIOR CHITWOOD, Conway Springs; killed in plane collision in New Mexico; Aug. 2, 1945. RAY- MOND LEWIS CLAPPER, Kansas City, Mo.; killed in plane collision in Marshall Islands; Feb. 3, 1944. DEAN EDWARD COCHRAN, Pratt; killed in plane crash near Wheeling, Ill.; March 13, 1945. ROBERT LANGDON COLEMAN, Junction City; killed in action over Gottingen, Germany; April 1, 1945. PAUL ROBERT CONWAY, Emporia; missing at sea near Honolulu; April 25, 1942. JOSEPH DILLARD CONWILL, Hutchinson; died in Ger- man prison camp at Neuruppin; April 2, 1945. JAMES EUGENE COOK, Iola; missing on a mission with the 13th Air Task Force; June 9, 1944. SAMUEL DONALD COULTER, Olathe; killed in plane crash into Atlantic off Florida coast; January 17, 1945. GEORGE THEODORE CRONEMEYER, Chanute; killed when ship was torpedoed and sunk; Dec. 24, 1943. ROBERT THOMAS CROWDER, Lawrence; killed in action during a flight over Rumania; April 15, 1944. ROBERT JAMES CRUTCHER, Kansas 6 THE JAYHAWKE City, Mo.; killed by flak burst on 27th mission; June 18, 1944. DEAN HERBERT DALTON, Pittsburg; killed in action in plane fire in the European theater; Nov. 26, 1943. NOLAN JAMES DAY, Junction City; killed in action in France; July 26, 1944. GROVER H. DENLINGER, Law- rence; killed when plane was shot down on Luzon; Dec. 15, 1944. FOSTER LEONARD DENNIS, Dodge City; died cn June 26, 1944. JOHN KINGSBURY DETWILER, Smith Center; killed in plane crash in Africa; March 12, 1944. JAMES HUNGATE DODDERIDGE, Lawrence; died in action during Sicilian Campaign; July 16, 1943. CARYL JOHN DODDS, JR., Lawrence; died in truck accident at Hollandia, Dutch New Guinea; June 17, 1945. VICTOR DONALD DOLECEK, Russell; killed in action over Germany; June 21, 1944. MARY ELIZABETH DOTY, Lawrence; died in Jones Hospital, Battle Creek, Mich.; Dec. 4, 1945. MOREL FRANCIS DUNHAM, Kan- sas City, Mo.; killed when shot down over Germany; April 19, 1945. JOHN TAYLOR DYATT, Kanarado; killed in action in Europe; Nov. 7, 1944. FRED CURRY EBERHARDT, Salina; killed in action at Iwo Jima; Feb. 20, 1945. RAYMOND EBERHART, Lawrence; killed in action in Italy; Oct. 3, 1944. DANIEL FRANK ELAM, Fort Worth, Texas; killed on a combat mission against Siegfried line; Sept. 17, 1944. DONALD LEE EVANS, Kansas City, Mo.; died on Saipan; June 22, 1944. JOHN DEE EWERS, Caney; killed in automobile accident near Palermo, Sicily; July 31, 1943. ALLAN RODERICK EWING, Lawrence; killed in action in Luxem- bourg; Dec. 24, 1944. LEONARD E. FASHOLTZ, Nowata, Okla.; killed in a California airplane crash; March, 1942. JAMES HAP- GOOD FERGUSON, McPherson; killed in an airplane crash on Mindoro Island; July 15, 1945. HERBERT STEWART FINNEY, Topeka; killed in a plane crash in Lengayen Gulf area of Luzon; June 21, 1945. WAYNE C. FITCH, Minne- apolis; killed on flight from England; Dec. 5, 1941. RODNEY LEROY FORD, Weir; killed in action in Italy; July 1, 1944. KEITH C. FOSTER, Anthony; killed when bomber was shot down over Hungary; July, 1944. HOLMES CHILES FOWLER, Roswell, N. Mex.; died as result of emergency appendectomy; Nov. 1, 1942. THOMAS FREE- MAN, Brewster; killed in plane crash in Stanley, New Guinea; Nov. 22, 1943. RAYMOND LESTER FRIED- SON, Kansas City, Mo.; killed when ship was hit by rocket bomb in Italy; Sept. 11, 1943. DON BERNARD FULLMER, Kansas City, Mo.; killed on a Jap prison trans- port torpedoed and sunk in China Sea; Oct. 24, 1944. JULIUS THOMAS GIBSON, JR., McPherson; died of wounds received while on Saipan; June 26, 1944. JOHN RICHARD GOHEEN, Belle Plaine; died in a crash at sea in Hawaii; April 26, 1944. JOHN BURTON GOINS, Brechenridge, Mo.; killed in Germany; March 10, 1945. WILLIAM HERMAN GRAVES, Topeka; killed in action over Florence, Italy; July 4, 1944. JOHN JAMES GREEN, Kansas City, Mo.; killed when ship was sunk off Salerno; Sept. 11, 1943. JOHN JOSEPH GRIFFIN, JR., Wichita; died on Iwo Jima with Engineers of 4th Marine Division; Feb. 28, 1946. NORMAN BERTRAND GRIGGS, Aurora, Ill.; killed in plane crash at Green Cave Springs, Florida; Feb. 6, 1945. CALTON B. GRISSOM, JR., Syracuse; miss- ing in action over the Mediterranean; July 4, 1943. HAROLD LYNN HACKLER, Tampa; killed in plane crash at Pacific Beach, Wash.; Feb. 23, 1944. JAMES HERBERT HAIL, Lawrence; killed in airplane crash in New York City; June 17, 1940. FRED SCOTT HALL, JR., Lawrence; died at Ft. Riley; April 13, 1943. WILLIAM McADOO HANNA, Newton; killed in action over Magde- burg, Germany; Sept. 28, 1944. MELVIN RAY HARTLEY, JR., Baxter Springs; killed in plane crash near Limon, Colo.; April 28, 1944. JAMES SAMUEL HARTZELL, Peru; killed in battle in France; July 7, 1944. HERMAN HEUBNER HAUCK, Valley Falls; killed aboard Jap prison ship sunk off China coast; Oct. 24, 1944. ROBERT ALBERT HAYNES, Lawrence; killed in sinking of ship enroute to Leyte; July 30, 1945. DARL JAY HEFFEL- BOWER, Newton; missing on a mission; Sept. 10, 1945. DON HEITMAN, Redfield, S. Dak.; killed in action in France; Jan. 18, 1945. JOHN ADAMS HETTINGER, Hutchinson; killed in action at Balete Pass in the Philip- pines; March 27, 1945. DEAN HOWARD HOWELL, Quinter; missing in action after plane was attacked; July 28, 1942. BERNICE FRANCIS HUMPHREY, Pasadena, Calif.; killed on Jap ship which was sunk; Oct. 25, 1944. FALL NUMBER, 1946 FREDERICK GEORGE HUMPHREY, Kansas City, Mo.; killed in action in Holland; Sept. 21, 1944. PERCY E. HUNT, Ft. Benning, Ga.; cause not given; several years ago. THOMAS PITT HUNTER, JR., Margaret, Texas; killed in action on Guam; July 21, 1944. FRANCIS V. HUYCKE, Ellsworth; washed overboard at sea enroute to Chile; Jan. 2, 1943. ROBERT ERNEST INNIS, Pittsburg; killed in action near Canary Islands; Oct. 1943. WILLIAM LAWRENCE JEPSON, Vancouver, Wash; killed in action in Germany; April 23, 1945. HAROLD ADELBERT JIMERSON, Tucson, Ariz.; died while a Jap prisoner on Honshu Island; Feb. 4, 1945. LAWRENCE RAYMOND JOHNSTON, Ft. Scott; missing in action in Pacific theater; 1944. CHARLES OSBURN JORDAN, Pittsburg; died at St. Albans, N. Y.; Jan. 15, 1944. JOHN DILLMAN KEELING, Scott City; killed in ac- tion near Japan; Aug. 5, 1945. ROBERT WEBSTER KEHR, Carthage, Mo.; killed in plane crash in British Columbia; Dec. 20, 1942. CHARLES NORTON KELLY, Hutchinson; killed in plane crash in Italy; Aug. 20, 1944. HILL IS ALAN KENNARD, Kansas City; killed in car accident at Santa Monica, Calif.; Aug. 12, 1945. LELAND WHITE KESLER, JR., Winfield; killed in action on Iwo Jima; March 15, 1945. DEAN WARREN KIEFER, Law- rence; killed during mission over Germany; Jan. 14, 1945. JACK KINELL, Houston, Texas; died of heart attack in Corpus Christi, Texas; April 14, 1944. WILLIAM MAR- SHALL KNIGHT, Independence; killed in action in Pa- cific; early Nov., 1944. GEORGE RICHARD KOEHLER, JR.; New Brunswick, N. J.; killed in action in Sicily; July 15, 1943. KEMPER JAY KOST, Grand Junction, Colo.; killed in plane crash in Aleutians; July 14, 1944. WILBUR PAUL KROEKER, Hutchinson; killed in vehicle accident in Philippines; April 21, 1946. GEORGE OWEN KUNKLE, Evansville, Ind.; killed when ship was torpedoed in Carribean; Dec. 5, 1944. FRANCIS CLAUDE LAIRD, Kismet; killed in action in Germany; Dec. 5, 1944. JOE RALPH LAIRD, Talmage; killed in action in France; July 29, 1944. FRED WRIGHT- MAN LAKE, JR.; Denver, Colo.; missing in action; Oct. 11, 1943. VERNON JAY LANDON, Russell; killed in plane crash at Lubbock, Tex.; Dec. 14, 1944. PAUL AL- BERT LARK, Kansas City, Mo.; killed at Anzio, Italy; Feb. 5, 1944. DANIEL SEWARD LASHELLE, Junction City; killed on Luzon; Jan. 28, 1945. JACK MARCHANT LEE, Topeka; missing in action in France; June 6, 1944. JAMES ROBERT LEWIS, Independence; killed in plane crash at Goodfellow Field, San Angelo, Texas; Feb. 19, 1942. SOLON RUSSELL LINDSEY, Atchison; killed in action in Italy; April 21, 1945. ALFRED DANIEL LINLEY, Law- rence; struck by a truck in a fog at Newport News; Dec. 25, 1942. SIDNEY SMYTHE LINSCOTT, JR., Erie; killed in action on Guadalcanal; Nov., 1942. G. MAX LOUK, Lawrence; killed at Clark Field, Philippines; Dec. 8, 1941. JAMES KEITH LOVELESS, Topeka; killed in plane crash at Roswell, N. M.; Aug. 3, 1944. EARL GEORGE LOWE, JR., Topeka; killed in mid-air collision at Los Alimitos, Calif.; March 1, 1943. ROBERT JOHN MARSHALL, Abilene; killed in active duty in Vire, France; Aug. 7, 1944. ROBERT LESTER MATHEWS, Topeka; killed in action in France; June 11, 1944. IVAN JOSEPH MAY, Topeka, killed in accident in Ariz.; Nov. 12, 1941. JOHN BRIDGER MAYHUGH, Kansas City, Mo.; killed in action on Luzon; Jan. 15, 1945. CURTIS JOHN McCOY, JR., Emporia; killed in action over Mindoro, Philippine Islands; June 20, 1945. WILLIAM WELDON McCRUM, Kansas City, Mo.; killed in car acci- dent at Polatka, Fla.; Dec. 4, 1943. LAWRENCE GENE McGINNIS, Eureka; killed in plane accident in Utah; Dec. 29, 1943. STANLEY WHITEFORD McLEOD, Smith Center; missing in action in European theater; Feb. 26, 1943. JAMES LESLIE McNAUGHTON, Leavenworth; killed in plane crash in Italy; Feb. 2, 1945. MARIAN McSHEA, Medicine Lodge; died at hospital in St. Joseph, Mo.; Aug. 1944. NORMAN RICHARD MEEKS, Wich- ita; killed in plane crash at Blue Springs, Mo.; Feb. 10, 1942. WALTER WILLIAM MEININGER, Louisville, Ky.; died of wounds received in Sicilian Campaign; Aug. 12, 1943. ROBERT CLARENCE MITSCHELE, Lawrence; died in hospital in Long Beach, Calif.; Jan. 10, 1945. GLENN TUCKER MIZE, Bonner Springs; killed in plane crash near Hillsboro, Texas; Aug. 5, 1945. RALPH (RED) EDWIN MORRISON, Helena, Mont.; killed in plane crash in Tampa, Fla.; Dec. 24, 1942. JOHNNY ( JACK) MUSSELMAN, Liberty Center, Iowa; killed in action in France; Nov. 15, 1944. 8 THE JAYHAWKER RAYMOND TARDIN NAPIER, Morris Plains, N. J.; killed in action in France; July 25, 1944. CHARLES WAYNE NEES, Brazil, Ind.; killed in action in Aleutians; May 18, 1943. EUGENE HAROLD NIRDLINGER, Leavenworth; killed in sinking of Jap prison ship; Dec. 15, 1944. JACK NOBLE, JR., Kansas City, Mo.; killed while prisoner of Germans; Feb. 19, 1945. PATRICK JOSEPH O ' CONNOR, JR., Kansas City; killed in sinking of ship in Mediterranean; July 10, 1943. ROBERT EUGENE ODE, Potter; died in San Diego Naval Hospital; April 5, 1944. FRANK WOODROW O ' FLAH- ERTY, Kansas City, Mo.; killed in battle of Midway; June 1942. EDWARD K. OLSEN, Bonner Springs; killed in action at Pearl Harbor; Dec. 7, 1941. STANLEY RAN- DOLPH OLSON, Erie; killed in an airplane crash at Will Rogers Field, Oklahoma City; Aug. 9, 1944. BERT L. OVERCASH, JR., Kansas City; killed in action in France; Dec. 1944. STANLEY LEACH PAINE, Ottawa; killed in action over Germany; Sept. 28, 1944. GEORGE MILTON PARIS, Kansas City, Mo.; down with ship off Okinawa; May 4, 1945. FRANCIS HOLMES PARONTO, Wakeeney; killed on mission in Pacific; July 12, 1943. ELMO LEMONT PATTERSON, Leavenworth; killed in action near New Guinea; Dec. 19, 1942. CHARLES EDWIN PAXTON, Lawrence; killed in action near Germany; March 14, 1945. JO WADE PAYNE, JR., Chanute; drowned in plane crash off Georgia coast; March 27, 1944. JOHN ELLIOTT PENNER, Lawrence; killed when U.S.S. Franklin, naval carrier, was bombed; March 19, 1945. NEIL PENNING- TON, Wichita; killed in plane crash in Pacific; Feb. 1, 1945. OTIS 0. PERKINS, Lawrence; killed in action on Okinawa; April 29, 1945. HERBERT MATHIAS PETERS, Dubuque, Iowa; died in France; Jan. 26, 1945. JOHN STARK PHILLIPS, Leavenworth; killed in plane crash; Sept. 11, 1944. WILLIAM WILSON PHILLIPS, JR., Ros- well, N. Mex.; died in El Paso, Texas; Jan. 6, 1946. CHARLES FRANKLIN PIERSON, Oakley; killed in action in Italy; Oct. 11, 1944. JOHN ALBERT PIERSON, Wa- keeney; killed in plane crash; date unknown. HAROLD C. PLACE, Topeka; killed in plane crash at Sheeler Field, Hawaii; July 25, 1943. ALBERT PLOTKIN, Linbrook, N. J.; killed in plane crash near Flagstaff, Ariz.; Jan. 21, 1943. DONALD BOYD POLLOM, Topeka; missing in action in Pacific; Feb. 4, 1944. FRED ROLLIN POWELL, Chanute; killed in action in France; Oct. 26, 1944. WIL- LIAM SAMUEL PROUT, Denver, Colo.; died in Fitz- simmons Hospital, Denver; Dec. 1 1, 1943. JOHN THOMAS PUCKETT, Wichita; killed in action in Belgium; Jan. 15, 1945. VERNON JOHN RAZAK, Collyer; killed in plane crash in Belgium; Summer 1944. GLESSNER WOODROW REIMER, Kansas City, Mo.; killed in action near Vire, France; July 30, 1944. JAMES ANDREW REINHART, JR., Wichita; died in bombing of Jap prison camp; April, 1945. EARL BOICE REYNOLDS, Colony; killed in plane crash at Sioux City, Ia.; Nov. 30, 1942. DEAN HABERLY RICE, Smith Center; plane shot down over Piave River, Italy; Oct. 20, 1944. JAMES CLARK RICHARDSON, Lawrence; killed in plane crash at Karlsruhe, Germany; Nov. 1, 1945. BROWDER ALEXANDER RICHMOND, JR., Kansas City; killed in plane crash at Wright Field, Ohio; March 5, 1945. DEANE EDWIN RICHMOND, Windsor, Vt.; killed in action in Metz, France; Nov. 19, 1944. FLOYD LEWIS RIEDERER, Holton; killed on bombing mission over Italy; March 14, 1944. CARROLL G. RIGGS, Ta- coma, Wash.; killed in plane crash in the Southwest Pacific; Dec. 17, 1942. JOHN ROLLAND RIISOE, Kinsley; miss- ing in action between Dutch Guinea and British New Guinea; Oct. 1, 1944. CLARENCE JUNIOR ROBINSON, Newton; shot down over Hankow, China; Aug. 24, 1943. WALTER WILLARD RODGERS, Ottawa; died in prison camp at Berga Elster, Germany; March 9, 1944. HAL RUSSELL RUPPENTHAL, Russell; plane disappeared be- tween Brazil and Ascension Island; Dec. 9, 1942. HERBERT KAZUO SADAYUSU, Maui, Hawaii; killed in action in Italy; July 9, 1944. LLOYD IRVIN SAVELY, Greensburg; killed in action in New Guinea; Dec. 16, 1945. HOWARD IDEN SCHLINGLOFF, Marion; died in a Jap prison camp; Dec. 15, 1944. WILLIAM WILSON SEITZ, Salina; died on Eniwetok, Marshall Islands; Oct. 18, 1945. RODNEY WALDEN SELFRIDGE, Liberal; killed in plane accident on Ia Shima; May 20, 1945. HOWARD EUGENE SELLARDS, Burlingame; no details available. ABE SHAFER III, Edgerton, Mo.; died in Great Lakes Naval Training Center Hospital, June 23, 1945. FALL NUMBER, 1946 9 EVAN HOMER SHAIBLE, Salina; killed in crash in Ick- ing, Germany; July 29, 1945. ROBERT JACKSON SID- DONS, Platte, S. Dak.; died at Annapolis; March 1946. NILES RAYMOND SIEBERT, Marion; killed in action in Pacific area; July 20, 1944. GLEN BRADLEY SMITH, Horton; killed in airplane accident in South Pacific; Aug. 6, 1944. JAMES CUNNINGHAM SMITH, Wichita; died in a bombing raid; Sept. 9, 1942. RAYMOND TRACY SMITH, Stillwell, Okla.; killed in Belgium; Dec. 11, 1944. GLENN HOWARD SOELLNER, Ft. Scott; died at Ft. Ben Harrison, Ind.; Dec. 19, 1943. JOHN GLENN SOMERS, JR., Newton; killed in action in Normandy; Aug. 8, 1944. WAYNE CLIFFORD STEELE, Jennings; killed in plane crash near Delhi, La.; Jan. 27, 1944. PAUL RAMSEY STEPHENS, Topeka; plane crashed into sea in attack on Jap cruiser; July 28, 1945. JOHN WHELESS STEPHEN- SON, Albuquerque, N. Mex.; died in Australia; July 18, 1942. THOMAS GRIER STEWART, Wellington; died from wounds received in the battle for St. Lo.; Aug. 12, 1944. VERN V. STEWART, Valley Falls; killed in Nor- mandy; Aug. 25, 1944. RAYMOND CUNNINGHAM STILES, Kansas City; died in plane crash; Oct. 21, 1942. ROBERT ELLSWORTH STODDARD, Green River, Wyo.; died of wounds received at Iwo Jima; March 4, 1945. LAWRENCE IVER STOLAND, Lawrence; killed in air- plane crash near Dutch Harbor; July 21, 1942. DANIEL BERNARR STONE, Wellington; killed in plane collision near Tulsa, Okla.; June 17, 1940. ELMER JACKSON STONE, Ottawa; killed on a mission in China or Eastern India area; Jan. 4, 1944. THOMAS WILLIAM STONE, Vinland; killed in Southwest Pacific; Feb. 6, 1945. JOHN ELMER STRAND, Rockford, Ill.; killed in action in France; Jan. 4, 1945. JAMES PHILIP STRATTON, Hutch- inson; missing over France; June 11, 1944. JEAN THOMAS, Waterville; lost in plane crash in Tyrhennian Sea; June 14, 1944. HENRY FOXALL THORNE, Kingsport, Tenn.; died in England from wounds received in France; Jan. 7, 1945. CHARLES RAYMOND TOBEREN, New York, N. Y.; killed in a fire at Cherry Point, N. Car.; June 3, 1944. JAMES COLEMAN TRAW, Duncan, Okla.; killed in the sinking of a Jap prison freighter; Sept. 7, 1944. ROBERT EMERY TREKELL, Wellington; died on his ship in Pacific; April 22, 1945. WALLACE AUGUSTINE TRUED, Greeley County; killed in a plane crash near El Centro, Calif.; Oct. 11, 1943. JOHN PETER VAN RIXOORT, Keyport, N. J.; killed in action in Belgium; Jan. 15, 1944. FRANCIS MONT- GOMERY VEATCH, Kansas City, Mo.; killed in action over Italy; May 26, 1944. PIERCE LEROY VEITH, Inde- pendence; killed in action over Tarawa; Nov. 19, 1943. WALTER HAROLD VERBANIC, Kansas City; killed in action. CRANSTON GORDON VINCENT, Kansas City, Mo.; died in Navy Hospital at San Diego; Aug. 23, 1945. HAROLD DUMONT WALDECKER, Hutchinson; killed in invasion of Saipan; June 19, 1944. VICTOR GRIESA WALLING, Chicago, Ill.; died in the Pacific area; April 24, 1944. JOSEPH EDWIN WALSH, JR., Dallas, Tex.; killed in airplane crash; Sept. 20, 1943. WIL- LIAM EDWARD WALTER, Fredonia; killed in plane crash in Texas; March 1, 1943. JOHN WESELEY WATER- BURY, JR., Cherryvale; killed in action on Luzon; Feb. 11, 1945. LUCIEN ANDREW WATKINS, Leavenworth; died at Lowry Field, Colo.; Aug. 19, 1945. WILLIAM LOUIS WEBER, Hutchinson; killed in a bomber crash in England; Feb. 13, 1945. RAY GUNTHER WENZEL, Kansas City; killed in sinking of the U.S.S. Indianapolis; July 30, 1945. CHEVEY SCHAEFFER WHITE, Norton; killed in action on Guam; July 22, 1944. ROBERT WILLIAM WHITE- HEAD, Silver Lake; plane lost in Solomon Sea area; Aug. 15, 1943. FRED ORDWAY WICKHAM, JR., Kennett, Mo.; plane crashed near Kosharevo, Bulgaria; March 30, 1944. ALBERT JOSEPH WIELAND, Norton; died in plane crash at Elgin Field, Fla.; Nov. 26, 1942. JOE LAWRENCE WIELAND, Norton; killed in plane crash over Belgium; April 24, 1944. ROBERT SAMUEL WIL- SON, Madison, Wis.; died in Brussels; Sept. 19, 1944. GILBERT LESLIE WORLEY, JR., Kansas City, Mo.; killed in plane crash in Indianapolis, Ill.; May 15, 1943. RALPH MILTON WYATT, Hiawatha; killed in plane crash over London; June 8, 1944. JOHN HENRY YODER, Gallup, N. Mex.; died in acci- dent in Paris, France; Sept. 21, 1945. PAUL BERNARD YOUNG, Wichita; killed in plane crash near Lebanon, Tenn.; Nov. 10, 1945. HERMAN HENRY ZIEGENBUSCH, Ellinwood; died in sinking of ship in Mediterranean Sea; Nov. 26, 1943. JAMES MONROE ZOELLNER, Tonganoxie; killed by sniper fire in Admiralty Islands; March 25, 1944. • RUM, EDITOR • DICK CARMEAN, BUS. MGR. RECOMMENDED READING Meeting a deadline two weeks after the opening of school presented many difficulties, but thanks to a hard-working, understanding staff, the obstacles were overcome and the first issue of the 59th JAYHAWKER is a reality. Of special value and interest is Betty Sara Brothers ' compilation of the University ' s World War II fatalities which follow the annual ' s dedication. Hours of time-con- suming labor were spent gleaning the data from the files of the Alumni Association, and only those persons whose deaths have been confirmed by their immediate families are included. Gordon Thomas ' dedication poetry was written especially for this issue and Fraser English department critics have already pronounced it professional. If you ' re interested in the heavier style of writing, don ' t miss Dr. A. H. Turney ' s AN OPTIMIST LOOKS AT THE FUTURE, and the pro and con student arguments con- cerning the possibilities of war with Russia. Off go the Editor ' s cap and shirt and anything else appro- priate to more short story writers like Bob Minich and Keith Wilson. For slap-happy humor you just can ' t beat OTHELLO and NEMBUTAL JONES. And as pictures make the magazine, there aren ' t enough superlatives to express the admiration we feel for excellent photographers like Hank Brown and Bob Graham. Making short-notice trips to Kansas City and Topeka with- out a word of complaint, both of these men deserve more than a lion ' s share of credit for the pictures in this issue. Yogi Williams ' professional-like cartooning can cer- tainly speak for itself, and after a glance at Frank Miller s caricatures, you know he must be good. The editor especially delights in pictorial feature stories like THE ROARING TWENTES, SAME SONG- 81ST VERSE, and THE JAYHAWKER GOES TO A WEDDING. All in all, it should be enough to say we ' ve eliminated most of what we didn ' t like. Just take off from here on your own. INDEX This One ' s Different 3 Dedication 4 The JAYHAWKER Presents 13 Administration 17 Candidly a Jayhawker 22 An Optimist Looks at the Future 26 Housing Headache 28 And Will We Fight 32 Growth of a Department 34 Only the Beginning 36 A Little on the Finer Side 40 Same Song 81st Verse 44 Three Seasons 46 Othello—The Moor of Venus (the Better) 43 Popular Professors 50 JAYHAWKER Pin-Up Girl 52 Big Wheels on Campus 53 Campus Caricatures 58 The JAYHAWKER Goes to a Wedding 60 The Roaring Twentes 62 Have You 65 Independent Living 66 The New Crop of Organized Independents.. 68 The World, the Flesh, and Nembutal Jones 70 Fraternity Pledges 73 Rush Weak Rush 76 Sorority Pledges 73 hlICI CI Ili 1! „ 111 ICI H hl [6 H Editor: DEAN OSTRUM STAFF Business Manager: DICK CARMEAN Advertising Assistants: HAROLD SANDY BOB WILLIAMS BOB WILSON Photographers: BIRCH DALTON HANK BROWN DUKE D ' AMBRA BOB GRAHAM HERB KAUFMAN JOHN YARNELL Office Assistants: MARY HELEN BAKER MARILYN BARNUM BEE BRADY BETTY BREWER BETTY SARA BROTHERS BARBARA BYRD ANNETTE CRAMER VIRGINIA DANIELS BILL DE LAY BARBARA FELT JANE FERRELL JIM HAWES GEORGE HOLLAND JO ANNE JACOBS ANN LEARNED NANCY MESSENGER SIM MYERS JANE OWEN ETHEL PEARSON LARRY SIMMONS DICK SCOVEL DORIS TIHEN Your fall number cover comes to you courtesy of the lens of Birch Dalton. The culmination of four months of planning, it ' s a four-color shot of new Lindley Hall as seen from across Chi 0 circle Those who saw the sample annual binder in the registra- tion line will recognize the parallel theme of design and lettering in the lower right- hand corner. With a view to the value of an annual ten years hence, we have diverged from the previous partiality of editors for Cover Girls and Cover Boys. Next Issue With the printer ' s breath still warm on the backs of our necks, we almost shudder to think of repeating the delir- ious whirl in another few weeks. Nevertheless, the show must go on and the second number will specialize in Christmas, Home - Coming, more pictorial features, win- ter beauty scenes, and the broad subject of Women. The 1 9 4 7 JAYHAWKER covers are scheduled for dis- tribution with the second issue providing the manu- facturers deliver according to contract specifications. Editorial Assistants: ALLAN CROMLEY BILLIE HAMILTON ELAINE THALMAN KEITH WILSON Art Contributors: BOB CALDWELL WAYNE GALLENTINE FRANK MILLER, JR. LU ANNE POWELL YOGI WILLIAMS Contributors: ANN ALEXANDER RUSSELL BARRETT BETTY BERRY BETTY SARA BROTHERS ALLAN CROMLEY DON DIEHL HERB KAUFMAN ALICE GOLDSWORTHY BILLIE HAMILTON TERRY HERRIOTT ELOISE HODGSON DICK HAWKINSON NEWELL JENKINS LARRY MILLER BOB MINICH JIM MORDY BETTY JEAN NELSON WILL NOBLE MARION SHELDON ELAINE THALMAN DR. A. H. TURNEY KEITH WILSON Secretary: JUDY TIHEN Advertising Manager: EARL STANTON Photographic Editor: HANK BROWN Art Editor: YOGI WILLIAMS Sales campaign posters by LU ANNE POWELL 12 THE JAYHAWKER - - apt ecawal It was a quiet night at the front near Metz back in September of 1944. Only an occasional staccato brrrrrrp . . from a Kraut schmeizer gun cut the silence and at clock-like intervals death-loaded shells sliced the stillness above as they sped to a Jerry cross- road on the other side of the river. Joe Dough knew the folks at home were still on the job when he saw the sheet-lightning flash and heard the delayed crackle of splintering steel. We had a great team in those days an unbeatable one to be exact. But a lot of water has flowed down the Mozelle since that night in France, and if Joe happens to be among the other lucky Doughs who made it home, I wonder what he ' s thinking of tonight. If he ' s attending school on the G. I. Bill, there must be a whole lot of thoughts running through his mind as he looks about his classroom. On the surface there ' s very little to remind him of the old days when life meant so little and could be snuffed out so easily. Oh sure, a khaki shirt here and there, a pair of worn-out combat boots or a flight jacket. It ' s sort of hard to realize the fellow in front of him spent two long, monotonous years in a prison camp near Munich. Who would ever suspect the guy beside him with the dirty cords got the Silver Star with the Marines on Iwo Jima, or the serious little girl over by the window had a WAC company in London. It doesn ' t make much sense to Joe when he picks up his annual, reads its dedication, and then glances at a newspaper or turns on the radio. The paper screams headlines of the latest crisis with Tito. The commentator tells of street fighting in Palestine and Trieste, of tension in Korea. Most seem to have for- gotten there ' s a civil war in China and powerful units of Uncle Sam ' s fleet are maneuvering in the Medi- terranean. People still talk occasionally of the A-bomb, but to most the revelation of atomic fission is about as real as the possibility of meeting Lena the Hyena at a mid-week dance. When he stops to think of it, Joe doesn ' t much like the looks of things today. We had a great team a year ago, but today it ' s a different story. Joe can ' t help thinking that something ' s lacking. For lack of better terminology, Joe might call that certain something, Faith. Faith in convictions? Yes, but mostly Faith in the future. Words which pledge peace—whether uttered by Byrnes, Stalin, or the Pope—can be mighty hollow if they ' re not backed up with Faith. Recently Joe received a letter from a fellow named Willy Antowiak who lives in Holland. His outfit had been billetted in Willy ' s town during a rest period away from the front. It ' s a mighty important letter to Joe for it answered a lot of his questions. A part reads as follows: We often think of the terrible wartime and the American soldiers, who came over our houses. I think you will remember those days too. It is already two years ago that you came to Hoensbroek. We shall never forget this time. The French say Partir, c ' est mourir un pen. ' It is possible that the expression is true, but I believe, as long as we live, we shall never forget the friends who came so suddenly, stayed so short a time and left again. It is a great pity not all the soldiers could go home again. Many are buried on a great cemetery in the neighborhood. In whole Limburg and the Nether- lands they honour their remembrance and we shall always take care of the cemetery in Margraten and teach our children to bring flowers and pray there. As I already said, it is going better over here. There is a lot of work to do and we shall solve all the after- war difficulties. Yes, that letter ' s a mighty important piece of paper to Joe for it seems to answer a lot of very puzzling questions for him. Maybe Joe should write to Willy. Maybe he should ask Willy to teach the children to pray for some other people—some Americans who are living. Maybe the children could pray that we, too, like the Dutch, might find that thing called Faith. FALL NUMBER, 1946 -le Jay Presents 13 ss o r I lam S C7Ileaktieel and cika The Editor had a brainstorm; Yogi Williams had an inspiration; and the 1947 JAYHAWKER has Heath- cliffe and Heoweez. In the creation of these two new characters, the sky was the limit for no one has ever seen a real Jayhawk. Personifying a bird presents other natural problems and, obviously, no bird, with the one exception of a chick, ever had a figure anything like Heoweez! As for the exaggeration of the bills, Yogi ' s only explana- tion was that he just likes them that way. Starting work for the JAYHAWKER back in the fall of 1941, Gene Williams completed two years of pre- medicine before entering service in June of ' 43. During operations in Europe, he served as a company aid man in the 71st Infantry Division of the Third U. S. Army. Coming home last April after eighteen months overseas, Yogi soon found he had a lot in common with Theta Virginia Tolle. Both live in El Dorado. Although Milton Caniff, well-known creator of Terry and Yogi — he had an inspiration. the Pirates, recently revealed that Virginia Larson, 1.946 jay- hawker beauty queen, was his inspiration for Jane Allen, Yogi swears on his honor he had no such inspiration for his Heoweez. For obvious reasons the identity of Gene ' s model for his fall num- ber pin-up girl on page 52 must remain a staff secret. After working with him for two years before the war, the Editor was more than happy this fall to welcome Williams back to his old job and appoint him as Art Editor of the 1947 JAYHAWKER. Gene enjoys his cartooning so much that he ' s given up medi- cine for the Fine Arts School and a major in commercial drawing. As you leaf through your annual, you ' ll know he made a right decision. CaTp Beau CHANCELLOR MALOTT As one treads the green carpet toward the large mahogany desk he meets a tall, friendly man who shakes hands warmly and makes his visitor feel at ease. Suave, bland Chancellor Deane W. Malott is the man whose responsibility it is to administer the scholastic education of almost 9,000 students. Believing that today is history ' s most in- teresting period in which to live, he voices enthusiasm which reaches out to encourage the student to take a greater interest in the dra- matic parade of current events. He is opti- mistic about the international future; he favors a fair but very firm policy toward Russia. How would he use a conjectural gift of money to the University? Housing! Asked about the function of the student council, he replies that it is a liason between student opinion and the administration. —Allan Cromley A ( • • strat • DEAN STOUFFER The University recently has created a new office, Dean of the Uni- versity. This impressive sounding position is handled by Dean Ellis B. Stouffer. His job includes chairmanship of the university budget com- mittee, faculty appointments, and assignment of space for the departments. From point of service, Dean Stouffer is one of the oldest faculty mem- bers; this is his 33rd year at K. U. He was dean of the Graduate School for 24 years and chairman of the math department for five years. He plays golf for relaxation and, considering his mathematical background, he is probably cursing some parabolic equation when he slices one into the rough. Asked about Einstein ' s theory of relativity he says, Not too tough. Easy to read the other man ' s work. —Allan Cromley DEAN REESE This southern gentleman usually can be found in room 215, Bailey Chem. Lab. J. Allen Reese, dean of the School of Pharmacy, came to Kansas in 1940. His complaisant manner and faint drawl betray hs former habitat, Virginia. After attending Medical College of Virginia and the University of Florida he entered industry as a scientist of the mortar and pestle. In 1930 he substituted for his former professor and has been in the educa- tional division of pharmacy since that time. Wedding bells rang after he came to Mt. Dread; his wife is a K. U. graduate. He believes that he will never succumb to the higher salaries offered in the pharmaceutical industry. His faculty friends regard him as the most insatiable and patient fisher- man they know. In politics he is a democrat and points out, You may quote me. Cromley DEAN STOCKTON Prospective Rockefellers and Morgans may take notice of the fact that our School of Business has a national placement market and is the only school in Kansas whose graduates may take the CPA exams in New York and New Jersey. Dean of the Business School is bald, tough-minded Frank T. Stockton. A former varsity football captain and Phi Beta Kappa at Allegheny University, he is outspoken and believes that the business world holds few places for introverts, that campus politics is an excellent avocation for the business major. Of the OPA— A hopeless rearguard fight against price rise. On the international situation— I expect to spend the rest of my life in an armed camp. —Allan Cromley DEAN JONES My name is Jacob Oscar, but my friends call me ' J. 0. ' Dean J. 0. Jones is the affable, i nformal, pipe-devoted native Kansan who leads our men of the slide rule and transit. Except for projects in Idaho, West Vir- ginia, and on the Mississippi River, he has engineered on Mt. Oread most of the time since his KU graduation in 1912. An admirer of our A Cappella Choir, J. 0. believes that extra-curricular activities should play a part in every engineer ' s campus life. A characteristic informality is his classroom regulation that sleeping is allowed but snoring is verboten. When asked his job, Dean Jones quotes his own adage, A dean is a man who is too smart to be chancellor and not smart enough to be a professor. —Allan Cromley DEAN NELSON Grave, sincere, deep-thinking J. H. Nelson is the dean of the Graduate School. A graduate of Cornell University, he came to K. U. as an associate professor of English in 1925. One is usually surprised to find that Dean Nelson ' s avocation is farming. During the war he ran a large dairy farm near Lawrence. Believing that good students establish the teacher and that good teachers establish the school, his ambition is to make the University a center of scholarship. He regards teaching as an art and thinks that extra-curricular activities should interfere in no way with academic studies. As chairman of the committee on aids and awards, Dean Nelson wants to set up many more exchange scholarships with other nations. —Allan Cromley DEAN SMITH World War II veteran, George B. Smith, Dean of the School of Educa- tion, heads the throng of ex-service men returning to Mt. Oread. Youngish, unaffected, his completely civilian appearance belies his martial record. A graduate of the army ' s formidable Command and General Staff school, Lt. Col. Smith served with operations section, G-3, 15th Army in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and Germany. He possesses fruit salad galore, including two battle stars and the purple heart. Dean Smith believes that most veterans will study more intelligently and pursue a more direct course toward a particular goal than they did be- fore the war. Did he like the army? Lt. Col. Smith replies with an emphatic Yes! —Allan Cromley Kauf man-Graham DEAN LAWSON Very few college students, graduate from K.U. without at one time having changed enrollment or dropped a course; when this happens, the man they must convince is Paul B. Lawson, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts Sciences. Bald, bluff but candid, he startles many a freshman with his quick-spoken and positive manner. Born in India of Methodist missionary parents, he enjoys the associa- tion with his congregation at West Side Presbyterian Church, where he preaches every Sunday. He is proud of his easy accessibility to the student; he confers with more students than most college deans. To the often-voiced student anxieties as to what to major in, he advises, Don ' t worry too soon about specializing; master what you are doing now. —Allan Cromley DEAN MOREAU A lawyer ' s most important qualification is self-confidence. This is the opinion of stocky, sly, self-confident Frederick J. Moreau, Dean of the Law School. A showman in the classroom, he is a Philadelphia lawyer at wriggling out of student snares. (This showmanship is practiced with a different twist by the whistlers in front of the law barn. ) Dean Moreau has never been in politics, thinks men of the legal profession have a superior understanding of human nature, does not re- gard lawyers as being overly cynical. He believes that the ability to read carefully will always create a demand for legally trained men in all reaches of society. On the international situation he quotes Francis Leiber: The difference between governments is that ' over there, ' governments charter liberties; here, people charter governments. —Allan Cromley DEAN SWARTHOUT That din and babel one hears as he passes Frank Strong comes from the School of Fine Arts. Administering this wonderful institution where the women outnumber the men is regal, stern, visaged Dean Donald M. Swarthout. Born and raised, as he terms it, in a menagerie of musical instruments, he studied abroad four years at the Royal Censervatoiy of Music in Leipzig and one year in Paris. This is his 24th year at Kansas University. His cousin, Gladys Swarthout, appears this winter in the university concert series. Although probably classed as a longhair in the jazz vernacular, he has a sympathetic ear for swing; he enjoys some of the music of Kostelanetz and Goodman. His one qualification: that swing should not be all-absorb- ing in the person ' s musical appreciation. —Allan Cromley Kaufman-Graham DEAN WAHL Unfamiliar to most Oreadites, but of great significance in Kansas City hospitals, Dr. Harry R. Wahl is Dean of the Kansas University Medical School. Brought up in medical surroundings (his father was a doctor) and Johns Hopkins educated, Dean Wahl is proud of his profession and the men whose training he directs. His school of medicine ranks high in the nation. Dean Wahl is a specialist in pathology and a member of Sigma Xi, A.O.A., and Phi Beta Kappa. He insists that the first prerequisite for the medical profession must be the individual ' s unimpeachable integrity. No medical recluse, he has been active in international clubs and debating societies. Does he favor national socialization of medicine? He answers, Please, let ' s not debate that one. —Allan Cromley DEAN WERNER Can two live as cheaply as cm? What is the best frat on the Hill? These are samples of the 64 dollar questions encountered daily by Dean of Student Affairs Henry Werner. Besides being an adviser to men, he counsels the functioning of most campus activities and evidences his re- search chemistry background by teaching a class in food analysis. He regards himself as a listening post and certainly not a campus conscience. Englishborn, witty, and approachable, Dean Werner laughs about the change in coed conventions on the campus; in former days a crimson tipped cigaret butt would have been cause for faculty consternation. Routine-hating, he starts each day with a certain prayer: Please make today different from yesterday. His prayer is always answered. —Allan Cromley DEAN HABEIN A Minnesotan by birth, a Jayhawker by adoption, Miss Margaret Habein just happened into the teaching profession. Came the evolution into administrational work, a few positions in girls ' schools, and presto- K.U. ' s new dean of women. Tall, youthful Miss Habein likes people, and consequently, her job. In her few weeks in office she has found nothing but top people. She is extremely impressed with the sense of responsibility and keen interest in the school taken by the students. And I don ' t limit that to girls, she quickly adds. This is her first position in a coeducational school, and she is finding the new male problem most interesting. Growing up in the land of lakes made her a fiend for winter sports— skiing, skating, and ice boating. Her favorite game is basketball, however, and her primary worry at the moment is seeing only half the games this winter in crowded Hoch. —Don Diehl all photos by Hank Brown 1 er aw 0 M1C1; Candid The roar of motorcycles is heard with the screams of pedestrians as mechanized Jayhawkers burn up the hill to make that 8;00, Duane Postlethwaite calmly sheds the life blood of Parisian Knights, an ex-tax `cab, which was dastardly done-in by the Fourteenth Street hill, Bruce Coffin and Elden Kiddoo get ready to strike out for Bailey Lab atop the ATO skooter, mod- ern man ' s answer to the horse. ,ay 1 III it -..■••••■••■■•=. Roger Athen and Mary Longnec•er inspect Muss Musselman ' s Tom Bailey and Joe Turner expose Barbara Winn and 1922 Dodge. It was originally intended to be a prop in the Lost Ann Alexander to the rigors of life in Tom ' s Fijijeep. Weekend. Oh Hell, Let ' s re-enlist! Sunshine bounces off the glis- tening finish of K.U. Number One as it speeds Past West Ad, deliberately crowding fifteen miles per hour. Phil Hartley ' s broken-down Buick doubles between escorting beauty queens and doing taxi duty between the Union and Snow Hall, Botany students get impressions of grass before exams. Any relation between this and the following picture is purely coincidental. The University is swelled by a record breaking enrollment, and even the ash trays are crowded, Grades rise as the grass goes down under t w o sidewalk bookworms. Dick Tracy points a menacing whistle at re- calcitrant pedestrians caught in the between-class traffic jam. Mabel Baker learns how to write out No books today in eight different languages for the benefit of exchange students in the Union Book Store. Georgia Lee Westmoreland, Donna Mueller, Mary Lou Mathews, and Bonnie Oswald decide to sit down and call a spade, a spade. WORN 1111111011111--- George Francis waivers undecidedly as he is caught up in the Old Party Line before the Young Republican ' s booth in front of Frank Strong. Maxine fiddles while Professor Geltch burns a trium- phant smile into the next page of Beethoven. Dick Henderson, Mary Jane Holzman, Jim Sa:!ee, Betty Bacon, Bill Lytle and Virginia cop- pedg glide to some smooth platters at a Wed- nesday night get-together at the ADPi house. Corbinites, Virginia Wickert, Mar- ion Mills, Louine Brown, and Nor- ma Jean Pyke, compare notes after closing hours. Jack Gove casts glowing glances at Eddie Brass during a Tri-Delt-Phi Gam hour dance. Early morning band practice shows a telling effect as three drummers pound away with closed eyes. Adrea Hinkel, Georgiann Bennington, Ber- niece Hughes, Virginia Powell, Virginia David, and Mary Crow crowd around the 013 Music Box at a Miller Hall Pajama Party. Glen Kappelman and Bill Guil- foyle, officers of the Young Demo- crat Club, get detailed instructions from a big wheel-horse before a gath- ering of the clan. Jeanne Gorbut, Jane Owen, a rushee, and Pa- tricia Kelly receive Rush Week coffee from Mother Baldwin, who is entering her twenty-fourt.5 year as housemother for the Gamma Phi ' s. Chancellor Mallott watches the game as Governor Schoep- pel eyes the crowd which gath- ered to watch the K.U.-T.C.U. clash. Not Egyptian slaves working on a pyramid, but workmen re- fitting the catacombs under the stadium for veterans. Bewildered freshman looks desperately about for raisin pie during the lunch hour. Dorothy Brewer, Trumpet major from Olathe, adds volume to the old adage, He who tooteth not his own bazoo, the same shall not be tooted. 26 THE JAYHAWKER An - i_ooks at the uture commoni,ail OK a 4ww4s, hdt cll. %Li-Wel over this country this fall it will be said that educational institutions are opening under the most unusual conditions in their history. Of course this is true, but one wonders how much this means to the student body and to the public. If education functioned as it should, every institution in the coun- try would be devoting its major efforts to helping young people understand the complex and forbidding conditions that face them and the world. The second phase of World War II, ending with V-J Day, is but little more than a year past. For a few weeks immediately following the use of the atomic bomb the people of the world seemed to have been shocked into a realization that war must not be permitted in the future. Now many look at the atomic bomb as another inevitable aspect of war, just as the airplane and the submarine, rather than an indication that war must end. Frequently in the last few weeks there have been startling press releases—one to the effect that in France another war is being accepted as inevitable and other statements of similar import. Very re- cently you may have read of preventive war. True enough, some editors have scathingly indicated talk of warfare as criminal. this we can agree, if it is talk calculated to produce or bring it about, but warning against warfare and warning against the trend of events that might precipitate war, such as that recently made by Professor Urey, is not criminal. In the year that has passed since V-J Day there have been incidents and reports that make many un- easy about the conduct and outcomes of the recent world conflict. A metropolitan paper recently carried a powerful editorial dealing with the well-known fact that during the past great conflict human life was conscripted but the producers of the sinew of war had to have their profits. Already there have been investigations of war profiteering in our own capitol. We have read how soldiers were killed by defective ammunition and defective supplies. Many people question seriously the happenings in China, holding that the part that our country has played there is not in accord with principles of true democracy. Cyni- cism and criticism of what appears to be rampant imperialism is common and widespread. Within our own country many events have given further concern. Much is said and written about pro- duction strikes. Prices have risen rapidly and there seems to be no adequate program of adjusting scar- city of materials to demand; black markets abound. Some reputable writers say that a very dangerous type of inflation is already here and reputable periodi- cals predict a depression—soon and severe. Among a multitude of other incidents one might mention the election in Athens, Tenn essee; the fact that at the time our government was demanding free elections in a foreign country, thousands of citizens in one of our states were petitioning for a free elec- tion in their own state; the rapid development of race prejudices; the increase in lynchings; the turmoil in labor management relations. No exhaustive catalogue is necessary. There is nothing new about the situation except that with the coming of the atomic bomb there is an urgency that never existed before. It really seems to be one world or none. The old formulas do not seem to FALL NUMBER, 1946 27 serve, hence cynicism and pessimism increase. To there is only one sound basis for an optimistic outlook. That basis is the belief that educational institutions in our country could assume the major objective mentioned above and could expedite its implementation. So far this objective which we may call social, economic and political literacy has never been in reality a major one. It has appeared by inference in statements of objective. There has been much talk of citizenship and teaching democracy, but no implementation that w ould permit the development of genuine social, economic, and political literacy. The reasons for this situation are many and com- plex. One will be discussed at length as a major factor. Recently, General Chis- holm, Canada ' s deputy min- ister of National Health, published an article called Can Man Survive? He says, and I believe him, that man ' s natural and inevit- able future lies in the further development and use of his brain, his ability to think, a n d further, these influences, which everywhere limit man ' s thinking . . . and disturb his judgment are his `taboos ' . Now taboos are not just social sanctions set up in primitive tribes. They are present in all societies. They are the social sanctions set up in all tribes by interested and powerful groups and authoritatively imposed on the young to protect the privileges, ideas, or faiths of the old people. They affect attitudes about such things as money systems, educational systems, systems of government, sexual education and marriage, clothes, health, foods, and religion. Old ideas and customs are generally called `good ' or ' sound ' , and new ideas, or experimental thinking or behavior are usually labelled ' bad ' , ' un- sound ' , ' communist ' , ' heretical ' , or any of many othe r words. Like individuals, educational institutions are sub- ject to taboos and serve in turn to implement them. Therefore, to hope that man can improve his think- ing sufficiently and quick enough to survive is hop- ing for much. Yet I do hope for various reasons. Two in particular are appropriate here. In this great land there is still more individual freedom than anywhere in the world. The educa-. tional institutions have not yet become dominated completely as they are in totalitarian states. Ours is the only great nation where there is even a chance of an education effective and free enough to offer hope for the development about which General Chis- holm writes. And further, one out- standing condition among the unusual conditi ons men- tioned in the first paragraph may have far reaching sig- nificance. That is the nature of the population in most of the institutions of higher learning all over the nation. This population can be divided into two parts. The first is comprised largely of service men and women, most of whom are gravely concerned about their future and can appreciate the seriousness of the world situation. The second and smaller division has apparently less awareness of the import of recent events. They are planning a future as if certain of a return to the status quo ante. The more active and vociferous of these will endeavor to reconstruct the collegiate atmosphere of the campuses of past years. If the first of these groups become the dominant influence upon our campuses, they might be of ma- terial value in aiding the development of an educa- tional program less crippled by the taboos previously discussed. Whether they will do this or whether they will follow the other population into an escape situa- (Continued on Page 80) Slap, Th ink, and Read! Chosen to write the feature article for the first issue of the 1947 JAYHAWKER, Dr. A. H. Turney will be remembered by most students as the short, stout man who gave them their entrance examinations. Holding B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Minnesota, he is Director of the Guidance Bureau and one of the hill ' s most widely read and re- spected professors. The editor enthusiastically recommends this contribution as must reading for all thinking university students. 30 THE JAYHAWKER When construction is completed, three new emer- gency housing projects will accommodate another 310 single men and married faculty members. Under the east side of the stadium McCook Hall will house 64 men by November 1 in two dormitory rooms. Sunny- side addition, consisting of 186 four-room apart- ment s in 31 barracks type buildings, will house both married faculty members and students and single men by the start of the Spring semester. An H -shaped dormitory west of the stadium will house 160 men in single rooms by the end of November. Complete with maple floors and plywood walls, but without marble columns, this unit is the personal pride of Housing Director Youngberg. K. U. students, along with nearly everyone else, aren ' t writing any sonnets about their housing, but 9,000 of them have descended on Lawrence and vicinity and have found places to live. The Jay- hawker ' s present post-war home may resemble an army barracks or the hall closet back home, may be miles from the campus or may rent in the stratos- phere, but he can console himself with the thought Three makes a crowd when its study time at the Louis Kissinger abode in Sunflower village. that the situation won ' t get much worse and will probably get better. Students still unhappy about the situation and future prospects can always exercise that one of the four freedoms which permits griping. They can write their Congressmen; they can carry their troubles to the Housing Director; they can complain to the OPA; or in last resort, they can look up their old chaplain, and he ' ll probably hear their story and respond with words of comfort. That post-war dream house, or even a pre-war one, is still just a dream; and the competition from bowling allies, store fronts, war memorials and other non-housing construction is hard to beat. A complicating factor in the housing situation is the probability that without rent control many apart- ment and room rents would climb out of the reach of the average student. During the short lapse of price controls few rent increases occurred, but this lack of increases resulted mainly from the certainty that at least rent controls would be restored. The K.U. Chapter of the American Veterans Committee conducted a survey of climbing rents and attempted evictions during the OPA recess. This survey revealed scattered raises and threatened raises averaging 20% plus several cases of attempted evictions. If the pres- ent trend toward the lifting of price controls leads to the end of rent ceilings, students living in private rooms or apartments will face the costly prospect of bidding against each other for Lawrence ' s crowded facilities. Even with ceilings in effect, landlords have ap- plied American ingenuity to find more or less direct methods of ignoring them. Extra charges may be made for the furniture, use of electrical appliances, or other such extras. The landlord may require a deposit on the room, later to be forgotten, or may specify that the student ' s wife do a certain amount of housework to supplement the rent paid under the ceiling. In other cases the matter of ceilings has been completely avoided by failure to list rooms or apartments with the rent control office. These law violations can occur only with the co- operation of the student renter, although any intima- FALL NUMBER, 1946 31 Smith Hall takes up quarters in the old Unitarian church. tion of action on the dent ' s part usually results in attempted eviction. These evictions may be plished by the troublesome legal process, or extra-legally, again by using Yankee in- genuity to let the student know he ' s no longer come. Like enforcement of most laws, the effectiveness of rent ceilings depends on plaints from those who have been asked to pay ceiling rent. For students who fear the results of a direct complaint to OPA, the K.U. Chapter of A.V.C. has vol- unteered to report such violations to the local price control office. Although few, if any, students are completely sat- isfied with their post-war homes, the housing lem is most serious for married students, particularly those with children, and for negro students. Housing officials can emerge from a maze of figures and dict that all unmarried students may be able to find housing in Lawrence one of these days. But married students will be riding that bus from Sunflower lage for several semesters. Married students find that those little bundles of joy complicate the housing problem considerably and complete the farce of at- tempting to subsist on $90 a month of subsistence pay. To remain within the bounds of accepted language, the best thing to say about negro housing is nothing. As in so many other matters, the negro ' s lot in ing is not a good one, and adds weight to the conten- tion that equal rights for the negro is seldom found outside the Constitution. Finding a place to eat is also a problem for the negro student, since the only acces- sible source of meals for negroes in Lawrence is the Union cafeteria. Privately operated restaurants refuse to serve food to negroes, although local officials fully drafted them as equals into the armed forces. The unavoidable conclusion is, You were good enough to fight for me, but not to eat with me. Such a conclusion is not easy to understand, except for those who can say one thing and believe another. Everett Bell, President of the Negro Student As- sociation, has said about all that can be said about negro housing facilities in one word, Lousy. The average negro room or apartment is much less tractive than facilities for white students. Those who have the job of thinking over University problems might well give some thought to negro housing. As long as it remains at present standards, housing for our negro students will be one of our primary worries. Jdualion cc ' 11 g,e and at-di p27.62.4a44 32 THE JAYHAWKER A n d .Ava62. t, Ccdlee Au4i62)b, el a 4 lie 4elleue2 ate ala2k 62, 4e ineo,da4le. With the hustle and bustle of reconversion which has followed the most recent war there has come an ominous overtone in international politics. Another war, more vicious, more terrible, more destructive than can be imagined by man is inevitably in the offing! Uppermost in the minds of most thoughtful Americans is the fact that, although we fought to- gether for three years, the state departments of Russia and the United States are working at cross- purposes. Upon no subject yet discussed, except an expected lip-service to peace, have these two great powers agreed. And, under present trends in foreign policies, it looks as though the bald eagle and the bear will be fighting the battle to the end. It is impossible to discuss the Russian Situation without referring to ex-Commerce Secre- tary Wallace ' s recent political mouthings. War with Russia is inevitable if we pursue our present stand. Mr. Wallace made that only too clear. Perhaps some of us believe that the Russians are afraid of us. If that is the case, I believe that we had better think again. The Russians have no reason whatsoever to fear the United States if it should come to a clash of arms. The knowledge for making atomic bombs is either now in Russian hands or it soon will be. And their manpower is limitless. The United States has carefully built a wall of satellites to protect her should war come. Our tremendous wealth has made it virtually impossible for any Latin American nation, with the stubborn exception of Argentina, to do anything that would alienate the American State Department. They must trail along or forfeit American good will in the form of good solid American dollars. Great Britain is pitifully weak. Another war at the present moment, should she be forced to face that war alone for even a very short period, would wreck her entire national economy. The British Empire would split into a thousand little pieces. She has al- ready had to grant unwilling concessions to parts of the empire in order to guarantee American favor. Should the United States adopt a conciliatory view toward Russia, England would be forced to do like- wise. But there is no reason to fear that the United States will adopt a conciliatory attitude in Russian affairs. The people of the United States fear Russia and communism more than anything else on the face of the earth. Never was there such a fear of Germany before the war. Look at the facts. The America First Committee, embracing that especially popular Am e r i c an Charles Lindberg, wielded tremenduous power in our national politics immediately preceeding the last war. No such or- ganization wields such power now. We did not fear Hitler. We called the last war the Phony War . We do fear Stalin. We know the terribleness of the coming war. Under our present national thought process which makes it impossible for capitalism and communism to work together in the same world, we must, in or- der to preserve our nation, fight Russia. If we sin- cerely believe as a people that it is our God-given duty to dictate the conscience of the rest of the world, it is inevitable that Russia must fight us. We are engaged in a life or death struggle in that ancient game of power politics and history has proved that balance of power diplomacy can lead to only one conclusion—ultimate war. When the clash will come, no one can predict. That it is inevitable under a system of power politics, no one can deny. e J FALL NUMBER, 1946 33 Russia? 2 4o24 palling an punc t, la)1 Afdle24, Co, , ege gon,o4, izedic d. peace in 0it24 In writing this article I place myself in a position of authority where there can be little authority. This bogey of a war with Russia oozes out of our prejudices and bounces across the headlines of our evening pa- pers. Our present degeneracy culminates in those persons—a number of whom are well-informed— who seriously advocate or predict, usually on the basis of inevitability, a war with the Soviet Union. Opinions on the subject are in general floundering in a slough of misinformation, closed minds, and sin- cere hopes for a better world. While hardly predicting perpetual peace, I do feel strongly that the reasons why we must not have war will be important in achieving peace for this gen- eration. I emphatically believe that unless we can work out such problems—vast as they admittedly are—on levels other than that of armed conflict, we should take little pride in our accumulation of knowledge and have little hope for civilization itself. This narrowing of perspective and growing con- cern with the possibility of a war with Russia in the near future is largely the result of the clash of Amer- ican and Russian foreign policy on the diplomatic level. Without intending in the least to belittle pub- lic opinion, it should be recognized that our opinions do tend to vary from day to day and in proportion to the emphasis placed upon certain incidents by pub- lic figures and columnists. It should also be pointed out that the inexperienced diplomacy of both this country and the Soviet Union has admirably at- tempted this past year to bring issues into the open, but has only crudely begun to grasp toward a realistic world working order. But beyond this, most of us know almost nothing about and make little effort to understand the country so lucidly pictured as the men- ice to our bank accounts and peace of mind. In the 1930 ' s there was a definite trend in the U.S.S.R. towards a genuine political democracy quite compatible with the achievements of western civiliza- tion. We can afford to remember that the evidence of World War I clearly indicates our failure in intro- ducing democratic institutions into countries with radically different backgrounds of militarism or serf- dom; these countries must work out their problems in the light of their own traditions. During the thirties Russia moved rapidly towards an economic democ- racy which the United. States, even with its Jeffersons, Lincolns and Whitmans, has not yet at- tained. This trend may or may not have permanently lost itself in the nationalism of the past war. Russia cannot, and from all evidences does not, want war—least of all at the present time in the face of atomic energy. Her leaders and her people are well-occupied these days—rebuild- ing a country, an inconceivably large part of which was totally devastated by the German armies. The absorption of possibly 25,000,000 casualties, the act- ually known loss of 100 Russian soldiers for each American lost, has oriented the Russians towards peace. The entire energy of the country must now be directed into capital goods to rebuild industry, and consumer goods for a higher standard of living. As have both we and the English In the past, the Russians are probably asking today for more than they really expect . . . . existing in a world where this is common practice, they stand to achieve something they feel necessary to their national security. There seems to be every reason to assume that Russia will never in the next ten or twenty years attack the United States; it should be inconceivable that the (Continued on Page 80) G r o t Prominent for years in the international field of psychology, Dr. Raymond H. Wheeler (below) now heads the psychology staffs of the University, Men- finger Foundation, and Winter Hospital. ftwoon...- Therapeutic treatment such as that pictured above is an important bart of the service given at the Alenninger Foundation and Win- ter Hospital in Topeka. t h e psychological staffs of Topeka ' s Winter Veterans Administration Hospital and Men- ninger Foundation with the University ' s Department of Psychology, the State Board of Regents last summer grew an oak from an acorn. As a result, the University of Kansas now boasts one of the largest, best equipped and staffed psychology departments in the world. It all started late in the spring of 1946 when Dr. R. H. Wheeler, department head, met in Washing- ton, D. C., with other internationally prominent psychologists upon the invitation of General Omar N. Bradley. Emerging from this meeting was the most ambitious program for the training of clinical psychologists in the history of medicine and psy- chology. A proposed 40 billion dollar expansion project of the Veterans Administration includes the services of 20 thousand psychologists, 20 thousand psychia- trists, 40 thousand social case workers, and the completion of 179 hospitals. The University of Kansas training unit for clinical psychologists is one of twenty established through the cooperation of the Veterans Administration at twenty of the larger uni- versities of the country. According to Dr. Daniel Blain, psychiatrist of the Veterans Administration staff, eight million out of the 20 million veterans of World War II are suffer- ing to some degree from personality maladjustment. Out of the total number of veterans needing mental aid, 80 per cent will recover without medical care, BERTUZZI ROBISON STEVENS FAMBROUGH CRAWFORD O rs A y the Be 0 0 g The star to which K. U. football fans have fastened their grid hopes for ten long, discouraging years be- gan this year to shine with a genuine, increasing brightness. The new head coach, George Sauer, brings a highly-respected and driving, yet popular, force into an athletic system already two years on its way to game-winning operation by the hard work and energetic resourcefulness of Ernie Quigley, K. U. ' s athletic director. Football experts throughout the Big Six applauded Quigley ' s wisdom in bringing to Mt. Oread a head coach with one of the Midwest ' s most outstanding football backgrounds. In the space of six short months, Sauer has already won great respect and confidence from a team into which he has installed an all out sixty minute drive to win. Sauer himself, in his college days earned a brilliant playing record. The large and powerful Nebraskan was first team All-American fullback in 1933. He is one of the four men in conference history to hang up All Big Six honors for three consecutive years, gaining this distinction in 1931, ' 32, and ' 33. He climaxed his All-American record by winning the East-West games most valuable player award as he scored both touch- downs in the West ' s 12 to 0 triumph in the 1933 shrine contest. Then he co-captained the college All Stars in the first game of a now famous series against the world ' s professional champions. Later he fullbacked the Green Bay Packers and then spent five successful years as head mentor at New Hampshire University. From there the rugged Nebraskan en- tered the Navy, serving for four years, including sea duty on the Enterprise. Our head coach has an outstanding record, most important to Jayhawk rooters because it shows conclusively that he has the experience, the leadership, and the all around ability to produce winners on the gridiron. Headman George Sauer and his hard-working staff are building up a football system at Kansas Uni- versity that is highly organized, highly respected, and above all else, is showing results. The Jayhawkers lifted a red hot lid on their 1946 pigskin parade by an upset zero-zero tie withT.C.U. and a convincing 21-13 victory over Denver. Much heralded as the conference dark horse in pre-season predictions, the Kansas squad has thus far turned in a performance that is ON REIGLE MONROE PENNY SCHMIDT PATTEE SMALL TOMLINSON EGNATIC McNUTT D. JOHNSON making Big Six football apprehensively sit up and take notice of a school whose gridiron star is rapidly rising. Encouraging as early successes are, the student bocl must realize the immensity of building from the ground up. The fact that results thus far have been very gratifying is a special tribute to the ability and efforts of Coach Sauer, his five praiseworthy assistant coaches and most directly to the fifty-five gridsters who toiled through spring practice and the one hun dred degree heat of August workouts to emerge from a field of one hundred and fifteen starters as the 1946 Kansas football squad. Early season reports show Kansas fielding a fine backfield, but short on line strength. The great Evans, whom Coach Sauer called the greatest athlete ever to step upon Mt. Oread sparks a break away running attack that should bring grey hairs to many opposing coaches. A pre-war All Big Six halfback as a junior, Ray led the nation in pass completions that year with one hundred and one. For two years a standout for the 2nd Air Force team, Ray has long and justly been praised for his inspiring competitive spirit. Also a terrific line backer and vicious blocker, Ray ' s all around drive spurred his teammates to break a sixteen year precedent of choosing individual game captains by electing him captain for the season. A broken leg suffered in the Denver game by Red Hogan, the na- tions number two passer at this writing, leaves Back- field coach Vi c Bradford the problem of finding the best-clicking combination of a wealth of good backs. Evans at his old left half, Frank Pattee at full, Lynne McNutt at quarter, and Dick Bertuzzi at right half so far lead the field, but many rugged reserves will see plenty of action. Line coach Bob Ingalls, and assistants Mike Getto, Dean Nesmith, and Wayne Replogle have few worries at the flank positions where Otto Schnellbacher, at the end of two games the nation ' s leading pass receiver, Davy Schmidt, last year all Big Six selection, and Marvin Small, out the first three weeks with a foot injury, all promise to turn in a fine showing. Chief weakness as the Jayhawkers continue this season remains from tackle and tackle. Though Don Fambrough, Don Ettinger, Joe Crawford, and Hugh Johnson played savage defensive ball against T.C.U. and were well backed up by reserves, the forward wall as yet remains the big question mark. Rapidly developing reserves may draw the starting nod in games to come, and at any rate should increase line strength through the rough schedule coming up. This, then, is the team that, at the completion of two non-conference games, leads the Big Six as its only undefeated team, and also heads the total of- fense column as well as having the best defensive record. However the T.C.U. and Denver frays may not be looked back upon as a dependable measuring TURNER TICE LANIEWSKI FRENCH HOGAN BAKER FRY BRAY MESTER FISCHER GRIFFITH stick after we have met the real powerhouses of a very rough schedule. Four Bowl teams meet the Crimson and Blue this year, and the Big Six can also be counted upon as furnishing the toughest grid en- tertainment in many years. These games will give experience, valuable but perhaps bitter, to a squad which loses only four men by graduation. With the athletic department ' s increasing ability to wave crim- son and blue streamers in front of the region ' s out- standing prep gridsters, prospects for development of a top notch football machine look better and better. Even a cautious observer must admit that if the injury jinx steers clear of us and if the linemen con- tinue to develop, Kansas will be a dangerous foe for Big Six powerhouses this year. Led from the bench by Sauer ' s infectious needling to win every minute of every game, and sparked on the field by Evans ' tre- mendous mental and physical drive, the Jayhawkers hope to knock a gaping hole in Missouri, Oklahoma, and Nebraska ' s eighteen year gridiron domination. But this same cautious observer must at the same time realize that these three football machines have been well oiled and well kept up the last two decades, whereas K. U. this year starts from scratch. The fact that an inexperienced team, supposedly weak in the forward wall could so ruggedly per- form in the season ' s openers has already caused defi- nite furrowed foreheads in opposing football miens. And these furrows deepen when these Tigers, Soon- Dave Schinidt----at 165 the lightest inan the lightest line in e flig ers, and Cornhuskers, always keeping one eye to the future, realize that this Kansas football machine is breathing fire under a coach holding grid reins on Mt. Oread for the first time. From the student body, nine thousand strong, best of luck to you, Coach Sauer and your 1946 Kansas Jayhawkers. SPERRY GIUNTA 4e 40 THE JAYHAWKER der atm e 0 e IF S a de 4 m m62.24 Have you heard the strains of a violin playing a familiar symphony as you went to Dr. Wheeler ' s morning psych. class? Or have you heard a soprano practicing that opera to which your mother once dragged you? Or perhaps a young pianist polishing up on a concerto which you failed to recognize? Yes, these would be the music students busily practicing —keeping in mind a professor with a grade book in hand instead of the no picture show until you ' ve practiced which mother used to enforce. For a time before the School of Fine Arts moved into Frank Strong, the piano and voice department was located on the third floor of Fraser. The melod- ious strains which drifted down were considered by one feminine instructor as a refining influence upon the laws on the first floor. Now, however, with practice rooms used continually on opposite sides of Jayhawk Drive in both Hoch and Frank Strong, Jay- hawkers of all schools are exposed to this refining influence while strolling down our busy campus avenue. Dean Donald M. Swarthout, who has been head of the School of Fine Arts since 1926, considers the two major objectives of the department of music to be providing a general development of musical ap- preciation for the entire student body and providing professional training for those who wish to study music. In fulfilling the first objective, the department pro- vides an outstanding array of musical events in every field throughout the year. Concerts and recitals are scattered frequently enough throughout the uni- versity calendar so that every student who wishes can achieve and realize a deeper, fuller life through the medium of music. Courses in musical theory and musical appreciation are open to all the schools of the university for credit. The music department strives to make music permeate the whole university through one medium or another. Access to the band, orchestra, glee clubs, and a capella choir allows over 400 persons the opportunity to participate under the finest and most capable leader- ship available anywhere. Unusual as it may seem, more than half of the personnel of these organizations are made up of students from outside the music de- partment. These students receive fine training and a chance to continue their music as an outside activity and recreational outlet. Five or six internationally known individuals or organizations are brought to the campus each year on the University Concert Series. These excellent concerts are made possible through the subscription of interested faculty members and townspeople, inas- much as the activity ticket fund nays for only about one-third the cost. Other distinguished soloists are brought to the uni- versity during the annual Music Week Festival in (Continued on Page 42) 4 P,ck tat acco,w,21 he muicat haq ills schziot a dte kam.lca It ' s opening night. Concert goers are in their seats. The houselights go down, the cur- tain goes up, and this tall. Texan raises his baton. Gleam- ing instruments flash as they are raised to eager lips for that thrilling first crescendo. This is the spine tingling buoyancy that a member of the K.U. band experiences when he plays under the di- rection of Russell L. Wiley. Stately, regal, sometimes a martinet for perfection. he is justly proud of the best uni- versity band in the Midwest. His instrumental sections are versatile. These bandsmen could be playing either Wag- ner or Gershwin. To play first chair is an honor that attests to a professional-like ability. Fanfares from these triple - tonguing trumpeteers have often pleased audiences at half-time performances in Memorial Stadium. 001,1310o pboos° 42 THE JAYHAWKER Chances are it ' s Bach, not boogie, as Jean Alldridge takes a lesson from Associate Professor Allie M. Conger. (Continued from Page 40) May to assist in the performance of an oratorio with the orchestra, choir, and glee clubs. Highlights of this week-long emphasis on music also include a number of the concert series, a convocation speaker on a musical theme, the annual Fine Arts Banquet, and recital from the Young American Artists Series. The latter program is furthered in order that one of these youthful artists on their way up the ].adder— the prominent stars of the future—might be brought to the campus each year. This year it will be necessary to give two perform- ances of the Christmas Vespers, another annual event which draws hundreds of outsiders as well as stu- dents. The choir, glee clubs, orchestra, and the faculty string quartet furnish the music, while the art depart- ment designs tableaux to illustrate familiar Christmas stories. Regular band and orchestra concerts, faculty re- citals, concerts by the choir and glee clubs, and stu- dent recitals swell the total to over 1.00 fine musical entertainments throughout the year. Each student should evaluate the different events carefully and go to the ones which seem more enjoyable or which will mean more to him later in life. An excellent group of artist-teachers have been secured by the music department to provide a high grade of professional instruction toward a career or livelihood in music, the second objective of the de- partment. Almost all of these professors have made their living by professional appearances and are thus able to teach the practical as well as the theoretical side of music. Two choices are offered, one in demonstrative or applied music and one in musical supervision. The first is for gifted instrumentalists or singers who re- ceive the training necessary to become career artists. The other choice is a program designed to furnish teachers for the public school systems. Majors in violin, piano, organ, cello, harp, trumpet, and voice are offered to students in the applied field. Each student studies this major choice under the same professor for four years so that the professor may know intimately his or her background, ability, weaknesses, and the proper rate of development necessary. The most talented music students take part in the weekly Thursday afternoon recitals, evening display recitals, and advanced student recitals. Then, before graduation, each senior in applied music gives a re- cital, either individually or with another senior. Those students majoring in musical supervision take a variety of courses in musical theory, practice singing or playing, and secure experience in practice teaching at local schools. Since judgments are formed by hearing music, all students in the department are required to attend a large proportion of the different concerts and recitals. If your roommate happens to be one of these stu- dents, you ' ve probably seen a recital card which must be punched to receive credit for the events attended. The School of Fine Arts has indeed a music de- partment of which all Jayhawkers can be justly proud. One of the most outstanding reputations of any music school in the Middlewest has been de- veloped through many years of work and effort. FALL NUMBER, 1946 43 L. E. Anderson, Professor of Organ and Theory, goes over the fine points of a diffi- cult passage with Bob Overstreet, Fine Arts Junior from Sedalia, Missouri. For years convocation-goers have rocked under the re- verberations from Hoch Auditorium ' s mam- mouth pipe organ. In former times this same organ sowed musical wild oats by lending its voice to more frivolous things in Kansas City ' s Newman Theatre. That ' s all finished; it ' s strictly classical now. Photos By Hank Brown Smooth, but it takes practice. And prac- tice they must if these men and women of the slip horn and sax are to come through with the precision and artistry that Professor Wiley demands—and gets. They can march and they can play, execute a sharp about face while hitting a high B flat. It used to be practice at 7:30 on the dot, sand in the eyes, and a yawn at every rest. Now with 8 o ' clock rehearsals these bandsmen are enjoy- ing the luxury of getting up with the rest of the world. 44 THE JAYHAWKER Same So g-8 st Verse fL pei4 aKci biu4 cilluibt,t, a 4)7,oav4 4e waeeda ki24 ateeb Thirty-five hundred in the same boat, with no smooth sailing for the first cruise. Enrollment climbed upward this fall like Fourteenth street, reaching an all-time high of 9,000 students now on Mount Oread. 3500 new students, of which 1900 are freshmen, went through traditional orientation week, including the endless registration line, enrollment, psycholog- icals, and convocations. The bewildered freshman went from one line to A door opens and Harold Thill, who considers himself just a small boy from a small town, is greeted at Batten- feld by Koli Amini and Jim Burke. Harold welcomes the counsel of two hardened Jayhawkers, who have gone through that lost feeling before. another, an old story for former G.I. ' s, and often, with one of the Union cafeterias as his destination, he ended up ordering books for dinner. Some stood to hear the opening convocation and during ment Robinson gym took the form of a convention hall. Amid the academic scramble, many carried on rush week activities and get acquainted parties oc- cupied the spare time of others. With no casualties (Continued to page 46) Keeping up with the news—Harold and Paul Uhlig take time out for a Kansan, to see where they go first and why. The paper bulged with stories of orientation activities, and after this moment Harold found little time for relaxation. Amid making friends, attending mixers, and meeting the campus in general, new students learned the procedure of university entrance. Here Harold Thill joins his first, but not last, line—registration. Seeing pink elephants—Harold, Robert Douglas, and Sam Kneale get initiated to the pastel autobiography procedure of registration. Then into another line, a final check, things to buy, and, at the head, the business office ' s open windows. The well-known feeling of total ignorance claims Harold during the psychological exam. Comparison tests reminded him of an exercise in hieroglyphic translation. Reading, grammar, and math tests brought forth sighs of didn ' t know I knew so little. Some students prof- ited from the results of these sessions. Harold found reassur- ance that he has a knack for math. Western Civ? English? Biology? Speech? Spanish? Miss Martha Peterson informs Harold of freshman require- ments, another jolt to every new and unknowing underclass- man. Here Harold and Irene Flory join the battle with 8,998 others . . . making out a class schedule. K.U. newcomers survived the events of a hectic week. For Harold Thill, College freshman from ton, Kansas another requirement was added—that of Convinced that lines go in circles and have no ends, Harold collapses at Battenfeld to disentangle his mind. A look at his books and the study bug bites early, for Harold is planning to keep up that Battenfeld average. being tracked down by the Jayhawker photographer. A pictorial study of the SAME SONG-81ST VERSE was the result. A mathematical mind comes in handy—Harold, who is planning to be a certified public account- ant, takes time out from studies to work at the Union fountain, which he calls a nerve-racking job. Here he writes a check for Joan Armacost and Bethy Ashton. His one wish is to find a few spare hours for each day. After many unusual experiences during orientation week, including get- ting lost in Marvin Hall, Harold slowly is beginning to feel at home at K. U. FALL NUMBER, 1946 47 1i IJ isc ban Ale1S644 9 (Spring—the Arrow ) This is the knowing from the depths of time; This is the germ wherein all life has birth: The wisdom of the endless-turning earth, The magic which inspires the poet ' s rhyme— And to this theme of every pantomime Ever there come all men, of drouth and dearth, And while the gods look down in epic mirth Each touches heaven—far, far above the grime. This the enchantress knew of, Lilith, fair As sunrise, and deceitful as the flame That plays about her glowing, gleaming hair; This is the ecstasy that none can name, A bondage old when even earth was new— The light-held blossom which this instant grew. ( Summer—the Spell ) Had I not marked when first this scroll began, This wondrous dream, this burning bush as bright As blazoned sun in shadeless noonday light— Had I not kept a record of its span, And traced its thousand parallels in man Back through the coiled-up years till mortal sight Grew dim; and had I not embroidered night With heart-warm dreams of how old stories ran— Had I not thuswise learned that time repeats Itself, and lovers loved as now we do In Helen ' s time, and Deiydre ' s, and Eve ' s, I should have claimed that these undreamed-of sweets Were self-created, self-immortal, new, And sworn to what my spirits yet believes. (Autumn—the Scar ) Now is it strange indeed that I should lie Unmoving, in a frozen emptiness, While yet the idle wind, with soft caress, Tangles the hair of long-stemmed grass and rye; Even before the harvest time is by, My heart, its store ungarnered, shelterless, Knows winter over soon; upon it press The memories of a spring that promised high. Well--nothing lives forever, so they say, And something more but lately have I learned— That joys first treasured are with surfeit spurned, That moons and stars must die at break of day, And weariest lesson, that when summer ' s gone, This wind-swept heart still wakes with every dawn. —First Prize, 1946 Carruth Poetry Contest 48 THE JAYHAWKER OTHELLO- THE MOOR OF VENUS (THE BETTER) PERSONS MISREPRESENTED DUKE OF VENICE—eats garlic and is author of the book, His Breath Is Death in the Afternoon. BRABANTIO—a senator who can throw the bull faster than the author writes it. OTHELLO—Venetian General of Moorish descent, Knight of the Round Stable, Order of the Star and Garter, Knocker of the Bath, and Grand Watcher of the Whiffletree. CASSIO—second in command and wearer of the Wild Oat Leaf Cluster. IAGO—beeg man, beeg beard, beeg appetite, and com- poser of Beegin the Beegnine. (First name is Sandy.) RODERIGO—his ancestors were men of science, politics, plows, and women—who pulled the plows. MONTANO Othello ' s predecessor in the government of Cyprus; no relation to Missoula. DESDEMONA—daughter to Brabantio, wife to Othello, and charter member of local Jane gang. EMILA--wife to Iago and originator of the profound state- ment, You gotta be built to model a kilt. SCENE This saga begins in the little village of Venice-by-the-sea later shifting to an unidentified port in Cyprus. Back in that long gone era when women were as fair as a Reno roulette wheel there chanced to be a conference in progress. One son of a samovar, known as Roderigo, claims he has been sorely spurned through the successful efforts of a pastel shaded Gen- eral named Othello who has pulled his rank and mar- ried Rod ' s quail, Desdemona. Another son of a sale- mander, known as Iago, maintains he has been purged by this identical General in respect to promotion. After due consideration it is decided that since Des ' s pater has not as yet got ye olde hot scoop on the elopement, it would be a sagacious move to stool on the high brass. With these vile intentions they arrange themselves bird-dog fashion under the Senator ' s bay window—on the house, that is—and hurl insults by the numbers. Finally appearing clad in his scivvies, the Senator scathingly rebukes, You are villains! Thou art a Senator! , the pious pair retort. Fol- lowing that squelching repartee, Brabantio is obliged to listen. At this point in the proceedings it seems mandatory that a posse of vigilantes be promulgated and Othello sought out. Othello is found at length for he is quite tall, but a previous engagement with the Duke pre- vents Brabantio from carrying out his fiendish desire to decapitate the aforementioned General. Atmosphere is now provided by the beating of muffled gums and the entire procession is ushered into the presence of the Duke and his cohorts. Im- mediately the Duke launches into a tirade remon. strating the Turks who have deemed it necessary to annex a portion of the Duke ' s territory, Cyprus. And to expedite matters General Othello ' s shrewd tactical mind is scheduled for employment on that front. Brabantio then interrupts to give the Duke the straight stuff on Oth abducting his clatter. He further re- minds the Duke that Othello ' s behavior has not been legitimate, but Oth objects to this slanderous state- ment. Leave us not discuss the question of my patern- FALL NUMBER, 1946 49 ity, Othello protests. Although humble by provi- dence, I am proud in spirit. Your birth certificate may be lettered in gold while mine is but common Quink, but slur not my honest nativity. After Oth ' s assurance that he can support a wife and the government on one income, Brabantio drops the charges and divines that peace be upon them. The General then shoves off leaving Desdemona in the custody of Iago, who is instructed to transport her to Cyprus at a later date. Rod, now despondent, quips, Put me on the bench coach, I smoke. Iago, however, persuades Rod to liquidate his assets and invest them in a joint account. In this particular period in history commuting was at a low ebb; therefore, Iago and Desdemona arrive at Cyprus just in time to greet the triumphant Othello on his return from the Turkey shoot. (Methinks they must have travelled on one of the first railroads that Joel McCrea and Barbara Stanwyck built—a forerunner of the Union Pacific, dubbed the Con- feredate Atlantic. ) Iago then beckons the jealous and disillusioned Rod aside and plies him with lies. He accuses Des of trifling and intimates she is in love with Cassio of the Macaroni en Cassios. Rod is of a sceptical nature, but admits he doesn ' t know much about women—just what he ' s picked up. In rebuttal Iago says that he has given the best leers of his life to women, which convinces Rod of Iago ' s integrity and he replies, Vout O ' rooney! A scheme is then concocted whereby the impetuous but valiant Cassio will be induced to drink and coerced into a quarrel with Rod. Now Cassio, being a ready teddy having not reached the stage of a ruined bruin, is checking the guard to see if all sentries know their eleven general hors d ' oeuvres. Iago approaches him and invites this paragon of virtue to partake of a snorte ( that ' s French). Editor ' s note: All the worlds ajar and man gets pickled. This convivial duo join Montano for the proverbial three fingers with water back. Suddenly, remember- ing his duty, Cas whips out his compass and takes off on an azimuth. Shortly thereafter Cas reenters performing lacerations on the person of Rod. When Montano interferes, Cassio, being versatile, vents his fury in that direction. Iago then fervently beseeches Cas to hold council with Desdemona and implore her to speak in the latter ' s behalf. Cassio agrees and closes the door as he passes out. The background music for this episode is written by Stonewall Jackson ' s nephew, name of Solid, and is entitled Concerto for Strings in Three-Fourths Twine. Cassio goes post haste to Des and solicits her aid. In the midst of polishing her booties with his tongue, Othello and Iago charge up and Cas makes with the hasty exit. Pointing to the fleeing Cassio, Iago exclaims, Fie on you, Knave! `Twas recently I observed Des- demona doing the ' Dance of the Seven Veiled Insin- uations ' in thy boudoir dressed only in her uninten- tionals. Othello, a gullible lad, believes this tale. Des then shuffles by and pleads Cas ' s case. Oth feigns a hang- over, so Desdemona offers a prescription of tomato juice, Worchestershire sauce, lemon , pepper, and six aspirins—shake well before stirring. She attempts to bind his head with her hankerchief, but Oth flings it to the deck. Unseen by Oth, Iago procures this nasal (Continued on Page 80) THE JAYHAWKER PopJ P7oFessors 50 JOHN ISE Being born and reared in Kansas, attending and teaching at K. U., and writing a best seller on pioneer days in the Sunflower State all qualify John Ise as an outstanding Jay- hawker. Strangely enough, this man, who is now recog- nized as one of the world ' s top authorities on economics, started out to be a concert singer. After teaching music for a year, he realized his endeavors in this field should be relegated to a hobby status and came back to the hill for a law degree. In six years at K. U. and Harvard Dr. Ise garnered five degrees, the last a Ph.D. in economics, his true love. After teaching briefly at Iowa State, he headed back to Dread in 1916 where he is now entering his thirty- first year of teaching. Brilliantly analytical, he is frankly worried about the Russian situation. War with Russia, as I see it, is inevitable because both factions are going to insist on having it. As long as rabid imperialism lasts, there can be no peace, and I see no end to that imperialism. Ise likes his students, defends them against the football, funnies, fraternity charge, and generally thinks they keep their eyes on the ball. His advice to youth: Build up a personal philosophy so you can get as much satisfaction as possible out of life. Don ' t let outside forces dominate your ideals. Strive for simplicity—avoid the superficial. Be an individualist! Is it any wonder that a course from this individualist is earmarked a must for every young Jayhawker? —Don Diehl Kaufman-Graham PALL NUMBER, 1916 51 HELEN SKILTON All engineers who yearn for more co in their co- education should enroll in a course in commercial art. There they would meet the attractive lady who directs the commercial art majors, Miss Helen Skilton. Charm- ing, neat, precise, her appearance harmonizes with her profession. Born in Lawrence, she studied at KU., Connecticut College for Women, and art school in New York. She has been a fashion artist and assistant advertising man- ager of a large Chicago department store, has done free lance work, and has operated a profitable commercial art service in Kansas City. She describes commercial art as art with a purpose. Her attitude toward surrealism is admiration for the draftsmanship and amazement at the subject matter. Acting as one of the judges in the 1947 JAY- HAWKER cover design contest last summer, Miss Skilton won the hearts and admiration of the JAY- HAWKER staff forever when she described the winning design as a knock-out! The ' 47 cover and Helen Skilton have a great deal in common. Allan Cromley MERREL D. CLUBB I guess I ' m just a typical preacher ' s son, the new chairman of the English department describes himself. The ambiguity of this statement soon evaporates as he reticently unfolds the story of a rich and diversified life. Kentucky born, Merrel Dare ( rather think we trace it back to Virginia Dare ) Clubb grew up in California where he attended Ramona College, making Phi Beta Kappa and graduating summa cum laude. Clubby then headed for Yale, and after a four year metamorphosis, Dr. Clubb emerged to seek his place in the educational world. This world has consisted of Miami U., T.C.U., Stanford, Oklahoma A. and M., and now K.U. An avid sports enthusiast, he hopes the flourish in football fortunes that have followed him to other schools will pursue him here. Dr. Clubb ' s primary academic interest is Old Eng- lish—Chaucer his favorite author. In this field he has had several books and translations published. Straying from his chosen language, however, he has a working knowledge of eight foreign tongues. Among his fancies are mountain climbing, his mus- tache, and Charlie Chaplin— purely a psychological in- terest, of course. —Don Diehl FALL NUMBER, 1946 53 g Thee s On Campus SHIRLEY WELLBORN That blurred streak with flying brown hair and a smiling face that just passed you as you were crossing the campus very likely was Shirley Wellborn, College junior, on her busy way to a meeting of one of the various activities in which she is engaged. Shirley doesn ' t believe in the old adage that a woman has a right to change her mind—especially when she is involved in an important campus activity that requires the old follow-through. That ' s the main reason she is always dashing somewhere—to represent Locksley Hall on the Inter-Dorm Council, to represent Inter-Dorm Council on the ASC, to manage business for the ISA, to collect dues as treasurer of the Jay Janes, to act as vice-- president of Kappa Phi, or to get her baritone (horn, that is) for the University band. She would like to sing in the Women ' s Glee Club again this year but it seems there is a University ruling discriminating against stu- dents who major in activities and don ' t attend classes. She isn ' t satisfied, however, just to be an activity girl and so punches a time card at Doc Wheeler ' s psychol- ogy office where she does secretarial work. Here she picked up her major, phychology clinic, and a passion for loud ties. Sandwiched between the psychology office and campus meeting rooms she has somehow found time to study and twice has merited a position on the Dean ' s Honor Roll. When Shirley relaxes it ' s at a piano, or curled up with any interesting book, or out on a date dancing or hitting the latest movie. —Will Nobly THE JAYHAWKER 5,1 GEORGE CALDWELL Sincere, urban, and friendly, George Caldwell wouldn ' t like to be known as a big wheel on the campus. But if being President of P.S.G.L., member of the Student Coun- cil, president of the Jayhawk Coop, member of Sachem, proctor in Western Civilization, and past chairman of For- ums Board isn ' t an important repertoire, George is at least approximating the B.M.O.C. classification. He still finds time to retain a Summerfield scholarship with a 2.5 grade average and give the impression that he isn ' t particularly worried about that next quiz. With that kind of intelligence, leadership, and ambition, he should go far toward disproving any idea that activities mean academic inferiority or that scholarship precludes extra-curricular participation. George is majoring in political science and has two main ambitions. One is to see the entrance of Negro athletes into Big Six athletics. He further evidences his racial tolerance by his endorsement of inter-racial cooperative living. His other ambition concerns that controversial subject---student government. He aspires toward making student govern- ment into something more than a body to pass ordinances on campus smoking. Hailing from Wichita, Caldwell shows definite proof that a big town boy can come to the University and still make good. —Ann Alexander MARY BREED Talent bestowed a wealth of favors upon the magnetic personality of Mary Breed. Although Mary claims no nick- names, hobbies, or favorite sports, her activities scatter far and wide, and each one finds itself well done when Mary is in charge. In her senior year, Mary is Y.W.C.A. president and a member of Mortar Board, with time out in her sched- ule to be an active member of Pi Beta Phi. Majoring in dietetics, Mary spends many hours in the bio-chem lab in about the same surroundings as pictured. Mary says there is nothing comparable to some of the classes she has had for three semesters, the ratio being one hun- dred med students to one—Mary being the one. Her one wish since she came to the University is to re- form the election system. Mary also thinks we should have an annual traditions convocation in which all students, old and new, are told of campus traditions. Numerous other plans for campus improvements are bottled up in her in- telligent head, and if women could be chancellors, Mary Breed would undoubtedly be a candidate. —Marion Sheldon by Kaufman-Graham 55 ELAINE THALMAN Something in Elaine Thalman ' s impressionable smile veals why she is a leader in campus activities. Now a senior, Elaine has been blessed with the responsibility since her first semester at K. U. This year she is the very efficient secretary of the All-Student Council which is no small job in itself. Elaine is a strong leader in the I.S.A. and works hard to further the organization. A campus politician, she was a member of the first group to promote the strong Independent movement in the last two years. Being a member of the Dean ' s honor roll is just doin ' what comes naturally to Elaine, even with her flood of tivities. She has played the piano since she was three years old and is still playing ( with time out for meals and classes). That, and meeting people, whom she always likes and vice versa, are her two favorite pastimes. She claims Kansas City, Mo., as home, with the Jayhawker office running a close second. Elaine has been working on the Jayhawker for four years, and has been an editorial associate for two. Union activities blend in with her spare time, and she has recently been named to the Union Operating mittee. To wind up this yarn about a very active girl is her own statement: Now that I ' m about through, I want to start over! —Marion Sheldon DEAN SMITH Everybody who ' s been in the Y.M.C.A. office knows Dean Smith, a lad who reversed Greeley ' s advice, went East, and made good. Although he looks like the epitome of nocence, Dean has been around—Iowa State, South Dakota State, and Kansas State in one year—before coming to rest at the Jayhawk roost two years ago. He ' ll be off again in a year and one-half to finish med school in Kansas City. He may have an unassuming, quiet appearance, but Dean keeps the Y going at full swing as its president and he is anything but quiet when he ' s tossing out assignments or tracing down reports. When anyone wants to start a project and doesn ' t know where to start, he comes to Dean who has more ideas about what can and should be done than profs have corny jokes. Even though Smitty is well-versed in many fields and thinks deep thoughts about many things, he makes it a icy not to voice his opinion on any matter until he ' s sure of what he is talking about. No young lady has committed larceny with his heart, but he does have a very definite feminine interest right a brand new, red-headed cadaver named Ruth who is the pride of his life. —Will Noble FALL NUMBER, 19 4 6 JIM WA UGH That ' s a big question, stocky, blue-eyed, collegiate Jim Waugh answered grinning when asked his opinion of life on the Hill as compared with pre-war days. College hasn ' t changed much, it ' s the students who have. Now days most everyone ' s here to study rather than to play. Currently President of the Engineering Council, Jim has an impressive record of accomplishments carried over from his first hitch on the hill before the war. Besides having held offices in Theta Tau and Pachacamac, Waugh has been a member of Owl Society, Scabbard and Blade, Ku Ku ' s, and Sachem. During his freshman year this ambitious Phi Delt took time out to be a K. U. cheerleader. Returning to Oread after a two-year stretch in the army, Jim is married to former Theta Patty Armel and the two call 946 Ohio their home. A Marvin hall stalwart now, Jim plans to shed his slide rule after graduation in 1948 and change sides in those Jimmy Green paint feuds. He will enter law school with an ambition to become a patent attorney. Weekends and holidays you ' ll find Jim walking across a fairway with a golf bag on one arm and Patty cn the other. —Ann Alexander EVERETT BELL Combine hearty laughter, tireless ambition, and eternal interest in people, and you have Everett Bell. Green Hall as his hangout and central office, Everett ventures out all over the campus, always in a hurry and al- ways taking time to stop and talk with everyone he knows. During the weeks of the World Series his main topic of conversation was the inevitability of the Cards, his home town team, winning the Series. Even though Everett puts most of his energy into his studies in criminal law and into his position as President and A.S.C. representative of the Negro Students Association, he still has time to take an active part in the AVC and YMCA programs. This fall he is acting as a freshman coun- sellor. Everett takes time off now and then to listen to Gilbert and Sullivan ' s music, to read an interesting book of history ( he says there are such things ) or to woo the Muse with his violin. He modestly admits that Heifetz won ' t have to worry about competition for a few years. With more people than ever on the hill, Everett expects lots of work for everyone, and he ' s armed with energy and zest to do anything that comes his way. —Will Noble THE JAYHAWKER Photos by Kaufman-Graham FALL NUMBER, 1946 57 Kaufman-Graham OWEN PECK A twinkling eye, a broad sense of humor, and a fine sense of responsibility character- ize Owen pivot and pass out Peck. Now a senior at K. U., Owen is a pre-med student. Everyone who has seen a K. U. basketball game knows Peck and his ability to fox the foe with his agility, clever plays, and shouting high voice. As for the voice, he claims to be the only one in the Sigma Chi house who can make the boys scatter upstairs. As representative of K. U. students for the Big Six, Owen is a natural. His interests lie in basketball and track. He is a member of Sachem, K Club, and the All Student Coun- cil, and recently has been put in charge of parking on the campus. Owen says the latter hasn ' t required much work of him yet—probably because of the small amount of traffic to be seen on the hill this year. You haven ' t met him? The next time you see a big smile walking across the campus, followed by brown hair and eyes and what looks like about five feet and nine inches of vim and vigor, that ' s your man. —Marion Sheldon :rahaui C r.catL THE JAYHAWKER 58 C a ry, p u s 04 atad Jzime powei he v4e ut - - 59 F ALL NUMBER, 1946 L Unlike the groom, the bride appeared quite composed before the wedding as her maid of honor helped her get dressed in her room at the Eldridge. During the ceremony Anne appar- ently thought she was getting a good right- hand-man because that ' s the hand upon which she placed his ring. cike ial tamtheYi gozel 7c (11 C.kapel School bells aren ' t the only kind which have been ringing for K.U. students. The wedding variety has rung for forty-some couples since the opening of Danforth chapel. On March 20, thirteen days before the offi- cial dedication of the little church on the campus, the first ceremony was held for Leone Sandow and Robert Fisher. Strains of Mendelssohn ' s famous march could be heard once again on September 14 for lovely, blonde Anne Nafe and her future husband, Edwin Marks. This time the JAY- HAWKER was present in order that a pictorial record might be made of this popular K.U. custom. Reverend Donald Weatherbee of the Law- rence Episcopal Church conducted the serv- ice before a small group of friends and the immediate families of these two K. U. stu- dents. Writeup by Eloise Hodgson Photos by Hank Brown Dashing out of Danforth amid clouds of rice, Ed and Anne departed shortly there- after for their honeymoon in Colorado. Although the final picture shows our newlyweds busily at work in their jet- propelled kitchen, they have since been evicted and, like everyone else, are in the market for a better place to live. Six o ' clock finds J. W. well underway on his daily shave. Born on a farm 59 years ago in Napoleon, Missouri, our typical professor comments: When Truman was plowing the straightest furrow in the western part of the state, I was over east plowing ' em straight, too. Six-thirty, and Tubby takes his usual whirl at making the morning coffee. Although his wife is famous for her ability to cook, Mr. Twente has been brewing the coffee every morning for years. Jayhawker cameramen stayed for breakfast and reported the coffee excellent, Mrs. Twente ' s eggs delicious. The Roariig Twentes The turbulent Twentes and their life at home, at play, and at work—these are subjects that take a cameraman to strange places. Our title notwith- standing, Professor and Mrs. J. W. Twente live a normal and exceedingly happy life in their recently redecorated home at 934 Indiana. Given the assignment of making a pictorial record of a typical day with a typical professor, JAY- HAWKER cameramen Herb Kaufman and Bob Graham arrived bright and early one morning before breakfast. The best assignment we ' ve ever had was their confirmed conviction when they went away that evening. Having received his Masters at the University and his Ph. D. at Columbia, Dr. Twente was head of the department of education and psychology at the University of New Hampshire when he decided to come back to Oread in the fall of 1925. Tubby, as his friends call him, has been with the University ever since. Mrs. Twente, affectionately dubbed Petie, was teaching school in Baxter Springs when she met Tubby who was her Superintendent. They were married in 1916. Grandma Newcomer, Petie ' s mother, makes her home with the Twente ' s. Son Jack of the army is due home from Korea any day and daughter Doris and her husband, Dr. Robert Hagen, live in Washington. Off to work after goodbyes to Petie, Dr. Twente leaves his car in the garage and habitually walks the five blocks to Fraser. Mary Elizabeth Evans, instructress in the Home Economics Department and head of the University Nursery School, sits down for a chat before the day ' s work begins. Acting Dean of the School of Education while Dean Smith was away, Mr. Twente is now back at his old job of professoring, as he calls it. Photos by Kaufman-Graham ,kmzeci, 41,4 4 a Ical After classes are over for the day, you can usually find J. W. in old clothes puttering around the garage, working on his garden, or playing a few minutes with the Twente springer spaniel— Honey. She ' s a fine retriever, he says, but hasn ' t been used much since Jack went into the army. Exceptionally intelligent, Honey can ' t help smiling nowdays for she somehow knows her master ' s on his way home to her from Korea. Fishing is the Professor ' s true love, however, and vacations and holidays usually find him on the other end of a hook. 64 THE JAYHAWKER Tubby ' s boyhood days on the farm in Missouri paid big divi- dends this summer when he planted a large garden near the rail- road tracks down by the river in North Lawrence. Mrs. Twente canned well over a hundred quarts of tomatoes in addition to supplying all her friends and neighbors with an abundance of fresh vegetables from her husbands little truck farm. Preparations for supper once again find J. W. in the kitchen cooking up his particular culinary specialty—apple sauce. Every husband has one and Professor Twente is no exception. Although he ' s a favorite with his students, a careful check failed to reveal any unusual polish to his apples. Mealtime at the Twente ' s is a truly happy time and a glance at P etie ' s table soon explains the reason. Always a big help around the house, Grandma Newcomer is rightfully proud of her children and grandchildren. Born in Denmark herself, sh- especially likes to tell how everyone of them was born in a different locality—Tubby in Missouri, Petie in Oklahoma, Jack in Kansas, and Doris in New Hampshire. When asked after dinner of what he thought of the teaching profession, Dr. Twente lit his pipe, leaned back, smiled and said: Oh, I don ' t know. It seems to me, though, that when men fight wars as terrible as the first world war, which I was in, and this last one, which my son was in, that they still have a lot to learn. And I ' m a big enough fool to think that if enough men try hard enough to be good teachers that someday there will be a lot less fighting and everyone will be happier. ALL NUMBER, 1946 dame 21,akt 0121,w-4d? - ate 62.ip ptom goicaktic44-- 65 With the prospect of more men, consequently more social activity, the year seems to have gotten off to a bang-up start. That, at least, is what Jack Eskridge thought when he ran into the rear of a car on a trip to the city. Seems Like Old Times—Vacation and more men seem to have no effect on these couples. Last year and this year we still find Virginia Cooper-Bryan Wheeler ... Mary Margaret Huse- Doc Sullivan... Larry Simmons-Lu Anne Powell ... Jackie Simmons- Warren Kump . . . Vivian Riffer-Jim Chaney . . . Keith Congdon-Jo Ellen Shirley ... Charles Gililand-Irmie Shears . . . George Byers-Shirley Salley . . . Elaine Sawyer-Bob Fenton . Marajean Carr-Dean Postleh- waite . Mary Ernst - Rod Summers ... Mary Jean Johnson-Bryan Sneegas ... Betty Gilpin-Jim Roark . Tommy Thompson-Patty Glover ... Bob Button- Mary Jane Merriman . Jack Ballard-Pat Billings . Sarah Smart-Greg Stock. First prize for publicity hound goes to Dick Parsell. How ' s this, Dick? Putting several solo hours in his rickety rocking chair, during the hub-bub of registration and enroll- Bill Wintermote managed to get everyone at the D.U. house a date but himself. He calls that having the chapter at heart. In a rut—Ruth Hibbs and Laurens Rossillon con- tinue to pull up to the curb every night exactly at 1 0: 30 in the blue and yellow Ford. Lorraine Mai is a happy girl these days since Jack Parker is out of the service and in school at K.U. Jim Guinatte seems to be wasting no time getting back into circulation now that Alison Jones is at- tending Texas Women ' s College. Orchids to Pat Pearson and Noel Nystrom on their recent pinning. Orchids also to Regina McGeorge and Dick Sevier. Surprising how much work Johnny Reber has gotten onto since he arrived on the hill. Couldn ' t be because Tommie Thompson is asking his assistance in carrying on all of her hundreds of campus ac- tivities. (Continued on Page 80) 66 THE JAYHAWKER Photos by Hank Brown indepencent Living Hi, Jane! Glad to have you here at K.U. Hi, Jim! Haven ' t seen you since high school graduation a few years ago—how are things going? And thus arrived on top of Mount Oread Septem- ber 16, 2,804 new Independent students. Some were seniors, transfers from various schools, but the ma- jority were freshmen. And what freshmen they were! Older, on the average, than the usual college freshman, but none the less eager, they entered into orientation week activities with enthusiasm. Men, in great predominance in all the gathered groups, were the cause of gasps from senior women, accustomed to a war-time campus, who shrieked, I used to read that college would be like this. Perhaps it was returning from a strictly adult world that made the majority of these new students more composed and assured as they walked briskly around the campus, asking questions of passers-by if in need of information. Of course, there were the few individuals — characteristic of the traditional freshman color, green who still asked questions, seriously with wide-eyes, which send faculty and stu- dent advisers into gales of inward laughter. Many of the students had quit worrying about housing weeks before—letting the University take care of it. Those that came for orientation week were housed and, although some of them didn ' t particularly care for the situation, they had decided that going to school was worth some added inconviences. Several hundred veterans found themselves far from the campus, living at Sunflower village, which rapidly was being turned into an organized com- munity. More than ever before citizens of Lawrence opened their houses to University students and numerous students found themselves living in neat, clean sur- roundings of private homes. Some found temporary lodging in hotels. Others entered University dor- mitories. Strangely enough, in these days of male predomi- nance in campus life, the three men ' s dormitories consolidated into one, Battenfeld Hall, leaving the FALL NUMBER, 1946 67 other two, Templin and Carruth, to female occupants. The move was made, according to officials, because of the need for women ' s housing as the entire Sun- flower Village was to be taken over by men and by married couples. Also the University felt that the financial assistance, offered by the dormitories, would not be needed by a great majority of men students who would be going to school under the G.I. Bill. During the past few years women had moved into more and more dormitories, giving quaint names to their new homes, such as Briar Manor ( for no par- ticular reason) , Sleepy Hollow ( you guess) , a nd Tipperary ( because it was a long way to ) . Tipperary, 1045 West Hills, was taken over by its returning fraternity this year and the majority of its former women inhabitants have moved into Templin Hall. Last spring the V-12 unit weighed anchor and left the Hill although its numbers had dwindled con- siderably before its final withdrawal. With a few of the Navy houses vacated and turned back to the University, women students moved into Locksley and Tipperary, and the Kappa Sigma fraternity moved into Templin Hall. Then the Locksley Hall women moved into three houses on McCook street and the women in Tipperary changed living quarters with the Kappa Sigs who returned to their original home. This year the University residence halls for women total twelve, with four other organized women ' s houses functioning. Corbin Hall, the largest organized house on the Hill, is called home by 203 University women. The hall was one of the first University dormitories and is named after Alberta Corbin, former Dean of Women. Miller and Watkins Halls were donated to the University by Mrs. Elizabeth Watkins as cooperative houses. Forty-nine women live in each hall. Girls are selected for these halls on a scholarship basis with the scholastic standing required gradually increasing each year. By this requirement the two halls, annually house many of the most intelligent University women. However, scholarship isn ' t the only trait developed in living cooperatively with numerous (Continued on Page 94) CORBIN HALL FIRST ROW: Luetta Henry, Nortonville; Eva Zum Brunnen, Louisburg; Ladeen Steinkirchner, Manhattan; Margaret McHarg, El Dorado; Phyllis Betts, Overlie; Queenie Burgess, Augusta; Betty Green, Hutchinson; Margo Pierce, Kansas City, Mo.; Patricia Burnham, Wichita; Delphine Bonesack, Eudora; Geraldine Harris, Eudora. SEC- OND ROW: Carol Marsh, Evanston, Ill.; Doris Clark, Kansas City, Mo.; Donna Clark, Kansas City, Mo.; Betty Byam, Kansas City, Mo.; Norma McMullan, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Barker, Kansas City: Martha Pennock, Long Mount, Colo.; Catherine Rodecker, Parsons; Rosemary Harding, Ottawa; Norma Hoff, Parsons; Phyllis Hoover, Kansas City; Serilda Clapp, St. Francis. THIRD ROW: Pattie McClatchw, El Dorado, Ark.; Billie Stillman, Bushton; Ruth Mitchell, Kansas City; Ruby Asbury, Leavenworth; Mary Mitchell, Cottonwood Falls; Cleta Van Marter, Grinnell; Margaret Beltz, Kansas City; Mary Joyce, Topeka; Joan Gregory, Kansas City; Frances Falen, Elmo; Marian Mills, Gorham; Zola Parke, Kansas City; Mary Lilly, Topeka. FOURTH ROW: La Verla Harris, Concordia; Rosemary Chamberlain, Osawatornie; Marjorie Watts, Kansas City; Mildred Gulnik, Kansas City; Sylvia Steahens, Kansas City, Mo.; Patricia Pfifer, Wichita; Marian Bates Perry; Marilyn Raney, Syracuse; Mary Stewart, Bushton; Luella Woodrum, Louisburg; Mary Kansas City, Mo.; Virnelle Jones, Manhattan; Beulah Ward, Highland; Ann Lamendola, Corona; Elaine Carlson, Clay Center. FIFTH ROW: Joan Myers, Topeka; Shirley Shriver, Coats; Mary Lucas, El Dorado Springs, Mo.; Mary Yost, Topeka; Mary Goodell, Kansas City, Mo ; Jerry Ayers, Wichita; Betty Cooper, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Pinkney, Ford; Marilyn Harter, Caldwell; Jeanne Van Wor- mer, Hoguiam, Washington; Edna Schlepp, St. Francis; Betty Hatcher, Plains; Jeanne Peck, Horton. SIXTH ROW: Joan Ramey, Ellsworth; Jane Keith, Hiawatha; Veda Nicholas, Johnson; Kathryn Showalter, Wichita; Elizabeth Regier, Moundridge; Betty Rolf, Junction City; Nancy Smith, Pittsburg; Colleen Jones, Kansas City; lune Ross, Sabetha; Estelle Roesler, Claflin; Geraldine Schoen, Downs; Martha Weab, Topeka; Mary Bernritter, Kansas City, Ma.; Joan Rogers, Lyndon; Mary Douglas, Edgeworth, Pa.; Marjcrie Hoffman, Kansas City; Carolee Small, Wilson; Jean Kirloam, Topeka; Bette Winters, Washington; Ruth Lewis, Kansas City, Mo. SEVENTH ROW: Janice Jacobs, Plains; Medved, Kansas City; Margaret Kelly, Kansas Cty; Evelyn Skonberg, Osage City; Geneva Laman, Alma; Jane Peterson, Osage City; Jeramaine Osmer, Wamego; Donaldeen Woods, Kansas City; Anna Noe, Topeka; Ddrothy Michael, Kansas City, Mo.; Irene Walker, Oberlin; Althea Voss, Downs; Ruth Brotherson, Kansas City, Marion Walters, Ulysses; Marjorie Hampton, Ulysses; Betty Pinkney, Ford. 11-9a-i-t-4eci Adepefriciefrai Ace ,u4 cid place BATTENFELD HALL FIRST ROW: Armando Rodriguez, Mexico City, Mex.; Wendell Hefflefinger, Effing- ham; ' William La Combe, Shawnee; James Burke, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Richter, Elmwood. SECOND ROW: Harold Thill, Hamilton; Carl Unruh, Wichita; Richard Rowe, Goodland; Paul Uhlig, Kansas City. SMITH HALL AND SPOONER-THAYER DORM FIRST ROW (Smith): Joseph Niernberger, Ellis; Jordon Burkey, Arkansas City; Philip Smith, Wellington; John Luckert, Sabetha; Lawrence Sabetha; John Davies, Effingham; Joseph Neilson, Ferndale, Maryland; Milton Waller, Osawatomie. SECOND ROW (Smith): Arieh Rivlin, Petah-Tickva, Palestine; Ralph Hipsley, Leav- enworth; George Sheldon, Great Bend; Homer Freeman, Topeka; Robert Pemberton, Muncie; Claude Engelke, Tecumseh; Robert Turkington, McCune. THIRD ROW: Richard Barnes, Wakeeney (Smith); Cleo Norton, Quenemo (Smith); Lyman Selig, Osage City (Smith); Taylor Rhodes, Chanute (Spooner-Thayer); Frank Tryon, Jr., Galena (Spooner-Thayer); Theodore Bernard, Hamilton (Smith); Galvin Stout, Lee Summit, Mo. (Smith). BRIAR MANOR FIRST ROW: Kate Hanauer, Pelham Manor, N. Y.; Frances Maclver, Wichita; Geral- dine Franklin, Kansas City, Mo.; Rose Reinhardt, Russell. SECOND ROW: Dorothy Hogan, Salina; Mona La Von Ratzlaff, Lakin; Elain Englund, Salina, housemother; Virginia Scheuber, Wichita; Ruth Veatch, Salina; Jeanne Campbell, Iola. THIRD ROW: Eva Morrow, LeRoy; Darlene Lewallen, Colby; Mary Spillman, Fredonia; Betty Forden- walt, Kansas City, Mo.; Wilma Hildebrand, Fowler: Rozella Farmer, Le Roy; Valerie Stagg, Tulsa, Okla. CARRUTH HALL FIRST ROW: Frances Mead, Mission; Eleanore Aikins, St. Joseph, Mo.; Melba Young, Wichita; Dorothy Stephenson, Winfield; Meribah Barrett, Arlington; Shirley Crane, Independence; Ardeth Collison, Humboldt; Jo Ann Spohn, Superior, Nebr. SECOND ROW: Eleanore Bradford, Humboldt; Ruth Marsh, Valley Falls, Fla.; Doris Leiser, Kansas City, Mo.; Kathryn Burkepile, Hoxie; Patricia Graham, Winfield; Charlyne Oliver, Kansas City, Mo.; Barbara Hamilton, Pratt. THIRD ROW: Leta Ramsdell, Burlington; Jackie McDermed, Hutchinson; Elizabeth Shaw, Galesburg; Helen Hastings, Lexington, ill.; Ruth Puls, Durango, Colo.; Nell Brown, Neal; Elnora Wycoff, Solo- man; Emalouise Britton, Columbia; June Mallory, Loveland; Nina Lull, Topeka; Doris Klein, Kansas City, Mo. FOSTER HALL FIRST ROW: Helen Humphrey, Kansas City, Mo.; Marian Cook, Newton; Lorene Hahn, Healy; Mary Corsant, Hutchinson; Betty Hayward, St. Joseph, Mo.; Joanne Moser, Hia- watha; Martha Hutchison, Marysville, Mo.; Betty Hayes, Kansas City, Mo.; Esther Black, Perry; Martha Cannon, Russell. SECOND ROW: Patricia James, Lawrence; Phyllis Kraft, Edwardsville; Marjorie Baurner, Hutchinson; Annette Etter, Independence; Bernadene Dawkins, South Haven; Jerry Powers, Junction City; Ha Miller, Coffeyville; Roberta Sanderson, Marysville; Frances Wolfskill, Kansas City, Mo. THIRD ROW: Celia Carr, Downs; Wanda Good, Garnett; June Hays, Stilwell; Kathy Sloan, Wichita; Beverly Cubbage, Des Moines, Iowa; Virginia Cuddy, Bethany, Mo.; Jeanne Atkinson, Burdick; Betty Adams, Beloit; Kathryn Cox, Fort Scott; Aleta Brown, Henderson, Nevada; Deloris Shade, Brookville. HARMON CO-OP FIRST ROW: Joyce Harkleroad, Whitewater; Janice Shehan, Chanute; Mary Shephard, Topeka; Barbara Miller, Chanute; Marjory Myers, Topeka; Mary Stuart, Rolla. SECOND ROW: Lois Cheek, Kansas City, Mo.; Catherine Tribble, Garnett; June Caldwell, Hutchinson; Ruth Wolf, Lyons; Carolyn Covert, Abilene; Erma Rippey, Helena, Mo.; Barbara Wilson, Manhattan; Patricia Waits, Nickerson. SLEEPY HOLLOW FIRST ROW: Peggy Miller, Langdon; Jeanne Schaullis, Kansas City; Joan Stringfellow, Raton, N. Mex.; Do ranne Snyder, Emporia; Joan Dexter, Kansas City, Mo. SECOND ROW: Betty Wickersham, Logansport, Ind.; Marion Cox, Mound City; Iva Rather- berger, Osburn; Billie Bullard, Lansing; Mary Chubb, Topeka; Dorothy Blacke, Reece. JOLLIFFE AND RICKER HALLS FIRST ROW: (Ricker): Darlene Zimmerman, Centerville; Marie Jackson, Parker; Shirley Sondker, Abilene; Lorraine Lensink, Edgerton, Minn.; Betty Hanson, Caldwell; Mildred Reed, Humboldt; Audrey Griffitts, Ozawkie; Joen Grey, Topeka; Marsha Baker, Topeka; Betty Wells, Topeka; Ethel Herrick, Lansing, Mich. SECOND ROW: Julia Anders, Winfield (Ricker); Mary Robson, Denison (Jolliffe); Shirley Liem, Overland Park (Jolliffe) Rose Madden, Baton Rouge, La. (Jolliffe); Mary Young, Kansas City, Mo. (Jolliffe) Barbara Lamareaux, Waterville (Jolliffe); Betty Martin, Kansas City, Mo. (Jolliffe) Mildred Crandall, Corning (Jolliffe); Margaret McDowell, Kansas City, Mo. (Jolliffe) Ruth Keller, Gardner (Jolliffe); Velma Copies, Parsons (Ricker). THIRD ROW (Jolliffe) : Helen Hovey, Kansas City, Mo.; Gerry Bobbitt, Oberlin; Sheryl Hol- land, Kansas City, Mo.; Gerry Ott, Madison; Barbara Stapleton, Topeka; Virginia Patch, Kansas City, Mo.; Marilyn Lindberg, Topeka; Katherine Smith, Yates Center; Ampara Villofane, Porto Rico Mildred Rowe, Wellman, Iowa. MILLER HALL FIRST ROW: Ruby Olson, Garnett; Rosemary Landrey, Kansas City; Mary Clark, Ash- land; Ruby Kauffman, Wichita; Betty Miller, Lee Summit, Mo.; Georgiana Benning- ton, El Dorado; Mary Hercules, Carbondale; Mary Crow, Horton. SECOND ROW: Florence Reed, Kansas City; Juanita Lewis, Topeka; Kathleen McKinney, Hartford; Kristin Moe, Askim, Norway; Dorothea Fuller, Coffeyville; Carol Crow, Horton. THIRD ROW: Dolores Mitsche, Kansas City; Margie Kent, Beloit; Joan Degenhardt, Kansas City; Joyce Rohner, Abilene; Harriet Graves, Dighton; Berniece Hughes, Waldron; Virginia David, Cherryvale; Sally Underwood, Hoisington; Patricia Williams, Clay Center; Catherine Cramer, Dighton. TEMPLIN, HOPKINS, AND LOCKSLEY HALLS FIRST ROW (Hopkins): Adeline Tonn, Haven; Mary Fletcher, Pleasanton; Jean Jone, Augusta; Helen Atkisson, Kansas City; Jean Leming, Liberal; Dorothy Heidebrecht, Burton; Margaret Forsman, Liberal. SECOND ROW (Hopkins): Maxine Magers, HoNord; Stella Bower, Paola; Iris Ainsworth, Bartlesville, Okla.; Evalyn Honomichl, Lucas; Barbara Marmont, Burton; Jean Fry, Kansas City; Geraldine Glaser, Mulvane. THIRD ROW: Lynn Meyer, St. Joseph, Mo. (Templin); Clara Lutz, Hoisington (Tem- plin); Donna Shimer, Topeka (Templin); Joan Wales, St. Joseph, Mo. (Templin); Mary Hall, Altoona (Locksley); Colleen Helminger, Fredonia (Locksley); Donna Rumsey, Council Grove (Locksley); Mildred Garrison, Marion (Locksley). WATKINS HALL FIRST ROW: Margaret Lawrence, Merriam; Gwen Peterson, Cunningham; Jo Hare, Porker; Martha Oatman, Independence, Mo.; Jo Ann Martin, Clay Center; Betty Sandbrook, Kansas City, Mo.; Barbara Glover, Caldwell. SECOND ROW: Jane Hyde, Topeka; Joan Waterstradt, Detroit, Mich.; Marjory Werts, Gridley; Norma Rehberg, Bennington; Anna Prettyman, Plevna; Jeannette Bolas, Kansas City, Mo. THIRD ROW: Gloria Neely, Pomona; Margaret Straka, McPherson; Shirley French, Topeka; Phyllis Rice, Plainville; Barbara Shipp, Paola; Freda Jones, Garden City; Carol Kirk- patrck, Ablene; Janet Rurnmer, Wichita; Jessimai Shidler, Winchester; Berniece Schmalzried, Dighton; Corinne Locke, Erie; Pat Moser, Hiawatha; Jean McGavran, St. Louis, Mo. 70 THE JAYHAWKER he World, es and Nembutal ones In the year 406 B. C. Ulysses Eiffelbaum, a stu- dent of Telemachus and a candidate for Alcoholics Anonymous, was approached by the Athens chapter of the Women ' s Christian Temperance Union which asked him to take the pledge. Ulysses mistakingly thought he was being asked to pledge the local T.N.E. chapter, and exultantly joined up. He later died of a broken heart , thus ending the first Rush Week, in history. My heart skipped a beat as I trudged up the great stone steps leading to the glistening edifice that housed the Kansas Chapter of Nu Sigma Beta (No Squeeza Banana). To think that I, Nembutal Jones, could have attained the distinction of acquiring an exclusive franchise on the collection of all fraternity garbage! My spirit soared as I gazed into the future and saw myself being the sole collector of Beta garbage, Phi Delt garbage, Sigma Nu garbage ... what an honor, what a life! I hastily turned the corner and poised myself above the large N.S.B. collection unit, reaching into it with my right hand. My hand was immediately grasped and a figure arose from out of nowhere and ad- dressed me. Well, well, well, and how are you today? Just in time for the afternoon rush date, I see. My name is E. Stunbolt Stutz. I ' m Rush Chairman for the N.S.B. ' s known fondly throughout America as the S.O.B. ' s. Let ' s go inside our modest four hundred thousand dollar chapter house with private rooms for freshmen and no mortgage, we ' re just in time for supper. Before I could protest I found myself seated at a massive oak table surrounded by the members of N.C.B. Their breasts proudly displayed the pin of N.S.B. ( voted the most beautiful fraternity pin in the country by a convention of eight Nu ' s after a two- day binge ). Tears welled to my eyes as I listened to their conversation, filled with the gentle words of true brotherhood. Listen you rat, pay me my six bucks or I ' ll work you over! ! During the sumptuous dinner ( fried biology spe- cimens and a toothpick embossed with the emblem of Nu Sigma Beta) , I became better acquainted with Stunbolt. I came to realize that heretofore my life had been but an empty shell ... insipid, meaning- less. I choked up quietly as the brothers broke into Mirror, mirror on the wall; Help Phi Delt to pledge ' em all. FALL NUMBER, 1946 71 song—their famous Don ' t Shoot Craps Tonight, Housemother —better known in some circles as The Dice Are Loaded and So Are You. Oh for the joys of brotherhood, I sighed hap- pily as I viewed the happy spectacle of the chapter eating dinner. As I watched I became aware of the intricate organization within a fraternity. The Treasurer arose and went about collecting house bills. What efficiency, I noted as I watched him carefully carve a pound of flesh from each member ' s back with a large machete. During the second course my eagle eyes began ferreting about the room inadvertantly appraising the exquisite tapestries which lined the walls, old Varga girls, old Petty girls, old Hurrell girls, old Gibson girls. My gaze was suddenly caught up by a terrifying sight! I suddenly spied a cold white corpse, covered with cobwebs, seated in a far corner clutching a dusty grey telephone. My Gawd, I shrieked, climbing up Stunbolt ' s leg, What ' s that? Oh, that, he murmured as he stroked my fevered brow. Thats Greg Groin, F.A. ' 36. He ' s still trying to get a line in at the Theta house. As I caressed my fillings with my embossed tooth- pick after eating, Stunbolt sidled up to me. Say hub, he whispered, now would you like to see our spacious upstairs, complete with oriental rugs and folding pool tables? Yes! I screamed, playing hard to get. He clutched me by the hand, pocketing his black- jack, and led me up the stairs past a row of luminous tinued. Why our history runs back into history. No doubt you ' ve seen the Great Seal of the University of Kansas, Moses beside a burning bush? Well, son, that bush was set afire by a cigarette butt carelessly flung away by a passing N.S.B.—namely Al Kline of Palestine Alpha. How wonderful, I gasped as he began pulling my mollars out with a pair of pliers. Phi Gams toss the book at rushees—scrap, that is! Varga girls. We entered a dimly lit room and I was motioned to a chair. Isn ' t this a stately room? he inquired of me, as two actives strapped me to the chair and a third nailed the door shut. My boy, he whispered, I am about to tell you of some of the glories of Nu Sigma Beta. Gee, I cried out as a fourth active injected 200 cc. of Scopalamine into my juglar v ein. My boy, he hissed, there are two types of Greek organizations on this hill, N.S.B. and then ordinary fraternities. Driving a Bowie knife through Banta ' s Greek Ex- change, he continued, We don ' t like to tattle, but we are head and shoulders above all the rest. Every man in the room leaped to a chair and stood solidly at attention. We are being very choosy this year and picking only men of real N.S.B. caliber. They all formed a line and salaamed to the East where the National headquarters of N.S.B. resides in Pocatella. And son, the chapter has decided that we want you! The Bowie knife sailed past my ear. Stunbolt then paused and cast a glance at me. I ducked gracefully as the glance sailed over my head and shattered the window. What an honor this is for you, Stunbolt con- Just think, Stunbolt muttered as he pulled on a pair of goggles in preparation for burning the N.S.B. Creed into my feet with an acetylene torch, of the famous men that have gone before you in our happy throng. All the actives smiled to prove they were happy. You, he cried turning on the flame, will be in the same organization with that great orchestra leader, Joe Banana and his Bunch. Think of that! I hastily plunged into a Samba to show I was socially inclined. Now there are two ways you can judge a frater- nity ... scholarship and athletics. We don ' t like to brag, but the Nu ' s have always been tops in these two fields. Do you know that we have among our members the greatest football player in America today? Bring him out men! he yelled, and a closet door was unlocked and a stumbling hulk led over to me. Son, cried Stunbolt with a paternal air, Meet Shrdlu Schmaltz, known thoughtout America as `Smooth Bore Shrdlu, ' the greatest line plunger since Pierre Snerd came to K.U. He was an S.O.B., or rather an N.B.S., too, by the way. H ' lo, Shrdlu grunted. Okay fellows, take him away, Stunbolt ordered. And now, Stunbolt cried exultantly, Meet our other wheel, C. Trilby Glotz. He ' s the only man ever to hold a position on both Mortar Board and Sachem at the same time! Trilby flew by and clasped my hand, moistly. Well, how about it kid, Stunbolt gasped as he plucked my eyebrows with his saber, Will you pledge? Fmpf! I muttered. The Scopalamine had taken effect. What will happen? Will Shrdlu suffocate? Will Gargles marry Christmas Early? For the straight scoop, just tear the top off ten Buick cars and send them to the JAYHAWKER office together with a six word theme on I like Chauncy Chudhoffer ' s Chickory Chewing Gum because... and we will send you postpaid a three hundred page biography of a fire-eater entitled, Forever Ember. r 7,he ALPHA TAU OMEGA FIRST ROW: John Hinde, Independence, Mo ; Bill Webb, Independence; Gib Layton, lndependnce; Bill Harding, Kansas Cty, Mo.; Richard Oberhelman, Kansas City, Mo.; Ed Becker, Newton; Don Millikon, Kansas City; Bill Weidensaul, Eudora; Herb Weiden- soul, Eudora. SECOND ROW ' George Peterson, Overland Park; Paul Brownlee, Sa- betha; Jim Brunson, Wichita; Bob Pringle, Kansas City; Jack Eskridge, Independence, Mo.; Darrel Norris, Kansas City, Mo.; Loren Watson, Coffeyville; Nile Peterson, Overland Park; John Brown, Independence; Claude Mason, Wichita. THIRD ROW: Jim Cope, Kansas City, Mo.; Herb Savage, Hutchinson; Ed Gilliland, Arkansas City; Dick Sime, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack Shanahan, Independence; Joe Gubar, Kansas City; Bob Shaw, Bartlesville, Okla.; Wade Arthur, Lawrence; Bob Schaefer, Kansas City, Mo.; Joe Hale, Downs; Jim Hanlon, Coffeyville; Bob Coshow, Hutchinson. NOT IN PICTURE: Delvin Norris, Kansas City, Mo.; Ed Lee, Louisburg; Chet Laniewski, Ambridge, Pa. BETA THETA PI FIRST ROW: Frank Prosser, Wichita; Charles Finney, Wichita; Robert Banker, Tulsa, Okla., Hugh Krearner, Downs; Henry Sullivan, Mission; John May, Atchison. SECOND ROW: John Bennet, Ottawa; Robert J. Renn, Wellington; Jack E. Winter, Columbus; Ralph Simmons, Smith Center; Ralph Moon, Kansas City, Mo.; Byron J. Bohl, Kansas City; Henry LaRue, Columbus. THIRD ROW: William L. Schwinn, Wellington; Richard Jones, Lawrence; Richard Capps, Wichita; James Fees, Iola; Frederick Shelton, Great Bend; Edward Huycke, Ellsworth; Bruce Hurd, Topeka; Bill Beeson, Parsons; Chester Scott, Topeka. DELTA CHI FIRST ROW: Barney Graham, Pratt; William Weigel, Dodge City; Jack Wiggins, Independence; Ole Blum, Oslo, Norway; Dick Tomlinson, Dodge City; Harold Houx, Independence; Frank Lane, Lawrence. SECOND ROW: Joe Ward, Lawrence; John Rader, Oslo, Norway; Kenneth Henderson, Gorden City; Lee Davis, Lawrence; Herbert W. Granemeyer, Jr , Kansas City, Mo.; Ralph Moore, Pratt; Roland A. Roepe, Topeka; Richard McClelland, Topeka; Rudy Johnson, Ottawa. THIRD ROW: Emil A. Glogau, Topeka; Rcger Penner, Wichita; Jamison R. Vaughan, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; John A. Davidson, Shawnee; Herbert B. Wilder, Lawrence; Kent Burns, Dodge City; James W. Milstead, Pratt; Donald R. Hyten, Wellington; Randolph Varies, Jr., St. Joseph, Mo ; Don Hardey, Hugoton; Leland W. Kesler, Jr., Winfield; James F. Pearson, Topeka FOURTH ROW: Kirk W. Grutzmacher, Onaga; John Wuest, Maysville, Mo.; Loren Fincham, Clay Center; Jim Killinger, Topeka; Ronald Paris, Kansas City; Duane Harvey, Henryetta, Okla.; Colin Howat, Lawrence; Melvin Huxtable, Jr., Kansas City, Mo ; Norman Hack, Lawrence. DELTA TAU DELTA FIRST ROW: Edward Hutton, Wichita; Royce Walz, St. Francis; Ruse McCarthy, Wichita; Dick Spencer, Arkansas City; Ed Blincoe, Fort Scott; Wayne Landis, Kansas City. SECOND ROW: Dick Dodson, Wichita; Dick Bradley, Wichita; George McCarthy, Wichita; Arlyn Smith, Rozel; J. C. Rea, Leavenworth; Earl Robertson, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Cunningham, Kansas City. THIRD ROW: Galen Wilson, Topeka; Lynn Winslow, Kansas City; Dean Hawley, Marquette; Ron Weddle, Paola; Dick Gelvin, Topeka; Willie Burtt, Wichita; Jack Wayland, Washington; Jordan Stranad, Bellevlle; Dale Marshall, Bonner Sprngs; Jack Haynes, Bonner Springs; Al Miller, Junction City. NOT IN PICTURE: David Bradley, Wichita. ----moneemssalemon rt DELTA UPSILON FIRST ROW: Wells Adams, Wichita; Bradley Light, Winfield; Sewell Wilson, Merriam; Gene Tait, Lawrence; John Elliott, Kansas City; Don Wheelock, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim Raglin, SECOND ROW: Carson Rockhill, Wichita; Dick mote, Augusta; Bob Ben, Lawrence; Don Glad, Pratt; John Meyers, Hoisington; Bill DeLay, Kansas City, Mo.; Sam Stewart, Humboldt. THIRD ROW: Jack Comstock, Hutchinson; Jim Howes, Kansas Mo.; Bill Cox, Pratt; Ernie Friesen, son; Wilbur Friesen, Hutchinson; Don Patton, Hutchinson; Bob Duckworth, Merram; George Francis, Lawrence. NOT IN PICTURE: Wade Abels, Topeka; Jim Thompson, Winfield. PHI GAMMA DELTA FIRST ROW: Tom Hawkins, Wichita; Robert Bunten, Topeka; Woody Dryden, Leavenworth; William Binter, El Dorado; Jack Ferguson, Wichita; Robert Coon, Tulsa, Okla.; Edward Brass, Lawrence; Joe Conley, Salem, Ill.; John Gorrill, rence. SECOND ROW: Dan Anthony, Leavenworth; Robert Evanston, Ill.; Hervey Macferran, Topeka; Leroy Britton, Ellsworth; Warren Helgeson, Omaha, Nebr.; Milton Fadler, Pittsburg; Bill Johnson, Lawrence; Phillip Carlson, Blue Rapids; Herbert Mesigh, Atchison. THIRD ROW: Jim Sallee, Topeka; John Wellington, Kansas City, Mo.; Wendell Gugler, Abilene; Rex Lucas, Independence; Dale Mallon, Topeka; Jack Gove, St. Joseph, Mo.; Carl Olander, Wichita; Charles Steeper, rence; Dave Ritchie, Wichita; Tex Price Kansas City, Mo.; Frank Hoge, Leavenworth. NOT IN PICTURE: Robert Kline, St. Joseph, Mo. KAPPA SIGMA FIRST ROW: Winwood Kline, Emporia; Robert McKim, Independence, Mo.; Oren Wright, Jr., Coffeyville; Paul Hill, Eureka; Ray Culbertson, Topeka; Donald Price, Topeka; Dean Young, Dodge City; Eugene Reinhardt, Russell. SECOND ROW: James Fishback, Hutchinson; Robert Brown, El Dorado; Robert Beiderwell, Garden City; Leon Barr, Arkansas City; John Kennedy, Kansas City; Max Coates, Arkansas City; William Miller, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack Parker, Robinson; William Pierson, Hutchinson; John Poison, Garfield. THIRD ROW: Donald Dean, Wichita; Ben Sherwood, St. Joseph, Mo.; Jack Steinle, Russell; William Fountain, Arkansas City; Harlan Ochs, Russell; William Jones, Emporia; Robert Estes, Topeka; Charles McCarthy, Topeka; Warren Blazier, Wichita; William White, Eureka; John Holliday, Topeka; Robert Wuerth, Kansas City, Mo.; William Burris, Wichita; Robert Sauder, Madison; Robert Stapleton, Independence, Mo.; Allen E. Green, Eureka. NOT IN PICTURE: Fred Kimball, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Zimmerman, Lawrence. PHI DELTA THETA FIRST ROW: Bob Lindsey, Topeka; Bob Danneberg, Kansas Mo.; Loren Powell, Salina; Bob Johnson, Salina; Jim Blocker, Lawrence; Kenny Ramsey, Kansas City, Mo.; Dick Cook, Iola; J. W. Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo. SECOND ROW: J. R. Perkins, Dodge City; Bob Fountain, Kansas City, Mo.; Murray Regier, Newton; Rusty Mammel, Hutchinson; Mickey Ault, Lawrence; Kenny Beck, Wichita; Ed Harris, Kansas City, Mo.; Ned Tanner, Kansas City, Mo.; Dick Croker, Kansas City. THIRD ROW: Renz Edwards, Kansas City; Ed Morril, Hiawatha; Don Wells, Rochester, N. Y.; Corb Bedell, Wichita; Howard Nearing, Kansas City, Mo.; Merle McKay, McPherson; Marvin Martin, Wichita; Tom Hanna, Newton; Don McIlroth, Great Bend; Sonny Eons, Newton; Bill Mitchell, Hutchinson; Clyde Burnside, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Ed Perrey, Kansas City; Bob Gaudreau, Wichita; Bob Hughes, Topeka. NOT IN PICTURE: Forrest Griffiths, Lee Summit, Mo. PHI KAPPA PSI FIRST ROW: Gregg Stock, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack Tusher, Lawrence; Ron Roberts, Kansas City; Fred Johnson, Chanute; Don Roberts, Kansas City; Ernie Never, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Arbuckle, Hutchinson. SECOND ROW: Paul Dillon, Hutchinson; Gene Nelson, Merriam; Fred Abell, Kansas City, Mo.; Bill Haggard, St. Louis, Mo.; Paul Haggard, St. Louis, Mo.; Dave Grimes, Paola; Tom McCully, Kansas City, Mo.; Orban Tice, Hutchinson. THIRD ROW: John Davis, Olathe; Moulton Green, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Mullen, Hutchinson; Bob Teel, Kansas City, Mo.; Max Bell, Kansas City, Mo.; Herbert Hess, Pretty Prairie; Bob Mercer, Hutchinson; Bill Hornbuckle, Kansas City, Mo.; Al Apits, Topeka. NOT IN PICTURE: Dick O ' Neil, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim Wood, Kansas City, Mo.; John Scanlon, Lawrence; Gene Sabine, Kansas City, Mo. PI KAPPA ALPHA FIRST ROW: Tom Hutton, Lawrence; Wally McDaniels, Winfield; Robert Hamm, Atchison; Mansfield Harris, Rose Hill; William Tolley, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack Cosper, Mullinville; Richard Lowe, Blue Springs, Mo. SECOND ROW: Carl Collins, Kansas City, Mo.; Daniel Johnson, Kansas City, Mo.; Charles Lindberg, Madison; Gene Smith, Longview, Wash.; Harry Lohrengel, Kansas City; Wiliam Chalfant, Hutchinson; Di lver Fellers, Mullinville; Norton Douglas, Topeka THIRD ROW: Robert Cowne, Coffeyville; Leroy Mumford, Coffeyville; Bernard Wardlow, Kansas City, Mo.; holt Denman, Sedan; John Dorsey, Coffeyville; Dole Hanes, Coffeyville; William Moore, Spearville; William Allen, Sedan. NOT IN PICTURE: Scott son, Gilman City, Mo.; Robert Gray, Topeka. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON FIRST ROW: Murray H. Davis, Kansas City, Mo.; Bill Hyten, Wellington; Jim Padon, Tulsa, Okla.; Claude Houchin, Muncie; Wallace Desterhaft, Wheaton, Ill.; Clyde Johnson, Tulsa, Okla.; Charles Peterson, Kansas City. SECOND ROW: Paul Carlos Chanute; Ted Glass, Tulsa, Okla.; Ed Weltner, Kansas City, Mo.; Edward Frizell, Lamed; Charles Apt, lac; Claude Van Doren, Wichita; Dave Mitchell, Tulsa, Okla. THIRD ROW: J. 0. Biggs, Pittsburg; Roy Fleming, Wichita; Dick Lamb, Caney; Mal- colm Copeland, Topeka; Jack Knowles, Topeka; Bill Meier, Kansas City, Mo.; John Rees, Emporia; Sam Peacock, Stafford; John Graves, El Dorado. SIGMA PHI EPSILON FIRST ROW: Rudy Valasek, Paul Drake, Paul Stavros, Donald McConnell, John Jenkins, Donald Wade, Don Carlos, Robert Mitchell, Lowell Ashby, Whitfield Anderson. SEC- OND ROW: Harold Carrell, Bill Adams, Eugene Ryan, Arthur Cattlett, John Rix, Court- land Smith, Bob Swenson, Claude Owens, Les Monroe, Edwin Rawson, David Scnoffner. THIRD ROW: Bill White, Francis Houston, Bob McNeive, Ivan Crabaugh, Bob Gurtler, Eugene Bullinger, Fred Perry, Dory Neale, Keith Owens, Alan Johnson, Lee Garich, Bob Finklepaugh, Harold Short, John May. FOURTH ROW: James May, Wayne Pierson, Gene Allen, Lyle Woodring, Frank Obenland Harold Schneider, James Russell, Max Haley, Edwin Herriman, John Ashby, Dean Campbell. NOT IN PICTURE: Roy Rogers, Junior Haverty, Donald Wind, Chan Boucher. SIGMA CHI FIRST ROW: Barry McDonnell, Salina; Dick Shea, Sedalia, Mo.; Andy Lunsford, Wich- ita; Dick Tucker, Kansas City, Mo.; Marvin Atha, Kansas City, Mo.; Bud Francis, To- peka; Bud Sands, Independence. SECOND ROW: Cal Markwell, Hays; Dean Miller, Topeka; Bob Anderson, Hutchinson; Pete Purdy, Kansas Mo; Gene Smith, Car- bondale; Bill Black, Kansas City, Mo.; Ed Hartman, Hays; Carl Tilford, Topeka; Grant Miller, Iola. THIRD ROW Skipper Stork, Dodge City; Bob Maupin, Topeka; Bill Sproull, Birmingham, Mich.; Dick Wagstaff, Lawrence; Bob Hopkins, St. Joseph, Mo.; Bill Saffell, Salina; Tern King, Pittsburg; Jim Connell, Kansas City, Mo.; Cliff Mc- Donald, Lawrence; Gene Gamble, Chicago, Ill.; Gordon Saunders, Boomfield Hills; Chuck Wagstaff, Lawrence. SIGMA NU FIRST ROW: Paul G. Klein, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert B. Riss, Kansas City, Mo.; Lee G. Selden, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; Verne Ricketts, Topeka; Alan Harms, Great Bend; Harold E. Jones, Wichita. SECOND ROW: Jack R. Settles, Wichita; Robert W. Elliott, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert A. Ramseyer, Kansas City, Mo.; Syd Bennett, Huron, S. D; William N. Bragg, Omaha, Neb.; 0. Clyde King, Wichita; Bruce Goshorn, Kansas City, Mo. THIRD ROW: Norton B. Riney, Kansas City, Mo.; Richard L. Ashley, Chanute; Wil- liam G. Malone, Wichita; Harvey D. Barnett, Kansas City, Mo.; Dwight 0. Deay, Cha- nute; Charles W. Hawkins, Olathe; Stanley M. Englund, Salina. FOURTH ROW: Stuart A. Thompson, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack Beeman, Russell; Andrew W. Berry, Russell; Wil- liam H. Roehl, Chicago, Ill.; Harry W. Morey, Jr., Perth Amboy, N. J.; Dale S. Romig, Hutchinson. NOT IN PICTURE: Vernon L. Biggs, Lawrence; Dean K. Gilchrist, Russell; Buddy J. Hinkle, Independence, Mo.; Frank Findley, Lawrence; Lloyd Russing, Kansas City, Mc. TAU KAPPA EPSILON FIRST ROW: Charles Boulware, Columbus; Bob Burton, Syracuse; Ralph Ster- ling; Bob Stroud, Emporia; John La Pinto, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Dudley Potter, Kansas City; Jim Street, Independence, Mo.; Bob Ulrich, Wichita. SECOND ROW: John Gunman, Kansas City; Paul Zeh, Kansas City, Mo.; Walt Yoakum, Leavenworth; Bob Staples, Kansas City, Mo ; Don Allen, Wichita; Dave McCullough, Wichita; Gene Brown, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Nelson, Kansas City, Mo. THIRD ROW: Jim Dudley, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Grissom, Syracuse; Norman Nolue, Leavenworth; Charles Comstock, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Bowersock, Columbus; Bill Kirchner, Kansas City, Mo.; Don Simonson, Great Bend; Cannon Kane, Topeka; Ed Bradney, Columbus; Bob Morton, Leavenworth; Bob Krueger, Florence. NOT IN PICTURE: Andy Sikyta. TRIANGLE FIRST ROW: John Hoffman, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Aker, Kansas City, Mo.; Wayne Smith, Paola; Van Harrison, Kansas City, Mo.; Forest Stark, Kansas City, Mo.; Louis Yonley, Kansas City. SECOND ROW: Elgin Thelen, Kansas City; Robert Frazer, Kansas City, Mo.; Joseph Henritz, Kansas City, Mo.; Paul Gratny, Kansas City; Charles Thomas, Kansas City, Mo.; Donald Helm, Kansas City, Mo.; William Davis, Kansas City; Jack Rowland, Kansas City, Mo. THIRD ROW: Robert Burwell, Kansas City; Alan Furnish, Kansas City, Mo.; Sam McCamont, Hutchinson; Larry Hyde, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim Crawford, Hutchinson; Eugene Brown, Kansas City, Mo.; William Locke, Kansas City, Mo.; Floyd Boosman, Kansas City, Mo.; Norman Royer, Kansas City, Mo. NOT IN PICTURE: Roy Smooth, Kansas City, Mo.; Verne Stevenson, Kansas City, Mo.; Gordon Stein, Overland Park. 76 THE JAYHAWKER RJSF Wea R us 74 lak)41cal labe-4 62-14 ateeh 4 13e 1 Sufficeth here to record what a few of History ' s For the benefit of all beginners, aliens, communists, Great have had to say about that most vicious of all incompetents, and illiterates, an explanation is in institutions—Women ' s Rush Week: order. Rush Week is spelled with a capital Rush because that ' s what you do during , HAMLET: To be or not to be, that is the ques- Week because thats what you are following. In tion! this case three days make a week and as for the LADY MACBETH: Out, out damnst spot—out I capital H —well, it don ' t stand for Hrdlcka. say! CHURCHILL: Never before have so many owed so much to so few. CYNTHIA: Wilt thou pledge ... ? FALSTAFF: Gadzooks, what mad rushing is this? F. D. R.: I hate war . . . ADMIRAL FARRAGUT: Damn . . . ! Gamma Phi Beta ' s go trunkin ' on down. Women, being members of the fairer sex, conduct a Rush Week commensurate with their classification. As in any specialized field, there is a definite technique to be attained—that of rushing and that of being rushed. First of all, if you are doing the rushing, there are certain tools that are required equipment. You need brass knuckles, a blackjack, one long rope, six bottles of chloroform, twelve Opium pipes, and assorted sorority pledge pins. If you are on the other end of the week ' s activities—be- ing rushed, that is—you will need a pair of track shoes, one box of false eyelashes, four new faces, one gallon of Evening in Poughkeepsie perfume, shoulder pads, hip pads, thigh pads, and assorted looks and glances. The latter fall naturally into five simple classes—eager, indifferent, sexy, shy, and glowing. The rat race, as it is affectionately re- ferred to in informed circles, begins with the Day of Teas. Once more the nomen- clature leaves a lot to be desired, for th:. elementary reason that there isn ' t any tea. The fare consists mainly of cigare ttes, warm coke, and a couple soggy cookies. After partaking of this sumptuous banquet, the average rushee has a taste in her mouth FALL NUMBER, 1 9 4 6 77 • strongly reminiscent of cotton-baling days on Uncle Rastus ' plantation. Next come the questions. Rosie Rushee is seated in the midst of a tight compact group—well any- way compact—and the quizz game begins. Would you care to see the upstairs? If our unsuspecting friend is on her first date and makes the mistake of answering Yes, in the vernacular of the prole- tariat, she has lit herself a camel! In every sorority house there is one iron-clad rule during Rush Week—only one of the upstairs rooms is to be used for entertainment. This one is neat. Casually referred to always as one of the freshmen rooms, it is a compilation of bedspreads from one room, curtains from another, and the closet door is shut! The last number on the program consists in most cases of initiation into the mystic rites of the hot- box. This terminology is obviously borrowed for this article from the men, as no self-respecting sorority woman would refer to it by any other name than the little chat. At this time the rushee learns that life anywhere but with the Zeta Pies will be empty and a mistake. By this time she usually realizes that life has been empty and a mistake anyway, anywhere. Probably the most confusing aspect of Women ' s Rush Week is the manner in which a rushee finds out whether a particular sorority is interested in her. Customarily if Rosie Rushee is asked to accept three dates following the Day of Teas with a certain house, it means that this sorority is hoping she will pledge. Naturally no one group ever gets every girl they really would like and so the three-date-rule doesn ' t always hold true. Although volumes could be writ- ten, there will never be any hard and fast rules the Rosies can lay their hands on to avoid the usual disappointments. All things considered, the 1946 season was the same as the many that have preceded it. Despite the fact that it seemed mighty important at the time, Rosie Rushee will never regret her decision to re- main independent. Sorority edges ALPHA OMICRON PI FIRST ROW: Geraldine Jones, Kansas City, Mo.; Beverly Emerson, Topeka; Nola Jean Nosey, Kansas City, Mo.; Core! Dunkley, Lawrence; Melba Mather, Stafford; Marjorie Jane Scott, La Cygne. SECOND ROW: Mary Myrtle Files, Kansas City; Martha Gib- son, Great Bend; Dorothy Heschmeyer, Kansas City, Mo.; Deane Carter, Richmond, Mo.; Wanda De Nio, Lawrence; Lita Lou Fisk, Independence, Mo.; Doris Edmiston, Lawrence. THIRD ROW: Alla Beebe, Wichita; Nadine Stafford, Hoisington; Patty Nordeen, Kansas City, Mo.; Betty Tice, Kansas City; Betty Cattell, Washington, D. C.; Margaret Hessick, McPherson; Marcella Cousins, Douglass, Okla.; Joann Webster, Leavenworth; Joan Bennett, Topeka; Mary June Roy, Kiowa; Phyllis Greisinger, Kiowa; Charlotte Thayer, Atchison; Nancy Dille, Kansas City, Mo. NOT IN PICTURE: Ardyce Wilson, Ottawa. ALPHA CHI OMEGA FIRST ROW: Norma Lee Loske, Kansas City; Dorothy Hegdal, Claflin; Helen Ward, Coffeyville; Jean Duvall, Kansas City; Beverly King, Kansas City, Mo.; Ann Shaeffer, Kansas City, Mo. SECOND ROW: Barbara Parent, Ottawa; Retta Jo Wichita; Joan Vermillion, Junction City; Mary Jo Myers, Great Bend; Joan Happy, Ottawa; Martha Weed, Kansas City. THIRD ROW: Edith Carey, Wichita; Barbara Ackerman, Kansas City; Virginia Daniels, Bethesda, Md ; Eleanor Howell, Escondido, Calif.; Lila Hyten, Wellington; Ann Hogue Russell; Martha Gragg, Wichita; Mary Lynn Hagerty, St. Joseph, Mo. NOT IN PICTURE: Billie Powell, Topeka. ALPHA DELTA PI FIRST ROW: Suzanne Reilly, Leavenworth; Mary Genet Covey, Atlanta, Ga.; Barbara Karges, Wichita; Peggy Schnackenberg, Madison, N. J; Nancy German, Kansas City, Mo.; Carol Tarrant, Atchison; Barbara Givin, Manhattan; Norma Mendenhall, Em- poria; Freda Harger, Kansas City, Mo. SECOND ROW: Peggy Herbst, Emporia; Nancy Lee McFadden, Atlanta, Ga.; Darlene Van Biber, Kansas City, Mo.; Eleanor Campbell, Independence, Mo.; Virginia Taylor, Lamed; Lucille Baldridge, Topeka; Virginia Cop- pedge, Kansas City, Mo.; Shirley Lindaver, Kansas City, Mo. CHI OMEGA FIRST ROW: Gloria Maxwell, Kansas City, Mo; Patti Norcross, Denver, Colo.; Carol Helmers, Kansas City; Shirley Sudendorf, Concordia; Jeanne Parrott, Hutchinson; Marie Stewart, Leavenworth. SECOND ROW: Nancy Messenger, Pittsburg; Betty Webb, Kansas City, Mo.; Isabel Martin, Topeka; Rosemary Robison, Kansas Mo.; Mary Helen Baker, Bethel: Ruth Walters, Kinsley. THIRD ROW: Stella Gabrielson, Hutchin- son; Mary Lou Martin, Topeka; Mary Bovaird, Tulsa, Okla.; Marilyn Barnum, Wichita; Isopel Faurot, Independence; Betty Brewer, Bartlesville, Okla.; Ethel Pearson, Kansas City, Mo. DELTA DELTA DELTA FIRST ROW: Louise Springer, Kansas City, Mo; Nancy McGraw, Newton; Marybelle Shepherd, Mission; Bernadine Read, Baxter Springs; Jeanne Bartlesville, Okla.; Kitty Walter, Kansas City, Mo. SECOND ROW: LaVerne Swaim, Godfrey, Ill.; Vinci Lou Gadding, El Dorado; Doreen Wallace, Norwich; Jane Archibald, Ashland; MaryLynn Trousdale, Newton; Patsy Harris, Independence; Betty Ann Hilts, Kansas City, Mo.; Margery Kauffman, Topeka. THIRD ROW: Marilyn Franklin, Kansas City, Mo.; Nancy Ludlow, Kansas City; Joanne Pugh, Wichita; Elaine Sawyer, Caney; Mary Kay Kott- mann, Kansas City, Mo; Dorothy O ' Conner, Hutchinson; Alice Schoonover, Denver, Colo.; Nancy Cameron, Omaha, Nebr.; Barbara Carroll, Independence, Mo. DELTA GAMMA FIRST ROW: Gwen Grant, Independence; Shannon McKim, Pratt; Betty Hammon, Wichita; Sally Sandifer, Wichita; Gertrude Hovey, Mission; Joan Morris, Oskaloosa; Margaret Harness, Kansas City, Mo. SECOND ROW: Marie Touhey, Lawrence; Mar- garet Jean Hanna, Newton; Kathleen O ' Conner, Salina; Joan Bynan, Kansas City, Mo.; Dorothy Wood, Kansas City, Mo.; Irma Lou Rick, Salina; Peggy Sue Cloyd, Kansas City, Mo. THIRD ROW: Mary Lou Stanley, Bethel; Betty Hirleman, Wichita; Louise Kintzel, Wichita; Gail Bixby, Valley Center; Carol Buhler, Lawrence; Mary Jean Mc- Cartney, Coffeyville; Betty Jo Jones, Garden City. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA FIRST ROW: Elizabeth Sheares, Hutchinson; Betsey Sheidley, Kansas City, Mo.; Dolores Teachenor, Kansas City, Mo; Polly Crosby, Topeka; Letitia Laming, Chanute; Anne Ashley, Topeka; Jo Ann Compton, Kansas City, Mo. SECOND ROW: Margaret Meeks, Kansas City; Helen Piller, Great Bend; Edith Elam, Lawrence; Sara Underwood, Law- rence; Eileen Horner, Parkville, Mo ; Diane Stryker, Fredonia; Jody Stuckey, Hutchin- son. THIRD ROW: Corinne Temple, Wichita; Francis Schutz, Kansas City, Mo.; Nina Green, Kansas City, Mo.; Margaret Moyer, Lawrence; Kathleen McKelvy, Atchison; Eileen Maloney, Tulsa, Okla.: Paula Sue Jernigan, Wichita; Harriet Waddell, Salina. GAMMA PHI BETA FIRST ROW: Ann Allen, Tulsa, Okla.; Shirley Hoyt, Iola; Mary Lind, Chanute; Isobel Atwood, Gardner; Barbara Johnson, Wichita; Sammy Kansas City, Mo. SECOND ROW : Carol Ann Hastings, Pratt; Alix Neville, Kansas City, Mo.; Grace Gwinner, Dodge City; Etta Mae Cooper, El Dorado; Doris Tihen, Wichita; Joan Manuel, Wichita. THIRD ROW: Bertie Schritzler, Wichita; Marilyn Glover, Topeka; Peggy Graber, Hutch- inson; Carolyn Carter, Lawrence; Bee Brady, Wichita; Janette Pollom, Lawrence; Cor- rine Carter, Lawrence. KAPPA ALPHA THETA FIRST ROW: Frances Bernero, St. Marys; Virginia Jensen, Emporia; Betty Sander, Wichita; Judy Torrey, Kansas City; Mary Jane Merriman, Topeka; Nancy Van Bebber, Lawrence. SECOND ROW: Betsy McCune, Tulsa, Okla.; Joan Stevenson, Salina; Edith Malott, Lawrence; Norma Jean Guthrie, Fort Scott; Janet Malott, Lawrence; Mary Sue Weimer, Kansas City, Ma THIRD ROW: Joan Schwinn, Wellington; Marcia Rains, Topeka; Mercedes Muir, Hutchinson; Cora King, Topeka; Phyllis Doane, El Dorado; Juliette Williams, Kansas City, Mo.; Virginia Daugherty, Tulsa, Okla. PI BETA PHI FIRST ROW: Ann Learned, Bartlesville, Okla.; Peggy Baker, Salina; Kathryn Pickens, Joplin, Mo.; Sally Shepard, Kansas City, Mo.; Mable Ellen Cable, Kansas City; Elinor Frye, Wichita; Barbara Burns, Wichita. SECOND ROW: Patricia Hamilton, Hutchin- son; Sally Pegues, Hutchinson; Shirley Garst, Wichita; Louise Lambert, Leavenworth; Charlotte Boyle, Kansas City, Mo.; Peggy Foster, Kansas City, Mo.; Georgann Eyler, Salina; Constance Dean, Topeka; Jacquelyn Herriatt, Lawrence. SIGMA KAPPA FIRST ROW: Jean Scherer, Newton; Barbara Burnham, Schenectady, N. Y.; Jo Ann Hull, Topeka; Ruth Murphy, Salina; Donna Munn, Garden City; Helen Hendrix, Inde- pendence, Mo.; Ann Clifford, Kansas City, Mo.; Felina Higgenbottom, Lawrence. SECOND ROW: Donna Kapp, Ottawa; Jaqueline Pryor, Kansas City, Mo.; Shirley Sparling, Kansas City, Mo.; Diana Smith, Colby; Nora Maria Mason, Seattle, Wash.; Dorothy Wheat, Kansas City; Doris Miner, Kansas City, Mo.; Pat Bahler, Kansas City, Mo. THIRD ROW: Nancy Ruth, Kansas City, Mo.; Kathryn Hassling, Kansas City, Mo.; Rita Horning, Topeka; Jacqueline Walker, Kansas City, Mo.; Joan Rettig, Fre- donia; Mary Helen Constant, San D.ego, Calif.; Olive Jean Grimes, Kansas City; Pat Parby, Kansas City, Mo.; Gerald() Keese, Alhambra, Calif.; Jeanne Ivester, Kansas City; Billie Dunn, Bethany, Mo.; Jean Bowersox, Wichita; Martha Sidener, Mullinville. NOT PICTURE: Maxine Van Northwick, Lawrence. xu THE JAYHAWKER An Optimist Looks at the Future (Continued from Page 27) tion, none can tell. But it is an import- ant question for the future of the stu- dents, the institutions, the nation, and the world. These two factors, our greater indi- vidual freedom and the presence on our campuses of an enormous mature experienced student population, offer a genuine basis for hope for the fut- ure—not the only basis for optimism, yet, a real basis. Time is of the essence. The odds are great, but I ' m optimistic! • And Will We Fight Russia? (Continued from Page 33) declaration of war would be the deci- sion of this country. There is one particular argument which cannot be turned aside fully in a limited discussion. Essentially it amounts to this: interests in this country who usually get what they want, want war with Russia —a fight for supremacy. Those who look with all the tolerance of a religious funda- mentalist to a world scene where the United Nations can survive only if one of the two great powers is forcibly crushed by the greatest power will not be convinced by this article. If you were actually presented the alternative, ask yourself: Would you urge this country into a holy crusade against commun- ism? I say that we will not be led into an aggressive war against communism because there is a latent and powerful feeling in both countries that cannot be whipped into a war fervor within the near future—a situation differing from that of the late thirties when one of the possible opponents openly antici- pated blitzkreig and holy warfare. Mil- lions of thoughtful citizens are some- how more aware of the deadly serious destruction such a war would precipi- tate. The ancient argument that man with the advent of new weapons will have to outlaw war to preserve his own skin has never prevented war. The strength of the argument is indicated in that it remains powerful, while not success- ful. There is no reason at present to think that man has reached the heights where he can destroy the world, but our civilization may well perish. The release of atomic energy has placed in extremely sharp focus the problems in light of which the League of Nations and United Nations were created. So long as the General Assembly operates as a sounding board for all countries, the Security Council as the ring for the great powers, so long as both t his country and the U.S.S.R. are members of this organization, I would not ad- vise transferring paper money into portable goods in anticipation of a third world war. The ultimate bedrock of this argu- ment is that Russia, while one of t he victors, was badly beaten in this past war; that although there are prominent and average Americans alike urging us to a destruction of the Red Menace, no pressure group will be swinging us toward war unless the world situation changes greatly. Enough of both the semblance and substance of a demo- cratic feeling remains to stabilize the main body of opinion in spite of ru- mors and headlines. From a coldly in- tellectual approach, atomic warfare would be the end of my world and your world. Emotionally, the boys are not yet convinced that they are ready to shoulder the atomic arms. Othello (Continued from Page 49) massager, knowing full well it was a present bestowed upon Des by Oth in their courtship and, therefore, of great sentimental value. Privately, Iago re- lates to Othello a spurious narrative depicting Cas as a cad and a bounder ( and there are very few of us left). To expostulate further upon Cas ' s conduct Iago states that at night Cassio mumbles obscenities in his sleep derogatory to Des ' s reputation. Iago suggests incar- cerating Cas in a red brig building, but Othello orders a more permanent entre ala pate de foie gran. Later, having received word via Iago to the effect that Cas is in possession of Des ' s handkerchief, Othello in- quires, Where is my lady? A loyal surf responds, She is in bed with bronchitis. The grieved General asserts, Well get that Greek out of there! At last Desdemona ' s whereabouts is determined and Oth cagily requests her handkerchief. Des is penalized 15 yards in Othello ' s estimation when she can ' t produce and Oth ' s suspicions are confirmed. Iago is then commanded by Oth to lower the boom on one Cassio. Instead, Iago spakes to the frustrated Rod, Your father was a garbage col- lector, pray disincarnate (rub out ) Cassio. Consequently Rod attacks Cassio, but Cas being deft in the manipulation of a cleaver wards off the blow and gives Rod the nasty end of his rapier. This displeases Iago somewhat and he rips out his Khyber ( that ' s Afghanis- tanian for knife) and gently strokes Rod ' s ribs, thus insuring his silence. Iago then wheels and deals Cas a couple of stabs. In the meantime, Othello takes off at high port for home. He finds Des in bed with her old dog Borscht and a copy of Psychomathigraphical Veloci- tildes. (If you don ' t believe it, look it up. ) Come wis me to Potter ' s lake, baby, as I have the warms for your form, Oth boldly banters. Over my dead body, you besmudged hunk of bifurcated filth, she rever- berates. Kismet, he murmers, a tear glis- tening in his manly glass eye, it is written! Oth then takes off his chapeau and strangles Des. Anti-climax — friends rush in shouting that a confession has been obtained from that snake in the Mardi Gras, Iago. This revelation causes Oth great consternation, which no doubt accounts for his subsequent chop suicide. The moral of this story? Statistics prove that for every man 85 years of age there are seven women, but then it ' s too late. Have You Heard? (Continued from Page 65) Wonder if Joe Brown and Joy God- behere have ever gotten together. They had three dates and something hap- FALL NUMBER, 1946 81 pened to prevent all of them. How long can this last? We hear that Bob Veatch ' s and Sarah Jayne Scott ' s romance has come to a screaming halt. Must be war nerves! Jane During and Al Ritt hit it off with a bang, even though Al had to call up a mutual friend the morning after their first date to find out the name of the girl with whom he had spent the previous evening. Paul Haggard has been taking up a lot of Eilleen Buelah Homer ' s free time. Both swear that it ' s a long estab- lished friendship, but people who real- ize that Eilleen lives in K. C., and Paul in Wichita find such a story unlikely. Sue McCloy and Bob Eichorn have that look about them. Perhaps its the shortage of apartments that ' s holding up the ceremony. Leroy Robison, Marsh Rryar, Bill Burgess, and Ted Batchelder—all V-12 boys, have returned to the campus as civilians and are quickly re-orientating themselves on the campus feminine sit- uation. Their only comment was Either there are more men or less women. Let ' s go to the show fellows! It seems that Armilda Abe Lincoln and Bill MacGregor have become un- pinned almost as unexpectedly as they became pinned. Candidate for the loneliest heart of the year goes to Bill Richardson whose fiancee, Shirley Corlett, has left K. U. for Rochester, N. Y. Harold Carrell seems to be trying to set a new record in the Sig Ep house by dating a different coed every night. Campus coeds have found themselves becoming slightly dizzy when they spot two pairs of identical twins walking down Oread. For your information, girls, they are Bill and Paul Haggard and Don and Ron Roberts. Anyone knowing for whom Bob Oberhelman is carrying the torch is certainly keeping this out of circula- tion. Bill Daugherty is now back dating in any house that will have him. The Sigma Chi ' s claim to have the most collegiate dog on the hill. He is said to drink beer, chew ice, and even attend classes. This Is Always—Marilyn Nigg-John Umbach—Mary Virginia Turner-Mar- vin Wray—Norma Lutz-Bill Jensen- Laurilla Cox-Bill Fowler—Anne Zim- merman-Bob Martin—Robyn Ashby- Bill Addis—Joyce Hartwell-Ferd Myers —Sara Russell-Jack Coleman—B. J. O ' Neal-Frank Pattee — Chuck Ball- Cathy Pillar—Mary Zeller-Jim Ken- nedy. One Love — Barbara Thiele-Tom Clark—Carol Mayer-Bob Hassig—Lor- raine Carpenter-L. B. Hammer—Pat Strang-Noel Nystrom—Ginny Gorrill- Bruce Coffin—Sarah Marks-Larry Mil- ler—Bobbie Ford-Neal Woodruff Mickey McKevitt-Joe Beeler — Anna Lou Macalaster-Dick Wyatt—Al Stein- hauer-Dixie Gilliland — Regina Mc- George-Dick Sevier — Toddy Aikens- Mary Ainsworth—Fran Pierpont-Susie Wright. ButtermilkSky— Joan Ruese- Windy Clark—Margo Pierce-Eddie Dix—Mary Kay Parker-Bill Huff Irene Sewell-Clark Churchill—Bobbie Esmond-Don Dorge — Jack Veatch- Kathryn Sue Culley—Marie Horseman- Doc Krup — Margie Meeks-Paul Dapper Dan Dillon—Jim May-Joan Vermilion — Norma Jean Pyke-Pete Snuff—George Polk-Polly-Molly Marge Wilson — Ernabelle Johnson-Howard Hull—Peggy Sue Cloyd-Jimmie Hawes —Bob Mercer-Ruth Up and down Walters. Coffee Time—Fred Johnson-Gloria Maxwell—Bob Goodrose-Joanne Grant —Beverly Betz-Paul Briley — Margie Darby-Bill Haggard — Emmalouise Britton-George Worrall—Duane Lete- con-Elizabeth Poseinow—Jim Kensett -Lee Brownlee—Pat Ward-Bob Cur- rand. Passe—Francie Lawrence-Don Cous- ins— Dainty Small-Bill Sharp—Sarah Jayne Scott-Bob Veatch—Pat Walsh- Mickey Alt — Elaine Thalman-Duane Adsit (he ' s married now) —Liz Esterle- Fig Newton—Johnny Beach-Nancy Goering—Georgia Lee Westmoreland- Bob Daugherty. The Eternal Triangle—Johnny Mc- Millan-Nancy Goering- Sparky Mc- Spadden — Mary Anne McClure-Bill Ellis-Georgia Lee Westmoreland Fig Newton-Bonnie Holden-Bob Crane—Chuck Byers-Mary Jane Zol- linger-Merle Brenner — Misty Hill- Jeanne Brown-Bill Burgess—Bob Scho- ber-Ruth Payne-Laird Campbell Roger Yost-Mary Lou Mathews-Jim D ittmer. I ' d Be Lost Without You—Jacquie Herriott-Ron Roberts — Jean Barlow- Don Fanestil—Dave Smart-Nine Green — Jim Paden-Norma Jean Padrie Joe Barrington-Patti Vance — Yogi Williams-Virginia Tolle—Liz Esterle- Bill Butler—Louis Orr-Dorothy Mof- fett--Tom McCully-Harriet Wendell— Sarah Webb-John Erwin. C R. Ca vait 0 Se Lace - - WINFIELD CHANUTE AUGUSTA NEODESHA KINGMAN Adve • • rr% g Sectio STUDENTS: 74e2e acle,te4t.e} liaue made the 12417 c4ear-e2i 62. pa. rah app4ecriakod4 4 it tv tee me2beita,41. THE 1947 JAYHAWKER STAFF FALL NUMBER, 1946 WE LWMLI: SEE A SHOW IGHT AND EVERY NIGHT at your LAWRENCE THEATERS JAYHAWKER GRANADA VARSITY IEF ALWAYS THE LATEST AND BEST FOR LESS 84 THE JAYHAWKER WARD ' S F.OWERS FLOWERS AT THEIR BEST DELIVERY SERVICE For 25 Years ronivrence dES ' ir Service GAS-01L—LUBRICATION TIRE and BATTERY SERVICE rLLivz Co. CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS PHONE 4 14 E. EIGHTH jihe Love Box Company CORRUGATED AND WOOD SHIPPING CONTAINERS 612 SOUTH COMMERCE STREET WICHITA, KANSAS Nature ' s own health tonic . . that ' s MILK AWRENCE SAN ' ARY LK AND ICE CREAM COMPANY PHONE 608 FOOT OF VERMONT FALL NUMBER, 1946 • exclusive B. H. WRAGGE sportswear For fall and winter Ameri- can Modern by Wragge . . . functional, streamlined clothes . . . that can be changed about, packed easily, suitable for town or country. Topeka, Kansas PHONOGRAPH RECORDS Popular and Classical Cameras and Supplies The Largest Record and Camera Shop in Eastern Kansas WRIGHT Appliance Store Mass. Lawrence PRINTING . PERSONALIZED STATIONERY . BONDS and WRITING PAPER by the or 500 sheets VOTE NOV. 5 YOU FOUGHT FOR IT, NOW DO IT THE LAWRENCE OUTLOOK Ed and Marie Abels Phone 542 1005 Mass. CE AN ESSENTIAL COMMODITY FOR HEALTH AND COMFORT Phone 48 ' AMERICAN SERV ICE COMPANY LAWRENCE KANSAS Be Collegiate! in clothes CLEANED . . PRESSED .. . by the NEW YORK CLEANERS PHONE 75 FILL YOUR FALL NEEDS NOW WE OFFER YOU CARLY INX MODES and PETTI JOHSON ' S 835 Mass. Phone 771 86 THE JAYHAWKER THE GRANT - BILLINGSLEY Fruit Company Wholesale Fru4 and Produce WICHITA KANSAS THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK LAWRENCE, • The Student Bank Since 1877 • MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE BANK AND FDIC 8th and Massachusetts Phone 30 krjèaver) For that gift that will put you in first place in her heart, visit our Cosmetic Department where we will be pleased to help you with your gift problems and where only better known and nationally advertised names are featured, such as: Ciro Schiaparelli Dana Caron Prince Matchabelli Worth Gerlain Elizabeth Arden Faberge Jean Patou Charles of the Ritz Lucien Lelong COSMETIC DEPARTMENT—MAIN FLOOR Phone 636 901 Mass. St. I FALL NUMBER, 1946 87 AM r EMBARRASSED! For centuries folks have relied on us bloodhounds to bring home the game. But I can ' t help much with today ' s scarcities. My master can ' t find any shirts . . . My lady waits in line for hours for nylons or one lonely bar of soap ... There ' s no building materials for our new home. But one thing sure, we ' re glad there ' s no waiting for electricity . . . We know there ' s always plenty and that it ' s as handy as our nearest electric outlet . . . What ' s more important, my master says, it ' s low in cost! KANSAS CITY POWER UGHT COMPANY • A COMPLETE CLEANSING SERVICE NDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners Telephone 432 740 Vt. St. Lawrence YEA. Outstanding Among Kansas ' Best Boiejenihenk ' TOPEKA—KANSAS Dining Room Coffee Shop A FRIENDLY MESSAGE Our 28 Years of Same Location — Same Management You are always welcome. We will try to give you the best of food and the best of service. Coffee famous the state over. DE LUXE CAFE 711 Mass. St. L Lawrence it 88 THE JAYHAWKER BRING YOUR FORD BACK HOME, FOR THE SERVICE IT LOVES BEST. TrilAN-111ACk or Amply 609 Mass. Lawrence YOUR FRIENDLIEST OF FRIENDLY FORD DEALERS MAGIC IN DISTINCTIVE FOOTWEAR DeLiso Debs Barefoot Originals Royall Colllege Shop 837-39 Lawrence AFTER ANY CLASS OR GAME, YOU ' LL AL- WAYS FIND THE GANG AT 4Ay AFE Where the Elite Meet to Eat CARL Phone 2007 14th Ohio TOPCOATS That Are Highly Styled and Reasonably Made By HYDE CURLEE GLENSHIRE STYLE CRAFT Gabardines—Fleeces Coverts—Tweeds $20 to $45 We Invite You To Look CLOTHING CO. 811 Mass. St. FALL NUMBER, 1946 CARTERS STATIONERY STUDENTS ' SUPPLIES STATIONERY QUALITY MERCHANDISE COURTEOUS SERVICE 1025 MASSACHUSETTS ST. LAWRENCE, PHONE 1051 dia go.4,9 O I I 1.g THIS YEAR, more Dads dreams are being realized than ever before. If your Dad had this dream—help it to success by diligent study at school and sound ness thought to the handling of the money which was planned for your education. WHETHER YOU attend K.U. now or later you will find willing help at The Friendly Student Bank in Lawrence. The Lawrence National (Member F.D.I.C.) LET ' S HAVE A DATE AT BRICKS Oh yes it is crowded all the time. That is because of that Murphy Did It Food. It ' s delicious and prepared by experts with years of experience. THAT ' S WHY I PREFER BRICKS WHEN FINER FOOD IS SERVED, MURPHY WILL SERVE IT W. E. (BRICK) MURPHY, PROP. 90 THE JAYHAWKER ter t h Year 1_3•LL TRADES LABEL COUNCIL PEKA.KAC4 This is our 50th year as commercial printers. We enter this year, not wi flamboyant phrases but with ity and gratitude. We are grateful for Victory and for iihose who made it possible. We are grateful to the hundreds of our customers who have been patient with any unavoidable lapse in our service. We are grateful to the co-workers who have cherished our 50-year tradition of service, ing every effort to maintain the same high standards, and helping to carry the load left by their co-workers who entered the armed services. Thanks to them, the year just completed has enabled us to serve more industries and businesses than ever before. We cherish your belief in us, in the service we render and the product we sel l o We thank you, one and all, for trading with us. 11 ' FITING1 COliPANY, Capper Building Topeka, Kansas F INE PRINTING SINCE 1897 FALL NUMBER, 1946 91 ' Quality you trust Have a Coke Coke Coca-Cola Coca-Cola and its abbreviation Coke are the registered marks which distinguish the prod- uct of The Coca-Cola Company. N all I SAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTI,ING CO. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY 92 THE JAYHAWKER STAR puwett 00 YOUR VOW ISA A trained team with the very latest and best ment gives you a ning nation. 1. Dependable Electric Service 2. Low Electric Rates THE KANSAS ELECTRIC POWER CO. Picture House Baby Studio USING NEW STROBOLITE BABY CHILDREN ' S PET PHOTOS GRANADA BUILDING E4iiAK ' S MORTUARY AMBULANCE TELEPHONE II9 Enjoy Specials in Fountain Service Phone 1487 616 W. 9th FALL NUMBER, 1946 93 A NON-PROFIT BOOK STORE OPERATED FOR K.U. STUDENTS NEW AND USED TEXT BOOKS—STUDENTS SUPPLIES featuring PARKER 51 PENS U ENT BOOK STORE MEMORIAL UNION BUILDING RAN -1-- V RELAX? COME ON OVER! MEET YOUR FRIENDS! SPEND THOSE SPARE MINUTES WITH THE GANG AT THE MEMORIAL UNION j 94 THE JAYHAWKER The.se oicitteidueA4 Made the 1947 Jayhawker Cheaper To You Show Your Appreciation By Patronizing the Merchants Listed Here ea4meapt, 4cht. We Solicit Your Business For-- Puretest Drugs Toiletries for Ladies Toiletries for Men Baby Foods and Supplies Prescriptions First Aid Products Fine Candies Stationery Cigars and Pipes STOWITS Rexall Store H. W. Stowits H. W. Stowits, Jr. 847 Mass. St. Phone 516 LAWRENCE Independent Living (Continued from Page 67) • other congenial young women and each of the halls, as well as other University dormitories, have a full social schedule. Their women take part in many curricular activities and a goodly ber of top campus activity women are numbered in the halls ' membership. Battenfeld Hall for men is run on much the same plan as that of Miller and Watkins hall for women. A natural rivalry sprang up between the three men halls—when each was still a men ' s abode—but this year with men, erly living in Carruth Hall, moved across the street into Battenfeld Hall, the rivalry is expected to die—and the scholarship average to soar. The 69 veterans, living in the ment of Thayer Museum of Art, have one of the most beautiful front yards in the district with the entire University campus at their front door. The mus- eum basement was converted into ing quarters only last year for the turning servicemen. The first co-op house was started at the University in 1939 with 20 charter members organizing to form the hawk Co-op at 1614 Kentucky street. This cooperative venture still exists and several independent, as yet unorganized, co-ops have sprung up this semester. The University now has se v e r al thousands of dollars, donated by various friends, for the construction of new dormitories and plans to commence construction when needed materials and labor are available. Restful, tive surroundings, as well as ing instruction, has been recognized by educators as a necessary element i n quate education. All the necessary proof of such a deduction may be found in the girls and boys who enter the dormi- tories and the well-prepared men and women who annually leave the versity via the dormitories to take their position in the complex world. • • FRANK ' S FOR FURNITURE FRANK ' S 1 E 834 Mass. Phone 834 • • ..1■1■•=1■1, • • COIT Phone 678 1101 Mass. St. Lawrence Drugs and Drug Sundries Fountain Service • • • 0 TOPS IN FINE PASTRIES • PHONE • 907 MASS. • 7 tal top young coat ill IL10,A.moyi,or Everything about Wiutra is the very tops ...its New Era BONMOUTON fur that looks like beaver feels like nutria. ... its super tailoring ...its superior lining of fine Narco Rayon. See your furrier now about your Wintra coat. TOWN AND COUNTRY CLUB FURS, INC. 540 West 58th Street, New York product of Motty Eitingon, Inc. Trademark Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1946 99 Sam, 014fae Memorial Stadium was crammed for the first time in its history. It was a perfect football afternoon, it was Homecoming, and there was a good chance to beat Nebraska. But if our football fortunes should go amiss everyone knew that the magnificent KU band would, as it had done for years, make up for score board inequalities by thrilling the crowd with its half-time precision and sparkling display. Th e first half was absorbing, and fans of both teams settled back to enjoy the intermission show. They knew that the Nebraska band would participate, but they also knew that for years no Midwestern college band had been able to equal the music, maneuvers, and appearance of Professor Wiley ' s men in crimson and blue. The Cornhuskers performed first. Their playing was good, their marching was good, and their appear- ance was excellent. The KU band was next. It would be a better performance; it always was. But, some- how, a lot of people were disappointed. Our play- ing was better, but the general effect of the Kansas organization just didn ' t stack up to the dazzle of Nebraska. There was one answer. Our uniforms looked like something out of Tobacco Road. The University of Kansas band has always been the pride of Mt. Oread. At football games, basketball games, convocations, and statewide concert tours the band has been a showpiece for KU. It should be; it has been rated beside the University of Illinois band, often considered the best in the nation. Our band is a laboratory for fine arts students, a source of entertainment for most of the student body, and an excellent publicity agent for KU. It is a musical avocation for many students not in the School of Fine Arts. And in the past it has prevented disap- pointed football patrons from mentally relegating KU to a place of mediocrity in the Big Six. It has been a debatable subject as to how much importance large musical and athletic organizations bear in bettering a univeristy as a center of learning. One thing is certain. Before KU can continuously hire better teachers and improve its physical plant it must attract a statewide student body and perpetuate a conviction among alumni and other friends that any boosting, financially, politically, or otherwise, would be worthwhile at K.U. It is unfortunate that most people judge a school by its publicly perform- ing organizations rather than by its curriculum and scholastic achievement. Nevertheless, the public as- sociates spectacular bands and winning football and basketball teams with a good educational institution. This year the KU band is as good as ever—in musicianship. However, no band can present a flashy marching performance or an impressive con- cert without dressing for the occasion. The band uniforms are 13 years old. They are moth-eaten, Paw Tao, 2a 9 faded, and worn out. In 13 years these uniforms have been worn 35 to 40 times per year. At a conservative estimate, they have been worn 475 times and have traveled 20,000 miles to ball games and concerts all over the country. Imagine wearing the same suit on consecutive days for 16 months. Replacement of these superannuated glad rags will take a lot of money, about dollars. This will include 125 uniforms with overcoats. Professor Rus- sell L. Wiley, conductor of the band, desires to change the style but, of course, to retain the colors crimson and blue. This year the University is rich. It has money to buy new football uniforms, and that is entirely proper. The coffer has been swelled by record-break- ing gate receipts from football games at which the band supported the team and furnished half-time entertainment. There is no reason why the band should be forced to raise the money (it could never raise enough anyway) or make public solicitations. It is an organization that has more than paid for its existence. The KU band cannot decently wear its tattered re- galia through another season of public appearances. Either it will have to be re-outfitted, retire from the public, or appear as is and lose its prestige as the best band in the Midwest. New uniforms are available. The money is avail- . able. All that is needed is a decision by the adminis- tration to use the money for this purpose. No one can argue that a complete re-outfitting will be un- avoidable soon. The only question is — how soon? Postponement of this move is not worth the loss of public esteem for an organization that is one of KU ' s best and most effective advertisements. —Allan Cromley OSTRUM, EDITOR • DICK CARMEAN, BU RECOMMENDED READING The above title is almost a misnomer for this issue because we ' ve gone all out for pictures, held written copy to a minimum, and asked our writers for contributions in the lighter vein. Students, faculty members, and deans alike will be especially interested in John Ise ' s superb piece of satire entitled CAMPUS DEMOCRACY. After reading it you will understand why Dr. Ise and the editor have a gentle- man ' s agreement to go down fighting together when the Chancellor asks for resignations. Homecoming was certainly A DAY TO REMEM- BER and Dick Hawkinson ' s account of it deserves read- ing and remembrance as well. Whether you like poetry or not, ycu will have to admit that Bill Feeney has done a masterful job with his CHRISTMAS PAGEANT which won second prize in the 1946 Carruth Poetry Contest. Frank Miller ' s illustra- tions, we believe, are equally good. Bill Conboy makes his debut writing for the 1947 JAY- HAWKER with his contribution THE HARD WAY — a fitting tribute to more than 5,000 students who don ' t wait for that check from home. When more efficient , conscientious secretaries are made, they will have to look to Judy Tihen for a counterpart. It is to Judy that credit is due for the nerve-racking and exacting job of compiling the facts, names, and figures for the thirty pages of women ' s organizations in the back of this issue. If we weren ' t married, we ' d say Judy is the type of secretary about which every editor dreams. In spite of what you may think after reading KRISS- MUSS PREZUNTS, John Conard, alias J. P. Oberdowski, is a former JAYHAWKER editor and at one time success- fully passed his English proficiency examination. Our partiality for pictorial feature stories will again be apparent in Billie Hamilton ' s HAYRACK PICNIC, Don Diehl ' s JAYHAWKER GOES TO THE HOSPITAL, and Elaine Thalman ' s OH, FRANKIE. Summing up, if you like lots of pictures, you should enjoy our Christmas Number. INDEX Sam, You ' ve Worn the Pants Too Long 99 Campus Beauty 102 Campus Democracy 106 Candidly a Jayhawker 108 Big Six Co-Champs 114 A Day To Remember 119 Krissmuss Prezunts 124 The JAYHAWKER Goes On a Hayrack Picnic 125 The JAYHAWKER Goes to the Hospital 128 KU Melting Pot 130 Popular Professors 132 Big Wheels on Campus 134 Christmas Pageant 138 Campus Caricatures 140 The Hard Way 142 Hittin ' the Hi Spots 145 Oh, Frankie 146 The Brutal Truth 148 Campus Beauties 150 Sororities 152 Organized Women ' s Houses 163 Women ' s Organizations 174 1 II I ' d hl CI I ' d III hl H II lc ' (E) (1) hl Editor: DEAN OSTRUM STAFF Business Manager: DICK CARMEAN BIRCH DALTON HANK BROWN DUKE D ' AMBRA BOB GRAHAM MORT HAUSERMAN HERB KAUFMAN GEORGE ROBB Office Assistants: ISOBEL ATWOOD MARY HELEN BAKER MARILYN BARNUM BETTY BREWER BERNICE BRADY BETTY SARA BROTHERS BARBARA BYRD JOAN COMPTON ETTA MAE COOPER ANNETTE CRAMER VIRGINIA DANIELS ISABEL FAUROT BARBARA FELT STELLA GABRIELSON DORIS GREENBANK ELOISE HODGSON GEORGE HOLLAND SHIRLEY HOYT JOAN MANUEL NANCY MESSENGER JEANNE PARROTT ETHEL PEARSON DICK SCOVEL BETSEY SHEIDLEY LARRY SIMMONS DOLORES TEACHENOR DORIS TIHEN THE COVER The Ad building, Frank Strong Hall, received the nod as subject matter for the Christmas Number and a great deal of credit is due Birch Dalton for her excel- lent winter scene. In case it makes any difference, those are magnified snowflakes floating around in the lower right-hand corner. THE BINDER Your 1947 JAYHAWKER binder which you received with this issue was designed by Robert W. Caldwell, Fine Arts senior from Dodge City. It ' s a real product of Univers- ity art work for it won first prize in the JAYHAWKER cover contest sponsored by the design department last summer. NEXT ISSUE Your third issue will fea- ture men, basketball, spring, and (we repeat, ladies) men. In the meantime, let ' s all take a breather. Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, and Good Luck on Finals, all you Grinds. ALLAN CROMLEY BILLIE HAMILTON ELAINE THALMAN KEITH WILSON Advertising Assistants: BETTY COMPTON BOB WILLIAMS BOB WILSON Art Contributors: BOB CALDWELL FRANK MILLER, JR. YOGI WILLIAMS Contributors: BERNICE BRADY JOHN CONARD BILL CONBOY ALLAN CROMLEY DON DIEHL JIM DITTMER STANLEY ENGLUND BILL FEENEY DIXIE GILLILAND BILLIE HAMILTON DICK HAWKINSON DR. JOHN ISE ANN LEARNED JIM MORDY D ON PIERCE DICK SCOVEL BETSEY SHEIDLEY JACK SMITH DIANE STRYKER ELAINE THALMAN JUDY TIHEN KEITH WILSON Secretary: JUDY TIHEN Advertising Manager: EARL STANTON Art Editor: YOGI WILLIAMS Editorial Assistants: Photographers: 100 THE JAYHAWKER a p ,d1 s e ocracy Za ze fJ, J), 102-kK )fie discussion of democracy, on the campus as elsewhere, is fraught with considerable danger. In analyzing my subject my first problem has been to find out what is meant by democracy—I mean what the word means to mine-run Americans rather than to us University intellectuals, or to New Deal- ers and other communists. Too much democracy is certainly not democracy, for it verges too closely on communism. Several years ago, for instance, I came to the disturbing realization of the fact that in my own home, where I had intended only to maintain democratic ideals, I actually had all the elements of communism, for the members of the family shared practically everything equally. Worst of all, we were learning to love our home. Too much democracy is not democracy. Too little seems to be the very es- sence of democracy, if I read the American mind correctly; or, if that isn ' t entirely clear, may I say that the less we have the better, and the safer it is, and the more thankful we should be that we have it, and the happier we should be in fighting for it, or in sending others to fight for it. If that isn ' t clear to the general reader, I believe it is my fault, for it isn ' t clear to me either, in spite of the fact that I have read deeply in Westbrook Pegler, Gerald Smith, Robert Taft, and other great lovers of American democracy. Perhaps democracy is like many medicines—good only in small quantities. As applied to the campus, the problem of democ- racy falls into four parts: first the relation of students to each other; second, the relation of students to the professors; third, the relation of students to the deans; and fourth, the relation of the deans to the professors. As to the relation of students to each other, I must be gravely critical of many of the proposals for democratizing student life. Our university is a min- iature world, and it should be a small model of the world about us, else it will not prepare our students for their later life in the big practical world. Oblit- eration of class lines here would mean the building up of a Marxian classless society in the University, which would not prepare our young men and women for life in the great American democracy outside. Even the common fraternity ban of friendships and marriages with the outside barbarians, although often subject to criticism, is a mere rule of common sense. It is the rule of the great world about us, and of good society everywhere. Nowhere is it the cus- tom for daughters of bankers, capitalists, merchants, congressmen and bootleggers to marry soda squirts, bar tenders, chauffeurs or professors. Such misalli- ances are always regarded as scandalous. There is no reason why friendships and marriages which violate good taste and convention in the outside world should be sanctioned in the University. It is not even known to what extent such morgan- atic marriages are likely to prove fertile since the laws of hybridization are not yet well understood. Huxley cites the well-authenticated instance of a Pi Phi girl who married a member of a grade-three pro- fessional and bore two children; but one of the chil- dren was pigeon-toed, and the other developed hay fever at an early age. In his exhaustive study of hy- brids and mongrels, Steinberg mentions the case of a Beta who married a girl whose only distinction was a Phi Beta Kappa key, who had three children, phys- ically normal, but all introverts, and all allergic to education. Robertson mentions several similar cases —one case of a Phi Gam who married a female bar- barian, to whom were born four healthy children, apparently normal in all respects. There is far less well-tested evidence than we need; but granting that CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1 9 6 107 such unions may be fertile, there is still the possibility that the children of such unions, like hybrids gener- ally, may themselves be barren, or that hidden weak- nesses or abnormalities may appear in later genera- tions. In several cases recorded by Robertson, such children showed definite abnormalities— adenoids, cross eyes, flat feet, warts, and various types of com- plexes. Such marriages could seldom prove happy anyhow. The children would have no definite, recognizable social status. In some re- spects their situation would scarcely be prefer- able to illigitimacy. It is perhaps better to have one parent unknown than to know who he is and that he is not what he should be. For yet another reason we must not go too far in democratizing student life. It would interfere too much with the American race—not the American race ethnologically, but the social marathon in which each strives to reach a po- sition in which he can feel superior to as many as pos- sible, and inferior to as few as possible, the race which has g i v en such luster and distinction to American democratic society. Without it, how drab would life be! Where would we find the zest for continuing the upward climb? So important did our founding fathers consider this that they guaranteed every American citizen the in- alienable right to life, liberty and the pursuit of property, and we can do no better than preserve what our fathers provided. Turning now to our second problem, we find many thoughtless people urging that the relations of pro- fessors and students should be more democratic; but here again we should not be too hopeful. It would be a fine, generous gesture for the students to visit their professors occasionally, but they could scarcely find much happiness in doing that. Let us remember that many of our students are sons and daughters of successful men of affairs, that they are accustomed to associate with people of means and dignity. This year we have also veterans some of whom held hon- orable positions in the military—I had a former captain in my class last spring! Students of this type could not well find much satisfaction in visit- ing professors. If they call on them in their offices, there may be no chairs to sit on, and if they call at the professors ' homes they are likely to find serious evidences o f pecuniary anemia. A professor, if his wife is skillful with the needle, may be able to present a reputable front in the class room, but he does not wear his best clothes at home, and is or- dinarily unable to keep the wife and children up to business standards of re- putability. A professor looks better away from home, but not very splendid anywhere. Some fessors affect a pose of careless dereliction, of preoc- cupation with weighty philosophical problems, pear at class in more or less frayed garments more or less skillfully repaired and rehabilitated, as if they had inadvertently put on the wrong ones, walk about with a far-away look as if expecting Halley ' s comet; but we should not be misled. The frayed coats are ably their only ones, and the far away look is not in (Continued on Page 183) The professor and his wife—Halley ' s comet and harried indecision. Bunny Lawler and Ken Bellamy compare molars on the Pi Phi front porch. Truth or consequences and Julie Ann Fields jumps from the frying pan into the fire. Pivot and pass out Peck dons a Kansas helmet as he watches Nebraska hand the Jayhawkers their only Big Six defeat. Late fall on Oread found young Jayhawkers making the most of hayracks and picnics. Here Harley Colburn and Eileen O ' Brien laugh at camera shy Jean Rose and date Hank Hayworth. The JAYHAWKER photographer asks for cheese and JoNile Hall gals and escorts (Rose Madden, Ginny Cassell, Mike Unruh, Barb Erickson, Denny Willard, Helen Havey. and Irwin Brown) beam for the birdie. Homecoming house decorations were optimistic and elaborate. Although the above display designed by Bob Kiskadden didn ' t win, neither did the Jayhawkers. A sample of the conviviality that ensued when the Sigma Nu ' s broke tradition and entertained the Phi Gam chapter with a barbecue at the Nu house. A bet ' s a bet and this one results in a close shave for Joan Schindling as date Kenny Crowley obligingly ho!ds the mirror. Winsome Jo Young looks down coyly in the ground while Audry Heidecker holds hands with one else ' s date on the sofa in the background. A happy football crowd enthusiastically applauds its There must be some explanation for this picture, but Homecoming Queen, Nina Green. and her attendants, suffice it to say the men are Phi Delts and the women Norma Jean Guthrie and Gwen Harger. prefer to remain anonymous. IOW —while Wilbur Friesen and Don Patton Dorothy Berry and Marcel Frost crown Harriet Waddell as Queen of their Pump- take their jivin real serious. kin Party. Delt pledges dub Lena the Hyena as Queen of their dle Party Gismo, alias Dogmo—and you ' d be proud, too, if you had a sleek housemother like Mrs. Reed to sew up your trousers. Beer ' s high, but Chuck Comstock and Charlie O ' Connor (left background) look higher in this chance photograph of a weekend beer bust. Don Wheelock isn ' t impressed as he watches Jim Raglin and Dick Wintermote break the ice with half Nelsons. Sweet, sultry, and sensational—we ' ll wager Harger, Holzman and Dumler can get dates even without that convertible. Just pinned and happy with the hanging—Susie Wright and Fran Pierpont. Swede Swenson, Joan Strowig, Oval West, and Beverly Stember wait one out on a Watkins Hall window sill. Not the D.T. ' s—just Herk Harvey rehearsing for gar on Horseback. Formal attire shortages make costume parties more popular than ever. Sig Eps chose the Gay Ninety theme and the above two shots are a few of the results. Left to right: Gene Ryan, Melba Mather, Kitty Walter, Bob Tinkelpaugh, Cliff Clark, Ruth Dudley, Helen Gooch, Ike Crabaugh, Betty Jacobs, Phyllis Kissinger, Jim Russell, Rudy V alasek, Cleta Van Marter, Boo Gibson, Dean Gibson, Pat White, Clarence Jarrell, Sue Webster, Bill Ogg, (sitting) Corel Dunkley, and Bob Swenson. Dennis Willard, Mildred Crandall, Barbara Lamoreaux, and John Stern-faced Caroline Morriss sews on a cos- tume to be worn in Beggar on Horseback. Deffendorf take a break for fresh air during a Varsity dance. Lee Pagel learns the hard way as Bob Stroud, Dave McCullough, Dud Potter and Norman Nolop strip him. All this excitement at the Theta house just because Jim Sargent hung his old Beta pin on pretty Barbara Haffner. Making up the easy way as cur- Nancy Love and George Cox are bummed for min time nears in Fraser Theater. a fag during a break in front of Watson. Bald-headed barber looks enviously at customer. 16. Rex Arrowsmith, Bonnie Cunningh am, Wayne Eckel, Betty Cunningham, Marjorie Scidmore, Bucky Neal, Helen Dietzel, and Frank Wendlandt jelly in the fountain. Future doctors rub shoulders for lack of elbow room in Bailey ' s crowded chemistry laboratories. Phyllis Hoover and Ruth Talented Norma Kennedy does Brown wrap packages for Minnie from Trinidad at the Corbin ' s Christmas party. Bitter Bird dance. The often heard but seldom seen operators of extensio n KU—Mrs. Laura Roper and Mrs. Mary Heustifter, 114 THE JAYHAWKER lc Six Co-Cn 0 Aelce atimL up Me 1946 biaaaa lea 16214 atia a ialitaathe izczumzi-Pria. can ' t talk about this year ' s Kansas football team without talking about George Sauer. From Ames to Norman, from Columbia to Manhat- tan they ' re calling that 1946 Jayhawker grid crew a miracle team and Sauer a miracle coach. The big, hard-driving ex-All-American from Nebraska won ' t like the title of Wizard of Football. But it ' s an unsuppressible fact that he will be a top- notch candidate for Coach of the Year. When Sauer took over the worn reins of KU football fortunes last spring, there wasn ' t much on hand to shout about. He had Ray Evans, a pre-war All-Big Six halfback and national passing leader, to be sure. In addition there was Joe Crawford, a sturdy guard before the recent conflict and Otto Schnell- bacher, who as a skinny little sophomore back in 1942 had looked like he might be a good end. In addition the painstaking former Cornhusker was handed the roughest schedule in red and blue history, a card which called for battles with four of the 1946 Bowl teams. He hired two young assistants, Vic Bradford, a one-time Alabama Rose Bowl quar- terback, and Bob Ingalls, 27-year-old former Michi- gan great, and embarked on the always ardent task of installing a new system, a standard T formation. To take a short cut to the success end of this Cinderella drama, here ' s what Sauer and his first Kansas football club accomplished: 1. Tied Okla- homa for the Big Six championship, the first taste of the banner since 1930. 2. Won 7 games, lost 2 and tied one for the best KU grid record since 1909. It also was the most games any Kansas team has copped since the Big Six was founded in 1928. 3. Defeated Oklahoma and Missouri in the same sea- son for the first time since 1930. 4. Set three new attendance records, a new home game mark of 33,- 000 for the Nebraska contest, a new home figure of 105,000 paid and a seasonal draw of 199,000 in 10 games. 5. Defeated Missouri for the first time since 1934 at Columbia. 6. Broke the spell of the Tiger ' s Don Faurot who had never lost to a Kansas team since taking over the Missouri helm in 1935. 7. Hung up the most lop-sided victory in 42 years over Kansas State. Here is the way the scoreboard looked after KU (Continued on Page 117) Right half Dick Bertuzzi ' s bad ankles give the team physician, Dr. Bob Allen, plenty of trouble. Here Bert and mates Paul Turner (43), Don Fambrough (22), and Dave Schmidt (45) sit this one out. low: Wichita ' s Wheatshockers come to KU and learn the hard way as five Jayhawkers gang Linwood Sexton, hard-running Wichita back. The final score —Kansas 14, Wichita 7. KU ' s football staff—the men who make the wheels grind. Front row: Dean Nesmith, Trainer and Tackle Coach; Wayne Replogle, B Team Coach. Back row: Vic Bradford, Backfield Coach; Bob Ingalls, Line Coach; Head Mentor George Sauer; and Mike Getto, Assistant Line Coach. Hugh Johnson, Ray Evans, Don Fambrough, and Lynne McNutt display that victory grin in the locker room after Kansas spilled powerful Oklahoma A M 14-13. A lot of other people were happy, too, Cornhusker Coach Bernie Masterson, an old teammate of George Sauer ' s, nightmares a Kansas scoring thrust, and the Nebraska bench appears to echo the worry. It was a long afternoon for both teams. 4.:44•N 1-4 Fir • nyittiw - _ • 4 Otto Schnellbacher spins off a Nebraska blocker to nar- rowly miss breaking up a Cornhusker pass. Kansas was barely edged out by a fourth period field goal which gave Nebraska a 16-14 win. Fullback Frank Pattee boots out of danger during the Nebraska game to continue the kind of punting that ranked him among the Big Six ' s best in that department. We beat the team that slowed mighty Army. And al- though the mud was miserable, the victory was a sweet one. Oklahoma ' s only Big Six defeat, the final score was KU 16 —Sooners 13. Fambrough prepares to convert as the Wichita line rushes forward. Invaluable Don rang up twelve straight this sea- son before a miss and his final count after the Missouri win stands at nineteen successful kicks out of an attempted twenty-two. Lt.1 itt CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1 9 1 6 (Continued from Page 114) outlasted Missouri on Thanksgiving Day to deadlock the title at four victories and a single loss: Kansas 0 Texas Christian 0 Kansas 21 Denver 13 Kansas 14 Wichita 7 Kansas 24 Iowa State 8 Kansas 14 Nebraska 16 Kansas 0 Tulsa 56 Kansas 14 Oklahoma Aggies 13 Kansas 16 Oklahoma 13 Kansas 34 Kansas State 0 Kansas 20 Missouri 19 After reading this log even the most informed Jayhawker had to ask questions. Did Sauer do it with mirrors or were the players terribly underrated? Well, perhaps it was a little of both. The large Nebraskan did pull some players and some plays out of the hat that left the opposition talking to itself. And those players, a physically undermanned squad, turned out to be the toughest, smartest gang 117 of clutch-loving buckeroos the conference has ever seen. Beginning immediately with their outbombing of Texas Christian in a scoreless tie at Kansas City to their last quarter offensive slash which toppled souri off the loop throne, the Kansans were the most astounding outfit in the 18-year-old history of the conference. They were so small that all ten opponents weighed them in overall team heft. The line, in fact, was outscaled a total of 155 pounds to the man for the ten-game trek. Replacements were so thin that every one of the regulars save three, averaged over 50 minutes per game. The club stood third in the ference in total offense and fourth in total defense. Yet with one exception, that mid-season cave-in against tough Tulsa, the Hawkers never were played, outfought or outsmarted. But how were they good enough to share the crown with powerhouse Oklahoma? How did they (Continued on Page 184) KANSAS ' BALL 4 DOWN 4 QUARTER 7 YDS. TO GAIN SCORE - 13-13 I MIN. 15 SEC. TO PLAY PAUL TURNERS 4I-YD. BOOT ON ITS WAY TOWARD MAKING FOOTBALL HISTORY FINAL SCORE KANSAS - 16 OKLAHOMA - 13 RNHUSKER5 CANNED BY J. HMI11 Or= T BRING YOU R C CA N TO KANSAS . !!!!!! . • ‘ ' .7417P$120 CHRISTMAS NUMBER. 1 9 4 6 119 A Day to Remember qtad avtoptry t ate eeletoita ion. iRN ED in . HA111 greatest home crowd in K.U. history flooded a keyed up campus on the sunny afternoon of October 19th to jubilantly join in the matchless festivities of the traditional homecoming football fray. The colorful entertainment of a day made per- fect for football by ideal weather and a near capacity throng unfolded to 33,000 fans the spirited merry- making of pregame fanfares preluding the thrills and spills of a bitterly fought pigskin spectacle that saw the invading Nebraska Cornhuskers shade out a narrow 16-14 victory over the previously unbeaten Jayhawkers. From far and near old Kansas grads gathered to see if the Nebraska eleven could repeat their gridiron romp of former years, for ' twas with a wince that many alumns paused in their return to the old alma mater to recall the all time record of Kansas-Ne- braska grid rivalry, the Cornhuskers with 39 vic- tories, Kansas with 10. And at the end of sixty action packed minutes of football in this 1946 homecoming game, hoarse thousands milled out of K.U. ' s horse- shoe bowl knowing they had been through a great day, though one brought to a heartbreaking climax by a fourth period Nebraska field goal that capped their second and third period touchdown drives to provide the winning Cornhusker margin. The crowd, the coaches, and members of both teams were unanimous in their praise of Ray Evans, Jayhawker captain, for his sparkling defensive play and two touchdown passes that payed off along with his runs which set up each aerial to give Kansas both her scores. Riflin ' Ray whipped his first bullet strike to halfback Bud French early in the third period to chalk up Kansas ' initial score, and repeated in the final stanza to Otto Schnellbacher as time ran out on a desperately driving Kansas tide. Though the Cornhuskers remained unhusked by two kerneled points, the great crowd was royally entertained, for Mt. Oread was in fine fettle and dressed for the kill on this day of days. The old Jay- hawker had been through a hilariously suspenseful time since homecoming activities were launched in the float parade and inflaming rally of the night before. He had pushed his way to the fore of a noisy, cheering crowd that lined Massachusetts street for four blocks to see the twenty-four ingenious scenes of forecasted Kansas victory roll past. He found himself warmly applauding the winning en- tries, Kappa Alpha Theta and Sigma Chi, for by now the old sage ' s spirits were beginning to soar. The surge of several thousand parading students led by K.U. ' s great marching band brought back memories of four years nearly forgotten by the old alumni, and his mind began to wander and wonder of col- lege spirit then and now. Suddenly Mr. J. Hawker found himself swept ir- resistibly along in the throng ' s forward march, and before he could amazedly murmer that he was just an old grad returned for a day, he was in the midst of a swaying yelling rally that topped anything he had ever seen. He brushed a crimson and blue pen- nant frcm his eyes and between thundering yells caught the wish of good luck expressed to coaches and players by the beautiful homecoming queen, Miss Nina Green, Kappa Kappa Gamma. The queen and her assistants, Miss Gwen Harger, Alpha Delta Pi and Miss Norma Jean Guthrie, Kappa Alpha Theta, brought an eye opening feature to our de- lighted old-timer and he began to join heartily in the infectious enthusiasm of the occasion. This was the (Continued on Page 120) 120 THE JAYHAWKER (Continued from Page 119) greatest rally in many, many years at old K.U.—and J. Hawker ' s first step into homecoming had become a red hot one. Saturday morning saw the now eager old-timer over at Hoch Auditorium where K.U. Hullabalo unveiled a novel pep rally featuring skits covering the highlights of homecoming. Miller Hall ' s clever presentation of how K.U. homecoming would be celebrated in various countries drew his heartiest ap- proval and the judges echoed this first place choice. From here Jay walked over to the Union building to add his name to that of countless others in Alumni registration. He wandered with a treasured few of his old cronies into an exhibit of K.U. Past, Present, and Future, and mistily scanned scenes bringing back happy memories of his own college days. Jay found more old friends a n d occa- sioned more back slapping as he joined the crowd in coffee and d oughnuts served by singing waiters. Class reunions of many luncheon groups and buffets at many of the organized houses reminded our faithful alum he had but a few hours before game time. He strolled aimlessly and perhaps a bit sentimentally along the campus thinking of the changes since his time. Jay walked down West Campus Road, chuckling with his old college carefreeness at the house decora- tions which showed Nebraska ' s Cornhuskers being husked by a fighting Jayhawk. Many amusing varia- tions of the Beat Nebraska ' theme popped up before his wandering gaze, though he conceded the first place award to the Sigma Chi ' s, Phi Kappa Psi ' s and the Pi Beta Phi ' s. He saw the Cornhusker in many shapes—all in defeat and thought to himself in passing that 8700 students couldn ' t be wrong. Lightly and confidently he brushed aside the rumbl- ings of past Nebraska victories and lost himself in the great mass of alumni, students, parents, and friends of K.U. football who had blocked traffic and jammed all Lawrence to join in the fun of a great day. And now it was game time and Mr. J. Hawker was giving the old Rock Chalk with all the pep of a College Freshman. Nebraska trotted onto the field and those sobering memories of their former houses came painfully to mind. A realization of the immense task facing Kansas ' head coach George Sauer dawned upon him for this was Sauer ' s ural year as football mentor and the greater part of his squad was playing together for the first time. Nebraska ' s head mentor was an old team-mate of Sauer ' s, they having played together for three pionship years in lege, and the sports writers wouldn ' t let their public forget about this additional rivalry. Of all this Jay was fully aware. But now Kansas was on the field and J. Hawk was on his feet with the rest of the crowd. He looked around and saw 33,000 yelling, swaying, multi- colored fans, and shouted all the louder as the thought hit him that this would be one of the best games he ' d ever seen a Kansas team play. Not since the days of Bill Hargiss ' s teams in the early ' 30 ' s had a K.U. squad come up to their fifth game un- beaten. He had read this was K.U. ' s best team in ten years; he knew Nebraska might was always dan- gerous. He gazed down on the playing field, Kansas had won the toss, was lining up to kick off and .. . bang, the game was on and his musings were lost in the roar of 33,000 voices booming down across the field. The roar quickly turned to a helpless silence how- ever as the Cornhuskers unrolled a first half defense (Continued on Page 185) 124 THE JAYHAWKER • TOSS! uss PrezL, r tN is 4 P. OZieixio Dew tew the shortaj ov material noboddy is ex- pecting verry much fore Krissmuss this yere espeshly the veterans i think becos the veterans hay becum ackustomed to shortajes som ov them in plases lik the pasific where there ar no wimmin but only water or pahm trees for miles evrywher. Som ov the fellose are writing to santaclaws ask- ing pleze send the Yewniversity more gurls in fact but i think that is asking tew much becos if the enjineeres wud mak out a skedjewl and the laws wud mak a set ov grownd tools the prezunt numbre wud be adekwat altho som ov the stewdent boddy wud not be able to patroniz the chapple they cud get matted later on in the business world ov free enterprice. But, gurls, if eny of yew ar going tew giv prezunts tew the war he roes yew shud giv mal- lards which ar a form of duck which fuse around until it toms tew close tew a blind. The ducks now in transom seem tew be the sitting kind which get shot on the watre before open season. But wiled anumuls and foul ov the air ar hard tew find which is tew say they ar not so good as prezunts unless yew happen to gno sumboddy whose roommat has a few. In this way we leve wiled anumuls and go on to moar convenientional prezunts such as wriste watches which ar small clocks fassened to strapps the size ov a mans arm and can be worne day or niteght except they must be wownd up lik other clocks only moar offten. These mak verry gnice prezunts espeshly cheeper ones lik the micky mous which is an ordnary wriste watch with a pictchur ov a small mous ore other houshold rodunt painted up tew look sumwhat lik a littl man with a big noz and Bares. An exslent prezunt and cheep tew foar a collej man is a pipe which is a sort of long tewb with a cup on the end in which yew can burn things, to- backo is good fyewl becos it Burnes slow and farely hot tew. The tewb may be almoste eny size which can be got in a fellose mouth but the cup shud be farely large tew mak ref yewling infrekwent as posibal. Gurls, i think, wud lik to hay foar Krissmuss a pet ov som kind such as a dawg which is a smal anumul all kov- ered with hare and with foar legs and a tail which he wags when he sees yew comming be- cos he is happy ore maybe gnos yew wil giv him a biskit which he can eat eny time lik humans foar brekfast. Eny kind ov dawg wud be alright i think but i heer them tawking most of booz- hounds which is a gud hunt- ing dawg. Thay mite be expen- siv as i hay not checked the price but it is something tew think ov. Wolvs which ar a kind of wiled dawg wud be al- right i gess but they ar somtims feerse and shud not be bawt if tame dawgs which dew not kill sheep or chickens can be found. Gurls also lik sloppijoe swet- (Continued on Page 185) CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1946 7%e I akau,the)b geieA at a -- Hayrack Picnic wdk 125 It was a crisp October night. Thirty-six Locksley Hall gals and their dates climbed aboard three hayracks and left for picnic grounds—with a veteran K.U. hayrack pilot charting the way. Gettyup, boss, he clucked as his horse team moved down the dusky road followed by the strains of Shine On, Harvest Moon, from the 72-plus voices of the riders. ( Plus chaperones and a JAYHAWKER rapher.) The picnickers were well-supplied with the traditional assortment of hayrack ride equipment — weiners, baked beans, salads, relishes, potato chips, cokes, blankets, radios, gluttonous appetites, and a few comedians. Starting at 6 o ' clock, the hayracks wound their way to their destination where a central bonfire was started. About 9:30 the group returned to Locksley Hall where they danced until closing hours. Writeup by Billie Hamilton Photos by Hank Brown The hayrack ride idea at K.U. is an old. popular one. Shown here, loading on the most comfortable looking hayrack before the ride starts, are (1. to r.) Laurens Rossil- lion, Donna Rumsey, Lorraine Rumsey. Charlene Williams, Donald Wade, Russell O ' Hara, Jean Unruh, Epsie Brandt, Ralph Alford, Jim Weatherby, Lucile Ralston, and Ruth Balka. When the flames die, the glowing ashes roast the most delicious weiners. Above, Carol Terrill, (seventh from left on the front row) pauses after a bite to inspect another sandwich while Maxine Alburty, kneeling behind her, peers worriedly into the fire. Eugene Ryan. with the smile, seems pleased about his prow- ness as a weiner-chef. One way of eating an ice cream bar is demonstrated by Mary Jane Zollinger and date Charlie Byers. shown at the left. ' Zolly later entertained the picnickers with songs, sung in the typical Zollinger manner. A little close harmony is featured by the Locksley Hall trio. This is the period at every picnic when most of the food has disappeared and songs start spontaneously or at a given signal from every side of the fire. Radios are tuned low and local talent takes over. Lorraine Mai, Violet Orloff, and Dessie Hunter form the trio. Below, a private bonfire has been started and plates are filled just once more before starting home. Jim Weatherby searches hind him for the sandwich he laid just a minute ago. It might be a laughs Lucile Ralston. Dessie Bob Williams, Charlene Williams, Wade, Epsie Brandt, Barbara son, and Dave Boyd merely are terested in that last bite before the homeward trip. A diagnosis—acute appendicitis—and Pat is on his way to the operating room. With one of Watkins ' attractive nurses at the controls, he finds it difficult to concentrate on Operation Appendec- tomy but does a quick fadeout as Dr. Lane applies a few well-placed drops of ether, 7%e ia0ai,t).Zeiz goed. PJal n 4ppencleafamiy When Pat Gray, red-thatched, faced college freshman, entered K.U. ' s friendly Big House early one morning, he was followed by a JAYHAWKER photog- rapher eager to prove pictorially that kins Memorial Hospital is more than just an oasis for that tired feeling. After ing the hospital staff in action, the JAY- HAWKER decided to reject all inadequate superlatives and let the photographs speak for themselves. These pictures of Watkins fore, during, and after—show what a ence four inches of vermiform appendix can make to a young Jayhawker ' s outlook on life. Pat registers early and avoids the daily rush of 240 students. Mrs. Kiesow hears the not unfa- miliar Pain in my right side and rushes him to the doctor. T Scalpel . . . Suture — a 440 long 20 minutes in the life of the sleeping patient. Above, Dr. Mana- han prepares to tie off a capricious capillary. 20 Three days later—still occupying one of Watkins ' 65 beds but almost ambulatory—Pat discovers that even in the hospital a guy can ' t escape those books! The university hospital, a gift from the late Elizabeth M. Watkins, is headed by Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, genial Director of the University Health Service. His staff is groomed in efficiency and accuracy—qualities that extend under- ground to the sub-basement where the well-equipped Physical Therapy Department is located. Right, Pat discovers the meaning of medical efficiency when Dr. Canuteson bids him godspeed after only six days of hospitalization. 130 THE J A Y H A W K E t 0 A five minute surveillance of a between class thrc ng on Mt. Oread will reveal a passing parade of young and old, cosmopolitan and provincial. For instance, c ne watches a bus from Sunflower Village disgorge a heterogeneous group of men. Most of them appear to be veterans; most of them look older than a similar group would have appeared in pre-war days. But the in congruous part of it is that upon questioning man y of the older ones admit to being freshman and many of the fuzzy cheeked ones are seniors. It is the same story in the case of the sweet young things of the sweater and skirt. What stag at a women ' s open house hasn ' t dodged across the dance floor to cut a sophisticated looking number only to learn she ' s a green one fresh from Podunkville? Sometimes it is disconcerting to learn that the particularly guileless bit of fluff in one ' s 9 o ' clock class will graduate in February. In order to record how the days of the typed college student have passed, the JAYHAWER presents the following pictorial examination. Among the eleven pictured are freshman, sophomores, juniors, seniors, and graduate students. No Ripley oddities, these students have been shot without regard to name, activities, or scholarship. For your information five correct selecticns is the college student average and you can turn to page 182 to check your results. 132 THE JAYHAWKER ?op„i air essors BERT NASH Are you a slow reader? Do you spend hours gazing at the printed page without absorbing the meaning? If so, Dr. Bert A. Nash, professor of education and director of the University ' s Educational Clinic and Reading Labora- tory, is the man you should contact. Strictly a family man, Bert Nash is rightfully proud of his daughter Barbara and son Bob, both seniors in high school. He ' s an enthusiastic football and basketball fan and enjoys nothing better than a good round of golf or an eve- ning of bridge. Youngish, sandy-haired Dr. Nash is easy to approach, and although he probably has two or three meetings to at- tend within the next five hours at points all over eastern Kansas, he takes time to lean back, light a cigarette (he smokes ' em to the nub), and lend a sympathetic ear. Dr. Nash ' s avocation is child welfare. He has organized the Kansas Receiving Home for Children at Atchison, has been president of the Kansas Council for Children, is chair- man of a Kansas legislative committee on child welfare, is a member of the American Psychological Association, and has a current series of ten articles on child welfare appearing weekly in the Topeka Daily Capital. To help fill out all his remaining spare time he teaches eleven hours in the School of Education. As a faculty big wheel, Dr. Nash speaks with authority when he says that student activities should be more scat- tered with less domination by the aggressive few. —Allan Cromley CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1946 133 R. M. DAVIS Scholarly and charming, Dr. Robert McNair Davis, pro- fessor of law, claims two big interests, one in current af- fairs, the other in his 19-months-old daughter, Diana. He admits to being 61 years young, and is sure it ' s the class- room, and talking to the young folks that keeps you from getting old. His interest in politics and in international relations, especially those of the United States and Russia, keep him in popular demand with Jayhawker lawyers for after-class bull sessions, and with various University and commu- nity clubs for after-dinner speaking. Dr. Davis estimates he has made some 2,000 speeches in his lifetime, averaging one or two a week now. His real love, though, is arguing politics with his students, and he carries on the debate with many of his former students by mail. His professorial record stretches for some 31 years, start- ing with the Universities of Arizona, California and Idaho, before he came to K.U. as dean of the law school in 1929. He practiced law for a half dozen years in Portland. He is a Harvard graduate and holds an S JD degree from the Harvard law school. He also attended the law schools of Yale and the University of Chicago, where he received his JD degree. Dr. Davis was married in 1944 to Janet Patchen, a for- mer student in the School of Fine Arts. Their Lawrence home is filled with Oriental rugs, Dr. Davis ' hobby-collec- tion. —Dixie Gilliland E. R. HALL A former Jayhawker who returned to Mount Oread two years ago, Dr. E. R. Hall was chosen by Chancellor Malott to complete the merger of Dyche Museum and the zoology department, which has placed K.U. ' s department as one of the top four in the country. During the war Dr. Hall ' s de- partment carried on research in the uses and defenses of bacteriological warfare, but now has reconverted to turning out zoologists. Continuing the work he began at the U ni- versity of California, Dr. Hall ' s specialty is field research in Wyoming with select groups of advanced students. Genial, gray-haired Dr. Hall was graduated from K.U. in 1924 and received his Ph.D. from the University of Cali- fornia, where he continued teaching and writing until his return to K.U. Between teaching and making field trips in the United States, Mexico, and northern Europe, Dr. Hall has found time to write nearly two hundred publications on vertebrate zoology. His latest work is a massive volume, The Animals of Nevada, published by the University of California press. In his spare time Dr. Hall enjoys going hunting, but confesses he doesn ' t have enough patience for fishing. The members of the Hall family are real Jayhawkers. Mrs. Hall is a K.U. graduate, and two of their three sons are attending the university. --Dick Scovel 134 THE JAYHAWKER Big Wheels On Campus BILL SEARS Beneath that twirling baton, which he ' s bound to catch when it comes back down, is Bill Sears, drum major of the K.U. band, and master of the shiny twirl- stick. Shy and unaffected, Bill modestly relates that he took up twirling just for the heck of it as an eighth grader in Ottawa. When his family moved to the strange new land of Wichita he perfected the art, which has made him nationally famous, just to amuse himself. Oh yes, he had some lessons—two to be exact. That was while he was visiting friends in California. Now the hobby is paying off. Beginning next fall Bill will do his twirling for the K.U. extension division, while he works for his master ' s degree in musical educa- tion. To supplement his government checks this year, he has mad e a profitable business by twirling for band concerts and special occasions in nearby Kansas towns. Bill returned to the campus last spring, after twirling his way through France, Germany, and Austria with the 103rd Army Band ( it beats standing in line! ). He is a member of Phi Mu Alpha, music fraternity, of Phi Delta Kappa, educational fraternity, and a former mem- ber of the Rifle Club and Scabbard and Blade. He plays string bass for the orchestra, and exchanges his baton for a tuba in the concert band. His big interest, though, since August 25, is Mrs. Bill Sears, formerly Opal Lee VonAchen, a junior in Fine Arts. —Dixie Gilliland DEANE POSTLETHWAITE Genial and sincere, Deane Postlethwaite for three years has had a voice in many Hill affairs. A senior majoring in political science, Posty finds time to be an an nouncer for KFKU, a chancellor of the Quill Club, vice-president of Pi Sigma Alpha, research assistant for the Bureau of Government Research, on the Dean ' s Honor Roll, a member of the executive committee of the Young Democrats Club, the World War II Memorial Committee, and the Statewide Activities Board. Deane ' s aspirations are, first, to get a master ' s degree and, second, to be a college professor. He and his pretty brunette fiancee, Marjean Carr, are dyed-in-the-wool Independents and hope to see the Independent stu- dents more effectively organized. While he is well occupied with his extra-curricular activities and his studies, Deane will take time off to challenge any contender to a game of bridge. He also likes nothing better than a good bull session, preferably after midnight. —Stanley Englund BILL SPICER Hailing from Los Angeles, Bill Spicer got to kinda liking K.U. when he was stationed here in the Navy V-12 program in 1945. Besides, his father had been graduated from the University ' s School of Medicine so, after his service discharge, Bill enrolled in the med school as a sophomore. He lived in Kansas City until 1941 when his family moved to California where he attended the University of Southern Cal four years. Not content to sit back and let native Kansans run campus activities at K.U., Bill became chairman of the traditions committee of the All Student Council, secretary-treasurer of the sophomore med class, member of Sigma Nu, Nu Sigma Nu, and the KU KU ' s. His hobbies include tennis, in which he lettered at S.C., swimming, and bridge. Spicer says his secret of success has been no sleep. —Jack Smith TOBY WALKER Take a warm, friendly manner, add a genuine interest in people, not forgetting to do a job and do it well, and you have the recipe to Toby Walker ' s leadership in hill activities. Toby has said no to many pleas for participation in various campus committees this year in order to devote more time to being vice-president of the YWCA, member of Mortar Board, in addition to president of her sorority, Delta Sigma Theta. Incidentally, Toby is trying to obtain her A.B. degree in psychology. As to the why of psych major choice, she shyly reveals, It is because I have an utter dislike for mathematics. Even though Toby hails from a farm near Hugoton, Kansas, she is no farm girl. She can hardly tell the difference between a horse and a cow. Toby, in self defense, attributes this to the fact that five brothers were always around when there was work to be done. All things considered, Toby has a modest, unassuming manner which will inevitably capture you as her friend. It has many others. —Ann Learned OTTO SCHNELLBACHER To talk to this tall, unassuming Kansan, one would never realize that he is one of the outstanding athletes in the Big Six conference today. For while lanky Otto Schnellbacher has had the rare distinction of playing on two undefeated conference championship basketball teams in addition to his pass-snagging leadership in football, he manages to retain a lazy, easy- going manner which everyone likes. President of the Delta Chi ' s before entering the service, Snelly finds his time well filled with football practice, studying, and movies. Usually tired and ready to relax after dinner, he usually reads until falling to sleep. A junior majoring in physical education, this 23-year-old star athlete would have a coaching job assured, but he admits that an undivulged plan exists which might change this idea. He ' s married to an appealing brunette whom he met when he was sta- tioned at St. Cloud, Minn., in the Army Air Corps. —Jim Mordy VIRGINIA URBAN Sugar ' n spice and an infectious laugh mark effervescent Ginny Urban as an interesting person. Kind, kinetic, and confident, Ginny came to KU for an education, which means more to her than filling a mental warehouse with extraneous facts. She is always busy with extra-curricular time consumers, such as being president of dramatic workship, head cheerleader, honorary mem- ber of Jay Janes, standards chairman for Gamma Phi Beta, and active participant in intramurals. This small atomic bundle also sandwiches two hours at the university pre-school nursery between treks to classes and meetings. A 21-year-old graduate in February, she plans to work as a reservationist in the TWA speech schools. Ginny has some serious ideas about KU. She believes that an envelop- ing school spirit can make the little man realize that he is an integral part of the University. —Diane Stryker GEORGE WORRELL George Worrell, Sachem and proctor of Smith Hall, is a personality paradox. His calm, poised manner, slight build, and deep brown eyes indicate that he is the quiet, retiring, philosopher type. That is the para- dox—he isn ' t. This quiet, soft-spoken young man has been a Golden Glove ' s Champion and instead of retiring behind deep books of philosophy, he is an avid reader of Terry and the Pirates. In fact, only his high grades and love of the classical symphonies and good biographies fit his seemingly studi- ous personality. Upon his graduation from Wyandotte High School in 1940, George began his active Jayhawker life by promptly being elected freshman rep- resentative on the All Student Council At that time he planned to major in chemistry, but the Army decided he would make a better anti-aircraft gunner. After two years in the service, the only thing about George that has changed is his major—it ' s now engineering. —Bernice Brady ROSEMARY HARDING The charm and enthusiasm of petite Rosemary Harding reveal the rea- son she is an outstanding figure in Hill affairs. A senior majoring in history, Rosemary is a campus politician. She was first president of the Inde- pendent Women ' s Committee, freshman representative on the All Student Council, an active member in the I.S.A., and a strong member of the Young Democrats Club. Besides her political affairs, she is secretary of the Jay Janes, chairman of the Union Activities Committee, and head of the YWCA counselors. Even with her outside activities, Rosemary has found time to make the Dean ' s Honor Roll. She likes to spend her more sentimental hours filling scrapbooks with clippings, playing the piano, and reading books by Saroyan. Ottawa is her home town, where she was graduated from high school in 1943. Her secret ambition after graduating this semester is to be a housewife—although she says she ' ll be a politician until she dies. —Stanley Englund ROY SHOAF The phrase, tall, dark, and handsome, probably was coined with some- one like Roy Shoaf in mind. Amiable Roy returned to the University last year after a sojourn in the Army Air Corps as a B-17 pilot. Shot down near Berlin in November, 1944, he was a prisoner of war for eight months in the Barth prison camp. Weighing only 125 pounds at the time of his release, instead of his cus- tomary 200 pounds, he was instructed by doctors to drink fifteen eggnogs a day and to take up tennis for recreation and exercise. This advice proved to be sound as Roy regained his lost weight and became tennis champion of Topeka, his home town. Last spring he led the K.U. tennis team to its first Big Six tennis championship since 1937. In his senior year of medicine, Roy also is president of the inter-fra- ternity council and of Kappa Sigma. This fall he and Ruthe Marsh were pinned. —Jack Smith DALE JUDY The pressure is on, sighed serious, brown-eyed Dale Judy, summing up in one emphatic phrase his impressions of K.U. this year. Energetic Dale finds that he is very susceptible to activity-rush-iris as evidenced by his participation in International Relations Club, Y.M.C.A., and presidency of Alpha Phi Omega, national Boy Scout service fraternity. Up to his crew haircut in various scout service projects, Dale finds his work with the wide cross-section of university men to be extremely stimulating. A junior in pre-med, Dale is an information please on Britain and Can- ada. He usually adds fuel to heated International Relations Club discus- sions. Love for the Canadian great out-of-doors and skill in skiing, fishing, swimming, and hunting (game, that is, he remarks slyly) mark Dale as a real sportsman. In case you ' re wondering what ' s going on in Lower Slobovia this month, you might ask Judy. He ' d probably know. —Betsey Sheidley L THE JAYHAWKER 138 Wonder if I can go to Liege tomorrow; Get a drink or two—between the buzz-bombs. Christmas Eve, 1944—I ' m a sort of shepherd tonight; My flock is Headquarters Company, one hundred twenty men: Sleep well, comrades, your shepherd is cold and weary, But he watches his post in the usual military manner. A cold wind wailing across the Ardennes forests, Drives snow whipped powder-fine against my helmet, Makes tiny, tinkling, tinny sounds when it hits, I could imagine it was church bells, if I wanted. But I don ' t. I only want these two long hours to end; Then crawl into the hayloft and go back to sleep. I certainly would like to go to Liege tomorrow. Should do something—after all, it ' s Christmas. Why do I stand guard each Christmas Eve? Last year it was Oran, and it was raining. This year it ' s Belgium, and it is snowing. What next year? China, and a sandstorm? But why count by years. It ' s foolish. Count by days, or count by parts of days. Or count by nothing. Only stand and wait. I ' ll wake some morning and find it ' s all over. CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1946 139 They tell me parts of town are flattened. I hope that Henri ' s bar is still intact. There is a sound—a truck or tank or shell, listen; No, it ' s none of them, it is something else, A cold, harsh, metallic, inhuman chuckling, Pilotless, monstrous buzz-bomb, headed toward Liege. I can see the flickering light of the exhaust now, There is your star, shepherd, coming out of the east; Overhead now, passing on through the scattered clouds, Gone, no, there it is, fading in the distance. Sputtering, flickering, no light, the sound is gone. Then, a splash of gray light on the horizon, And a sullen rumble, rolling across the hilltops. I ' ve seen it before. I know what ' s happened in Liege. Christmas Eve, and the smell of powder in the air, Tumbled bricks, tumbled homes, and in the street The dead lie twisted, until someone comes along To dignify their passing with a blanket or a sheet. A special Christmas pageant for you, shepherd, All the ingredients—the star, the bells, the manger, Now, what more can you ask for, shepherd? I ' d just like to know—where are the Wise Men?. BILL FEENEY Second Prize 1946 Carruth Poetry Contest 110 THE JAYHAWKER C7MpUS C Olt wad do2-me poweli the v,t ,ie v,ie ad - ff CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1946 141 L Gregg—the administration didn ' t atchman inind when they W o ' clock classes this year. Keith Congdon tarns on a smile and the blae buy a blue fait. lig ' ht for Stan who pretends he to The Hard Way 1 Fifteen hours, said the advisor. Fifteen hours, stated the class appointment card. Fifteen hours, mumbled Bob to himself as he walked down the steps from enrollment. But Bob knew that fifteen hours told only half the story. He was thinking, as were some 5000 other K.U. students, about the other five hours—or twelve —or eighteen—he was going to spend in outside employment to help make his time in the classroom possible. Three out of every five students on the Hill know college life, not as a vacation with pay—from Dad —but as a serious working proposition. Some earn only a minor portion of their college expenses. Others are entirely self-supporting. There are many routes leading to that final cap and gown. Some students can travel on a fine, smooth road built by family funds. They can sit back and enjoy the ride. Others strike out to blaze their own trails . . . Dick works as ticket-taker in one of the down- town theaters. Nothing very glamorous. His eve- nings are never free. But Dick considers himself plenty lucky to have a job at all. He received his discharge a little late from the navy and reached Lawrence only the day before enrollment. Jobs were pretty scarce by then. But Dick kept looking until he found this one. At first, Dick was impatient during working hours—felt he was really wasting valuable study thought we ' d give you some busi. ness. Pretty soft set-up you have gettin ' into the movies every night. ' ' Sure—and I even get to study till two every morning. Yeah, soft—like a iron pillow-case. Dick doesn ' t have time for ing, and he ' s usually too tired each night to afford a nightmare. But when he does dream, he always sees the same hand To the left, just playing like they ' re working, are Bob Parkinson, Arnold Englund, Lee Eats, and Loren Fincham. Shown below between the stacks in Watson Library is Bill Mullarkey. No one ever got rich working for the University, but every bit helps. time. Soon he began to realize, however, that each ticket he tore in two was really one more fare on his own trip to that promised land of commencement. Tickets, please. Best seats are in the balcony, sir. Not much to remember. Just the same lit tle speech every night. Tickets, please. Best seats in the bal — Say! What ' re you fellas doin ' down here the night before an exam? The books started hittin ' back, Dick, so we Orville Doc Buell, left, gives a customer the lowdown on a T-square while on duty in the Union Bookstore. Alert Paul a Linavurg and Graham take time Off from studies to jerk sodas and sling hash at a local beanery. presenting him a piece of paper. Not a sere. ter examination. Not even a theater ticket. But it does look like a diploma . . . Mary found the competition from veterans for available jobs pretty discouraging till she started minding children during the evening. It cut deep into her social life. And it meant cramming home- work into odd moments. But it also meant bringing her nearer to D-Day—Diploma Day. You won ' t have a bit of trouble minding Donnie tonight. He ' s a perfect angel. Just read to him. Just read to him! Just concentrate on Little Red Riding Hood while thinking of that quiz over Chaucer coming up next morning. Going into business for himself, Taylor Rhodes operates the Record Nook and hires Bonnie Vickert to assist. .EcosE0 -- NABLE WOOF ET TONE :AtE 110151 ESISTANT 1 4LENT FULL (010❑ W arson proves the Dana is quicker than the eye and pulls down some extra cash at a local newspaper office. If the baby Mary, simply ignore her. Simply ignore her! Ignore the accompaniment of baby wails while trying to learn a new German vocabulary—especially when the child seems to know the correct pronun- ciation. It isn ' t all fun by a long shot. But it is worth- while—and Mary knows it isn ' t the job she ' s doing now which really counts. It ' s the jobs she ' ll be able to do when she ' s completed that senior year . . . Bill attends classes all morning and works all afternoon as a clerk in a clothing store. He needs his evenings free. Not only to spend on the books, (Continued on Page 185) With the coal strike in mind, Harold Ambler plays it smart with a nice warm job at a downtown cleaning plant. ;I 7 •-■ 7 7 CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1916 14i and 4 schma, ,o Once more the chill wind swirls about the girls on Old Mount Oread. Young freshmen should not be unduly alarmed, however, because it happens every year around this time. And after all, everything is frozen these days—cars, automobiles, washing ma- chines, legs, noses. It ' s really not so bad once you get used to seeing those big dogs with little barrels around their necks trailing fraternity men through the snow. With the advent of winter a new social season begins down at Lawrence, the only thaw on the Kaw. Great changes take place as everyone rushes to keep at the top of the social whirl—everyone rubs anti- freeze on their blankets before pic-necks. Heralding in the new season we wouldst quote to you from the immortal bards, J. Pseister, and Flintlock Quincy. WINTER SONG ( Alka-celsior ) The shades of night were falling fast when across the lonely hilltop passed a silent figure bound for the drab Bus Shelter!! Stay not here! was an old man ' s cry and a tear welled up in a coed ' s eye as the silent figure entered the Bus Shelter!! But dauntless courage lined his face as up old Oread road he rac ' d and grimly stood inside the new Bus Shelter!! The Snow was white when they found him there with long icicles twined in his hair and his frozen hands clutched the Daily Kansan Bus Shelter!! And from above, in heaven ' s bower a voice rang down to Oread ' s tower, By God, next time I ' ll walk! ! ! FAMOUS LAST WORDS I didn ' t think you liked Glenn Miller, so I thought we ' d go to the Granada instead! At the M.U.-K.U. game— Do you mind moving over and making room for my friend? The advent of zero weather has agitated the acute woman shortage. It seems that every available male is caught up in the rush for the little de-icers these days. Just to show the world that K.U. could have inflation too, the sterner sex mobbed the bidding at the recent W.S.S.F. auction and prime, government- inspected females topped the market at six dollars. Gwendolyn Harger brought the highest price of the evening with a bid of $6.47. This inflation is hell! OPTIMISTS AWARD OF THE WEEK Usually reliable sources confidentially reported that on Tuesday last they overheard the following (Continued on Page 182) iaine 4a iman Fainting housemothers, speechless coeds, crowded closets . . . these were the results of Franken- stein ' s latest prowl on Mt. Oread. Frankie carefully planned a night of horror and left several women ' s houses buzzing with mystery. In 1942, thanks to the Lawrence theaters, Frank- enstein sifted through the screen during a showing of his picture, revealed a formaldehyde-curdling scream, and enrolled at K.U. After settling in Lawrence, Frankie began to prac- tice the art of grave-robbing, with Hallowe ' en fur- nishing the appropriate atmosphere. His talents also included house-haunting. In this he found immedi- ate success (from his own standpoint) , for a house- mother fainted during his first debut. One girl, with a long-established phobia for the monster, stood speechless in response to his unique smile. Others ran for the nearest closet. Frankie sneaked away during the war to do some underground work, and returned this fall to re-haunt the Hill. Precisely who he is, no one seems to know. Some ghoul tipped off the Jayhawker photographer, who managed to follow him on his trip this Hallo- we ' en. His last visit almost ended in disaster, when thosc of Chi Omega ' s braver sect ganged up on him f.nd tried to carry him upstairs. After being rescued b7 his faithful, following ghouls, Frankenstein evaded the photographer, and faded away for another year. He ' s likely to become a K.U. tradition, so a word to the wise is sufficient. Man on second! Mrs. Perkins, Theta housemother, gives Frankie his first faintless welcome. Won ' t you sit down and have a cup of blood? Frankie makes himself at home, while puzzled women spy from the door. Striving for an eager eyeful are Sue Newcomer, Mary Varner, Ann Learned and Edith Marie Darby. 7%e la0au,the c4 1 mo2,141-4 Oh, Frankie! was the typical response to the Form at the Pi Phi house. First the silence of quiet hours is broken by an aria of screams and then the chorus joins in with a hysterical background. One girl jumped out of her socks and ran for cover while Frankie stole the socks. Mouths shown below are those of Mary Varner, Carol Mayer, Louise Lambert (head turned), Shirley Garst, Alice White, Bethy Ashton, Peg Foster, Sally Shepard, Elinor Frye, Susie Boyle and Pat Hamilton. Out of the sack, the curious blocked stairways to see the monster; the frightened ran for the closets. Among the braver set at the Delta Gamma house are Jo Morris, Carolyn Nigg, Abe Lincoln, Ruth Payne, Bobby Thiele and Betty Boling. Come on, girls, don ' t be afraid. Meredith Gear invited Frankie into the Chi Omega house, where, much to his surprise, he had to call for help. 148 THE JAYHAWKER ke 14 Wdzio-K )4e.c6 4d e B r J to T aZ2o-ul oiwei4 Old, worn-out, physically ill, one rib missing, and kicked out of his own home—thus was the unhappy end of the first man who ever tried to understand women—Adam. Truth, according to Webster, is absolute con- formance to reality. If anything a mere man can observe about women from his excluded point of view conforms absolutely to reality, I don ' t know what it could be. For a man to attempt to reveal the truth about women would be like Frances Willard giving a detailed description of the Blue Moon in Wichita on a Saturday night. Woman is undoubtedly the greatest boon and greatest boot that could ever befall mortal man .. . I don ' t care if you are Santa Claus. No men on second! and on top of that, she ' s scarce. Exactly how scarce we will never know, but the growing male member- ship in the Chowder, Checkers, Cork and Fork Club (Meeting on Friday and Saturday nights) attests to the fact. If perchance some queer quirk of fate should place a twitching female within tackling distance, the sucker will find that women will fall into various categories with regard to uses. She can be utilized in many ways and in the words of Johann Bach, To Each His Own. However on certain types of dates, certain reactions will strike the eye of the careful observer (Glasses six inches thick will remedy this hazard). First of all, there is the Coke Date. This may also be called the Dr. Pepper Date, the Four Hundred Date, the Four Roses Date or the Bromo-Seltzer Date, depending upon the girl. At such a meeting proper etiquette demands that the participants sit precisely facing each other in a booth and for two hours do nothing but—play footsie, chew straws, giggle, snort, guffaw, gurgle, dump cigarette butts in bottles, dump water on the floor, and generally chide, cajole, implore, persuade, force, stampede and drive the waitress into a state of babbling insanity. The Coke Date ends at two-thirty and the Sport Date begins. The first prerequisite of this type of date is that the girl be a good Sport. This implies that she knits, crochets, plays bridge, dances, smooches, is well mannered, and can start at right guard if necessary. The willing novice is then out- fitted in the proper manner. The correct dress for the Sport Date include parkas, sarongs, pince nez, flying jackets, and hip pads. There are of course CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1946 149 I hope I find something nice in my stocking this Christmas. some heretical beings who resort to sweaters and skirts to trap their game. As the afternoon progresses, male and female migrate to the playing fields and proceed to toss arrows, tennis balls, footballs, shots, or javelins at each other depending upon how long they have gone together. By five o ' clock in the evening the meticulous male has arrived at the appropriate time to sally forth once more into the quagmire of this social world. Pity the poor male! Driven by insatiable instinct he staggers forth again and again to endless shows, con- certs, dances, and teas. His head is bloody and bowed from the physical and financial strain so rudely placed upon him by his predacious companion. And for all the hardships he endures, the ceaseless chatter, nagging, frustration, vexation, irritation, argumenta- tion and yakkita, yakkita, yakkita—what does he re- ceive? Bags under his eyes, an empty bank account, and an F on a quiz the following Monday. The male is undauted by his impending downfall and starts out on the Buffet Date. It is so-called because man and date enter the dining room, ap- proach the table, face each other and begin to buffet each oth er about the room with fistfuls of fois fras, pomme de terre, petite pois, fried hrdlcka, and damp macaroni. Climaxing the busy day, the Man-About-Campus will indulge in that Connoisseur ' s delight, the Late Date. There are two methods employed by women in the execution of this intricate maneuver. The first is employed in all cases of pinnings, engagements, plighted troths, and the like. In this case the female sneaks out after hours and meets her companion in some secluded spot where they discuss the coal strike. In case number two, the fragile femme contracts a vicious headache about six o ' clock on a Sunday after- noon, apologizing profusely, she rushes home, out the back door, into a waiting car and off to Meadow Acres where she spends the rest of the evening. Sitting back in our easy chair and stroking our collective beards, we male are reminded of the im- mortal words of the species: It takes a pile of pilin ' to make a pile of pile! Scrooge! VI pa4). c91-7a 4e 4 Alpha Chi Omega was founded October 15, 1885, at DePauw University, Greencastle, In- diana. Phi, now one of 68 active chapters was established at K.U. in 1914. President, Bar- bara Vanderpool; Vice-President. Mittamaude Hunter; Secretary, Barbara Ford; Treasurer, Margaret Logan. PLEDGES BARBARA ACKERMAN Kansas City EDITH CAREY Wichita VIRGINIA DANIELS Bethesda, Md. JOAN DUVALL Kansas City MARTHA GRAGG Wichita JOAN HAPPY Ottawa MARY LYNN HEGARTY St. Joseph, Mo. DOROTHY HEGDAL Claflin ANN HOGUE Russell ELEANOR HOWELL Escondido, Calif. LILA HYTEN Wellington BEVERLY KING Kansas City, Mo. RETTA JO LANDIS Wichita NORMA LEE LOSKE Kansas City MARY JO MYERS Great Bend BARBARA PARENT Ottawa BILLIE MAE POWELL Topeka ANNE SHAEFFER Kansas City, Mo. JOAN VERMILLION Junction City HELEN WARD Coffeyville MARTHA WEED Kansas City ACTIVES ALICE ACKERMAN Kansas City SUZANNE ALBAUGH Olathe JANE ANDERSON Lawrence ANN ANGLE Kansas City, Mo. JEAN BRUNTON Winfield BETTY DE ARMOND Kansas City, Mo. BARBARA FORD Osborne MARJORIE GARDNER Arkansas City GWENNYD GUPTON Greensburg LOUISE HAINES Kansas City JO ELLEN HALL Kansas City, Mo. CHARLOTTE HENRY Kansas City MITTAMAUDE HUNTER Great Bend NORMA LEE JONES McPherson CAROLYN KEITH Topeka BETTY KEIFFER Lawrence PATRICIA LINK Kansas City, Mo. MARGARET LOGAN Garden City JACQUELYN LOGAN Kansas City, Mo. JERRE LYONS Lawrence MAROLYN McNEISH Winfield MARY JO MOXLEY Atchison JANICE NATTIER Concordia PATRICIA POWER Beloit BETTY RENDLEMAN Olathe MARILYN ROSENAU Eudora MARY LOU ROWLETT Great Bend BETH RUSSELL Lawrence NANCY TRANTUM Kansas City BARBARA VANDERPOOL Wellington JANE WILLIAMS Denver, Colo. MILA WILLIAMS Topeka FIRST ROW: Hegarty, Spencer, Ward, Vermillion, Gregg, Myers, Carey, Williams, Lyons, Mcxley. SECOND ROW: Rendlemen, Kieffer, Henry, M Logan, Hunter, Mrs. Jackson (housemother), Vanderpool, J. Logan, A. Ackerman, Haines, Rosenau. THIRD ROW: Parent, Powell, Howell, Hyten, Brunton, Duvall, De Armond, Graves, Jones, Anderson, Daniels, Li nk, Shaeffer. FOURTH ROW: McNeish, Weed, Landis, Loske, King, Happy, Russell, Albaugh, Gupton, B. Ackerman, Hogue, Power. L - PLEDGES LUCILLE BALDRIDGE Topeka ELEANOR CAMPBELL Independence, Mo. VIRGINIA COPFEDGE Kansas City, Mo. MARY GENET COVEY Atlanta, Ga. NANCY GERMAN Kansas City, Mo. BARBARA GIVEN Manhattan FREDA HARGER Kansas City, Mo. PEGGY LOU HERBST Emporia BARBARA KARGES Wichita SHIRLEY LINDAUER Kansas City, Mo. NANCY LEE McFADDEN Atlanta, Ga. NORMA MENDENHALL Emporia SUZANNE REILLY Leavenworth PEGGY SNACKENBERG Madison, N. J. CAROL TARRANT Atchison VIRGINIA TAYLOR Larned DARLENE VAN BIBER Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES JEANNE ALDRIDGE Kansas City JOAN ANDERSON Emporia BETTY BACON Lakewood, Ohio PATRICIA BENTLEY Great Bend BETTY BRADFORD Kansas City, Mo. LEE BROOKS Brewster ELINOR BROWN Kansas City JEANNE COOPER Lawrence RACHEL COOPER Lawrence DELORES CUSTER Wichita WANDA LEE DUMLER Larned PEARL GEIGER Paola GWENDOLY HARGER Kansas City, Mo. KATHRYN HAVER El Dorado MARY JANE HOLZMAN Springfield, Mo. JANE KENDALL Leavenworth CONNIE MARKLEY Laramie, Wyo. MARTHA McLEAN Kansas City, Mo. JEAN PRESTON Denver, Colo. JEAN REID Kansas City, Mo. MARY LOIS RICE Butler, Mo. LEATHA SANFORD Lawrence BETTY ANN SAWYER Leavenworth JOAN SCHINDLING Leavenworth DONNA SNAR.T Lawrence JACQUETTA SHAW Holton MARJORIE SHRYOCK Kansas City, Mo. MARYLYN SMITH Miami, Okla. BETTY RAE THOMAS Leavenworth BARBARA ZUERCHER Wichita Alpha Delta Pi was founded May 15, 1851, at Wesleyan Female College, Macon, Georgia, under the name of the Adelphean Society. Tau, now one of 64 active chapters was established at K.U. in 1912. President, Marjorie Shryock; Vice-President, Joan Schindling; Secretary, Marylyn Smith; Treasurer, Mary Lois Rice. 1 Tf FIRST ROW: Brooks, Reilly, McFadden, Preston, McLean, Aldridge, Copp edge, Herbst, Lindauer, F. Harger, Reid, Cooper. SECOND ROW: Geiger, Snort, Markley, Rice, Shryock, Schindling, Smith, Brown, Kendall, snacKen berg. THIRD ROW: G. Harger, Mendenhall, J. Cooper, Karges, Bentley, Haver, German, Tarrant, Shaw, Keeler, Bacon, Given, Taylor, Zuercher. FOURTH ROW: Holzman, Sawyer, Thomas, Von Biber, Bradford, Campbell, Sanford, Custer, Covey, Baldridge, Dumler. NOT IN PICTURE: Anderson. A Alpha Omicron Pi was founded January 2, 1897, at Columbia University, New York. Phi, now one of 45 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1918. President, Marguerite Ker- schen; V ice-President, Jo Ann Tindall; Secre- tary, Marilyn V oth; Treasurer, Beverly Reitz. PLEDGES ALLA BEEBE Wichita JOAN BENNETT Topeka DEANE CARTER Richmond, Mo. BETTY CATTELL Washington D. C. MARCELLA COUSINS Stafford WANDA DE NIO Lawrence NANCY DILLE Kansas City, Mo. COREL DUNKLEY Lawrence DORIS EDMISTON Lawrence BEVERLY EMERSON Topeka MARY MYRTLE FILES Kansas City LITA LOU FISK Independence, Mo. MARTHA GIBSON Great Bend PHYLLIS GREISINGER Kiowa DOROTHY HESCHMEYER Kansas City, Mo. MARGARET HESSICK McPherson NOLA JEAN HOSEY Kansas City, Mo. GERALDINE JONES Kansas City, Mo. MELBA MATHER Stafford PATTY NORDEEN Kansas City, Mo. MARY JUNE ROY Kiowa MARJORIE SCOTT La Cygne NADINE STAFFORD Hoisington CHARLOTTE THAYER Atchison BETTY TICE Kansas City JOANN WEBSTER Leavenworth ARDYCE WILSON Ottawa ACTIVES li JANET BELT Lawrence ELWANDA BREWER Hoisington BILLIE BURTSCHER Hays MARJORIE BURTSCHER Hays DOROTHY DEEM Lawrence KAY EATON Torrington, Wyo. MARY LUCILLE GARTON Chanute MARGARET GOSNEY Junction City WILMA HAMPTON Kansas City GLENDALE JONES Lawrence EVELYN KERSCHEN Wichita MARGUERITA KERSCHEN Hereford, Tex. HELEN LAWRENCE Ottawa ELSIE LEMON Lawrence SYDNEY LETSON Kansas City, Mo. JOANNE LIST Kansas City, Mo. CAROL LONG Kansas City HELEN MATHER Kansas City BARBARA PAEZ Lawrence BEVERLY REITZ Olathe ZOE ANN SILER Chicago, Ill. JO ANN SPALDING Concordia MARY STARK Perry VIRGINIA STEPHENSON Garnett JO ANN TINDALL Hoisington MARILYN VOTH Goessel RUTH WILLIAMS Alexander FIRST ROW: Garton, Eaton, E. Kerschen, Nordeen, Dille, Gosney, Siler, Cattell, Beebe, Bennett, Letson, B. Burtscher. SECOND ROW: List, Long, Voth, Reitz, M. Kerschen, Mrs. Klinkenberg (.housemotherl, Tindall, Brewer, H. Mother, Deem, Stork. THIRD ROW: Tice, Scott, Heschmeyer, Cousins, Glendale, Jones, Files, Edmiston, DeNio, Gibson, Carter, Emerson, Williams, Webster, Stafford, Thayer. FOURTH ROW: Griesinger, Wilson, Lemon, Stephen- son, Fisk, Spalding, Lawrence, Hessick, Geraldine Jones, Bell, Dunkley, M. Mather, Nosey, M. Burtscher. NOT IN PICTURE: Hampton, Hulen, Pcez. PLEDGES MARY HELEN BAKER Bethel MARILYN BARNUM Wichita MARY BOVAIRD Tulsa, Okla. BETTY BREWER Bartlesville, Okla. IS ABEL FAUROT Independence STELLA GABRIELSON .. Hutchinson CAROL HELMERS Kansas City ISABEL MARTIN Topeka MARY LOU MARTIN Topeka GLORIA MAXWELL Kansas City, Mo. NANCY MESSENGER Pittsburg PATTI NORCROSS Denver, Colo. JEANNE PARROTT Hutchinson ETHEL PEARSON Kansas City, Mo. ROSEMARY ROBISON Kansas City, Mo. MARIE STEWART Leavenworth SHIRLEY SUDENDORF Concordia RUTH WALTERS Kinsley BETTY WEBB Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES ANN ALEXANDER Bartlesville, Okla. PATRICIA BARRON Wichita CONNIE CLOUGHLY El Dorado PATRICIA COOK Sarasota, Fla. JANE COOLIDGE ... Estes Park, Colo. PAT COOLIDGE Estes Park, Colo. JEAN CUNNINGHAM Kansas City, Mo. ROSE NELL CURTIS Iola MARY CAROLYN DAUGHERTY Pittsburg BETTY DUEMCKF Coffeyville JANE ELBEL Lawrence JANE FERRELI Wichita PHYLLIS FRETWELL Pittsburg MEREDITH GEAR Guymon, Okla. DIXIE GILLILAND Ottawa BONNIE HOLDEN Pittsburg SALLY HOUCK Independence MARY MARGARET HUSE Tulsa, Okla. SHIRLEY HUSTED Plainville JO ANNE JACOBS Independence JANICE JONES Garden City, N. Y. VIRGINIA LARSEN Quivera Lake JOAN LARSON Wamego MARILYN McCLURE El Dorado REGINA McGEORGE Kansas City, Mo. MARGARET O ' NEIL Leavenworth PAT PEARSON Kansas City, Mo. MARJORIE PEET Kansas City, Mo. LEE SHULL Kansas City BARBARA SMITH Kansas City, Mo. MARILYN STEINERT Kansas City, Mo. PAT ANN STRANG Kansas City, Mo. JANET TAYLOR Topeka DOTTIE THOMAS Pittsburg MOLLY WILSON Pittsburg ANNA YOUNG Concordia Chi Omega was founded April 5, 1895, at the University of Arkansas. Lambda, now one of 98 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1902. President, Sally Houck; Vice-Presi- dent, Margaret O ' Neil; Secretary, Dixie Gilli- land; Treasurer, Anna Young. 1 FIRST ROW: Parrott, Strang, Barron, Ferrell, Alexander, Taylor, Stained, P. Pearson, Sudendorf. SECOND ROW: Smith, Deumcke, Jones, Thomas, Gilliland, Houck, O ' Neil, Young, Cunningham, McGeorge. THIRD ROW: McClure, Helmers, Curtis, Larsen, Baker, Ebel, I. Martin, Huse, Wilson, Shull, Barnum, P. Coolidge, Dougherty, Larson, J. Coolidge, Maxwell. FOURTH ROW: Fretwell, Peet, Faurot, Walters, Messenger, Brewer, E. aearson, Gabrie:son, Stewart, Norcross. Delta Delta Delta was founded in 1888 at Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts. Theta Omega, now one of 90 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1945. President, Eileen O ' Brien; Vice-President, Emily Berry; Secre- tary, Barbara Meyer; Treasurer, Norma Schneider, PLED GES JANE ARCHIBA LD Ashland NANCY CAMERON Omaha, Nebr. BARBARA CARROLL Independence, Mo. REBECCA DAVIDSON Kansas City FRANKLIN Kansas City, Mo. VINA LOU G ODD ING El Dorado PATSY HARRIS Independence BETTY ANN HILTS Kansas City, Mo. MARGERY KAUFFMAN Topeka MARY KAY KOTTMANN Kansas City, Mo. NANCY LUDLOW Kansas City NANCY McGRAW Newton DOROTHY O ' CONNOR Hutchinson JOANNE PUGH Wichita BERNADINE READ Baxter Springs JEANNE ROSE Bartlesville, Okla. ELAINE SAWYER Caney ALICE SCHOONOVER Denver, Colo. MARJORIE SCID MORE Salina MARYBELLE SHEPHERD Mission LOUISE SPRINGER Kansas City, Mo. LAVERNE SWAIM Godfrey, Ill. MARY LYNN TROUSDALE Newton DOREEN WALLACE Norwich BETTY WALTER Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES T L EMILY BERRY Kansas City, Mo. SALLY BLAKE Kansas City SUE CALLAWAY Blue Springs, Mo. EUNICE CARLSON Concordia BETTY CUNNINGHAM Downs BONNIE CUNNINGHAM Downs HELEN DIETZEL Kansas City, Mo. MARJORIE DINSMORE Lawrence PAT DYE Independence SHIRLEY GRIGSBY Kansas City, Mo. EVA HUMPHREY Concordia MARY KLOOZ Lawrence BETTY MALLONEE Wichita MARY ALICE MARTIN Salida, Colo. BARBARA MEYER Wichita MARILYN OBORG Salina EILEEN O ' BRIEN Kansas City, Mo. Caney Kansas City MARY ANN SAWYER NORMA SCHNEIDER DOROTHY STEPHENSON GLENNA THOMPSON JOYCE WORNOM Independence Mandan, N. Dak. Chandler, Okla. FIRST ROW: McGraw, Schoonover, Pugh, E. Sawyer, Franklin, Carroll, Oborg, Cameron, Rend, Thompson. SECOND ROW: M. Sawyer, Mal- lonee, Schneider, Berry, Gagsby, Meyer, Stephenson, Carlson, Dietzel. THIRD ROW: Bonnie Cunningham, Wornom, Dye, Rose, Betty Cunningham, Martin, Calloway, Humphrey, Kauffmon, Hilts, Trousdale, Harris, Archibald. FOURTH ROW: Walter, Springer, Davidson, Swaim, Shepherd, Godding, Kottmann, Dinsmore, Scidmore, O ' Connor, Blake, Klooz. PLEDGES GAIL BIXBY Valley Center CAROL BUHLER Lawrence JOANNE BYNAN Kansas City, Mo. PEGGY SUE CLOYD Kansas City, Mo. GWEN GRANT Independence BETTY HAMMAN Wichita MARGARET JEAN HANNA Newton MARGARET HARNESS Kansas City, Mo. BETTY HIRLEMAN Wichita GERTRUDE HOVEY Kansas City BETTY JO JONES Garden City LOUISE KINTZEL Wichita MARY JEAN McCARTNEY Coffeyville SHANNON McKIM Pratt JOAN MORRIS Oskaloosa KAY O ' CONNOR Salina IRMA LOU RICK Salina MARY LOU STANLEY Bethel SALLY SANDIFER Wichita MARIE TOUHEY Lawrence DOROTHY WOOD Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES RUTHANNE BETLACH Owatonna, Minn. BETTY BOLING Leavenworth MILDRED CARPENTER Lawrence BETTY COMPTON Topeka ALBERTA CORNWELL Lawrence ELIZABETH ESTERLE Kansas City, Mo. OLIVIA GARVEY Wichita BETTY GILPIN Kansas City, Mo. GUIN GOERZ Moundridge ALICE GOLDSWORTHY Minneapolis, Minn. HARRIETT HARLOW Kansas City, Mo. GLORIA HILL Freeport, Ill. BABE HORINE Wichita BARBARA HOWARD Lawrence LU ANNE LANE Joplin, Mo. LOIS LINK Leavenworth ARMILDA LINCOLN Liberty, Mo. MARY LOU MATHEWS Kansas City, Mo. ELIZABETH McCLEARY Excelsior Springs, Mo. DONNA MUELLER Kansas City, Mo. CAROLYN NIGG Whitewater BONNIE OSWALT Garden City RUTH PAYNE. Oskaloosa BETTY ANN SANDEN Iola SILVIA SMALL Kansas City, Mo. MARY JEAN STEWART Topeka BARBARA THIELE Kansas City, Mo. PATRICIA VANCE Kansas City, Mo. SARA WEBB Blue Springs, Mo. PATRICIA WALSH Tulsa, Okla. GEORGIA LEE WESTMORELAND . . Kansas City, Mo. Delta Gamma was founded January 2, 1874, at Lewis School, Oxford, Mississippi. Beta Kappa, now one of 55 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1940. President, Barbara Thiele; Vice-President, Bonnie Oswalt; Secre- tary, Elizabeth Esterle; Treasurer, Mary Jean Stewart. T FIRST ROW: Gilpin, Grant, Jones, Sandifer, Hammon, Hirleman, Harness, Hovey, Morris, Buhler, Nigg, Howard. SECOND ROW: Lane, Carpenter, Lincoln, Vance, Esterle, Thiele, Oswalt, Stewart, Cornwell, Small, Betlach. THIRD ROW: Rick, Westmoreland, Wood, Gorez, Hill, O ' Connor, Payne, Boling, Mathews, Muller, Goldsworthy, Bynan. FOURTH ROW: Mcairtney, Compton, Harlow, Linck, Kintzel, Hanna, Cloyd, Walsh, Webb, Stanley, Garvey, Horine, Touhy. Gamma Phi Beta was founded November 11, 1874, at Syracuse University, New York. Sigma, now one of 49 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1915. President, Rose- mary Jarboe, ' Vice-President, Jane Atwood; Secretary, Geraldine Nelson; Treasurer, Sarah Heil. 9 j 111 PLEDGES ANN ALLEN Tulsa, Okla. ISOBEL ATWOOD Gardner BEE BRADY Wichita CAROLYN CARTER Lawrence CORRINE CARTER Lawrence ETTA M AE COOPER El Dorado MA.RILYN GLOVER Topeka PEGGY GRABER Hutchinson GRACE GWINNER Dodge City CAROL ANN HASTINGS Pratt SHIRLEY HOYT Iola BARBARA JOHNSON Wichita MARY LIND Chanute JOAN MANUEL Wichita ALIX NEVILLE Kansas City SAMMY PEETE Kansas City, Mo. JANETTE POLLOM Lawrence ALBERTA SCHNITZLER Wichita DORIS TIHEN . . . . . . ....... Wichita ACTIVE JANE ATWOOD Gardner LEE BLACKWILL Wamego LOLA BRANIT Kansas City, Mo. BETTY SARA BROTHERS Cherryvale B. ANN BROWN Coffeyville JEANNE BROWN Kansas City BARBARA BYRD Kansas City, Mo. JANE CHASE Lawrence KATHERINE CULLEY Medicine Lodge ELIABETH EVANS Winfield ARLEEN FELDKAMP Kansas City DOROTHY FELDKAMP Kansas City BARBARA FELT Wellington BEVERLY FOX Kansas City, Mo. ROSEMARY • GAINES Lawrence JEANNE GORBUTT Topeka HELEN HARKRADER Pratt SARAH JANE HEIL Topeka JOAN HENDRICKSON Kansas City PEGGY HOWARD Coffeyville NANCY JACKSON Pleasanton DOROTHY JAMES West Caldwell, N. J. ROSEMARY J AR BOE Parsons PATTY KELLY Wichita GERALEE KREIDER Chanute GLENDA LUEHRING Leavenworth MARY ANN McCLURE Houston Tex. MARY JEAN MOORE Winfield ANNA FRANCES MUHLENBRUCH Argonia GERALDINE NELSON Kansas City SHIRLEY OTTER Norton JANE OWEN Kansas City LU ANN POWELL . ..... . Kansas City, Mo. SHIRLEY SALLEY Liberal BARBARA SCHWECHEIMER Kansas City, Mo. MARION SHELDON Garnett BILLYE SIMMONS Su blette EMILY STACEY Lawrence JUDITH TIHEN Wichita VIRGINIA URBAN Wilson BONNIE VEATCH Merriam JOAN VICKERS Lawrence SUSAN WRIGHT Tulsa, Okla. FIRST ROW: Felt, James, Veatch, Hoyt, Lind, I. Atwood, Schnitzler, Moore, Allen, Corrine Carter, Schwecheimer. SECOND ROW: Nelson, Simmons, Stacey, McClure, J. Atwood, Jarboe, Owen, Luehring, Blackwill. THIRD ROW: Byrd, Kelly, A. Feldkamp, Gaines, Branit, Manuel, Fox, Vickers, Powell, Hastings, Horkrader, Cooper, B. Brown, Neville, D. Tihen, Hendrickson, Gwinner, Peete. FOURTH ROW: Johnson, Pollom, Wright, J. Tihen, D. Feldkomp, Sheldon, Jackson, Garbutt, Gruber, Kreider, Brody, Carolyn Carter, Glover, J. Brown. NOT IN PICTURE: Otter, Mublenbruch, Howard, Evans, Chase, Urban. PLEDGES FRANCES BERNERO St. Marys VIRGINIA DAUGHERTY Tulsa, Okla. PHYLLIS DOANE . . . . ....... El Dorado N ORMA JEAN GUTHRIE Ft. Scott VIRGINIA JENSEN Emporia CORA KING Topeka EDITH MALOTT Lawrence JANET MALOTT Lawrence BETSY McCUNE Tulsa, Okla. MARY JANE MERRIMAN Topeka MERCEDES MUIR Hutchinson MARCIA RAINES Topeka BETTY SAUDER Wichita JOAN SCHWINN Wellington JOAN STEVENSON Salina JUDY TORREY Kansas City, Mo. NANCY VAN BEBBER Lawrence MARY SUE WEIMER Kansas City, Mo. JULIETTE WILLIAMS Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES MARTHA ABEL MARY ALFORD GLADYS BLUE MARTHA BONEBRAKE MARNIE BROWN MARILYN CARLSON MARGARET EBERHARDT MARJORIE FADLER ELIABETH FAULDERS BARBARA HAFFNER JOAN JOSEPH VIRGINIA JOSEPH FRANCES LAWRENCE SHIRLEY LEITCH PEGGY MALONEY KATHY McBRIDE MARY LOUISE McNERNEY EILEEN O ' CONNOR KATHERINE O ' LEARY MARY KAY PAIGE JILL PATCHEN SADY PHIPPS INA KAY RODERICK ANN SCOTT DOROTHY SHIELDS MARILYN SMART DINEEN SOMERS LEE SPROULL VIRGINIA TOLLE PAT TOMLINSON NANCY WELKER ELAINE WELLS VIRGINIA WINTERS SALLY WINTERSCHEIDT ALICE WRIGHT MARTHA YINGLING MARY PAT YINGLING PAT ZACHMAN Kappa Alpha Theta was founded January 27, 1870, at DePauw University, Greencastle, In- diana. Kappa, now one of 67 active chapters was established at K.U. in 1881. President, Elaine Wells; Vice-President, Katherine O ' Leary; Secretary, Barbara Haffner; Treasurer, Mary Alfred. Kansas City, Mo. Lawrence Emporia Wichita Detroit, Mich. Blue Rapids Salina Pittsburg Wichita Kansas City, Mo. Whitewater Whitewater Lawrence Kansas City, Mo. Wichita Wichita Hutchinson Wichita Kansas City, Mo. Topeka Oakland, Calif. Wichita Wetmore Pratt Wichita Lawrence Newton Birmingham, Mich. El Dorado Greenwich, Conn. Kansas City, Mo. Ottawa Lawrence Kansas City, Mo, Topeka Wichita Wichita St. Joseph, Mo. FIRST ROW: Martha Yingling, Moloney, Tomlinson, Bernero, Jensen, Muir, Patchen, Somers, Scott, Tolle, Mary Pat Yingling. SECOND ROW: Winterscheidt, Wright, Lawrence, O ' Leary, Wells, Haffner, Alford, Eberhardt, Fauiders, O ' Connor, V. Joseph. THIRD ROW: Merriman, Roderick, Doane, Winter, King, Leitch, Zachman, E. Malott, Abel, Bonebrake, Guthrie, Schwinn, McBride, Brown, Souder. FOURTH ROW: Torrey, Fadler, Stevenson, Raines, J. Malott, McCune, Williams, Daugherty, Shields, J. J oseph, Weimer, Paige, Carlson. NOT IN PICTURE: Blue, Phipps, Smart. Kappa Kappa Gamma was founded October 13, 1870, at Monmouth College, Monmouth, Illinois. Omega, now one of 77 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1883. President, Nancy Goering; Vice-President, Mary Mar- garet Morris; Secretary, Patricia Moyer; Treas- urer, Sue Crabb. PLEDGES ANN ASHLEY Topeka JO ANN COMPTON Kansas City, Mo. POLLY CROSBY Topeka EDITH ELAM Lawrence NINA GREEN Kansas City, Mo. EILEEN HORNER Parkville, Mo. PAULA SUE JERNIGAN Wichita LETITIA LAMING Chanute KATHLEEN McKELVY Atchison EILEEN MALONEY Tulsa, Okla. MARGARET MEEKS Kansas City, Mo. PEGGY MOYER Lawrence HELEN PILLER Great Bend FRANCES SCHUTZ Kansas City, Mo. ELIZABETH SHEARS Hutchinson BETSEY SHEIDLEY Kansas City, Mo. DIANE STRYKER Fredonia JODY STUCKEY Hutchinson DOLORES TEACHENOR Kansas City, Mo. CORRINNE TEMPLE Wichita SARA UNDERWOOI) Lawrence HARRIET WADDELL Salina ACTIVES MARY LOUISE AINSWORTH Derby ELLOUISE BARBEE Centerville, Iowa BETTY BERRY Kansas City SUE CRABB Kansas City, Mo. MARILYN CHILD Hutchinson ELEANOR CHURCHILL Kansas City, Mo. MARILYN FRIZELL Lamed PATRICIA FERGUSON Kansas City, Mo. GLORIA GRAY Topeka NANCY GOERING Newton PATTY GLOVER Newton MARTHA GOODRICH Topeka MAXINE GUNSOLLY Emporia MARY JANE HAYES Atchison ELOISE HODGSON Salina NANCY HULINGS Tulsa, Okla. MARY JEAN HOFFMAN Enterprise SALLY KREHBIEL Kansas City, Mo. MARTHA LAFFER Wichita JEAN McGREW Lawrence NANCY MILLER Iola MARTHA METCALF Kansas City, Mo. MARY MARGARET MORRIS Wichita BARBARA OLSON Wichita IRENE SANDELIUS Lawrence BARBARA SCHREIBER Kansas City, Mo. GEORGIANNA SEWELL Sabetha IRENE SEWELL Kansas City, Mo. DOROTHY SHELDEN Kansas City, Mo. ELIZABETH SIFERS Iola MARY KAY SIMS Miami, Okla. NANCY SLATER Kansas City, Mo. SARA SMART Kansas City, Mo MARY VALENTINE Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Ashley, Hayes, Laming, Sheidley, Ainsworth, Metcalf, McGrew, Teachenor, Krehbiel, Shears, Valentine, Crosby. SECOND R OW: Smart, Slater, Sewell, Crabb, Goering, Morris, Miller, Hulings, Churchill, Goodrich. THIRD ROW: Hoffman, Frizell, Berry, Sims, Sewell, Piller, Underwood, Stryker, Horner, Ferguson, Stucky, Moyer, Laffer, Gunsolly, Moyer, Sondelius, Compton. FOURTH ROW: Waddell, Temple, Gray, McKelvy, Maloney, Jernigan, Schutz, Meeks, Sheldon, Sifers, Green, Child, Olson, NOT IN PICTURE: Barbee, Elam, Glover, Hodgson, Schreiber. PLEDGES PEGGY BAKER Salina CHARLOTTE BOYLE Kansas City, Mo. BARBARA BURNS Wichita MABLE ELLEN CABLE Kansas City CONSTANCE DEAN Topeka GEORGANN EYLER Salina MARGARET FOSTER Kansas City, Mo. ELINOR FRYE Wichita SHIRLEY GARST Wichita PATRICIA HAMILTON Hutchinson JACQUELINE HERRIOTT Lawrence LOUISE LAMBERT Leavenworth ANN LEARNED Bartlesville, Okla. SALLY PEGUES Hutchinson KATHRYN PICKENS Joplin, Mo. SALLY SHEPARD Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES ELIZABETH ASHTON Bloomington, Ind. JOAN ARMACOST Kansas City, Mo. CELESTE BEESLEY Bartlesville, Okla. IMOGENE BILLINGS Gig Harbor, Wash. MARY BREED Kansas City, Mo. CAROLYN BROWN Kansas City, Mo. CAROLYN CAMPBELL Kansas City, Mo. FRANCES CHUBB Lawrence COURTNEY COWGILL San Francisco, Calif. EDITH MARIE DARBY Kansas City MARJORIE DARBY Kansas City MARILYN ERWAY Hutchinson JOAN GARDNER Winfield JOY GODBEHERE Kansas City, Mo. RUTH GRANGER Emporia BETTY JEANNE GRANT Wichita JOANNE GRANT Wichita JOAN HEPWORTH Burlingame ADRIENNE HISCOX San Mateo, Calif. BARBARA HUME Kansas City NORMA KENNEDY Kansas City, Mo. MARTHA KEPLINGER Kansas City, Mo. ROSE MARGARET LAWLER Kansas City, Mo. MARY LONGENECKER Kansas City NANCY LOVE Wichita MARILYN MARSH Long Island, N Y. MARY GAYLE MARSH Emporia ELAINE MARTINDELL Lawrence CAROL MAYER Kansas City NANCY NEVIN Lawrence SUE NEWCOMER Kansas City, Mo. ELEANOR PACK Kansas City ELIZABETH PRIEST Wichita MARTHA RINGLER Lawrence SALLY ROWE Lawrence JOAN RUESE Lawrence SARA JAYNE SCOTT Kansas City, Mo. JUNE SMALLEY Newton MURALYN SPAKE Kansas City EDITH STODARD Burlingame ELEANOR THOMPSON Kansas City, Mo. BARBARA VARNER Wichita MARY VARNER Wichita ELAINE WALKER Wichita MARY ALICE WHITE Kansas City, Mo. JOAN WOODWARD Kansas City, Mo. JOAN YOUNG Lawrence Pi Beta Phi was founded April 28, 1869, at Monmouth College, Monmouth, Illinois, Alpha, now one of 91 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1873. President, Carol Mayer; Vice- President, Edith Marie Darby; Secretary, Car- olyn Campbell; Treasurer, Mary Gayle Marsh. T p FIRST ROW: Dean, White, Ashton, Stodard, Woodward, Love, B. Grant, Hepworth, Herriott, Hume, Hamilton, Spoke. SECOND ROW: Hiscox, Godbehere, Pack, Campbell, Smalley, Mayer, Mary Gayle Marsh, Newcomer, Granger, Priest, B. Varner. THIRD ROW: Brown, Cable, Learned, Armacost, M. Darby, Marilyn Marsh, Pickens, Shepard, Boyle, Scott, Eyler, Beesley, J. Grant, Frye, Burns, Walker. FOURTH ROW: Chubb, Cowgill, Ruese, Gardner, Baker, M. Varner, Keplinger, Garst, Rowe, Ringler, Lambert, Foster, Pegues. NOT IN PICTURE: Longenecker, Billings, Thompson, Breed, Kennedy, E. Darby, Erway, Lawler, Martindell, Nevin; Young. Sigma Kappa was founded in 1874 at Colby Co llege in Waterville, Maine. Xi, now one of 52 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1913. President, Caroline Morriss; Vice-Presi- dents, Mary Vermillion and Betty Wahlstedt; Secretary, Doris Kingsbury; Treasurer, Sue Webster. PLEDGES PATRICIA BEHLER Mission JEAN BOWERSOX Arkansas City BARBARA BURNHAM Scotia, N. Y. ANN CLIFFORD Kansas City, Mo. MARY CONSTANT San Diego, Calif. PAT DARBY Kansas City, Mo. BILLIE DUNN Bethany, Mo. OLIVE JEAN GRIMES Kansas City HELEN HENDRIX Independence, Mo. KATHRYN HESSLING Kansas City, Mo. ZELINA HIGGENBOTTOM Lawrence RITA HORNING Topeka JO ANN HULL Topeka JEANNE IVESTER Kansas City DONNA KAPP Ottawa GERALDA KESSEE Alhambra, Calif. NORA MARIE MASON Seattle, Wash. DORIS MINER Kansas City, Mo. DONNA DE MUNN Garden City RUTH MURPHY Salina JACQUELINE PRYOR . . .... Kansas City, Mo. JOAN RETTIG Fredonia NANCY RUTH Kansas City, Mo. JEAN SCHERER Newton MARTHA SIDENER Mull inville DIANA SMITH Colby SHIRLEY SPARLING Kansas City, Mo. MAXINE VAN NORTWICK Lawrence JACQUELINE WALKER Kansas City, Mo. DOROTHY WHEAT Kansas City ACTIVES BETTY BLACK Ottawa EILEEN DEUTSCHMAN Albert Lea, Minn. SHIRLEY GUENTHER Kansas City, Mo. FRANCES HADLEY Topeka BARBARA HANLEY Kansas City, Mo. ALICE HOBBS Topeka MARY HOLTZCLAW Lawrence MARTHA JEWETT Lawrence DORIS KINGSBURY Grenola JEWELL MISHLER Richmond CAROLINE MORRISS Topeka LOUISE MORROW Lawrence CHARLENE PHIPPS Wichita SARA ROTHROCK Wellington BETTY SARGENT Wichita JEANNE SMITH Topeka ESTELLE STEWART Salina GERALYN ST. JOHN Wathena MARY VERMILLION Salina BETTY WAHLSTEDT Kansas City, Mo. ANNA WAKENHUT Salina ELIZABETH SUE WEBSTER Garden City JOAN WHARTON Wichita JANE W ILCOX Newton MARGARET WRIGHT Wellington FIRST ROW: Scherer, Phipps, St. John, Bowersox, Hull, Hendrix, Guenther, Black, Jewett, Sidener, Murphy, Clifford. SECOND ROW: Stewart, Holtzclaw, Kingsbury, Wahlstedt, Morriss, Mrs. Mary Younkman (housemother), Vermillion, Webster, Wakenhut, Hobbs, Wright. THIRD ROW: Van Nortwick, Rothrock, Morrow, Sparling, Sargent, Dunn, Wheat, Hanley, Grimes, Mason, Smith, Miner, Kapp, Kessee, Behler, Mishler, Ruth. FOURTH ROW: Wharton, Higgenbottom, Darby, Smith, Hessling, Horning, Walker, Wilcox, Pryor, Constant, Ivester, Hadley, Deutschman, Munn, Rettig, Burnham. 1 Th tr. RESIDENTS BETTY ADAMS Beloit JEANNE ATKINSON Burdick BEVERLY BAUMER Hutchinson MARJORIE BAUMER Hutchinson MARY LOU BIENHOFF Kansas City, Mo. ESTHER BLACK Peru MARY BOOTH Olathe ALETA BROWN Henderson, Nev. MARTHA CANNON Russell MARY CORSAUT Hutchinson MARION COOK Newton KAY COX Uniontown BEVERLY CUBBAGE Des Moines, Iowa VIRGINIA CUDDY Bethany, Mo. BERNADINE DAWKINS South Haven MARION DEVAULT Spring Hill ANNETTE ETTER Independence ELAINE FIKAN Atwood MAXINE FIKAN Atwood KAY FULK Troy JACQUIE GOODELL Abilene WANDA GOOD Garnett LORENE HAHN Healy BETTY HAYES Kansas City, Mo. JUNE HAYS Stillwell BETTY HAYWARD St. Joseph, Mo. HELEN HUMPHREY Kansas City, Mo. MARTHA HUTCHISON Maryville, Mo. HILDA JAMES Belleville PATRICIA JAMES Lawrence ERNABELLE JOHNSON Fort Scott LOUISE LOOKER Kansas City, Mo. ILA MILLER Coffeyville JOANNE MOSER Hiawatha MARJORIE NIGUS Hiawatha ELIZABETH POSORNOW Olathe GERALDINE POWERS Junction City ROBERTA SANDERSON Marysville HELEN SCAMILL Kansas City, Mo. DOLOR ' S SHADE Brookville KATHLEEN SLOAN Wichita ELOISE WEST Kincaid RITA WICKLIN Amazonia, Mo. FRANCES WOLFSKILL Kansas City, Mo. Foster Hall became an organized women ' s residence in 1943. President, Rita Wicklin; Vice-President, Elizabeth Posornow; Secretary, Ernabelle Johnson; Treasurer, Elaine Fikan. FIRST ROW: Moser, West, Looker, Hutchison, Haves, Corscut, Black, Goddell, Cook, Cannon, Humphrey. SECOND ROW: Nigus, M. Fikan, Johnson, Wicklin, Posornow, E. Fikan, Sanderson, Dawkins. THIRD ROW: Miller, Etter, Fulk, Cuddy, Atkinson, Wolfskill, B. Baumer, M. Baumer, Sloan, DeVault, P. James, Cabbage, Adams, H. James. FOURTH ROW: Booth, Hahn, Good, Cox, Shade, Hays, Powers, Bienhoff, Brown, Hayward, Scamill. lime A i■imor 111rage RES IDENTS RUBY ASBURY Leavenworth JERRY AYERS Wichita DONNA BAILEY Ellsworth MARY ELLEN BARKER Kansas City BETTY BARKIS Topeka CHARLOTTE BARTLEY Horton MARIAN BATES Perry PERA BETH BAUER Brouthton JANE BELT Coffeyville MARGARET BELTZ Kansas City MARY BERNRITTER Kansas City, Mo. PHYLLIS BETTS Oberlin NEVA BISHOP Kendall DELPHINE BOHNESACK Eudora BETTY JANE BOOTH Pleasant Hill, Mo. EDITH BOSSON Concordia ELIZABETH BRADNEY Columbus SELEN A BRA NCO Rio de Janerio DOROTHY BRENNER Olathe RUTH BROTHERSON Kansas City BONNIE BROWN Topeka ELEANOR BROWN Bethel LOUINE BROWN Bethel RUTH BROWN Sabetha DOROTHY BRUCE Horton JEAN BULLOCK Glasco QUEENIE BURGESS Augusta PATRICIA BURNHAM Wichita BETTY BYAN Kansas City, Mo. ELAINE CARLSON Clay Center LORRAINE CARPENTER Claflin ROSEMARY CHAMBERLAIN Osawatomie SERILDA CLAPP St. Francis DONNA CLARK Kansas City, Mo. DORIS CLARK Kansas City, Mo. BETTY COOPER Kansas City, Mo. VIRGINIA COOPER Peabody PHYLLIS DEBUS Kansas City DORIS JANE DEMAREE Kansas City AMELIA DOMBECK Hartford, Conn. MARY DOUGLAS Edgewood, Penn. BARBARA ESMOND Springfield, Ill. FRANCES FALEN Elmo DELORES FARRELL Marysville PHYLLIS FARRELL Marysville MARY LOU FOLEY Kansas City WILMA GEPPELT Mound City MARY GOODELL Kansas City, Mo. BETTY GREEN Hutchinson JOAN GREGORY Kansas City BETTY GRIMM Downs MARGARET GRUENTHAL Glasco MILDRED GULNIK Kansas City GERALDINE HAMM Cottonwood Falls MARJORIE HAMPTON Ulysses ROSEMARY HARDING Ottawa LUCILLE HARLOW Bonner Springs GERALDINE HARRIS Eudora LAVERLA HARRIS Concordia DOROTHY HARTER Caldwell MARILYN HARTER Caldwell BETTY LOU HATCHER Plains JESSIELEE HELENTHALL St. Joseph, Mo. MARY LOU HELMS Kansas City, Mo. HELEN HENDRICKS Axtell LUETTA HENRY Nortonville MARIETTA HIGLEY Osawatomie NORMA HOFF Parsons MARJORIE HOFFMAN Kansas City PHYLLIS HOOVER Kansas City MARIE HORSEMAN Kansas City WILDA HOSLER Ottawa JOAN HOWARD McDonald BETTY HUFFMAN Glasco LORRAINE HUNT Bunker Hill MARY HUMPHREY East Leavenwo rth, Mo. VENITA INLOES Quinter JANICE JACOBS Plains LOIS MARIE JAMISON Quinter LEDA GRACE JANKE Claflin MARY JEANNE JOHNSON Cleburne ANNA MAE JOHNSTON Marysville COLLEEN JONES Kansas City HELEN JONES Ponca City, Okla. VIRNELLE JONES Manhattan MARY JOYCE Topeka LEVERNE KEEVAN Troy JANE KEITH Hiawatha SHIRLEY KEITH Ottawa MARGARET KELLY Kansas City JEAN KIRKHAM Topeka JOAN KIRKHAM Topeka ELAINE KNECHT Wamego DOROTHY KNOWLES Atchison Corbin Hall was established as a women ' s residence in the fall of 1925. President, Norma Jean Pyke; Vice-President, Mary Kay Parker; Secretary, Dorothy Har- ter; Treasurer, Eva Lee Yung. FIRST ROW: Nicholas, Bishop, J. Smith, Johnson, Watts, M. Raney, Novak, Woods, Jacobs. SECOND ROW: Stewart, Geppelt, Michael, Jamison, McAllaster, Stephens, Stork, R. Mitchell (K.C.), Medved, B. Pinkney, Lamendola. THIRD RCW: Vogel, Schoen, Bates, Brenner, Dombeck,Whiting, Sherrard, Pratt, Skonberg, Winters, Millhauser, Nelson, Peterson. FOURTH ROW: Wickert, Horseman, Keevan, Bartley, B. Larson, N. Pyke, Mrs. Brown (housemother), D. Harter, Yung, Spurney, J. Keith. FIFTH ROW: Gregory, Burgess, Rathbun, Bosson, Knowles, M. Harter, Ringwalt, Hen- dricks, B. Cooper, R. Brown, Robinson, Webb, Yost, Carpenter, Bradney, Bauer, M. Pinkney, Ross, Steckel, S. Keith. SIXTH ROW: Jean Kirkham, Demaree, Hunt, R. Mitchell (Waldo), Clapp, Falen, Joan Kirkham, Riffer, Mills, Inloes, Repstine, Lowe, R. Lewis, M. Mitchell, E. Brown. SEVENTH ROW: Hosier, Peck, Walters, Walker, Hamm, Schmid, L. Brown, Stone, Foley, Rolf, Hatcher, E. Roesler. GENEVA LAMAN Alma ANN LAMENDOLA Carona BERNELDA LARSON Belleville REBECCA LARSON Robinson LOIS LAUER Abilene DONNA JEAN LEWIS Belleville RUTH ELLEN LEWIS Kansas City, Mo. MARY LILLY Topeka MARGARET LOWE Olathe MARY LYNN LUCAS El Dorado Springs, Mo. CAROL MARSH Evanston, Ill. ANNA LOU McALLASTER Lyons PATTI McCLATCHEY El Dorado, Ark. NORMA McCULLAN Kansas City, Mo. MARGARET McHARG El Dorado MARY FRANCES McKEVITT Spokane,Wash. MARY MEDVED Kansas City DOROTHY MICHAEL Kansas City, Mo. MAXINE MILLHAUSER Preston MARIAN MILLS Gorham MARY MARGA RET MITCHELL Cottonwood Falls RUTH L. MITCHELL Kansas City RUTH MITCHELL Waldo JO ANN MYERS Topeka MARILYN NELSON Kansas City VADA NICHOLAS Johnson ANNA NOE Topeka CORAL NOVAK Wilson JERMAINE OSMER Wamego DOROTHY PARK Hilo, Hawaii ZOLA PARKE Kansas City MARY KAY PARKER Salina JEANNE PECK Horton MARTHA LOU PENNOCK Longmount, Colo. JANE PETERSON Osage City PATRICIA PFIFER Wichita MARGO PIERCE Kansas City, Mo. BETTY PINKNEY Ford MARY PINKNEY Ford BETTY ANN PRATT Galveston, Texas BEVERLY PYKE Strong City NORMA JEAN PYKE Strong City JUDITH QUIROS Costa Rica JOAN RANEY Ellsworth MARILYN RANEY Syracuse PHARA RATHBUN Dexter ELIABETH REGIER Moundridge LOIS REPSTINE Atchison LOIS LEE RICHARDSON Topeka FRANCES RICHERT Newton VIVIAN RIFFER Corning ARDELLA RINGW ALT Oakley BARBARA RIVARD Kansas City, Mo. BARBARA ROBERTS Kansas City MARGARET ROBINSON Kansas City CATHERINE RODECKER Parsons ESTELLE ROESLER Claflin VIRGINIA ROESLER Claflin JOAN ROGERS Lyndon BETTY ROLF Junction City JUNE ROSS Sabetha BETTY MARIE SANDBORN Stafford EDNA SCHLEPP St Francis LAURA SCHMID Atwood GERALDINE SCHOEN Downs SHIRLEY SCHRIVER Coats MARY SHERRARD Wellington KATHRYN SHOWALTER Wichita EVELYN SKONBERG Osage City BETTY SLINKER Wellington CAROLEE SMALL Wilson JEANNE SMITH Neodesha NANCY SMITH Pittsburg ELLEN SPURNEY Belleville MARJORIE STARK Manhattan LUCILLE STECKEL Emporia LADEEN STEINKIRCHNER Manhattan SYLVIA STEPHENS Kansas City, Mo. MARY LEE STEWART Bushton BILLIE STILLMAN Bushton BARBARA STONE Smith Center CLETA VANMARTER Grinnell JEANNE VA N WORMER Hoquaim, Wash. MARJORIE VOGEL Topeka ALTHEA VOSS Downs CORAL WADE Belleville IRENE WALKER Oberlin MARIAN WALTERS Ulysses BEULAH WARD Highland KATHRYN WARD Highland MARJORIE WATTS Kansas City MARTHA WEBB Topeka MELBA WENGER Horton MELBA WHITING Downs MARILYN WHITEFORD Garnett VIRGINIA WICKERT Claflin VIRGINIA WILLIAMS Great Bend BETTE WINTERS Washington LUELLA WOODRUM Louis burg DONALDEEN WOODS Kansas City MARY JEAN YAGER Anthony MARY YOST Topeka EVA LEE YUNG Sedgw ick EVA MAE ZUM BRUNNEN Louisburg FIRST ROW: Quiros, McClatchey, Grimm, Voss, ZumBrunnen, Park, VanMortar, Marsh, Harding, Beroritter, Osmer. SECOND ROW: Bohnesack, L. Harris, Betts, Ward, Debus, Hoover, Brotherson, Gulnik, Asbury, Steinkirchner, Bailey, Wade, V. Jones, Kelly, Hampton. THIRD ROW: Whiteford, Huffman, Johnston, Williams, Pfifer, Sandborn, Rodecker, Goodell, McKevitt, C. Jones, Bruce, Wenger, Janke, Helms. FOURTH ROW: Joyce, Esmond, Douglas, Showalter Ayers, VanWormer, Noe, Barkis, Yager, Schlepp, Gruenthal, Lucas, Schriver, Harlow, Lauer, H. Jones, R. Larson, Regier, Laman, McHarg, Branco, Carlson. FIFTH ROW: J. Raney, Pierce, Higley, Beltz, Ward, Stillman, Pennock, Hoff, Burnham, Bullock, Henry, G. Harris, Parke, Chamberlain, McCullan, Byan, Donna Clark, Doris Clark, Booth. SIXTH ROW: Rivard, Woodrum, B. Brown, Small, Barker, Green, N. Smith, V. Roesler, Richert, Myers, Rogers, Hoffman. NOT IN PICTURE: Belt, Cooper, D. Farrell, P. Farrell, Howard, Humphrey, Knecht, D. Lewis, Lilly, Parker, B. Pyke, Richardson, Roberts, Stinker. Jolliffe Hall became an organized women ' s residence in February, 1943. President, Betty Young; Vice-President, Clarice Beaver; Secre- tary-Treasurer, Barbara Erickson. L. dr, RESIDENTS CLARICE BEAVER Osawatomie GERRY BOBBITT . . Oberlin MARGARET BOWER Stanley VIRGINIA CASSELL Independence, Mo. MILDRED CRANDALL Corning LOIS DEWALD Casper, Wyo. BARBARA ERICKSON Neal CAROL GRAHAM Fort Scott HELEN HAVEY Kansas City, Mo. AUDREY HEIDECKER Osawatomie SHERYL HOLLAND Kansas City, Mo. RUTH KELLER Gardner BARBARA LAMA REAUX Waterville SHIRLEY LIEM Overland Park MARILYN LINDBERG Topeka ROSE ANN MADDEN Baton Rouge, La. BETTY MARTIN Kansas City, Mo. MARGARET McDOWELL Kansas City, Mo. HELEN MILLER Ottawa, Ill. GERRY OTT Madison CAROLYN OWSLEY North Kansas City, Mo. VIRGINIA PATCH Kansas City, Mo. MARIAN PROBST Argonia FRANCES ROADY Osawatomie MARGARET ROADY Osawatomie MARY ROBSON Denison MILDRED ROWE Wellman KAY SMITH Yates Center BARBARA STAPLETON Topeka FRANCES THELEN Kansas City, Mo. ROSE MARIE TRUESDELL Concordia AMPARA VILLAFANE Porto Rico KAY WEBSTER Hanston BETTY YOUNG Kansas City, Mo. JO YOUNG Kansas City, Mo FIRST ROW: Bcbbitt, Probst, Ott, Hovey, Heidecker, Bower. SECOND ROW: Cassell, Owsley, Young, Erickson, Miller, Liem. THIRD ROW: Patch, Lamareaux, Martin, Truesdell, Madden, F Roady, M. Roady, Crandall, Young, Robson, Graham, Webster. FOURTH ROW: Lindberg, Staple- ton, McDowell, Keller, Thelen, Holland, Villatone, DeWald. NOT IN PICTURE: Beaver. RESIDENTS DORIS ANDERSON Lecompton GEORGIANA BENNINGTON El Dorado MAR JEAN CARR Wichita MARY HELEN CLARK Ashland JOANN CLOUGH Richland CATHERINE CRAMER Dighton CAROL CROW Horton VIRGINIA DAVID Cherryvale JOAN DEGENHARDT Kansas City MARY FRANCES DIEHL Liberal MARTHA JO EASTER Abilene DOROTHEA FULLER Coffeyville ELIZABETH CRAVES Dighton HARRIET GRAVES Dighton MARY FRANCES HERCULES Carbondale ADREA HINKEL Concordia BERNIECE HUGHES Waldron NANCY JOLLY Moline RUBY KAUFFMAN Wichita MARGIE KENT Beloit ROSEMARY LANDREY Kansas City JUANITA LEWIS Topeka MARYLEE MASTERSON Columbus KATHLEEN McKINNEY Hartford DOLORES MITSCHKE Kansas City KRISTIN MOE Askim, Norway JANICE OEHRLE Overbrook RUBY OLSON Garnett SHIRLEY OUSLEY Lees Summit, Mo. VIRGNIA POWELL Olathe FLORENCE REED Kansas City JOYCE ROHRER Abilene BILLIE ROTERMUND Independence, Mo. ELAINE SAWYER Fairview MARIE SCHREIBER Salina DOROTHY SCROGGY Wichita BETTY SOUKUP Wilson MARCELLA STEWART Winfield BERNICE STROUP Fontana NOLENE STUMP Pawnee Rock MAXINE THACH ....... . Burrton LOIS THOMPSON McPherson MARGE TRAUTWEIN Salina SALLY UNDERWOOD Hoisington ERMA LEE VOLKEL Lenora POLLY WEGSCHEIDER Fort Scott PATRICIA WILLIAMS Clay Center MARGARET WYNN El Dorado Miller Hall became an organized women ' s residence in 1937. President, Billie Rotermund; Vice-President, Polly Wegscheider; Secretary, Betty Soukup; Treasurer, Marie Schreiber. LEB L 7 I I FIRST ROW: Hinkel, Underwood, Williams, Crow, Hercules, Olson, Claik, Thach, Bennington, Stump,, Kauffman. SECOND ROW: Clough, Ousley, Easter, Soukup, Rotermund, Mrs. Roche (housemother), Wegscheider, Schreiber, Masterson, Thompson. THIRD ROW: Oehrle, Trautwein, Stewart, Carr, H. Graves, McKinney, Volkel, Jolly, Reed, Lewis, Anderson, Moe, Stroup, F. Graves, Fuller. FOURTH ROW: Powell, Sawyer, Mitschke, Diehl, Scraggy, Rohrer, Crow, Hughes, David, Degenhardt, Cramer, Landrey, Kent. NOT IN PICTURE: Wynn. Templin Hall became an organized women ' s residence in the fall of 1946. President, Bonnie Chestnut; Vice-President, Beverly Betz; Secre- tary, Anne Andrews; Treasurer, Virginia Fore- man. RESIDETTS ROSEMARY ALDERMAN Ottawa ANNE ANDREWS St. Joseph, Mo. ALIEEN BEAL Junction City BEVERLY BETZ Asherville MARJORIE BROOKS Kansas City, Mo. MILDRED BROOKS Kansas City, Mo. EMILY BURGERT Horton BONNIE CHESTNUT Beloit CONNIE CULTRA Herington BETTY CUMMINGS Almena MILDRED DEAVER Sabetha RUTH DUDLEY Iola BILLIE ENTERLINE Wichita VIRGINIA FOREMAN Lead, S. Dak. JUNE HEACOCK Kansas City, Mo. LORITA HIGGINBOTTOM Winfield MARILYN JAMISON Bartlesville, Okla. DORAEN LINDQUIST Belleville CLARA JANE LUTZ Hoisington MARIAN MINOR Hutchinson BETTY MYERS Bethel MARILYN MYER St. Joseph, Mo. BETTY PARK Blue Springs, Mo. MARY PRITCHARD Wichita VIVIAN ROGERS Hoisington DONNA SHIMER Topeka VIRGINIA SHIMER Topeka VIRGINIA SHUSS Larned ELIZABETH SPRATT Weston, Mo. ELIZABETH TRIPP Herington JOAN WALES St. Joseph, Mo. HAZEL WATHEN Platte City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Deaver, Park, Dudley, Cultra, Cummings, Myer, Tripp. SECOND ROW: Rogers, Burgert, Andrews, Chestnut, Mrs. Schrumpf (house- mother), Betz, Foreman, Lindquist. THIRD ROW: Mildred Brooks, Sprott, Heacock, Marjorie Brooks, Higginbottom, Wales, Alderman, Myers, Beal. FOURTH ROW: V Shimer, Shuss, D. Shimer, Wathen, Minor, Enterline, Jamison, Lutz, Pritchard. RESIDENTS MAXINE BELL Wichita PHYLLIS BICE Plainville JEANETTE BOLAS Kansas City, Mo. ESTHER CALVIN Pittsburg MARY LOU DAVIS Blue Mound MAXINE DUNKLEBURG Osborne SHIRLEY FRENCH Topeka BARBARA GLOVER Caldwell DOLLY JOYE HARE Parker EVELYN HOFFMAN Ottawa WILDA HORTON Blue Mound JANE HYDE Topeka MARTHA HYDE Topeka FREDA JONES Garden City BILLY JOAN KENT Humboldt CAROL KIRKPATRICK Abilene MARGARET LAWRENCE Merriam CORINNE LOCKE Erie CHRISTINE MANN Junction City JO ANN MARTIN Clay Center JEAN McGAVRAN St Louis Mo. MARY JO MERCER Wellington CAROLINE MONTGOMERY Borger, Texas PAT MOSER Hiawatha GLORIA NEELY Pomona ALVERTA NIEDENS Dighton MARTHA OATMAN Independence, Mo. VIRGINIA OKESON Sabetha GWENDOLYN PETERSON Cunningham JUNE PETERSON . . . . .. Osage City VIRGINIA POND Plainville ANNA PRETTYMAN Plevna MARIAN PUGH Kansas City, Mo. NORMA REHBERG .. Bennington CAROLE RUHLEN Florence JANET RUMMER Wichita BETTY SANDBROOK Kansas City, Mo. BERNIECE SCHMALZRIED Dighton BEVERLY SEMON Chanute JESSIMAI SHIDLER Winchester BARBARA SHIPP Paola ROSELYN SKONBERG Osage City BEVERLY STEMBER Ozawkie ANN STOUT Rothville, Mo. MARGARET STRAKA McPherson JOAN STROWIG Concordia JOAN WATERSTADT Detroit MARJORY WERTS Gridley MARILY WHITING Topeka Watkins Hall was established as a women ' s residence in 1926. President, June Peterson; Vice-President, Wilda Horton; Secretary, Chris- tine Mann; Treasurer, Beverly Semon, FIRST ROW: Montgomery, Glover, G. Peterson, Stout, Martin, Sandbrook, Lawrence, Okeson, McGavran, Neely, Whiting. SECOND ROW: Niedens, Davis, Semon, Mercer, J. Peterson, Miss Willard (housemother), Horton, Mann, Strowig, Skonberg. THIRD ROW: Locke, Hoffman, Kirk- patrick, Shidler, Jones, Bolas, Dunkleberg, Prettyman, Werts, Waterstadt, Kent, Shipp, Rummer, Straka. FOURTH ROW: Pond, Stember, M. Hyde, French, J. Hyde, Moser, Bice, Rehber, Bell, Pugh, Schmalzried, Calvin, Oatman, Hare. NOT IN PICTURE: Ruhlen. Campus House became an or- ganized women ' s residence in 1939. President, Naomi Nor- quest; Secretary-Treasurer, Ro- berta Jacobus; Social Chairman, Betty Pretz. FIRST ROW: Bales, Curry, Jacobus, Mrs. Joseph Goode (housemother), Norquest, Fridell, Marshall. SECOND ROW: Skinner, Sneary, Colbert, Nevitt, Connor, Schrek, Klindt, Pretz. NOT IN PICTURE: Burch. F 11 li J1 RESIDENTS SHIRLEY BALES Emporia HOPE BURTCH Bronson MARJORIE COLBERT Kansas City, Mo. HARRIETT CONNOR Atchison PATRICIA CURRY Dillon FRANCES FRIDELL Robinson NANCY JACK Mission ROBERTA JACOBUS Wichita 9 DORIS KLINDT Cassville, Wis. IRENE MARSHALL Wichita DEE NEVITT Moran NAOMI NORQUEST Fredonia BETTY PRETZ Olathe MARY SCHRECK Independence LOIS ARDEN SKINNER Overland Park BETTY SNEARY Weida RESIDENTS ELEANORE AIKINS Sa Joseph, Mo. MERIBAH BARRET Arlington ELEANOR BRADFORD Humboldt EMALOUISE BRITTON Columbia NELL BROWN Neal KATHRYN BURKEPILE Hoxie SHIRLEY CRANE Independence ARDETH COLLISON Humboldt PATRICIA GRAHAM Winfield BARBARA HAMILTON Pratt HELEN HASTINGS Lexington, Ill. DORIS KLEIN Kansas City, Mo. DORIS LEISER Kansas City, Mo. NINA LULL Topeka JUNE MALLORY Loveland RUTHE MARSH Valley Falls JACKIE McDERMED Hutchinson FRANCES NEAT. Mission CHARLYNE OLIVER Kansas City, Mo. RUTH PULS Durango, Colo. LITA JEAN RAMSDELL .. Burlington ELIZABETH SHAW Galesburg JO ANN SPOHN Superior, Nebr. DOROTHY STEPHENSON Winfield ELNORA WYCOFF Solomon MELBA YOUNG Wichita FIRST ROW: Neal, Aikins, Young, Barret, Crane, Collison, Spohn. SECOND ROW: Bradford, Marsh, Leiser, Burkepile, Graham, Oliver, Hamilton. THIRD ROW: Ramsdell, McDermed, Shaw, Hastings, Puls, Brown, Wyc off, Britton, Mallory, Lull, Klein. Carruth Hall became an organ- ized women ' s residence in 1946. President, Emalouise Britton; Vice-President, Shirley Crane; Secretary, Eleanor Bradford; Treasurer, Lita Jean Ramsdell. Harman Co-op became an or- ganized women ' s residence in the fall of 1942. President, Doris Dennis; Vice-President, Margaret Holsinger; Secretary, Doris Pavlicek; Treasurer, Doris Ateinecke. FIRST OW: Rippey, Cheek, Caldwell, Brown, Waits, Tribble. SECOND ROW: L. Harkleroad, Meinecke, Dennis, Mr. Smith (housefather), Pavlicek, Holsinger. THIRD ROW: Shehan, Stinebaugh, Awald, Miller, Hall, Momigonian. FOURTH ROW: Wolf, Stoll, Stuart, Myers, Wise, Covert. NOT IN PICTURE: J. Harkleroad, Pinkston, Shepard, Watson. II It RESIDENTS JOAN AWALD Schenectady, N. Y. MABEL BROWN Kansas City, Mo. JUNE CALDWELL Hutchinson LOIS CHEEK Kansas City, Mo. CAROLYN COVERT Abilene DORIS DENNIS Trenton, Mo. KATHLEEN HALL DeSoto JOYCE HARKLEROAD Whitewater LOIS HARKLEROAD Whitewater MARGARET HOLSINGER Kansas City JOYCE MAMIGONIAN Wichita DORIS MEINECKE Wichita BARBARA MILLER Chanute MARJORY MYERS Topeka 1 DORIS PAVLICEK Elsmore DOROTHY PINKSTON Arkansas City ERMA RIPPEY Helena, Mo. JANICE SHEHAN Chanute MARY HELEN SHEPARD Topeka PERNEACIA STINEBAUGH Wichita EVELYN STOLL Rose MARY BETH STUART Rolla CATHERINE TRIBBLE Garnett PATRICIA WAITS Nickerson MARGUERITE WATSON Greensburg CARMEN WISE Conway Springs RUTH WOLF Lyons 9 RESIDENTS IRIS AINSWORTH Bartlesville, Okla. HELEN ATKISSON Kansas City STELLA BOWER Paola ELOIS EITZEN Hillsboro MARY SUE FLETCHER Pleasanton MARGARET FORSMAN Liberal FRANKIE SUE FREEMAN St. Joseph, Mo. JEAN FRY Kansas City GERALDINE GLASER Mulvane LOUISE HAAS Plainville DOROTHY HEIDEBRECHT Burrton EVALYN HONOMICHL Lucas JEAN JONES Augusta JEAN LEAMING Liberal MAXINE MAC ERS Howard BARBARA MARMONT Burrton RITA NEUGEBAUER Kansas City VIVIAN STUNKEL Belle Plain BETTY TARP Kansas City ADELINE TONN Haven FIRST ROW: Heidebrecht, Thorp, Learning, Freeman, Fletcher, Forsman. SECOND ROW: Eitzen, Honomichl, Glaser, Fry, Ainsworth, Stunkel. THIRD ROW: Tonn, Magers, Neugebauer, Mormont, Jones, Bcwer, Atkisson Hopkins Hall became an or- ganized women ' s residence in the fall of 1944. President, Gerald- ine Glaser; Vice-President, Eva- lyn Honomichl; Secretary-Treas- urer, Jean Fry. Locksley Hall became an or- ganized women ' s house in the fall of 1944. President, Lorraine Rumsey; Vice - President, Sue McCoy; Secretary, Bertha Lowry; Treasurer, Lucile Ralston. FRONT ROW: Garrison, A. Bedell, Hibbs, Orloff, H. Bedell, Brooker, Russell, Smith. SECOND ROW: Unruh, Ralston, L. Rumsey, Mrs. Christian (housemother), McCoy, Lowry, Barlow. THIRD ROW: M. Hall, Balka, Ernst, Brandt, Brownlee, Johnson, Lippelmann, During, Wellborn, Mai, Cochreham. FOURTH ROW: Templeton, Baker, Perrussel, D. Rumsey, N. Hall, Hunter, Helmlinger, Van der Smissen. 1 J IF 1 RESIDENTS WANDA BAKER Pratt RUTH BALKA Topeka JEANE BARLOW Kansas City ANITA BEDELL Augusta HORTENSE BEDELL Augusta EPSIE BRANDT Russell BETTY BROOKER Kansas City LENORE BROWNLEE Kansas City, Mo. JOANNE COCHREHAM Johnson MARY JANE DURING Bushton MARY ERNST Kansas City, Mo. MILDRED GARRISON Marion MARY HALL Altoona NORMA HALL Altoona COLLEEN HELMLINGER Fredonia RUTH HIBBS Carthage, Mo. DESSIE HUNTER White City BARBARA JOHNSON Topeka JOAN LIPPELMANN Oberlin BERTHA LOWRY Wichita LORRAINE MAI Russell SUE McCOY Coffeyville VIOLET ORLOFF Kansas City, Mo. MARJORIE PERRUSSEL Salina LUCILE RALSTON Sabetha DONNA RUMSEY Council Grove LORRAINE RAMSEY Council Grove MARILYN RUSSELL St. John LEAH SMITH Joplin, Mo. JEAN TEMPLETON Logan CAROL JEAN TERRILL Osawatomie NEVA JEAN UNRUH Pratt BETTY VAN DER SMISSEN Buhler SHIRLEY WELLBORN Linden CHARLYNE WILLIAMS Kansas City MARY JANE ZOLLINGER Junction City Hfl RESIDENTS JULIA ANDERS Topeka MARSHA BAKER Topeka VELMA CAPPLES Parsons JOAN GRAY Topeka AUDREY GRIFFITTS Ozawkie BETTY HANSON Caldwell ETHEL HERRICK Lansing, Mich. MARIE JACKSON Parker LORRAINE LENSINK Edgerton, Minn. MILDRED REED Humboldt SHIRLEY SONDKER Abilene BETTY WELLS Topeka DARLENE ZIMMERMAN Centerville FIRST ROW: Copies, Wells, Anders, Lensink, Sondker. SECOND ROW: Reed, Herrick, Gray, Griffitts, Zimmerman, Jackson, Baker, Hanson. a women ' s residence in President, Julia Anders; President, Betty Wells; tary-Treasurer, Shirley Sondker. Ricker Hall was established as 1921. Vice- Secre- e Sleepy Hollow became an or- ganized women ' s residence in the fall of 1945. President, Doris Brown; Vice - President, Mary Catherine Shatzell; Secre- tary, Lauree Louis; Treasurer, Mary Detwiler. FIRST ROW: Graham, O ' Neill, Hurtig, Blacke, M. Cox, D. Jones. SECOND ROW: Louis, G. Jones, Detwiler, Mrs. Arrick (housemother), Shatzell, Myers, Bronigan, D. Cox. THIRD ROW: Redmond, Lambert, Miller, Gretzer, Snyder, Stringfellow, Schaulis, Dexter, Shinn. FOURTH ROW: Chubb, Seacat, Wickersham, Taylor, Bullard, Rothenburger, Forbes, Copeland. L RESID DOROTHY BLACKE Reece MARY BRANIGAN Kansas City, Mo. BILLIE BULLARD Lansing MARY CHUBB Topeka BETTY COPELAND Schenectady, N. Y. DORIS COX El Dorado MARIAN COX Mound City MARY DETWILER Pratt JOAN DEXTER Kansas City, Mo. BETTE FORBES Eurkea MARIAN GRAHAM Lansing MARTY GRETZER Kansas City, Mo. JOSEPHINE HURTIG Hartford DOROTHY JONES Langdon GWENDOLYNE JONES Olathe ENTS JEANNE LAMBERT Emporia LAUREE LOUIS Augusta PEGGY MILLER Langdon MARTHA MYERS Norwich FRANCES O ' NEILL Lyons MARY LOU REDMOND Ottawa IVA ROTHENBURGER Osborne JEANNE SCHAULIS Kansas City PHYLLIS SEACAT Ashland MARY CATHERINE SHATZELL Hoxie PEGGY SHINN Niotaze DORANNE SNYDER Emporia JOAN STRINGFELLOW Raton, N. Mex. VIRGINIA TAYLOR St. John BETTY WICKERSHAM Logansport, Ind. flC 11 ' RESIDENTS CATHERINE BOSSI Arkansas City JOYCE CASTLE Norton ROZANNE CROFF Fresno, Calif. RUTH DILLON Kansas City BILLE MARIE HAMILTON Weir HELEN HEATH Salina JOSEPHINE ANN HURST Topeka JANE ELLEN JOHNSON Salina ADA KOPKE Coldwater BETTY KRENZER Kansas City, Mo. JOANNE MANNERS Garnett MARY ETHEL MOORE Howard MARGARET MARY NELSON Concordia GRETTA PIERSON Nowata, Okla. MARY MARGARET RICKARD Bucklin LOUISE SCHIESSER Eskridge SHIRLEY SCHRENFILE Kansas City, Mo. MARTHA JANE S PRADLIN Garnett FIRST ROW: Castle, Nelson, Bossi, Kopke, Schiesser, Moore, Johnson. SECOND ROW: Hurst, Pierson, Croff, Krenzer, Heath, Rickard, Dillon. Wright Place became an or- ganized women ' s house in the fall of 1941. President, Ada Kopke; Social Chairman, Jane Ellen Johnson and Rozanne Croft. FIRST ROW: Fieinsohn, Martinez, McCracken, Walker. SECOND ROW: Green, Michener, Singer, Hoover, Wisner, Maya. U r Henley House was organized in the fall of 1945 as a women ' s co -op. President, Antonio Mar- tinez; Vice -President, Dorothy Hoover; Secretary, Gwendolyn Singer; Treasurer. Joanne Mich- ever. LORNA GREEN MEREDITH HEINSOHN DOROTHY HOOVER ANTONIO MARTINEZ MARY McCRACKEN RESIDENTS JOANNE MICHENER ISABEL MOYA GWENDOLYN SINGER OCTAVIA (TOBY) WALKER MARY WISNER Wichita Costa Rico Kansas City, Mo. Hugoton Howard Kansas City Topeka Smith Center Arkansas City Lawrence J MEMBERS ALICE ACKERMAN Kansas City RUTHANNE BETLACH Owatona, Minn. PAT BILLINGS Gig Harbor, Wash. GAIL BIXBY Valley Center BETTY BOLING Leavenworth CORINNE CARSON Hutchinson FRANCES CHUBB Lawrence HARRIETT CONNER Atchison MARJORIE DINSMORE Lawrence PEG FOSTER Kansas City, Mo OLIVIA GARVEY Wichita JEANNE GOR BUTT Topeka ILA MAE JUNOD Chanute CAROLYN KEITH Topeka MARTHA KEPLINGER Kansas City, Mo. MARY LONGNECKER Lawrence JEANNE McGREW DOROTHY O ' CONNOR KATHRYN O ' LEARY ELEANOR PACK RAQUEL RIOS ALBERTA SCHNITZLER FRANCES SCHUTZ ANNE SCOTT BARBARA SMITH MURALYN SPAKE PAT TOMLINSON BARBARA VARNER MARY VARNER ELAINE WALKER MARY ALICE WHITE Lawrence Hutchinson Kansas City, Mo. Kansas City, Mo. Panama Republic Wichita Kansas City, Mo. Pratt Kansas City, Mo. Kansas City Greenwich, Conn. Wichita Wichita Wichita Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Tomlinson, Dinsmore, Chubb, Connor, Schutz, Carson, Garvey, Boling, Rios, Bixby, Gorbutt, White, M. Varner. SECOND ROW: Betlach, O ' Connor, Spoke, Keplinger, Foster, Miss Hoover, Schnitzler, B. Varner, J unod , McGrew, Scott. 110116•11111 1111 1111111111111WM Quack Club was established at K.U. in 1922 to promote swimming, diving, and lifesav- ing efficiency of its members. President, Olivia Garvey; Secre- tary-Treasurer, Mary Varner. The Girls ' Inter - Dormitory Council was established at K.U. to promote understanding and co-operation among the organ- ized independent women ' s dor- mitories. President, Bonnie Chestnut; Vice - President, Lor- raine Ramsey; Secretary-Treas- urer, Virginia Shimer. FRONT ROW: Neal, Lensink, Stagg, Hildebrand, Skonberg, Hovey. SECOND ROW: N. Pyke, Wicklin, Shimer, Chestnut, Ramsey, Peterson, Young. THIRD ROW: Scareell, B. Pyke, Shatzell, Brown, Williams, Clough, Anders, NOT IN PICTURE: Britton, Eitzen, Glaser, Rotermund, Welborn. 1 MEMBERS JULIA ANDERS Winfield EMALOUISE BRITTON Columbus DORIS BROWN Kansas City BONNIE LEE CHESTNUT Beloi, JOAN CLOUGH Richland ELOISE M. EITZEN Hillsboro GERALDINE GLASER Mulvane HELEN HAVEY Kansas City, Mo. WILMA HILDEBRAND Fowler LORRAINE LENSINK Edgerton, Minn. FRANCES NEAL Mission JUNE PETERSON Osage City BEVERLY PYKE Strong City NORMA JEAN PYKE Strong City BILLIE ROTERMUND Independence, Mo. LORRAINE RUMSEY Council Grove HELEN SCAMELL Kansas City, Mo. MARY CATHERINE SHATZELL Hoxie VIRGINIA SHIMER Topeka ROSELYN SKONBERG Osage City VALERIE STAGG Tulsa, Okla. SHIRLEY WELLBORN Lyndon RITA WICKLIN Amazonia, Mo. VIRGINIA WILLIAMS Great Bend BETTY YOUNG Kansas City, Mo. T ii MEMBERS PHYLLIS BETTS Oberlin BETTY CUNNINGHAM Downs ROSEMARY GRAVES Tell City, Ind. GERRY HAMM Cottonwood Falls RUTH HIBBS Carthage, Mo. ROSEMARY JAR.BOE Parsons ERNA BELLE JOHNSON Ft. Scott SARA MINNIS Bucklin MARY KAY PARKER Salina MARGARET PIHLBLAD Garfield ELIZABETH POSORNOW Olathe NORMA JEAN PYKE Strong City BETTY SOUKUP Wilson BILLIE JO STILLMAN Bushton MAXINE THACH Burrton VIRGINIA WICKERT Claflin FIRST ROW: Hibbs, Soukup, Graves, Pyke, Cunningham, Minnis, Thcch. SECOND ROW: Betts, Posornow, Parker, Pihlblad, Hamm, Jarboe, Johnson. NOT !N PICTURE: Stillman, Wickert. Phi Chi Theta, professional women ' s business sorority, was founded in Chicago in 1924. Lambda, new one of 24 collegi- ate chapters, was established at K.U. in 1924. President, Norma Jean Pyke; Vice-President. Betty Soukup; Secretary, Betty Cun- ningham; Treasurer, Rosemary Graves. Tau Sigma was established at K.U. in 1921 to promote interest in and appreciation of higher types of dancing. President, Alice Ackerman; Vice-President, Jane Ellen Johnson; Secretary, Glenda Luehring; Treasurer, Mittimaude Hunter. FIRST ROW: Daugherty ' , Steinert, Johnson, Westmoreland, Ackerman, Franklin, Hunter, Luehring, Power, Moore SECOND ROW: Cultra, Myers, Green, Munn, Ward, Meeks, J. Tihen, D. Tihen, Croff, Helmers, Robison, Graber, Pierce, Vermillion, Laming, Maxwell. NOT IN PICTURE: Allen, Barron, Brady, Hammon, Lorbeer Webb. ER S GLORIA MAXWELL Kansas City, Mo. MARGARET MEEKS Kansas City MARY JO MYERS Great Bend MARY JEAN MOORE Winfield DONNA MUNN Garden City MARGO PIERCE Kansas City, Mo. PAT POWER Beloit ROSEMARY ROBISON Kansas City, Mo. MARILYN STEINERT Kansas City DORIS TIHEN Wichita JUDITH TIHEN Wichita JOAN VERMILLION Junction City HELEN WARD Coffeyville BETTY WEBB . . . . Kansas City, Mo. GEORGIA LEE WESTMORELAND Kansas City, Mo. MEMB ALICE ACKERMAN Kansas City ANN ALLEN Tulsa, Okla. PATRICIA BARR ON Wichita BERNICE BRADY Wichita ROZANNE CROFF Fresno, Calif. CONNIE CULTRA Herington MARY DAUGHERTY Russell PEGGY GRABER Hutchinson NINA GREEN Kansas City, Mo. BETTY HAMMAN Wichita CAROL HELMERS Kansas City MITTIMAUDE HUNTER Great Bend JANE ELLEN JOHNSON Salina TISH LAMING Chanute BETTY JO LORBEER Neodesha GLENDA LUEHRING Leavenworth r E MEMB ER S JERRY AYRES Wichita BETTY BATT Marion KATHLEEN BEASLEY Hiawatha DORIS COX El Dorado MARY LOU FOLEY Kansas City FRANCES FRIDELL Robinso.i ROBERTA JACOBUS Wichita DOROTHY JOHNSON Lawrence SHIRLEY KEITH Olathe DORIS KLINDT Cassville, Wis. LAUREL LECKRON Abilene PEARL LEIGH Lawrence j MARTHA OATMAN Independence, Mo. MAR JORIE PERRUSSEL Salin GERALDINE SCHOEN CawkerCity BEVERLY SEMON Chanute CORA MAY SIMPSON Hayes BETTY SLAGLE Lawrence HELEN STRINGHAM Lawrence DOROTHY TAFT Lawrence POLLY WEGSCHEIDER Fort Scott SHELI A WILDER Lawrence FRIEDA WRAY Lawrence FIRST ROW: Simpson, Perrussel, Outman, Slagle, Batt. SECOND ROW: Jacobus, Leigh, Fridell, Johnson, Stringham, Wray. THIRD ROW: Keith, Ayres, Taft, Foley, Wilder, Klindt, Schoen, Cox. NOT IN PICTU RE: Beasley, Leckron. Semon, Wegscheider. Theta Epsilon, Baptist soror- ity, was founded at Iowa Univer- sity, Iowa City, Iowa, in 1923. Beta, now one of 9 active chap- ters, was established at K.U. in 1924. President, Frances Fridell; Vice - President, Pearl Leigh; Secretary - Treasurer, Dorothy Johnson. The National Women ' s Pan- hellenic Association, which now includes 20 national fraternities, was founded in Boston in 1891. K.U. ' s organization was estab- lished in 1904. President, Kath- ryn O ' Leary; Secretary-Treasurer, Maxine Gunsolly. FIRST ROW: Hobbs, Jarboe, Houck, O ' Brien, Gunsolly, O ' Leary, Markle y, Moxley, Churchill, Lawrence. SECOND ROW: Varner, Newcomer, Owen, Grigsby, McGeorge, Goldsworthy, Shryock, Morriss, Vanderpool. I Il MEMBERS JACQUELINE LOGAN Kansas City BARBARA VANDERPOOL Wellington CONSTANCE MARKLEY Topeka MARJORIE SHRYOCK Kansas City MARJORIE BURTSCHER Hays MARJORIE KERSCHEN Hays SALLY HOUCK Independence REGINA McGEORGE Kansas City SHIRLEY GRIGSBY Kansas City EILEEN O ' BRIEN Kansas City ALICE GOLDSWORTHY Minneapolis, Minn. PATRICIA VANCE Kansas City ROSEMARY JARBOE Parsons JANE OWEN Kansas City FRANCES LAWRENCE Lawrence KATHRYN O ' LEARY Kansas City ELEANOR CHURCHILL Kansas City MAXINE GUNSOLLY Kansas City SUE NEWCOMER Kansas City BARBARA VARNER Wichita ALICE HOBBS Topeka CAROLINE MORRISS Topeka HHINET MEMBERS MARY BREED Kansas City, Mo. EMALOUISE BRITTON Columbus COURTNEY COWGILL San Francisco, Calif. MARGARET EBERHARDT Salina ELIZABETH EVANS Winfield BARBARA FORD Osborne PATRICIA GRAHAM Winfield ROSEMARY HARDING Ottawa HELEN HARKRADER Pratt MEREDITH HEINSOHN Topeka DOROTHY HOOVER Smith Center DOTTIE JAMES West Caldwell, N. J. NORMA KENNEDY Kansas City, Mo. LU ANN LANE Joplin, Mo. CAROLYN MORRISS Topeka DOROTHY PARK Hilo, Hawaii ELIZABETH SIFERS Iola EMILY STACEY Lawrence MARILYN STEINERT Mission BETTY VAN DER SMISSEN Buhler ELAINE WALKER Wichita OCTAVIA WALKER Hugoton SUE WEBSTER Garden City MELBA WHITING Downs RITA WICKLIN St Joseph, Mo. SALLY WINTERSCHEIDT Kansas City, Mo, MARY WISNER Howard FIRST ROW: Winterscheidt, Van der Smissen, Evans, Morriss, Whiting, Pork, Webster, Britton. SECOND ROW: Stacey, Wisner, 0. Walker, Breed, Kennedy, Graham, Lone. THIRD ROW: Sifers, Hoover, Thompson, Wicklin, Harkrader, Eberhardt, E. Walker, Cowgi II, Ford, Hei nsohn . James, Steinert, Harding. The student branch of Y .W. C.A., world-wide fellowship of Christian women, was founded at the Illinois State Normal School in 1873. K.U. ' s branch, one of 600, was established in 1886. President, Mary Breed; Vice-President, Octavia Walker; Secretary, No r m a Kennedy; Treasurer, Patricia Graham. 178 THE JAYHAWKER L iii The K.U. Home Economics Club was established in 1913. Since 1936 it has been affiliated with the National American Home Economics Organization. President, Wilda Horton; Vice-President, Mary Lu Hill; Secretary, Lee Yung; Treasurer, Mary Jo Mercer, MEMBERS ANDY ANDERSON Lecompton JEANE BARLOW Kansas City CHARLOTTE BARTLEY Horton JEAN BRACKMAN Lawrence CORINNE CARTER Lawrence RUTH CAWOOD Wetmore WANETA COLMAN Lawrence ETTA MAE COOPER El Dorado JOAN DUVALL Kansas City DOLORIS FARRELL Marysville PHYLLIS FARRELL Marysville PATRICIA FERGUSON Kansas City, Mo. JANE FERRELL Wichita WILMA GEPPELT ....... . . . . Mound City MARY GODDELL Kansas City, Mo. MARY EVELYN GOTT Lawrence HELEN HENDRICKS Axtell KATHRYN HESSLING Kansas City, Mo. MARY LEE HILL Lawrence WILDA HORTON Blue Mound JANICE JONES Garden City, N. Y. DONNA KAPP Ottawa MARY KAY KOTTMANN Kansas City, Mo. JOLA MARKLE Lyons NORA MARIE MASON Seattle, Wash. HELEN MATHER Kansas City, Mo. ELIZABETH MCCUNE Huron MARY JO MERCER Wellington LOUISE MORROW Lawrence KATHERINE NAXERA Kansas City, Mo. BETTY PRETZ Olathe JOANNE PUGH Wichita BETTY RENDLEMAN Olathe VISLETTE RICHARDS Sedalia, Mo. BETTY SANDBROOK Kansas City, Mo. DOROTHY SHELDEN Kansas City, Mo. MARILYN SMART Lawrence JEANNE C. SMITH Neodesha ANNETTE STOUT Rothwell, Mo. JUDY TIHEN Wichita PATTY VANCF Kansas City, Mo. BARBARA VANDERPOOL Wellington BARBARA VARNER Wichita BONNIE VEATCH Merriam MELBA WENGER Horton BETTY YOUNG Kansas City, Mo. MARY JO YOUNG Kansas City, Mo. LEE YUNG Halstead FIRST ROW: P. Farrell, Pretz, D. Farrell, Wenger, Sandbrook, Ferrell, Geppelt, Young. SECOND ROW: Cawood , Veatch, Hill, Horton, Uehling, Mercer, Yung, Jones, Anderson. THIRD ROW: Markle, Mason, Barlow, Morrow, Cooper, Kapp, Young, Ferguson, Colman. FOURTH ROW: Stout, Shelden, Smith, Hess- ling, McCune, Cater, Varner Smart. NOT IN PICTURE: Bartley, Brockman, Duvall, Caddell, Gott, Hendricks, Kottman, Mather, Naxera, Pugh, Rendleman, Richards, Tihen, Vance, Vanderpool. CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 179 Jay Janes was established at K.U. in 1925 to promote good sportsmanship and school spirit on the campus. President, Virginia Wickert; Vice-President, Emily Stacey; Secre- tary, Rosemary Harding; Treasurer, Shirley Wellborn. MEMBERS ELIZABETH APT Iola MABEL BAKER Lawrence CHARLOTTE BARTLEY Horton MARY KAY BOOTH Olathe EMALOU BRITTON Columbus ESTHER CALVIN Pittsburg CAROLINE CAMPBELL Kansas City, Mo. EDNA CAROTHERS Kansas City LORRAINE CARPENTER Claflin RUTH CAWOOD Wetmore KAY COLEMAN Richmond EVELYN COOPER Lawrence JEANE COOPER Lawrence EDITH MARIE DARBY Kansas City EILEEN DEUTSCHMAN Albert Lea, Minn. FRANCES FRIDELL Robinson BILLIE MARIE HAMILTON Weir ROSEMARY HARDING Ottawa GWEN HARGER Kansas City, Mo. HARRIET HARLOW Kansas City, Mo. WILDA HOSLER Ottawa HELEN HOWF Lawrence DOROTHY JAMES West Caldwell, N J HELEN LAWRENCE Ottawa PEARL LEIGH Lawrence BETTY MALLONNEE Wichita RUTHE MARSH Valley Falls MARYLEE MASTERSON Columbus HELEN MATHER Kansas City MARILYN McCLURE Eureka BARBARA MEYER Wichita MARION MINOR Hutchinson LENNIE MOE New Port Richey, Fla. MARY MARGARET MORRIS Wichita CAROLINE MORRISS Topeka CAROLYN NIGG Whitewater JUNE PETERSON Osage City MARY LOU REDMOND Ottawa MARILYN ROSENAU Eudora BILLIE ROTERMUND Independence, Mo. ANNE SCOTT Pratt ELIZABETH SIFERS Iola EMILY STACEY Lawrence BARBARA STAPLETON Topeka MARJORIE STARK Manhattan PERRY STINEBAUGH Wichita ELAINE THALMAN Kansas City, Mo. LEAH UEHLING Afton, Wis. SHIRLEY WELLBORN Lyndon VIRGINIA WICKERT Claflin MILA WILLIAMS Topeka SALLY WINTERSCHEIDT Kansas City, Mo. ANNE YOUNG Concordia MARY JANE ZOLLINGER Junction City FIRST ROW: Deutschman, Baker, lifers, Bartley, Winterscheidt, Scott, Morris, Thalman, Carothers, Peterson, Leigh, James. SECOND ROW: Young, Cawood, Darby, Harding, Stacey, Wickert, Wellborn, Meyer, Minor, Cooper. THIRD ROW: Nigg, Apt, Morriss, Howe, Mallonnee, Moe, Campbell, Zollinger, Fridell, Stine- bough, Williams, Rosenau, Redmond, Uehling, McClure. FOURTH ROW: Stark, Rotermund, Calvin, Coleman, Marsh, Masterson, Cooper, Carpenter, Hosier, Hamilton, Mother, Harger, Britton. NOT IN PICTURE: Booth, Harlow, Lawrence, Stopelton. 180 THE JAYHAWKER 7 The K.U. Women ' s Glee Club was established in 1913. Since 1935, it has been under the direction of Irene Peabody. President, Vivian Rifler,. Secretary, Marjorie Shryock; Business Manager, Lee Sears. MEM JANET BARKER Greensburg MERIBAH BARRETT Arlington JACKIE BAUM Leavenworth JOAN BENNETT Topeka KATHLEEN BIRD Albert GLYDE BLACKWOOD Lawrence BETTY ANN BOLING Leavenworth EDITH BOSSOM Concordia MARGARET BOWER Stanley NELL BROWN Neal LENORE BROWNLEE St Joseph, Mo. CAROL BUHLER Lawrence MARJEAN CARR Wichita INA LEE CRABTREE Lawrence PATRICIA DARBY Kansas City, Mo. JESSIE ESTRADA Eudora MARJORIE FADLER Pittsburg DORIS JEAN GILMAN Kansas City, Mo. GUINEVERE GOERZ Moundridge MARTHA GOODRICH Topeka PEGGY GRABER Hutchinson HARRIET GRAVES Dighton BETTY GUYER Macksville FRANCES HADLEY Topeka JOAN HAPPY Ottawa JOYCE HARKLEROAD Whitewater RUTH HIBBS Carthage, Mo ZELINA HIGGINBOTTOM Lawrence MILDRED OSTERHOUT HOCKADAY Lawrence ANN HOGUE Russell RITA HORNING Topeka ELOISE HULL Kansas City MARY HUMPHREY East Leavenworth, Mo. LILA HYTEN Wellington ANABEL KEELER Lawrence BEVERLY KING Kansas City, Mo. MARTHA LAFFER Wichita BARBARA LAMOREAUX Waterville BERS HELEN LAWRENCE Ottawa RUTH LEWIS Kansas City, Mo. SHIRLEY LINDAUER Kansas City, Mo. NANCY LUDLOW Kansas City JOLA MARKLE Lyons CONNIE MARKLEY Cheyenne, Wyo. JEWELL MISHLER Richmond MARY MARGARET MORRIS Wichita CAROLINE MORRISS Topeka RUTH MURPHY Salina MARGARET NELSON VADA NICHOLAS Johnson HELEN PILLER Great Bend MARILYN RANEY Syracuse BERNADINE READ Baxter Springs SUZANNE REILLY Leavenworth BEVERLY REITZ Olathe LO1S RICHARDSON Topeka VIVIAN RIFFER Corning BETTY ANN ROLES Junction City IVA ROTHENBERGER Osborne PHYLLIS SEACAT Ashland LEE VON ACHEN SEARS Lawrence ELIZABETH SHAW Galesburg PEGGY SHINN Niotaze JESSICA SHIVL Turon MARJORIE SHR YOCK Kansas City, Mo. MARTHA JEAN SIDENER Mullinville MARY KATHERINE SIMS Miami, Okla. JEANNE CLARA SMITH Neodesha JEANNE MARIE SMIT H Topeka SYLVIA STEPHENS Kansas City, Mo. EDITH STODARD Burlingame BETTY RAE THOMAS Leavenworth MARIAN WALTERS Ulysses MARTHA WEED Wellington FRANCES WEGSCHEIDER Fort Scott JANE WILCOX Bridgeport, Conn. FIRST ROW: Read, Bennett, Barker, Crabtree, Baum, Nelson, Ludlow, Barrett, Sears, Riffer, Lewis, Buhler, Bower. SECOND ROW: Higginbottom, Gilman, Lindauer, Goodrich, Smith, J. C. Thomas, Rothenberger, Blackwell, Sidener, Shaw, Hibbs, Stodard, Nicholas, Reilly. THIRD ROW: Weed, Reitz, Wilcox, Ramey, Markley, Happy, Bird, Murphy, Seacot, Shinn, Harkleroad, Estrada, Grober. FOURTH ROW: King, Hogue, Hull, Darby, Stephens, Morris, M M , Sims, Smith; J. M., Laffer, Wegscheider, Carr. FIFTH ROW: Hadley, Humphrey, Boling, Bossom, Hyten, Keeler, Guyer, Groves, Rolfs, Hockaday, Goerz, Brownlee. SIXTH RCW: Horning, Lamoreaux, Markle, Walters, Peabody, Morriss, Mishler, Brown, Lawrence, Shryock, Piller, Shive. CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1 9 4 6 181 Kappa Phi, National Methodist Girls ' Club, was founded in 1916 at the University of Kansas. Alpha is now one of 30 chapters. President, Wilda Horton; Vice-President, Shir- ley Wellborn; Secretary, Margery Vogel; Treasurer, Anna Hemphill. MEMBERS SHIRLEY BALES Emporia MARIE JACKSON Parker JANET BARKER Topeka HILDA JAMES Belleville DORIS BAYSINGER Lawrence MARILYN JAMISON Bartlesville, Okla. AILEEN BEAL Junction City GRACE JANKE Claflin MAXINE BELT Wichita FRANCES JOHNSON Grinter Heights GEORGIANA BENNINGTON El Dorado NANCY JOLLY Moline CATHERINE BOSSI Arkansas City DOROTHY JONES Ottawa EPSIE BRANDT Russell RUBY KAUFFMAN Wichita ESTHER CALVIN Pittsburg NOLA FAYE KILLGORE Frazier, N. M. DONNA CARPENTER Lawrence MARGARET KING Stafford JANE CHASE Lawrence CAROL KIRKPATRICK Abilene SERILDA JANE CLAPP St. Francis ANN LAMENDOLA Carona JOANNE COCKREHAM Johnson MARGARET LAWRENCE Merriam VIRGINIA DANIELS Bethesda, Md. SUE LEATHERMAN Chapman MARY LOU DAVIS Blue Mound DORIS LEISER Kansas City, Mo. JANE DURING Bushton ELSIE LEMON Lawrence MARTHA JO EASTER Abilene CORRINE LOCKE Erie BILLIE ENTERLINE Wichita BERTHA LOWRY Wichita BARBARA ERICKSON Neal THELMA MANKA Burns BARBARA FELT Wellington CHRISTINE MANN Junction City MARY SUE FLETCHER Pleasanton TONI MARTINEZ Arkansas City WILMA GEPPELT Mound City JOAN McILRATH Hugoton ELIZABETH GRAVES Dighton LAVON McILRATH Hugoton BETTY GUYER Macksville KATHLEEN McKINNEY Hartford NORMA LOU HALL Altoona BARBARA MILLER Chanute JOAN HAPPY Ottawa MARY MARGARET MITCHELL . Cottonwood Falls LOIS HARKLEROAD Whitewater MARGE MORROW Independence, Mo. GERALDINE HARRIS Eudora MARTHA MYERS Norwich MEREDITH HEINSOHN Topeka KITTIE NITE Montezuma ANNA HEMPHILL Lawrence JANICE OEHRLE Overbrook ADREA HINKEL Concordia JUNE PETERSON Osage City LAVAUGHN HODGSON Garnett JANETTE POLLOM Lawrence WILDA HORTON Blue Mound JACKIE PRYOR Kansas City, Mo. HELEN HOWE Lawrence MARGE RAMSEY Abilene MARTHA HYDE Topeka MARILYN RANEY Syracuse VENITA INLOES Quinter (Continued on Page 182) FIRST ROW: Lawrence, Hodgson, Rohl, Fletcher, Watson, Horton, Price, Inloes, Hinkel, Easter, Kaufmann, Shimer. SECOND ROW: Lowry, Felt, Lemon, Pollom, Barker, Stember, Mann, Woodburn, Scamell, Hemphill, Hyde, Willard. THIRD ROW: Scraggy, Jackson, Vogel, Shaw, Janke, Locke, Mitchell, Cockreham, Wycoff, Wellborn, During. FOURTH ROW: Sneary, Bales, Oehrle, Leatherman, Enterlir,e, Kirkpatrick, Davis, Smith, Bell, Howe, E. Swart, Richert. FIFTH ROW: Sutton, B. Swart, Simpson, McKinney, Walters, L. Mcllrath, J. McIlrath, Wolfskill, Leiser, Miller, Roesler, Varaerpool, • Delta Sigma Theta was founded at Howard University, Washing- ton, D. C., in 1913. Psi, now one of 160 active chapters, was estab- lished at K.U. in 1924. Presi- dent, Toby Walker; Vice-Presi- dent, Myrtle Dooley; Secretary, Lorna Green; Treasurer, Caroline Kerford. FIRST ROW: Green, Green, Walker, McGough, Singer, Wilson. SECOND ROW: Thurston, Clemmons, Morrison, Whitfield, Vickers, Gross, Elliot. NOT IN PICTURE: Demcss, Dooley, Dooley, Hams, Kerford, Lyle, Parker, Reed, Sisson, Smith. J MEMB E R S BEATRICE CLEMMONS Kansas City, Mo. EUNICE MAE DOOLEY Pittsburg MYRTLE DOOLEY Kansas City, Mo. IDESSA DEMOSS Fort Scott SHIRLEY ELLIOTT Newton LEOLA GREEN Houston, Tex. LORNA GREEN Kansas City, Mo. LOUISE GROSS Kansas City, Mo. SARAH HAMS Kansas City, Mo. CAROLINE KERFORD Lawrence VIRGINIA LYLF Lawrence DAISY MCGAUGH Newton BARBARA MORRISON Lawrence FLORA PARKER Kansas City, Mo. GEORGIA REED Kansas City, Mo GWENDOLYN SINGER Kansas City, Mo. CLEO SISSON Lawrence ELIZABETH JOE SMITH Kansas City, Mo. NORMA JEAN THURSTON Versailles, Mo. MARIE PEARL VICKERS Langston, Okla, TOBY WALKER Hugoton ROSEMARY WHITFIELD Newton GLORIA WILSON Kansas City K.U. MELTING POT And here are your answers to the pictorial examination on page 130: 1. Freshman, Dave Moore, age 25. 2. Sophomore, Janice Oehrle, age 18. 3. Junior, Randy Cousins, age 21. 4. Senior, Beverly Fox, age 19. 5. Junior, Bob Rosenfield, age 21. 6. Freshman, James Young, age 27. 7. Freshman, Jack Pritchard, age 22. 8. Graduate (Law) , Roger Til- bury, age 21. 9. Sophomore, Nancy Jack- son, age 19. 10. Senior, Bill Burgess, age 20. 11. Freshman, Margaret Kelley, age 17. Hitting the High Spots (Continued from Page 145) telephone conversation in which the first participant was heard to remark, Say Jane, how about a date row night? And so it goes, as in the words of Rosa Hartwick Thorpe: Slowly as the sun was setting o ' er the hilltops far away, Filling all the land with beauty at the close of one sad day; And the last rays kissed the of a man and maiden fair, He with footsteps slow and weary, she with sunny floating He with bowed head, sad and ful, she with lips all cold and white, Struggling to keep back the murmer, `Closing hours weren ' t extended tonight! ' • Kappa Phi (Continued from Page 181) Ruth Reisner, Lawrence; Joan tig, Fredonia; Frances Richert, ton; Virginia Roesler, Claflin; Mary Rohl, Newton; Carole Ruhlen, ence, Marilyn Rust, Saopaulo, Brazil; Roberta Sanderson, Marysville; Evalyn Scamell, Lawrence; Helen Scamell, Lawrence; Louise Schiesser, Eskridge; Dorothy Scroggy, Wichita; Lee Sears, Lawrence; Elizabeth Shaw, Galesburg; Virginia Shimer, Topeka; Peggy Shinn, Neotazi; Shirley Shriver, Coater; vonne Simpson, Norwich; Nancy Deane Smith, Pittsburg; Donna Snart, Lawrence; Betty Sneary, Weida; erly Stember, Ozawkie; Delores Sutton, Bucklin; Bettie Swart, Oakley; Ethel Swart, Oakley; Margaret Templin, Lawrence; Barbara Vanderpool, ington; Betty Van Der Smissen, ler; Marge Vogel, Topeka; Marian Walters, Ulysses; Marguerite Watson, Greensburg; Shirley Wellborn, don; Eleanor Wells, Lawrence; Mary Belle White, Wellington; Marilyn Whiteford, Garnett; Dorothy Willard, Eudora; Alice Wismer, Pomona; Frances Wolfskill, Kansas City, Mo.; Ida Mae Woodburn, Hutchinson; nora Wycoff, Solomon; Melba Young, Wichita; Eva Lee Yung, Hedgwick. CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1946 183 Flbik C, 14-it JR • How do you like my figure skating? Campus Democracy (Continued from Page 107) anticipation of Halley ' s comet but in fear of the bill collector, or perhaps the professors are looking for the return of their children who are out foraging. The less students see of professors out- side the class rooms the greater will be their regard for professors and for academic traditions The wives of the professors do not embellish the picture greatly. Some of them are fairly well nourished, are not unattractive, and have a est function in the academic nity. They drag their husbands out to teas and receptions and bridge parties and teach them how to behave like successful business men. Most of them have not the appearance of social elite, but we must distinguish two general classes. In the first class are those who married for love, who share in their husbands ' devotion to learning, do not pine for the fleshpots of the business Philistines, but are surprisingly ful. In the second class are those who married professors because they were unable to achieve more successful men, women who saw their arms growing thin, their clavicles protruding, and fi- nally accepted such husbands as they could get. These are of course not by nature the most beautiful women, and they often wear an expression of ical resignation, or perhaps of furtive and harried indecision, as if wondering whether they might not have done better if they had waited a bit longer. Altogether, the faculty wives could not well expect the chic, well garbed coeds to enjoy visiting them very much. Yet, of course, it does make us happy when students come to see us. It does build up our morale and self esteem. Particularly does it please us when alumni come back and call on us, and tell us what an inspiration we have been in their lives, how the principles we have taught them have lighted up life ' s rough course and guided them to higher and nobler ends; how their hearts bleed for the unfortunate masses who never had the privilege of taking our courses. It cheers us to hear such things. We almost get the impression that in providing so much inspiration, at so low a wage cost, we are offering a real bargain in the present inflation. We professors appreciate the fine de- mocracy which leads the students to come to see us, although we cannot rightly expect it. Should students, in the third place, associate with deans on a democratic basis? Again we should not be too hopeful. In the first place, deans are very busy making and interpreting rules to prevent the students from get- ting an education, or perhaps to vent them from getting a degree out an education, and if the students consort much with the deans who are thus engaged they interfere with the most important educational function. In the second place, and much more important, the deans are only ex-pro- fessors, and students would find them little more interesting than professors. It is true that their elevation to admin- istrative greatness is often due to some sort of preeminence—great erudition, scholarship, eloquence, sanctity, or perhaps lack of interest in teaching. Their more generous salaries enable them to dress more reputably, and after a few years of deaning some of them develop the resolute chins and masterly accents of army officers or railroad sec- tion foreman; yet in unguarded ments they are likely to lapse back to the furtive and apprehensive demeanor of professors, however vigilantly they try to avoid this. Students cannot well enjoy much or profit greatly from as- sociation with the deans, unless they merely wish to know the rules. But what, finally, can be said as to democracy in the relation of deans to professors? In recent years there has been a rising insistence on the part of professors that university tion be democratized, that they be given the same right as organized plumbers, plasterers, steam-fitters and typesetters. Indeed, the lower classes throughout the world have been de- manding more democracy. The Indon- esian peoples, the Hindoos and cans are demanding freedom and equality; and now here are the fessors insisting on more rights, haps even on the right to vote on their deans, somewhat as the students vote on their professors. This, however, would be carrying the principle of democracy quite too far. In the first place, professors are not very great men. They are only what is left when the deans have been picked out. The fact that they are contented to be pro- fessors suggests that they have little ambition or enterprise, and that they could not do much but teach. This is not a very important function, and they do it fairly well; but the great lems of university administration are of course beyond their grasp. In the ond place, if they had much to say about administration they would pres- ently be using too much of the sity funds for professors ' salaries, to the neglect of the buildings, offices, 184 THE JAYHAWKER —1 campanili and fountains which give a university real, objective distinction. Professors should not be vulgarly con- cerned about salaries anyhow. Theirs is a work of love, of consecration, and not of worldly profit. Professors are often reminded that theirs is a noble calling, that it is better to be noble than to be rich and comfortable, and that they do not need much money to preserve their nobility. Finally it should be said that in most universities the professors have already been granted such modest ad- ministrative responsibilities as they can assume successfully. They serve on committees, perhaps on many commit- tees, where they decide on examination schedules, guard student morals, and arrange the courses in proper order, perhaps assist the deans in drawing up new rules and interpreting old ones. Some of the committee meetings, like the faculty meetings, are very dul l, and some professors bring their knitting to the sessions, but they enjoy them in a simple way. Such duties give them something to pass the time, and give them a little insight into some of the less important administrative problems. Finally, the faculty committees take over some of the less complicated ad- ministrative chores and so leave the deans more time to grapple with the major problems of educational admin- istration. So, in conclusion, we find that there is little opportunity for the sion of democracy on university campuses. If there were a great deal of it the students and the faculty would not appreciate it fully, just as they do not appreciate bananas when they are plentiful—according to the great law of diminishing utility. We conclude with our original thesis — too little democracy is the essence of democracy. • Big Six Co-Champs (Continued from Page 117) stand that Saturday after Saturday col- lision with brawny foes? What is the true success story of a team that the entire state adopted and pulled for even in defeat? Aside from the superb job by Sauer and his staff, which also included Mike Getto, Dean Nesmith and Wayne Replogle, there were six major factors in the team ' s sensational success. These included smartness, speed, condition, alertness, and a player named Ray Evans. They ' ll be building new stadia at all the conference schools before the shouting about Evans ceases. There isn ' t a lot more this writer can say about Riflin ' Ray. If one could pin-point the high spot of a season doted with thrilling maneuvers he easily would have picked the last eight minutes of the Missouri tussle as the pinnacle of the season. Here was a combination of smart generalship, vicious determined ing and a clear-cut example of out- conditioning a stout foe. Leading 20-19 after the Tigers ' third touchdown the Jayhawkers were faced with the lem of hanging on to the ball or ing a desperate winning bid from MU ' s dangerous offense. They met it by hammering out three first downs, one of them on a fourth down smash by Evans, bucking from their own fifteen to the Bengal eight in a drive which conference critics will talk about for some time. The last four downs ran out the clock and preserved KU ' s scant lead over an opponent it hadn ' t beaten in Columbia since 1934. The season hadn ' t progressed far when Valley scribes labeled Kansas a team of opportunists. When the Jay- hawkers came up off the floor from the Tulsa game to knock off Oklahoma Aggies with a pair of first quarter stabs, 14-13, their stock as alert work- men went to the top of the board. It got to be so that clubs who made physical mistakes against the Sauermen took a seven-point blow amidships. Seven because Don Fam- brough, already one of the best guards in KU history, plunked through 19 of 22 extra point efforts. None of his three misses cost a game. In all the Hawkers nailed down 12 touchdowns this autumn directly through recovered fumbles, blocked punts or intercepted passes. times these happenings are recorded as luck. Sometimes they are referred to as breaks. The point is that in a son of ten games every team gets its full share. The difference is in the payoff and those silver-panted men from Mt. Oread were masters at the latter. On three of the occasions against Iowa State, Denver and Oklahoma, Kansas scored on the next play after gaining possession of the ball in enemy territory. Lynne McNutt, who veloped into the league ' s top strategist, invariably came up with the correct play or sequence to ram the Hawkers home. Against the ponderous Oklahoma Aggies, who outweighed the ers 30 pounds to the man up front. McNutt sent Evans over on a fourth down naked reverse from the Cowboy twenty-four. He fooled Nebraska with a running pass for a touchdown and piloted the late drive against Missouri by calling Fullback Hoyt Baker on a consistent chain of counter plays which the Tigers failed to fathom all afternoon. There were plenty of other heroics beside those which Evans and McNutt loosed and every grim red and blue battler deserves a full measure of credit. There was that Otto Schnellbacher to Dick Bertuzzi lateral at the end of an Evans forward which scored against Oklahoma from the five. This found Bertuzzi, one of the loop ' s best around halfbacks, back-pedaling five yards to maneuver in position for the toss from the wily end. There was Marvin Small ' s block of Neill Armstrong ' s attempted kick for what would have been the • tying point in the Oklahoma A. and M. fracas. Small ' s catch of Evans ' 58-yard heave in the Missouri game also ranks as one of the outstanding individual feats of the season. There was Bud French ' s sudden 46- yard skip against Wichita which handed the Jayhawkers their first tally. There was Joe Crawford ' s block of a Bob Fenimore quick kick which netted KU an early touchdown from the Aggie five. In the same game little Dave Schmidt, KU ' s giant-killing 165- pound end, turned in his biggest day of another fine season by tackling the Cowpokes ' Blond Blizzard no less than 13 times. There was Bill Red Hogan trifying the Midwest football world CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1946 a 185 by outpassing TCU ' s four airlane tists in the opener and rolling up 229 air yards in only six quarters before going out against Denver with a broken leg. Red rode out the tough break right down to the Missouri game. He was ready for action in that one, but the opportunity did not present itself. Mark him down as Evans ' passing successor next autumn. High up and in gold letters you ' ll find the name of Paul Turner, a stitute end who ' ll outlive all the rest when heroes fade and their deeds grow dim. It was his field goal—a fantastic 41-yarder through the mud and that felled mighty Oklahoma in the last 85 seconds, 16-13. When the back-slapping started in the Jayhawk Mutual Admiration ciety after the Missouri game a lot of praise was meted out to a pair of lean, tough, durable battlers, Hugh Johnson and Don Red Ettinger. It is a fact that this pair gave KU its first top-flight pair of tackles for more than a decade. They were the big reasons for the surprising showing of the red and blue line which was written off as weak in every pre-season prediction. brough, a swift terrific blocker and Crawford, who improved with each game, turned in excellent guard play along with Willie Micklick and Ken Sperry while Center Howard Fischer and those shifty, cagy ends, Schmidt, Small and Schnellbacher were doing the rest. Nobody in this crew got much rest, but it didn ' t seem to make any ference. Instead of wearing down they gathered strength and fire with every game, finally beating down Missouri ' s giant forward wall in that amazing last quarter demonstration. They held the opposition to an average of 150 yards net rushing per game, not a figure which will get them a Block-of-Granite label but one which opponents found too short for victory. Sauer ' s masterful improvising was the final slicker. In September he found his club overloaded with good backs and short on front wall bosses. He shifted backs to the line and the result at season ' s end was the speediest, sharpest-hitting, best-conditioned unit in the conference. The tackles were down with the ends under punts. The guards boomed ahead of that footed gang of backs all afternoon. And the ends teamed with Evans and Red Hogan to construct the most dangerous aerial attack in the loop. And how they loved to rush that passer. How well they performed their tasks not only is written in the won and lost column but in the son All-Big Six scripts as well. bacher, Fambrough, Evans, Schmidt and McNutt were first team choices on various selections while every one of the starters plus French and Hogan found themselves listed either on the second team or among the honorable mention. A Day to Remember (Continued from Page 120) that completely bottled up the hawkers scoring machine. Our faithful grad grumbled and moaned as the solid Nebraska attack ground out a six point lead at the end of the first half. Then early in the second half the Kansas team suddenly came to life to unleash a savage offense that • outscored the Cornhuskers but left them still ing on to a precious two point lead as the gun sounded to cut short the third Kansas thrust of this last thirty minutes. The men from the lands didn ' t romp as before, but their surge was enough to eke out a hard fought 16-14 victory. As always, Evans shone on defense, crossing all over the field to make touchdown ing tackles and to bat down enemy passes. The big bomber and mates cut loose in that second half to shove Kansas over the last stripe twice, but Nebraska proved to have the hustle to come from behind to power out their narrow victory. The old college town of Lawrence was jammed till 7:00 that night with football fans returning home still happy with the bitter loss, but tially encouraged to know that the future of football at the University of Kansas was looking brighter than ever before. And inside many college spots, K.U. men of yesteryear were iffing on the breaks of the game and getting the loss in collegiate good times relived for a night. Old Mr. Jay Hawker floated from table to table shaking hands and reveling in the fun, for this was K.U. homecoming, 1946, and he wasn ' t going to miss a minute of it. • Krissmuss Prezunts (Continued from Page 124) tres which ar a kind of koarse woven sack which is worne lik a blous ore if it was a man yew mite call it a wollen shirt with no buttons to be seen enywher. These swettres however ar no longre worne in ther natchral sack shape but ar bound in at the bottm cloase tew the boddy with a brite kolored outside gurdle in this way showing somwhat the shape which is in the swettre. Tew prezunts which i shal tak up wan at a tim ar artickles which can be giv tew ether min ore wimmin. Such as saddle shoos which ar a kind of sandle yew dont to be a bak rider tew ware as saddle is a common term used arownd collej just as in the grewv or beem or deel and saddle sope is used moat on shoos than horses also cowboys sing songs lik thers an empty saddle in the bunkhous toniteght, my back is in the saddle again and sailers on the high see sings it was saddle when that grate ship went down. The uther prezunt i forgot but i wil think ov it before Krissmuss and bye the way mary krissmus tew yew awl. • The Hard Way (Continued from Page 144) but to spend with his wife and child. Any white shirts today, Bill? Sorry, Ed, fresh out—six months ago! Some fellows browse around the store for almost an hour. Bill wishes he could find a little spare time like that—take Vivien out to dinner and then a show—but the day just isn ' t long enough. It ' s rough on family life now, but Bill is thinking with a smile about the day he ' ll be able to run a store like this. Then he can look back on these college days and thank his lucky stars he did have the ambition. He ' ll be able to pay his young son ' s way to college—or maybe no t. Maybe he ' ll have that son work his way through . . . 186 THE JAYHAWKER CARTER ' S STAVIONERY Student ' s Supplies Stationery Quality Merchandise Courteous Service 1025 Massachusetts St. Lawrence, Kansas PHONE I UU I E R A Fl O E Y S A A L S A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS Puretest Drugs Toiletries for Ladies Toiletries for Men Baby Foods and Supplies Prescriptions First Aid Products Fine Candies Stationery Cigars and Pipes STOWL1TS lex Store H. W. Stowits H. W. Stowits, Jr. 847 Mass. St. Phone LAWRENCE We Solicit Your Business For- CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS FOUNTAIN PENS DESK BRIEF BILL BOOKS TYPEWRITERS (When Available) LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE 735 MASS. ST. Pasteurized An All-Round Food Grade A Lawrence Sanitary Milk Ice Cream Company 202 W. 6th Telephone 696 181 CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1 9 4 6 The Men ' s Store In Nationally Advertised Brands We Offer . . . KUPPENHEIMER • MACGREGOR ARROW DOBBS BOSTONIAN HICKOK WILSON BOTANY 500 where . . . University Styles Predominate First With What Men Want Most For Better Style, Quality and Value- OBER ' S ICE AN ESSENTIAL COMMODITY FOR HEALTH AND COMFORT Phone 48 AMERICAN SERV-ICE COMPANY LAWRENCE KANSAS BEST WISHES to the JAYHAWKERS of KANSAS UNIVERSITY THE SEYMOUR PACKING CO. COVERS BY 2857 N. Western Ave. Chicago 18, Illinois • • TOPS N FINE PASTRIES • PHONE 0 907 MASS. 0 188 THE JAYHAWKER 6 Rte Love Box Company CORRUGATED AND WOOD SHIPPING CONTAINERS 612 SOUTH COMMERCE STREET WICHITA, KANSAS THE WOODCRAFT Coo FURNITURE REPAIRED AND REFINISHED RECONDITIONED FURNITURE FOR SALE 730 MASS. PHONE 640 For 25 Years Lawrence BEST Service GAS—OIL—LUBRICATION TIRE and BATTERY SERVICE FRITZ CO. CITIES SERVICE PHONE 4 14 E. EIGHTH XI ARD ' S F_O ERS THE K. U. FLORIST OVER 25 YEARS PHONE 820 RUMSEY ' S AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONE 672 GIFTS FROM FRANK ' S FRANK ' S FURNITURE COMPANY 834 Mass. Phone LAWRENCE, KANSAS CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1946 189 HOW ABOJT • JOY GOOD PAY WITH ReGERS CO7PPAY PLANTS LOCATED AT MILTON AND ATHENA, OREGON ... COMFORTABLE HOUSING FACILITIES FOR BOTH SINGLE MALE AND FEMALE EMPLOYEES, AS WELL AS MARRIED COUPLES OR FAMILIES, AT BOTH PLANTS. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PERSONNEL MANAGER ROGERS CANNING COMPANY MILTON, OREGON CAFETERIA, MILTON, OREGON RECREATION ROOM AT MILTON, OREGON 190 THE JAYHAWKER TIICKLED Dainty Susie Porkey feels pleased with herself these days. She ' s fast becoming No. 1 on the price parade. But Susie is a foolish girl, flying high on an inflationary cloud of false vanity. Popularity is fine if the price isn ' t too high. Electricity is another popularity item, but electricity has gone down in price 18.5 percent since 1939! That ' s reason enough to be tickled pink. N K! (‘ANSAS CITY POWER LIGHT CO. IMF .V Kansas City Missouri for gifts of fashion for vacation and resort wear for your campus style assurance downtown on the plaza M-M--__A11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111H111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111ME A o ON GH AT YOUR LAWRENCE THEATRES 192 THE JAYHAWKER e ve east Where Folks Are Friendly and Fashions Are Foremost — Truly a K.U. Institution SERVING K.U. AND LAWRENCE SINCE 1887 901 MASS. ST. LAWRENCE 52acidien for • 40 71( lb STUDE T BOOK STORE TEXT BOOKS NOTEBOOKS ARTIST ' S MATERIALS featuring ENGINEER ' S SUPPLIES SUPPLIES PARKER 51 PENS PENS AND PENCILS MEMORIAL UV ON IV CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1946 193 BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY KANSAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. Hi. Recognize me? I ' m one of your cyrowd. You see, I speak for Coca-Cola, known, too, as ' Coke. ' I speak for both. They mean the same thing. The gang say ll look Pqm, like ' Coke ' tastes. And you won% get that delicious and refreshing taste this side of Coca-Cola. There ' s no com- parison, TRADE-MARK Delicious and Refreshing Fa, 947 ,ayla m er Photograp-ler z Topeka, Kansas CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1 9 4 6 195 THE GRANT - BILLIFSSLEY Fruit Company Wholesale Fruit and Produce WICHITA KANSAS THE FAMOUS LINE OF BRAEMOOR Coats and Suits for Campus Are Now Being Sold Exclusively in Lawrence by SWOPES MOTOR N WE SERVICE ALL MAKES OF CARS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH MOTOR CARS — SKELLY Tire Repair and 827 VERMONT PHONE 607 • 196 THE JAYHAWKER MAGIC IN DISTINCTIVE FOOTWEAR DeLiso Debs Barefoot Originals Royal Coilllege Shop 837-39 Lawrence BRING YOUR FORD BACK HOME, FOR THE SERVICE IT LOVES BEST. • MORGAN-MACK to or ' 1--llplly 609 Mass. • YOUR OF FRIENDLY FORD DEALERS Be Collegiate! in clothes CLEANED . PRESSED — by the [H YORK CLEAVERS PHONE 75 A FRIENDLY MESSAGE Our 28 Years of Service— Same Location — Same Management You are always welcome. We will try to give you the best of food and the best of service. Coffee famous the state over. DE LUXE CAFE 71! Mass. St. Lawrence Well He Wouldn ' t Call Me His Ball and Chain If He ' d Let Me Get My At .011NSON ' S CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1 9 4 6 1.97 TOPCOATS That Are Highly Styled and Reasonably Priced Made By HYDE PARK CURLEE GLENSHIRE STYLE CRAFT Gabardines—Fleeces Coverts—Tweeds $20 to $45 We Invite You To Look CO. 811 Mass. St. CHAR JE SPIVAC aria Phis Orchestra • December 22nd • i`JILAJ ACRES BALLROOM TOPEKA BOOK SELLERS TO JAYHAWKERS SINCE 1898 Main Store Annex 1401 Ohio 1737 Oread Ph, 1401 Ph. 492 exclusive B. H. WRAGGE sportswear For fall and winter can Modern by Wragge . . . functional, streamlined clothes . . . that can be changed about, packed easily, suitable for town or country. Topeka, Kansas Clothes that CHEERS From Campus and Women The Palace 843 MASS. There ' s Joy GIVING GIFTS from TOPEKA ' S DEPENDABLE for more than a Half-Century Home of INSURED PERFECT DIAMONDS 821 Uclosas 198 THE JAYHAWKER TEAM WORK is important It Conserves Strength, Minimizes Effort, and Increases the Chance of Success. This BANK ' S Service Is Based on the Principles of Constructive Co-operation in the Financial Plans and Problems of Its Customers. Our Interests Are in Common THE LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK BANKING HOME OF K.U. STUDENTS Member F.D.I.C. F l N K ' S MORTUARY AND CHAPEL AMBULANCE SERVICE Telephone 1 19 THE KANSAS ELECTRIC POWER COMPANY WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 203 The average veteran these days resembles the little boy who boards a streetcar and rides endlessly, enjoying the scenery, but neither knowing nor caring about his nation. Naturally enough the veteran is praised and flattered for his war-gained intelligence by those who want his money, votes or other support. Now veterans did develop a good deal of ingenuity and initiative in doing their own limited tasks during the war, but on important matters the result was an attitude of almost mechanical fatalism. This tude, deeply ingrained in the veteran, is largely responsible for his lack of interest in the political problems of the war world. Few vets have taken even a passing interest in matters of public policy. The man who moans the most about his dingy living quarters has never heard of the Ellender-Taft Housing Bill. The ex-G.I. who ' s already suffering the hardships of the next war in his mind takes no interest in United Nations, the control of atomic energy, or our relations with Russia. The veteran who applies his best profanity to Congress is busy with other things at election time and has never written-- a line to his Congressmen. What the veteran needs to do today is simply to decide where he wants to go and how he wants to get there. When he had a military superior around to tell him the score on such things, he had reason to moan. Now that reason is gone, and it ' s time for the veteran to realize that he has not only the right, but the responsibility as well, to tackle these problems. Who knows—maybe a closer look at the scenery would show the vet that he ' s boarded the wrong streetcar. To me, the most deplorable campus situation is the prevalence of racial prejudice. I know a lot has been said about it; a little has been done. But a lot more will have to be said and done before the condition is corrected. And it is an important problem—one that goes to the very roots of our democratic traditions. For, say what we will, democracy is a faith; you can ' t prove that it is good or bad. But you can see—as a lot of us did—what the lack of it is like, and from that you may judge whether you like it or not. I like it, and for me it is therefore good --so good, that I hate to see it denied to anyone. To deny a person equal rights—even the little ones; the ones that help him to feel like a fullfledged member in good standing of the community—is to water down your faith in democracy and to give it less meaning. The denial cf any right to anyone is incompatible with the faith we profess to hold in democracy. Have college students lost their idealism? Uncurl that lip and ask yourself frankly what is wrong with that word, idealism. O.K., so Mr. Webster, himself, says it is the opposite of realism, and it ' s the rare college student who doesn ' t point to himself proudly and say, Sure, I ' m a realist. Mr. Webster in his interesting book goes on to explain that realism is the preoccupation with reality— the position to think and act in the light of things as they are and to repudiate visionary schemes. Now, of course, most progress has been made by realists, who acted in the light of things as they were and who rejected visionary schemes. Or has it? Were the founders of the American colonies acting without vision? Were they strictly realists with no idealism thrown in? How about our westward expansion? The founding of Lawr ence, of K. U.? History books, historical documents, and other evidences show whelming proof that idealism has played a big part in the progress of the world. So, how about that cynicism (often mistakenly referred to as realism ) that has taken the place of idealism on the campus and in the hearts of students who go out to become community leaders? Much of it originates in class instruction. Students should demand that a seat be saved for idealism beside that manently reserved seat for realism in the classroom. The college life isn ' t the only sphere influenced. The entire world community is affected. One World isn ' t enough. It must be a better world and that ideal cannot be attained without the idealism of today ' s college students. RECOMMENDED READING A large bowl of roses and a ringing round of applause are due our new discovery Betsey Sheidley for her enlighten- ing article, What Every Man Should Know. Besides playing a solid sense of humor, it ' s one of the best examples of fine feature writing we ' ve been privileged to publish this year. Naturally any similarity between the Dates pictured on pages 212 and 213 and Betsey ' s story is purely coincidental. Any similarity to the man on the campus is downright intentional. Nothing more need be said if you ' ve read the editor ' s note on page 207 to Dr. Gibson ' s feature article, K. U. from Harvard. Once more the emphasis is on pictures with just enough written copy to tell the reader the story. You won ' t have to look far to realize how much we owe Hank Brown. His work is superb and his camera is still warm. Final Week in Retrospect is a pictorial account of those harrowing days of reckoning shortly past. The photography actually was done during final week and the results are obviously authentic. When more clever cutlines are written, we ' ll wager Keith Wilson will be writing them. Allan Cromley, Elaine Thalman, and Dick Hawkinson have done their usual excellent work on their respective assignments— The Story Behind Your University Daily Kansan, Sunflower Village Baby Contest, and That Social Stimulus. Other newcomers to the staff who show exceptional promise are Bob Ready and John Baird. Bob ' s account of the typical married student, A Huggin and A Chalkin, and John ' s ' ' Discourse on Genes are rare as well as taining. To Dick Bibler goes our special appreciation for his four splendid L. M. 0. C. cartoons drawn especially for the JAYHAWKER. No longer enrolled at K. U., Frank Miller was imported from the City to continue his Campus cature feature, which is composed of students rather than faculty members this time. With the winter number our Big Wheels on Campus column bows out in favor of ten upperclass Big Brains. All schools of the University are represented and no brain has lower than a 2.7 grade average. As each sketch tells the person ' s secret to successful scholarship, now might not be a bad time to read them. INDEX The JAYHAWKER Listens 203 K. U. from Harvard 206 What Every Man Should Know 208 Candidly a Jayhawker 214 And the Snows Came 218 Final Week in Retrospect 219 Basketball Blues 222 A Huggin and a Chalkin 226 Campus Caricatures 228 Accent International 230 Popular Professors 232 Pi Phi Christmas Party 234 Big Brains on Campus 236 Lest Anyone Forget 240 University Daily Kansan 241 Little Man on Campus 243 That Social Stimulus 244 Sunflower Village Baby Contest 246 Juno and the Paycock 248 Discourse on Genes 249 Fraternit ies 250 Miscellaneous Organizations 267 THE COVER Little Hank Brown layed. down in the gutter on Oread Drive to catch a low angle shot of Dyche tower, and the winter number cover is the result of his labors. Everybody knows that flowers bloom in the summer tra la, so don ' t bother to write the editor. For the stickler who complained to the Kan- san about the Pabst Blue bon label on the ale bottle prop in Juno and the Pay- cock—just be a good sport and chalk this one up to tistic license and the fact we like the color yallow. NEXT ISSUE Your next issue of the JAY- HAWKER willcombine the ics of spring and ment and will be the last issue of the year. There will be senior pictures, spring tures, and of especial interest —beauty queen pictures. When we think of the last issue, it is with pangs of grief as well as relief. The versity has had a great year. If the combined efforts of your annual staff have any bearing, we hope to finish that year off with a great JAY- HAWKER. You ' ll be the judge. Editorial Assistants: ALLAN CROMLEY DICK HAWKINSON NEWELL JENKINS ELAINE THALMAN KEITH WILSON Advertising Assistants: JO COMPTON LARRY SIMMONS Art Contributors: DICK BIBLER BOB CALDWELL FRANK MILLER, JR. LU ANNE POWELL YOGI WILLIAMS Contributors: JOHN BAIRD RUSSELL BARRETT BILL CONBOY ALLAN CROMLEY VIRGINIA DANIELS LEATRICE ENDLICH STANLEY ENGLUND DR. HILDEN GIBSON DIXIE GILLILAND BILLIE HAMILTON JOAN HARRIS DICK HAWKINSON GEORGE HOLLAND ANN LEARNED JIM MORDY DAVE MORRIS BOB READY BETSEY SHEIDLEY RHOTEN SMITH DIANE STRYKER ELAINE THALMAN KEITH WILSON STAFF Photographers.. HANK BROWN DUKE D ' AMBRA BOB GRAHAM MORT HAUSERMAN HERB KAUFMAN JIM MASON GEORGE ROBB Office Assistants: ISOBEL ATWOOD DONNA BAILEY MARY HELEN BAKER MARILYN BARNUM SARAH JANE BELT BERNICE BRADY BETTY BREWER BETTY SARA BROTHERS JO COMPTON ETTA MAE COOPER ANNETTE CRAMER VIRGINIA DANIELS BILL DELAY BARBARA FELT JANIE FERRELL MARILYN FRIZELL STELLA GABRIELSON DORIS GREENBANK SHIRLEY HOYT ANN LEARNED JOAN MANUEL NANCY MESSENGER DEAN MILLER ALIX NEVILLE JEANNE PARROTT ETHEL PEARSON BETSEY SHEIDLEY LARRY SIMMONS DORIS TIHEN NANCY VANBEBBER Editor: DEAN OSTRUM Business Manager: DICK CARMEAN Secretary: JUDY Advertising Manager: ROBERT Photographic Editor: HANK Art Editor: YOGI WILLIAMS 206 THE JAYHAWKF,Ii K. From 1-larvard lezVeib o2 he ecidoib kizm a po2,1eciib leaae c aem-ce. 4 Cambridge, Mass. Dear Dean, You asked me how K. U. looks from Harvard. Well, that one is easy. It looks good, very good. I confess that already I am looking forward to my return. Once before I left K. U. for a stay at another educational institution. That time I went to Stanford. I still recall my concern over the pect of being forced to compete with the graduates of California, and of Stanford itself, and of all the other institutions that I knew would be represented there. I found out soon enough that the competition was tough, but I also recall my very great pleasure at discovering that my own state university in the middle-west had given me a preparation for graduate work that did not compare unfavorably with that given by any of the institutions whose graduates were also toiling in Senator Stanford ' s vineyard in Palo Alto. I was particularly curious, therefore, to discover how K. U. would look when seen through the sacred portals of Harvard. After all, Harvard is, if we may use Time ' s felicitous phrase, the mo st prestigious U. S. university, and I wondered just how much its gilt edged frame would tarnish the vista of Mount Oread. Well, K. U. is no Harvard. It is not, and it should not try to be. It is something else, and that thing is for its time and place much better. By com- parison with these cloistered halls I suppose our mid- western prairies are unlettered and crude. But there is also a vigor on the prairies that they could well envy here—if they could understand it. In short, the old place looks pretty good, Dean, even from Harvard. For some years I have had the conviction that the University of Kansas was a much better school than it had a right to be on the basis of either the population of the State or of the wealth of the State. That conviction has only been strength- ened here. If this were only my private judgment I wouldn ' t take your time with it, but is isn ' t. So many of our graduates have made outstanding records here at Harvard that it has become a byword. There is a legend among the graduate students in mics, for instance, that if one wants a really good fellowship one has first to go to the University of Kansas in order to get one. And I doubt that any other state university in the country can claim the distinction of contributing three members to the faculty of the Graduate School of Business Admin- istration. Yet Learned, Hower, and Lintner are all Kansas men, and there have been others in the past. Now all of the foregoing sounds pretty rosy, and knowing that I do not ordinarily pipe like Pollyanna in the daisy patch, you are probably wondering whether I have forsaken the social sciences for the writing of publicity. No, Dean, it isn ' t that. What I really want to do is to set forth my ideas on what makes K. U. the university that it is. I have done a good deal of thinking about this, and, though I am not sure I have gotten very far, you can have my ideas for whatever they are worth. (I understand the honorarium for this piece is not apt to be very high anyway.) Well, it seems to me that one of the things that has made us a better university than we have a right WINTER NUMBER, 1947 207 to be has been a rigorous insistence on academic standards. I once knew a man who had done part of his graduate work at K. U. and then had taught at another state university of comparable size and location. He always used to say that the difference between them was that one of them was a University. Now by maintenance of standards I do not mean merely the formal requirements set up by the faculty and administration. These are part of the thing I am talking about, but by no means all of it, and probably not even the most important part. The thing is ficult to define. It is a complex of beliefs and behavior patterns so deeply ingrained into the folkways of both faculty and student body that for the most part we are quite unconscious of them. What I am trying to say is that there is at the University of Kansas a vigor of conscience that is not found everywhere. It is something which the ical sophisticate finds amusing- ly naive, and something which those used to a less rigorous outlook find extremely burden- some. The typical student and the typical faculty member at K. U. does his best. His best may be good, bad, or indifferent —but he does his best. We do not have the tradition of C is the gentleman ' s grade, and even the play boys among us would usually rather do well than not do well. And we are as a group almost excruciatingly honest. Closely allied to this thing I have been talking about, ( in fact it is really only the other side of the same coin) is our constant habit of self-criticism. This is a dignified way of putting it. I imagine that my point would have more meaning if I used that other term which the experience of ten million men in the armed forces has made almost respectable bitching. K. U. is the bitchingest educational in- stitution I have ever encountered. Everyone gripes at everyone and everything. The administration tugs valiantly at the faculty. The faculty complains terly of the general ineptness (this is really a master- piece of understatement) of the administrative ficers. And the students, as nearly as I can see, gripe at practically everybody. In saying this I am not boasting—and neither am I particularly ashamed. I am merely trying to figure out what has made us what we are, and this habit of constant criticism is one of them. It accounts for both the internal progressiveness of the University on the one hand, and for its liberalism on the other. I am fully aware that there are many people in the State ( and some of them in positions of considerable prominence) who deplore the spirit of liberal- ism consistently manifested at the University. They should not feel so, for the critical spirit (I deliberately use the words liberal and critical interchange- ably) is a part of the tradition of the State. And the basic pat- tern of Kansas thought was formed in the days of its tragic and desperate youth long before the Country Clubs had grown up outside Kansas towns and the service clubs had risen to offer their weekly exhortations in the religion of optimism. Kansas is more than a political state, it is also a state of mind. I suppose that most people have heard that old crack about Kansas being a good state to be from. Or that old story about the hitch-hikers in Kansas holding up both their thumbs. Or that other story about the Kansas farmer during the dust bowl summers who was standing by his fence staring at the parched and thirsty land. A tourist stopped. (Continued to Page 285) e kith. Vole An associate professor of cal science and sociology, Hilden Gibson returns to Mt. Dread this summer following a year of study and research in the field of human relations at Harvard University. A champion of progressive methods of study and educati on, dynamic, sincere Dr. Gibson is probably the most outstanding classroom lecturer the University has ever had. Unbelievable as it may seem, his students have been known literally to break forth into applause following many of his routine class lectures. It is an honor and a pleasure for the editor to publish a message to the University from one of its most critical, yet loving, native sons. 20,8 THE JAYHAWKElt What Every Shop d Know 4 butter, nylons, steaks, and new cars—MEN are back again in abundance. Many a coed whose heart formerly jumped and clicked its heels twice in the air when she saw navy blue or khaki ( with a male inside naturally) now calmly elbows her way through hordes of men swarming hopefully about the doors of classrooms, women ' s houses, the Union, and ( sometimes) the library. Yes, men are back, and unfortunately (or rather fortunately, ing from a strictly female point of view) there just aren ' t enough women to go around. Therefore, trying to be accomodating and as available as possible during the shortage, we poor women find ourselves rising at the ungodly hour of ten o ' clock Saturday morning for a breakfast date, tically dashing from Fraser to Ad to meet some male for a cigarette between 8:50 and 9:00 A. M., or suffering an acute case of psycho-neurotic hysterics when we find we have absentmindedly made three dates for Friday night the ninth of May instead of the customary one. But in spite of their long absence during which they profess to have acquired stores of worldly ( usually said with a leer) wisdom, we K. U. women find men to be disappointingly the same. First, it is generally agreed by the fairer sex ( meaning women) that all men are conceited. There seems to be firmly embedded in each male ' s gray matter the pleasing idea that he is God ' s Extra-Special Gift to Women. Secondly, all men are primarily male. It is sufficient to say that the meaning of this last remark should be perfectly obvious to any woman. Since there are so many men of all sizes, shapes, quality, and texture, a girl usually classifies her profuse following into several main categories. The most numerous type of male is the buddy or just a good friend type, the coke-dater. Clad in a yellow V-neck sweater ( no shirt—it shows off his muscles better ), dirty cords (turned up to reveal fuchsia and treuse argyle socks ) and a coat with the collar casually ed up about his ears, he will be hovering at the door of your three o ' clock ology class with the exciting words, C ' mon let ' s go get a coke. Having you into a booth in some joint, he mously suggests a milk shake or sandwich. This meant to be humorous, for he naturally only to spend a dime, and two cokes are ordered. He carefully proceeds to relate how he flunked his Mod- ern Europe quiz because he never cracks a that he had to spend $3.60 to have his precious repaired, that he only had three hours of sleep night before, and that he blew up his in chemistry leaving his lab partner (Loud guffaws here.) During this time the girl chuckle gaily at his dashing attempts to be witty, Man 4 aill man and madieh--- Maiali4 PlaaL aid be va.o.,,, PLO,VO4 he lens .4.4 210 struggle to keep her eyes from watering in the smoke haze, and exclaim with childlike admiration at the clever little games he proudly brings forth using matches, coins, straws, and paper napkins. Eventually, he will trustingly pour out his love troubles, and ask for sisterly advice on the problems he is experiencing with his special girl, thereby killing all hopes you might have had that he might break down and ask you for a real date. But even though he ' ll never spend more than a dime, this good friend type can always be counted on for that much needed lift after a three hour struggle in biology lab—and believe me, that means a lot! The next classification of male is the he-man type, the kind of man you expect to find on the ical sport date. The he-man thinks of himself as a modern Atlas—to a woman he is simply a brute. Most at home when clad in a comfortable leopard skin, this type of male expects women to gasp in awe at his mountainous biceps and hirsute chest. He is terrified at the thought of a quiet dinner party, but glories in dragging his poor date through briars and bogs, tracking down some poor, innocent rabbit with a shotgun. He fiendishly comes by in his jeep to go to a mal dance, gleefully exposing his date to the blasts of zero weather. Besides giving him a chance to call her a poor sport if she complains, this provides an excellent excuse for him to protect her with his manly arm. He ' ll undoubtedly call up at six o ' clock the next morning and cheerfully suggest a brisk teen holes of golf before breakfast. The he-man, whose conversation consists mainly of how many points he scored in the last intramural game, is entirely oblivious to the fact that most girls are rather vague about screening and T-formations. He roars boisterously at his own crude jokes, but somehow fails to get the point of anyone else ' s. This type of male can be summarized in three short words — he likes picnics. But strangely enough—most women like ' em too. Next we have the intellectual type, who will probably take his girl on what is called a buffet date. This either means dinner followed by several beers, or simply, several beers lowed by several beers. This type phones about four o ' clock in the afternoon and casually suggests a dinner date for that evening, never having the remotest glimmer that you might just possibly have already made some other plans. Com- plete with a rumpled tweed jacket, a pipe (carved from genuine Siamese teakwood, he proudly informs you) , and a remote, aesthetic look in his eyes, he usually arrives an hour late because he just couldn ' t tear himself away from the most ex- citing part of Plato ' s Republic. Because he believes that good gastronomy produces the right effect for enlightening conver- sation, he often takes his date to some quiet nook for dinner. There, over fried ox tongues and avocado he eagerly pounds Freud ' s theories on cial patterns, never batting an eye when he touches the rather delicate ( but invariably man ' s favorite) subject of sex. By the time the girl has finished her banana cream pie, she is con- vinced that Buddhaism is the only way to a happy life, and they plunge ately into a heated discussion over the probability of amoebae on Mars. This is the type of male who hustles his date to the special recital of the second oboe and bass flute when Stan Kenton is playing in the city. less, the intellectual sometimes can be very romantic, and no girl really minds eating by misty candlelight and having the sweet nothings of Shakespeare and Browning murmured softly in her ear. Last, but most assuredly not least, is the suave, —Photo by Honk Brown. Akt a4akud baK Cti-41 i-Ce14 ca well u ' sophisticated male, the Man-About-Town, the typical late-dater. Nattily attired in a tuxedo, he glides about casually snapping a mammoth silver cigarette case and acting insidiously suave. Feeling very masculine, he gallantly holds his date ' s coat, almost trips in his eagerness to get on the outside of the sidewalk, and bounds gracefully from the car to open the door. He cleverly realizes that women love this because it makes them feel so very important and feminine. He leers gaily to hear women shriek as he madly careens around corners on two white sidewalks of his 1947 fire engine red super- deluxe convertible ( women love it) , and laughingly screeches to a smoking stop missing some poor, old, crippled, grayhaired widow with inches to spare. (Continued on Page 287) If L Venn iabe 11 Phoios by Hank Brown Ca c a A Jay er Cutlines by Keith Wilson Photos by Brown, Hauserman, Robb, and Mason Surrounded by daisies and daffodils, Barbara La- moreaux is crowned queen of the Sunflower Ball. Josephine Steinberger loans Alex Haas her hankie to help him recover from an encounter with that Chinese Greek, Who Flung Pi. Martha Bonebrake poses with a rab- bit on her head after being crowned Jinx Rasputinburg at the Slobovian Stomp. Mary Lou Mathews trys a triple cushion shot on the Fiji pool table, as Wendy Gugler and Pat Moyer cheer from the rear. Bill Halsey and Billie Rotermund discuss the effects of the coal shortage on Bill ' s front porch. The mistletoe was just a coincidence. Gloria Hill displays a hunting trophy, while Syd Bennett hangs by his teeth from a cigar at the Sigma Nu waiter and upstairs maid party, Dudes and squaw men line up for a tintype at the Red Dog Inn Saloon. Left to right: Dave Ballard, Donna Mae Wingerson, Jane During, Al Ritts, Jersey Ruthe Marsh, Wild Roy Shoaf, Betty Bacon, and Sam Brick. Dean Paul B. Lawson speaks to the Alpha Chi ' s on the subject How to Grow Hair on a Billiard Ball and illus- trates same. Alan Martinek hands him a fur-lined loving cup for his efforts. rn 6 Howard Engleman, K. U. ' s acting basketball mentor, smiles and waves cheerfully to the referees during the K- State game in Manhattan. Sparky McSpadden fans the perspiration off of Jack Esk- ridge ' s brow during a basketball practice session, while Gib Stramel gives his personalized version of Open the Door, Richard. Keeper of the door Dan Kreamer closes his eyes to the spectacle of hordes of new enrollees to prove that on en- rollment day it ' s a case of the blind leading the blind. Most-datable-male Bill Daugherty rolls Ginny Winters in the aisles with accounts of his harrowing experiences on Union Day. All of Jo Anderson ' s tro- phies laid end to end would ... really clutter up the floor, Ku Ku pledges dance about happily in cele- bration of their initiation into the pep club. ' ' Who flung that commode cover? Steve Wilcox discovers a handy drain in which to dispose of contra- band beer, as the revenue collector batters in the door. Homer Evans gives Bob Hill ' s leg art the once over, as they crowd Nancy German and Amelia Crossland between them at the A. D. Pi kid party. Muscle-man Jimmy Russell gives a demonstration on how to hang a curtain rod to an 8 o ' clock home ec class. Johnson, James, Atkinson. Cabbage, W olf skill, Dawkins. and Hayward make up the Foster hall sextet—which is the world ' s largest. Skipper Williams wrestles with the bass as Bud Seaman. Vern Ricketts, and Bob Dougherty lend some helping harmony at the Sweetheart Swing. A group gathers around Huff and Burtscher at the A. 0. Pi song title party. They are illustrating the song, Run for the Roundhouse, Nellie; He Won ' t Corner You There! Jo Compton, Jody Stuckey. and Corinne Temple register horror at the sight of a man in their sacrosanct and with a camera, too, Jim Mordy and Carol Drum do strenuous exercises in the sweetheart swing at the Sweetheart Swing. Sally Bowers assumes an official pose at Robinson Gym. Before she left she was taken for an advisor six times, Al Steinhauer as R o b in Hood prepares to let fly a trusty shaft at the photographer. 1 218 THE JAYHAWKER —Photo by Hank Brown. 4friciire S,cwwS Caste - After waiting four long months for a heavy snow, the Jayhawker finally got its chance to photograph a truly winter scene two days after its deadline for cuts and copy at the printers. In order that no one would be disappointed, we give you this inspiring shot of Bruce Coffin and Virginia Gorrill sledding down the slopes of Oread to Potter Lake. dill1 ff Jim Kensett and Lenore Brownlee salute each other across a mountain of books in Watson library. He is grinding away on elementary economics while she prepares for finals in the Business School. Studying with a date may not be the best procedure, but it ' s productive—they ' ll be married in August. Many people feel that group me a study is the • best method of preparation for final week since, cording to the old adage, four heads are as good as one. Velma Caples, Betty Hanson, Shirley Sondker, and Darlene Zimmerman take tage of a vacant space in the Ricker hall living room to congregate and let their knowledge coagulate. lene illustrates a point to Shirley as the conversation slips into an old rut—men. WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 221 Above left.. George Darsie creeps into a closet to think it all over. His conclusion is that hibernation helps in Hebrew history. Above center: Billie Hamilton looks into the dark mirror, winds up her hair, wrestles despairingly with a few last Chaucer quotes, and wends her way to bed. There must be some easier way. Above right: Neal Cramer strolls happily out of a physics exam expressing his appreciation for the prof ' s generosity in not withholding many questions. 4 keia Left.. It is unanimously agreed by all that the best position for complete concentration is flat on the back. Ralph Ed- wards and Don Simpson poise for deep thinking and soon drift off into the land of nod—Esquire ' s picture gallery, no doubt. Right: Final reckoning. Then comes the day when professors eke their fearful retribution for time ill-spent dreaming through lectures and snoozing through seminars. That fateful day when penny post cards fall from limp hands like maple leaves in autumn. At the right Helen Piller, Harriet Waddell, Mary Valentine, and Sarah Smart gloat over Harriet ' s new born B —while Liz Shears steps back a few paces to determine whether she is suffering from acute astigmatism or fallen A ' s. 222 THE JAYHAWKER asketball B es 4 ...5a,ue moi) 4 HE curtain has fallen upon one of the most un- battles in Big Six basketball history. Having lost a game and won a game with every other team in conference play, the defending champion Jayhawkers have relinquished their title to homa and have been relegated to a third place tie with Iowa State. The Jayhawk bucketeers inaugurated the season on December 7 and immediately won four straight games. But defeat raised its ugly head in the finals of the Big Six tournament in Kansas City, when Kansas was bowled over by the Mustangs of Southern Methodist University. This tough loss by three points did not deter the Oreadites from crunching the Saint Louis University Billikans into the hardwood floor. The Billikans subsequently won the Missouri Valley Conference title. Another Oklahoma five, the Rope gets buzzed by better-half Mary Beth for his team ' s thrilling home-court win over the Big Six champion Sooners. Aggies from Stillwater, last year ' s national champions, obliterated the Jayhawkers from any high national ranking prospects as they took K.U. ' s measure three times running. The tide was turned in the fourth and final game, though, as K.U. redeemed some of its lost pride and set the Cowboys back on their spurs. A. M. was tough opposition for all competitors; witness their shellacking of the number one team in the nation, Kentucky, who won a total of thirty-one games out of thirty-three played this season. The New Year did not dawn brightly for the Oread Cagers as five straight encounters were lost by close margins, two of which were overtime en- gagements with the Buffaloes of Colorado Univer- sity. To add to the grief of one of the worst losing streaks in K. U. basketball history, Kansas ' genial mentor, Dr. Forest C. Allen, was forced to drop his coaching duties because of ill health for the remainder of the season. At this dark hour, Howard Rope Engleman, one of K.U. ' s basketball immortals, who was twice named 223 WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 All-American in prewar days, took over the reins and had the superhuman task of trying to rejuvenate the team and produce a winning aggregation. A coach of less stature might have thrown in the sponge, but Engleman maneuvered his charges with masterly precision, and the Jayhawkers began to show the form of old. Kansas ' hope for another Big Six title went a- glimmering when their traditional rival, Kansas State, polished their home court with the hapless Jay- hawkers. The Wildcats were waiting for this oppor- tunity as they had not defeated the Oread quintet in twenty-two consecutive games, dating back to 1937. The score was tied three times, but the Cow- town boys would not be headed. Then Iowa State decided to climb aboard the bandwagon and knocked Kansas into the Big Six second division. Though the future was not bright for the final two conference games against Oklahoma and Missouri, the Jayhawkers finished in a blaze of glory, defeating the title-winning Sooners and trouncing the second-place Tigers. Only a handful of fans witnessed the rough and rugged Bengal con- test where the entire Missouri starting line and two Jayhawk starters finished the game from the bench. Students of both schools were barred from the game because of an influenza epidemic. K.U. had three members of the pre-war giant killing Iron Five, who returned to the cage wars last season, in the persons of Charlie Black, Ray Evans and Otto Schnellbacher. Black, of course, is the two-time All-American who set a new school individual scoring mark last year by looping in 173 points, missing by two points of tying the Big Six record. The Hawk, called by many as the greatest basketball player in Kansas history, has perform ed almost as brilliantly this year, finishing second in conference scoring. The rebounding and intricate shot artist with the uncanny eye kept K. U. in many a ball game. Ably supporting Black at the other forward slot Top to bottom, left to right; Gib Stramel, Charlie Black, Ray Evans, Otto Schnellbacher, Owen Peck, and Wendell Clark. 224 was Otto Schnellbacher. Snelly ranked fifth in conference scoring last year and closely pushed Black this year as top goal-getter for K. U. As one of the most dangerous fast break experts in the country, Snelly really proved his worth this year. Ray Evans, All-American in both football and basketball, played the same steady brand of ball that has already made him famous on the iron. That rounds out the Big Three, but too much cannot be said of the remaining players, without whose help Black, Evans, and Schnellbacher could not have advanced. Owen Peck, the smallest but scrappiest man on the court, playing as center and quarterback, usually took the measure of his taller opponents and ran them ragged. The Canary, his piping voice often heard above the roar of the crowd, barked out the signals with machine-gun like cision. Evans ' running mate at guard was aggressive Wen- dell Clark, whose rebounding technique was second only to Black. His performance on defense was re- markable and he could usually be counted on for a quick score on a fast break. Freshman Harold England is the budding man of promise for K.U. basketball stardom. His tility at any position made him invaluable. Near the end of the season he had almost as much playing THE JAYHAWKER Dr. Forest C. Allen—ill health and doctor ' s orders forced a much-needed rest. time as the starting five. A strong aggressive sive player, England covered the court rapidly and his expert left-hand shots gave K.U. many a needed basket. Gib Stramel, finishing out the final games last year for his first taste of Big Six basketball petition, came into his own this year and ably backed up Black and Schnellbacher at the forward positions. Hopes were high at pre-season practice—Phog, Stramel, Clark, Schnellbacher, The Hawk, and Evans. WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 225 His right-hand push shots and remarkable defensive work gave many an opponent a hard time. Jack Eskridge and Claude Houchin, both 6 ' 4 , the former a star at Graceland Junior College and the latter a freshman, performed yeoman service. These basket-scrappers were excellent rebound artists and performed equally well on offensive. Among those players bearing watching in the future are Don Auten, Myron Enns, Bill Feagans, Clifford King, Al Lukken, Charles Penny, Bill Sapp, Guy Mabry, and Bob Van Citters. Though the season as a whole may seem dark in- deed to loyal Jayhawkers, and it will not enter the record books as a banner basketball year for Kansas, it still has had some remarkable aspects. Even when K.U. tasted defeat, that defeat was hard to accomplish for the opposition. Of the eleven losses suffered by Kansas, nine were lost by five points or less. That means they could have been anyone ' s ball game. De Paul University, ranked eleventh in the nation at the start of the cage wars, was soundly trounced by Kansas, upsetting all the dopesters who predicted a Kansas downfall. Oklahoma was defeated two out of three games, but one win by K. U. was a non- conference affair. Every conference team was de- feated at least once by the Jayhawkers, and Missouri was the only foreign aggregation to win on the Crimson and Blue home court. One school can not continue to win game after game and championship after championship, and K.U. has had a good share of both in past seasons. The Jayhawkers had rough sledding through most of the year, but on peak nights could have defeated any team in the country. So please, loyal jayhawker fan, rid yourself of the blues and start singing of the future cage championships that will grace the crown of Mount Oread. BIG SIX CONFERENCE SCORES KANSAS 34 MISSOURI 39 KANSAS 47 OKLAHOMA 50 KANSAS 46 NEBRASKA 48 KANSAS 55 IOWA STATE 30 KANSAS 50 KANSAS STATE 39 KANSAS 69 NEBRASKA 37 KANSAS 45 KANSAS STATE 48 KANSAS 44 IOWA STATE 56 KANSAS 38 OKLAHOMA 36 KANSAS 48 MISSOURI 38 Top to bottom, left to right: Harold England, Charles Penny, Bill Sapp, Jack Eskridge, Claude Houchin, and John ' Jewell. For women only! Don greets the day with a shower and With ample assistance from Buckwheat, Don attempts some a brisk towel rub-down. This is a posed picture. last minute studying before class. A Huggin and a Chalkin Eighteen hundred and nine strong—scattered from Sunflower to Topeka—living in barracks, basements, garages, attics, and apartments and houses of all sizes — worrying, working, studying — the married students have invaded the Jayhawker scene this year. They are all fighting uphill battles, especially in achieving a satisfactory balance of study, children Vance Elder provides Bill Carrington and Don with wheels for their ten block trek up the hill every morning. and sustenance, which elements seem to conform to the law that an increase of any one necessitates pro- portional decreases in the other two. For this issue, the JAYHAWKER follows the Don Fambrough family in an attempt to depict, in part at least, the life these new campus personalities live. —BOB READY In training for a coaching career, Don listens attentively as Henry Shenk explains some fine points of the profession. All photos by Mort Hauserman. WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 227 A broad smile from Buckwheat helps cheer up the day for a tired Papa Fambrough when he returns home from school in the evening. The baby ' s re al name is Preston. Buckwheat enjoys all visitors to Fambrough ' s basement apartment. Here, he entertains Ray Evans (who nicknamed him) and Red Hogan while Mom and Pop prepare dinner. The Fambroughs spend a social evening at home with their dinner guests. On other evenings, Don and Del occasionally attend the movie or play bridge with another couple in the apartment. They spend most of their time alone at home, however, to take care of the baby and to give Don some opportnuity to study. Del spends her day with Preston and reads whenever she has time. Don and Del relax after their guests have gone for the evening, but Buckwheat is still playful. Only nine months old, he is already getting the feel of a pigskin, training to match his father ' s record—KU lineman of the year, member of several all-Big Six teams, and a star in the Shrine Annual East-West game. Don ' s cated toe ' also spelled Kansas victories over Oklahoma A. M. and Missouri. 228 THE JAYHAWKER Campus Cr rica es 04 wad Jame polu,Wb ate v,i0e e 04 - - TOMMY THOMPSOt. DOM ' POMEROY ART ' PARTRIDGE MARY ZOLLINGEK WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 229 ROM HAN STANTON DICK BIBLER. HANK BROWN 230 THE JAYHAWKER Accent !nternationa II11 eaKkV Is English a foreign language? Fifty-one students at K.U. can answer yes to that question and be right. From 21 foreign countries, plus Hawaii and Puerto Rico, more than half a hundred men and women have migrated to Mount Oread for higher education. Two sisters from India, Dina and Mehra Daruvalla, have come half way around the globe. James Honey and Armando Rodriguez, both from our neighboring Mexico, have had the shortest journey. Latin America claims more than half the K.U. total of foreign students, with the Scandinavian coun- tries a not-too-close second. Costa Rica leads all individual nations, having contributed 12 of its native sons and daughters to our student body. But with all this international aid, the sad fact remains, men, that the male-female ratio has not been reduced in the least. Only 15 women are included on the list of 51 transplanted Jayhawkers. The University devotes much time and effort in the attempt to make the students from other lands content in their Kansas surroundings. A faculty com- mittee on foreign students, headed by Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, has the bility of administering to the needs of the visiting scholars. Other members of the committee are: Margaret Habein, dean of women; Henry Werner, dean of student affairs; John H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate School; Maude Elliott, assistant professor of romance languages; Ned Linegar, University YMCA secretary; and James K. Hitt, registrar. An International Club has been formed on the campus in which all foreign students are members, as well as those American students interested in world relations. The club has served as a social outlet for the visitors and has helped them to know their American classmates better. The freshman class contains the greatest number of foreign students, as might be expected. The next largest group, however, is found in the Graduate School. Several students from other nations are employed by the University. One of these, James Honey of Mexico, fills a full-time position as store- keeper in the zoology department. The School of Engineering has drawn the largest enrollment of foreign men, but the College of Liberal Arts has the greatest combined total of men and First Row: Vasquez, Peru; Quiros, Costa Rica; Rios, Panama; P. Rust, Brazil; Martinez, Arkansas City; Moya, Costa Rica; Second Row; Rivas, Costa Rica; Murillo, Costa Rica; Rodriguez, Mexico; Chow, China; Arauz, Costa Rica; Portuguez, Costa Rica. Third Row: Perez, Ecuador; Balda, Ecuador; Chavarria, C osta Rica; Antonioli, Peru; E. Marquez, Pana ma. Fourth Row: Crespo, Cuba and U. S.; Amini, Iran; Aliotti, Italy; B. Marquez, Panama; Duran, Chile. WINTER NUMBER, 1947 231 e )f Le s, et it er xt to re es al nd ca; ,sta Upper right. Ana Maria Vasquez of Peru and three Costa Ricans— Judith Quiros, Juan Arauz, and Armando Rivas—jelly on the steps of Ad. Upper left: Some officers of the International Club—Antonia Martinez, president; Chi Chien Chow, treasurer; Aldo Aliotti, publicity chairman; and Jose Portuguez, social chairman. Right: Silvio Crespo of Cuba, a U. S. Army veteran and a freshman in chemical engineering, women. Interest in the English language has even resulted in two foreign students adopting it as their major. Over fifty per cent of our cosmopolitan classmates are supported either by their parents or by personal savings. The home governments of only nine dents furnish financial assistance. Roger LeComte of France is the only actual exchange student at the only one in return for whose schooling the University has one of its own former graduates studying abroad. Two men are attending K.U. under the G.I. Bill, having served in the United States armed service dur- ing the war. Four students, though foreign by birth, are now actually naturalized American citizens. They are: Silvio Crespo of Cuba, Tzu Chih Mah of China, Dorothy Bok Yuen (Continued on Page 286) Oooh, those Latins! Raqeul Rios and Boli Marquez of Panama are living proof that Hollywood and the State Department aren ' t exaggerating the good neighbor personality. 232 THE JAYHAWKER Pope ar ProFessors I ) Er ' ClAt ' Ai PI am s E. THAYER GASTON Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, chairman of the Music Education department of the School of Fine Arts, has interests ing from functional music to canny canines. His difficulty in centering his versatile talents proves that women have no corner on the privilege of changing one ' s mind. Dr. Gaston started his music career at an early age, playing the piano, trumpet, and violin. He was a trumpet soloist with a Chautauqua company at 19. Starting out to be a physician, he received his pre-medic A.B. degree at Sterling College, then switched to the trumpet and a B.M. degree in music. Just couldn ' t make up my mind between the two, he explains. With two degrees he began teaching athletics, science, and music in Sublette high school ( he played football, basketball, tennis, and baseball). Several positions later he became director of music at Garden City. It was his work with the co-operative conservatory there which brought him in contact with the music department at K.U., and in 1937 he came here to earn an A.M. degree in music education and his Ph.D. in educational psychology. Dr. Gaston is now doing research in functional music, a field covering musical therapy and industrial music. In spare professional moments he works on several national music educators committees, edits a series of music tion books, and directs the First Methodist choir. He belongs to numerous professional and honorary fraternities. Dr. Gaston ' s hobbies take him from trumpeting brass to baying hounds. He spends much time with his behaved and well-pedigreed German pointer, Heidi and Mrs. Gaston ' s springer, Bok (not Bach). He says that training the two dogs has taught him a lot of educational psychology. His hunting forays with his cohort, Prof. Russell Wiley, usually end with a bag of quail, and after this, as a ing gesture, Dr. Gaston adds a round of golf. Often joshed about his receding hairline, he proposes to compile a volume of musty stories about bald-headed men and present the collection to the next guy who cracks wise about his cerebellum. Dixie Gilliland R WINTER NUMBER, 1947 233 lty ive ge, jet dic the Ike tce, all, ter his ich U., ' sic a In nal uc- rigs -ass ell- Ind hat .nal ley, i to nen vise NATALIE CALDERWOOD Natalie Calderwood is vivacious and versatile. Her dents soon discover that she is also a teacher who knows how to teach. Good counsellors lack no clients. Former V-12 students who became interested in writing while in her classes at K.U. continue to send her their manuscripts for criticism. Stimulated by her teaching, last semester ' s English 5 class requested continued meetings, and received an enthusiastic invitation to evening discussions this semester in the Calderwood home. She plays a triple role. She is an instructor in the English department, the wife of Professor Bob Calderwood, and sister of Miss Margaret Habein, K. U. ' s. Dean of Women. Incidental to teaching, she is chairman of the English proficiency examination committee, writes book reviews and feature articles on literary subjects for the Kansas City Star, digs dandelions ( in season), and plays the piano. Tall attractive, Minnesota-born, she was a Phi Beta Kappa English major at Carleton College and received her Master ' s degree from Columbia University. Perhaps the clue to Mrs. Calderwood ' s success with dents is to be found in her interests. I thoroughly like teaching, she says, and I like the inquisitive independent-minded students in college today. —Diane Stryker FRANK BROWN Pipe-smoking, easy-going, affable Frank L. Brown, plied Mechanics department head, has been teaching at K.U. for 34 years. A Kansan by choice, Professor Brown was born in Iowa and educated in Minnesota and Colorado. Graduating at Boulder in 1911 with a B.S. degree in civil engineering, he came to the Hill in 1913 and has been here ever since. I ' ve always liked Kansas, he affirms, and by now I feel almost like a native son myself; ' Professor Brown has written a textbook entitled En- gineering Mechanics and has received the singular honor of being listed in Who ' s Who in America. He belongs to numerous organizations and fraternities—Sigma Tau and Tau Beta Pi, to name but two of them. Admired and respected by his students, the Prof is characterized as being one of the fairest teachers on Mt. Oread. His mathematical system of grading leaves little room for apple-polishing or complaint. His most worked phrase— Let ' s have a shotgun! He boasts a mean collection of stories which he tells to all of his classes. To spur his more somnolent sophisters on to bigger and better efforts he tells them that they not only face the prospect of flunking the course, but also will have to listen to his drollery again the following semester. When asked to comment on the rumor that he has his pearls of wit filed away card catalog style, he is significantly silent. —George Holland V —Photo by Hank Brown. Three little sisters take time off from their coloring to register delight, appreciation and doubt as Santa distributes gifts. 74e la0a whe,b Ocie a a - tj J pui,dei4piaadev,ed chitcheK Remembering that it is more blessed to give than to receive, the Pi Phi ' s this year reestablished an old custom. Thirty-six underprivileged Lawrence children, ages 2 to 15 were selected by the Salvation Army. They were brought to the house and treated to an noon of Christmas joy, the first real Christmas some of them had ever seen. Santa Claus. none other than Paul B. Lawson, opened the afternoon ' s festivities by entering the house ( through an open window) and thrilling the children with gifts. The rest of the afternoon they played games, sang carols, and gazed in awe at their presents. This gesture brightened an otherwise dreary Christmas for 36 children. It could be an example for other organized houses in the future. Ail photos by Flank Brown. gifts, 7.11,tpt fealz,neci Above—Around the Christmas tree the girls explain terious gifts to the children. Right—Furry bunnies are fitted for size by Edith Marie Darby and Mary Gayle Marsh. Lower left—Seated on Kay Picken ' s lap, this little girl is overwhelmed by it all. Lower right— I ' ll trade you my plane for your dollhouse. the the they their reary mple 236 THE JAYHAWKER Big Brains on Campus 2.86 NORMAN MILLER. Typical of the serious-minded older student encountered so frequently today is Norman Miller. Since finishing high school in 1935 his eduaction has been a series of interrup- tions. After completing a semester at El Dorado Junior College he worked at the local refinery laboratory to sup- port his mother and sister and studied by correspondence from both K. U. and Kansas State. Later he went to the Phillips process engineering office in Kansas City and took courses in both junior colleges there. Beginning residence work here last spring, he is now a chemical engineering junior with a 2.86 grade average. A member of the Engineering Council and Owl Society, Norman was a merchant marine radio operator for two years of the war during which time he visited both major theaters of operations. As a hobby he collects hot jazz records—Duke Ellington and Dizzy Gillespie being his favorites. Jim Mordy R 2.90 MARY BLOOD Mary, Mary, quite precocious, what makes your grade points grow? Mary Blood has been asked that question by a lot of fellow medics. Music loving, not too studious, she entered Medical School last semester with a 2.9 grade average. She did undergraduate work at Wichita University; received a Master ' s Degree in medical technology from Wayne University, Detroit; works as a medical techn ician in the summer; and does silversmithing to fill in her spare time. Quiet (her close friends say not so quiet), well-traveled, Mary admits she studies hard when she studies, but says she has fun, too. She ' s not sure how she ' s going to reach her goal of being a physician, but one thing is apparent—if grade points were horses, Mary would ride. —Allan Cromley 3.00 BOB Mc JONES The Greatest could have nothing on Bob McJones when it comes to grade points. With one semester left, he stands a good chance of becoming the first graduate with a 3.00 average in the history of the School of Engi- neering. A product of Dodge City, this quiet, rangy westerner really looks more like a cowboy than a throttle jockey . Nevertheless, he piloted a B-24 Liberator through 42 missions in the Southwest Pacific and now flys his own Taylorcraft. Teaching a wind tunnel class this semester, he hopes to go to Cal. Tech. for graduate study and eventually to do aeronautical research for the government. Married last year to the former Norma Jean Prater, now a junior major- ing in music, Bob is a Summerfield scholar and a member of Tau Beta Pi, the Institute of Aeronautical Engineers, and the Engineering Council. —Jim Mordy :ered high :rup- n ior sup- lence 2.91 MAXINE MILLHAUSER Modest Maxine Millhauser claims no secret success formula for her almost straight A Being interested in the subject is the imp or- part, she believes, and you do have to study some. Hailing from Preston, Kansas, Max will receive her degree in chem- istry this spring. Being interested for her, however, runs to many dif- fields. She has accumulated 17 hours of mathematics, 14 hours of psychology and a good many in home economics. I just like them, is her explanation for the wide variety of courses. She is a laboratory in- structor in qualitative analysis and served as vice-president of Corbin hall last summer. What comes after June, Max hasn ' t quite decided. She ' d like New York and a chemist ' s job with some manufacturing company. Or, she may apply a little of that home ec to a home of her own. If the latter be the case, she staunchly claims she wants a career, too. )f f ice leges now ge. ciety, two najor jazz g his —Dixie Gilliland rdy 2.90 HELEN HOWE A precocious pianist, Helen Howe centers her life in music. With only a 2.9 scholastic average at the end of last semester her transcript in the School of Fine Arts looks like a Julliard curriculum. Fine Arts frivolity just isn ' t, according to her. While others are show-going or coke-dating we are planted in Frank Strong auditorium, listening to Susie Slavichords recital. Her appreciation of swing is passive, but such gems as Open the Door, Richard, and Managua Nicaragua are hardly soothing to her musical tastes. Her record collection is heavy in Beethoven. No musical grind, she is a member of Kappa Phi, Wesley Cabinet, and Mortar Board. With recitals, extra-curricular activities, and a 2.9 average, she ' s not dened with spare time—her practice sessions often start at midnight. —Virginia Daniels 2.80 LAUREL HODGDEN Only 19 years old, Laurel Hodgden is a senior with an enviable astic record. She is majoring in home economics and expects to graduate next semester. Laurel ' s remarkable scholarship is evinced by her grade average of 2.80, an accomplishment she explains simply by the fact that she has had a ine interest in her work. Besides taking a full college course, she is occupied by a student assistantship which she holds at the University sing School. Laurel has been married for one and one-half years to Lee Hodgen, a senior in architecture who was recently discharged from the Army. Her family is well represented at KU as her father, V. P. Hessler, is a professor in the Electrical Engineering department. Although her main interest lies in being a homemaker, she hopes to devote some attention to the study of clinical psychology after she ates. She is a member of Omicron Nu, professional home economics sorority. —Stanley Englund 2.81 GRACE WITT Petite and charming, with big brown eyes, Grace Piros Witt proves that beauty can go with brains. A senior majoring in English, Gracie hesitantly explains the key to her academic success with, Well frankly, I cram! Claiming reading, dancing, swimming and other sports as hobbies, she still finds time to teach preparatory composition in the English ment and work as a member of Quill club. She was a proctor in Western Civilization last year and has been a member of Dramatics Workshop. Gracie is eagerly awaiting graduation in June so she may join her band, Robert Witt, former K.U. student, who is completing work on his doctor ' s degree in sociology at Yale University. They were married on the campus last spring and Mrs. plans to apply her high grade point average to being a professor ' s wife. —Dixie Gilliland 2.88 MIGNON MORTON I hope they ' re not expecting another John Ise, apologized tall, tive Mignon Morton, preparing to teach beginning economics to her first class this semester. Her students need have little worry of her capability, however, for this graduate business scholar holds a 2.88 grade point average and is writing her master ' s thesis on Freight Rates and their Effect on Localization of Industry. Making the dean ' s honor roll four years was a snap with 129 hours of A. Most of the fifteen inferior hours happened one year under the influence of cupid, Minnie confesses—which all goes to prove that even a B.B.O.C. can be sabotaged. Not wanting to be classed a grind or bookworm, Veda has found time to be district representative of Y.W.C.A., secretary of Gamma Phi Beta and Y.W.C.A., vice-president of Phi Chi Theta, and a member of Beta Gamma Sigma, plus the usual dates and parties of the K.U. coed. —Jim Mordy 2.70 RAY ZIMMERMAN Although he ' s modest about his accomplishments, Ray Zimmerman ' s record is evidence of his ability. A senior in the school of business, Ray is majoring in accounting and will graduate next semester. He intends to find accounting or auditing work, though graduate study may claim his near future. School has been a serious undertaking for Ray. This brain has had part-time work at the library and at the registrar ' s office most of the time he has spent here, yet still has maintained a grade point average of 2.70. He says there is no secret to making high grades; his advice is that hard study, keeping up with class work and not taking too much of a load will put anyone on top of their class. Despite the long days ' work Ray schedules for himself, he is a good bet for tennis or bridge anytime he is not working. Instead of burying self in deep philosophical treatises as his studious nature would indicate, he prefers the rollicking humor of Wodehouse. —Stanley Englund 2.91 MAR JORIE SHRYOCK An unusual combination of high scholastic achievement coupled with genuine interest in campus activities proves Marjorie Shryock is attaining a liberal education. She graduated last semester from the College with an English major and is now studying speech correction. Marjorie, who graduated with a grade point average of 2.91, attributes her accomplishments to the fact that she studies once in a while . Right now she is president of the Alpha Delta Pi ' s, is secretary of the Women ' s Glee Club, vice president of the French Club, and has served on the All Student Council for three semesters. A loquacious redhead, Marjorie thinks one of the best moves taken on the campus recently is the creation of the United Women ' s Club for all the women at KU. She likes to play bridge and tennis and to ride back and is an intramural volleyball enthusiast. —Stanley Englund 1 L Ken Postlethwaite, Mildred Clodfelter, John Irwin, Betty Jo Pattee, Mary Sommerville, and Bruce Bathhurst listen joyfully as Fred Ellsworth points out how much of the campanile can be built with funds received thus far. With a scenic parkway, a carillon, and the rest of the campanile tower to go, a great deal more will have to follow before the University World War II Memorial becomes a reality. —Photo by Hank Brown. M 4 ban With more than a quarter of the $500,000 goal in the hands of its treasurer, the University of sas Memorial Association is driving hard this month to speed up contributions for the erection of the campanile with carillon and scenic parkway which will commemorate K. U. men and women killed in World War II. 1 Et .„,z1a,v4a Loyal alumni, working in 84 Kansas towns and 17 out-of-state cities, made the initial part of the campaign a success. Judge Hugo T. Wedell, of Topeka; Carl V. Rice, of Kansas City; and Fred Ells- worth and Ken Postlethwaite, of Lawrence, members of the Memorial association executive board, are also working for the project with untiring devotion. WINTER NUMBER, 194 7 7%e University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 3 o ' clock each afternoon some serious- minded student takes one look at the crowd in front of Watson Library, grits his teeth, elbows his way through chattering pledges, and mutters, I ' m gonna write a letter to the Kansan! Most of his obstructionists are waiting for the very publi- cation that is to be the medium of his denunciation. Soon a boy hurries to the scene with an armload of copies of the University Daily Kansan. The crowd surges about him and students begin to emerge with their copies, grinning at the latest antic of Bibler ' s Little Man on Campus. Our disgusted student be- comes curious and soon he, too, is scrambling for his copy. The Kansan has become a campus institution that would be hard to forgo. Like all newspapers, it is a product often discussed by its readers. With every issue it is in the glaring spotlight of student cism, and who could find a more censorious group of readers than a university student body? The University newspaper is a laboratory for the journalism stu- dent. In one very important spect it is different from the chem, anatomy, or physics labs: the lab report of the Daily Kansan goes before 9000 students for their perusal. Billie Hamilton, managing editor, rules the slot , where copy -readers labor, informality reigns, and accuracy counts. ---al eeil 44dan eizxftwile One fatal day our Kansan cub reporter is sent out to get his first story. He interviews his man, writes the story, and with a triumphant smile turns it in to the city editor. He reports, Horace K. Damalu, dean of the School of Hard Knocks, will lecture to the Society for the Prevention of Kindness to Freshmen. The copy goes in, the paper comes out, and all is forgotten until about 4 o ' clock, when the telephone starts ringing and the city editor gets a haunted look. Alas! As everybody except our reporter and copy reader know, Dean Damalu ' s middle initial is J , not K. Our reporter has made only a slight lab mistake, but it is an important one to the Kansan. It ' s about —Hank Brown. 242 THE JAYHAWKER Linotyptsts convert typewritten words to hot metal, as agile fingers manipulate a puzzle of keys, knobs, and levers. equal to a chemistry student filling his lab with hydro- gen sulphide. The Daily Kansan is written and printed partly as a tabloid. Its stories often play up the humorous, play The make-up man takes slugs of metal from the lino- type, sets them in the proper place, and soon we ' ll go to press. dow n a drab news style. The light touch is sought on every angle before resorting to facts without adornment. If it can entertain while informing, its goal has been realized. When women ' s wear is stolen from an organized house, the Kansan prints purloined panties, not stolen lingerie. With a circulation of 7,750 and a do or die line, the Kansan has an organization similar to that in a medium sized city. Its newsroom hardly looks like a Hollywood movie set. Nevertheless it is a scene of considerable activity about 9 o ' clock each morning—Mondays through Fridays. Reporters are typing their copy, the teletype is clacking off the state and national news, and the copy readers are editing the stories of meetings, lectures, sports events, and concerts of the night before. This, the copy desk, is the nerve center of the paper. It is where the stories live, die, or are cut down to a slip with only the main facts showing. It is where Mallott is changed to Malott, facts are verified, and dangling participles are given subjects. This point is the last outpost for written accuracy. At 11:30 a.m. all copy must be in the hands of the copy readers. It is an absolute deadline. All this time the linotype operators and the type- (Continued on Page 287) Hot off the press, and before long you ' ll be chuckling, too, at Bibler ' s Little Man on Campus (see adjoining page). —Photo by Hank Brown. Photos by Hank Brown Circle: Bob Graham and la femme Nancy Moore are caught in a mutual look as the Phi Psi winter formal proceeds from dine to dance, Below: Sparky McSpadden and date Edith Darby take in one of the Club Fraternique f e a t u r e attractions as the Inter-Fraternity winter formal spins mer- rily on. Betty Grable has nothing on beauteous Barbara Ackerman—as plot- ting Bob Dougherty can easily affirm. 4 ...Nch c4au,thiirr 1-6i2 Out over Mt. Oread rings the cry of party and thousands of students drop their books and open the doors to social relaxation. From the time honored Thank God It ' s Friday club through the riotous ranks of costume balls, formal dinners, traditional parties, picnics, and beer busts—all rational party- goers gleefully agree that the social stimulus is a vital part of a truly liberal education. Whether the occasion be dress or informal, cos- tume or tacki, K. U. parties furnish many, many good times— some of a spirited nature, some of a more serious tone, but students from the tradition-bound booths of the Southern Pit to the smooth ballrooms of the Eldridge hotel, Kansas room, and Lawrence Country Club all agree that hill parties are welcomed with open arms. And who knows? In twenty years, will a look at that dusty old diploma bring memories of time spent on the books—or of those nights at the Mite? As the old saying goes, All work and no play . . . And who wants to be dull? Upper left: The Sigma Chi opium party-ers revel around a table of caffeine- filled cokes. B. J. Pattee and hubby Frank furnish that Oriental effect while Cissy Dick Keene, and Marilyn Watkins stare Faulders, Odd Williams, Carol Stewart, through the smoke. Upper right: The Kappa Alpha Psi ' s celebrate their winter formal in the Kansas room an d this beginning banquet sets the keynote. Right: Relax, fellows, she goes to W. U. And gorgeous Charlene Nichols stands ex- pectantly under the mistletoe with beam- ing Jim Brunson at the ATO christmas ormal. Lower left: Intent on games of chance, Kappa Sig gamblers and molls present a hardened picture at their annual Red Dog Inn. Lower right: The Briar Manor Christmas party greets old St Nick in varying degrees of yuletide cheer. Here, Jim Long, Virginia Scheuber, Bob Baker, Eva Morrow, Mary Flo Spillman, and Robert Tennant stand one out. All photos by Hank Brown. x TL Upper left: The pause that refreshes. Larry and V elories Harlan succeed in occupying daughter Susan with a cool drink from the dispenser. Upper right; Curiosity killed a cat, but Judge Henry Werner doesn ' t min d a little awe-inspired attention from Joe Carlson ' s small contestant. Left: Comely Donnie Fisher is crowned queen of the contest by Judge Mary beth Evans. At least her mother Peggy liked the decision if some other ladies didn ' t. Lower left: Mealtime can ' t wait, so bert and Frances Creason take time out to feed the youngest entry. Lower righ t: Natty Jackie Bozart reads an interesting passage from Mother Goose to most attractive Mary Roos. Circle: Two of a kind on a trunk. Karan and Paula Jones, twin daughters of Eugene and Helen Marie Jones of Everest, wait patiently for their turn to impress the judges, Below: Bassinet Boogie, As the bass sec- tion rests, Scotty Campbell, Mary Roos, and Jackie Bozart pound out the melody to Impromptu for Ten Fists, This is prob- ably the best reason why parents at Sun- flower aren ' t provided with pianos. All photos by Hank Brown. gagiciate Yi 4 74cdmaig K. U. may crown kings and queens of dandelions and homecomings, but the contest to be remembered as unique resulted in the crowning of the king and queen of Sunflower children. On December 5th, under the direction of Mrs. Betty Kernaghan and the K.U. Dames, 198 toddlers displayed their oomph before Dean Henry Werner, Prof. R. H. Wheeler, and Miss Mary Elizabeth Evans. Sunflower Village seemed to overflow with little people, who emerged in starched pinafores, sailor suits, and jumpers. Some of the children scampered down hall- ways with their bottles and dolls, or performed an Im- promptu for Ten Fists on the piano. The more sedate ones crawled into a corner to sleep or made faces at the judges. Through the heat of flash bulbs and an unusually warm December day, judges played with tired babies of 6 months and big shots of 5 years. Then they cast their votes. Michael Clinton and La Donna Fisher reigned as king and queen. Voted most attractive were Janie Marie Ed- wards, Dennis Ferro, Mary Roos, and Terry Rice. Best personality, Tommy Porter; Karen Raper; best-looking, Carol Jean Ford; sleepiest, Carole Lee Thompson; happiest, Janis Lee Woolworth; orneriest, Craig Henshaw; most bashful, Jimmy Forbes. 248 THE JAYHAWKER Juno and the Paycock c71-1u,nchecith 0 7%e p4 ' ' a ate Suren to be if Juno and the Paycock did not turn out to be the best of the one hundred plays the University of Kansas has produced since 1923. In Juno Sean O ' Casey has portrayed the aftermath of the Irish Rebellion. His play is a rich comedy written and usually played in Irish dialect. And only an Irishman such as O ' Casey could create a drama with such profligate beauty and lyric artistry. The deep roots in dramatic character and the deep pene- tration into human anfractuosities fill the production with rare scenes of comedy. The mood shifts from drollery and satire to grim unsubtle tragedy. The darlin play ( so-called by the humorist Joxer ) was handled by a group of veteran perform- ers who did superb jobs of acting. Captain Jack Boyle, the swaggering paycock, was done by Allen Crafton, head of the Department of Speech and Drama. Juno Boyle, his faithful patient wife, was characterized by Jessica Crafton, and Johnny, their young neurotic son, was played by Herk Harvey. Mary Boyle, the school teacher daughter, was Mary Booth; Joxer Daly, the Captain ' s indomitable old crony in wine and song, was masterfully handled by Professor Robert Calderwood. As a contrast to these comic yet tragic characters, speech instructor Frances Feist returned to the stage after an eleven year absence in the role of the viva- cious middle-aged flapper known as Mrs. Maizie Madigan. In spite of the fact that the supporting cast did not always retain their Irish dialect, they did excel- lent jobs of acting. Don Dixon handled the rol e of Needles Nugent, the tailor; Tom Ray made Jerry Devine divine; Dan Palmquist portrayed the school teacher, Carlie Bentham. The neighbors were Alice McDonnell, Sarah Heil, and Vivian Rogers. The two irregulars in the army were Glenn Hunt and jack Fellman. The furniture removal men were Jim Nelson and Alvin Haggard. Veteran performers celebrate a century of good theater. The scenery and costuming were in keeping with the time and action. An old dilapidated room with dingy grey antique victrola, and renovated fireplace was truly reminiscent of Dublin ' s tenement section. Rundown heels on worn shoes, patched clothing, and ragged shawls complemented the set- ting, designed to be indicative of extreme poverty. The University of Kansas can well be proud of such a professional performance. With Juno and the Paycock, the century mark has been reached with real success. lea gmcilic4 WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 Discourse on Genes 4 yd. p,,d 249 Nearly everybody has 48 chromosomes some- where inside him. Some biologists think each sep- erate cell has 48 chromosomes. Others think only certain cells have 48 chromosomes in them; for instance, cells which are in your hair may not have chromosomes in them. Chloroplast isn ' t in your hair, either, or it would be green and grow from the other end and in the daytime only. If a man ' s whiskers had chloroplast in them, he wouldn ' t have to shave until evening. Nobody has chloroplast in them unless they eat fresh spinach, which is a good thing. Inside the chromosomes are quite a few genes. Textbook authors see these genes as a stack of pies sliced for serving, or dimes with a lot of diameters drawn on them or something similar. Yogi Williams sees them as little globs with a covering like a sau- sage and the whole thing is called a chromosome. Chromosomes determine what you will be. Chromo- somes are located in maybe some, maybe all of the cells of your body. Sometimes these things can be awfully difficult to determine. No one has ever peeled a chromosome yet, but biologists know what is inside them because they are transparent. Chromosomes, that is—not biolo- gists. Stevens reports one man who tried to skin a chromosome with a razor blade. He cut his left thumb. Chromosomes may have been cut in two parts, across the middle, or sliced, but not peeled. Genes of certain characteristics are dominant. Take eyes, for instance. Why do you have two blue eyes? Well, you had two blue-type eye-genes. But if you had one brown-type gene, you ' d have two brown eyes, not one brown and one blue, because brown is dominant. Blue may be dominant, but I don ' t think so. See how it works? There is one more important thing about chromo- somes and genes. A certain biologist by the name of Saltysack has been experimenting with a process which he hopes will standardize genes. If genes were to be standardized, you would be as dishonest as the next person and he would be as good as the one next to him and the one next to him would be . . . well, let ' s see. If he had a dominant dishonest crene he b 7 would be more dishonest than . . . that ' s wrong, though. If genes were standardized, we would all be alike. We wouldn ' t need names, because only you would know who you were. If you talked to another person you might think you were looking into a mirror. If he didn ' t answer, you might start shaving. I don ' t quite know. What do you think? (Not so many years ago a Fine Arts graduate wrote his Master ' s thesis on The Educational Possibilities of the Tenor Banjo. Don ' t make light of contributor Baird. He may have something here.—The EDITOR) PLEDGES Wade Arthur, Lawrence Edward Becker, Newton John Brown, Independence Paul Brownlee, Sabetha James Brunson, Wichita James Cope, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Coshow, Hutchinson Jack Eskridge, Independence, Mo. Edward Gilliland, Arkansas City Joseph Gubar, Kansas City Herman Hale, Kansas City, Mo. James Hanlon, Coffeyville William Harding, Kansas City John Hinde, Independence, Mo. Chester Laniewski, Ambridge, Pa. Gibson Layton, Independence Edward Lee, Louisburg Claude Mason, Wichita Charles Arthur, Lawrence William Arthur, Lawrence John Asher, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Beck, Iola Steven Butcher, Hutchinson Lowell Case, Independence Kenneth Cates, Hutchinson Arthur Clevenger, Salina Bruce Coffin, Independence, Mo. Richard Collins, Wellington Richard Cory, Eudora Chester Dillon, Downs Jack Forbes, Kansas City Charles Gilliland, Hutchinson Robert Gordon, Independence Alexander Haas, Independence Richard Haggard, Mission William Halsey, Independence Ted Heuer, Nashville Dalton Holland, Harper Frank Houck, Independence Howard Hull, Kansas City William Kallenberger, Edna Donald Millikan, Kansas City Darrell Norris, Kansas City, Mo. Delvin Norris, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Oberhelman, Kansas City, Mo. Frank Palmer, Harper George Peterson, Overland Park Nile Peterson, Overland Park Robert Pringle, Kansas City Kenneth Richardson, Lawrence Herbert Savage, Hutchinson Robert Schaefer, Kansas City, Mo. Glenn Shanahan, Independence Robert Shaw, Bartlesville, Okla. Richard Sime, Kansas City, Mo. Loren Watson, Coffeyville Herbert Weidensaul, Eudora William Weidensaul, Eudora Page King, Washington, D. C. Earl Laird, Kansas City George Latham, Kansas City, Mo. Wendall Link, Kansas City, Mo. Donald Lysaught, Kansas City Robert Martindell, Hutchinson Alan Martinek, Kansas City Joseph McCoskrie, Kansas City, Mo. Eldon Means, Wichita Kenneth Norris, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Oberhelman, Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth Pringle, Wichita John Randell, Colby Albert Rice, Mission George Robb, Kansas City, Mo. Otto Rueschoff, Park Bill Sims, Wichita Falls, Texas Alan Stutz, Topeka Donald Taylor, Hutchinson Donald Thompson, Lawrence Robert Walker, Acme, Wyo. William Wood, Meade Alpha Tau Omega was founded Septem- ber 11, 1865, at the Virginia Military In- stitute, Lexington, Virginia, Gamma Mu, now one of 95 active chapters, was es- tablished at K. U. in 1901. President, Steve Butcher; Vice-President, Earl Laird; Secretary, Dick Cory; Treasurer, George Latham. IPII M ACTIVES FIRST ROW: K. Pringle, Beck, Holland, Martindell, McCoskrie, Sims, Heuer, Houck, Asher, Latham, Butcher, Richardson, C. Gilliland, Wood, Hull, Robb. SEC- OND ROW: N. Peterson, Haggard, Lee, R. Pringle, Martinek, Laird, Norris, Eskridge, G. Peterson, Collins Dillon, Watson, Brown, Norris, Brunson, Hale, Stutz, Link. THIRD ROW: Randell, Halsey, Palmer, Mason, Savage, Millikan, Guber, Rice, Oberhelman, Norris, Brownlee, Harding, Shaw, Webb, Hanlon, Weidensaul, Cory, Sime, Case, Shanaha n, Becker, Coshow, King, Rueschoff, Coffin, Hinde, Clevenger. NOT IN PICTURE: B. Arthur, C. Arthur, W. Arthur, Cates, Cope, Forbes, Haynes, Kallenberger, Langworthy, Laniewski, Lysaught, MacDonald, Means, Taylor, Thompson, Walker. PLEDGES Robert F. Banker, Muskogee, Okla. Bill Beeson, Parsons Jack D. Bennett, Ottawa Byron J. Bohl, Kansas City Richard H. Capps, Wichita Francis E. Carr, Wellington James H..Fees, Iola Charles H. Finney, Wichita Clair Gillin, Pittsburg Bruce T. Hurd, Topeka Edward J. Huycke, Ellsworth Richard K. Jones, Lawrence Hugh H. Kreamer, Downs Henry A. LaRue, Columbus John S. May, Atchison Ralph M. Moon, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. Francis W. Prosser, Jr., Wichita Robert J. Renn, Wellington William L. Schwinn, Wellington Chester E. Scott, Topeka Frederic W. Shelton, Great Bend Ralph 0. Simmons, Smith Center Henry B. Sullivan, Jr., Shawnee Jack E. Winter, Columbus ACTIVES Robert B. Anderson, Ottawa Robert S. Mosser, Wichita Thomas W. Ballinger, Santa Barbara, Calif. A. N. Murphey, Oklahoma City, Okla. Stanley Nelson, Lawrence Beta Theta Pi was founded August 8, 1839, at Miami University, Oxford, Leland S. Bohl, Kansas City Robert D. Buehler, Seneca Wilbur B. Noble, Leavenworth Ralph T. O ' Neil, Topeka Ohio. Alpha Nu, now one of 91 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1872. J. P. Burke, Chicago, Ill. Robert J. Piller, Great Bend President, W . C. Hartley,. Vice-President, Dan Chase, Lawrence Monroe Proctor, Parsons Richard P. Royer,. Secretary, A. N. Mur- Lynn Chase, Parsons Payne H. Ratner, Jr., Wichita phey; Treasurer, Robert D. Buehler. William A. Conboy, Lawrence William E. Read, Baxter Springs Neal Cramer, Walsenburg, Colo. Robert K. Ready, Wellington Don Diehl, Smith Center John H. Robinson, Kansas City, Mo. Robert B. Docking, Lawrence Richard P. Royer, Abilene Jack D. Dunne, Wichita James W. Sargent, Wichita r Robert F. Ellsworth, Lawrence William F. Schell, Wichita Stephan R. Ellsworth, Lawrence Frank H. Engle, Topeka Lee Schloesser, Fredonia Jack Schmaus, Iola iL ii Max G. Falkenstien, Lawrence Robert T. Schwanzle, Pittsburg Hubert H. Hall, Lawrence Robert P. Shirley, Chanute William H. Harrison, Downs Larry W. Simmons, Iola W. C. Hartley, Baxter Springs Jerry J. Simpson, Salina Elton E. Hoff, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. Charles F. Spencer, Pittsburg Harry H. Hunter, Attica William C. Spencer, Pittsburg Stanley W. Jervis, Grosse Pointe, Mich. Jess Stewart, Wamego William W. Johnson, Granville, Ohio Russell Stites, Wichita William R. Jones, Jr., Wichita Andrew C. Struble, Glasco Howard Joseph, Whitewater Edward B. Surface, Salina Hugh C. Kershner, Jr., Kansas City James Teichgraeber, Emporia Melvin Kettner, Hutchinson Dunham A. Walker, Kansas City, Mo. Dan N. Kreamer, Downs Tom Watkins, Farmington, Mo. Robert H. Malott, Lawrence Donald L. Williams, Salina lV H. Laurence Miller, Kansas City, Mo. Shipman Winter, Lawrence R. D. Moore, Bellflower, Calif. Keith A. Wolfenbarger, Talmage FIRST ROW: Jones, May, Banker, Docking, Mosser, Schwinn, H. Kreamer, Hunter, Dunne, Finney, Kettner, Sullivan, Jack Stewart. SECOND ROW: Read, Falken- stien, Schell, Joseph, Simpson, Kershner, Murphey, Hartley, Buehler, Ratner, O ' Neil, Sargent, Diehl, Stites, D. Chase, Shirley. THIRD ROW: Jess Stewart, Bohl, Sch- maus,Hoff, Small, W. Spencer, Hall, Malott, S. Winter, Gillin, R. Moon, R. Ellsworth, Schaeffer, S. Ellsworth, Bennett, Renn, La Rue, Surface, Prosser, Wolfenbarger. FOURTH ROW: Spencer, Tiechgraeber, Robinson, Beeson, J. Winter, L. Simmons, Conboy, Ready, L. Chase, Burke, Moore, Jervis, Johnson, Cramer, Piller. FIFTH ROW: Struble, Engle, Schwonzel, D. Kreomer, Anderson, Noble, Fees, Shelton, Huycke, Hurd, Proctor, Scott, Walker, Carr, Sch- loesser, Harrison, Williams. PLEDGES Kent Burns, Dodge City John Davidson, Shawnee Lee Davis, Dodge City Frank Fickel, Shawnee Loren Fincham, Clay Center Howard Fischer, Mt. Vernon, Iowa Emil Glogau, Topeka Barney Graham, Pratt Herbert Gronemeyer, Kansas City, Mo Kirk Grutzmacher, Onaga Don Hardy, Kansas City Duane Harvey, Henryetta, Okla. Keith Hinshaw, Mission Harold Houx, Independence Colin Howat, Lawrence Melvin Huxtable, Kansas City, Mo, Donald Hyten, Wellington Rudy Johnson, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Killinger, Topeka Frank Lane, Lawrence Richard McClelland, Topeka George MacCurdy, Kansas City, Mo. James Milstead, Pratt A. D. Moore, St. Joseph, Mo. Ralph Moore, Pratt Warren Oswalt, Bucklin Ronnie Paris, Kansas City James Pearson, Topeka Roger Penner, Wichita . Roland Roepe, Topeka Calvin Subera, Caldwell Harold Thomas, Lawrence Dick Tomlinson, Dodge City Jamieson Vaughan, Kansas City, Mo. Randy Vories, St. Joseph, Mo. Milo Voshell, Bucklin Joe Ward, Lawrence William Weigel, Dodge City Jack Wiggins, Independence Bruce Wilder, Lawrence John Wuest, Maysville, Mo. Delta Chi was founded October 13, 1890, at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. Kansas, now one of 36 active chap- ters, was established at K. U. in 1923. President, Jamison Brady; Vice-President, Vern Birney; Secretary, Larry H a de n; Treasurer, Gordon Walters. If ACTIVES Warren Beck, Hutchinson Vern Birney, Bucklin William Brady, Clyde, Mo. John Burton, Lawrence Marshall Butler, Hopkinsville, Ky. Richard Channell, Lawrence Millard Dornblaser, Kansas City, Mo Solon Gilmore, Lawrence Lawrence Haden, St. Joseph, Mo. Marvin Hagemeier, Luverne, Minn. Warren Hall, Lawrence Donald Harper, Spring Hill Richard Harris, Wellington Kenneth Henderson, Garden City Robert Hilton, Salina Wayne Hilton, Salina • Wendell Johnson, McPherson Leeman Joslin, Harper Francis Langan, Kansas City, Mo. James Marshall, Reading Lewis Mitchell, Scott City Charles Moore, Wichita Lewis Musick, Redondo Beach, Calif. Millard Musselman, Lawrence Bill Passmore, Concordia Paul Pellette, Liberal Roy Reynolds, Dodge City Otto Schnellbacher, Subletce James Sherman, Lawrence Kenneth Troup, Lawrence Gordon Walters, Anthony Lyle Young, Lawrence FIRST ROW: R. Hilton, Howett, Wuest, Harvey, Oswalt, Hayden, Fincham. SECOND ROW: Roepe, Birney, R. Johnson, Dornblaser, Troop, C. Moore, Beck, Loo- sen, Marshall, Brady, Joslin, Butler, Hall, Henderson, Hinshaw. THIRD ROW: Passmore, Thomas, Graham, W. Hilton, Mitchell, R. Moore, Fisher, Gronemeyer, Wilder, McClelland, Davis, Burns, Weigel, Hardy, Vaughan, Milstead, Haux. FOURTH ROW: Grutzmacher, Pierson, Glogau, A. Moore, Wiggins, Hyten, Vories, MacCurdy, Tomlinson, Hagemeier, Killinger, Subera, Huxtable, W. Johnson. FIFTH ROW: Harper, Penner, Voshell, Gilmore, Harris, Fickel, Davidson, Musick, Musselman, Reynolds, Walters. NOT IN PICTURE: Burton, Channel, Holmer, Lane, Pellette, Schnellbacher, Sherman, Ward. PLEDGES Edward Blincoe, Fort Scott David Bradley, Wichita Richard Bradley, Wichita William Burtt, Wichita Robert Cunningham, Kansas City Richard Dodson, Wichita Richard Gelvin, Topeka Conrad Hawley, Marquette John Haynes, Bonner Springs Edward Hutton, Wichita Charles Krone, Lawrence Wayne Landis, Kansas City Dale Marshall, Bonner Springs George McCarthy, Wichita Ruse McCarthy, Wichita Charles Miller, Junction City Earl Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. Arlyn Smith, Rozel Richard Spencer, Arkansas City Jardon Strnad, Belleville Royce Watz, St. Francis John Wayland, Washington Ronald Weddle, Paola Galen Wilson, Topeka Lynn Winslow, Kansas City Delta Tau Delta was founded February, 1859 at Bethany College, West Virginia. Gamma Tau, now one of 76 active chap- ters, was established at K. U. in 1914. President, John Gunther,. Vice-President, Don Harris; Secretary, Gene Pope; Treas- urer, Carl Bomholt. Ut ACTIVES M. R. Arrowsmith, Belleville Hoyt Baker, Peabody Ross Baker, Peabody Willis Baker, Pleasanton Malcolm Black, Wichita Carl Bomholt, Cheney Robert Bonebrake, Baldwin Frank Campbell, Fort Scott Anderson Chandler, Wichita Jacob Colter, Leavenworth Robert Crain, Fort Scott Gordon Danielson, McDonald Malcolm Dryden, Leavenworth Robert Elbel, Lawrence Paul Ericson, Topeka Dale Farr, Independence Donald Frisbie, Kansas City Homy Gaston, Lawrence Whitson Godfrey, Kansas City Harold Goss, Pleasanton William Guilfoyle, Abilene John Gunther, South Bend, Ind. Harry Hanson, Kansas City Otis Harding, Liberal Phillip Hartley, Wichita Ralph Hedges, Kansas City, Mo. Donald Jones, Lawrence Robert Keplinger, Kansas City, Mo. Wilbur Koehn, Haven John Kongs, Seneca Dorwin Lamkin, Hudson, Wis. Robert Lee, Lawrence Harlan Lill, St. John James Maloney, Wichita William Marshall, Bonner Springs Don McDaniel, Neodesha Gary McKee, Kansas City, Mo. Joe Moddrell, Wichita Robert Moore, Lawrence James Mordy, Fredonia Gorman Neel, Kansas City Jean Nunnelee, Tulsa, Okla. Duane Olson, Greensburg Charles Peek, Kansas City, Mo. Edward Pope, Blue Rapids Ernest Rice, Fort Scott Edward Rolfs, Junction City Bill Schafer, Blue Rapids Frank Schulthies, Kansas City, Mo. Thomas Scovel, Independence Alan Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Edward Sondker, Holton Ben Spencer, Arkansas City Glenn Stallard, Lawrence Wayne Stallard, Lawrence David Stimson, Kansas City, Mo. Stephen Stimson, Kansas City, Mo. Phillip Stockton, Lawrence Adrian Wallace, Kingman Robert Weeks, Eldon, Mo. Frank Wendlandt, Herington Robert Wiedemann, Lawrence James Wilson, Topeka William Wright, Kansas City, Mo. Thomas Young, Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Lamkin, kt. Baker, Walz, Ericson, Wright, Pope, Haynes, Miller, McDaniel, Wallace, Stockton, R. Spencer, Young, Harding. SECOND ROW: Gunther, Campbell, Keplinger, Godfrey, B. Spencer, Danielson, Schafer, Farr, D. Stimson, Hedges, Lee, S. Stimson, Sondker, Hartley, Crain, Bonebrake, W. Marshall. THIRD ROW: Wendlandt, Robertson, R. Bradley, Hanson, W. Baker, Peek, Wiedemann, G. Stallard, Mordy, Kongs, Nunnelee, A. Y. Smith, Krone, Elbel, Chandler, W. Stallard, Lill, R. Baker, Weddle, G. D. McCarthy, Bomholt. FOURTH ROW: Dodson, Burtt, Weeks, D. Bradley, Moddrell, Rice McKee, Frisbie, Strnad, A. G. Smith, Arrowsmith, Rolfs, Jones, Schulthies, Wilson, Gelvin, Block. FIFTH ROW: Blincce, Hutton, Neel, Maloney, Goss, Dryden, Winslow, Wilson, Landis, Cunningham, Hawley, D. Marshall, Olson, Colter, Scovel, J. McCarthy, Moore, Gaston, Wayland, Guilfoyle. NOT IN PICTURE: Brooks, Coyan. PLEDGES Delta Upsilon was founded November 4, 1834, at Williams College, Williams- town, Massachusetts. Kansas Chapter, now one of 61 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1920. President, Bill Winter- mote; Vice-President, Ed Woolcott; Secre- tary, James Swoyer; Treasurer, John Fee. Wade D. Abels, Topeka Wells M. Adams, Wichita Robert D. Ben, Lawrence Jack B. Comstock, Hutchinson Reginald F. Cook, Pratt William L. Cox, Pratt William R. Delay, Kansas City, Mo. Robert W. Duckworth, Merriam John F. Elliott, Kansas City George W. Francis, Lawrence Ernest C. Friesen, Hutchinson Wilber E. Friesen, Hutchinson Don Glad, Pratt James W. Hawes, Kansas City, Mo. Lee E. Hoopes, Winfield Bradley Light, Winfield Mark H. Adams, Wichita John E. Armel, Humboldt Rodney M. Armstrong, Topeka Carl A. Bell, Wichita Robert D. Bessier, Wichita Jerry Breitag, Kansas City, Mo. Laird S. Campbell, Wichita Bailey R. Chaney, Iola Robert J. Curran, Pratt George R. Davidson, Lawrence Paul R. Duckworth, Merriam Chester F. Fee, Cunningham John R. Fee, Cunningham Philip G. Fee, Cunningham Donald J. Fincke, Kansas City, Mo. Hal M. Friesen, Hutchinson John H. Gerety, Wichita Calvin Granger, Emporia Lawrence D. Guy, Winfield William Hall, Lawrence Mac H. Hermann, Topeka John K. Higdon, Kansas City, Mo, Jack W. Hines, Wichita Harold M. Hubbard, Beloit John J. Irwin, Merriam John E. Meyer, Hoisington Arild D. Moe, Akim, Norway Andrew G. Murray, Lawrence Donald W. Patton, Hutchinson James H. Raglin, Independence J. Carson Rockhill, Wichita Samuel J. Stewart, Humboldt Eugene R. Tait, Lawrence James R. Thompson, Winfield Jack C. Veatch, Hutchinson Duke Weltmer, Mankato Donald F. Wheelock, Kansas City, Mo. Sewell T. Wilson, Merriam Richard D. Wintermote, Augusta Ralph Wood, Trousdale James 0. Jones, Beloit George H. Keene, Pratt Robert E. Kroesch, Hoisington Carl M. Kron, Kansas City, Mo. John S. Light, Jr., Winfield Robert S. Light, Winfield James E. McIntire, Clay Center Edward A. Metcalf, III, Neodesha Bentley A. Nelson, Kansas City, Mo. Donald A. Pomeroy, Holton Robert L. Schober, Topeka James W. Scott, Mankato Eugene Smith, Hutchinson Norman R. Smith, Elkhart William A. Starr, Peabody Alvin P. Steinhauer, Berwyn, Ill. James F. Swoyer, Oskaloosa Lee Veatch, Hutchinson Robert W. Veatch, Hutchinson Eugene Voigt, Topeka Roderick E. Weltmer, Mankato John F. Williams, Troy, N. Y. William Wintermote, Augusta John E. Woolcott, Halstead ACTIVES FIRST ROW: Cox, Abels, Comstock, Howes, Armel, Kron, C. Veatch, Jones. SECOND ROW: B. Wintermote, P. Duckworth, Nelson, Iderrnonn, Guy J. Fee, Scho- ber, Williams, Curran, Hines, Fink, Hubbard, Armstrong, Glad. THIRD ROW: Tait, Meyers, Bessier, Bell, Cook, W. Adorns, Steinhauer, J. Veatch, Raglin, Thomp- son, Wilson, M. Adorns, Eliot, Hoopes, J. Light, Kroesch, Pomeroy, P. Fee. FOURTH ROW: Swayer, H. Friesen, B. Light, D. Wintermote, R. Light, Stewart, Whee- lock, Breitag, Delay, Higdon, Scott, Campbell, Woolcott, Chaney, Voigt. FIFTH ROW: B. Veoch, Patton, B. Duckworth, D. Weltmer, R. Weltmer, C. Fee, W. Friesen, E. Ben, Francis, Davidson, Starr, Murray. NOT ' IN PICTURE: Bcer, Elder, Gerety, Granger, Hall, Irwin, Keene, McIntire, Metcalf, Moe, Rockhill, Ruggles, G. Smith, N. Smith. PLEDGES Leon Barr, Arkansas City Bob Beiderwell, Garden City Warren Blazier, Wichita Bob Brown, El Dorado Bill Burris, Wichita Max Coats, Arkansas City Ray Culbertson, Topeka Don Dean, Wichita Bob Estes, Topeka Jim Fishback, Hutchinson Bill Fountain, Kansas City, Mo. Eddie Green, Eureka Paul Hill, Eureka John Holliday, Topeka Bill Jones, Emporia John Kennedy, Kansas City Winwood Kline, Emporia Merle Baker, Fredonia David Ballard, Topeka Robert Beal, Great Bend Sam Brick, Salina Larry Brown, El Dorado Herbert Buchholtz, Wichita Bill Bunt, Dodge City Gaylord Campbell, Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth Carder, Fredonia Herbert Cole, Meade Beady Crass, San Bernardino, Calif. John Crump, Lakin Fred Daneke, Topeka Roy Duffens, Topeka Lee Ethridge, Thomaston, Ga. Dick Finney, Topeka Wallace Forney, Great Bend Ben Foster, Hutchinson Herb Foster, Topeka George Gadding, Lawrence Bob Gunn, Great Bend Jack Heisler, Wichita Bob Held, Great Bend Don Herold, Ellinwood John Herrmann, Kansas City, Mo. Reed Hoffman, Enterprise Walt Hoffman, Enterprise Bill Hollis, Fredonia Harry Hutchens, Kilgore, Texas Charles McCarthy, Topeka Bob McKim, Independence, Mo. Harlan Ochs, Russell Jack Parker, Robinson Bill Pierson, Hutchinson Jack Poison, Garfield Don Price, Topeka Gene Rinehardt, Russell Bob Souder, Madison Ben Sherwood, St. Joseph, Mo. Jim Spears, Hutchinson Bob Stapleton, Independence, Mo. Jack Steinle, Russell Bud Wright, Coffeyville Bob Wuerth, Kansas City, Mo. Dean Young, Dodge City Bob Zimmerman, Lawrence Roger James, Lawrence Dick Kirk, Arkansas City Dick Laub, El Dorado Springs, Mo. Charles Love, Lawrence Roger Lovett, McPherson Bob McCurdy, Topeka Carl Meyer, Salina Bob Mowry, Delaware, Ohio Art Partridge, Coffeyville Leslie Pihlblad, Garfield Bill Porter, Hugoton Tom Pringle, Arkansas City Bill Pringle, Arkansas City Alvin Ritts, Stafford Bob Rowley, Hamilton, Ohio Lee Sauder, Madison Dan Senkarik, Sanford, Fla. Myron Sewell, Arkansas City Rex Shaw, Topeka Roy Shoaf, Topeka Bob Southern, Ellinwood Bob Templer, Russell John Thiele, Topeka Harold Vagtborg, Lenexa Jim Walker, Long Beach, Calif. Jerry Ward, Ellinwood John Yarnell, Topeka Phil Young, Dodge City ACTIVES Kappa Sigma was founded December 10, 1869, at the University of Virginia. Gamma Omicron, now one of 110 active chapters was established at K. U. in 1912. Grand Master, Roy Shoaf; Grand Pro- curator, Robert Southern; Grand Scribe, Robert Held,. Grand Treasurer, Dick Laub, 9 j FIRST ROW: Zimmerman, Coles„ Dean, Spears, McCurdy, Hill, Reinhardt, Culbertson, Price, Hoffman, Barr, Sherwood, H. Ochs SECOND ROW: Par- tridge, Crass, Kerr, Hermann, Ballard, Laub, Southern, Shoaf, Held, James, Shaw, Bunt, Yarnell, Mowry, Hoffman. THIRD ROW: Kirk, McIntosh, Rolley, Werth, Stapleton, Poison, Parker, Blazier, Senkarik, L. Ochs, Ferner, Pihlblad, Templer, Campbell, D. Finney, Baker, Meyer, L. Finney, L. Souder. FOURTH ROW: Vagtborg, Jones, Burris, Brown, Ward, Beiderwell, Fountain, Coats, Kennedy, Steinle, McCarthy, Sewell, Porter, Estes, Souder, Fishback, Holliday, Foster, R:tts, Green. FIFTH ROW: Daneke, Young, Duffens, Crump, Brick, Buchholtz, Wright, McKim, Thiele, Hutchens, Herold, Walker, Gunn, Forney, Young, Heisler, Kline. NOT ' IN PICTURE: Bush, Carter, Engleman, Ethridge, Godding, Hearin, Hollis, Love, Lovett, Lowe, Morrison, Netzer, Pal son, T. Pringle, W. Pringle, Rc Ydn, Roos, Witherspoon. A PLEDGES Mickey Alt, Topeka Kenneth Beck, Wichita Corb Bedell, Wichita Jim Blocker, Lawrence Clyde Burnside, Oklahoma City, Okla. Dick Cook, Iola Tuck Cooke, Kansas City, Mo. Dick Croker, Kansas City Bob Danneberg, Kansas City, Mo. Renz Edwards, Kansas City Harold England, Halstead Myron Enns, Newton Bob Fountain, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Gaudreau, Wichita Forrest Griffith, Lee ' s Summit, Mo. Tom Hanna, Newton Edward Harris, Kansas City, Mo. Mick Hines, Salina Bob Hughes, Topeka John Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Lindsay, Topeka Russell Mammel, Hutchinson Marvin Martin, Wichita Merle McCoy, McPherson Don Mcllrath, Great Bend Bill Mitchell, Hutchinson Edmand Morrill, Hiawatha Howard Nearing, Kansas City, Mo. Frank Newell, Kansas City, Mo. Morton Newell, Kansas City, Mo. J. R. Perkins, Dodge City Ed Perry, Kansas City, Mo. Lorene Powell, Salina Ken Ramsey, Kansas City, Mo. Murray Regier, Newton Ned Tanner, Kansas City, Mo. Don Wells, Rochester, N. Y. Phi Delta Theta was founded December 26, 1848, at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, Kansas Alpha, now one of 108 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1882. President, Everett Gille; Vice- President, Keith Congdon; Secretary, John Stauffer; Treasurer, Don Ong. 9 ACTIVES Gene Alford, Lawrence Roger Allen, La wrence Don Auten, Rochester, N. Y. Floyd Baker, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Baker, Kansas City, Mo. Rusty Baltis, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Belden, Eskridge Charles Black, Lawrence George Byers, Kansas City, Mo. Cecil Chappelow, Kansas City, Mo. Clark Churchill, Kansas City, Mo. Carl Clark, Kansas City Keith Congdon, Winfield Gene Conklin, Chanute Don Cousins, Washington, D. C. Ken Danneberg, Kansas City, Mo. Fred Darville, Sabetha Bill Davis, Hutchinson Bill Debus, Kansas City Ed Denning, Wichita John Dewell, Newton Joe Dickey, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Dillard, Dodge City Charles Dunn, Sayville, L. I., N. Y. Ray Evans, Kansas City Bruce Fitts, Wichita Bob Fitzpatrick, Salina Bob Franklin, Kansas City, Mo. Fred Gableman, Kansas City, Mo. Wayne Gallentine, Norton Everett Gille, Kansas City Lou Goehring, Wichita George Gray, Kansas City Jack Greer, Boulder, Colo. Harvey Haines, Sabetha Jordan Haines, Sabetha Sam Harris, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Hassig, Kansas City Dick Hawkinson, Kansas City, Mo. Lacy Haynes, Kansas City Clay Hedrick, Newton Robert Hess, Lawrence John Hirschler, Halstead Stan Hobbs, Venice, Calif. Bill Hogan, Detroit, Mich. Bob Hollibaugh, Winfield Ray Irwin, Kansas City, Mo. Dean Johnson, Kansas City Bill Kanaga, Kansas City Jack Kendree, Hutchinson Ralph Kiene, Kansas City Joe Lindsay, Topeka Bob Maricle, Dodge City Edward Marquis, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Martin, Topeka Bill Martindell, Hutchinson Harry McClure, Topeka John McGuckin, Philadelphia, Pa. Jack McKee, Kansas City Leonard Menzie, Montezuma John Merriam, Topeka Bob Merrick, Salina Plez V. Miller, Kansas City John Morgan, Kansas City Bert Morris, Hutchinson Chas. Munger, Kansas City John Murray, Turtle Creek, Pa. Dale Oliver, Salina Don Ong, Kansas City, Mo. Don Owen, Emporia Bill Pence, Kansas City, Mo. Dick Piper, Hutchinson Dick Porter, Concordia Dick Potter, Lawrence Walt Quiring, Hutchinson Clark Rhoden, Kansas City, Mo. Howard Ryan, Abilene Oliver Samuel, Emporia Kirk Scott, Newton Glen Sewell, Sabetha Louis Shepard, Erie Homer Sherwood, Arkansas City Dave Smart, Kansas City, Mo. Earl Snowden, Chillicothe, Mo. Gordon Sondker, Holton Jack Staats, Kansas City, Mo. John Stauffer, Topeka Jack Steineger, Kansas City Jack Stevens, Hutchinson Bill Walker, Hutchinson Harold Warwick, Kansas City, Mo. George Waugh, Eskridge Garland Weed, Wellington Quinton Wells, Kansas City Sanford White, Kansas City, Mo. C. D. Williams, Anthony John Woodworth, Halstead Matt Zimmerman, Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Darville, Lindsay, White, Weed, Wells, Danneberg, Gaudreau, Morgan, Stevens, Munger, Denning, Edwards, Jenkins, Blocker, Sondker, Chap- pelow, Lindsay, Waugh. SECOND ROW: Merriam, Merrick, Potter, Martin, Stoats, Hobbs, Perry, Bedell, Griffith, Piper, Powell, Cook, Ramsey, Hedrick, Wells, Congdon, Woodworth. THIRD RO W: Murray, McGuckinarris, Dickey, Hirschler, McClure, Samuel, Hogan, Gille, Fitzpatrick, Ong, Quiring, Haines, Hawkinson, S Dillard, Gray, Black, Menzie. FOURTH ROW: Conklin, Smart, Haines, Zimmerman, Baltis, Croker, Sewell, Warwick, Byers, Churchill, Kiene, Porter, Dewell, Walker, Goehring, Alt, Hines, Perkins, Hassig, Hess, Harris, Hollibough, McKee, Debus, Kendree, Newell. FIFTH ROW: Irwin, Oliver, Steineger, Greer, Fitts, Ryan, Allen, Rhoden, Danneberg, Cooke, Franklin, Gallantine, Hanna, Regier, Beck, Burnside, Shepard, Mammel, Belden, Alford, Dunn England, Mitchell, Hughes, Marquis, Snow- den. SIXTH ROW: Pence, Auten, Tanner, Evans, Miller, Johnson, Morris, Cousins, Sherwood, Owen, McCoy, Martin, Morrill, Mcllrath, Nearing, Enns, Gableman, Lear, Fountain. PLEDGES Dan Anthony, Leavenworth George Bell, Wichita William Binter, El Dorado Edward Brass, Lawrence Leroy Britton, Ellsworth Robert Bunten, Topeka Phillip Carlson, Blue Rapids Joseph Conley, Salem, Ill. Robert Coon, Tulsa, Okla. Woodson Dryden, Leavenworth Milton Fadler, Pittsburg John Ferguson, Wichita Wendel Gugler, Abilene Thomas Hawkins, Wichita Warren Helgesen, Omaha, Nebr. Donald Hinchman, Salina Neal Anderson, Sylvan Grove Thomas Bailey, Topeka Richard Beach, Topeka Warren Bowman, Topeka James Boyd, Lamed Robert Boyd, Lamed John Burns, Wichita Henry Coulter, Kansas City, Mo. James Dittmer, Tulsa, Okla. William Douglas, Topeka Willard Frank, Wichita John Grant, Wichita Clifford Hargis, Atchison Leonard Hartigan, St. Joseph, Mo. Robert Harwi, Atchison Carl Henrichson, Atchison Arthur Hoffman, Wichita Kenneth Johnson, Topeka John Kapfer, Lawrence Henry Logan, Wichita Sewall Macferran, Topeka Charles Marsh, Salina Donald May, Lawrence Bill McDonald, Enterprise William McElhenny, Topeka Harold McSpadden, El Dorado Walter Miller, Paola Randolph Moore, Potwin William Neff, Kansas City Frank Hoge, Leavenworth William R. Johnson, Lawrence Robert Kline, St. Joseph, Mo. Dale Mallon, Topeka John McClelland, Independence Herbert Mesigh, Atchison Robert Ogilvie, Evanston, Ill. Carl Olander, Jr., Wichita Gari Price, Kansas City, Mo. Dave Ritchie, Wichita James Sallee, Topeka Charles Steeper, Lawrence Earl Strong, Nashville John Wellington, Kansas City, Mo. James Williams, Paola Robert Noll, Jr., Atchison Thomas Ober, Carlsbad, Calif. James Olander, Wichita Billie Porter, Lawrence Thomas Pryor, Wichita Robert Ramsay, Atchison Richard Raney, Osborne Bob Reed, El Dorado Jack Reinhart, Sabetha John Reynolds, Kansas City Robert Riegle, Chanute Warren Riegle, Chanute Earl Robbins, Lawrence Eugene Sallee, Topeka Donald Schreiber, Kansas City, Mo. Walter Simonson, Great Bend Ned Smull, Bird City Earl Stanton, Leavenworth Ric hard Starr, Great Bend Charles Stucker, Lawrence Harry Stucker, Lawrence James Swenson, Wichita Dwight Thompson, Wichita Joe Turner, Independence Roy Twist, Jr., Meade George Waitt, Wichita Gene Williams, El Dorado Keith Wilson, Independence, Mo. ACTIVES Phi Gamma Delta was founded April 22, 1848 at Jefferson College, Canons- burg, Pennsylvania. Pi Deuteron, now one of 72 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1881. President, Ned Smull; Secretary, Harold McSpadden; Treasurer, Sewall Macf erran, FIRST ROW: B. Riegle, Pryor, J. Williams, May, G. Williams, Ferguson, Grant, Reinhart, Ober, Strong. SECOND ROW: Dittmer, Harwi, Sallee; Douglas, Henrichson, Turner, Thom pson, McSpadden, Small, S. Macferran, Libby, Bailey, Ramsay, Robbins, Ogilvie, Anthony. THIRD ROW: Bell, Olander, Simonson, Porter, Noll, Britton, McClelland, Hinchman, Hargis, Wellington, Carlson, Steeper, Gugler, Mesigh, H. Macferran, W. Riegle, Hoge, Ritchie, Raney. FOURTH ROW: Kapfer, Schreiber, Boyd, Wilson, Bowman, Neff, Mallon, Starr Orr, Fadler, Helgeson, Frank, Sallee, Marsh, Logan, Price, Reynolds, Kline, Twist, Reed. FIFTH ROW: Stan- Waitt, Hawkins, Dryden, Bunten, Olander, Beach, Andreson, Miller, Hoffman, Johnson, Hartigan, Moore, Coon. NOT IN PICTURE: Boyd, Bright, Brosius, Carmean, Hinshaw, Hulett, Kennedy, McSpadden, Sandberg, Stucker, Thayer. g PLEDGES Fred Brinkman, Tulsa, Okla. William Case, Atchison Ralph Collins, St. Joseph, Mo. Donald Culhane, Mitchell, S. D. Edward Daly, Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth Dieker, Tampa John Gillies, Pontiac, Mich. Anthony Hoffman, Claflin Vernon Lang, Claflin Vincent Leonhard, Leavenworth Bill Mahoney, Wakefield, Mass. Alvin Riedel, Ellis Laurens Rossillon, Gridley Dean Ryan, Salina Felix Spies, Hays Fred Thomas, Louisburg ACTIVES Phi Kappa was founded September 1, 1889 at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island. Epsilon, now one of 28 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1915, President, Bernard E. Domann; Vice-President, Bill Hogan; Secretary, Charles Theroff; Treasurer, Ralph Martin. Kerrel Butler, Lawrence James Carroll, Paris, Texas Jerry Correa, Lawrence Bernard Domann, Winchester Hugh Donahoe, Kansas City, Mo. Everett Hill, Lawrence Bill Hogan, Boston, Mass. Paul Keenan, Singapore Straits Settlement Ralph Martin, Wichita Edwin Rossillon, Gridley Joseph Schreiner, Timber Lake, S. D. Edward Schuch, Tyndall, S. D. Frank Simala, Stockdale, Pa. Dean Steyer, Chanute Floyd Svoboda, Lawrence Lloyd Svoboda, Lawrence Charles Theroff, Kansas City Ernest Warnken, Kansas City, Mo. Norbert Zimmer, Stickney FIRST ROW: Svoboda, Steyer, Theroff, Domann, Warnken, Hogan, Simala, Schreiner, Svoboda. SECOND ROW: Butler, Daly, Collins, Lang, Case, Cui- hone, Ryan, Hill, Leonhard. THIRD ROW: Correa, Spies, Keenan, Mahoney, Schoch, Reidel, Brinkman, E. Rossilion, Gillies, L. Fossil- Ion. NOT IN PICTURE: Dieker, Thomas, Zimmer. _AL PLEDGES Fred Abell, Kansas City, Mo. Al Apitz, Topeka Bob Arbuckle, Hutchinson Max Bell, Kansas City, Mo. Howard Burch, Lawrence John Davis, Olathe Paul Dillon, Hutchinson Moulton Green, Kansas City, Mo. David Grimes, Paola Bill Haggard, Wichita Paul Haggard, Wichita Herbert Hess, Pretty Prairie Fred Johnson, Chanute Tom McCully, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Mercer, Hutchinson Bob Mullen, Hutchinson Gene Nelson, Marion Ernest Neuer, Kansas City Gene Olson, Erie Dick O ' Neill, Kansas City, Mo. Don Roberts, Kansas City Ron Roberts, Kansas City Gene Sabin, Kansas City, Mo. John Scanlan, St. Louis, Mo. Joe Schell, Iola Howard Smith, Kansas City Gregg Stock, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Teel, Kansas City, Mo. Orbon Tice, Hutchinson Jack Tusher, Lawrence Jim Wood, Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES Phi Kappa Psi was founded February 19, 1852 at Jefferson College, Canons- burg, Pennsylvania. Kansas Alpha, now one of 52 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1876. President, Roland Gid- ney; Vice-President, Donald Sprinkle; Secretary, Byron Shutz; Treasurer, Mar- shall Fryar. Charles W. Aikins, Independence, Mo Calvin Arnold, Coldwater Theodore Batchelder, Garden City Hugh Bayles, Lawrence Lewis Bayles, Lawrence Kenneth Bellamy, Colby Charles Black, Lawrence Bill Bolin, Kansas City, Mo. J. D. Botkin, Fredonia Jack Bouse, Kansas City Jack Bradley, Overland Park Bill Brewster, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Edward Brunk, Kansas City Bill Burgess, Oklahoma City, Okla. Tom Cadden, Rosiclare, Ill. Paul Carpenter, Kansas City Bill Carrington, Coffeyville John Cole, St. Joseph, Mo. Bill Combest, Lawrence Evan Connell, Ka nsas City, Mo. George Cox, Kansas City Earle Crawford, Chanute Joe Davis, Olathe E. W. Edwards, Chanute Bill Ellis, Mound City Dick Ehrman, Chanute Don Emerick, Lawrence Bob Foerschler, Kansas City Dean Foster, Chanute Marsh Fryar, Wichita Charles Galbreath, Chanute Roland Gidney, Arkansas City John Glover, Topeka Jack Gosnell, Kansas City Bob Graham, Lawrence Lloyd Grant, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Guinotte, Kansas City, Mo. H. Terry Herriott, Lawrence Phillip Hill, Arkansas City Wayne Hird, Lawrence Dwight Horner, Parkville, Mo. Jack Homer, Parkville, Mo. Wayne Johnson, Lawrence Burris Jones, Quivera Lake Walter Jones, Hutchinson John Kindscher, Beloit Max Kissell, Portis Clayton Kyle, Hastings, Nebr. Bill Linscott, Lake Lorowana, Mo. Jules MacKallor, Baxter Springs Duane McCarter, Topeka Don McCaul, Kansas City, Mo. Gene McLaughlin, Coffeyville Lynne McNutt, Colby Jack Mercer, Milton Dick Miller, Chanute Clarence Mollett, Hutchinson Tony Mura, Kansas City, Mo. Ellis Nicolet, Cimarron George Padgett, Greenleaf Don Powell, Kansas City Bob Pugh, Topeka Kenneth Ray, Kansas City Bill Richardson, Mission Jim Roark, Lawrence Leroy Robison, Lawrence C. E. Russell, Iola Sonny Russell, Iola Jim Scanlan, St. Louis, Mo. Dick Sevier, Kansas City, Mo. Byron Shutz, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Singleton, Chanute Don Sprinkle, Weaverville, N. C. Frank Stuckey, Hutchinson Howard Thorp, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Tilson, Kansas City, Mo. Frank Tyler, Kansas City, Mo. Haworth White, Hutchinson D. W. Whitlow, Tulsa Glenn Williams, Arkansas City hil FIRST ROW: Roark, Edwards, Sabin, Stock, Johnson Aikins, Russell, Muir, Graham, Brunk, Kindscher, Ray Schell, Tusher, Smith. SECOND ROW: Brown, Mol- lett, Bouse, Williams, Burgess, Fryor, Herriott, Kyle, Ellis, Gidney, Thorp, Foster, Arnold, MacKallor, Cadden, Tyler, O ' Neill. THIRD ROW: Bell, Robison, Shutz, Emerick, Teel, Grimes, Bellamy, Mullen, Connell, Horner, Richardson, Haggard, Homer, Haggard, Crawford, Nelson, Cox, Nicolet, Mercer, McBride, Burch FOURTH ROW: Johnson, Davis, Davis, Wood, Apitz, Grant Guinotte, Ehrman, Olson, Galbreath, Mura, Botkin, Bolin, Green, Sprinkle, Hess, Tice, Boyles, Dillon FIFTH ROW: Arbuckle, Neuer, Roberts, Roberts, Sevier, Mercer, Carrington, Hill, McCully, Glover, Tilson, Whitlow, McLaughlin, Linscott, Chambers, McCaul, Batchelder. NOT IN PICTURE: Boyles, Black, Bradley, Brewster, Carpenter, Cole, Combest, Foerschler, Gosnell, Hird, Jones, Jones, Kissel!, McNutt, Miller, Pad- gett, Powell, Pugh, Russell, Scanlan, Singleton, Stuckey. PLEDGES William Allen, Sedan Robert Boese, Coffeyville Jack Bryant, Kansas City Jack Casper, Mullinville William Chalfant, Hutchinson Dan Clinger, Rose Hill Robert Cowne, Coffeyville Holt Denman, Sedan John Dorsey, Coffeyville Dilver Fellers, Mullinville Robert Gray, Topeka Robert Hatnm, Atchison Dale Hanes, Coffeyville Mansfield Harris, Rose Hill Thomas Hutton, Lawrence Charles Lindberg, Madison Harry Lohrengel, Kansas City Richard Lowe, Blue Springs, Mo. Wally McDaniel, Winfield William Moore, Spearville Scott Thompson, Gilman City, Mo. William Tolle, Kansas City, Mo. Bernard Wardlow, Kansas City, Mo. Pi Kappa Alpha was founded March 1, 1868 at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia. Beta Gamma, now one of 92 active chapters, was estab- lished at K. U. in 1914. President, Rob- ert Mathews,. Vice-President, Kenneth Johnston; Secretary, Richard Pickier; Treasurer, Ervin Johnston. ACTIVES Pfl N John Addington, Kansas City, Mo. James Allen, Reynoldsville, Pa. Joseph Crawford, Kansas City Walter Curtis, Parkville, Mo. Harold Henshaw, Winfield Richard Houts, St. Louis, Mo. Gerald Jensen, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ervin Johnston, Peru Kenneth Johnston, Peru C. Dixon Kennedy, Hutchinson Charles Lyne, Miltonvale Ralph Martin, Atchison Robert Mathews, Kansas City, Mo. Richard McWilliams, Kansas City, Mo. William Miller, Wichita John Newman, Hutchinson Richard Patterson, Ford Richard Pickier, Beloit Bill Robertson, Peru Eugene Rudd, Mullinville N.Vister Shreve, Lawrence FIRST ROW: Allen, Hoofs, Jensen, Johnston, Pickier, Mathews, Johnston, Hanshaw Newman, Miller, Cowne. SECOND ROW: Hanes, Lindberg, Chalfant, Martin, Denman, Lohrengel, Collins, Boese, Gray, Clinger. THIRD ROW: Lyne, Crawford, Kennedy, Wordlow, Curtis, Dorsey, Moore, Fellers, Allen, Rudd, Tolle. FOURTH ROW: Lowe, Hamm, Patterson, Harris, Addington, Casper, Hutton, McWilliams, McDaniel. NOT IN PICTURE: Shreve, Thompson. PLEDGES Charles Apt, Iola J. 0. Biggs, Pittsburg Paul Carlos, Chanute Malcolm Copeland, Topeka Murray Davis, Kansas City, Mo. Wallace Desterhaft, Wheaton, Ill. Patrick Dulaney, Kansas City, Mo. Ray Fleming, Wichita Edward Frizell, Lamed Charles ,Freeburg, McPherson Ted Glass, Tulsa, Okla. John Graves, El Dorado Fred Howard, Strong City John Haddock, Tulsa, Okla. Frank Harlow, Kingman Jack Ballard, Kansas City, Mo. Larry Benedick, Bennington Lillus Berg, McPherson Marshal Bingham, Wichita Jack Black, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Blackwell, Lamed John Blake, Kansas City Page Brent, Kansas City, Mo. James Briley, Tulsa, Okla. Calvin Briney, Bennington Charles Church, Kansas City, Mo. William Daugherty, Pittsburg James Dominick, Lawrence Jerry Ewers, Caney Don Ferguson, McPherson Chester Frazier, Tulsa, Okla. Bob Freeburg, McPherson Jim Froman, Kansas City, Mo. Frank Gage, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Galle, McPherson Dan Gardner, Chanute Bob Glover, Kansas City Frank Haas, Kohler, Wis. Larry Hawkinson, Kansas City, Mo. Leon Heuer, St. Louis, Mo. Robert Hield, Riverside, Calif. Willard Hilton, Cottonwood Falls Oliver Hughes, El Dorado Jay Humphreys, Ashland Pierre Jensen, Chicago, Ill. Bob Jones, Garden City, N. Y. 0. J. Kaufman, Moundridge Hubert Kintzel, Wichita Earl Krieger, Chicago, Ill. Claude Houchin, Muncie Clyde Johnson, Tulsa, Okla. Jack Knowles, Topeka Dick Lamb, Caney William Meier, Kansas City, Mo. Robert McKee, Kansas City, Mo. David Mitchell, Tulsa, Okla. Jim Padon, Tulsa, Okla. Sam Peacock, Stafford Charles Peterson, Kansas City John Rees, Emporia Jerry Shideler, Kansas City, Mo. Claude Van Doren, Wichita Edward Weltner, Kansas City, Mo. William Leo, Kansas City, Mo. William Martin, Salida, Colo. Bill Mayer, Kansas City Tom Mayhew, Truesdale Gordon McCune, Tulsa, Okla. Jim Muller, Kansas City, Mo. Keith Neville, Topeka Tom Nicklin, Chanute Kenneth Nohe, Kansas City Miller Nordeen, Fort Scott Ray Ocamb, Junction City Stan Oyer, Kansas City Jack Peeler, Memphis, Tenn. Francis Pierpont, Chanute Joe Purves, Wichita Dick Ramsey, El Dorado Dumont Reed, Lamed George Robb, McPherson Dick Rosberg, Salina Bob Rosenfield, Junction City Dick Rosenfield, Junction City Tom Scofield, Kansas City, Mo. Walter Sheridan, Emporia Larry Silks, Kansas City, Mo. Charles Smith, Tulsa, Okla. R. Q. Smith, Denver, Colo. Don Stockdale, Kansas City Leon Thomas, Seminole, Okla. David Thompson, Emporia James Tuthill, Kansas City, Mo. Larry Wagner, Kansas City Robert Whitcomb, St. Joseph, Mo. Dexter Welton, Sterling, Ill. ACTIVES Sigma Alpha Epsilon was founded March 9, 1856, at the University of Ala- bama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Kansas Alpha, now one of 117 active chapters, was es- tablished at the University of Kansas in 1903. President, Robert Jones; Vice- President, John Humphreys; Recorder, Lawrence 1Vagner; Treasurer, Lawrence Hawkinson. M FIRST ROW: Brent, Purves, Peacock, Nicklin, Knowles, Gismo, Glass, Neville, Galle, Rees, Peeler. SECOND ROW: Thompson, Ferguson, Froman, Scofield, Wel- ton, Gage, Kaufman, Robb, Mrs. Reed, Hawkinson, Daugherty, Ballard, Blackwell„ Kiskadden, Jones, Ewers, Thomas. THIRD ROW: Rosenfield, Johnson, Frizell„ Peterson, Humphreys, Davis, Apt, Houchin, Desterhaft Ocamb, McKee, Harlow, Freeburg, Dulaney, Briney, Howard, Berg, Hield. FOURTH ROW: Shideler, Fleming, Stockdale, Church, McCune, Weltner, Rosberg, Van Doren, Rosenfield, Haas, Haddock, Whitcomb, Wagner, Oyer, Blake. FIFTH ROW: Graves, Tuthill, Mayer, Glover, Carlos, Biggs, Copeland, Ramsey, Meier, Briley, Pierpont, Frazier, Reed, Mueller, Lamb. PLEDGES Robert Anderson, Hutchinson William Black, Kansas City, Mo. William Brooks, Kansas City, Mo. James Connell, Kansas City, Mo. Evans Francis, Topeka Eugene Gamble, Chicago, Ill. Kenneth Hampton, Alliance, Nebr. Robert Hopkins, St. Joseph, Mo. Tern King, Pittsburg Floyd Lunsford, Wichita Calvin Markwell, Hays Robert Maupin, Topeka Cliff McDonald, Lawrence Larry McDonnell, Salina Dean Miller, Topeka Grant Miller, Iola Peter Purdy, Kansas City, Mo. Ruell Reddoch, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Saffell, Salina William Sands, Independence Gordon Saunders, Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Dick Shea, Sedalia, Mo. Bob Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Gene Smith, Topeka Larry Smith, Salina Bill Sproull, Birmingham, Mich. Harold Stark, Dodge City Carl Tilford, Topeka Dick Tucker, Evanston, Ill. Charles Wagstaff, Lawrence Dick Wagstaff, Lawrence Gail Weber, Hutchinson Bill Winey, Lawrence Pat Winsor, Wichita Sigma Chi was founded June 28, 1855, ACTIVES at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Alpha Xi, now one of 103 active chapters, was Robert Adams, Salina Don Livingston, Hutchinson Mead Almond, Topeka established at K. U. in 1884. Consul, James Barr, Leavenworth Forest Lee Logan, Hutchinson Floyd Mallonee, Wichita Jack Button; Pro-Consul, Robert Samson, Joseph Barrington, New Washington, Ohio Robert Mallonee, Wichita Doug McLeod, Smith Center Secretary, Bob Sellers; Quaestor, George John Be ck, Dwight Gordon Miller, Salina Robert Beeler, Beloit Tiffany. William Bennett, Ottawa Al Miville, Topeka Jack Moehlenkamp, Tulsa, Okla. Charles Bevan, Hutchinson George Newton, Olathe Marvin Bills, Kansas City, Mo. Mike Nichols, Phillipsburg Ford Bohl, Georgetown, Ohio Frank Pattee, Smith Center Orval Buell, Elcajon, Calif. Dean Patterson, Leavenworth Joseph Bukaty, Kansas City Owen Peck, Kansas City William Butler, Kansas City, Mo. Charles Peterson, Kansas City, Mo. 11) Jack Button, Anthony it Wendell Clark, Victoria, Ill. Arthur Coate, Leavenworth Paul Plumb, Hays Mike Rake, Horton Ed Rickel, Kansas City Harley Colburn, McCune Tad Reid, Evergreen, Colo. Joseph Connelly, Petersburg, Ill. Terry Relihan, Smith Center John Couch, Anthony William Richardson, Kansas City, Mo. Thurston Cowgill, San Francisco, Calif. Hank Samson, Roswell, N. M. David Cowley, Overland Park Gene Sawyer, Hutchinson Robert Dafforn, Overland Park Bob Sellers, Bartlesville, Okla. William Degen, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Seymour, Leavenworth Arthur Dekker, Roswell, N. M. Todd Seymour, Leavenworth Charles Delano, Hutchinson Edward Sheldon, Ottawa Robert Duboc, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Shondell, Kansas City Louis Duff, Kansas City, Mo. John Sigler, Kansas City, Mo. Lloyd Eisenhower, Junction City Gene Siler, Topeka Joe Etzler, Hutchinson Jerry Slater, Bartlesville, Okla. William Forsyth, Medicine Lodge Dale Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Bud French, Kansas City Harold Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Hamilton, Topeka Jim Stevens, Lawrence Jack Hansman, Davenport, Iowa Pat Thiessen, Hutchinson George Holden, Kansas City, Mo. George Tiffany, Topeka Samuel Hunter, Marion, Ind. Jack Tucker, Kansas City, Mo. John Jackson, Kansas City, Mo. Matt Weigand, Leavenworth Ralph Jackson, Lawrence Kenneth White, Kansas City, Mo. John Kanas, Kansas City Richard Keene, Lawrence Ernest Wildhagen, St. Joseph, Mo. Odd Williams, Lawrence Charles Winslow, Pratt Everett Land, Mission Don Wyman, Hutchinson Lynn Leigh, Burley, Idaho Don Young, Dodge City FIRST ROW: Wyman, Bukaty, Duboc, Miller, Seymour, Winey, Reid Miller, Buell, McDonnell. SECOND ROW: Sands, Barr, Smith, Button, Luns- ford, Hamilton, Stevens, Sellers, Saffell, Brooks, McLeod, Sheldon, Bills, Reddoch. THIRD ROW: Delano, Mallonee, Tucker, Tiffany, Rake, Cowley, Winslow, Hansmon, Bennett, Mallonee, Livingston, Colburn, Hunter, Coate, Eisenhower, Patterson. FOURTH ROW: Francis, Bohl, Rickel, Thiessen, Weber, Purdy, Young, Connell, Leigh, Slater, Richardson, Almond, Orr, Clark, Bevan, White, Butler, Miller, Anderson. FIFTH ROW: Nichols, Burt, Smith, Wagstaff, Sproull, Keene, Samson, Moehlenkamp, Beck, Relihan, Beeler, Wildhagen, Adams, Sigler, King, Newton, Barrington, Weigand, Seymour. SIXTH ROW: Degen, Miville, Connelly, Saunders, Hampton, Williams, Gamble, Winsor, Smith, Etzler, Dafforn, Siler, McDonal°, Sawyer, Shea, Shondell, Hopkins, Tucker Logan. PLEDGES Dick Ashley, Chanute Jack Beeman, Russell Syd Bennett, Huron, S. D. Andrew Berry, Russell Bob Berry, Kansas City, Mo. Vernon Biggs, Lawrence Bill Bragg, Omaha, Nebr. Ray Binnicker, Kansas City, Mo. Dick Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Don Burton, Russell Dwight Deay, Chanute Robert Elliott, Kansas City, Mo. Stanley Englund, Salina Frank Findley, Lawrence Dean Gilchrist, Russell Bruce Goshorn, Kansas City, Mo. Allen Harms, Great Bend Darrell Havener, Kansas City Charles Hawkins, Olathe Bud Hinkle, Independence, Mo. Gene Jones, Wichita Clyde King, Wichita Paul Klein, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Malone. Wichita Bob Morey, Perth Amboy, N. J. Harry Morey, Perth Amboy, N. J. Bill Pattison, Council Grove Bob Ramseyer, Kansas City, Mo. Vern Ricketts, Topeka Bob Riss, Kansas City, Mo. Norton Rixey, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Roehl, Chicago, Ill. Dale Romig, Hutchinson Loyd Russing, Kansas City, Mo. Lee Selden, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Settles, Wichita Al Shepard, Kansas City, Mo. Stuart Thompson, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Touhey, Lawrence Charles Werhan, Bennington ACTIVES Sigma Nu was founded Januar y 1, 1869, at the Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Virginia. Nu, now one of 99 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1884. President, Scott Harvey,. Vice- President, James Summers,. Secretary, Howard Shryock,. Treasurer, D o n al d Chadsey. Dean Banker, Russell Maurice Beardmore, Mankato Milton Bloodgood, South Amboy, N. J Joseph Brown, Washington Walter Cassida, Osawatomie Donald Chadsey, Miami, Okla. Bob Combs, Grandview, Mo. Jack Cousins, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Dalrymple, Paola George Darsie, St. Paul, Minn. Bob Dawson, Russell Bob Dougherty, Plainville John Duffy, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Fairchild, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Fairchild, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Findley, Lawrence Scott Fleener, San Bernandino, Calif. Bill Fowler, Iola Jim Gerlach, Manhattan J. C. Halliburton, Arkansas City Clark Hargiss, Topeka Harry Harlan, Kansas City, Mo. Gibson Hart, Kansas City, Mo. Scott Harvey, Salina Dick Hodges, Kansas City, Mo. Fred Jaedicke, Lawrence Charles Kelley, Magnolia, Ark. Wilmer Landon, Russell Robert Learned, Lawrence George Lowe, Olathe Bill Lyttle, Wheaton, Ill. Bill McPhee, Santa Ana, Calif. Thomas Messplay, Kansas City, Mo. • Thomas Miller, Boonville, Mo. Robert Minich, Overland Park Omer Muchmore, Parsons Arthur Myers, Pawnee Rock Don Nielson, Kansas City, Mo. Arthur Nystrom, Savonburg Russell O ' Hara, Neodesha Dean Ostrum, Russell Dick Parsell, Kansas City, Mo. Howard Perry, Paola George Polk, Independence Charles Powell, Columbus Bart Ramsey, Kansas City, Mo. Charles Replogle, Cottonwood Falls Robert Seaman, Logan John S hackelford, Walters, Okla. Howard Shryock, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Spicer, Los Angeles, Calif. Jim Summers, Kansas City, Mo. John Touhey, Lawrence Paul Van Dyke, Plainville Jim Weatherby, Fort Worth, Tex. Charles Wheeler, Kansas City, Mo. Dick Williams, Lawrence Bob Williamson, Topeka Bob Wilson, Kansas City, Mo. Dick Young, Lawrence L lv FIRST ROW: Pattison, Brown, Kelly, F. Findley, Werhan, Seaman, Williams, R. Touh ' ay, Jones, Gilchrist, Miller, Cousins. SECOND ROW: Weatherby, Shackelford, Polk, Meyers, Ramsey, Dawson, Summers, Chadsey, Shryock, Hargiss, Messplay, Ostrum, Spicer, Darsie, Von Dyke, Minich. THIRD ROW: Brown, Duffy, Berry, Bragg, Settles, Hoverer, Goshorn, Englund, H. Morey, King, Bennett, Berry, R. Morey, Ashley, Hodges, Hart, Parsell Dougherty, Ricketts, Gerlach, Deay, Malone, Powell. FOURTH ROW: Selden, J. Touhey, Harms, Rixey, Roehl, Barnett, Russing, Biggs, Combs, Binnicker, Halliburton, Wilson, O ' Harra, Hinkle, Jaedicke, Dalrymple, Ramseyer. FIFTH ROW: Harlan, Beardmore, Klein, Shephard, London, Wheeler, Talley, Cassida, Banker, Williamson, Elliott), Replogle, Hawkins, Burton, Beeman, J. Findley, Perry, Romig Riss. NOT IN PICTURE: P. Fairchild, R. Fairchild, Fowler, Lowe, Lyttle, Muchmore, McPhee, Nystrom, Smith, Stevenson, Thompson. PLEDGES Sigma Phi Epsilon was founded Novem- ber 1, 1901 at the University of Rich- mond, Richmond, Virginia. Gamma, now one of 72 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1923. President, Jean Fisher; Vice-President, Glenn Kappelman; Secre- tary, William Ogg; Treasurer, William Burt, Bill Adams, Wichita William Akright, Kansas City Adrian Allen, Topeka Eugene Allen, Hutchinson Whitfield Anderson, Lawrence John Ashby, Hutchinson Lowell Ashby, Lawrence George Benscheidt, Hutchinson Dick Blasdel, Hutchinson Chan Boucher, Kansas City, Mo. Eugene Bullinger, Wichita Dean Campbell, Topeka Donald Carlos, Lawrence Harold Carrell, Winfield Arthur Cattlett, Lawrence Clifford Clark, Iola Merle Cline, Hutchinson Virgil Cooper, Lawrence Ivan Crabaugh, Kansas City Paul Drake, Topeka Woodfin Faucets, Kansas City Jack Fink, Topeka Charles Freshwater, Ft. Leavenworth Lee Garich, Lawrence Maurice Gibbons, St. Marys Robert Gurtler, Lawrence Dick Haley, Bennington Max Haley, Salina Junior Haverty, Lawrence Edwin Herriman, Kansas City, Mo. Francis Houston, Maitland, Mo. Robert Hutton, Kansas City, Mo. Albert Johnson, Kansas City, Mo. Dave Johnson, Kansas City, Mo. Emmett Johnson, Wichita James May, Topeka John May, Oskaloosa Donald McConnell, Lawrence Robert McNeive, Topeka Robert Mitchell, Humboldt Dory Neale, Topeka Frank Obenland, Clay Center Claude Owens, Topeka Keith Owens, Kansas City, Mo. Fred Perry, Baxter Springs Wayne Pierson, Topeka Edward Rawson, Kansas City, Mo. Art Riordan, St. Marys John Rix, Wichita Roy Rogers, Tulsa, Okla. James Russell, Kansas City, Mo. Eugene Ryan, Wichita Harold Schneider, Kansas City David Shoffner, Salina Harold Short, Kansas City, Mo. Courtland Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Stavros, Lawrence Dan Steffenson, Kansas City Robert Swenson, Topeka Richard Taylor, Winfield Robert Tinklepaugh, Kansas City, Mo. Rudy Valasek, Pittsburg, Pa. Donald Wade, Coffeyville Alvin Ward, Chanute William White, Lawrence Donald Wind, Winfield Lyle Woodring, Wichita ACTIVES fl N Bob Barnes, Wichita Robert Bell, Wichita Charles Boisvert, Topeka David Boyd, Kansas City, Mo. James Bradley, Merriam Al Brown, Kansas City, Mo. William W. Burt, Lawrence Charles Carson, Kansas City, Mo. Daniel Coats, Topeka William Doane, Lawrence Alan Dougherty, Topeka Bill Feeney, Gary, Ind. Alan Fisher, Lawrence Jean T. Fisher, Lawrence John Foust, Iola Wandron Fritz, Silver Lake Dean Gibson, Lawrence Desmond Gibson, Lawrence Judson Goodrich, Topeka Irven Hayden, Atwood Thomas Harkness, Ness City Thomas Hensley, Wichita William Hinrichs, Kansas City, Mo. Harry Hughes, Topeka Roland Hughes, Kansas City, Mo. Clarence Jarrell, Topeka Charles Johnson, Lawrence Donald Johnson, Topeka Max Johnson, Kansas City, Mo. Glenn Kappelman, Lawrence Karl Kappelman, Lawrence Leroy Krug, Lawrence Jack Mankin, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Moorhead, Atchison Robert Murray, Sedalia, Mo. Bill Ogg, Topeka Robert Pearson, Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth Peters, Wichita Stewart Rubacoff, Sunflower Arthur Ruppenthal, Russell Earl Shurtz, Sunflower Wesley Smith, Salina J. Paul Turner, Kansas City Ralph Ufford, Kansas City, Mo. Eugene Vignery, Concordia Joseph Walter, Kansas City, Mo. Thomas Wreglesworth, Chicago, Ill. FIRST ROW: Murray, W. Smith, Cottlett, Obenland, Haley, Russell, Jim May, Krug, J. Ashby, Woodring, Hinrichs. SECOND ROW: Ufford, Boyd, H. Hughes, Hensley, Barnes, Goodrich, D. Johnson, G. Kappelman, J. Fisher, Burt, Des Gibson, Ogg, Foust, C. Johnson, Carson, A. Fisher. THIRD ROW: Tinklepaugh, E. Johnson, Adams, Carlos, Houston, McConnell, Dean Gibson, Doane, Carrell, Ga rrich, Ryan, C. Owens, Dougherty, Wind, Perry, Rawson Crabaugh, Wade, C. Smith, Short, Wreglesworth, McNeive. FOURTH ROW: G. Allen, Shaffner, Bullinger, Jarrell, John May, L. Ashby, Taylor, A. Allen, Mitchell, Vignery, K. Kappelman, White, Neale, Drake, Fritz, Pierson, Stavros, Moorhead, Swenson. FIFTH ROW: Ruppenthal, Herriman, Campbell, Bell, W. Anderson, Valasek, Rix, Peters, Rogers, Boucher, Haverty, Faucett, Schneider, Clark Benscheidt. NOT IN PICTURE: Bradley, Gurtler, Harkness, Hayden, R. Hughes, A. Johnson, M. Johnson, K. Owens, R. Pearson, Turner. PLEDGES Donald Allen, Wichita Charles Boulware, Columbus Robert Bowersock, Columbus Edward Bradney, Columbus Ralph Brock, Sterling Kenneth Brown, Newton Lloyd Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Burton, Syracuse Charles Comstock, Kansas City, Mo. James Dudley, Kansas City, Mo. John Gosman, Kansas City, Mo. Zeno Gould, Syracuse Robert Grissom, Syracuse Robert Hill, Kansas City, Mo. Eugene Kane, Kansas City, Mo. William Kirshner, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Krueger, Emporia Robert Line, Kansas City, Mo. John LoPinto, Brooklyn, N. Y. Dave McCullough, Wichita Larry Mercer, Garden City Robert Morton, Leavenworth Robert Nelson, Kansas City, Mo. Norman Nolop, Leavenworth Dudley Potter, Turner Donald Simonson, Great Bend Robert Staples, Kansas City James Street, Independence, Mo. Robert Stroud, Peabody Robert Ulrich, Wichita Walter Yoakum, Leavenworth Paul Zeh, Kansas City Donald Zook, Kansas City, Mo. Tau Kappa Epsilon was founded Janu- ary 10, 1899, at Illinois Wesleyan, Bloom- ington, Illinois, Alpha Phi, now one of 49 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1942. President, Reg Robert- son; Vice-President, Leon Pagel; Secre- tary, Richard Truehart; Treasurer, Rob- ert Brock. I ACTIVES John Beach, Newton Harold Benitz, Leavenworth Robert Brock, Sterling Leonard Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Toby Brumback, Columbus Elton Closser, Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth Crowley, Leavenworth John Danneberg, Kansas City Floyd Davis, Kansas City, Mo. Charles Duvall, Ottawa Homer Evans, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Frohwerk, Kansas City Thomas Gregg, Los Angeles, Calif. William Haage, Garden City Morton Hauserman, Grandview Clarence Jenkins, Bucklin Robert Keeman, Seward Edward Linguist, Kansas City, Mo. Walter Linthicum, Wadsworth Howard McClellan, Lawrence Charles O ' Connor, Lawrence Leon Pagel, Denison Reg Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. Warren Rugan, Ellinwood Lloyd Shafer, Great Bend Larry Smith, Leavenworth James Stiller, Shreveport, La. Richard Truehart, Sterling Robert Truehart, Sterling J. B. Webster, Trenton, Mo. Robert Weintraut, Moline, Ill. Perry Wilcox, Garden City FRONT ROW: Jenkins, Comstock, Brown, Potter, Benitz, LoPinto, Dudley, Duvall. SECOND ROW: Robert Trueheart, McConnell, Keenan, Lindquist, Beach, Brock, Webster, Robertson, Richard Trueheart, Crowley, Carl, Davis, Weintraut, Rugan, Gosman. THIRD ROW: Yoakum, Brown, Simonson, Zook, Frohwerk, Staples, Mercer, Evans, Danneberg, Allen, Hauserman, Zeh, Brown, Shafer. FOURTH ROW: O ' Conner, Nolop, Bradney, Hill, Street, McCullough, Kirshner, Grissom, Gould, Line, Bowersock, Wilcox, Closser. FIFTH ROW: Ulrich, Burton, Stiller, Morton, Watson, Lint ' hicum, Boulware, Brock, Stroud, Krueger. PLEDGES Robert Aker, Kansas City, Mo. Floyd Bossmann, Kansas City, Mo. Eugene Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Burwell, Kansas City James Crawford, Hutchinson William Davis, Kansas City Robert Frazer, Kansas City, Mo. Alan Furnish, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Gratny, Kansas City Van Harrison, Kansas City, Mo. Donald Helm, Kansas City, Mo. John Hoffman, Kansas City, Mo. Lawrence Hyde, Kansas City, Mo. William Locke, Kansas City, Mo. Samuel NIcCamant, Hutchinson Jack Rowland, Kansas City, Mo. Norman Royer, Kansas City, Mo. Wayne Smith, Paola Roy Smoots, Kansas City, Mo. Forrest Stark, Kansas City, Mo. Gordon Stein, Overland Park Verne Stevenson, Kansas City, Mo. Elgin Thelen, Kansas City Charles Thomas, Kansas City, Mo. Louis Yonley, Kansas City Triangle was founded April 15, 1907, at the University of Illinois, Champaign, Illinois. Kansas chapter, now one of 18 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1927. President, Thomas Ackerman; Vice-President, Ric h ar d Deffenbaugh; Secretary, Harry Holzle; Treasurer, Glen Sankey. ACTIVES Thomas Ackerman, Kansas City Clifford Bates, Lawrence Lewis Carroll, Kansas City, Mo. Edward Curtin, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Deffenbaugh, Kansas City, Mo. John Fuchs, Kansas City, Mo. Joseph Hensley, Herington Harry Holzle, Topeka Clifford Kaarbo, Topeka Robert Prewitt, De Soto Alan Pringle, Kansas City, Mo. Glen Sankey, Kansas City, Mo. John Sanks, Kansas City, Mo. Kay Thompson, Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Pringle, Prewitt, Holzle, Deffenbough, Sankey, Kaorbo, Hensley, Curtin, Sanks. SECOND ROW: Helm, Hyde, Stein, Stevenson, Gratny, Crawford, Rowland, Smoots, McComant. THIRD ROW: Burwell, Locke, Brown, Thomas, Davis, Furnish, Hoffman, Bossmann. FOURTH ROW: Royer, Yonley, Smith, Aker, Frazer, Harrison, Stark. NOT IN PICTURE: Bates, Carroll, Fuchs, Thelen, Thompson 267 WINTER NUMBER, 1947 Battenfeld Hall was established at K.U. as a men ' s resi- dence in September, 1940. President, Arnold Englund. Vice- President, Gene Casement; Secretary, Austin Harmon; Treasurer, Lyle Wheatcroft. HEM FF I. 11 (1 RESIDENTS Wallace Abbey, Evanston, Ill. Thomas Allen, Topeka Khodagholi Amini, Teheran, Iran Robert Andrews, Bethel Darrel Brown, Oxford John Burnau, Leavenworth Eugene Casement, Sedan Eugene Crawford, Topeka John Dickerson, Meade Samuel Duran, Concepcion, Chile Harold Ehrlich, Marion Ray Frisby, El Dorado James Gettys, Wayne Charles Geyer, Topeka Howard Hallman, Pittsburg Jerry Hamilton, Wichita Delmer Harris, Concordia Wendell Heffelfinger, Effingham Wayne Hunt, Bunker Hill James Jackson, Osage City Donald Jarboe, Luka George Johnson, Chanute Andress Kernick, Overland Park William LaCombe, Shawnee Jack Lynn, Lawrence Edmond Marks, Topeka William Nagle, Hoisington James Nelson, Hutchinson Arthur Darman, Independence, Mo. Deane Postlethwaite, Delphos George Pyle, Morrill Robert Richter, Ellinwood Armando Rodriquez, Mexico City, Mexico Richard Rowe, Goodland Vincent Sarukinas, Newburyport, Mass. Dean Smith, Selden Frank Stalzer, Kansas City Gail Stout, Rothville, Mo. Edward Swain, Jefferson City, Mo. Harold Thill, Hamilton Paul Uhlig, Kansas City Carl Unruh, Wichita Lyle Wheatcroft, Utica Edward Whiteside, Fort Scott William Worwag, Sabetha Robert York, Spring Hill FIRST ROW: Postlethwaite, Pyle, Lunger, Harmon, Sumner, Reinking, Hollingsworth, Casement, Wheatcroft, Burke, Rodriguez, Marks. SECOND ROW: Unruh, Jackson, Brown, Geyer, Amini, York, Uhlig, Nagle, Allen, Abbey. THIRD ROW: Hallman, Jarboe, Thill, Harris, Rowe, Stout, Richter, Heffelfinger, An- drews, Oatman. FOURTH ROW: Whiteside, Smith, Crawford, Sarukinas, La Combe, Kernick, Worwag. NOT IN PICTURE: Burnau, Dickerson, Duran, Ehrlich, Eng- lund, Frisby, Haggard, Hamilton, Hunt, Johnson, Lynn, Nelson, Saffell, Stalzer. 268 THE JAYHAWKER 1 SIB Nu Sigma Nu, professional medical fraternity, was founded March 2, 1882, at the Uni- versity of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Beta Theta, now one of 42 collegiate chapters, was established at K.U. in 1909. President, Paul Carpenter; Vice-President, Jerry Wildgen; Secretary, J. D. Kabler; Treasurer, Dewey Nemec, PLEDGES John Corbett, Emporia Mac Geyer, Topeka Larry Arnspiger, Wellington Ward Benkelman, McDonald George Boone, Manhattan Frank Brosius, Wichita Hugh Buff, Topeka Robert Buechel, Wichita Paul Carpenter, Kansas City Mack Carter, Wichita Dan Coats, Topeka Richard Dreher, Salina Robert Fairchild, Kansas City Russell Frink, Lawrence Jim Gerlach, Manhattan William Hawley, Sunflower Leo Hines, Netawaka Harry Hoch, Middletown, Del. John Kanas, Kansas City Jack Lungstrom, Topeka Frank O ' Connell, Kansas City ACTIVES Charles Isaac, Newton Neal Jenkins, Kansas City J. D. Kabler, Wichita Keith Kennard, Kansas City Warren Kump, Oberlin Lawrence Lamb, Fredonia Roy Lawson, Kansas City Richard Looker, Emporia George McDonald, Kansas City Stanley, McEwen, Wichita Warren McKay, Wichita William McPhee, Santa Ana, Calif. Alexander Mitchell, Topeka Dewey Nemec, Agenda James Pike, Hurlock, Md. Richard Pokorny, La Crosse Owen Peck, Kansas City Eugene Schwartz, Hoisington Charles Powell, Columbus Bartlett Ramsey, Kansas City, Mo. Alvin Russo, Buffalo, N. Y. Jack Schroll, Hutchinson Donald Smith, Lawrence William Spicer, Los Angeles, Calif. Louis Stadnik, Lawrence Melvin Stevens, Hutchinson Rex Taggart, Lawrence Elwood Tippin, Wichita Robert Weber, Kansas City William West, Wichita Charles Wheeler, Kansas City, Mo. Jerome Wildgen, Hoisington Byron Yost, Lawrence FIRST ROW: Boone, Wheeler, McDonald, Kump, O ' Connell, Weber, Lawson, Tippin, Peck. SECOND ROW: McPhee, Hawley, Isaac, Yost, Buechel, Wildgen, Nemec, Lamb, Geyer, Schroll. THIRD ROW: Kanas, Hines, Carter, Buff, Kabler, McKay, Lungstrom, Smith, Frink, Looker. FOURTH ROW: Stevens, Dreher, Coats, Ram- sey, McEwen, Benkelman, Taggart, West, Fairchild, Gerlach, Brosius, Pike. FIFTH ROW: Hoch, Kennard, Corbett, Arnspiger, Jenkins, Spicer, Mitchell, Pokorny, Russo, Powell, Stodnik. NOT IN PICTURE: Schwartz. WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 1 7 269 iL Phi Chi, professional medical fraternity, was founded in 1905, by consolidation of two societies, one founded in 1889 at Vermont University, Burlington, Vermont, and the other in 1894 at Louisville Men ' s College, Louisville, Kappa Upsilon, now one of 64 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1915. Presiding Senior, Bob Adams; Presiding Junior, Paul Resler; Secretary, Arden Almquist; Treasurer, Tom Batty. FACULTY Dr. W. J. Baumgartner Dr. A. B. Leonard PLEDGES Robert Cater, Lawrence ACTIVES Don Gholson, Kansas City Lewis Goyette, Kansas City, Mo. Floyd Grillot, Parsons Schubert Henry, Kansas City Warren Hinton, Wichita Paul Hornung, Spearville Wesley Innes, Lawrence Norman Jennings, Garden City Royce Johnson, El Dorado Robert Jongema, Ulysses Edwyn Lewis, Dodge City Donald MacLean, Detroit, Mich. John Mansfield, Salina James Mercer, Lawrence Thomas Montgomery, Hill City Chester Moore, Lawrence Elliott Mosley, Lawrence Scott Mowrey, Luray Richard Munns, Kansas City Arthur Pincomb, Lawrence David Rau, Junction City Earl Redfield, Bucklin Bill Burns, Raymond Harlan Burns, Kansas City Robert Adams, Lawrence Leonard Akes, Dennis Arden Almquist, Salina Leonard Barrington, Wichita Thomas Batty, Kansas City Lafe Bauer, Broughton Dan Becker, Blackwell, Okla. Don Becker, Blackwell, Okla. Robert Borders, Arriba, Colo. Robert Bowser, Wellsville Russell Bridwell, Topeka Ben Bryant, Garnett Ben Budai, Detroit, Mich. George Cramer, Kansas City, Mo. Dick Emerson, Topeka Ralph Emerson, Topeka Jack Evans, Lawrence Merle Foland, Almena Earl Fowler, Kansas City, Mo. Jake Friesen, Hillsboro Robert Friggeri, Franklin Tex Fury, Salina Paul Kaelson, Lawrence Bob Rawlings, Tonganoxie Paul Resler, Pittsburg Wilburn Robinson, Kansas City Alexander Roth, Lawrence John Roth, Wichita Sherman Saffier, Wichita Ernest Schlachter, Kansas City Elton Schroeder, Pittsburg Edwyn Sherwood, Garden City Eugene Smith, Kansas City Harold Smith, Polk, Nebr. Robert Swanson, Waterbury, Conn. Dan Thompson, Almena Hoy Thompson, Allen Elias Throne, New York, N. Y. Fred Timms, Kansas City, Mo. Garth Van Pelt, Hutchinson Carroll Vorhees, Sunflower William Whitehead, Topeka James Winblad, Lindsborg Gilbert Winesmiller, Lawrence George Yeckel, Lawrence Donald Young, Arkansas City FIRST ROW: Rau, Dan Becker, Friesen, Schlachter, Adams, Cromer, Montgomery, A. Roth, Evans. SECOND ROW: R. Emerson, Fury, Timms, Batty, H. Smith, Leonard, Lewis, Gholson, Sherwood, Bridwell, Almquist, Mosley, Winblad. THIRD ROW: H. Thompson, MacLean, Throne, Hinton, Whitehead, Friggeri, Swanson, Yeckel, Fowler, Winesmiller, B. Burns, Schroeder, D. Emerson, Grillot. FOURTH ROW: Mercer, Mowrey, Van Pelt, Saffier, lanes, Akes, Barrington, Pincomb, Henry, Don Becker, Moore, Horning, Jongema, D. Thompson, Jennings. NOT IN PICTURE: Bauer, Borders, Bowser, Budoe, H. Burns, Bryant, Cater, Foland, Goyette, John- son, Koelson, Mansfield, Munns, Rawlings, Redfield, Resler, Robinson, J. Roth, E. Smith, Vorhees, Young. 270 THE JAYHAWKER Phi Beta Pi, professional medical fraternity, was founded March 10, 1891, Western Pennsylvania College, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Alpha Iota, now one of 32 collegiate chapters, was established at K. U, in 1910. President, Kenneth Knuth; Vice-President, Robert Puntenney; Secretary, George Steinberger; Treasurer, Deryl Fuller. 1 ' - 1 III Robert Alexander, Kansas City, Mo. Ted Aschman, Kansas City, Mo. Marvin Bills, Kansas City, Mo. Irwin Brown, Kansas City, Mo. John Buess, Pittsburg Ryland Coe, Tarkio, Mo. Bob Andrews, Bethel Ted. Batchelder, Garden City Rex Belisle, Miltonvale LeRoy Biggs, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Blackburn, Lawrence Bob Brenner, Kansas City Jerry Brown, Wichita John Campbell, Kansas City, Mo. Thomas Clinton, Wichita George Cook, Concordia Bob Corder, Weida Earl Coriell, Stanford, Mont. Ira Cox, Wichita Jim Crockett, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Cuthbertson, Sterling Frank Cvetkovich, Pittsburg William Dodson, Great Bend Seldon Dunn, Wichita Byron Eberle, Kansas City Clarence Francisco, Kansas City Deryl Fuller, Arlington PLEDGES Bob Cook, Kansas City, Mo. Don Dyche, Kansas City, Mo. Don Eakin, Greensburg Mark Hall, Denver Colo. Dorwin Lamkin, Lawrence Glenn McCray, Lawrence ACTIVES Wilbur Geeding, Chanute Ed Goldsich, Kansas City Orval Hamm, Jetmore Dennis Hardman, Blue Rapids Wayne Hird, Lawrence Tom Hogan, Chanute Waldo Holt, Kansas City, Mo. Glenn Hutchinson, Wakeeney Fred Joerns, Mission Clifford Jones, Liberal Kenneth Knuth, Nashville Findley Law, Hill City Bruce Livingstone, Seattle, Wash. Ed Long, Norwich Warren Miller, Corry, Pa. Max Musgrave, Minneapolis, Minn. G. E. Omer, Wamego Dale Ostlund, Simpson John Ott, Sabetha La Rue Owen, Nashville Milton Ozar, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Pearce, Kansas City, Mo. Max Moody, Onaga Howard Pyle, Wichita Don Saunders, Lamed Charles Sharp, Derby Joe Wells, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Peterson, Hutchinson Bob Puntenney, Newton Vic Reinking, Weymouth, Mass. Frank Riordan, Lawrence George Ryder, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Saylor, Lawrence Charles Shopfner, Fort Smith, Ark. Harold Shifrin, New York, N. Y. Bob Skillman, Tribune Dean Smith, Selden George Steinberger, Independence Niles Stout, Lawrence Marion Sumner, Independence Bob Tennant, Pittsburg Richard Todd, El Dorado Fred Totten, Sunflower. Cad Westfall, Halstead Charley Wood, Lawrence Emerson Yoder, Windom Paul Zook, Larned Sam Zweifel, Luray FIRST ROW: Dodson, Eberle, Tennant, Ryder, Cvetkovich, Long, Jones, Puntenney, Knuth, Steinberger, Fuller, Law, Sharp, Peterson, Francisco, Sumner. SECOND ROW: Zweifel, Omer, Skillman, Brown, Lamkin, Correll, Brenner, McCrady, Batchelder, Hogan, Crockett, Wells, Hird, Geeding, Cook. THIRD ROW: Corder, Stout, Hamm, Hardman, Joerns, Bills, Alexander, Hutchinson, Todd, Brown, Reinking, Westfall, Andrews, Totten, Shifrin. FOURTH ROW: Beuss, Pearce, Smith, Musgrave, Eakin, Holt, Belisle, Pyle, Ott, Dyche, Cook, Yoder, Outland, Moody. WINTER NUMBER, 1947 271 1-1-1EH 111 Theta Tau, national honorary engineering fraternity, was founded October 15, 1904, at the University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota. Zeta, now one of 24 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1912. Regent, Robert Brothers; Vice-Regent, Billie Dan Weldon; Secretary, Dudley Hanstine; Treasurer, Morris Borene. PLEDGES Larry Asel, Lawrence Jack Bruyr, West Mineral Joe Beeler, Jewell Bill Bergman, Bark River, Mich. Kenneth Borene, Sabetha Morris Borene, Sabetha Bob Brothers, Cherryvale Alvin Brubaker, Lawrence Harry Box, Lawrence Vernon Foster, Parsons Sam Campbell, Kenilworth, Ill. Bob Elliot, Kansas City, Mo. Russell Kunkle, Jeanette, Pa. ACTIVES Larry Guy, Winfield Dudley Hanstine, Wichita David Hay, Lawrence Bob Kunkle, Jeanette, Pa. Bert Ladd, Lawrence Lee Nelson, Garden City Wallace Proctor, Parsons Charles Shrake, Topeka Dean Smalley, Neodesha Dick Marcum, Long Beach, Calif. Joe Reid, Sabetha Clair Sommers, Ellsworth Francis Van Benthem, Atchison Billie Dan Weldon, Kansas City, Mo. Bruce Wells, Marshland, Neb. John Williams, Troy, N. Y. Jack White, Lawrence James Waugh, Eskridge Jack Waugh, Eskridge FIRST ROW: Guy, N. Borene, Weldon, Bradshaw. Brothers, Russell, Boer, Nelson, Williams. SECOND ROW: Von Benthem, Shrake, Proctor, Smalley, Reid, Wells, Robert Kunkle, Elliot, Marcum, K. Borene. THIRD ROW: Bruyr, White, Campbel I, Russell Kunkle, Bergman, Hay, Ladd, Brubaker, Asel, Sommers, Waugh. 272 THE JAYHAWKER The Ku Ku Club, men ' s pep organization, was formed at K. U. in 1921. Five years later it joined Pi Epsilon Pi, national fraternity of college pep organizations. President, Bill Wood; Vice-President, George Robb; Secretary, Tuck Cooke; Treasurer, Bill Schafer. PLEDGES Mead Almond, Wichita Robert Bell, Wichita Robert Cato, Overland Park Richard Cory, Eudora James Crawford, Hutchinson Walter Curtis, Parkville, Mo. Bernard Domann, Winchester Tom Ackerman, Kansas City Frank Anderson, Kanopolis Bob Andrews, Bethel Rodney Armstrong, Topeka Floyd Beery, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Blackwell, Earned Carl Bomholt, Cheney Phil Borden, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Bradley, Blue Mound Joe Brown, Washington Leonard Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Eddy Brunk, Kansas City Tuck Cooke, Kansas City, Mo. George Davidson, Lawrence Dick Deffenbaugh, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Dunne, Wichita Paul Ericson, Topeka Wilbur Friesen, Hutchinson Bob Glover, Kansas City, Mo. Luke Henderson, Lucas Walter Hoffman, Enterprise Gene Innis, Meade Findley Law, Hill City ACTIVES Homer Evans, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Foerschler, Kansas City Bob Franklin, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Goss, Pleasanton Coler Hissem, Wichita Donald Jarboe, Luka Robert Light, Winfield Clyde Lunger, Summerfield Jim Maloney, Wichita Clyde McKale, Garnett Jim Mueller, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Neff, Kansas City, Mo. Dewey Nemec, Agenda Francis Pierpont, Chanute George Polk, Independence, Mo. Bob Pugh, Topeka Lewis Mitchell, Scott George Polk, Independence Jack Rardin, Topeka John Stauffer, Topeka Earl Strong, Nashville Bob Stroud, Peabody William Worwag, Sabetha David Rau, Junction City Victor Reinking, Boston, Mass. Bill Richardson, Kansas City, Mo. George S. Robb, Kansas City, Mo. Reg Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. Howard Ryan, Abilene Tom Saffell, Berryton Oliver Samuel, Emporia Bill Schafer, Blue Mound Jack Schmaus, Iola Bob Schober, Topeka Don Schreiber, Kansas City, Mo. Larry Simmons, Iola Bob Southern, Ellinwood Jerry Ward, Great Bend Bill Wood, Meade FIRST ROW: Ward, Bomholt, Maloney, Goss, Ryan, Rau, Schafer, Wcod, Cooke, Brown Armstrong, A Brown, Blackwell, Deffenbaugh. SEC- OND ROW: Robertson, Mueller, Lunger, Jarboe, Hissem, Barden, Simmons, Schober, Crawford, Bradley, Reinking, Curtis, Ackerman, Polk, Andrews. THIRD ROW: Domann, Stauffer, Robb, Franklin, Henderson, Schmaus, Neff, Pugh, Beery, Schreiber, Brunk, Richardson, Light, Strong, Innis. FOURTH ROW: Hoffman, Cato, Stroud, Ericson, Dunne, Bell, Law, Friesen, Worwag, Cory, Davidson, Glover. NOT IN PICTURE: Anderson, Borden, Evans, Foerschler, McKale, Mitchell, Nemec, Pierpont, Polk, Saffell. WINTER 1947 273 [ b The K. U. Men ' s Glee Club, for those who enjoy group singing, now has over 100 mem- bers, more than twice as many as ever before. President, Lawrence Guy; Pianist, Marshall Butler; Director, Professor Joseph Wilkins. MEMBERS Wallace Abbey, Evanston, Ill. Wade Abels, Topeka Jack Adams, Galena Boyd Adsit, Lawrence Frank Alderson, Kansas City, Mo. Merton Anderson, Lawrence Loyal Babcock, Columbus, Mo. J Baxter, Stafford John Bayles, Lawrence George T. Black, Lawrence Melvin Borell, Dighton David Bradley, Wichita Darrel Brown, Oxford John D. Brown, Independence William Burton, Kansas City, Mo. Marshall Butler, Hopkinsville, Ky. Eugene Casement, Sedan Robert Chesky, Herington Eugene Chinn, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Cogswell, Piper Richard Collins, Wellington Edward Cooper, Newton Milton Coughenour, Wellsville Joe Cowdrey, Kansas City Byron DeHaan, LaGrange, Ill. William DeLay, Kansas City, Mo. Norman Denton, Horton Robert Duckworth, Merriam Louis Duff, Kansas City, Mo. Donald Dufendorf, Waterville Joseph Elliott, Kansas City Ralph Ellis, Humboldt Clarence Erickson, Brainerd, Minn. Nathan Ericson, Shawnee John Exley, Junction City Don Fincke, Kansas City, Mo. Maurice Fletcher, Pleasanton Dean Frazier, Caldwell Ernest Friesen, Hutchinson Gerald Fritts, Grantville Bob Gale, Syracuse Charles Gerber, Osage City Karl Giessman, Sunflower Dean Gilley, Downs Zeno Gould, Syracuse Ivan Groseclose, Stafford Robert Grubb, Great Bend Lawrence Guy, Winfield Steve Hadley, Kansas City, Mo. William Haggard, Wichita Eugene Halbert, Topeka Herman Hale, Kansas City, Mo. Clarke Hargiss, Topeka Scott Harvey, Salina Frank Heckendorn, Cedar Point Clarence Heinrich, Buhler Maynard Hesselbarth, Abilene William Higgins, Peabody Clarence Hooper, Topeka Charles Howard, Lawrence Jimmie Hughes, Kansas City Dwight Hunter, Wichita Donald Jarboe, Luka Daniel Johnson, Mission Darrel Johnson, Lyndon Keith Johnson, Kansas City, Mo. Don Jones, Lawrence James Jones, Beloit Kenneth Jones, Labette Norman Jones, Topeka Phillip Jones, Lakin Ira Dean Jordan, Chanute Arthur Keller, Claflin Robert Koenig, Edwardsport, Ind. Robert Kroesch, Hoisington Joseph Langworthy, Leavenworth Marvin Martin, Wichita Alan Martinek, Kansas City Robert Mathews, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Matzdorff, Bothell, Wash. Tom McGraw, Newton Donald Mendenhall, Lyons John E. Meyer, Hoisington Dean Miller, Topeka Bill Moore, Spearville Keith Neville, Topeka Herbert Nichols, Kansas City, Mo. Wilbur Noble, Leavenworth Cleo Norton, Quenemo Dan Palmquist, Hutchinson Donald Parnell, Topeka Don Patton, Hutchinson Sam Peacock, Stafford Eugene Peterson, Ottawa Vern Peterson, Welds Francis Pfeifer, Kansas City Sanford Porte, Fort Scott Perry Preusch, Healy Quijas Perry, Kansas City Robert Raber, Carthage, S. Dak. Myron Rake, Horton Richard Raney, Osborne Jack Rardin, Topeka Calvin Remmers, Elmhurst, Ill. James E. Roberts, Hutchinson William Roberts, Pine Bluff, Ark. Gene Robinson, Topeka Vernon Saylor, Burrton Clyde Scott, Belleville Earl Shaw, Meade Gregory Simms, Newton Jack Sink, Bonner Springs Richard Spencer, Arkansas City Bryce Sellard, Perry Samuel Stewart, Humboldt James Summers, Kansas City, Mo. Lloyd Svoboda, Lawrence Delloyd Tibbs, Silver Lake Eugene Voigt, Topeka William Votapka, Jennings Eldon Weaver, Mullinville Oval West, Muncie Lyle Wheatcroft, Utica Haworth White, Hutchinson John Wilcox, Bridgeport, Conn. Evan Williams, Nevada, Mo. Robert L. Williams, Hutchinson Del Woolworth, Lawrence Jack Worley, Marysville, Mo. Melvin Zack, Sunflower Walter Zurfluh, Clifton 274 THE JAYHAWKER ll E Li Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, was founded in 1925 at Lafayette Col- lege, Easton, Pennsylvania. Lambda, now one of 104 active chapters, was established at K. in 1930, President, Russell Brown II; Vice-President, Donald Ong; Secretary, Charles Crowley; Treasurer, Clarence Atkins. Tom Allen, Topeka Lawrence Allred, Sugar Creek, Mo. Ralph Anderson, Lawrence Clarence Atkins, Independence, Mo. John Awald, Schenectady, N. Y. Corb Bedell, Wichita Floyd Boosmann, Kansas City, Mo. Melvin Borell, Dighton Joseph Brown, Clayton, Mo. Russell Brown II, Denver, Colo. Orval Buehl, El Cajon, Calif. William Chalfant, Hutchinson Cecil Chappelow,Kansas City, Mo. George Clayton, Kansas City, Mo. Verne Collier, Colorado Springs, Colo. Thornton Cooke, Kansas City, Mo. William Cooper, Goodland Leslie Cox, Independence, Mo. Keith Criswell, Herington Richard Croker, Kansas City Charles Crowle, Rockford, Ill. Donald Culhane, Mitchell, S. Dak. Walter Dahlman, Chicago, Ill. Byron DeHaan, LaGrange, Ill. Hugh Donahue, Kansas City, Mo. Renz Edwards, Jr., Kansas City John Exley, Junction City John Fee, Cunningham Arthur Fitch, Arkansas City Robert Fountain, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Franklin, Kansas City, Mo. Fred Gableman, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Gray, Topeka Richard Harrington, Kansas City, Mo. MEMBERS Ed Harris, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Hess, Lawrence Dick Houseworth, Harveyville Walter Houston, Hickman Mills, Mo. Charles Howard, Lawrence Robert W. Hughes, Topeka Robert C. Hull, Dayton, Ohio John Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo. Arnold Jennings, Kansas City, Mo. Sid Johanson, Lawrence Dean Johnson, Kansas City Dale Judy, Leavenworth Jack Kennedy, Jr., Kansas City Ralph Kiene, Kansas City K. D. King, St. Joseph, Mo. Jerry Kuehnle, Washington, D. C. William LaCombe, Shawnee Daniel Leander, Solomon Robert Lindsay, Kansas City, Mo. Ralph Lundberg, Kansas City, Mo. Ralph McClung, Hugoton Merle McCoy, McPherson Don Mcllrath, Great Bend Kenneth Maddux, Sugar Creek, Mo. Luster Main, Kansas City Wayne Miller, Cheney Alfred Moore, Jr., Kansas City, Mu. Don Ong, Kansas City, Mo. William J. Palmer, Kansas City, Mo. William Perkins, Oswego Ralph Perry, Kansas City Rober t Petitt, Paola Don Pomeroy, Holton Ray Portwood, Kansas City, Mo. James Pratt, Colby Carlon Pryor, Little Rock, Ark. Richard Raidt, Kansas City, Mo. Henry Reed, Lamed Oliver Samuel, Emporia Frank Schull, Lawrence Glen Sewell, Sabetha Warren Shaw, Florence Jerry Shideler, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Shigley, Wichita Clyde Shockley, Kansas City, Mo. Charles T. Smith, Little Rock, Ark. Gordon Sondker, Holton Weldon Sportsman, Kansas City, Mo. Oren Stanley, Topeka Forrest Stark, Kansas City, Mo. David Stockwell, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Stucky, Lawrence Robert Stucky, Lawrence Leonard Sturm, Wellsville Clarke Thomas, Topeka Glen Turner, Lawrence Theodore Utschen, Topeka Richard Wakefield, Kansas City, Mo. George Waugh, Eskridge Robert Wehe, Topeka Donald Wells, Rochester, N. Y. David Wilkie, bilene Thomas Wilson, Fredonia Bernard Wolkow, Wichita William Worwag, Sabetha William Wright, Kansas City, Mo. Donald Yockey, Horton Jerry Zachow, Kansas City, Mo. Matthew Zimmerman, Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Stucky, Sportsman, Anderson, Stark, Brown, Pryor, Judy, Lindsay, Edwards, Lundberg, Worwag, Pratt, LaCombe. SECOND ROW: Chalfant, Gray, Allred, Jennings, Boosmann, Atkins, Ong, Brown, Crowley, Franklin, Stockwell Reed, Sewell, Kiene, Hess, Hull. THIRD ROW: Petitt, Fountain, Zimmerman, Cooke, Perkins, DeHaan, Croker, Portwood, Harris, Wehe, Stanley, Moore, Miller, Johanson, McCoy, Wilson, Utschen, BoreII, Pomeroy. FOURTH ROW: Sondker, Main, Shigley, Cox, Yockey, Raidt, Wakefield, Clayton, Perry, Palmer, Hughes, Harrington, Kennedy, Houston, Stucky, Howard, Collier, Macidux, Jenkins. NOT IN PICTURE: Allen, Awald, Bedell, Buehl, Chappelow, Cooper, Criswell, Culhane, Dahlman, Donahue, Exley, Fee, Fitch, Gablemon, Houseworth, Johnson, King, Kuehnle, Leander, McClung, McBroth, Samuel, Schull, Shaw, Shideler, Shockley, Smith, Sturm, Thomas, Turner, Waugh, Wells, Wilkie Wolkow, Wright, Zachow. ( r!. r- owl n 41 WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 275 Alpha Kappa Psi, national commerce fraternity, was founded in 1904 at the University of New York, New York City. Psi, now one of .59 collegiate chapters, was established at K.U. in 1920. President, Warren Huff; Vice-President, Dan Baumunk; Secretary, Duane Blanding; Treasurer, Arthur Partridge. MEMBERS FACULTY Prof. J. G. Blocker Prof. Alfred Seelye Prof. Alvin Tuohino Frank Anderson, Kanopolis Don Baumunk, La Harpe Marshall Bingham, Wichita Duane Blanding, Atwood Paul Briley, Chanute Norman Cochran, Milo, Mo. Verne Collier, Colorado Springs, Colo. James Crook, Spokane, Wash. Dick Cueller, Kansas City John M. Davis, Topeka Leonard Dietrich, Nortonville Charles Dillon, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Dufek, Hutchinson Ivan Farmer, Lawrence Gene Glotzbach, Plainville Delmar Green, Atwood COLLEGIATE Curvin Greene, Kansas City, Mo. Ralph Grier, Haven Louis Huber, Texarkana, Texas Warren Huff, Latham Sidney Johanson, Lawrence Orval Kaufman, Moundridge William Kopp, Lawrence Floyd Krehbiel, Moundridge Ralph Martin, Atchison Richard McConnell, Atwood Don Merrill, Parker Wiley Mitchell, Valley Falls Charles Mosher, Lawrence Omer Muchmore, Parsons Bill Mullarky, Kansas City, Mo. Morse Murray, Fort Scott Lloyd Noble, Kansas City Earl O ' Conner, Paola Arthur Partridge, Coffeyville William Pierson, Hutchinson Don Pomeroy, Holton Clifford Reynolds, Lawrence Harry Rice, Johnson County James Roark, Lawrence William Schuler, Lawrence Glen Sewell, Sabetha Charles Sherrer, Elwood Vergil Simon, Studley Joe Small, Sunflower Thomas Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Zellers, Holton FIRST ROW: Krehbield, Green, Partridge, Seelye, Mitchell, Small, Blocker, Glotzbach, Tuohino, Farmer, Huff, Davis, Blanding, Cochran. SECOND ROW: Mul- larky, Roark, Bingham, Smith, O ' Conner, Rice, Briley, Johanson, Reynolds, Sewell, Simon, Pierson, Dietrich, Kaufman, Cueller, Crook Anderson, Merrill, Sherrer. THIRD ROW: Dufek, Zellers, Baumunk, McConnell, Dillon, Collier, Martin, Greene, Huber, Grier, Murray, Kopp, Schuler, Noble, Muchmore. NOT IN PICTURE: Mosher, Pomeroy, Smith. The Owl Society is an hon- orary organization for junior men, whose selection is based on outstanding leadership and character. The society ' s pur- pose is to originate and pro- mote movements for the best interests of the junior class of the University and to create school spirit and fellowship. President, Dick Hawkinson; Vice-President, Terry Herriott; Secretary, Otto Schnellbacher; Treasurer, Bob Bock. FIRST ROW: Conboy, Hollingsworth, Bock, Herriott, Hawkinson, Schnellbacher, Ready, Johnson. SECOND ROW: Fos- ter, Rees, Harvey, Fairchild, Stalzer, Rummer, Miller, Judy. MEMBERS ril Robert Bock, Macksville Richard Hawkinson, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Ready, Wellington William Conboy, Lawrence Terry Herriott, Lawrence John Rees, Emporia Paul Fairchild, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Hollingsworth, South Haven Dale Rummer, Wichita Ben Foster, Hutchinson Harry Johnson, Manhattan Otto Schnellbacher, Sublette Harold Harvey, Fort Collins, Colo. Dale Judy, Leavenworth Frank Stalzer, Kansas City Norman G. Miller, Kansas City EXECUTIVE BOARD Rosemary Alderman, Ottawa Barbara Byrd, Kansas City, Mo. Carolyn Campbell, Kansas City, Mo, Tuck Cooke, Kansas City, Mo. Harriet Harlow, Kansas City, Mo. Dick Hawkinson, Kansas City, Mo. Ann Learned, Bartlesville, Okla. John McGuckin, Philadelphia, Pa. Don Ong, Kansas City, Mo. Lu Anne Powell, Kansas City, Mo. Buell Schilts, Clay Center Byron Shutz, Kansas City, Mo. Lois Thompson, McPherson Sue Webster, Garden City Joan Wharton, Wichita Keith Wilson, Independence, Mo. Joan Woodward, Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: McGuckin, Campbell, Hawkinson, Wharton, Thompson, Learned, Woodward, Webster, Cooke, Byrd, Ong, Powell, Schilts. NOT IN PICTURE: Alderman, Harlow, Shut Wilson. Student Union Activities, a member of the national Asso- ciation of College Unions, con- c-rns itself mainly with student recreation and entertainment. It has 13 committees and a secretarial staff of over 200 students. President, Joan W o o d w a r d; Vice-President, Keith Wilson; Secretary-Treas- urer, Tuck Cooke. The Inter-Fraternity Council is the governing body for so- cial fraternities at K. U. Presi- dent, Roy Shoaf; Vice-Presi- dent, Frank Gage; Secretary, Keith Congdon; Treasurer, Lloyd Eisenhower. FIRST ROW: Allen, Eisenhower, Gage, Shoat, Congdon, Hawkinson, Sime, Dougherty. SECOND ROW: Ackerman Ben- nett, Ufford, Birney, Mordy, Kiene, Sadder, Tinklepaugh, Marsh. THIRD ROW: Kaarbo, Hensley, Oberhelman, Higdon, Brown, McSpadden, Ewers, Swenson, Johnston, Brock. FOURTH ROW: Halsey, Kennedy, Woolcott, Veatch, Shaw, Haden. NOT IN PICTURE: Brady, Button, Danneberg, Darsie, Hall, Harvey, Hill, Holzle, Mal- lonee, Ratner, Robb, Robinson, Russell, Schreiner, Svoboda, Zimmer. T L - it 11 I 1_11 111 T. J. Ackerman, Kansas City Jim Allen, Reynoldsville, Pa. Jim Brady, Clyde, Mo. William Bennett, Ottawa Vern Birney, Bucklin Bob Brock, Sterling Jack Button, Anthony Leonard Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Keith Congdon, Winfield Richard Danneberg, Kansas City George Darsie, St. Paul, Minn. Bob Dougherty, Plainville Malcolm Dryden, Leavenworth Lloyd Eisenhower, Junction City Jerry Ewers, Caney Jean Fisher, Lawrence Frank Gage, Kansas City, Mo. John Gunther, Lawrence Paul Briley, Chanute Bob Casad, Wichita L. B. Hammer, Lawrence MEMBERS Larry Haden, St. Joseph, Mo. Charles Hall, Junction City Bill Halsey, Independence W. C. Hartley, Baxter Springs Scott Harvey, Salina Dick Hawkinson, Kansas City, Mo. J. E. Hensley, Herington Kenneth Higdon, Kansas City, Mo. Phil Hill, Arkansas City Harry Holzle, Topeka Kenneth Johnston, Peru Cliff Kaarbo, Topeka Jack Kennedy, Hutchinson Ralph Kiene, Kansas City Francis Longan, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Mallonee, Wichita Charles Marsh, Salina Harold McSpadden, El Dorado I. S. • MEMBERS Lorraine Hammer, Lawrence Laurel Leckron, Abilene Vic Reinking, Weymouth, Mass. Jim Mordy, Fredonia Bob Oberhelman, Kansas City, Mo. Darb Ratner, Wichita George Robb, McPherson Jack Robinson, Kansas City, Mo. Herk Russell, Iola Lee Sander, Madison Joseph Schreiner, Timber Lake, S. Dak. Rex Shaw, Topeka Roy Shoaf, Topeka Bill Sims, Wichita Lloyd Svoboda, Lawrence Bob Swenson, Topeka Robert Tinklepaugh, Kansas City, Mo. Ralph Ufford, Kansas City Bob Veatch, Hutchinson Ed Woolcott, Halstead Norbet Zimmer, Stickney Lois Thompson, McPherson Shirley Wellborn, Lyndon Betty Van der Smissen, Buhler FIRST ROW: Van der Smissen, Wellborn, Thompson, Leckron_ SECOND ROW: Hammer, Reinking, Briley, Cased. The I.S.A. was organized at K. U. in 1937 to help unite the independent students and promote their entertainment, extra curricular activities, intra- mural sports, and welfare. K.U. ' s branch is part of a large group of national col- l-giate I.S.A. ' s. President, Lor- raine Hammer; Vice-Presi- dent, Lois Thompson; Secre- tary, L. B. Hammer; Treas- urer, Shirley Wellborn. The student branch of Y. M.C.A., world-wide fellowship of Christian men, was founded in 1858 at the Uni- versities of Michigan and Vir- ginia. K.U. ' s branch, now one of 300, was established in 1882. President, Dean Smith; Vice-President, Wesley Elliott; Secretary, Wilbur Noble; Treasurer, Carroll McCue. FIRST ROW: Bathurst, McCue, Elliott, Smith, Linegor (Exec. Sec.), Noble, Alford, Reynolds. SECOND ROW: Johnson, Pfister, Franklin, Hormon, Barrett, Thomas, Partridge. THIRD ROW: Baumunk, Rummer, Wright, Varenhorst, Thayer, Wahl, Pryor. NOT IN PICTURE: Arnold, Eskelin, Lees, Pomeroy, Portugeuz. BNB MEM BERS . Richard Pfister, Hiawatha Don Pomeroy, Holton Jose Portuguez, Puerto Rico a. Carlon Pryor, Little Rock, Ark. Clifford Reynolds, Lawrence Dale Rummer, Wichita Gene Alford, Lawrence Roger Arnold, Norwood, Ohio James Barrett, Solomon Bruce Bathurst, Merriam Don Baumunk, La Harpe Wesley Elliott, Newton Ernest Eskelin, Kansas City Ralph Anderson, Lawrence Charles Arthur, Lawrence Willard Barber, Emporia Harold Beck, Iola Page Benson, El Dorado Donald Boardman, St. Francis Edward Boddington, Kansas City Robert Bond, El Dorado James Borders, Tonganoxie Shirley Boutz, Lawrence William Bright, Paola Robert Briley, Chanute Thomas Brown, Lawrence Granville Bush, Kansas City Richard Carpenter, Lawrence Bill Cole, Hutchinson Vernon Coss, Isabel Harry Crowe, Tulsa Gordon Danielson, McDonald Robert Franklin, Kansas City, Mo Austin Harmon, Lawrence Arthur Johnson, Kansas City Harry Lees, Oklahoma City, Okl Carroll McCue, Mound City Wilbur Noble, Leavenworth Art Partridge, Coffeyville ' HI I II IN PHI MEMBERS Robert Douglas, St. Joseph, Mo. Fred Hulett, Platte City, Mo. Robert Ellsworth, Lawrence James Jenson, Oakley Howard Engleman, Lawrence Robert Johnson, Lawrence Ralph Fleagle, Lawrence David Kester, Eureka Robert Foulston, Wichita Charles Knapp, Coffeyville James Galle, McPherson Robert Lee, Lawrence Roy Gallea, Neodesha Randolph Leonard, Lyons T. G. Gaston, Sterling Stanley Lind, Kansas City Roland Gidney, Arkansas City Weymouth Lowe, El Dorado William Guilfoyle, Abilene John Lynch, Salina Charles Hall, Junction City George Mankin, Kansas City Kenneth Hamilton, Manchester Robert Marietta, Salina Thomas Harkness, Ness City Keith Martin, Lawrence Elmer Harvey, Wichita William Martin, Lawrence Robert Helsel, Wichita Paul Mason, Wichita Reed Hoffman, Enterprise Marion Mathews, Winfield Dalton Holland, Harper John May, Atchison William Howard, Arkansas CityWilliam McElhenny, Topeka Oliver Hughes, El Dorado Larry McSpadden, Topeka Dean Smith , Selden Robert Thayer, Manhattan Edgar Thomas, Lawrence Ross Wahl, Lawrence Orin Wright, Jr., Coffeyville Glenn Varenhorst, Conway Springs Clemens Mong, Neodesha Robert Morrison, Lawrence Edward Moses, Great Bend Kenneth Nohe, Kansas City William Overton, Kansas City Howard Rankin, Lawrence Kenneth Ray, Kansas City William Read, Baxter Springs Richard Rogers, Manhattan John Royce, Salina Thomas Seed, Wichita Glee Smith, La wrence Edward Sondker, Holton Robert Stadler, Iola Roger Tilbury, Arkansas City Lewin Timmerman, Plentywood, Mont. Jason Yordy, Salina Richard Young, Lawrence FIRST ROW: Kester, Ray, Boardman. Douglas, Arthur, Smith, Howard, Seed. SECOND ROW: Guilfoyle, Cole, Sondker, Nobie, Lee, Mason, Hoffman, Martin. THIRD ROW: Mackin. Beck, Holland, Mathews, Morrison. Bobbling- ton. FOURTH ROW: Lynch, Borders, Harkness, Gidney, Rankin, Bush, Johnson. FIFTH ROW: Hamilton, Fleagle. Hughes, Mong, Barber, Engleman, Read, May. SIXTH ROW: Helsel, Hull, Crowe, Bond, Ellsworth, Moses, Gas- ton NOT IN PICTURE: Anderson, Benson, Boutz, Bright, Briley, Brown, Carpenter, Coss, Danielson, Foulston, Galle, Gal- lea, Harvey, Knapp, Leonard, Lind, Lowe, Marietta, W. Martin, McSpadden Overton, Rogers, Royce. Stadler, Tilbu.y, Tim- merman, YorcN, Young. Phi Delta Phi, professional legal fraternity, was founded in 1869 at Michigan Univer- sity. Green Inn, now one of 67 active chapters, was estab- lished at K.U. in 1895. Magis- ter, Charles Arthur; Excheq- uer, Robert Douglas; Clerk, William Howard; Historian, Glee Smith. The Student Forums Board sponsors cultural programs of interest to students, such as lectures, foreign moving pic- tures, and coffee discussion groups with convocation speak- ers. Members are chosen by a student council-faculty com- mittee. Chairman, H. Laur- ence Miller, Jr. • GREEN HALL • MICA= MIWADOTIZX numNIDAND W.PAIS, JAMES W9PDS,CEN MAW ANORWM,11:1114..36iXt,0nAw or W moms, TM UMW 11111111WIWI• M ma gorri L.; FIRST ROW: Jennings, Wilson, Hulings, Miller, Ready, Caldwell. fOfl George Caldwell, Wichita Nancy Hulings, Tulsa, Okla. Norman Jennings, Garden City H. Laurence Miller, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. Robert Ready, Wellington Keith Wilson, Independence, Mo. NI S MI Dr. Herman Allen Dr. William Argersinger Dr. Ray Brewster Aldo Aliotti, Saife, Rhodes (Dodeccanese) Jack Anderson, Coffeyville Thomas Bean, Winchester, Ill. Gerald Bechtle, Ottawa Floyd Beery, Kansas City, Mo. John B. Campbell, St. Louis, Mo. Jerry Carter, Lawrence David Chamberlain, Lawrence Joseph Delaney, Kansas City, Mo. Hugh Donahoe, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Duckworth, Merriam Richard Ferm, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Ferm, Kansas City, Mo. John Ferris, Kansas City, Mo. William Francis, Lee ' s Summit, Mo. Thomas Gier, Kansas City, Mo. Elwood Haines, Chanute William Harding, Kansas City Henry Hoffman, Shawnee FACULTY Dr. R. W. Clark Dr. E. D. Kinney Dr. Frank Dains Dr. S. A. Miller Dr. Paul Haney Dr. Robert Taft COLLEGIATE Kenneth Hoffman, Lawrence Richard Hoover, Kansas City Sam Johnson, Lawrence Weslee Kendall, Guide Rock, Nebr. Vance Kirkland, Liberty, Mo. Carl Kron, Kansas City, Mo. Warren Lowen, Lawrence William Mackie, Lawrence Lyman Magee, Bogalusa, La. Robert Malott, Lawrence Mack McCormick, El Dorado Gerald McGrew, Iola Carl Michaelis, Topeka John Minor, Marshall, Mo. Dean Patterson, Leavenworth John Poje, Kansas City James Ralls, Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth Reasons, Coldwater Albert Reed, Lawrence Dr. Calvin VanderWerf Dean Henry Werner Paul Renich, Lawrence Russell Runnels, Lawrence Robert R. Russell, Lawrence (inactive) Ray Stanclift, Shawnee Ambrose Startz, Liberty Stephen Stephanou, Lawrence Ellsworth Stephens, Lawrence Orvin Stevenson, Lawrence Jay Stewart, West Palm Beach, Fla. Ray Stoenner, Levasy, Mo. Lloyd Svoboda, Lawrence August Sveinbjornsson, Iceland Milton Truax, Lawrence Richard Walje, Pleasanton Thomas Whaley, Atchison Quentin Wheatley, Gypsum Archer Wilcox, Kansas City George Worrall, Kansas City Armand Wullschleger, Marysville FIRST ROW: Beery, McGrew, Chamberlain, Rolls, Kirkland, Startz, Clark, Lowen, Worrall, Duckworth, Malott, Michae- lis, Bechtle, Johnson. SECOND ROW: Edwards, Renich, R. L. Ferm, McCormick, H. Hoffman, Kendall, Hoover ,Truax, Sveinbjornsson, R. J. Ferm, Stephanou, Wheatley, Stewbrt, Poje. THIRD ROW: Minor, K. Hoffman, Bean, Runnels, Stoen- ner, Magee, Reasons, Aliotti, Carter, Haines, Donahoe, Kron, Whaley. NOT IN PICTURE: Allen, Anderson, Argersinger, Brewster, Campbell, Coins, Delaney, Ferris, Francis, Gier, Haney, Harding, Kinney, Mackie, Miller, Patterson, Reed, Rus- sell, Stanclift, Stephens, Stevenson, Svoboda, Taft, Walje, Wilcox, Wullschleger, VanderWerf, Werner. Alpha Chi Sigma, profes- sional chemical fraternity, was founded in 1902 at the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. The or- ganization is composed of two branches, the collegiate and professional. Kappa, now one of 46 collegiate chapters, was established at K.U. in 1909. Master Alchemist, Warren Lowen; Vice Master Alchem- ist, George Worrall; Recorder, Jay Stewart; Treasurer, Paul Renick Phi Alpha Delta, profes- sional legal fraternity, w a s formed in 1902 in Illinois, its roots springing from a genuine legal controversy. James Wood Green Chapter of K.U., now one of 46 active chapters, was established in 1913. Justice, Dan Aul; Vice Justice, Walter McVey, Jr.; Secretary, Aub- rey Earhart; Treasurer, Robert Luke. FIRST ROW: Earhart, Bowker, Frey, McVey, Hoke, Mackie, Hill, Oglesby. SECOND ROW: Nuss, Fowlie, Allphin, Covey, Cole, Booz, Hiebert, Rupar. THIRD ROW: Luke, Harding, Aul, Freeman, Sweet, Bailey. FOURTH ROW. Bilyeu, Hayword, l-liebsch, Moore, Hudson. NOT IN PICTURE: Donnelly, Harris, Neal. PN VL PLEDGES Charles Allphin, Lawrence Robert F. Bailey, Topeka Oral Bilyeu, Protection Austin Covey, Lawrence Gerald Fowlie, Lawrence Algie Harding, Independence Don Hayward, Butler Franklin Hiebert, McPherson Kenneth Hiebsch, Zenda Robert Hudson, Wichita Thomas Mackie, Lawrence Jean Moore, Wichita Warren Neal, Troy Vernon Nuss, Hoisington Dwayne Oglesby, Pratt Leo Rupar, Pittsburg Grove Sweet, Warrensburg, Mo. Dan Aul, Lawrence Jack Bowker, McPherson Jack Beebe, Dighton Robert Booz, McPherson Herbert Cole, Meade ACTIVES Francis Donnelly, Kansas City, Mo. Aubrey Earhart, Hutchinson Robert Freeman, Brewster Cecil Frey, Lawrence Milo Harris, Ottawa Robert Hill, Ottawa Ralph Hoke, Garden City Robert Luke, Lawrence Walter McVey, Jr., Independence FACULTY Kenneth Beasley, Topeka Jack Button, Anthony William Conboy, Lawrence H. Laurence Miller, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. Dr. E. C. Buehler COLLEGIATE Jim Crook, Lawrence Hal Friesen, Hutchinson Sarah Louise Marks, Valley Falls Jean Moore, Wichita Orville Roberts, Independence Richard Royer, Abilene FIRST ROW: Friesen, Beasley, Marks, Moore, Miller, Buehler, Roberts, Conboy, Roger. NOT IN PICTURE: Button, Crook. Delta Sigma Rho, national honorary fraternity whose membership is awarded for outstanding work in debate and forensic activities, was formed in 1904 by consolida- tion of four fraternities, founded at Michigan, Minne- sota, Northwestern, and Wis- consin Universities. Kansas chapter is now one of 84 ac- tive chapters. President, H. Laurence Miller, Jr.; Vice- President, Jim Crook; Secre- tary-Treasurer, Jean Moore. GREEN HALL • nIlt.711120.101CTUN MURIA .9 nn JAMES ' W9VCArrA rtmoLLI.1141YAN x mamas ulame, Phi Mu Alpha, national men ' s music fraternity, w as founded in 1898 at the New England Conservatory of Mu- sic at Boston, Massachusetts. Xi, now one of 77 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1914. President, Leo Horace k; Vice-President, Richard Kell; Secretary-Treas- urer, William Sears. FIRST ROW: Conrick, Spencer, Batchelor, Ballard, Geoffroy, Stalzer, Allsup. SECOND ROW: Spence, Schneider, M. Gaston, Krehbiel, Hahn, T. Gaston, Horacek, Wilkins, Carney, Briggs, Kell, Sears. THIRD ROW: Jent, Ruppenthal, Hopkins, Langworthy, Zack, Englund, Clayton, Grover, Gettys, Cater, Webber, Spalsbury, Goering, Brick. FOURTH ROW: Kinder, Anderson, Shanklin, Sellards, Tack, Bachmann, Wampler, Rose, Koenig, Grant, Adams, Kassinger. NOT IN PIC- TURE: Anderson, Basnett, Breitog, Butler, Byers, Cotton, Duffens, Friesen, Geltch, Hamilton, Nickerson, Simpson, Stuhl, Swarthout, Webster, Wiley, Yeckle, Zoschke. pH fl FACULTY Albert Spalsbury, Lawrence Charles Byers, Topeka Richard Kell, Topeka Laurel Anderson William Spence, Springfield, Mo. Robert Cater, Lawrence Lester Kinder, Oak Park, Ill. Gerald Carney Deane Tack, Gaylord Merle Clayton, Topeka Robert Koenig, Edwardsport, Dr. E. T. Gaston B. J. Webber, Coffeyville Melvin Cottom, Lawrence Ind. Waldemar Geltch J. B. Webster, Trenton, Mo. Roy Duffens, Topeka Floyd Krehbiel, Moundridge Dr. J. Nickerson Arnold Englund, Salina Joe Langworthy, Leavenworth G. Criss Simpson ACTIV ES Paul Friesen, Hillsboro J. C. Rose, Kansas City, Mo. Raymond Stuhl Edward Allsup, Lawrence Lamont Gaston, Sterling Erwin Schneider, Lawrence Dean D. M. Swarthout Merton Anderson, Lawrence Kenneth Geoffroy, Solomon William Sears, Topeka Russell Wiley Daniel Bachmann, Newton James Gettys, Wayne James Sellards, Osage City Joseph Wilkins David Ballard, Topeka Leroy Goering, Moundridge Ben Shanklin, Lawrence PLEDGES John Basnett, Kansas City Dean Grant, La Harpe Harry Spencer, Topeka Wayne Adams, Lawrence Richard Batchelor, Hays Marcus Hahn, Lawrence Frank Stalzer, Kansas City John Conrick, Kansas City, Mo. Jerry Breitag, Kansas City, Mo. Jerry Hamilton, Wichita Dean Wampler, Chanute Richard Francis, Lee ' s Summit, Mo. Sam Brick, Salina Robert Briggs, Sunflower Charles Hopkins, Abilene Leo Horacek, Topeka George Yeckle, Lawrence Melvin Zack, Sunflower Paul Grover, Wakeeney Wayne Ruppenthal, Kansas Marshall Butler, Hopkinsville, Ky. Clay Jent, Emporia Charles Kassinger, Lawrence Marvin Zoschke, Junction City City, Mo. FACULTY Micheal Andrews Albert Block Dessa Jane Bush Maria Ellsworth Gladys Hendricks Arvid Jacobson Karl Mattern Helen Marie Skilton Marjorie Whitney PLEDGES Howard Canniff, Lyndon Geraldine Nelson, Kansas City ACTIVES Gladys Blue, Emporia Carolyn Ann Campbell, Kansas City, Mo. Helen Dietzel, Kansas City, Mo. I Mary Annette Etter, Independ- ence Dorothy Feldkamp, Kansas City Julia Ann Fields, Kansas City Louise Haines, Kansas City Austin Harmon, Lawrence Robert Kiskadden, Wichita Frances Lawrence, Lawrence Martha McLean, Kansas City, Mo. Barbara Meyer, Wichita Nancy Miller, Iola Eileen O ' Connor, Wichita Shirley Otter, Norton Eleanor Pack, Kansas City Billie Rotermund, Independence Sara Ellen Smart, Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Feldcamp, Pack, Dietzel, Meyer, Campbell, Harmon, Smart, Conniff. SECOND ROW: Fields, McLean, Etter, Kiskadden, Nelson, Otter, Miller. NOT IN PICTURE: Blue, Haines, Lawrence, O ' Connor, Rotermund, faculty. Delta Phi Delta, national honorary art fraternity, was formed September 28, 1912, from the Pallette Club organ- ized at K.U. in 1909. Griffith ' s chapter is now one of 31 col- legiate chap to r s. President, Carolyn Ann Campbell; Vice- President, Barbara AI e y e r; Secret a r y, Helen Dietzel; Treasurer, Austin Harmon. Mu Phi Epsilon, national music sorority, was founded November 13, 1903, at the Metropolitan College of Music, Cincinnati, Ohio. Xi, now one of 57 collegiate chapters, was established at K.U. in 1911. President, Marjean Carr; Vice- President, Caroline Morriss; Secretary, Helen Howe; Treas- urer, Marlee Parmiter. FIRST ROW: Ringwalt, Gugler, Howe, Carr, Morriss, Thomas, Dunkleberg, Thalman, Schnabel, Webb. THIRD IN PICTURE: Brenner, Dudley, Walker. Parmiter Klussman, Brown. SECOND ROW: Orloff, Sloan, Harlow, Nelson, ROW: Ousley, Myers, Aldridge, Evans. NOT ivl FACULTY Jean Klussman COLLEGIATE Jeanne Aldridge, Kansas City Dorothy Brenner, Olathe Eleanor Brown, Bethel Marjean Carr, Wichita Ruth Dudley, Iola Maxine Dunkleberg, Osborne Beverly Evans, Olathe Lylas Gugler, Florence Harriet Harlow, Kansas City, Mo. Helen Howe, Lawrence Caroline Morriss, Topeka Martha Myers, Norwich Margaret Nelson, Concordia Violet Orloff, Kansas City Shirley Ousley, Lee ' s Summit, Mo. Marlee Parmiter, Eskridge Ardella Ringwalt, Oakley Emily Schnabel, Kansas City Shirley Sloan, Kansas City Elaine Thalman, Kansas City, Mo. Betty Rae Thomas, Leavenworth Elaine Walker, Wichita Sara Webb, Blue Springs, Mo. H FACULTY Leonard Brown M. E. Jackel Prof. E. S. Gray Stan Stockton Prof. R. S. Tait COLLEGIATE Thomas Ballinger, Santa Barbara, Calif. Robert Bessier, Wichita Morris Borene, Sabetha William Burgess, Jr., Oklahoma City, Okla. Wesley Copeland, Emporia Frank Gage, Kansas City, Mo. Clarke Hargiss, Topeka Stanley Jervis, Grosse Pointe, Mich. Robert Kunkle, Jeannette, Pa. Eugene Lea, Kansas City, Mo. Elmo Maiden, Lawrence Duane McCarter, Topeka William McCoy, Benkelman, Nebr. John McGuckin, Philadelphia, Pa. Harold Moore, Muncie, Ind. Robert Moore, Bellflower, Calif. John Morgan, Kansas City Leslie Pihlblad, Garfield Oran Pringle, Kansas City, Mo. Grady Randle, Portales, N. Mex. Perry Schuerman, Salina Richard Shea, Sedalia, Mo. Walter Sheridan, Emporia Howard Shryock, Kansas City, Mo. John Thiele, Topeka Robert Wehe, Topeka Max Wymore, Topeka FIRST ROW: Wymore, Stockton, Jackel, Jervis, Gray, Pi hlblad, Thiele. SECOND ROW: McCarter, Ballinger, Bessier, Borene, McCoy, Maiden, H. Moore THIRD ROW: Shyrock, Morgan, R. Moore, McGuckin, Wehe, Sheridan, Randle, Schu- erman, Kunkle. NOT IN PICTURE: Brown, Burgess, Copeland, Gage, Hargiss, Lea, Pringle, Shea, Tait Pi Tau Sigma, national hon- orary mechanical engineering fraternity, was founded at the University of Illinois on March 16, 1915. Psi, now one of 33 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1941. President, Stanley Jervis; Vice-President, Perry Schuerman; Secretary, Clark e Hargiss; Treasurer, Leslie Pihlblad. Scarab, professional architec- tural fraternity, was founded in 1902 at Illinois University. Abydos Temple, now one of 12 active chapters, was in- stalled at K. U. in 1922. Presi- dent, Millard Dornblasser; Vice-President, Paul McCon- nell; Secretary, Lloyd Heiberg; Treasurer, Warren Gibbs. I FIRST ROW: Rosenfield, Gibbs, Dornblaser,Heiberg, Jones, Singleton. SECOND ROW: Shepard, Horst, Horner, Yost, Bryan, Foster, Graves. THIRD ROW: LoPinto, Johnson, Heuer, Masterson, Welton, Hartronft, Wilson. NOT IN PICTURE: Bradley, faculty. Ii L FACULTY W. W. Richardson Warren Gibbs, Kansas City John LoPinto, Brooklyn, N. Y. G. M. Beal V. F. Smith C. W. Strieby Rufus Graves, Baltimore, Md. Edward Hartronft, Lyons Merle Masterson, Paola Paul McConnell, St. Joseph, Mo. R. J. Eastwood T. J. Geraughty COLLEGIATE Lloyd Heiberg, Pasadena, Calif. John Horner, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Rosenfield, Junction City Louis Shepard, Erie L. P. Johnson Jack Bradley, Overland Park Glenn Horst, Pomona Jack Singleton, Topeka L. R. Johnson Jack Bryan, Junction City Lon Heuer, St. Louis, Mo. Dexter Welton, Sterling, Ill. J. M. Kellogg Millard Dornblasser, Kansas City, Mo. Wayne Johnson, Chanute William Wilson, Merriam F. C. Parriott Herbert Foster, Topeka Warren Jones, Osage City William Yost, St. Joseph, Mo. 101 FACULTY vlelvin Cottom Prof. J. D. Stranathan Prof. G. W. Smith Prof. F. E. Kester William Reardon Clarence Coates PLEDGES Laurence Allred, Sugar Creek, Mo. John Awald, Schenectady, N. Y. George Darsie, St. Paul, Minn. George Eisenhardt, Greensburg Henry Earner, Lawrence Joseph Frankovitch, Kansas City, Mo. Guy Gettys, Independence, Mo. Venard Guyer, Topeka Bill Ha milton, Wellington Forrest Haynes, Chillicothe, Mo. Charles Irwin, Lawrence Hal Mahuon, Liberal William Malone, Wichita John Margrave, Kansas City James Marsh, Lawrence Joseph McMasters, Kansas City, Mo. Bertram Miller, Erie, Pa. James Miller, Sunflower James Millington, Pittsburg Carl Paden, Topeka John Patterson, Sunflower Boyd Pond, Lawrence Craig Ramsey, Erie Bill Roach, Lawrence John Shepp, Sunflower Walter Stockebrand, Garnett Dave Thomson, Irving ACTIVES Bert Brown, Topeka Francis Duddy, Abilene William Freienmuth, Lawrence Elmo Geppelt, Lawrence Ray Grantham, Leavenworth Jack Hollingsworth, South Haven Bruno Loewen, Newton Clyde McKale, Garnett Ralph Moody, Mound City Dale Rummer, Wichita Warren Shaw, Florence Harry Shinkle, Topeka Ted Tyler, Parsons Del Woolworth, Lawrence Charles York, Spring Hill FIRST ROW: Patterson, Irwin, Margrave, Firner, Shepp, Guyer, Shinkle, Duddy. SECOND ROW: Freienmuth, Geppelt, Hollingsworth, Grantham, Cottom, McKale, Reardon, Rummer, Tyler, Shaw, York. THIRD ROW: Roach, J. Miller, Awald, Malone, Ramsey, Millington, Hamilton, Allred, Stockebrand, Gettys, McMasters, Haynes. FOURTH ROW: B. Miller, Ma- huon, Darsie, Pond, Eisenhardt, Thomson, Paden, Loewen, Woolworth. NOT IN PICTURE: Brown, Frankovitch, Marsh, Moody. Kappa Eta Kappa, profes- sional electrical engineering fraternity, was founded in 1923 at Wisconsin University, Madison, Wisconsin. Gamma, now one of 7 chap- ters, was established at K. U. in 1924. President, Clyde Mc- Kale; Vice-President, Ray Grantham; Secretary, Dale Treasurer, Jack Hol- lingsworth. Tau Beta Pi, national hon- orary engineering fraternity, was founded in 1885 at Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Penn- sylvania. Kansas Alpha, now one of 73 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1914. President, Harry Johnson; Vice- President, Robert Moore; Sec- retary, Richard Shea; Treas- urer, Robert Wiedemann. FIRST ROW: Ramsey, Finney, Shea, Daasch, Jones, Johnson, Brown, McJones, Billuris, Maiden SECOND ROW: C. Foster, Brown Potter. Black, Crow, Kaufman, Hall, Schuerman. THIRD ROW: H Foster, Kenlall, Shryock, Stimson, Wehe, Dresser, Sheridan, Steiner. FOURTH ROW: Pihlblad, Gage, Hargiss, Eash. NOT IN PICTURE: Ballard, Copeland, Cous- ins, Day, Hoefer, Hoover, Jervis, Kanaga, Lash, Margrave, Moore, Ott, Prewitt, Pringle, Stockton, Toch, Wampler, Wiede- mann. T T FACULTY Prof. F. L. Brown Prof. Harry Daasch Dean J. 0. Jones COLLEGIATE David Ballard, Topeka George Billuris, Independence, Mo. Charles Black, Lawrence Leonard Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Wesley Copeland, Emporia Donald Cousins, Washington, D. C. Lloyd Crow, Columbus Robert Day, Topeka Calvin Dresser, Lawrence Dalton Eash, Great Bend Richard Finney, Topeka Charles Foster, Parsons Herbert Foster, Topeka Frank Gage, Kansas City, Mo. William Hall, Lawrence Willard Hargiss, Topeka William Hoefer, Higginsville, Mo. Richard Hoover, Kansas City Stanley Jervis, Grosse Pointe, Mich. Harry Johnson, Manhattan William Kanaga, Kansas City Milford Kaufman, Moundridge Weslee Kendall, Guide Rock, Nebr. Billy Lash, Ottawa Elmo Maiden, Lawrence John Margrave, Kansas City Robert McJones, Dodge City Robert Moore, Bellflower, Calif. Paul Ott, Lawrence Leslie Pihlblad, Garfield Richard Potter, Lawrence Robert Prewitt, De Soto Oran Pringle, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Ramsey, El Dorado Tylon Schuerman, Salina Richard Shea, Sedalia, Mo. Walter Sheridan, Emporia Howard Shryock, Kansas City, Mo. John Steiner, St. Louis, Mo. Step hen Stimson, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Stockton, Lawrence Arthur Toch, Lawrence Dean Wampler, Chanute Robert Wehe, Topeka Robert Wiedemann, Lawrence T FACULTY Prof. F. L. Brown Stan Stockton COLLEGIATE David Ballard, Topeka Charles T. Black, Lawrence Lloyd Crow, Columbus George Darsie, St. Paul, Minn. Calvin Dresser, Lawrence Dalton Eash, Great Bend Charles Foster, Parsons Herbert Foster, Topeka Edsel Johnson, Bridgeport Harry Johnson, Manhattan Bill Kanaga, Kansas City Milford Kaufman, Moundridge Hugh Kerschner, Kansas City Gerald McGrew, Iola John McGuckin, Philadelphia, Pa. Harold McSpadden, El Dorado Les Pihlblad, Kansas City Max Wymore, Topeka FIRST ROW: Wymore, Black, Stockton, McGuckin, Crow, Darsie, H. Johnson. SECOND ROW: Foster, F. Johnson, Pihlblad, Dresser, Kershner, Foster, Eash, Ballard. NOT IN PICTURE: Brown, Kanaga, Kaufman, McGrew, McSpadden. Sigma Tau, national hon- orary engineering fraternity, was founded in 1904 at Ne- braska University, Lincoln, Ne- braska. Lambda, now one of 25 collegiate chapters, was es- tablished at K. U. in 1916. President, John McGuckin; Vice-President, Les Pihlblad; Secretary, Charles T. Black; Treasurer, Herbert Foster. WINTER NUMBER, 19 7 285 FIRST ROW: Spicer, Stacey, McCue, Irwin, Thalman, Robb, Scott. SECOND ROW: Peck, Anderson, Briley, Wellborn, Reynolds, Zollinger, Lunger, Carpenter. THIRD ROW: Caldwell, Rummer, Wilson, Burtscher, Jennings. NOT IN PICTURE: Bathurst, Bell, Dietrich, Evans, Gunther, Hall, Harmon, Hogdson, London, May. The All Student Council, student governing body, has power to unite the students in a single, self-governing body, promote and regulate extra-curricular activities, coordinate student activities with programs of faculty and administrative bodies, promote the Uni- versity ' s highest interests, and cultivate loyalty to the University among its students, President, John Irwin; Vice-President, George Caldwell; Secretary, Elaine Thalman; Treasurer, Carroll McCue. MEMBERS Joan Anderson, Emporia Bruce Bathurst, Merriam Everett Bell, St. Louis, Mo. Paul Briley, Chanute Marjorie Burtscher, Hays George Caldwell, Wichita Lorraine Carpenter, Clain Leonard Dietrich, Nortonville Homer Evans, Kansas City, Mo. John Gunther, Lawrence Charles Hall, Junction City Tom Harmon, Lawrence Eloise Hodgson, Salina John Irwin, Merriam Norman Jennings, Garden City Wilmer Landon, Russell Clyde Lunger, Summerfield John May, Sunflower Carroll McCue, Mound Valley Owen Peck, Kansas City Clifford Reynolds, Lawrence George Robb, McPherson Janet Rummer, Wichita Anne Scott, Pratt Bill Spicer, Los Angeles, Calif. Emily Stacey, Lawrence Elaine Thalman, Kansas City, Mo. Shirley Wellborn, Lyndon Keith Wilson, Independence, Mo. Mary Jane Zollinger, Junction City K. U. From Harvard (Continued from Page 207) Think it will rain soon? he asked. Naw. Never, said the farmer. But look at those clouds up there, said the tourist. The farmer cocked a jaundiced eye heavenward and squinted critically. Naw, them ' s empties coming back from Iowa. Now I suppose that there are stories like those about nearly all states, but the point is that in Kansas we tell them about ourselves. The only attitude which could have enabled men to sur- vive in the early days of the State was one of critical pessimism, constantly predicting and preparing for the worst while at the same time struggling to make things better. The superficial op- timist would have been crushed be- neath the burden of the grasshopper and drought years, but the embittered pessimist hung grimly on. So griping is typical of Kansas, but I think it is especially typical of the And it is the University ' s persistent dissatisfaction with things as they are which has enabled it to make such progress as it has during the last few years in matters such as curricular reform for instance. Here at Harvard I have an unusual opportunity to talk with men from other institutions, and I am continually surprised (and vastly pleased) to discover how much farther along we are than many other places. But like a typical Kansan, I suppose that when I return I will talk only about those that are farther along than we are, for the fact remains that there are some which have done more in the way of thinking through the function THE JAYHAWKER -,9111111. • of education in relation to modern living than we have, and I for one shall not be satisfied until we have at least given them a run for their money. I don ' t think there can be any ques- tion that there is need for improve- ment—and in a hurry. I do not know of anyone who would argue seriously that modern education as presently constructed is adequate to the task before it. That task is, after all, of enormous dimensions. It has been said so many times before that unless we can solve the problem of war and the equally pressing economic problem of our time ( which if left unsolved will almost certainly lead to war) the thing which we like to call western civilization may easily perish. These things have been said so often that we regard them as trite—and yet they are none the less true for that. It should be equally obvious that these problems can not be solved within the frame- work of nineteenth century thinking, In periods of great transition the force of tradition which normally determines the social relations of men loses its adequacy. In such periods men must either THINK—or they must suffer and possibly perish. At present as a nation we are not THINKING. We seem determined to write a new theme song for the Republic—a lullaby with Senator Taft as choir master. Now, Dean, I realize that I will be accused of bias, but is seems to me that K. U. is struggling valiantly, and I think we can say quite successfully, to meet the tremendous obligation which the crisis of our time imposes upon higher education. Even now I What could I do? She was bigger than I. can hear some of my hyper-critical col- leagues snort when they read this. Well, if they snort that is just what I am talking The whole thesis of this piece is that the superbly de- veloped habit of self-criticism which typifies K. U. is the very quality which has made us a slightly better university than we have any right to be. We will gripe, gripe, gripe at each other until we get somewhere. Whatever else we have at the old place we almost always have intellectual ferment, and though we unquestionably have many undesir- able qualities ( including a shameful salary scale), complacency is not one of them. So I write rather wistfully, Dean, and I shall be very glad to return. But I have no doubt that once back I shall revert very rapidly to the Kansas pat- tern. Within two weeks I will be ex- plaining to all who will listen that if it weren ' t for the incredibly knuckle- headed administrators around the joint, together with the equally incredible obtuseness of my colleagues who per- sist in thinking otherwise despite my efforts to explain the true path, and the totally incredible laziness of the so-called students who have obviously come to K. under the delusion that it was a cross between a vacation resort and a matrimonial agency—why if it weren ' t for all these things (which I will be perfectly willing to elaborate in the greatest detail) there might be a chance of making an educational institution out of this place after all. As ever, HILDEN 0 Accent International (Contimied from Page 231) Park of Hawaii, and Amparo Villafane of Puerto Rico. Hobbies are as varied among the foreign students as are their names. Most of their interests do, however, have an American twang. Close to fifty per cent admitted that sports were their favorite source of spare time enjoyment. Dancing and music ranked second in a popularity poll of outside interests, with stamp collecting com- ing in After these first three, the field was spread, choices ranging 286 Impressionism 287 WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 from fencing and carpentry to card tricks and antiques. One Latin Romeo answered simply that his main hobby was women. Among our visiting populace are some accomplished linguists. Eleven foreign students speak four or more languages in addition to English. Claes-Goran Rende of Sweden has command of seven tongues in all. Several students have their families here with them. Joao Moojen from Brazil lives in Lawrence with his wife and four children. Claes-Goran Rende of Sweden and Fernando Torres of Costa Rica both have their wives here with them. Peter MacDonald of Scot- land was in the R.A.F. during the war and married a Kansas girl. She lives in Salina. Then, on the potential side we have John Raeder of Norway, whose fiance, Anne Marie Moestue, arrived at the University only recently from Scandinavia. It ' s a small world all right, but our appreciation for the people in it is growing larger all the time. • What Every Man Should Know (Continued from Page 211) While skidding down 14th at 60 miles an hour, he turns carelessly around to talk to the people in the back seat so that his date can see his Greek god profile. This type of male claims to be an expert on the art of driving with no hands on the wh eel. He thinks he is hilariously funny after he ' s swallowed a few beers, and it is his date ' s special function to sit blinded by cigarette smoke and serve as an admiring audience. Dancing with this type of male requires a rubber spine and numerous double joints, for he delights in crushing the girl against his starched shirt front while executing sacroiliac-snapping dips and glides. Invariably leaving a party early so he ' ll have time to run out of gas, he runs hurriedly through his well-pol- ished line and smoothly maneuvers himself into position. It is at this point with this type of male, that girls are often forced to resort to such fran- tic suggestions as, I know! Let ' s go wading in Potter Lake! or I ' m hungry! Let ' s go get hamburgers with onions! Diverted only momentarily, he will take up later on at the door- way, completely unabashed before the housemother ' s wilting glare. In case the men reading this article have sworn, after the second para- graph, to grow three-foot beards and enter the Sacred Brotherhood of Mate- less Males, let us say that we learned to get along without the butter, nylons, and steaks—but we ' re convinced that men are completely For in the immortal words of Tennyson— man is still man and master —and don ' t we women know it! Kansan Story (Continued from Page 242) setters downstairs are receiving finished copy, changing typewritten words to characters in lead and setting them in their proper places. Whatever the copy says, the linotypists If it reads, Prof. Kookurgoos is crazy, the come home now. Daily Kansan is certainly going to read, Prof. Kookurgoos is crazy. At 1.45 p.m. the press begins to roll. It really doesn ' t roll; it goes back and forth, jarring the whole Shack with each vibration. Finally, at 3 the cycle has been completed, and another issue of the Daily Kansan hits the street. The next time a harried individual corners you and says that the Kansan would like to know what you think about the marriage vows of the Uban- gis or the condition of campus politics, don ' t run. He ' s harmless. It ' s probable that he ' s the same person you saw taking notes at convocation or over- heard quizzing the chancellor. If your questioner is a Kansan reporter he has probably run the gauntlet from the Tidlywinks club to the A. S. C. Yes, 9000 K. U. students hold a helluvalotuv meetings. Just ask a Kansan reporter — he has to cover them. Popp Mama says for you to 288 THE JAYHAWKER Going out For Diviner? HOW ABOUT STEAKS! • You ' ll Find The Best Ones At The DE LUXE CAFE 711 Mass. St. COVERS BY h401, OY 2857 N. Western Ave. Chicago 18, Illinois WHEN SPOTS OR GRIME APPEAR THAT ' S THE TIME TO CALL 7 5 • LET THE NEW YORK CLEANERS 926 Massachusetts CARE FOR YOUR CLOTHES Advertisements make the 1947 JAYHAWKER cheaper to you. Show your appreciation by patronizing the merchants listed in these pages. Bob Williams, Advertising Manager THIS YEAR, more Dad ' s dreams are being realized than ever before. If your Dad had this dream—help it to success by diligent study at school and sound busi- ness thought to the handling of the money which was planned for your education. WHETHER YOU attend K.U. now or later you will find willing help at The Friendly Student Bank in Lawrence. The Lawrence National (Member F.D.I.C.) WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 289 LAWRENCE SAN:TARY MILK AND ICE CREAM COMPANY • HEALTHFUL AND DELICIOUS THAT ' S M LK AND Velvet Yee e4eam Phone 608 Foot of Vermont Cali of the Outdoors For Your Campus comfort in Spring Sportswear Step into the spring sea- son in comfort and smartly styled clothing. To be assured of Fabric, Fit, and Fashion Arrow Shirts Tics Dobbs Hats Bostonian Shoes Society Brand Suits Hickock Belts Jewlery MacGregor Sportswear Botany ' 500 ' Slacks OBER ' S First With What Men Want 1 Most JAYHAWK CAFE Invites You BETWEEN CLASSES AT MEAL. TIME OR JUST ANYTIME • Phone 2007 I 4th Ohio CARL CLIFTON 290 THE JAYHAWKER C E K. U. Novelties VISIT THE HILLSIDE No. it AN ESSENTIAL COMMODITY FOR HEALTH AND COMFORT Phone 48 AMERICAN SERV-ICE COMPANY LAWRENCE KANSAS Pennants, Pillows Bracelets, Compacts Key chains, Ch arms Lockets, Pins Tie Clasps, Book Ends Paperweights Stationery, Post Cards Stickers, Ashtrays Iayhawk Playing Cards ROWLANDS Two Book Stores 1401 Ohio 1237 Oread Ph. 1401 Ph. 492 • For the Best In Refreshment Entertainment Delicious . . . • Cokes • Sundies • Malts • Shakes Prescriptions Filled • 616 W. 9th Ph. 1487 141,000,000 piggy banks That ' s a lot of piggy banks . . . one for every person in the United States . . . and laid end to end, the pennies in those piggy banks would buy a lot of electricity. Breaking down an electric dollar, today, we find that less than five pennies worth of electricity will do a week ' s washing for an average size family . .. one electric penny will vacuum clean six large roomsize rugs or make 35 slices of toast . . . or brew 20 cups of coffee. Yes, penny for penny, dollar for dollar, your electric bill represents one of the biggest bargains in your family budget. . C . 1 E LIP117 (21P77 WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 293 MOTOR IN WE SERVICE ALL MAKES OF CARS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH MOTOR CARS — SKELLY PRODUCTS Tire Repair and Recapping 827 VERMONT PHONE 607 This Is No Problem les A Frurfiq Nojucts Quality Service - vz co. Cities Service Koolmotor Trained Men and Phone 4 Gas and Oils Best Equipment THE WOODCRAFT CO. FURNITURE REPAIRED AND REFINISHED RECONDITIONED FURNITURE FOR SALE 730 MASS. PHONE 640 ROTHMOO I am the ROTHMOOR SCOTTY. You will find my picture on a label in every ROTHMOOR coat and suit that is styled exclusively for you, the college gals, for perfect fit and figure flattery. Exclusive at tffeavei5 agamineitid 947 ,ay-Aav (er Hotographer -V V V Tope a, Kansas WINTER NUMBER, 1947 295 When You Want That New Suit for Spring` Come to GI BS • Allotments in Single and Double Breasted styles are Arriving regularly GH3dS Clothing c©o 811 MASS. ST. I knew I shouldn ' t have mentioned that Carlye dress at Johnson ' s! JOHNSON ' S 835 Mass. St. Phone 771 CARTER ' S STATIONERY Student ' s Supplies Stationery Quality Merchandise Courteous Service 1025 Massachusetts St. Lawrence, Kansas PHONE 1051 We Solicit Your Business For- Puretest Drugs Toiletries for Ladies Toiletries for Men Foods and Supplies Prescriptions First Aid Products Fine Candies Stationery Cigars and Pipes STOW TS Rexai Store H. W. Stowits H. W. Stowits, Jr. 847 Mass. St. Phone LAWRENCE Offers You the Advise of friendly trained FORD MECHANICS Genuine FOR ports • Your Friendly FORD Dealers I n Lawrence 609 Mass. Ph. 277 296 THE JAYHAWKER LRAKE ' S BAKERY TOPS In Fine Pastries PHONE 61 907 MASS. Rte Love Box Company CORRUGATED AND WOOD SHIPPING CONTAINERS 612 SOUTH COMMERCE STREET WICHITA, KANSAS 1H L T HE 1_1 I E 7 ( 11 I iN GSLEY Fruit Company Wnolesale Fruit and Produce WICHITA KANSAS WINTER NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 297 c ya J__ ot iE ( t, A-12Z „ A A . S - • --..e • -- .4 ' ( - )1.b ;-- 0 , ' 7) 7 149-aetic is the Word for the New PARKER ' 51. ' Magic Wand Pen See it Today At the TEXT BOOKS ARTISTS ' MATERIALS NOTEBOOKS AND SUPPLIES MEDICAL INSTRUMENTS ENGINEERS ' EQUIPMENT Student Book Store f c .. UNION BUILDING SPRING NUMBER, 1947 n N] NAME PAGES NAME PAGES American Service Company 85, 187, 290, 396 Lawrence Hardware 394 Braemoor 195 Lawrence National Bank 89, 198, 288, 399 Bricks 89 Lawrence Outlook 85 Burger Baird 405 Lawrence Sanitary Milk 84, 186, 289, 402 Calvert Co. Inc. 81 Lawrence Typewriter Exchange ' 186 Camel Cigarettes 1, 98, 202, 300 Love Box Company 84, 188, 296, 399 Capper Printing Co. 90 Meadow Acres Ballroom 197 Carters Stationery 89, 186, 295, 403 Memorial Union 93, 186, 291, 406 Chateau 394 Mindlin ' s 190, 402 Chesterfield Cigarettes 96, 200, 300, 408 Molloy Covers 187, 288, 403 Christopher Studio 194, 294, 401 Morgan-Mack 88, 196, 295, 399 Coca-Cola 91, 193, 292, 398 Motor-In 195, 293, 397 Commonwealth Lawrence Theaters 83, 191, 298, 395 New York Cleaners 85, 196, 288, 396 Crosby Brothers Co. 85, 197, 291, 403 Ober ' s Clothing Co. 187, 289 De Luxe Cafe 87, 196, 288, 393 Palace Clothing 197 Dine-A-Mite 392 Picture House 92 Drakes Bakery 94, 187, 296, 397 Rankin Drug Co. 94 Endlich, Harry 393 Rogers Canning Co. 189, 299, 407 First National Bank 86, 404 Rothschilds 406 Franks Furniture Co. 94, 188 Rowlands 197, 290, 394 Fritz Co. 84, 188, 293, Royal College Shop 88, 196 Funks Mortuary and Chapel 92, 198 Rumsey ' s Ambulance Service 182 Gibbs Clothing 88, 197, 295, 393 Santa Fe Watch Co. 197 Grant-Billingsley 86, 195, 296, 400 Seymour Packing Co. 187 Harzfelds 297 Stowits Rexall Store 186, 295, 403 Hillside Pharmacy 92, 290, 402 Student Book Store 93, 192, 297, 396 Hotel Jayhawker 87, 403 Thompsons Cafe 393 Independent Laundry and Dry Cleaners 87,402 Town-Country Club Furs 95, 199 Jayhawk Cafe 88, 289 Ward ' s Flowers 84, 188 Johnson ' s Dress Shop 85, 196, 295, 396 Weavers 86, 192, 293, 392 Kansas City Life Insurance 394 Woodcraft Co. 188, 293, 393 Kansas City Power and Light Co 87, 190, 290, 397 Wright Appliance Store 85 Kansas Electric Power Co. 92, 198, 291, 400 Zim ' s 404 ' DEAN OSTRUM, EDITOR • DICK CARMEAN, BUS. MGR. INDEX Advertising Index 303 Campus Beautiful 306 Candidly a Jayhawker 312 A Queen is Crowned 320 Spring Comes to Kansas 330 A Trip to the City 334 Rain and the Relays 338 A J ayhawker is Born 340 Personalities with a Past 342 Spring Election 346 Midsummer ' s Night Dream 348 59th JAYHAWKER 350 Symphony Orchestra 352 Concert Band 353 Lambda Chi Alpha 354 Mortar Board 355 Sachem 356 Senior Laws 357 Senior Nurses 358 Class of ' 47 359 A Cappella Choir 391 1 RECOMMENDED READING As the spring number of the JAYHAWKER marks the end of the 59th volume we ask your indulgence while a few bouquets are thrown the way of the 1947 staff, the largest in the history of the annual. We ' ll wager there ' s never been a Business Manager to equal the all-around ability of Dick Carmean. Dependability has been his hallmark and no greater compliment can be paid him than that he managed a $35,000 business this year without a second worry to his Editor. Dick ' s successor, Larry Simmons, has an outstanding record to emulate, but if his untiring efforts in the office this year are any criterion he is well on his way. All year our emphasis has been on pictures and for this reason we are in great debt, literally as well as figuratively, to our excellent group of photographers. Hank Brown leads the list and no superlatives are too great to bestow upon his smiling countenance. For quick service and loyal cooperation Duke D ' Ambra is a tradition with all JAY- HAWKER editors. In addition to a full schedule plus playing in a Hill dance band, energetic Bob Graham took all ality shots for the first three issues and did a bang-up job to boot. Another man with great promise for future annuals is Mort Hauserman. Allan Cromley has been the Editor ' s right-hand man on every issue and if he hadn ' t decided to leave the University in February of ' 48 he would have been a sure-fire bet for next year ' s editor. No apologies are due, however, for the 1948 position promises to be ably filled by capable, working Keith Wilson. To Keith goes the honor of being the youngest editor in the history of the University after two year ' s of wheel-horsing for every activity on the pus known to a B.M.O.C. Along the line of art, Yogi Williams has carried the major burden and we can only say we are proud to have been able to publish his work. Loyal Lu Anne Powell has earned a name in poster making that will keep her talented fingers occupied for a long time to come. We are especially grateful to her for her shapely pin-up girls who grace the pages of the beauty queen section in this issue. Last and by no means least, we salute our office staff upon whose shoulders fall the dirty work and little glory. Genial Judy Tihen was our faithful secretary, handsome Bob Williams our amiable advertising manager, and names like Billye Simmons, Jane Belt, Betty Brothers, Dale Romig, Doris Greenback, and Shirley Hoyt are only a few who will live in our appreciation forever. UAL • UNIVERSITY Editor: DEAN OSTRUM Secretary: JUDY TIHEN Editorial Assistants: ALLAN CROMLEY DICK HAWKINSON NEWELL JENKINS JIM MORDY ELAINE THALMAN KEITH WILSON Advertising Assistants: LU ANNE POWELL DWIGHT ROUNDS WARREN HELGESEN LARRY SIMMONS Contributors: ALLAN CROMLEY DICK HAWKINSON ELOISE HODGSON BETSEY SHEIDLEY KEITH WILSON Art Contributors: BOB CALDWELL LU ANNE POWELL YOGI WILLIAMS Office Assistants: ANN ALLEN ANNE ASHLEY ISOBEL ATWOOD DONNA BAILEY STAFF Business Manager: DICK CARMEAN Assistant Secretary: BILLYE SIMMONS MARY HELEN BAKER MARILYN BARNUM JANE BELT BEE BRADY BETTY BREWER BETTY SARA BROTHERS FRANCIS CARR CAROLYN CARTER ETTA MAE COOPER VIRGINIA DANIELS BARBARA FELT JANIE FERRELL STELLA GABRIELSON PEGGY GRABER DORIS GREENBANK HELEN HEATH BUD HINKLE BETTY HIRLEMAN SHIRLEY HOYT PAULA SUE JERNIGAN BARBARA JOHNSON ANN LEARNED JOAN MANUEL MARY JEAN McCARTNEY ALIX NEVILLE KAY O ' CONNOR JANE OWEN JEANNE PARROTT ETHEL PEARSON THE COVER An artist ' s drawing of the beautiful World War II Me- morial bell-tower was chosen as the cover for the spring number of the for two very important rea- sons. First, its carillon will be one of less than a score of great musical instruments of its kind in the world today. Second, and most important of all, it provides a fitting climax to the 1947 annual which is dedicated to the men and women of the University who gave their lives in the costliest war yet known to mankind. Contributions and individual memorials may be arranged for through the morial office in Lawrence. HELEN PILLER MARY BELLE POLLOCK BOB RISS DALE ROMIG SALLY SANDIFER BUD SANDS ELAINE SAWYER BERTIE SCHNITZLER BETSEY SHEIDLEY LARRY SIMMONS DIANA SMITH MARIE STEWART DORIS T IHEN ALTHEA VOSS BETTY WEBB Advertising Manager: JAMES R. Photographic Editor: HANK Art Editor: YOGI WILLIAMS THE JAYHAWKER Cutlines by Keith Wilson Photos by Brown, Hauserman, and Robb Dr. Daniel Poling, director of the Baptist Temple of Philadelphia was among the distinguished speakers to pear at the University during Religious Emphasis week. Gwen Harger gives h e r impression o f Mother Macree on a spree at the A.D. Pi calendar party. Joan Schindling, who trays the month of March, tries to look like a veteran making out his income tax report, Rosemary Landrey helps herself to another mouthful of fried hrdlcka while Mary Helen Clark shields her eyes from Rosie ' s date ' s tie. Guests eagerly await extra helpings of frankfurters and beans at a Sigma Chi buffet. Two Jolliffe hall swamis break out with some difficult bars of Serenade to a Snake. Dwight Rounds winks at his date from the depths of a valentine as Harris, Marks, and McKim chin themselves on the rim. Frank Lane hands his wife, Kay, a large demitasse at a Delta Chi formal coffee. A midnight miscreant helps his errant escort up the fire escape after closing hours. The moral being: Come home late and you regret it in the end. Arild Moe seriously instructs Helen Harkrader on the situation in Glocca Morra while in a ened corner of Pigalie. 7 Alice Goldsworthy and Ruth Payne play footsie while Jim Roberts and Betty Compton get set to go back for seconds at a DG buffet. O Luster Main and friend Sabu discuss the price of used camels at the mock United Nations Conference held on the Hill. Eunice Carlson stares the photographer down while Bob Foster laughs at his own joke at a Tri Delt buffet. Sad students and shocked K-clubber line up to receive a shot in the arm at a flu station in Ad. Rae Betlach listens to date Sam Hunter cry about his aching back while Macie McCartney goes with the devil. Small and Westmoreland lead the boys in a hot chorus of Wipe the Flour Off Your Face, Mother, We Know You ' ve Been Through the Mill. Joan Woodward and archangel Tom Gregg prove that all Pi Phi angels aren ' t disguised. Carolyn Campbell does deep knee bends during intermission at the rial Drive ball. Miller hall beauties led by Joan Blonde beauty Jim Cope coyly throws his Marilyn Steinert comforts Bobby Clough gambol down their stairs. sex appeal around at an ATO dance. Weber, the pride of Beta Theta Pi. John Asher eyes Eileen Horner ' s knee as George son poses for a Calvert ad in the background. Bob Stroud, Bee Brady, Mary Lind, and Malcolm Dryden talk it all over at the Gamma Phi freshman Hook and Ladder Party. Brothers crowd around Paul Sims and the banquet table Feeta-feeta Valentine laughs at her date ' s jokes while the during a Kappa Alpha Psi dinner in the Kansas room, flower in Tondelayo Rosie Robison ' s hair points earthward. pint-sized Fiji at the Phi Gam house. Buzz Robbins and Marsha Raines get a hand-out from a Liz Shears makes sure no one is looking, then grabs an after dinner snack at the tradition-bound Phi Gam pig dinner. Betty Barkis beats out Drums of Fu Manchu on the xylophone. Red Hogan says a mouthful to a covey of Alpha Chi ' s and dates guzzling cokes at a box lunch party, Rip Collins fires a shaft at an sized apple held by trusting Bob Lemon. City slicker Bob Keenan clutches the farmer ' s daughter Terry Sheil, while pirate Ted Shafer prepares to apply the blackjack to Mary Taft. Happy Corbinites and dates prove that even the walls have ears at a circus party. A husky group of gobs prepare to man the guns and swab the decks of the S. S. Pinafore. Beachcomber Ted Glass gets a wistful look from Louise Lambert while Bill Feagans and Donna Mueller prepare to run for the surf. The wild cry of fourthforbridge is sounded at the Phi Kappa house on a day night. The Reverend Mr. Green surveys coeds ' morals from the base of Jimmy Green. Eager Jayhawkers and a stray Texan hold down the turf in front of Ad. Saddy Phipps displays her Dorothy Jones, Jerry Correa, Marie Creegan, Kenny Norma McMullen adds leg new hunting trophy to her sis- Dicker, Hugh Donahoe, and Rita Neugebauer gather art to Latakia to effect a tern in solemn song. for a jam session at the Phi Kappa house. rounder, firmer, and fully-packed smoke. Joan Harris, Clark Hargiss, and Bill Stanton emerge scathed from the eternal triangle at the Sigma Kappa Spring formal. George Darsie, Pat Cook, and Jack Duffey help hold down the rug during a Sigma Nu rush weekend. Austin Turney points out possible tracks for wheelhorses to follow to the ASC elections committee before the sprin g elections. . . and there I was, flat on my back at thirty thousand feet! Reg Robertson settles down in a comfortable Southern fashion with Helen Haffner, Perry cox, and Eileen Deutschman at the Teke house. Max Thompson, business ager of the Bob Douglas band, takes a vocational guidance test to find out what to do after graduation. Jean Reid watches anxiously as her ADPi sisters kiss her fiance Tad Reid at her pinning. The electorate lines up in the basement of Frank Strong to cast their ballots for council representatives. Bob Ogilvie, Diane Stryker, and Mr, and Mrs. Joe Stryker peruse the possibilities for starting a rabbit ranch. Bolivar Marquez surveys a sack of goobers in front of a peanut stand in Corbin hall. Grade points and convertible tops come down rapidly as Spring Fever hits the hill. Bill Johnson, Bob Nash and bara Nash take a look at man Stanton ' s beauty shots in the Phi Gam scrapbook. JAYHAWKER staff members, Jim Mordy and Newell Jenkins survey the Winter issue after a busy day in the nual office. Jim Hastings strokes his opium pipe while Doty James dodges hind a Ming Dynasty fan at the TKE Mardi Gras party. 320 THE JAYHAWKER for The 1947 JAYHAWKER avid the g ' iij at ' the 06 911 ER5,1TV of KANSAS wishe 5-rEvF CA CYC) Copyright 1947, Field Enterprises, Inc. SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 een is Crowned 321 are made, not born, and this is the story of the selection of the 1947 JAYHAWKER beauty queen, top honor of its kind at the University of Kansas. Three mcnths ago aspiring Hill beauties were asked to submit photographs to the JAYHAWKER office. A record number of 258 applicants answered the call. From this mass of feminine pulchritude a committee of five married male students narrowed the field down to sixty who were invited to the annual beauty queen tea. The five judges were Marvin Small and Lynne McNutt of the College, Perry Schuerman of the Engineering School, Walter McVey of the Law School, and Gene Glotzbach of the Business School. The same committee of men officiated at the tea where fifteen finalists were chosen to have their pictures taken at the Hixon Studio in Lawrence. No sorority or fraternity jewelry was worn and each young lady was identified solely by the number she wore. Milton Canif f—a difficult but most enjoyable task. The fifteen photographs were mailed to cartoonist Milton Canif f in New City, New York, who rated the final beauties on behalf of his cartoon strip hero, STEVE YON. Gloria Hill of Freeport, Illinois, was crowned Queen of the 1947 JAYHAWKER and her fourteen tendants were listed in the following order: Wanda ler, Larned; Sally Trembly, Kansas City, Mo.; Joan Joseph, Whitewater; Rosemary Robison, Kansas City, Mo.; Betty Berry, Kansas City; Nina Green, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Lou Martin, Topeka; Corinne Temple, Wichita; Virginia Joseph, Whitewater; Diane Stryker, Fredonia; Beverly Fox, Kansas City, Mo.; Edith Malott, Lawrence; Eloise son, Salina; and Mary Lilly, Topeka. JAYHAWKER Beauty Queen Tea—sixty beautiful women and five uncomfortable males. Photos by Cartoon by LoAnne Powell ca 4 727,944144 AlJemall RcakikiK Ph!)Inr by Nixon Cartoon by LllAnne Powell Photos by Hixon Cartoon by LnAnne Powell eciapu te 7emiale Photos by Hixon Cartoon by CuAnne Powell Vi qinia Pep4 2 aKe ghee Photos by Hixon Cartoon by LattInne Powell gclith Maio Photos by Hixon Cartoon by LuAnne Powell gleze Ma Cartoon by LaAnne Powell Photos by Hixon Jim Morgan scowls distastefully as Wilma Lee Straight demonstrates to him that, Suddenly it ' s Spring. Photo by Hdnk Brown SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 331 Spr a ng Comes to ansas Photo by Flank Brou L keith NLW . And ye burstyng budde on olde Oreade Mounte, sygnales forthe ye coming of ye winters ende. Oh sweete are ye firste sounds of ye glorious breaking of dred winters gryppe on ye hill, ye robbins voice, ye happy voices of ye studentes tripping to ye eighte o ' clockes, ye poppinge of ye beer bustes, ye squealing of ye picneckes, ye tanning of ye Pie Phyes on yon porche, ye melodious tunnes of ye besottene nades. Forsoothe in ye wurdes of ye happye studente who bath runne in ye Kansas Relayes, Sprig id here! Ray Frisby points out the finer parts of a Bison bone to fellow Battenfeld hailers as they combine sunbathing with Comparative Anatomy. THE JAYHAWKER 332 I 1 Tuxedos sprout in the spring night air like berserk Begonias. A group of nocturnal callers gather in front of a spangled butterfly at the Gamma Phi Spring formal. Maggie Harness steps up to Bill Koehn car in true state patrol fashion to engage him in a favorite Spring sport, jellying. John Kennedy, Betty Hammon. Bill Fountain and Joanne Bynan load a jeep with blankets and food in preparation for a Spring picnic. 333 SPRING NUMBER, 19-17 Chuck Delano comes in on the beam as he and Pat Hamilton exchange pins in front of a covey of Pi Phis. L Maharajah Sabu Rainee Dae backs up an American Indian at a recent good will tour of Ricker Hall. Gene Gamble makes a wild snatch at a fistful of Tutti-Fruiti held by Betsy McCune while Jack Button applauds. City-bred Mary Ann of Houston, Texas, ingly explains the sprawling city to small town boy Gene from Chanute, as the two take a moment off to plan their day ' s tactics. Gene cepts Mary Ann ' s experienced advice, then sets out to show her the city. Having left Lawrence and books safely behind, the two arrive at the Union Station and head for the excitement of downtown Kansas City. Photos by Hank Brown THE JAYHAWKER 336 Gene amuses afternoon shoppers, as well as himself, by playing Hawkshaw the Detective in a downtown department store. Suffering from an acute case of vagrant vision, Gene carefully inspects a pair of passing nylons, while Mary Ann, oblivious and happy, views the latest styles behind plate glass. Photos by Hank Brown But it ' s only $29.98! This concoction of frilly ribbons and net is the sort of thing that brings nightmares to hard-working fathers of versity coeds. In a able shop on the Plaza Mary Ann approves the $30.00 flection in the mirror, while Gene leans back to get a ter view. Much to his relief, her shopping is only wishful thinking and the bonnet is replaced on the shelf. Gene stops the shopping tour by suggesting wining and dining at a favorite seafood restaurant. Here, his interest seems to be eagerly centered on his favorite liqueur which he has spotted on the wine list. But virtuous Mary Ann is shocked at such a thought, and Gene reluctantly settles for prosaic coffee with his broiled lobster. Photos ny Honk Brow,, Spellbound by the tantalizing billboard, Gene decides he wants to see them go about as fur as they can go, but Mary Ann refuses even to look. Only by executing a hammerlock on his right arm does she manage to drag him away. Mary Ann wins the battle, and they end up pily at the musical hit, OKLAHOMA! Later, inside the show, they applaud proudly as the musical cast sings Everything ' s Up-to-date in Kansas City! SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 Rain and the Relays 4 .2lich c4aathipaapt 339 Kansas Relays fought an all day losing race with a driving rain April 19, as old man weather closed gray skies over the twenty-second running of what is usually the highlight of spring athletics on the hill. Twenty-five hundred umbrella-clad track enthusiasts shivered through a day that had brought some of the nation ' s top thinclads to Lawrence. The much-heralded 100 yard dash duel between Bullet Bill Martineson of lor and Flyin ' Charley Parker of Texas set a disappointing spark to the day ' s activities when Martineson was qualified after jumping the gun twice. Parker finished a close second to teammate Allan Lawler who repeated his 1946 triumph in 9.7 seconds. The baton festival featured more mud than records as the seven hundred rain-splattered tracksters slushed home just about as expected in all relays. Texas, Missouri, Drake, Texas A M, and Oklahoma set the pace in their relay specialties, while Notre Dame ' s Smith led the hurdlers to the tape in fifteen seconds flat. The field events saw Kansas ' s only first place when Tom Scofield tied for top honors in the high jump. Mud-speckled muscle men from Minnesota, Nebraska, and Kansas State dominated the weights and vaults. The bright spot of the day for Kansas rooters came when Charlie Black nearly walked off with the exhausting event decathlon, the Olympic specialty held here for the first time in seven years. Black won three firsts in the weights to lead the field at the end of nine events, but the final contest, the 1500 meter run, gave husky Jack Ewen of Colorado high total point honors with 6333. Black trailed a bare 93 points behind in second place. Lawrence High School ' s Johnson, who raked in firsts in the shot, discus, and javelin to be the only triple winner in the history of the Relays. Even a few days make a lot of dif- ference and it isn ' t long before mother Tina proudly owns up to the parent- hood of her child. Red, wrinkled, and ugly—not an ego-elevating sight after nine long months of waiting. I 11 Ac4kti4 There ' s many a Joe who has switched from ing babes to wheeling baby buggies atop Mount Oread this year, for childbirth is just another unusual element which pervades present day University life. Every one of the 1809 married students on the Hill will assure you that it can really happen in the best of families. One especially pretty baby Jayhawker arrived in Lawrence in the early morning hours of March 24. Her name is Nancy Jo and her parents, Hank and Tina Brown, are both of K. U. stock. Already some of Nancy ' s classmates-to-be are attending intramural games, escorted by their fathers, and Sunday afternoon sees a veritable parade of buggies and proud parents streaming down the pus. It ' s not being chief cook and bottle washer or that constant diaper duty that gets me, sighs Hank, her father, it ' s just that 2 o ' clock bottle! Although they wouldn ' t trade her for a million dollars, Hank is quick to add, but we don ' t want another one next week. No doubt Tina agrees. The expectant father brushes up on What To Do When the Baby Comes. Photos by Hank Brown Photos by Hank Brown Another three weeks and you can ' t talk to Hank Brown without listening to what Nance did today. (The Browns named her Nancy Jo so that none of the kids would nickname her. ) But even the JAYHAWKER will have to admit that she ' s a most unusual child. Life can be so boring—so will you excuse me while I yawn? The little neighbor girl, Sue Stinson, thinks the new baby ' s just like a doll and rushes home to ask her father to order one for them. At twenty diapers a day, hands soon become deft and it is safe to bet that Hank could write his own book by now on What To Do When the Baby Comes. THE JAYHAWKER IVAN MOODY Past—Shot down in a bombing raid over Germany. Prisoner of war. Sauerkraut and potatoes. Future— Maybe fighting Russians in lower Slobovia. KENNETH RHODES-106th Div. Battle of the Bulge. Captured. Watery soup. Starvation. Future—Petroleum engineering at K. U. Maybe a job in Colorado. Photos by Mort Hauserman RALPH GILL Past—O. M. detachment England. aration for European invasion. On to Germany. Social science teacher in a secondary schoot. HOWARD WOODW ARD Past—Anzio. 34th Div. Wounded while ziggin ' instead of Future-500 bucks a month as a chemical engineer in the Midwest. 342 SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 343 Persona ides With A Past iwca4 Three years ago Mt. Oread was brown with army khaki and dark with navy blue. Hill politics were nothing. Women outnumbered the men. Most of them w ere sending letters with APO and FPO dresses. Newspapers were full of war headlines. Now was the theme. Nobody looked back, and the future was limited. Today nearly 9000 students swarm over the cam- pus, most of them men. Uniforms are conspicuous. Politics arc booming. Boy meets girl, and letters are confined to Mom and Dad. Newspapers play up crime, governmental affairs, and local disasters. Most folks are making long-range plans again. The future has lengthened. The last three years has been a long time. The next three may pass more quickly. Centuries have been condensed into short hectic months. All stops have been pulled out on time ' s organ, and out of tlic LAIRD CAMPBELL Past—Army airfield, Lincoln. Neb. Teacher in army school for illiterate soldiers. Future—Law school. No marriage prospects. strange scramble stranger events have arisen. The great change in activity is mirrored in the three-year histories of these students and a look into their future. Photos by Mort Hauserman RUTH RAMSEY Past U. S. Army dietician. Ham- mond General Hospital, Mo- desto, Cal. Future—Secretary and accountant. Maybe South America. 344 THE JAYHAWKER BERNADENE DAWKINS Past — Receptionist, Los Angeles detective agency. Wave boot camp in New York. Pharmacist Mate, 2nd class. Future—Commercial art at K. U. WARREN HUFF Past—Preparation for overseas. Sgt. Major, Hq. 63rd Div., Camp Van Doren, Miss, Future— Personnel work. Marriage? June ' s awfully close. Photos by Mort Hauserman, ERNEST BUCKLES Past—China Hump flyer in C-54. Internment in Spain after B-26 crash landing. Future— Base operator in airport business. LUSTER MAIN Past-99th Div. in Germany. Prisoner of war. Christmas in a box car. Liberation April, 1945. Future—Master ' s degree in biological science. SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 BILLIE HAMILTON Past—Production control clerk, ordnance plant, Parsons. Future—Maybe staff of Christian Science Monitor. Matrimony? Not even contemplated. ' CLAYTON CRAMER Past—Workin ' on the railroad. Graduated Liberty, Missouri, High School. Future—Auto salesman with Dad. Photos by Mort Hauserman BOB MORTON Past—Normandy landing, D plus 4. On across Cherbourg peninsula. Future—Perhaps in army. Fears women more than he feared D-day. CLARK RANDALL Past—Kelley Field. Preparation for Iwo and Okinawa. Future—Harvard business school. Golf everyday. 345 Lily Whiters gather in the Kansas room to discuss making a clean sweep of student elections. Bobby Ford is overcome with fervor as George Caldwell scowls in background. Jim Waugh chain smokes the evil weed in camac headquarters as the districts report on election night. Paul Barker drops a funny to sive party members at a meeting to discuss ways of tossing a wrench into machine politics on the Hill. George Caldwell gives the straight story to PSGL party members as cop-hating Duane Postlethwaite shields face in ground. The wheelhorses of PSGL meet at their primary to discuss the forthcoming struggle in power politics. Photos by George Robb Wheels, Don Ong, J. R. Danneberg, and Earl Stanton meet under the dangling feet of Kansas ' greatest dead athlete to ponder Pachacamac ' s possibilities in the Republican primaries of 1948. Supervisor Tom Page barks orders to counters Mila Williams, Donna Munn, and Tom Bailey in the smoke-filled, debris- littered rooms of Frank Strong hall. Photo by George Robb fl ect 0 A wise man once observed that it is an ill wind that doesn ' t blow someone some good. Observers have not reported as to the good that was spread by the latest tornado to hit the hill, but they are all agreed that there was a terrific wind blowing about Mount Oread on April 24, election day. For weeks before, the three political parties had issued the call for the gathering of their respective clans of wheels, cogs, and minor spokes in tion for the great test of power. After the smoke of battle had cleared and Mr. Hare ' s system of tional representation had been figured out, student counters trudged their weary way home from the Ad building with feverish shouts of Tippecanoe and Tom Page, too! The final count gave everyone a slice of victory. Jim Waugh will head next year ' s council composed of George Caldwell, Bill Cole, Arnold Englund, Harriet Harlow, Helen Heath, Lynn Leigh, John Margrave, George McCarthy, Duane Postlethwaite, George Robb, Arthur Ruppenthal, Dave Schmidt, Sue Webster, Robert Wehe, Shirley Wellborn, Keith Wilson, and Mary Jane Zollinger. Otto bacher heads the new senior class, Lu Anne Powell, the junior class, and Stanley the sophomore class. —KEITH WILSON Mary Helms (left) taps Titania Gail Bixby on the shoulder and surreptitiously inquires, Are you one too? Marjorie Shryock (center) seems to be imploring for something while Margaret Furnish prepares to snatch Titania ' s crow n. Elizabeth LeSuer and Janet Belt do a statue o f liberty in the ground. James Nelson as Snout isn ' t making a V for victory. He ' s taking the part of the Wall, and that ' s the peephole. James Gettys as Bottom (left) watches, while Dean Frazier as Starveling (background) says, Heavy, heavy hangs over thy head. Herk Harvey as Flute (white robe) mers the orbs while Loren Kennedy as Quince looks on. No, it isn ' t a game of sip. Loren Kennedy as Quince (right) is explaining his tillating p l a y, which this group as intelligent men is to produce before the Duke of Athens cn his ding day at night. James Nelson (left) is wondering if he will make Phi Beta Kappa, while Dean Frazier, Herk Harvey, James Gettys, and Loren Kennedy sing the quar- tette from Rigoletto. THE JAYHAWKER 330 We hate post-mortems, but another school year is over and with it the 59th volume of the University annual. It ' s been an uncon- ventional year, but nonetheless, an ideal one for a magazine annual, unique in itself, to have the privilege of covering. The 1947 JAYHAWKER has tried its utmost to give students a truly pictorial record of life on the Hill. Rather than write a 1500 word article about the University as has been the past policy for example, we chose to publish a pictorial feature story about a typical student ' s appendectomy. The few non-picture contributions were selected with care and if student comment is indicative, our estimate of interest was usually correct. Counter-clockwise: Allan Cromley, Editorial Assistant; Keith Wilson, Editorial Assistant and 1948 JAYHAWKER Editor; Judy Tihen. Secre- tary; Hank Brown, Photographic Editor,. Yogi Williams, Art Editor; Elaine Thalman, Editorial Assistant. Photos by Hank Brown SPRING NUMBER, 1947 Left: Business Manager Dick Carmean. Right: Editor Dean Ostrum and inspiration, Sari. As the last page of copy is mailed to the printers we can ' t help experiencing a great feeling of relief. The JAYHAWKER is a job you live, eat, and sleep with during the twelve months it is your individual baby. Of course there were times when we would have liked to have chucked the whole mess, but all in all it ' s been an interesting task. If you ' ve enjoyed the ' 47 JAYHAWKER, every hour of worry and every extra ounce of effort have been worth- while. We ' re happy, if you are. FIRST ROW: Dick Hawkinson, Elaine Thalman, Hank Brown, Yogi Williams, Dick Carmean--1947 Business Manager, Judith Tihen-1947 Secretory, Dean Ostrum-1947 Editor, Allan Cromley, Newell Jenkins, Bertie Schnitzler, Barba ra Johnson. SECOND ROW: George Holland, Elaine Sawyer, Billie Hamilton, Sally Sandifer, Dale Romig, Doris Greenback, Diana Smith, Jane Belt, Jane Ferrell, Barabara Felt, Kay O ' Connor. THIRD ROW: Jim Mordy, Helen Heath, Stella Gabrielson, Marilyn Barnum, Betty Brothers, Betty Webb, Ann Ashley, Be tsey Sheidley, Ann Allen, Joan Manuel, Janette Pollom, Virginia Daniels. FOURTH ROW: Dick Scovel, Bud Sands, Jeanne Parrott, Ethel Pearson, Mary Helen Bak er, Betty Brewer, Mary Belle Pollock, Helen Piller, Shirley Hoyt, Peggy Graber, Carolyn Carter, Marilyn Glover, Alix Neville. FIFTH ROW: Stan Englund, Andy Berry, Bob Ready, Bill Conboy, Don Diehl, Larry Simmons-1948 Business ger, George Robb. NOT IN PICTURE: Keith Wilson-1948 Editor, Bob Williams-1947 Advertising Manager, Jo Compton, Bob Caldwell, Lu Anne Powell, John Baird, John Conard, Russell Barrett, Leatrice Endlich, Dixie Ann Lear ”ed, Dave Morris, Diane Stryker, Bob Graham, Mort Hauserman, Isobel Atwood, Donna Bailey, Bernice Brady, Etta Mae Cooper, Annette Cramer, Bill Delay, Marilyn Frizell, Nancy Messenger, Doris Tihen, Nancy Van Bebber, Jack Smith, Eloise Hodgson, Jane Owen, Billye Simmons, Bob Minich, Wayne Gallentine, Bet Berry, Francis Carr, Betty Hirleman, Paula Sue Jernigan, Mary Jean McCartney, Bob Riss, Marie Stewart, Althea Voss. Photo by D ' Ambra 351 Photos by Hank Brown PERSONNEL DIRECTOR Charles Smith Russell L. Wiley FIRST VIOLINS Vincent Bleecker, Principal Erwin Schneider James Hightower Dean Wampler Sally Trembly Betty Lou Wells Clark Randall Andress Kernick Maxine Alburty Marilyn Macferrin Ruth J. Dudley John Bockhorst Frances Richert Lucille Stratton Charlotte Maxey Betty Brewer BASS VIOLINS Clarence Mills, Principal Nancy Jackson William Jackson Florence Reed Don Wyman Wayne Ruppenthal Melvin Zack B. J. Webber FLUTES Marcus Hahn Jean Klussman Martha Ann Baker OBOES Wade Fite Frank Stalzer SECOND VIOLINS Phyllis Jones, Principal Myron McNown Tom McMillin Betrice Kasha Betty Tharp Richard Cram Sarepta Ostrum Betty Van der Smissen Jenila Schneider Marguerite Watson Freda Jones Billie George Evelyn Hoffman Jean Alexander Doris Jean Marriott Lavonne Simpson Caulbert Livingston VIOLAS Joe Weigand, Principal Emily Schnabel Paul Grover Charles Kassinger Albert Swinchoski William Clubb Charles Teghtmeyer CELLOS Martha Lee Baxter, Principal Maurice Pollom Merle Clayton Virginia Joseph Roger Clubb Margaret Nelson Sidney Lee Hahn Pat Harris Ruby Kauffman Donna Clark Martha Jewett Carl Bilger Joyce Rohrer Bettilou Gregory Mary Jewett ENGLISH HORN Frank Stalzer CLARINETS Shirley Sloan Richard Lading Marshall Turkin Carol Jean Terrill BASSOONS William Spence Georgiana Bennington Brian Cheyne Betty Ketchum TRUMPETS Leo Horacek Joe Langworthy LeRoy Goering FRENCH HORNS Edward Allsup Mary Ann Sawyer Sam Eitel Gerald Carney Judson Goodrich Harry Spencer David Jones TROMBONES Arnold Englund Kenneth Geoff roy Dean Grant Melvin Cottom TUBA Richard Porter TYMPANI Robert Briggs PERCUSSION Betty Barkis Robert Robertson ND PERSONNEL DIRECTOR Russell L. Wiley FLUTES Dean Davies Russell O ' Hara Martha Ann Baker Elaine Sawyer Betty Tharp Elnora Wycoff Martha Oatman Epsie Brandt OBOES Frank Stalzer Marilyn Lindberg BASSOONS William Spence Ellen Spurney Georgiana Bennington Bill Stoner CLARINETS Shirley Sloan Carol Jean Terrill Richard Lading Paul Grover Jerry Breitag John Burnau Dorothy Heidebrecht Calvin Remmers Marjory Colbert Mary Ernst Elsie Lemon Jack Buckner Barbara Marmount Clifford Reynolds Bob Kroesch Dorothy Stephenson Joan Raney Donald Yockey Juanita Lewis June Mallory Robert B. Finley Barbara Felt Lorraine Hunt ALTO CLARINET Charles Byers BASS CLARINETS Malcolm MacLeod Melba Youn g Billie George ALTO SAXOPHONES Richard Kell Phyllis Seacat Richard Francis Jeanne Smith Delores Langel TENOR SAXOPHONES Betty Ketchum Brian Cheyne BARITONE SAXOPHONES Bruce Hoad Gerald Hall CORNETS Leo Horacek Joe Langworthy Clarence Mills LeRoy Goering Jeanne Peck James Sellards Dorothy Brenner Anna L. Noe Robert Tawney Pat Thiessen Jack Parker George Francis TRUMPETS Charles Kassinger Delbert Spalsbury Davis Crawford Roy Duffens Bill Degen FRENCH HORNS Harry Spencer Mary Ann Sawyer Sam Eitel Eddie Al!sup David Seamans Roger Adams B. J. Webber Martha Jewett Pat Harris Carl Cramm BARITONES Morris Shull Charles Jeffery Arthur Partridge Marjorie Skeen Charles McBurney Shirley Wellborn Deane Carter Warren Donaldson Jack Williams TROMBONES Arnold Englund Gaylord Gasal Kenneth Geoffroy J. B. Webster Neill Humfeld Don Hanes Grady Randle Eugene Martin Eugene Orcott Adrian Smith Charles Palmer Hickey TUBAS William Sears Richard Porter William Smith Emily Schnabel Charles Teghtmeyer Dwight Oglesbee Derral Sloan Paul Kirkpatrick TYMPANI Betty Barkis BASS DRUM Phillip Persky SNARE DRUMS Robert Robertson Wayne Adams John Chronic Dean Beck Lambda Chi Alpha was founded No- vember 2, 1909, at Boston University, Bos- ton, Massachusetts. The colony at K.U. was organized February 8, 1947. When the organization receives its charter in May, it will be one of 118 active chapters, High Alpha, Bill Holford; High Beta, Jack Wor- ley; High Gamma, Bob J. Barnes; High Tau, John Long. THE JAYHAWKER 354 PLEDGES Bob Brown, Peabody LeRoy Cox, Hutchinson Jerry Crawford, Junction City John Jones, Great Bend Ray Parker, Seneca Bob Pennington, Frankfort ACTIVES Roger Arnold, Norwood, Ohio Bob J. Barnes, Dodge City Bill Braum, Emporia Dick Champ, Junction City Bob Corbin, San Rafael, Calif. Charles Crowley, Rockford, Bob Davison, Chicago, Ill. Ernest Dewey, Hutchinson Norman Eberhart, Lawrence Jim Fleming, Bonner Springs Bob Fleming, Lecompton Jim Fuller, Lamed Clark Griswold, Lawrence Ronald Hill, Newton Bill Holford, Hutchinson Max Kliewer, Atchison John Long, Lawrence Tom McGraw, Newton Gene McKellar, Junction City Don Powell, Larned Jack Robinson, Flushing, N. Y. Gordon Schleifer, Lawrence Leon Sherwood, Independence Dick Wegner, Great Bend Arba Williams, Lawrence Jack Worley, Marysv ille, Mo. Jim Yoxall, Wakeeney FIRST ROW: Davison, Sherwood, Fuller, Barnes, Holford, Worley, Long, Robinson J. Fleming, Corbin. SECOND ROW: Eberhort, Pennington, Yoxall, Kliewer, Gris- wold, Braum, Brown, Crawford, Crowley, Champ, Parker. THIRD ROW: Cox, McGraw, B. Fleming, McKellar, Powell, Hill, Dewey, Wegner, Williams, Arnold, Jones. NOl IN PICTURE: Schleifer. I 11 II 11 E I] 14 SPRING NUMBER, 1947 355 1 Mortar Board is a national honorary society for outstanding women. The organization appeared first on the K.U. campus in 1912 as the Torch Society for senior women. In 1924 it became affiliated with the national organization of Mortar Board. While an honorary organization, Mortar Board fulfills its active four-fold purpose of service to the University, advancement of scholarship, cooperation with the faculty and administration, and loyal support to worthwhile campus activities. This year Mortar Board has sponsored orientation week activities for freshman women, Leadership Day for outstanding high school seniors from nearby towns, a Party for sophomore and junior women of high scholarship, a get-acquainted tea for the new Dean of Women, and in cooperation with Sachem, the third Student-Faculty Conference. Torch chapter at the University of Kansas is one of 78 Mortar Board chapters throughout the United States. Newly elected members are secretly tapped by active members the night before the Honors Convocation of their junior year. Their names are revealed the following morning when the new bers are capped before the entire student body. President of Mortar Board is Billie Marie ton; Secretary, Alberta Cornwell; Program man, Lois Thompson; Treasurer, Helen Howe. MEMBERS First Row Mary Breed Alberta Cornwell Dixie Gilliland Second Row Billie Hamilton Helen Howe June Peterson Third Row Lois Thompson Emily Stacey Octavia Walker 356 THE JAYHAWKER MEMBERS Sachem is the honor society for senior men at the University of Kansas. It was founded in 1910 by twelve upperclassmen. Election to membership is one of the highest honors that any Jayhawker can ceive. This spring the local organization is ing itself as Sachem Circle with Omicron Delt a Kappa, national honorary society for senior men. Membership in Sachem is presumably given to men with at least a 1.5 grade average who have achieved the highest rank in their particular fields of endeavor, who have been real student leaders, and who have made valuable contributions to the versity. Officers, who are elected by lot, are as follows: Chief Sachem, Dick Hollingsworth; Chief Warrior, Perry Schuerman; Secretary-Treasurer, Donald Ong. FIRST ROW: George Caldwell, Allan Cromley, Ray Evans, Dick Hollingsworth, Newell Jenkins, John Mar- grave. SECOND ROW: John McGuckin, Robert McJones, Harold McSpadden, Larry Miller, Donald Ong, Dean °strum. THIRD ROW: Arthur Partridge, Owen Peck, Clifford Reynolds, Perry Schuerman, James Waugh, George Wor- rell. NOT PICTURED: Wesley Elliott. 357 Sl ' RING NUMBER, 1947 First Row ANDERSON, RALPH DAVID, Pratt. Honor Roll. ARTHUR, CHARLES SHIRK JR., Lawrence. Alpha Tau Omega; President, 2nd year Law Class; President, Phi Delta Phi; Football; Men ' s lenic Council. AUL, DANIEL ROSSMAN, Lawrence. Tau Kappa Epsilon; Justice, Phi Alpha Delta. BENSON, PAGE WILLIAM, El Dorado. BOARDMAN, DONALD ROBERT, St. Francis. Second Row BOND, ROBERT MARTIN, El Dorado. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Delta Phi; K Club. BROWN, THOMAS J. JR., Leavenworth. Kappa Sigma; Phi Delta Phi. COSS, VERNON F., Isabel. Phi Delta Phi. DOUGLAS, ROBERT ELLIS, St, Joseph, Mo. President, Senior Law Class; Treasurer, Phi Delta Phi; Law School Honor Committee; Phi Delta Theta; Dean ' s Honor Roll. EARHART, AUBREY V., Hutchinson. Clerk, Phi Alpha Delta. Third Row PLEAGLE, RALPH CLAYTON, Lawrence. Secretary, Delta Tau Delta; Phi Delta Phi; Student Court. FOWLIE, GERALD LON, Lawrence. GIDNEY, ROLAND DEROL, Arkansas City. Treas- urer, President, Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Delta Phi; A Cappella; Fraternity Council; Zoology Club; Jayhawker Staff. GRIFFITH, JERRY L., Iola. HARKNESS, THOMAS HERBERT, Ness City. Sigma Phi Epsilon; Phi Delta Phi. Fourth Row HUGHES, ()OVER HENRY, El Dorado. Chief Justice, Student Court; Business Manager, Kansan; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Delta Phi; Scabbard and Blade; Y.M.C.A.; A.S.C.; Kansan Board. LUKE, ROBERT STANDLEY SR., Joplin. Chief Justice, Student Court; Pi Alpha Delta. OVERTON, D. WILLIAM, Kansas City. College sentative, M.S.C.; President, Junior Law Class; Secretary-Treasurer, Phi Delta Phi. ROGERS, RICHARD DEAN, Manhattan. Beta ' Theta Pi; Phi Delta Phi. SMITH, GLEE SIDNEY, Lawrence. Managing Editor, Kansan; Managing Editor, Sour Owl; Editorial Staff, hawker; Treasurer, Freshman Class; Treasurer, Freshman Law Class; Treasurer, Chapter Adviser, Delta Tau Delta; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Kansan Board; Manager, Law School Book Exchange; Sigma Delta Chi; Phi Delta Phi. 358 THE JAYHAWKER X E M L II M1 Left Column, Top to Bottom: BOWERSOCK, DOROTHY ELEANOR, Columbus. Nursing; Scholastic Chairman, Alpha Delta Pi; A.S.C.; Y.W.C.A.; Rifle Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll; County respondent. CAMPBELL, DOROTHY JEAN, Parsons. Nursing; Vice President, Program man, Pre-Nursing Club; Wesley Foundation; Wesley Choir; Sigma Theta Tau; A.S.C.; Student House Government; Nurses Choir; Hinch Hall Hear-All Staff. DAY CAROLER JEAN, Ottawa. Nursing; President of Sophomore Class, K.U.H.; Nurses Choir, A.S.C.; Hinch Hall Hear-All Staff. ERICKSON, ROSE LEE MARIE, Neal. Nursing; Kappa Phi. GUTHRIE, FRANCES KATHRYN, Walton. Nursing. HOLDER, ELIZABETH LOUISE, Atchison. Zoology Club; Band; Kappa Beta; Sigma Theta Tau. Right Column, Top to Bottom: HORNER, PATRICIA Jo, Kansas City. Nursing; Pi Beta Phi; Y.W.C.A.; Pre-Nursing Club; A.S.C. KIRTLEY, DOROTHY MAE, Ingalls. Nursing; Band; Women ' s Glee Club; Theta silon; Y.W.C.A. MCCOY, CAROL L., Oskaloosa. Nursing; Sigma Theta Tau. MCLAIN, BETTY Lou, Bur Nursing; Nurse ' s Choir; President, Pre-Nurse ' s Club. RIELING, JOYCE BRIGHT, Kansas City, Mo. Nursing; President, Freshman Class; Vice President, A.S.C.; Secretary-Treasurer, Pre-Nurse ' s Club; Sigm a Theta Tau; 200 Club; Wesley Foundation; Band; Nurse ' s Choir; Kappa Phi; Art Editor, Hinch Hall Hear-All; Class Invitations Committee. SILADY, ELEANOR BLACKBURN, Hill City, Nursing; A.S.C.; President, Senior Class. RIGHT: Lois Thompson and Paul Briley gloat over Tommy ' s diploma on the steps of Frank Strong hall. Hank Brown took the photograph. THE JAYHAWKER 360 First Row ABEL, MARTHA GRACE, Kansas City, Mo. History; Librarian, Kappa Alpha Theta; Phi Alpha Theta. ACKER, KATHLEEN ALTWEGG, Junction City. Business; Phi Chi Theta. ACKERMAN, ALICE MAREA, Kansas City. Zoology; Activities man, Alpha Chi Omega; President, Treasurer, Tau Sigma; Secre- tary-Treasurer, Quack Club; W.A.A. ADAMS, MEL E., Kansas City, Mo. Journalism; Alpha Delta Sigma; Vice President, Acacia Fraternity; Advertising Manager, Business Manager, Promotion Manager, University Daily Kansan. Father Jean Moore beams paternally while Hass and Aliotti share their watered spirits with Harriet Graves and Christine Moe. ADAMS, RICHARD PAUL, Lawrence. Geology; Vice President, ology Club; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Band. ADAMS, ROBERT HAROLD, Lawrence. Medicine; Presiding Senior, Phi Chi. Second Row ADCOCK, ROY DALE, Bartlesville, Okla. College. AIKINS, ELEANORE MAY, St. Joseph, Mo. Bacteriology; Bacteriology Club. ALBRIGHT, RONALD D., El Dorado. English; Phi Alpha Delta. ALEXANDER, BERNICE E., Oklahoma City, Okla. Bacteriology; Bac- teriology Club; Treasurer, Zeta Phi Beta; Negro Student ciation; Secretary, Forum. ALEXANDER, WARREN RICHARD, Richmond, Ind. Electrical gineering; AIEE; German Club; IRE; A Cappella. ALFORD, MARY VIRGINIA, Lawrence. Psychology; Treasurer, Kappa Alpha Theta; Y.W.C.A.; Tau Sigma. Third Row ALLEN, JAMES B., Reynoldsville, Pa. Business; N.R.O.T.C.; Pi Kappa Alpha; Inter-Fraternity Council. ANDERSON, DORIS MARIE, Lecompton. Clothing and Textiles; Home Economics Club. ANDREWS, ANA MAE, St. Joseph, Mo. Personnel Administration; Y.W.C.A.; I.S.A.; Social Chairman, Secretary, Templin; Public Relations Committee, Union Activities. ARCHER, CHARLES ELDON, Norton. Business. ARMACOST, JOAN CAROL, Kansas City, Mo. Sociology; Y.W.C.A.; Sociology Club; Pi Beta Phi; Jayhawker Office Work. ARTHUR, WILLIAM JOSEPH, Lawrence. Marketing; Alpha Tau Omega. SPRING NUMBER, 1 947 361 First Row ASHER, MARY LEE, Sterling. Bacteriology; Alpha Chi Omega; teriology Club; A Cappella; Y.W.C.A.; C.V.C. ATWOOD, JANE, Gardner. History; Vice President, Gamma Phi Beta; Tau Sigma; Vice President, Union Activities; Jayhawker; Forums Board. BAILEY, THOMAS FERRELL, Topeka. Geology; Secretary, Phi Gamma Delta; President, Jayhawk Flying Club; Y.M.C.A.; ball. BAKER, JOHN NORTON, Springfield, Mo. Mechanical Engineering; A.S.M.E.; A.S.T.E.; A Cappella; Band. BAKER, MABEL ELIZABETH, Lawrence. College; I.S.A.; Jay Janes; Membership Committee, Y.W.C.A.; International Relations Club; Young Democrats Club. BAKER, WANDA DEANE, Pratt. Bacteriology; Bacteriology Club; I.S.A, Second Row BALLARD, DAVID CHAPIN, Topeka. Engineering; President, Kappa Sigma; Vice President, Phi Mu Alpha; Corresponding Secretary, Tau Beta Pi; Corresponding Secretary, Sigma Tau; A Cappella; Band; Sophomore Representative, A.I.E.E.; Inter-Fraternity • cil. BALLARD, JOHN WILLIAM JR., Kansas City, Mo. General Business; Rush Chairman, Pledge Trainer, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; K Club; Freshman numerals, Track, Basketball; Three year letterman, Basktball. BARLOW, JEANE MARGARET, Kansas City. Home Vice President, Locksley Hall; I.S.A.; Home Economics Club. BARTLEY, CHARLOTTE M., Horton. Dietetics; Secretary-Treasurer, Junior Class; Jay Janes; Home Economics Club. BATCHELDER, THEODORE LAVERNE, Garden City. Medicine; Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Beta Pi. BATCHELOR, RICHARD ARTHUR, Hays. Design; Phi Mu Alpha; Quill Club; Lions Club. Third Row BEACH, JOHN WESLEY, Newton. Journalism; President, Social Chairman, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Alpha Delta Sigma; Promotion manager, circulation manager, University Daily Kansan. BERRY, EMILY ALICE, Kansas City, Mo. Occupational Therapy; Occupational Therapy Club; Vice President, Pledge Trainer, Delta Delta Delta; Y.W.C.A. BEVAN, CHARLES R., Hutchinson. General Business; Sigma Chi. BIGGS, VERNON L., Lawrence. Engineering; Sigma Nu. BILLBE, DWANE EARL, Iola. Accounting. BILLURIS, GEORGE, Independence, Mo. Chemical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; Treasurer, A.I.Ch.E. Barbara Lamoreaux gives the high sign to the photo- grapher as date Erwin Brown smiles his approval. 362 THE JAYHAWKER First Row BIRD, RAMON EARL, Albert. Petroleum Engineering; Pi Kappa Alpha; A.I.M.M.E.; Scabbard and Blade. BIZAL, ALBERT, Kansas City. Business. BLAKE, SALLY JEAN, Kansas City. Sociology; Delta Delta Delta; Vice President, Sociology Club; Student Union Activities. BLEECKER, VINCENT, Richmond, Calif. Violin; Orchestra; String Quartet. BODMAN, CAROLYN JEANNE, Kansas City, Mo. Architectural gineering; A.S.C.E. Buccaneer Phil Smith displays his most provocative leg art while Freda Jones lets out a she-wolf cry at a Battenfeld mixer. BOLLIER, ALAMADA ORPHA, Horace. Journalism; Press Club; fare Chairman, Independents; Secretary, Theta Sigma Phi; tor-in-chief, Daily Kansan; Proctor, Western Civilization. Second Row BOOTH, MARY KATHRYN, Olathe. Speech and Drama; University Players; Jay Janes. BORDEN, PHILIP S., Kansas City, Mo, Business. BORGMANN, HERBERT CARL, Athol. Marketing; Y.M.C.A.; Young Democrats. BOSSI, ELLEN CATHERINE, Arkansas City. Bacteriology; Kappa Phi. BCssOM, EDITH LUCILLE, Concordia. Bacteriology; Women ' s Glee Club; Bacteriology Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll. BOSWELL, LENIS, Kansas City. Education; Kappa Alpha Psi. Third Row BOUSE, JACK LLOYD, Kansas City. Mechanical Engineering; Phi Kappa Psi; A.S.M.E.; Football; T rack; Band; Orchestra. BOWER, LAVINIA MARGARET, Stanley. Education; Women ' s Glee Club; Y.W.C.A.; Westminster Fellowship; Pi Lambda Theta; Dean ' s Honor Roll. BOYCE, FRANK R., Kansas City. Geology; Geology Club. BRADLEY, AUBREY J. JR., Blue Mound. Political Science. BRADFORD, WILLIAM EDWARD, McLouth. Finance; Senior ager, University Intramural Program. BRANIGAN, MARY ELIZABETH, Kansas City, Mo. Journalism; Press Club; Daily Kansan; War Memorial Committee. 36:1 SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 1 7 First Row BREED, MARY ELIZABETH, Kansas City, Mo. Home Economics; Executive Board, Pi Beta Phi; Election Chairman, A.S.C.; dent, Y.W.C.A.; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Senior Class Committee; Mortar Board; War Memorial Committee; Chemistry Club; Home Economics Club. BRENDLINGER, WILLIAM F., Wynnewood, Pa. Mechanical neering; A.S.M.E. BRENT, PAGE, Kansas City, Mo. French; President, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Vice President, French Club. BRILEY, PAUL WINFIELD, Chanute. Business; A.S.C.; I.S.A.; Alpha Kappa Psi; Homecoming Committee; Dean ' s Honor Roll. BROCK, ARTHUR UPSHAW, Kansas City. Spanish; Kappa Alpha Psi. BROOKS, VERNA LEE, Brewster. Business; Alpha Delta Pi; Phi Chi Theta. Second Row BROWN, ELEANOR MAY, Bethel. Piano; Mu Phi. Epsilon. BROWN, JOSEPH SESSFORD, Washington. Political Science; man Counselor; Chairman, Freshman Vocational Forum; dent, Vice President, Pachacamac; Executive Committee, wide Activities; Vice President, Ku Ku Club; Alpha Phi Omega; Y.M.C.A.; Men ' s Glee Club; Intramurals; Rush Captain, Pledge Trainer, Sigma Nu; Vice President, Men ' s Student Council; President, Young Republican Club; Chairman, Varsity Dance Committee; Commander, Jayhawk Flying Squadron. BROWN, LEONARD CHARLES JR., Kansas City, Mo. Mechanical and Electrical Engineering; President, Tau Kappa Epsilon; President, Tau Beta Pi; President, Pi Tau Sigma; Secretary, A.S.C.; tive Council, Ku Ku Club; A.S.M.E.; Inter-Fraternity Council; Sigma Tau; V-12 Dance Band; V-12 Boxing Team. BROWNE, ELINOR LORRAINE, Kansas City. Journalism; Reporter, Alpha Delta Pi; Secretary-Treasurer, Press Club; A Cappella; ciety Editor, Daily Kansan. BRUNS, EDWIN E., Kansas City, Mo. Business; Sergeant, Alpha Delta Gamma; Society for Advancement of Management. BRUNTON, JEAN, Winfield. Sociology; Alpha Chi Omega; ciology Club; Y.W.C.A. Third Row BUELL, ORVAL WESTON JR., El Cajon, Calif. Mathematics; Sigma Chi; Alpha Phi Omega. BUNT, WILLIAM J., Dodge City. Business Administration; Band; Kappa Sigma. BURKE, JAMES EDWARD, Kansas City, Mo. Accounting; Newman Club; Intramural Manager, Battenfeld Hall. BUTLER, ROBERT MARSHALL, Hopkinsville, Ky. Fine Arts; Song Leader, Delta Chi; Phi Mu Alpha; Men ' s Glee Club; A Cappella. B UTLER, WILLIAM LILLARD, Kansas City, Mo. Psychology; Editor, Rush Chairman, Social Chairman, Sigma Chi. BUTTON, JACK BLAIR, Anthony. Political Science; President, Sigma Chi; Delta Sigma Rho; Secretary, Y.M.C.A.; Summerfield lar; President, Pachacamac; Secretary, A.S.C.; Debate. Harry Johnson looks coyly past Janice Oehrle ' s slit skirt as Joyce Rohrer stares cheerfully into the ice bucket at a Miller hall party. 364 THE JAYHAWKER First Row CALDWELL, ROBERT WALTER, Dodge City. Commercial Art; Pi Kappa Alpha; Band; Art Club; Delta Phi Delta; Jayhawker Staff. CAPLES, VELMA LEE, Parsons. English. CARLOS, DON F., Lawrence. Geology; Geology Club; Sigma Gamma Epsilon. CARLSON, MARILYN JUDY, Blue Rapids. History; Social Chairman, Kappa Alpha Theta; Secretary, Phi Alpha Theta; French Club; Jayhawker; Y.W.C.A.; Intramurals. CARMEAN, RICHARD P., Carthage, Mo. Business; Rush Captain, Corresponding Secretary, President, Phi Gamma Delta; urer, Jayhawk Veterans; Adv. Mgr., Business Mgr., Business as- Arild Moe, Carol Crow, Christine Moe, and Aldo Aliotti cement international relations to the tune of Putty, Putty. ' sistant, Contributor, Jayhawker; Inter-Fraternity Council; Pacha- camac; Y.M.C.A.; Social Committee, Big Dance Commitee, dent Union Activities. CARPENTER, MILDRED ANN, Lawrence. Social Science; Treasurer, Delta Gamma; Panel Discussion Chairman; Librarian, Business Manager, Women ' s Glee Club. Second Row CAROTHERS, EDNA EVELYN, Kansas City. Bacteriology; I.S.A.; Bac- teriology Club; A Cappella. CARR, MAR JEAN, Wichita. Piano; President, Vice President, Mu Phi Epsilon; Accompanist, Women ' s Glee Club; Mu Phi Epsilon; Wesley Foundation Cabinet; Student Religious Council; Resident Hall Scholarship; Carl A. Preyor Scholarship; Christmas Vesper ' s Scholarship. CARROLL, NORMAN L., St. Joseph, Mo. Personnel Management. CASALONE, GEORGE JOHN, Lemay, Mo. Mechanical Engineering; Newman Club; A.S.M.E.; A.I.A.S. CASKEY, BYRON W., Independence. Accounting. CASSELL, VIRGINIA LEE, Independence, Mo. Art; Band; Orchestra; Social Chairman, Joliffe Hall. Third Row CATES, KENNETH WILLIAM, Hutchinson. Industrial Management; Alpha Tau Omega. CAULK, ELMER L., Kansas City, Mo. Accounting. CHADSEY, DONALD SCOTT, Miami, Okla. History; Treasurer, Rush Captain, Sigma Nu; Y.M.C.A.; ROTC; Bitter Bird. CHAPMAN, MARTIN F., Dresden. Business. CHASE, JANE WOESTEMEYER, Lawrence. History; Crescent Cor- respondent, Gamma Phi Beta; Music Chairman, Kappa Phi; Union Activities; Glee Club; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A. CLARK, MARY-ALLICE, Kansas City. Psychology. 365 SPRING NUMBER, 1947 First Row COATS, DANIEL TEDFORD, Topeka. Medicine; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Nu Sigma Nu. COCHRAN, NORMAN LEROY, Milo, Mo. Accounting and Business Administration; Alpha Kappa Psi; Jayhawk Flying Club. CONGDON, KEITH WINSOR, Winfield. Business; Choirster, den, Vice President, Phi Delta Theta; Secretary, Inter-Fraternity Council; Co-Chairman, World Student Fund; Y.M.C.A.; national Relations Club; Forensic League; Modern Choir; War Memorial; Orchestra. COOK, RONALD ROY, Yakima, Wash. Civil Engineering; Sigma Phi Epsilon; A.S.C.E. COOPER, EVELYN FRANCES, Lawrence. Bacteriology; Jay Janes; Phi Sigma; Bacteriology Club; Biology Society. COPELAND, WESLEY E., Kansas City. Mechanical Engineering; Corresponding Secretary, Delta Tau Delta; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; A.S.M.E. Second Row CORNWELL, ALBERTA, Lawrence. Bacteriology; Activities man, Delta Gamma; Mortar Board; President, Union Activities; Head Cheerleader; W.I.G. ' s; Bacteriology Club; Zoology Club; W.A.A.; Union Operating Committee; W.S.S.F.; Memorial Drive Committee; N.O.W.; Attendant to Queen of Engineer ' s Hop. COVEY, A. LEROY, Lawrence. Business Administration; Phi Alpha Delta. COX, DORIS JEAN, El Dorado. Secretarial Training; treasurer, Vice President, Sleepy Hollow; Theta Epsilon. CRABB, LAUREL SUE, Kansas City, Mo. Sociology; Treasurer, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Y.W.C.A.; Sociology Club; French Club. CRAIN, ROBERT TALLMAN, Fort Scott. Business; Executive mittee, Delta Tau Delta; Pachacamac; Dean ' s Hono r Roll. CRASS, BEADY PAUL, V ictorville, Calif. Engineering; Kappa Sigma; A.S.M.E.; A.I.A.E. Third Row CROOK, JIM OLIVER, Spokane, Wash. Business Administration; Alpha Kappa Psi; Vice President, Delta Sigma Rho; Alpha Phi Omega; Forensic League; American Academy of Political and Social Sciences; President, Junior Class; Debate; U. N. Delegate; Victory Speaker; Missouri Valley Debate Conference; Business School Committee; Independent Council; P.S.G.L.; Religious Council. CROW, LLOYD R. JR., Columbus. Chemical Engineering; Tau Kappa Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; A.I.Ch.E. CUBBAGE, BEVERLY JANE, Des Moines, la, Occupational Therapy; Inter-dormitory Council; Occupational Therapy Club. CUNNINGHAM, BETTY COLLEEN, Downs. Business; House ager, Delta Delta Delta; Secretary, Phi Chi Theta. DAHLMAN, WALTER E. JR., Chicago, Ill. Personnel Management; Alpha Phi Omega. DANIEL, ROBERT WILLIAM, Olathe. Business; Delta Tau Delta; Intramurals. Mother Lili Marlene Nellis displays a daring off-the- shoulder fashion in a Battenfeld Hall reception line. 366 T TIE JAYHAWKER First Row DANNEBERG, JOHN RICHARD, Kansas City. Political Science; dent, Tau Kappa Epsilon; President, Inter-Fraternity Council; President, Executive Council, Inner Circle of Pachacamac; man, House Decorations of Homecoming; Chairman, Senior Cakewalk Committee, Senior Class. DARBY, EDITH MARIE, Kansas City. Speech Correction; Vice dent, Rush Captain, Pi Beta Phi; Notification Chairman, Jay Janes; Y.W.C.A.; Union Activities; Speech Clinic; Panhellenic Council; Jayhawker Staff; Homecoming Committee; Young publicans Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll. DARSIE, GEORGE ANDREW, St. Paul, Minn. Electrical Engineering; Vice President, Sigma Nu; Sigma Tau; A.S.C.; Inter-fraternity Council; A.I.E.E.; Intramurals; Kappa Eta Kappa. Kainor Carson applies the clench to Virginia Shimer ar Rosemary Alderman and Charlie Beach get a big boot out of the proceedings. DEEM, DOROTHY MAREE, Lawrence. Psychology; Historian, Alpha Omicron Pi; Secretary-Treasurer, Psi Chi; Sociology Club; chology Club. DEFFENBAUGH, RICHARD, Kansas City, Mo. Chemical ing; Vice President, Triangle; A.I.Ch.E.; Ku Ku Club. DELANO, CHARLES F. JR., Hutchinson. Civil Engineering; Sigma Chi; A.S.C.E. Second Row DEMAREE, DORIS JANE, Alexandria, Va. English; Y.W.C.A.; A Cappella; Women ' s Glee Club. DETWILER, MARY AGNES, Pratt, French; Treasurer, Intramural manager, Sleepy Hollow; French Club, Pi Lambda Theta; murals. DEVAULT, MARION, Spring Hill. Medicine; A.S.C.; Zoology Club. DEWALD, LOIS R., Casper, Wyo. Zoology. DIEHL, DONALD WINSTON, Smith Center. History; Secretary, Beta Theta Pi; Phi Alpha Theta; Phi Mu Alpha; Cabinet, Y.M. C.A.; K Club; Basketball; Track; A Cappella; Band; Modern Choir; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Jayhawker Contributor. DILLARD, JACK, Dodge City. Business; United Nations Conference; Phi Delta Theta; Varsity Basketball; Intramurals; Senior mittee. Third Row DINSMORE, MAR JORIE ELIZABETH, Lawrence. Psychology; Delta Delta Delta; Home Economics Club; Psychology Club; Sociology Club; United Women ' s Council; Quack Club; Dramatic Work Shop; Young Republican Club; W.A.A. DOGANTZIS, BILLY EUGENE, Kansas City. Electrical Engineering; I.R.E.; A.I.E.E.; Amat. Radio Club. DOMBEK, AMELIA, Hartford, Conn. History; Phi Alpha Theta; Newman Club. DONOVAN, WILLIAM JACK, Gardner, Journalism; Alpha Delta Sigma; Business Manager, University Daily Kansan. DOOLEY, MYRTLE GROSS, Kansas City. Spanish; Vice President, Delta Sigma Theta; Y.W.C.A. DORNBLASER, J. MILLARD, Kansas City, Mo. Architectural gineering; President, Scarab; Delta Chi. 167 SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 First Row DREHMER, LAWRENCE E., Dodge City. General Business. DUEMCKE, BETTY LOUISE, Coffeyville. French; Social Chairman, Vestment Chairman, A Cappella; Chi Omega; Y.W.C.A.; French Club; Modern Choir. EBY, LEILA JANE, Lawrence. Psychology; Alpha Chi Omega; Y.W. C.A.; Union Activities; Women ' s Glee Club; Kappa Beta; chology Club. EDSON, GLEN ALVIN, St. Joseph, Mo. Accounting. EDWARDS, RALPH WARREN JR., Kansas City, Mo. Zoology; ology Club; Y.M.C.A.; Phi Delta Theta. ELLIS, ANTHONY, Kansas City. Chemistry; Kappa Alpha Psi; gro Student Association; Y.M.C.A. Second Row ESTERLE, ELIZABETH, Kansas City, Mo. Bacteriology; Social man, Secretary, Delta Gamma. ETTER, MARY ANNETTE, Independence. Design; Delta Phi Delta; Kappa Phi; I.S.A.; Christmas Vesper Tableau; Homecoming Queen Candidate. EVANS, BEVERLY MAE REITZ, Olathe. Music Education; Song Leader, Treasurer, Alpha Omicron Pi; Pi Lambda Theta; Mu Phi Epsilon; Band; Women ' s Glee Club. EVANS, RICHARD RAY, Kansas City. Business; Phi Delta Theta; Football; Basketball; Senior Class President; Sachem; Owl ciety. FADLER, MAR JORIE DEAN, Pittsburg. Business; Kappa Alpha Theta; Softball Manager, W.A.A.; Assistant Librarian, Secretary, Women ' s Glee Club; Intramurals; Student Union Activities; Y.W.C.A. FARRELL, MARY DOLORES, Marysville. Home Economics; Vice President, Newman Club; A.S.C.; Home Economics Club; ern Choir; I.S.A.; Inter-Dorm Council. Third Row FAULDERS, MARY ELIZABETH, Wichita. Home Economics; House Manager, Kappa Alpha Theta; Home Economics Club; Y.W. C.A.; Union Activities. FEE, JOHN RAYMOND, Cunningham, Business; Treasurer, Manager, Scholarship Chairman, Delta Upsilon; Alpha Phi Omega; Scabbard and Blade; Inter-Fraternity Council; Y.M.C.A.; Business School Association; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Intramurals. FEIGENBAUM, BEN, Kansas City, Mo. Marketing; Business School Association; Treasurer, Jewish Students ' Union; Honor Roll, School of Business. FERGUSON, JUANITA ELAINE, Atchison. Bacteriology; Newman Club; Alpha Kappa Alpha; Bacteriology Club; Y.W.C.A.; tary-Treasurer, Negro Student Association. FERGUSON, PATRICIA ANN, Kansas City, Mo. History; ship Chairman, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Entomology Club; Home Economics Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Y.W.C.A.; Union ties; C.V.C.; Phi Alpha Theta. FIELDS, JULIA ANN, Kansas City. Drawing and Painting; tary, Delta Phi Delta; Anti-Basilieus, Alpha Kappa Alpha. The flag is up. The flag is waving. The flag is down! A pin and buzz for Bunny Lawler from fiance Johnny Glover. 368 THE JAYHAWKER First Row FIRESTONE, MILTON MAX, Kansas City, Mo. Economics; Pi Sigma Alpha; President, Jewish Student Union; Dean ' s Honor Roll. FISHER, JEAN THOMAS, Topeka. Speech; President, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Executive Council, Inter-Fraternity Council; Dance ager; Social Committee, A.S.C.; Newman Club; Ku Ku Club; Winner of the Senator Capper Award; KU Public Speaking Champion; Kansas Collegiate Oratorical Champion; Daily san; Intramural Board. FORD, BARBARA, Osborne. Political Science; Y.W.C.A.; Cabinet; International Relations Club; Union Activities; Pi Sigma Alpha; Alpha Chi Omega. FOSTER, CHARLES VERNON, Parsons. Chemical Engineering; urer, Theta Tau; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Scabbard and Blade; Vice President, A.I.Ch.E.; Band. Just engaged and happy over the outcome—Mother Brown poses for a tin-type with Bob Crowley and Elaine Carlson, FOX, BEVERLY JUNE, Kansas City, Mo. Psychology; Gamma Phi Beta; El Ateneo; Psychology Club; Music Appreciation Club; Entertainment Committee, Union Activities; Y.W.C.A.; murals; Dean ' s Honor Roll. FRANCIS, WILLIAM C., Lee ' s Summit, Mo. Chemistry; Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Mu Alpha. Second Row FRANK, G. WILLARD, Ottawa. Petroleum Engineering; Historian, Rush Captain, Phi Gamma Delta; K Club; Y.M.C.A.; A.I.M.E.; Basketball; Intramurals. FREDERICK, LEMOYNE RICHARD, Wilson. Journalism; Sigma Delta Chi; Band; Editor-in-chief, Daily Kansan. FULLER, NORMAN E., Manhattan. Accounting; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Men ' s Glee Club; A.V.C.; I.S.A. GALE, RORERT H., Syracuse. Business; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; President, Men ' s Glee Club, GALLENTINE, WAYNE R., Norton. Commercial Art; Phi Delta Theta; Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles; Jayhawker Staff; Bitter Bird Staff. GEAR, MEREDITH, Guymon, Okla. Secretarial Training; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Tau Sigma; W.A.A.; Chi Omega; Jayhawker. Third Row GILES, RUTH VICTORIA, Sublette. Secretarial Training. GILLE, EVERETT SPENCER, Kansas City. Business; President, Phi Delta Theta; Y.M.C.A.; Pachacamac. GILLILAND, DIXIE JEANNE, Ottawa. Journalism; Secretary, Chi Omega; Treasurer, W.E.C.; Treasurer, Publicity Chairman, Y.W. C.A.; President, Treasurer, Theta Sigma Phi; Editor, KU dar; Publicity Chairman, Union Activities; A.S.C.; Forums Board; Kansan Board; Press Club; Executive Council, N.O.W.; hawker; Orchestra; Statewide Activities; Publicity Committee, Senior Class; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Mortar Board. GODFREY, PEARL WHITSON, JR., Overland Park. Aeronautical Engineering; Delta Tau Delta; American Society of Testing terials; Secretary-Treasurer, Institute of Aeronautical Sciences; K Club; Engineering Council; Track. GOODELL, JACQUIE, Abilene. Spanish; I.S.A. Council; Inter-dorm Council; Secretary, Pi Lambda Theta; President, Foster Hall; Spanish Club; Y.W.C.A.; Home Economics Club. GOODELL, MARY CATHERINE, Kansas City, Mo. Dietetics; Home Economics Club; W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A. 369 SPRING NUMBER, 1917 First Row GOODRICH, JUDSON E., Topeka. Chemistry; Secretary, President, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Inter-Fraternity Council; Band; Orchestra; Phi Beta Kappa. GORDON, ROBERT GLENN, Independence. Mining Engineering; Alpha Tau Omega; A.I.M.M.E.; Geology Club; Chemistry Club. GOSNEY, MARGARET JANE, Leavenworth. Speech and Drama; Doorkeeper, Alpha Omicron Pi; Co-Chairman Publicity, versity Players; Dramatic Workshop; Radio Workshop; Thank You Doctor ; Hay Fever ; Skin of Our Teeth ; Beggar On Horseback ; Midsummer Night ' s Dream . Goss, HAROLD EDGAR, Pleasanton. General Business; President, Delta Tau Delta; Ku Ku Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Men ' s Glee Club; Y.M.C.A. GOTT, MARY EVELYN, Lawrence. Home Economics; Vice dent, Kappa Beta; Home Economics Club. GRAHAM, CAROL L., Fort Scott. Business; Psi Chi; Y.W.C.A.; A Cappella; I.S.A. Second Row GRAVES, ROSEMARY S., Tell City, Ind. Business; Alpha Chi Omega; Vice President, Newman Club; Treasurer, Phi Chi Theta; U.W. C.; Y.W.C.A. GRAY, GEORGE MORRIS, Kansas City. Zoology; Phi Delta Theta. GRAY, GLORIA MARIE, Topeka. Speech; Pledge Trainer, Kappa Gamma; W.A.A.; Dramatic Workshop; Y.W.C.A. GRAY, ROBERT TRULL, Topeka. Mathematics; Pi Kappa Alpha; Pachacamac; Alpha Phi Omega; Mathematics Club; Students ' United Nations Organization Assembly. GREEN, EU GENIA CECILIA, Lawrence. Pharmacy; Newman Club; President, Kappa Epsilon. GREENE, JACK H., Wichita. Zoology; Zoology Club. Thirr ' Row GREGORY, BETTILOU, Muncie, Public School Music; Band; estra. GREY, CHARLES EDWIN, Parsons. Geology; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Vice President, Chemistry Club; Geology Club; Jayhawk Co-op. GROVES, BARBARA LAURA, Edwardsville. Sociology; ing Secretary, Alpha Kappa Alpha; Y.W.C.A. GUGLER, LYLAS RUHLEEN, Florence. Music Education; ponding Secretary, Historian, Mu Phi Epsilon; Pi Lambda Theta; Kappa Phi; A Cappella; W.A.A. GUNN, JANE ANDERSON, Lawrence. Journalism; Publicity man, Alpha Chi Omega; Chairman, Kansan Board; Vice dent, Theta Sigma Phi; Assistant Managing Editor; Telegraph Editor, Make-up Editor, Daily Kansan; Press Club; Women ' s Glee Club; Y.W.C.A. GUNN, RICHARD L., Kansas City. College; Steward, Kappa Alpha Psi; Justice, Student Court; Y.M.C.A. Scott Wilson presides while Ed Tillman beams at the Kappa Alpha Psi founders day banquet. 370 THE JAYHAWKER First Row GUNTHER, JOHN JOSEPH, South Bend, Ind. Political Science; President, Delta Tau Delta; Social Chairman, A.S.C.; fraternity Council; International Relations Club; Inner Circle, Pachacamac; Intramurals. GUY, LAWRENCE D., Winfield. Aeronautical Engineering; Delta Upsilon; Theta Tau; Institute of Aeronautical Sciences; dent, Men ' s Glee Club. HAAGE, WILLIAM RUSSELL, Garden City. Journalism; Song Leader, Historian, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Secretary, Sigma Delta Chi; Editor-in-chief, managing editor, make-up editor, Sunday editor, University Daily Kansan; Kansan Board; Press Club. HAFFNER, BARBARA MARY, Kansas City, Mo. Psychology; tary, social chairman, Kappa Alpha Theta; Statewide Activities Executive Board; Secretary, Psychology Club; Secretary-treasurer, Clubs committee chairman, Union Activities; Y.W.C.A.; 1945 Jayhawker; Dean ' s Honor Roll; W.S.S.F. Executive Board. Barker Tom Rea and Mary Kay Booth yelp in unison at the Foster hall circus party while assorted clowns look on, HAINES, HARVEY HARTZELL III, Sabetha. History; Historian, social chairman, Phi Delta Theta; Y.M.C.A.; Senior Dance mittee; Pachacamac. HALE, GARVIN W., Protection. Political Science. Second Row HALLENBECK, LUCILLE, Linwood. Political Science; Spur Club; International Relations Club. HAMILTON, BILLIE MARIE, Weir. Journalism; President, Mortar Board; President, Christian Science Organization; Theta Sigma Phi; Feature editor, city editor, telegraph editor, managing tor, Daily Kansan; Kansan Board; Associate editor, Jayhawker; Social chairman, A.S.C.; Union Operating Board; President, Press Club; President, Women ' s W.E.C.; Women ' s Glee Club; Statewide Activities Commission; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Eastern Star Scholarship. HAMM, HARRIETT GERALDINE, Cottonwood Falls. Business; tesy Chairman, Phi Chi Theta; Business Schol Association; I.S.A.; Y.W.C.A.; W.S.S.F. HAMPTON, WILMA JEAN, Kansas City. Physical Education; Alpha Omicron Pi; Treasurer, W.A.A. HANLEY, BARBARA, Kansas City, Mo. Mathematics; Treasurer, Sigma Kappa; Chemistry Club; Psychology Club. HANSHAW, WALTER HERBERT, Augusta. Accounting. Third Row HARDING, ROSEMARY GRACE, Ottawa. History; Secretary, Jay Janes; President, Women ' s Independent Political Party; ian, Phi Alpha Theta; Freshmen commission head, Y.W.C.A.; I.S.A.; Union Activitise; Statewdie Activities; A.S.C.; Student Court; Nurse ' s Aide; Young Democrats; Dean ' s Honor Roll. HARDING, WILLIAM B., Kansas City. Engineering; A.I.Ch.E.; Alpha Chi Sigma; Alpha Tau Omega. HARDMAN, PAUL ALBERT, JR., Topeka. Mechanical Engineering; K Club. HARGISS, WILLARD CLARKE, Topeka. Mechanical Engineering; Vice President, Sigma Nu; Secretary, Pi Tau Sigma; Tau Beta Pi, A.S.M.E.; Varsity Track; Intramurals; Men ' s Glee Club; Band. HARKLEROAD, LOIS RUBY, Whitewater. Mathematics; Pi Lambda Theta; Pi Mu Epsilon; Mathematics Club; W.A.A.; Kappa HARLAN, VELORIES M., Wichita. Industrial Management; bard and Blade; R.O.T.C. 371 SPRING NUMBER, 1947 First Row HARMON, KENNETH, Ellsworth. Accounting; A.V.C.; Business School Association. HARTLEY, PHILIP B., Wichita. Civil Engineering; Treasurer, Delta Tau Delta; A.S.C.E. HARTLEY, W. C., Baxter Springs. Business Administration; dent, Beta Theta Pi; Owl Society; Sachem; Intramural Board; Senior Chairman, Relays Committee. HARVEY, WINFIELD SCOTT, Salina. Business Personnel; mander, Sigma Nu; Men ' s Glee Club; Summer Chorus; Senior Class Gift Committee; Intramurals; Tennis. HASKINS, KENNETH L., Hutchinson. Social Scienc 2; Phi Alpha Theta; A.V.C.; I.S.A.; Summer Chorus. HAVER, KATHRYN N., El Dorado. Political Science; Alpha Delta Pi; International Relations Club; Y.W.C.A.; Phi Alpha Theta; Dean ' s Honor Roll. Second Row HAYDEN, MARTHA AMELIA, Lawrence. Mathematics; I.S.A. HAYES, MARY JANE, Atchison. Speech; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Y.W.C.A.; Entomology Club; Newman Club. HAYWOOD, CLARENCE ROBERT, Fowler. Social Science; Treasurer, Phi Alpha Theta; Phi Delta Kappa; Dramatic Workshop; ciology Club . HEINEN, AGNES CATHERINE, Beloit. Accounting; I.S.A.; Y.W. C.A.; Newman Club; Business Association. HENDRICKS, WALTER H. M., JR., Wellington. Business; Alpha Kappa Psi. HENDRIX, LLOYD E., Independence, Mo. Psychology; Chemistry Club; Psychology Club; Tumbling Team; Y.M.C.A. Third Row HERD, G. RONALD, Coldwater. Economics; P.S.G.L., Senate; Vice President, S.S.O.; Baseball. HERRIOTT, HAROLD TERRY, Lawrence. History; Phi Kappa Psi; Political Science Club; Jayhawker; Daily Kansan; Pachacamac; Union Activities; Editor-in-chief, Bitter Bird; Vice President, Owl Society; Chairman U.S.S.R. Delegation, U. N. Conference; Chairman, Memorial Show Committee; Chairman, Senior Class Breakfast Committee. HERRMANN, JOHN L., Kansas City, Mo. Chemical Engineering; Vice President, Kappa Sigma; Treasurer, Alpha Phi Omega; A.I.Ch.E. HIGDON, JOHN KENNETH, Kansas City Mo. General Business; Secretary, Treasurer, Delta Upsilon; Inter-Fraternity Council; Young Republicans; Ku Ku Club; Pachacamac; Finance man, War Memorial Drive. HILL, MARY Lu, Lawrence. Home Economics; I.S.A.; Y.W.C.A.; Vice President, Treasurer, Home Economics Club. HINES, JACK WENDELL, Wichita. History; Senior Council, Rush Chairman, Delta Upsilon; Band; Orchestra; Men ' s Glee Club; A Cappella; Male Octet; Freshman, Varsity, Debate; Golf; K Club; Inner Circle, Pachacamac. Fred Helm, Ruth Mitchell, Bobbe Esmond, and Bill Bowlby beam for the birdie at the Corbin hall circus party. 372 THE JAYHAWKER First Row HIRD, E. WAYNE, Lawrence. Medicine; Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Beta Pi; Treasurer, K Club; Football; A.P. All American Honorable Men; A Cappella; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Y.M.C.A.; Zoology Club. HISSEM, PEGGY Lou, Wichita. Design. HOBBS, WALDO STANLEY, Venice, Calif. Mechanical Engineering; Phi Delta Theta; President, A.S.M.E.; Treasurer, Clubs ganizations; Union Activities. HOCKADAY, MILDRED IRENE, Lawrence. Music Education; en ' s Glee Club. HOEFER, WILLIAM GAINES, Higginsville, Mo. Electrical ing; Tau Beta Pi; A.I.E.E. HOFFMAN, MARY JANE, Enterprise, Bacteriology; W.A.A.; teriology Club; Y.W.C.A.; Kappa Kappa Gamma. Peg-leg Duane Lintecum reclines in Liz lap and casts an evil eye about the room at a Foster hall masque. Second Row HOGAN, DANIEL WILLIAM JR., West Medford, Mass. History; President, Phi Kappa; President, Newman Club; Bacteriology Club, HOLTZCLAW, MARY, Lawrence. Sociology; Corresponding tary, Sigma Kappa; Devotional Chairman, Kappa Beta; President, Student Religious Council; Christian Church Forum; I.S.A.; Chairman, Religious Emphasis Week; Sunflower Union tivities. HORSEMAN, MARIE, Kansas City. Chemistry; Vice President, U.W.C.; W.A.A. HORTON, WILDA, Blue Mound. Home Economics; President, licity Chairman, Home Economics Club; Vice President, Reporter, Watkins Hall; President, Chaplain, Kappa Phi; Editor, Omicron Nu; Pi Lambda Theta; Wesley Foundation; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Band. HOUCK, FRANK HALSEY, Independence. Personnel; dent, Alpha Tau Omega. HOUCK, SALLY E., Independence. Sociology; Secretary, Sociology Club; House Manager, President, Chi Omega; Panhellenic cil; Y.W.C.A.; Committee Chairman, W.S.S.F. Drive; Sponsor, Junior Panhellenic; Union Activities; Memorial Drive mittee. Third Row HOWE, HELEN IRENE, Lawrence. Piano; Secretary, Treasurer, Mu Phi Epsilon; Treasurer, Mortar Board; Wesley Foundation net; Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship Cabinet; A.S.C.; Union Operating Committee; Orchestra; Kappa Phi; Pi Kappa Lambda. HUBER, LOUIS A., Kansas City, Mo. Business; Alpha Kappa Psi. HUFF, WARREN ARTHUR, El Dorado. Personnel Management; President, Alpha Kappa Psi; Y.M.C.A.; Business School sociation. HUFFMAN, BETTY JANE, Glasco. Bacteriology. HUGHES, HARRY LEWIS, Topeka. French; President, Sigma Phi Epsilon; French Club. HULL, ELOISE E., Kansas City. English; Y.W.C.A.; I.S.A.; Women ' s Glee Club. First Row HULL, HARVEY WILSON, Dayton, Ohio. Civil Engineering; A.S.C.E.; Alpha Phi Omega. HULL, JUNE MONTGOMERY, St. John. Mathematics; Mathematics Club; Theta Epsilon; Student Religious Council. HUTCHINSON, ROBERT BAKER, Hutchinson. English; Wesl y Foundation; I.S.A.; Y.M.C.A.; Owl Society; Summerfield Schol; r; Speaking Contests; Freshman Debate; Dramatics. IRWIN, CHARLES E., Independence, Mo. Electrical Engineering; Secretary, A.I.E.E.; Kappa Eta Kappa. IRVING, NINA GRETCHEN, Lawrence. College. JACKSON, RALPH A., Lawrence. Civil Engineering; Sigma Chi; A.S.C.E.; Men ' s Glee Club; Band; Sigma Tau. Second Row JACOBSON, ELLIOT L., Kansas City, Mo. Mechanical Engineering; A.S.M.E. JANKE, LEDA GRACE, Claflin. Medicine; Chaplain, Kappa Phi; Wesley Foundation; Dean ' s Honor Roll. JARBOE, ROSEMARY ANN, Parsons, General Business; Librarian, President, Gamma Phi Beta; Phi Chi Theta; Newman Club; Women ' s Panhellenic Association. JENKINS, MARY ELNORA, Lawrence. Bacteriology; President, Alpha Kappa Alpha; Bacteriology Club; Y.W.C.A. JENKINS, NEWELL N., Howard. English; Student Union ties; A.S.C.; Sachem; P.S.G.L.; Pershing Rifleman; Scabbard and Blade; Forensic League; I.S.A.; Jayhawker. JETTON, ELDEN VERNER, Alta Vista. Physics; Phi Alpha Theta. Third Row JOHNSON, ERNA BELLE, Fort Scott. Secretarial Training; Phi Chi Theta; Business School Organization. JOHNSON, JANE ELLEN, Salina. Mathematics; Secretary, Newman Club; Vice President, Tau Sigma; W.A.A. JOHNSON, MARVIN H., Lawrence. Credit Management and counting; Assistant Manager, Student Book Store; Y.M.C.A. JONES, COLLEEN ELLEN, Kansas City. General Business; I.S.A.; Business School Association. JONES, ROBERT EARL JR., Garden City, Long Island, N. Y. Busi- ness Administration; Y.M.C.A.; President, Sigma Alpha silon; Progressive Political Party; Student Manager, JOSEPH, HOWARD F., Whitewater. Chemistry; Beta Theta Pi; Nu Sigma Nu; Business Chairman, Union Activities. Love, Scott, Beasley, Brown, Cundiff, Pack, Pickens, Garst, Cable, and Lambert practice up for a spring rush weekend on the Pi Phi steps. SPRING NUMBER, 1947 373 T H E 374 Press Club; Psychology Classified Advertising Lutheran Organization. Chemical Engineering. KEEVEN, LAVERNE A., Troy, Journalism. Club; Y.W.C.A.; Alpha Gamma Phi; Manager, Daily Kansan; Gamma Delta; KENDALL, WESLEE W., Guide Rock, Nebr. Alpha Chi Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; A.I.Ch.E. JAYHAWKER First Row KABLER, J. D., Wichita. Medicine; Secretary, Nu Sigma Nu; Phi Delta Theta; Summerfielci Scholar. KALBFLEISCH, RUTH CAWOOD, Wetmore. Home Economics; W.A.A.; Publicity Chairman, Jay Janes; Home Economics Club; President, Omicron Nu; Independent Council; Class Basketball Team; Dean ' s Honor Roll. KANAGA, WILLIAM SMITH, Kansas City. Metallurgical ing; President, Phi Delta Theta; Sigma Tau; Tau Beta Pi; Inner Circle, Pachacamac; Feature Editor, Sour Owl; Sports Writer, Daily Kansan, A.S.C. KAUFMAN, MILFORD J., Moundridge. Petroleum Engineering; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau, Jane Wilcox, Joan Harris, Donna Munn, and Jerrie Keesee welcome the latest addition to the Sigma Kappa house. Second Row KERNICK, ANDRESS, Overland Park. Electrical and Mechanical gineering; Battenfeld Hall; Phi Mu Alpha; A.I.E.E.; A.S.M.E.; Orchestra; Synphonette; I.S.A. KERR, KENNETH L., Paola. Business. KERR, RICHARD A., Galena, Ill. Mechanical Engineering; Kappa Sigma; A.S.M.E.; Intramurals. KERSCHEN, MARGUERITA MONICA, Leoti. French; Treasurer, cording Secretary, Vice President, President, Alpha Omicron Pi; A.S.C.; President, French Club; Treasurer, Pi Lambda Theta; Panhellenic Council; U.W.O.; Newman Club. KERSHNER, HUGH CLEVELAND JR., Kansas City. Civil ing; Y.M.C.A.; A.S.C.E.; Sigma Tau; Beta Theta Pi. KINDIG, ELIZABETH E..LEN, Medicine Lodge. Bacteriology. Third Row KINGSBURY, DORIS M., Grenola. English; Secretary, Vice dent, Sigma Kappa; A Cappella; French Club. KISKADDEN, ROBERT M., Wichita. Drawing and Painting; Social Chairman, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Vice President, President, Delta Phi Delta. KNEALE, SAMUEL GEORGE, Tulsa, Okla. Mathematics; Secretary, Phi Delta Theta; Pachacamac; Union Activities. KNOWLES, DOROTHY, Atchison. Personnel Administration; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Home Economics Club. KNUTH, KENNETH LAWRENCE, Nashville. Medicine; President, Pledge Class President, Phi Beta Pi; Intramurals. KOENIG, ROBERT W., Edwardsport, Ind. Political Science; Men ' s Glee Club; Phi Mu Alpha; A Cappella; International Relations Club; Kansas Players. 1 375 SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 First Row KOPKE, ADA LOUISE, Coldwater. General Business; Phi Chi Theta; President, Wright Place. KOPKE, CHARLES H., Coldwater. General Business. KOST, CLYDE KENNETH, Lawrence. Pharmacy; Kappa Psi; Ku Ku Club. KREHBIEL, FLOYD HAROLD, Moundridge. Economics; Phi Mu Alpha; Alpha Kappa Psi; Secretary-Treasurer, President, Band; Forensic League; A Cappella; Announcer, K.F.K.U.; Ku Ku Club. KUNKLE, ROBERT, Jeannette, Pa. Mechanical Engineering; Theta Tau; Pi Tau Sigma; A.S.M.E.; Vice President, Senior Class; Editor, Kansas Engineer; Engineering Council; I.S.A. LACKEY, ELDON L ., Hutchinson. Accounting; Y.M.C.A.; V.F.W.; School of Business Organization. Second Row LASH, BILLY B., Ottawa. Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Pi Tau Sigma; Scabbard and Blade; President, Institute of Aeronautical Sciences. LAUB, RICHARD SIDNEY, El Dorado Springs, Mo. Mechanical gineering; Treasurer, Kappa Sigma; A.S.M.E. LAWLER, ROSE MARGARET, Kansas City, Mo. English; Pi Beta Y.W.C.A.; Jayhawker; Editorial Associate, Bitter Bird; Kansan. LAWRENCE, FRANCES VIVIENNE, Lawrence. Commercial Art; retary, Rush Captain, Kappa Alpha Theta; Secretary, Delta Phi Delta; Tau Sigma; Y.W.C.A.; Union Activities; Panhellenic Council. LAWTON, ROBERT KEITH, Bushong. Personnel Management. LEA, EUGENE DAVID, Kansas City, Mo. Engineering; Pi Tau Sigma; Track; A.S.M.E.; K Club. Third Row LEISER, DORIS VIRGINIA, Kansas City, Mo. Music; Kappa Phi. LINCOLN, ARMILDA ANN, Liberty, Mo. Biological Science; Social Chairman, Delta Gamma; Treasurer, Rifle Team; Bridge ment Winner; Entomology Club; Botany Club; Nursing Club; Y.W.C.A. LINDQUIST, DORAEN ADELE, Belleville. Psychology; I.S.A.; Y.W. C.A.; Parliamentarian, Templin Hall; Band; Spur Club; A pella; Chemistry Club; Zoology Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll. LIST, RITA JOANNE, Kansas City, Mo. Art; Alpha Omicron Pi; Women ' s Glee Club; Art Club; French Club. LIVINGSTON, CAULBERT R., Kansas City, Mo. Public School Music; Orchestra; Kappa Alpha Psi. LIVINGSTON, DONALD GENE, Hutchinson. Psychology; Vice dent, Band; Editor, N.R.O.T.C. Newspaper; Orchestra; Psychology Club; Quaestor, Tribune, Rush Secretary, Sigma Chi. Herb Mesigh, Phyllis Farrell, John Scanlon, and Claire White pantomime the new hit song, Just a Huggin and a Gawkin. First Row LOGAN, HENRY WILLIAM, Wichita. Accounting; Phi Gamma Delta; Y.M.C.A.; Society for the Advancement of Management. LONG, VIRGIL GENE, Pleasanton. Physical Education; Vice dent, K Club; Football; Track; Intramurals, Basketball, Track; State Health and Physical Education Association. LONGAN, FRANCIS E., Kansas City, Mo. Civil Engineering; dent, Delta Chi; Alpha Phi Omega; Inter-Fraternity Council; Pachacamac; A.S.C.E.; Manager, Intramural Activities; Archery Club. LONGENECKER, MARY, Kansas City. Sociology; Pi Beta Phi; Union Activities; Jayhawker; Quack Club; Rifle Club; Sociology Club; W.A.A. LOOKER, LOUISE FRANCES, Kansas City, Mo. History; I.S.A.; Band. Man of distinction Todd Seymour strikes a pose while Louise Lambert cheers madly from the sidelines. THE JAYHAWKER MAGILL, BARBARA J., Topeka. Sociology; Delta Delta Delta; ciology Club. Second Row MAHONE, IRENE MAUDE, Kansas City. Sociology; Grammateus, Alpha Kappa Alpha; Y.W.C.A. MAHONEY, WILLIAM JOSEPH, Wakefield, Mass. English; responding Secretary, Phi Kappa; Treasurer, Newman Club; Football; Baseball. MALLONEE, ELIZABETH ANN, Wichita. Psychology; President Pledge Class, Chaplain, Vice President, Delta Delta Delta; Jay Janes; Y.W.C.A.; Vice President, N.O.W.; Psychology Club; ciology Club; Young Republicans; Panhellenic Council. MALONEY, JAMES 0., Wichita. Business; Alumni Secretary, Delta Tau Delta; Ku Ku Club; K.U. Relays Committee; Newman Club. MARGRAVE, JOHN L., Kansas City. Electrical Engineering; Kappa Eta Kappa; Tau Beta Pi; A.I.E.E.; Summerfield Scholar; Owl Society; Sachem; Engineering Council. MARKLEY, RICHARD LEELAND, Lawrence. Geology; Secretary. Treasurer, Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Geology Club. Third Row MARLMAN, WILLIAM MORRIS, Kansas City, Mo. Marketing. MARSH, MARY GAYLE, Emporia. Psychology; Treasurer, House Manager, Pi Beta Phi; Vice President, Psychology Club; Psi Chi; Jayhawker Staff; Union Activities; Y.W.C.A.; Intramurals; Home Economics Club; Sociology Club. MARSHALL, WILLIAM A. JR., Bonner Springs. Accounting; dent, Delta Tau Delta; Secretary, Inter-Fraternity Council; Y.M. C.A.; Intramurals. MARTINDELL, ELAINE WYMAN, Hutchinson. English; Pi Beta Phi; Y.W.C.A.; Reporter, KU Dames; C.V.C.; Dean ' s Honor Roll. MAUPIN, CARL F., Merriam. College; Inter-Hall Council; national Relations Club; Men ' s Residence Hall Scholarship. MAYER, CAROL, Kansas City. Education; President, Pi. Beta Phi; Women ' s Glee Club; Y.W.C.A.; War Memorial Drive tee; Intramurals; Panhellenic Council. 376 First Row MAZON, SAM, Kansas City, Mo. Marketing; All Student Religious Council; Tennis Team; I.S.A.; Progressive Party; J.S.A. MCCAUL, DONALD BRYAN, Kansas City, Mo. Mechanical ing; Phi Kappa Psi; A.S.M.E.; Bitter Bird; A.S.C.; Pachacamac; Inter-Fraternity Council. MCCHESNEY, DONNA, Zenda. Bacteriology; Bacteriology Club. MCCONNELL, RICHARD FOSTER, Atwood. Business; Social man, Alpha Kappa Psi; Tau Kappa Epsilon; Scabbard and Blade; Business School Committee. MCCUNE, MARY ELIZABETH, Huron. Home Economics; Treasurer, Omicron Nu; Home Economics Club. MCDONALD, JAMES GORDON, Eudora. Business; Alpha Tau Omega; Alpha Phi Omega; Intramurals. Second Row McEwEN, STANLEY RANKIN, Wichita. Medicine; Phi Delta Theta; Nu Sigma Nu. MCGREW, MARGUERITE JEANNE, Lawrence. Zoology; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Quack Club; Quill Club; A Cappella. MCGUCKIN, JOHN FRANCIS, Philadelphia, Pa. Mechanical gineering; President, Sigma Tau; President, Vice President, A.S. M.E.; Regimental Commander, Navy V-12 Unit; Executive Board, Student Union; Historian, Chaplain, Activities Chairman, Phi Delta Theta; Pi Tau Sigma; Sachem; A.S.T.M.; Executive mittee, International Relations Club; Editorial Staff, Kansas gineer; Varsity Baseball. MCINTIRE, JAMES EDWARD, Clay Center. Accounting; Delta silon. MCJONES, ROBERT W., Dodge City. Aeronautical Engineering; Sachem, Tau Beta Pi; Summerfield Scholarship; A.1.A.S.; gineering Council. MCKAY, JOHN WARREN, Wichita. Medicine; Phi Delta Theta; Nu Sigma Nu. Third Row MCMURRAY, CLAYTON C., Kansas City. Accounting. MCQUOWN, JOHN RAGAN, Kansas City, Mo. Physics. MCSPADDEN, HAROLD DEAN, El Dorado. Chemical Engineering; Secretary, President, Phi Gamma Delta; Varsity Basketball; gineering Council; A.S.C.; President, K Club; Inter-Fraternity Council; Ow l Society; Sigma Tau; Sachem. MEANS, ELDON L., Wichita. Industrial Management; Alpha Tau Omega. MENDENHALL, MRS. GEORGE G., Lawrence. Sociology. MENNELL, JEANNE BOWLEY, Liberal. Psychology. Labor unrest hits the hill as Charles Mull and Bob Shively strike a light for the picket behind Ad. SPRING NUMBER, 1947 377 378 THE JAYHAWKER First Row MERCER, MARY JO, Wellington. Home Economics; House ager, Watkins Hall; Treasurer, Home Economics Club; istry Club; W.A.A.; I.S.A. METCALF, MARTHA, Kansas City, Mo. Psychology; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Y.W.C.A.; Psychology Club; Entomology Club; hawker Staff. MEYER, CARL MARTIN, Salina. Psychology; Vice President, Kappa Sigma. MEYER, JOYCE MARY, Wichita. Art; Song Leader, Delta Gamma; Y.W.C.A.; Newman Club; Inrtamurals. MICHENER, WILLIAM RALPH, Wichita. College; President, net, Y.M.C.A.; Summerfield Scholar; Pi Sigma Alpha; P.S.G.L. Gus Burton scowls at the camera while C. B. White trips the light fantastic and her partner at a Corbin hall party. MILLER, HENRY LAURENCE JR., Kansas City, Mo. Political Science; President, Beta Theta Pi; K.U. Honor Award Forensics; President, Delta Sigma Rho; Pi Sigma Alpha; Chairman, Forums Board; Proctor, Western Civilization; Sachem. Second Row MILLER, NANCY A., Iola. Drawing and Painting; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Delta Phi Delta; Y.W.C.A.; Rifle Club; Executive Board, State-Wide Activities; W.A.A. MILLER, WILLIAM D., Wichita. Political Science; Vice President, Pi Kappa Alpha; Alpha Phi Omega. MILHAUSER, GLADYS MAXINE, Preston. Chemistry; Vice dent, Corbin Hall; Phi Beta Kappa; Iota Sigma Pi; Chemistry Club. MILLIGAN, DONALD FLEMING, Salem, Ohio. Political Science; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; N.R.O.T.C. MINNIS, SARA VIRGINIA, Bucklin. Marketing; Phi Chi Theta; porter. MOLLETT, CLARENCE M., Hutchinson. Accounting; Vice President, Rush Chairman, Phi Kappa Psi. Third Row MOODY, IVAN EVEREADY, Stark. Finance; International Relations Club; Barbed Wire Club; Deuces Wild. MOODY, MAX DALE, Onaga. Medicine; Phi Beta Pi. MOORE, JEAN OLIVER, Wichita. College; Secretary, Honour Man, Delta Sigma Rho; Vice President, International Relations Club; Vice Chairman, Progressive Party; Social Chairman, A Cappella Choir; Varsity Debate Squad; National Chairman, National Collegiate U.N. Assoc.; Fellow of the American Academy of litical and Social Science; Fellow of the American Society of International Law; Union Activities; Honor Roll; Young publicans Club; Daily Kansan; World War II Memorial mittee; Phi Alpha Delta; Forensic League. MOORE, ROBERT R., Lawrence. History; Delta Tau Delta; Men ' s Glee Club. MORDY, JAMES CALVIN, Fr edonia. Chemistry; Delta Tau Delta; Sports Editor, Daily Kansan; Jayhawker Staff; Inter-Fraternity Council; Band; Chemistry Club; Mathematics Club; Summerfield Scholarship; Assistant Publicity Director, K.U. News Bureau; Student War Memorial Committee. MORGAN, JOHN ANDREW, San Benito, Texas. Accounting. 379 SPRING NUMBER, 19,17 First Row MORRIS, DAVID BURTON, Saint Paul, Minn, Business; Scabbard and Blade; Phi Delta Theta; Intramurals; Union Activities; hawker Staff; Business School Association. MORRIS, MARGARET ELIZABETH, Carlinville, Ill. Education; Pi Beta Phi. MORRISS, CAROLINE L., Topeka. Music Education; Vice President, Mu Phi Epsilon; President, Pi Lambda Theta; President, Sigma Kappa; A.S.C.; Y.W.C.A.; Women ' s Glee Club; Jay Janes; retary-Treasurer, Senior Class. MOWRY, ROBERT NEIL, Delware, Ohio. Political Science; Grand Master of Ceremonies, Kappa Sigma; N.R.O.T.C. MUHLENBRUCH, ANNA FRANCES, Argonia. Geology; Secretary, President, Gamma Phi Beta; Cheerleader; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Secretary, Geology Club; Women ' s Glee Club; Y.W.C.A.; hellenic Council. MULLARKY, WILLIAM C., Kansas City, Mo. Marketing; Alpha Kappa Psi; Honor Roll, School of Business; Publicity Committee, Union Activities. Second Row MUNDIS, WILLIAM 0., Parsons. Accounting. MURPHY, VIRGINIA CANNON, Lawrence. Psychology; Psychology Club; Rifle Club; Y.W.C.A. MURRAY, JOHN R., Turtle Creek, Pa. Mechanical Engineering; Phi Delta Theta; Union Activities; A.S.M.E. NELSON, ELLIS W., Chanute. Accounting; I.S.A. NELSON, GERALDINE E., Kansas City. Drawing and Painting; retary, Executive Representative, Gamma Phi Beta; Delta Phi Delta; Intramurals; Y.W.C.A.; Union Activities; Music ciation Club; Jayhawker Staff; C.V.C.; University Art Club. NELSON, HAROLD LEE, Lawrence. Mechanical Engineering; torian, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Theta Tau; A.S.M.E.; A Cappella; Kansas Engineering Magazine. Third Row NELSON, MARGARET MARY, Concordia. Music Education; Mu Phi Epsilon; Orchestra; Women ' s Glee Club; Y.W.C.A.; House resentative, Bitter Bird. NELSON, WALTER PAUL, Concordia. Economics. NEWMAN, HERMAN WENDELL, Valley Falls. Marketing; I.S.A.; Secretary, Templin Hall; P.S.G.L.; Dean ' s Honor Roll. NIELSON, DONALD C., Kansas City, Mo. Economics; Sigma Nu; Y.M.C.A. NOBLE, LLOYD WILLIAM, Kansas City. Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi. O ' BRIEN, JOHN SULLIVAN JR., El Dorado. History; Phi Alpha Theta. Domoney, Whiting, and Pomeroy wait cheerfully in line for their balloons as Bill Sears buys a big one from pretty Margie Watts. 380 THE JAYHAWKER First Row O ' CONNOR, EARL E., Paola. Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi; Y.M. C.A.; I.S.A. O ' LEARY, KATHRYN SHAW, Kansas City, Mo. Spanish; Kappa Alpha Theta; A Cappella; Tau Sigma; Quack Club; Phi Alpha Theta; History Club; W.A.A.; Modern Choir; Home Coming Committee; President, Women ' s Panhellenic; Co-Chairman, U.W.C.; Advisor, Junior Panhellenic. OLIVER, MARCH EDWARD, Kansas City, Mo. Chemical Engineering. ONG, DONALD HUNTER, Kansas City, Mo. Economics; Treasurer, Phi Delta Theta; Phi Beta Kappa; Secretary-Treasurer, Sachem; President, Pachacamac; Secretary-General, United Nations ference; A.S.C.; Vice President, Alpha Phi. Omega; Varsity ball; President, International Relations; Chairman, Senior Class Gift Committee; C hairman, Union Intramurals Committee; ness Manager, Bitter Bird; Quill Club; New Student Counsellor; Flight Instructor, Jayhawk Flying Club. John Scanlon, C. B. White, June Ross, and Jim Master- son struggle for elbow room at a Corbin hall dance. OSTRUM, DEAN G., Russell. Political Science; Rush Captain, dent, Sigma Nu; President, Pi Sigma Alpha; Scabbard Blade; Owl Society; Sachem; Phi Beta Kappa; Band; Charley ' s Aunt ; Spring Fever ; Editor, 1947 Jayhawker; Summerfield Scholar. OSWALT, BONNIE Lou, Garden City. English; Vice President, Delta Gamma; Student Statewide Activities. Second Row OTTER, SHIRLEY LOU, Norton. Design; Gamma Phi Beta; Delta Phi Delta; Vice President, Rifle Club; Y.W.C.A.; Union ties; Jayhawker Staff; C.V.C. OWENS, GEORGE ERWIN, Kansas City. Economics. OWEN, JANE, Kansas City. Art; Treasurer, Pledge Trainer, Gamma Phi Beta; Jayhawker Staff; Women ' s Glee Club; C.V.C.; Y.W. C.A.; Panhellenic Council; Music Appreciation Club; Student Union Activities; Statewide Activities. PACK, ELEANOR JANE, Kansas City. Art; Corresponding Secretary, Pi Beta Phi; Historian, Delta Phi Delta; Women ' s Glee Club; Y.W.C.A.; Quack Club; Union Activities; University Art Club. PARKER, MARY KATHRYN, Sali na. Business; Phi Chi Theta. PARMITER, MAR JORIE SKEEN, Eskridge. Music Education; dent, Wright Place; Macbeth ; Band; Women ' s Glee Club; Orchestra; A Cappella; Treasurer, Historian, Mu Phi Epsilon; Pi Lambda Theta. Third Row PARSONS, BETTY Lo, Wellington. English; Press Club; I.S.A. PARTRIDGE, ARTHUR R., Coffeyville. Social Science; Secretary, Treasurer, Alpha Kappa Psi; Kappa Sigma; Phi Delta Kappa; Treasurer, Sophomore Class; Men ' s Student Council; Secretary, Y.M.C.A.; Vice President, P.S.G.L.; Pachacamac; Progressive Party; Vice President, Band; Cabinet, Y.M.C.A.; Sachem. PATTERSON, MARY MARGARET, Bucklin. Music Education; I.S.A.; Y.W.C.A. PAYNE, RUTH ELLEN, Oskaloosa. Psychology; Secretary, Delta Gamma; W.A.A.; Jayhawker; Flying Club. PEELER, JACK W., Memphis, Tenn. Psychology; Sigma Alpha silon. PENDLETON, WILLIAM BIKLEN, Lawrence. Economics; Beta Theta Pi. SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 1 7 381 First Row PERKINS, DELBERT E., Lawrence. Mechanical Engineering; Sigma Nu. PERKINS, JEANNETTE PEARL, Lawrence. Occupational Therapy; Sigma Kappa; Kappa Phi; Band; Orchestra; Occupational Therapy Club. PERRY, WIMBERLY R., Topeka. Geology; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Geology Club. PETERSON, JUNE E., Osage City. Chemistry; President, Vice dent, Watkins Hall; Secretary, Independent Council; Secretary, Chemistry Club; President, Vice President, Interdorm Council; W.A. A.; Kappa Phi; Jay Janes, Mortar Board. PHIPPS, SARAH FRANCES, Wichita. Mathematics; French Club; Mathematics Club; Kappa Alpha Theta. PIHLBLAD, MARGARET M., Garfield. Mathematics. Second Row PINCOMB, ARTHUR LEON, Olathe. Zoology; Phi Chi. PITTS, RAYMOND EARL, Waverly. Psychology. POLAND, LEO A., Gem. Accounting; Inter-Varsity Christian lowship. POMEROY, DONALD ANDREW, Holton. Economics; Senior walk Committee; Chairman, New Student Activities Committee; Y.M.C.A.; County Chairman, Statewide Activities; Men Student Council; Treasurer, Sophomore Class; President, Progressive Party; Executive Committee of Inner Circle, Pachacamac; First Vice Chairman, Young Republican Club; Editor, Delta Upsilon; President, Vice President, Alpha Kappa Psi; President, Alpha Phi Omega. POSTLETHWAITE, RAYMOND DEANE, Delphos. Political Science; Chancellor, Quill Club; Vice President, Pi Sigma Alpha; tive Committee, Young Democrats Club; Editor, The Dove; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Statewide Activities; Residence Hall ship; Research Assistant; Bureau of Government Research. PRINGLE, JAMES THOMAS, Arkansas City. History; Kappa Third PRINGLE, KENNETH WILKIE, JR., Wichita. Economics; Alpha Tau Omega; Pachacamac; Y.M.C.A.; International Relations Club; Young Republicans Club. PROCTOR, WALLACE PENNINGTON, Parsons. Engineering; Theta Tau. PRYOR, CARLON WINSTON, Little Rock, Ark. Zoology; Basileus, Omega Psi Phi; Historian, Secretary, Alpha Phi Omega; man, Creative Leisure Committee; Y.M.C.A.; Zoology Club; sas Academy of Science; Negro Student ' s Association; N.A.A.C.P. PYKE, NORMA JEAN, Strong City. Business; President, Corbin Hall; President, Phi Chi Theta; Y.W.C.A., Cabinet; I.S.A. Council; W.A.A. RAMSEY, BARTLETT WILHITE, Kansas City, Mo. Medicine; Sigma Nu; Nu Sigma Nu; Ku Ku Club. RAMSEYER, ROBERT A., Kansas City, Mo. Political Science; Sigma Nu. John Conard strikes a profile for admiring Ginny Powell to the complete satisfaction of their comrades-in-arms. 382 THE JAYHAWKER First Row RANDALL, WAYNE CLARK, Osage City. Business; Orchestra; A Cappella; Y.M.C.A.; Wesley Foundation. RATHBUN, PHARA KATHELEENE, Winfield. Chemistry; Social Chairman, Foster Hall; Music Chairman, Kappa Beta; Chemistry Club; Orchestra. RENDANT, JOHN C., Pasadena, Calif. Engineering. RENDLEMAN, BETTY LAVONE, Olathe. Spanish; Alpha Chi Omega; Home Economics Club; Spanish Club; Phi Alpha Theta. REW, VICTOR MERLIN, Lawrence. Accounting; K.U. Business School Association; Honor Roll. Bud Hinkle whispers sweet nothings into the ear of Betty Bacon who guffaws in reply. REYNOLDS, CLIFFORD, Lawrence. General Business; Y.M.C.A.; Alpha Kappa Psi; I.S.A.; P.S.G.L.; Beta Gamma Sigma; Sachem; Band; A.S.C.; M.S.C.; Treasurer, Union Activities; Summerfield Scholarship. Second Row REYNOLDS, FOSTER NELSON, Upper Darby, Pa. Engineering sics; Kappa Sigma. RICHARDS, VIOLETTA, Sedalia, Mo. Home Economics; ing Secretary, Dean of Pledges, Alpha Kappa Alpha; Negro dent Association; Home Economics Club; Y.W.C.A. RICHEY, JAMES J., Lawrence. Business; Phi Gamma Delta; K-Club; Men ' s Intramural Secretary; Track; Homecoming Queen mittee. RIFFER, VIVIAN Lou, Centralia. Music Education; Orchestra; President, Woman ' s Glee Club. RITTS, ALVIN VERNE, Stafford. Mathematics; Kappa Sigma; Vice President, Student Assistant, Wesley Foundation; Band. RIXEY, NORTON BERNARD, Kansas City, Mo. Electrical ing; Sigma Nu. Third Row ROBBINS, EARL LEE JR., Lawrence. Social Chairman, Phi Gamma Delta; Y.M.C.A.; Student Union Activities; Jayhawker Staff; Pachacamac. ROBERTS, BARBARA, Kansas City. Bacteriology. RODECKER, CATHERINE MAY, Parsons. Bacteriology; I.S.A. RODERICK, INA KATHERINE, Wetmore. Textile Design; Song Leader, Kappa Alpha Theta; Women ' s Glee Club; Independent Women ' s Council; Home Economics Club. ROTERT, ELEANOR JEAN, Kansas City. Psychology; Y.W.C.A. ROTMAN, MAX J., Kansas City, Mo. Business. 383 SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 First Row RUNYON, KENNETH EUGENE, Lawrence. Psychology; Vice man, Chairman, A.V.C.; Psychology Club. RUNYON, LUTHER LAWSON, Wester Grove, Mo. Civil ing; President, A.S.C.E. RUSKIN, JOHN HOWARD, Lawrence. Civil Engineering; A.S.C.E.; A.S.T.M. RUSSELL, HELEN ELIZABETH, Lawrence. College; Alpha Chi Omega; Secretary-Treasurer, Kappa Beta; German Club. RUSSELL, MARION GEORGE, Kansas City. Accounting. RYAN, HOWARD ALLEN, Abilene. Civil Engineering; Phi Delta Theta; Track; A.S.C.E.; Ku Ku Club; County Chairman, wide Activities. Second Row SAMSON, ROBERT HENRY, Roswell, N. M. Electrical Engineering; House Manager, Vice President, Sigma Chi; A.I.E.E. SANDBORN, BETTY MARIE, Stafford. Chemical Engineering; retary, A.I.Ch.E.; Y.W.C.A.; Intramurals. SANDELIUS, IRENE WALTERIA, Lawrence. Spanish; Secretary, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Spanish Club; A Cappella; Dramatics Workshop; Y.W.C.A.; Modern Choir. SANDEN, BETTY ANN, Iola. Zoology; Pledge Trainer, Delta Gamma; Zoology Club; W.A.A.; Officer, Women ' s Rifle Club; German Club; Pre-Nursing Club. SANFORD, LEATHA BELLE, Lawrence. Chemistry; Band; Alpha Delta Pi; Y.W.C.A.; Secretary-Treasurer, Chemistry Club. SCHIESSER, LOUISE, Eskridge. Journalism; National Advertising Manager, Kansan Staff; Kappa Phi. Third Row SCHMITENDORF, GLORIA MARIE, Lawrence. Accounting; Associated Students, School Business. SCHNEIDER, VERN H., Lawrence. Political Science; I.S.A.; national Relations Club; The Dove; Dean ' s Honor Roll. SCHOBER, ROBERT LESTER, Topeka. Accounting; President, Delta Upsilon; Alpha Kappa Psi; Ku Ku Club; Men ' s Glee Club. SCHUERMAN, PERRY TYLTON, Salina. Mechanical Engineering; President, Freshman Class; President, I.S.A.; President, Tau Beta Pi; Vice President, Pi. Tau Sigma; Y.M.C.A.; Engineering cil; A.S.M.E.; Owl Society; Sachem. SCHULTHE IS, FRANK R. JR., Kansas City, Mo. Journalism; tary, Delta Tau Delta. SCHWARTZ, EUGENE W., Hoisington. Medicine; Nu Sigma Nu; Vice President, Battenfeld Hall; Inner Hall Council; Newman Club. Paul Greiss strains into position as the other dancers ignore the photographer and continue their jive at a Jolliffe hall open house. o 384 THE JAYHAWKER First Row SEARS, WILLIAM WESLEY, Topeka. Music Education; Treasurer, Phi Mu Alpha; Phi Delta Kappa; Scabbard and Blade; Pershing Rifles; Band; Orchestra. SEMON, BEVERLY MAXINE, Chanute. Bacteriology; Theta Epsilon; I.S.A.; Treasurer, Watkins Hall; Bacteriology Club. SEWELL, GLEN R. JR., Sabetha. Business; Phi Delta Theta; tary, Battenfeld Hall; Vice President, Treasurer ,Inter-Hall cil; Alpha Phi Omega; Alpha Kappa Psi; Y.M.C.A. SEWELL, IRENE, Kansas City, Mo. History; Pledge Trainer, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Secretary, Entomology Club; Y.W.C.A.; Spur Club; International Relations Club; Jayhawker Staff. SHELDEN, DOROTHY JEAN, Kansas City, Mo. Home Economics; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Home Economics Club; Y.W.C.A.; C.V.C.; Advertising Staff, Jayhawker. Dick Harris and Shirley Sparling give vent to the new song, I hear a Bird —Brooklyn, that is. SHIELDS, DOROTHY ALICE, Wichita. Personnel Management; torian, Kappa Alpha Theta; Newman Club; Forum Committee, Union Activities; Statewide Activities. Second Row SHRAKE, CHARLES DAVIS, Topeka. Electrical Engineernig; Social Chairman, Theta Tau; A.I.E.E.; Feature Writer, Kansas Engineer. SHYROCK, MAR JORIE MAY, Kansas City, Mo. English; ing Secretary, President, Alpha Delta Pi; Secretary, Women ' s Glee Club; Secretary, Vice President, French Club; A.S.C.; matics Workshop; University Players; Union Activities; Speech Clinic; Phi Beta Kappa. SIMALA, FRANK GEORGE, Stockdale, Pa. Business; Pledge Captain, Phi Kappa; Newman Club. SIMMONS, BILLYE, Sublette. Spanish; Activities Chairman, tive Representative, Gamma Phi Beta; Women ' s Glee Club; ecutive Board, W.A.A.; Y.W.C.A.; El Ateneo; Jayhawker Staff; State wide Activities. SIMON, VERGIL L., Studley. Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi; dent, Baptist Youth Fellowship. SIMONSON, DONALD DALE, Great Bend. Business; Tau Kappa Epsilon. Third Row SIMS, BILL, Wichita Falls, Texas. Journalism; President, Secretary, Alpha Tau Omega; Sigma Delta Chi; Vice President, ternity Council; Sports Editor, Daily Kansan; Kansan Board; Press Club. SKINNER, LOIS ARDEN, Overland Park. Education; Alpha Chi Omega; Y.W.C.A.; Band. SLINKER, BETTY JEANNE, Wellington. Bacteriology; Bacteriology Club ;I.S.A.; Kappa Phi; Y.W.C.A. SLOOP, JAMES ALVIN, Independence. Finance; Y.M.C.A. SMALLEY, JUNE, Newton. Psychology; Pledge Trainer, Chairman, Pi Beta Phi; Psychology Club; Secretary, Jayhawker. SMITH, DEAN ANNO, Selden. Medicine; Phi Beta Pi; President, Regional Representative, Y.M.C.A. SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 385 STARK, MARY F., Perry. Psychology; Social Chairman, Alpha Omicron Pi; Band; County Chairman, Statewide Activities; Y.W. C.A.; Archery Club. STECKEL, LUCILLE MARIE, Emporia, Art Education; Y.W.C.A. STEINER, JOHN SIMON, St. Louis, Mo. Chemical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi. STEPHENSON, VIRGINIA Lou, Garnett. Advertising; Alpha ron Pi; Press Club; Jayhawk Flying Club. STEVENS, GRANT MELVIN, Hutchinson. Medicine; Phi Delta Theta; Nu Sigma Nu; Track; K Club. STEWART, LUCILE ESTELLE, Salina. French; Activities Chairman, Sigma Kappa; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; French Club; Intramurals; Union Activities. Third Row STEWART, MARCELLA, Winfield. Journalism; Theta Sigma Phi; Press Club; Chairman of Kansan Board; City, Assistant ing Editor, Kansan; Managing Editor, Kansan; Dean ' s Honor Roll. STEYER, CYRIL DEAN, Chanute. Mechanical Engineering; Phi Kappa; Newman Club; Inter-Fraternity Council; A.S.M.E. STIMSON, DAVID HUDSON, Kansas City, Mo. Industrial ment; President, Delta Tau Delta; Inter-Fraternity Council; ciety for Advancement of Management; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Intramurals. STIMSON, STEPHEN R., Kansas City, Mo. Mechanical Engineering; Secretary, Delta Tau Delta; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; A.S. M.E.; Staff, Kansas Engineer . STOCKDALE, DONALD RAY, Kansas City. Civil Engineering; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; K Club; A.S.C.E., Varsity Football; Intramurals. SUMMERS, JAMES STEPHEN, Kansas City, Mo. Mechanical gineering; Vice President, Sigma Nu; Men ' s Glee Club. Jerry Jensen and Helen Hendricks cut a wide swath out of the rug at a Pi K A — Sigma Kappa hour dance. First Row SMITH, GENE LEROY, Topeka. Accounting; Sigma Chi. SMITH, MARYLYN HELEN, Miami, Okla. Bacteriology; Secretary, Alpha Delta Pi; Vice President, Bacteriology Club; Y.W.C.A.; U.W.C.; Intramurals; Dean ' s Honor Roll. SNODGRASS, LESLIE R. JR., 0 a. Business. SOUKUP, BETTY ROSE, Wilson. Business; Vice President, Phi Chi Theta; Secretary, Treasurer, Miller Hall; Newman Club; Pi Lambda Theta; Dean ' s Honor Roll; School of Business Honor Roll. SPENCER, FRANCIS WARREN, Sedan. Sociology. STACEY, EMILY JANE, Lawrence. French; Gamma Phi Beta; Mortar Board; Vice President, Jay Janes; Vice President, French Club; A.S.C.; W.E.C.; Cabinet, Y.W.C.A.; Jayhawker Staff; Student Union Activities; K.U. Forensic League; Dramatics Workshop; Tune In Yesterday ; Thank You, Doctor . Second Row 386 THE JAYHAWKER First Row SUTTON, DELORIS RUTH, Bucklin. Marketing; Kappa Phi; I.S.A. TACK, DEANE A., Gaylord. English; A Cappella; Phi Mu Alpha; Sinfonia; Progressive Party; Y.M.C.A. TAYLOR, JOHN P., De Soto. Business; Vice President, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Alpha Kappa Psi; R.O.T.C. TEMPLETON, LAURA JEAN, Logan. Music Education; Sigma Alpha Iota; A Cappella; W.E.C.; Inter-Dorm Council; A.S.C.; President, Locksley Hall. THACH, MARY MAXINE, Burrton. Secretarial Training; Phi Chi Theta; Intramural Manager, Miller Hall; W.A.A. THALMAN, ELAINE FRANCES, Kansas City, Mo. Music; Secretary, A.S.C.; Editorial Associate, Jayhawker; Treasurer, A Cappella; Mu Phi Epsilon; Jay Janes; Union Operating Committee; morial Union Board of Trustees; I.S.A.; Dean ' s Honor Roll. Nolene Stump reaches for an ice cube to cool off Harold Davidson as a Miller hall party warms up to a finale. Second Row THELEN, FRANCES MAE, Kansas City. Economics; Y.W.C.A. THIELE, BARBARA ANN, Kansas City, Mo. Spanish; Rush Captain, President, Delta Gamma; Phi Alpha Theta; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Union Activities; Memorial Drive Committee; Panhellenic cil; Social Chairman, El Ateneo. THOMAS, LEON LOGAN, Seminole, Okla. Psychology; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; N.R.O.T.C.; Psychology Club. THOMPSON, DAVID WALTER JR., El Dorado. Business; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Student Manager, Union Fountain; Inter-Fraternity Council. THOMPSON, ELEANOR ANN, Kansas City, Mo. Psychology; Social Chairman, Pi Beta Phi; National Advertising Manager, Daily Kansan; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; Union Activities; Psychology Club; Intramurals. THOMPSON, HELEN LOIS, McPherson. Sociology; President, pendents Organization; Vice President, I.S.A.; Program man, Mortar Board; Secretary, W.E.C.; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; dependent Women ' s Party; Union Activities; Sociology Club; A.S.C.; A Cappella; Editor, Independents Activity Pamphlet; Pep Committee Chairman; Homecoming Committees; Freshman Counselor, Miller Hall; Senior Class Committee; Swedish Club. Third Row TIMMERMAN, HAROLD ALOIS, Kansas City. Electrical ing; Radio Club; Student Religious Council. TINDALL, JOANN, Hoisington. Speech and Drama; Intramural Manager, Rush Captain, Vice President, Alpha Omicron Pi; matics Workshop; Speech Clinic Club; University Players; Skin of Our Teeth ; Thank You, Doctor . TODD, CHARLES WILLIAM, Lawrence. Chemistry; I.S.A.; Proctor, Battenfeld Hall; Chemistry Club. TRAVIS, LOUIS R., Topeka. Business. TRIPLETT, JOHN ROGER, Emporia. Physics; Sigma Xi; Owl ciety ; Y.M.C.A. Cabinet; Summerfield Scholar; President, Don Henry Co-op. TRIPP, ELIZABETH, Herington. English; Y.W.C.A.; Treasurer, Templin Hall; Geology Club; Band; Intramurals. SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 387 First Row TRUAX, MILTON ANDREW, Cimarron. Chemistry; Alpha Chi Sigma; Basketball; Zoology Club. TRUEHEART, ROBERT THOMAS, Sterling. Geology; Grammateus, Hypophetes, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Geology Club. TRUXAL, FRED STONE, Great Bend. Entomology; Phi Sigma; dent, Entomology Club; President, Fencing Club; President, John Moore Co-op; President, Westminster Forum; Y.M.C.A.; I.S.A. TURNER, JESSE PAUL, Kansas City. Physical Education; troller, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Phi Delta Kappa; President, K Club; Football; Basketball. TYLER, FRANK B., Kansas City, Mo. History; Phi Kappa Psi; bard and Blade; Pershing Rifles; Captain, Rifle Team; Dean ' s Honor Roll. UMBACH, MARILYN NIGG, Whitewater. Zoology; Delta Gamma; W.A.A.; Secretary, Zoology Club; President, Occupational Therapy Club; Y.W.C.A. Second Row UNRUH, NEVA JEAN, Pratt. Bacterialagy; Bacteriology Club; ology Club; Y.W.C.A.; Band. URBAN, VIRGINIA MAY, Wilson. Speech Correction; Rush Captain, Executive Representative, Standards Chairman, Gamma Phi Beta; President, Dramatics Workshop; Head Cheerleader; County man, Statewide Activities; Radio Dramatics; Panhellenic cil; N.O.W. UTLEY, EDWARD M., Bartlesville, Okla. Piano; Organist, Danforth Chapel. UTTER, OSCAR EDGAR JR., Cherryvale. Industrial Management. VANCE, PATRICIA MARGARET, Kansas City, Mo. Home Economics; Culture Chairman, Rush Captain, Delta Gamma; Panhellenic Council; Home Economics Club. VANDERPOOL, BARBARA ISABELLE, Wellington. Sociology; ties Chairman, President, Alpha Chi Omega; Corresponding retary, Kappa Phi; Secretary, Sociology Club; Y.W.C.A.; ecutive Committee, County Correspondent, Statewide Activities; Home Economics Club; Memorial Drive Committee; Dean ' s Honor Roll. Third Row VANSANT, MARY Lou, Dewey, Okla. English; I.S.A.; Kappa Phi; Entomology Club; French Club. VARNER, BARBARA ANN, Wichita. Home Economics; President, Rush Captain, Pi Beta Phi; Treasurer, Tau Sigma; Quack Club; W.A.A.; Home Economics Club; Panhellenic Council; Union Activities; Jayhawker Staff. VENITA, INLOES PEARL, Quinter. Music Education; I.S.A.; lain, Kappa Phi; Sigma Alpha Iota; Band; Orchestra. VERMILLION, MARY E., Salina. Psychology; Rush Captain, Vice President, President, Sigma Kappa; President, Psi Chi; lenic Council; W.A.A.; Psychology Club. VINE, WARREN CECIL, Zurich. Accounting. VOTH, F. MARILYN, Goessel. Spanish; Song Leader, Recording retary, Alpha Omicron Pi; A Cappella; W.A.A. It takes a bigger photographer than Hank Brown to take Ginny Cassel ' s attention away from handsome Mike Unruh. k • First Row WAHLSTEDT, BETTY, Kansas City, Mo. Psychology; House ager, Vice President, Sigma Kappa; Phi Chi; Psychology WAKENHUT, ELIZABETH ANNA, Salina. History; Sigma Kappa; Phi Alpha Theta; Union Activities; Psychology Club. WALKER, ELAINE, Wichita. Music in School of Education; tary, Pi Beta Phi; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Quack Club; Mu Phi silon; A Cappella. WALKER, OCTAVIA MURIEL, Hugoton, Psychology; Henley Co-op; President, Delta Sigma Theta; Secretary, Mortar Board; Vice President, Y.W.C.A.; Negro Student Association; L.L.P.D, WALKER, WARREN EUGENE, Topeka. Accounting. WALLACE, WALTER KENNETH, Chillicothe, Ohio. Accounting. Marshall Butler slips the grip to Mrs. Otto Schnellbacher at a reception at the Delta Chi house following his recital. Second Row WAMPLER, DEAN DELOS, Chanute. Engineering; Vice President, Phi Mu Alpha; Secretary-Treasurer, Sigma Tau; Tau Beta Pi; A.I.E.E.; I.S.A.; Orchestra; Y.M.C.A. WARREN, PHYLLIS JACK, Garnett. Bacteriology; Delta Delta Delta; Y.W.C.A.; K.U. Dames; Bacteriology Club. WATSON, DANIEL FIANDER, San Diego, Calif. Mechanical gineering; A.S.M.E. WEBB, ORLANDO JR., Kansas City. Petroleum Engineering; Tau Kappa Epsilon; Treasurer, A.I.M.E. WEGERT, MARY JANE, North Kansas City, Mo. Zoology; Zoology Club. WEGSCHEIDER, FRANCES PAULINE, Fort Scott. Bacteriology; dent, Bacteriology Club; Theta Epsilon; Vice President, Miller Hall; Women ' s Glee Club. Third Row WEINTRAUT, ROBERT E., East Moline, Ill. Mechanical Tau Kappa Epsilon; A.S.M.E. WELLS, ELAINE, Ottawa. Psychology; President, Rush Captain, Kappa Alpha Theta; Psi Chi; Secretary-Treasurer, Union ties; Chairman of Club Committee; Y.W.C.A.; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Psychology Club; Senior Class Committee. WERTS, JACE MYERS, Gridley. Journalism. WEST, RUTH ELOISE, Kincaid. Journalism; Art Editor, University Daily Kansan; Publicity Manager, Independent Women ' s Senate; Press Club; Quill Club; Band; I.S.A. WEYBREW, BENJAMIN BRUNNER, Wamego. Zoology; Men ' s Glee Club; Zoology Club; Newman Club; Band. WHITE, MARY BELLE, Wellington. Bacteriology; Orchestra; Kappa Phi; Bacteriology Club. • THE JAYHAWKEII 388 389 1 SPRING NUMBER, 1947 First Row WHITE, OTIS IRVIN, Wichita. Economics; Business School Asso- ciation; Baseball. WHITING, MARILYN LOUISE, Topeka. Mathematics; A Cappella; Mathematics Club; French Club; Watkins Hall. WHITLEY, RUTH ELIZABETH, Kansas City. Sociology; Dean of Pledges, Treasurer, Alpha Kappa Alpha. WICKERT, VIRGINIA LEE, Claflin. Business; President, Secretary, Jay Janes; Vice President, W.E.C.; Homecoming Committee; A.S.C.; Y.W.C.A.; W.A.A.; I.S.A.; C.V.C.; Statewide Activities; Intramurals; Senior Class Committee; War Memorial Committee. WICKLIN, RITA ROSE, Amazonia, Mo. Personnel Administration; President, Sociology Club; President, Foster Hall; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet; Psi Chi; Inter-Dorm Council. WIDDER, WILLARD G., Kansas City. Mechanical Engineering; Treasurer, A.S.M.E. Second Row WILCOX, HOWARD STEVEN, Trousdale. Music Education; A Cap- pella; Ku Ku Club. WILDHAGEN, ERNEST LEROY, St. Joseph, Mo. Mechanical En- gineering; House Manager, Sigma Chi; Forensic League; Men ' s Glee Club; A.S.M.E.; A.S.T.E.; Band. WILLIAMS, VIRGINIA MARIE, Great Bend. Spanish; El Ateneo; Pi Lambda Theta; Y.W.C.A.; I.S.A.; Inter-Dorm Council; U.W.C.; Student Religious Council. WINEINGER, CAROL RUTH, Lawrence. Bacteriology; I.S.A.; Secre- tary, Bacteriology Club. WITHERsPoON, JOHN GRIER, Kansas City, Mo. Civil Engineering; Vice President, Alpha Omega; Grand Master of Ceremonies, Kappa Sigma; A.S.C.E. WITHERSPOON, MARIETTA RICHARDSON, Kansas City, Mo. Mathe- matics; Secretary-Treasurer, Mathematics Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll. Third Row WITT, GRACE PIROS, Scott City. English; Treasurer, Quill Club; Dramatics Workshop; Jayhawker Staff. WOLF, PAUL A., Lyons. Business; President, Treasurer, Jayhawk Vice President, A.V.C.; Y.M.C.A.; Wesley Foundation. WOOD, JOHN WILLIAM JR., Meade. Alpha Tau Omega; Pachaca- mac; Secretary, President, Ku Ku Club. WOOLPERT, DON R., Topeka. Civil Engineering; Phi. Mu Alpha; Band; A.S.C.E. WOOSTER, LESTER ARNOLD, Erie. Petroleum Engineering; A.I.M.E. WRIGHT, WILLIAM H., Kansas City, Mo. Business; Delta Tau Delta. Jerry Osmer smiles affectionately at her date as Gerry Harris and Marion Mills exchange a knowing glance. 390 THE JAYHAWKER First Row WYMORE, MAX LEE, Topeka. Chemical Engineering; Sigma Scabbard and Blade; Battenfeld Hall; A.I.Ch.E.; Intramurals. YORK, CHARLES LUTHER, Spring Hill. Electrical Engineering; Kappa Eta Kappa; Vice Chairman, A.I.E.E. YOUNG, ANNE J., Concordia. Journalism; Chapter Correspondent, Treasurer, Chi Omega; Publicity Chairman, Jay Janes; Treasurer, Theta Sigma Phi; Circulation Manager, K.U. Calendar; tising Manager, Student Directory; Business Manager, Student Directory; Statewide Activities Committee; German Club. YOUNG, ELIZABETH MARIE, Kansas City, Mo. Spanish; Y.W.C.A.; I.S.A.; President, Social Chairman, Jolliffe Hall; Spanish Club; Home Economics Club; Inter-Dorm Council. YOUNG, GEORGE PATRICK, JR., Butler, Pa. Mathematics; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; N.R.O.T.C. YOUNG, MARY JOAN, Lawrence. Bacteriology; Treasurer, teriology Club; German Club; Pi Beta Phi. Second Row YUNG, EVA LEE, Sedgwick. Home Economics; Treasurer, Corbin Hall; Secretary, Omicron Nu; Secretary, Home Economics Club; Pi Lambda Theta; Glee Club; Kappa Phi. ZOOK, PAUL W., Larned. Medicine; Phi Beta Pi. RAY EVANS President BOB KUNKEL Vice President CAROLINE MORRISS Secretary-Treasurer 1947 CLASS OFFICERS Barfly Dixie Gilliland eagerly awaits another shot while Marilyn Sweeney fingers the bar at the D. U. Continental. SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 391 [10 III j A musical organization of state-wide fame, the Dean ' s Choir was first organized by Dean Donald M. Swarthout at the University of Kansas in 1923. Officers are Paul Friesen, President; C. A. Byers, Secretary; and Mary Jane Zollinger, Treasurer. CONDUCTOR SECOND SOPRANOS SECOND ALTOS Harry Johnson Dean Donald M. Swarthout FIRST SOPRANOS Jo Ann Adell Iris Ainsworth Marjorie Joyce Burns Eloise Eitzen Olive Grimes Betty Jean Hayward Eileen Homer Marian Bates Imogen Billings Nancy Cameron Elinor Enberg Helen Harkrader Joan Rettig Robert Kornhaus Merle Oglesby DuMont Reed Deane Tacke Clarke Thomas Dexter Welton Elwanda Brewer Betty Lou Byam Norma Kennedy Loraine Mai Marjorie Skeen-Parmiter Ellen Spurney FIRST BASSES Jeanne Campbell Nancy Lee Messenger Elaine Thalman Paul Farrar Edna Carothers Dorothy O ' Connor Velda Tieperman James T. Gettys Mary Elizabeth Coe Beverly Stember Helen Ward Calvin Glover Betty Lou Duemcke Dorothy Stephenson Jane Zollinger William Jackson Joan Elliott Phyllis Fretwell Melva Tacke Helen Thompson Harlan Kilmer King Raymond Mildred Garrison Gladys Hammond FIRST ALTOS FIRST TENORS E. M. Brack Andrew Klapis Benjamin Shanklin Harriet Harlow Pearl Clothier George Campbell Steven H. Wilcox Helen Hastings Maxine Dunkelberg Ralph Conner Mary Lou Helms Charity Fischer John Conrick SECOND BASSES Billie Joan Kent Margaret Jean Hanna Charles Day Paul Beisel Marylee Masterson Lois Jamison Wayne Landis Theron Brewer Margaret Miller Mary Lee Frame Donald McDaniel Dean Cox Jeanne Peck Lois Lauer Calvin Stout Sidney Dawson Ardella Ringwalt Martha Myers Harry Talley Bob Gurtler Eva Joyce Rohrer Violet Orloff Charles Kassinger Donna Rumsey Joan Rodgers SECOND TENORS Charles L. O ' Connor Marilyn Smart Vivian Stunkel Charles A. Byers Alan Stewart Joan Vickers Jean Templeton Louis Cunningham Gerald Stucky Kathryn Walter Patricia Waits Paul Friesen Marvin Zoschke FIRST ROW: Waits, Stember, Eitzen, Burns, Elliott, Fretwell, Adell, Campbell, Harlow, Byam, Stephenson, O ' Connor, Hammond, Cameron, Garrison. SECOND ROW: Rettig, Brewer, Rohrer, Duemcke, Carothers, Helms, Walters, Hastings, Zollinger, Thalman, Smart, Myers, Templeton, Thompson. THIRD ROW: Vickers, Harkrader, Hayward, Tacke, Coe, Peck, Jamison, Masterson, Rumsey, Spurney, Parmiter, Bates. FOURTH ROW: Friesen, Kent, Rodgers, Dunkleberg, Hanna, Fischer, Frame, Clothier, Mai, Ringwalt, Stunkel, Ainsworth, Lauer, Enberg, Tieperman, Ward, Wilcox, King FIFTH ' ROW: Byers, Kornhaus, Welton, Tacke, Landis, Talley, Campbell, Grimes, McDaniel, Brack, Horner, Stout, Messenger, Jackson, Shanklin, Kilmer, Connor, Dawson, Glover, Brewer, Klapis, Gurtler, Farrar. SIXTH ROW: Reed, Thomas, Day, Oglesby, Cunningham, Johnson, Deon Swarthout, Gettys, Stucky, Beisel, Kissinger, Conrick, Zoscke, O ' Connor. NOT IN PICTURE: Billings, Orloff, Kennedy, Miller, Stewart, Cox. 392 THE JAYHAWKER To The Graduating Class of ' 47 We extend heartiest congratulations to you on the successful completion of your college career. As you venture forth in the world may you find one in which you can make your fondest dreams come tr ue. We have appreciated the patronage and friendship of K. U. students, and hope to continue that privilege. lffeavet HAVING FUN AT THE MITE EVERY NIGHT GOOD FOOD TOO ! SPRING NUMBER,7.947 393 A FRIENDLY MESSAGE FOR THE LAST OF THE JAYHAWKER THE EMPLOYER AND EMPLOYEES OF THE DELUXE CAFE WANT TO EXTEND K. U. STUDENTS BEST WISHES FOR FURTHER PROGRESS • DE LUXE CAFE 711 Mass. St. Lawrence • • NOW IS THE TIME FOR SPRING CLEANING CALL 640 OR WRITE THE WOODCRAFT COMPAkY 730 MASS. FURNITURE AND REFINISHED NO CHARGE FOR ESTIMATES hurry Endlich 733 Kansas TOPEKA, KANSAS YOU ' LL ENJOY WEARING A SPRING MADE BY CURLEE OR HYDE PARK SAME HIGH QUALITY SAME FINE STANDARD TAILORING WE ' LL BE GLAD TO SHOW YOU CLOTHING CO. 811 Mass. St. EVERYBODY GOES TO WiampSonld. Caie 709 MASS. PHONE 2045 394 THE JAYHAWKER ifrule4imefrt1 — is four years of your life plus your expenses while in school. am. 4e144444 — is an average of $130,000 more in earnings than you would have without your education. 444 — is to protect those who share your investment with you. }C:tnsas 014? MUM fliTH KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI The New Chateau Is the Place To Go DRIVE or COME IN Fountain Specials Tasty Steak Dinners CHATEAU DRIVE IN 1802 Massachusetts CONGRATULATE THE GRADUATE With a Distinctive Gift from 49 Years a K. U. Store PHILCO MAYTAG THE PLACE TO FOR THE YOU KNOW RENTALS FLOOR WAXERS SANDERS LAWRENCE HARDWARE AND HOME APPLIANCES 724-726 Mass. Ph. 178 SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 395 CONGRA r-ULAT:ONSI CLASS OF GREER GARSON • ROY ROGERS PAUL MUNI GREGORY PECK RED SKELTON CHARLES STARRETT JANE WYMAN CLAUDE RAINS LARRY PARKS GLENN FORD THERESA WRIGHT JOAN CRAWFORD ANNE BAXTER YOUR COMMONWEAD H LAWRENCE THEATRES 396 THE JAYHAWKER WHERE THE CROWDS GO For Books and Supplies Everything for the Student CASH DIVIDENDS PAID ON SALES TICKETS S DENT BOOK S ORE UNION BUILDING ICE AN ESSENTIAL COMMODITY FOR HEALTH AND COMFORT Phone 48 AMERICAN SERV-ICE COMPANY Lawrence, Kansas Gosh! And all I said was that I ' ve already bought her Graduation gift at — JOHNSON ' S 835 MASS. PHONE 771 A complete in Cleaning, and of Garments and CLEANING—PRESSING CASH AND CARRY BRANCH 411 West Phone 307 SPRING NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 397 DRAKE ' S BAKERY TOPS In Fine Pastries PHONE 61 907 MASS. WE ' LL BE SEEING YOU AS AN ALUMN YOU ' LL BE COMING BACK TO VISIT LAWRENCE AND K. U. (They always do) YOU DON ' T NEED AN INVITATION—JUST DROP INTO FRITZ CO. AND SAY HOWDY ! (They always do) FRITZ CO. PHONE 4 CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS 14 E. EIGHTH MOTOR I,JN WE SERVICE ALL MAKES OF CARS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH MOTOR CARS — SKELLY PRODUCTS Tire Repair and Recapping 827 VERMONT PHONE 607 Meet the greatest career woman of all! She doesn ' t manage a business, write novels, or sing over the radio. But her job ' s big and it ' s important — she runs a home! What a job that is! In a year she washes more than 6 tons of dishes, cooks more than 1000 meals, wades through mountains of laundry. The more Mom depends on electric service, the less work is in her work. And how little electricity costs! A penny ' s worth a day will rescue Mom from the drudgery of dishwashing. A few more pennies daily will cook her meals. Electricity does her laundry for less weekly than the cost of a bar of soap. And when Mom balances her budget, she ' s bound to note that electricity is one of its smallest items. Actually, the average family now gets twice as much electricity for its money as it did about 20 years ago. This bargain comes to Mom — and to you, too — through the practical experience of your friends and neighbors in this company, under sound business management. C„ POWER Lighi Uumpally CAREIR WOMAN! •- ' ' ' ' . ' : ' 7%;1:240;9S6dekEigre:;?‘ ....... SPRING NUMBER ' , 1947 399 Rte Love Box Company CORRUGATED AND WOOD SHIPPING CONTAINERS 612 SOUTH COMMERCE STREET WICHITA, KANSAS VACATION TIME IS VALUABLE- WHETHER YOU USE IT FOR WORK OR PLAY Our Air Travel Department can save you several days in travel time by arranging your distant trip to or from school—BY PLANE. THE LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK LAWRENCE, KS. TIME FLIES WHY NOT YOU? DEPENDABLE RELIABLE WE OFFER YOU GENUINE FORD AND FRIENDLY EFFICIENT SERVICE MORGAN MACK MOTOR CO. 609 MASSACHUSETTS PHONE 277 THE 6,KANT BILLINGSLEY Fruit Company Wholesale Fruit and Produce WICHITA KANSAS THE KANSAS ELECTRIC POWER COMPANY -■■■■••WIN.c SPRING NUMBER, 1947 401 1947 Jayhawker Photographer Topeka, Kansas 402 THE JAYHAWKER KANSAS CITY, HERE WE TO SHOP AT BOTH STORES FOR VACATION PLAY THINGS AT PRICES IN OUR REACH. • 0 ) 1014 Walnut f S 201 W. 47th A CLEANSING SERVICE INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners Telephone 740 Vt. St. Lawrence • VISIT THE HILLSIDE No. ' 11 • For the Best In Refreshment Entertainment Delicious . . . • Cokes • Sundies • Malts • Shakes Prescriptions Filled • 616 W. 9th Ph. 1487 Pasteurized MILK An All-Round Food Grade A Milk Lawrence Sanitary Milk Ice Cream Company 202 W. 6th Telephone 696 SPRING 403 • CARTERS STATIONERY STUDENTS ' SUPPLIES STATIONERY QUALITY MERCHANDISE COURTEOUS SERVICE 1025 MASSACHUSETTS ST. LAWRENCE, KANSAS PHONE 1051 C Is Your Lucky Letter For you it means college, campus, commencement and clothes. When you think of clothes ... write our personal shopping service for what ever you need. Topeka, Kansas COMPLETE LINE OLD SPICE O F STAG LENTHERIC MEN ' S TOILETRIES COURTLEY STOWITS REXALL STORE 847 MASS. ST. LAWRENCE, KANSAS FIREPROOF Outstanding Among Kansas ' Best AIR COOLED Roteljaghank TOPEKA•RANSAS COVERS BY MOLLOY 2 8 57 N. WESTERN AVE. CHICAGO 1 8 , ILLINOIS 401 THE JAYHAWKER A NEW SERVICE OF THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK LAWRENCE, KANSAS We have established an Air Travel Service. We have a complete list of Colorado Ranches We can make reservations to any major point and Resorts. in the United States and to foreign countires. See us concerning Berry Tows Contact Us For All Airline Information and Reservations TELEPHONE 30 Advertising MAKES THE 1947 JAYHAWKER Cheaper to You SHOW YOUR APPRECIATION BY PATRONIZING THESE MERCHANTS BOB WILLIAMS, Advertising Manager WE SPECIALIZE IN HAMBURGERS TRY ' EM THANK YOU ZIM ' S SNACK SHOP Across the Street from the Post Office 106 THE JAYHAWKER Ii HE MEMORIAL UNION YOURS FOR FUN AND PLEASURE McGregor Sportwear In Action Under the Sun! Tennis Shorts $3 Of combed cotton gaberdine with two pockets . . . zipper closure . . . full-cut action seat. Waist sizes 28 to 36. Tennis Sweater $7.95 Of light-weight wool with red, white a nd blue neckline trim. Small, medium, large. less style ... $5.95. Tee Shirts $2 Of white combed yarn. medium, MAIL ORDERS STUDENT ' S SHOP 10th and Main Kansas City, Missouri
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