University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS)

 - Class of 1948

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University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1948 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 423 of the 1948 volume:

This Page Intentionally Left Blank FALL NUMBER, 19 4 7 3 4•11.11.17=1S--. BF HARD to PLEASE For the STUDENT WHO CARES the JAYHAWKER is the only Hill publication Why does the JAYHAWKER lead die field? The Jayhawker is: FIRST in complete coverage of all important events FIRST with student articles and picture stories on pus life and personalities FIRST among college annuals in the country ( accord- ing to leading magazine editors) FIRST in timeliness through the four issues which make a complete diary for your year at K.U. A permanent memory of college days 1948 JAYHAWKER YOUR K.U. YEARBOOK For the time of your life ... Kansas Memorial ' Won • • . . Center of Activity . . . Corner of the Campus 6 THE JAYHAWKER C:Ns •TWCK 4 c. A ' , M William 14 Oh pardon gentles all, while I sing my ode to Fall. Fall, ab, fall—excuse me please I feel the call of savage sneeze. Lo, in yon window breaks the Autumn moon aglow. Amid its beams, in aerie flakes drifts pollen—not the snow. Sweet upon my pillow dreaming, unaware of nature ' s scheming, with Ceres ' evil eye agleaming, Alas, Alack, I wake up screaming! Atomizers, all in vain, Filters will not stop the pain. Ah, golden lads and girls all must In glorious Autumn, succumb to dust. Oh mortal who may wish to die and supplicate the Gods on high, The annals of ancient Greece record The God ' s solution to discord. As Persephone descends to Hades, Bacchus said, ' Pardon, Ladies, Hay fever comes but once a year, I gasp for breath, I drink my beer. For Autumn is my love divine With book of verse beneath the vine A jug of booze A tender whooze . This above all When Hay Fever ' s thru With finis of Fall . . Ah, cometh the flu! Poets may laud the beauties of Fall But in my own words, to id all! FITTER CHEVROLET is THE PLACE TO COME WITH YOUR CAR 738 New Hampshire LAWRENCE Everywhere it goes the assurance of Beech-Nut for fine flavor goes with it Beech-Nut Gum Those who take ac- tive part in sport, as well as those who IQ just watch, enjoy the refreshing flavor of BEECH-NUT GUM. FALL NUMBER, 1947 7 Staff EDITOR: KEITH WILSON BUSINESS MANAGER: LARRY SIMM ONS SECRETARY: SHIRLEY HOYT ADVERTISING MANAGER: DWIGHT ROUNDS PHOTOGRAPHIC EDITOR: HANK BROWN EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS: Bill Conboy Betsey Sheidley Charles Hoffhaus Joan Woodward Marian Rippeteau ART STAFF: Paul Coker Jeanne Gorbutt Yogi Williams Lu Anne Powell Jo Compton Charles Freshwater CONTRIBUTORS: Bill Conboy Joan Bagby Mila Williams Margaret Meeks Betsey Sheidley Helen Kittle Janet Malott Corinne Temple Jane Williams Charles Hoffhaus Robert Davis Joan Woodward Neil Ball Hortense Bedell ADVERTISING STAFF: Bob Bottoms Virginia Daniels Warren Helgesen Arlene Feldcamp Margaret Granger Tom Hanna Dean Miller Bob Oberhelman Ann Preble Balie Waggener PHOTOGRAPHERS: Bob Graham Jim Mason Duke D ' Ambra Hank Brown Leland Norris Al Chalupnik Joe McClure It takes all kinds of people to make the world, and it also took a multitude of ferent personalities to collaborate on the first issue of the 1948 Jayhawker. Despite the seemingly insurmountable obstacles of photographing, engraving, recording, and printing the record of events on Mount Oread almost as they happened, the diligent work of the tireless staff enabled the first issue to become a reality. Keynoting a series of timely guest torials by prominent alumni is an article by a person who has long been among the favorites of the student body. By all means do not miss the essay Friends and Frogs by Helen Rhoda Hoopes. After long years of service, during which her name became a permanent fixture at K.U., Miss Hoopes has decided to retire from the strain of Hill activities. As a tribute to a brilliant teacher and friend of the students, we take great pleasure in printing one of the more famous of her essays. We have endeavored to record as many important events of the season as possible through the medium of photography. We believe that a series of good pictures can catch the theme of student life much more vividly and accurately than can the feeble efforts of our typewriters. In keeping with this plan, we therefore gladly doff our hats, shirts, ties, and everything else removable to the untiring efforts of our excellent photo- graphers. Without the efforts of men like Hank Brown, Bob Graham, and Jim son, we fear this issue would have never been out. And speaking of photographers, a new face has crept into the midst of our staff in the person of Neil Ball, who verbally and pictorially records the trip made by five Jayhawkers to Europe. To Betsey Sheidley and Bill Conboy, go our gold stars of the month. Betsey brings down the house with her intimate look into the new fashion trend titled, The New Look. Bill reports on the pros- pects of the Crimson and Blue in the iron sweepstakes of this year, and also on the Men ' s intramural race. If riotous laughter is your forte, then you should enjoy the hilarious account of Enrollment by Jane and Mila Williams. For an encore, Jane and Mila returned to dip their pen into verse. After many hours spent slaving over a hot rhyming dictionary they finally produced, Autub Seredade which appears on page seven. Long after this issue has collected a thick layer of dust on the shelf, we shall remember Hank Brown outfitted in surgical robe, gloves, and mask, preparing to enter the operating room to take the title picture of, Jayhawker—M.D. During the two days he spent wandering around Bell morial Hospital, he developed quite a pro- fesional manner. An speaking of unusual assignments, we also envy Hank for the excursion he made in taking the pictures for, Third Floor, Back. The trials and tribulations of an ling Freshman are related by Joan ward in, The Green Year, as she follows Jim Bower through the first trying days of the first week. Adding the social touch to this issue, Jim Mason toured the brighter spots of Lawrence one Saturday night to record, A Jayhawker ' s Night Out. He has corded almost all the different aspects of student recreation, from bowling to malt beverage. We realize that it is almost an bility to please the tastes of everyone, how- ever, we are determined to try. So here it is for your aproval . . . the first issue. EDI n_gle According to Mr. Paul Gallico, no columnist worth his journalistic salt can afford to face the typewriter without the assistance of some hyperintelligent off- spring which are not averse to making with the wise- crack and glib remark at the appropriate time. In deference to Mr. Gallico ' s wishes, on Thursday last I labored and gave birth to a three-year-old son here- inafter referred to as Junior. Junior is an expert on all matters pertaining to economics, politics, ness, education, and the lowering of women ' s skirts; and in addition has definite Phi Beta Kappa leanings. Yesterday evening as I sat at home breathlessly engrossed in Little Orphan Annie ' s struggles with machine politics, Junior raised up from his study of the Chicago Journal of Commerce and cautiously inquired, Pater, why is this? This, in this case referred to the classified advertising section where two ads appeared concurrently. The first blandly an- nounced, Wanted — Certified Public Accountant. Must have college degree and at least two years ' ex- perience. Salary, $50 per week. This ad was lowed by a larger, more pretentious notice which exclaimed, Bricklayers Wanted! Two years ' work guaranteed! $25 per day! Junior, I said with a tear in my eye, The time has arrived for you to become acquainted with tain facts ... There was a time, back in the days of free lunches and Francis X. Bushman, when a college degree en- titled one to a slight raise in pay. Those were the days when the white collar worker could keep self in soap chips with his pay check. Such ness has now gone its way, along with hip flasks and Isham Jones. This change in the monetary evaluation of a lege degree has been brought about in part because there has been a change in college education itself. Two things have happened to it—it has been com- mercialized, and it has become specialized. A college degree has become a symbol of objective worth, like a tuxedoe, a Buick, or a Calvert ad. As such a symbol, it has been bought and sold in a way that would make Barnum proud and Plato shudder. As is the case with all commercial goods when an increased supply appears, the value of college grees has dwindled. The objective value of a college education has been forced down even further by the specialization that has taken place within education. Specialization has entered the American college scene at a pace that would make Henry Ford turn green with envy. The sedate old Liberal Arts institutions that used to dot our nation have been divided, sub-divided, de- partmentalized, and extended into sprawling cities which have a suspicious resemblance to our modern bomber plants. To the ivy-covered old buildings have been added; schools of business, schools of metalurgy, schools of speech, schools of mology, schools of advertising, and schools of family relations, but no schools of thought. We now have specialists in every field of human endeavor known to man. The only thing we seriously need is a specialist to coordinate all of the other specialists. We have an abundance of know-how, but all too little know-why. The American colleges, in their rush to instruct the fledgling citizen with the practices of our called civilization, have been criminally negligent in their instruction of the purposes of that civilization. As a result our technical advance has far out-stripped our moral advance, and we now have power without wisdom—a dangerous combination. Our position as a nation is analogous to a boat load of marine gineers, without a pilot. Our physicists know nothing of philosophy and our philosophers know nothing about guided missiles. Our ministers can ' t fire a rifle, and our ballistics experts don ' t know ethics from third base. The fault is not theirs, but that of the edu- cational system which produced them. The time has arrived for that system to give its children compasses to travel the thoroughfares of life with, instead of spades. Hilaire Belloc, a great writer and a great thinker, once remarked that we are witnessing a race between education, and disaster. At this moment, I ' d hate to have two bucks on education. Autub Seredade 6 JAYHAWKER Under Cover 7 Friends and Frogs 11 Candidly a JAYHAWKER 12 Enrollment 17 A Jayhawker Enrolls 20 The Idles of the King 22 Pigskin Prognosis 26 The Iowa State Game 30 Intramural Impetus For the Men 32 For the Women 33 JAYHAWKER—M.D. 35 The New Look 38 A Jayhawker Abroad 40 Sixty Million Years 43 Big Wheels on Campus 48 Third Floor, Back 53 For Freshmen Only 59 The Green Year 60 Pledge Pictures 62 Organized Independents 68 A Jayhawker ' s Night Out 71 Independents Unlimited 76 Dog Days Come to Kansas 80 THE COVER This month ' s cover is due to the never-failing resourcefulness and genuity of Duke D ' Ambra. Duke, who has been taking pictures for the JAYHAWKER ever since most of us can remember, spent most of the summer wandering about the campus in search of unusually beautiful scenes. His search finally ended when he turned out the unusual shot which later became our Fall cover. The only thing that is missing in this shadow study of Uncle Jimmy Green, is a cluster of fledgling lawyers whistling at the girls. NEXT ISSUE Along with the first snow flurries on Mount Oread, the Christmas tion of the JAYHAWKER is due to arrive, complete with over a hundred pages of pictures, features, and ings. Homecoming, the end of the football season, Christmas shopping, Basketball, and that broad subject of— Women , all will be featured. In addition the 1948 JAYHAWKER covers are scheduled for distribution with the second issue. JAYRAWIIINT Keith Wilson Larry Simmons Badime44 Maita9e4 FRIENDS A D FROGS A Chromatic Essay 4 %cSa ,1-iozope (Title from Aristophanes) When I first came to K.U.—need we clutter up this true confesion with dates?—we used to have chapel. Every day. For fifteen minutes. It came tween the second and third hours, and was a ful pause in the day ' s occupations. You drifted in from some room in Fraser -Hall, seated yourself, and prepared for rest. The woodwork of the chapel was in its original state—mid-Victorian walnut—before the hand of the desecrator—I mean decorator—was laid heavily on it with paintbrush dripping a clammy gray that gave it--to go Gilbertian—the bloom of cold gravy. It was warm and brown and cozy, and there was a pulpit and a bible. And the deep voice of Dr. Frank Strong boomed out, exhorting the men to be earnest of purpose, and to continue to lieve in God, even though they had learned thing about splitting the atom, or whatever it was they learned in science class. I never knew. I was in two science classes. My adviser was a zo- ologist. Need I tell you that I was at once enrolled in an afternoon zoology class? Oh. Well, then, I will tell you: I was. And when I went to class, the very first thing we had to do was to cut up a frog. There at the desk sat my adviser. I realized that I had been shanghaied. I jumped overboard, swam right back to the wharf, and asked to be released. I was leased, all right; but only to be shoved into another science class. In the words of the song, Oh, science, I gotta be where you are. Do you have to cut up things in this class? I demanded of my new instructor. I was desperate. And fearless. Or almost fearless. The teacher was kind and patient, and explained that there would be the mini- mum of cutting. Ah! That there now minimum! I went up to class one afternoon—this was also an afternoon session; and now listen, just listen to the fuss being kicked up by present day students against such regulations—the sissies. But we were strong and faithful and noble and we took it on the lam. I went up, opened the door, took one look, and fled. Every table held a pan of dirty brown wax, and on every slab of wax lay a pale frog, upturned, aw aiting results. Oh, dead, of course. The place was a morgue. I sat out on the steps (of what is now the ism building) and cried. Then I dried my chief, and cried some more. Finally, I began to feel conspicuous—a thing I abhor!—so I got up, still softly sobbing into my wet mouchoir, and, mined to hide my tears from my fellow-students, I stumbled down the dark corridor to another room, and opened the door—on another class of students, all happily engaged in cutting up their own personal frogs. I went back to mine. By this time my teacher had cut him up; so I drew him. I was pretty good at this; and I was really awfully good at microscope work. I would find out beforehand what we were supposed to see. (Continued on Page 87) . • you forgot the glad-to-be-back feeling that went with the last few days of September. Remember when it all started—way Then events started closing in on back in September? The Old Hill you, and between classes and looked pretty good during the first few ends . . weeks But then the T.C.U. game came along, and everybody dropped everything in one mad rush and headed for Kansas City. You didn ' t mind the rain . . . . . . even though it began to get a little obnoxious after the first two hours. You stuck it out, and realized what a wet state Missouri really was. A=ONNE ri■MM; 1-KP44.1:- Registration, Rush Week, and Enrollment came in quick succession, and you began to wonder if all the hustle and bustle was worth the effort. The little things began piling up. Get your picture taken, get checked for T.B., get your classes, and get your books , . . if you could. ecuedediey felltetedeer .. or bat the breeze, As October came around, courses became rougher. Yet, there was always time to beat out the boogie .. , The Governor came over from peka and shook hands with everybody at the Union Open House. The Chancellor and the Faculty always . . . large and small events, alike. turned out for .. 974st Tactedetioot 7a Tea State Time Magazine had a story in it about the great influx of new convertibles because of the rich wheat harvest. But Time Magazine and Ancient History and everything else were forgotten when Friday rolled around, and the T.G.I.F, club met. Sat . . . or tennis. While others played chess .. . Almost everyone spent some of their time reading the Daily san. Everyone turned out and gave the team a big send-off The Freshmen were busy meeting each other, and many to Denver, and the team showed their appreciation by blind dates grew into ripening attractions . . . and some stomping the Pioneers, 9-0. not so ripe. As the days grew shorter the picnics became more merous, until . . . . . the World Series came along and everyone stopped work to listen—indoors . . . . It was a lazy, happy season. Whether you slept on your stomach . . . . . or on your back. ... or out in front of Frank Strong. The men all hated the long skirts ... . . . and even threatened counter action. They all cheered . . . . . when Ted North came. The warm weather made everyone feel good, and trading jokes between classes became a favorite pastime. FALL NUMBER, 1947 17 After 84 Years ENROLLMENT iecessary, 4 lane aKci 31_ C ainFu This was it—another enrollment day. The W ' s lined up before the housemother for a final, last minute briefing. Girls, she said, most of you have been through this before, so I won ' t try to tell you what to expect. Just go out there and do your best. Now, lets all check our equipment once again. Does everyone have fire extinguishers, three day emergency rations, bowie knife, rope, smelling salts, blankets, DDT bomb, brandy, first aid kit, maps, and copy of the operational plans? If so, you ' re ready to start. Wish I were young enough to go with you. Good luck and God bless you! Grim lipped and determined, we left the house and headed toward the scene of battle, Frank Strong hall. We deployed at the central office and I was on my own. Upon entering the registration line I noticed Alex Moonshine, with whom I had spent several evenings last spring. Alex had quite a black reputation on the campus, but I decided to risk a few words of greeting. Hi, Alex! Hi, he replied, his beady eyes lighting up with insane desire. By hurdling a few tables he arrived at my side. I ' d like to talk to you for a few minutes, he leered, dragging me into an empty classroom. Oh, Alex, you ' re so tempestuous, I gurgled, sinking my teeth into his extended arm and skipping gaily down the hall. Alex gazed after me, his face bitter with defeat. Carefully I descended into the catacombs of lower Frank Strong. The girl behind the desk asked a few impertinent questions concerning my classification, and then began unreeling a sheath of forms from a S Red I NC • 18 huge spool. When the dial on the spool indicated that 20 feet had been unwound, she handed the forms to me with instructions to fill out in full. Two hours later, after printing my name and address 2000 times, I gathered up the prescribed questionaires and forged onward to the next ing table. Here lightning-like workers began to separate the cards. Two were returned to me—the rest were scooped into a bushel basket marked File. Four tables later I was directed to the business office where I paid my various fees. Peeling off six $50 bills, I deposited them with the cashier. For this I received my passkey to the University and a dime change. The receipt looked something like this: Incidentals $150.00 Health 50.00 Activity and tax 25.00 Union 15.00 Stag hunting license 5.00 ,THE JAYHAWKER Fishing license 5.00 Potter ' s privilege permit 5.00 Vending license 5.00 Smoking permit 5.00 More incidentals 34.90 TOTAL $299.90 Turning from the window, I ran the gauntlet of booths set up at the end of the registration line. Here enterprising students were selling hot dogs, hamburgers, pop, memberships to various organiza- tions, comic books, life insurance, opium, and other articles of use to college students. Sales resistance was at a low ebb, and the ringing of cash registers was deafening. It is rumored that these students pay the highest income taxes in Lawrence. Registration completed, I headed toward son gym. As I was crossing the street, I sighted good old Alex Hundredproof, lying in the gutter. Alex, I said gently, you can ' t stay there. That ' s a no parking zone. Obviously, he muttered feebly, as he unearthed himself from a mound of parking tickets. I ' m going to enroll, Alex. Carry my fire guisher and DDT bomb over to Robinson? Please, Alex, I ' ll be indebted to you forever. Alex, responding to these kind words, emptied his pockets of assorted bottles, and accompanied me across the street. The enrollment arena reminded me of the New York stock exchange. Students, pale and tight lipped, gazed transfixed at the large board which contained announcements of closed classes. Just as I entered the room, the announcement was posted that the last class in Professors of the Past had been closed. Horrifed screams, accompanied by a barrage of pistol shots, rent the air. Disposal squads quickly carried away the dead, and enrollment proceeded as before. Seating myself at a table, I began to fill out the enrollment card. I had already selected the courses I wanted, so all I had to do was complete said card. What a dream course I had. No class before nine, and none after 12. Three hours of History of Druidism, three hours of Elementary Tomahawk Throwing, three hours of Birds and Bees, and a two hour course in Developing a Child Delinquent. My counsellor nodded approval as he okayed the card. Glad to see you ' ve settled down to some real study, he commented. Clutching the signed document to my pounding heart, I ran to the next station for approval. At this point, after careful scrutiny, my adviser said, You should be able to escape from this institution in the spring of ' 63 if you continue at your present rate. A quick signature was scrawled on the card and I was ready for the final step of procuring my class cards. As I was about to enter the enclosure, I was tled by a near-by commotion. A fun loving student named Alex Jokero had released a wild bull into the pen. Students ran frantically trying to escape, but monitors at each entrance barred their way. Once in the pen, one cannot leave until he has completed gathering up his class cards. Two men were gored to death before the bull was dued. The more fortunate students laughed heartily at the cleverness of Alex Jokero. When the disposal squad had borne aw ay the two hapless freshmen, I entered the pen. My first stop was at the Religion table, where I met my old friend, Professor Alex Bookmark. He was pleased to see me and introduced me to his new assistant Alex Rounder. Young Alex was happy to see me, too. It took me five minutes to get unentwined from his passionate embrace and convince him that I was not interested in his new course How to Reduce with the Holy Rollers. I hurried to the other tables without further incident. My final card filled out, I gathered together my pieces of equipment, threw the empty brandy flask at Dean Alex Alexander, and ran forth into the outer world. Not the line-up at Lansing. bat K. U. Freshmen getting photographed for their Activity Books. Returning to the house, I cast my bleeding body through the doorway, hastily discarded my fire guisher, emergency rations, Bowie knife, rope, ing salts, blanket, DDT bomb, first aid kit, and maps; then I seated myself on the floor and began a rapid application of Band-aids. A Freshman proac hed me timidly. Hello, she exclaimed, isn ' t enrollment the biggest thrill? You ' ve no idea how excited I am. You see I enrolled the first day at eight o ' clock, and . . . I struck her a stunning blow and raced from the room. I threw myself at the feet of our housemother, Mrs. Alex, and reported that I had accomplished my mission. Tenderly she lifted me to my knees, and whispered, Well done my dear. It ' s ove r for another year. 22 THE JAYHAWKER The Id es of the King PARTE, THE FIRSTE Forsooth, gadzooks, and a barrel of 3.2 on a dead man ' s breast! cried Sir Arthur as he leaped into the saddle of his snorting war horse, Homer. Homer grunted. Why art thou leaving like a bat out of Western Kansas? queried Arthur ' s aged mother. I must! shouted Arty as he sped down the highway, fully keeping in his own lane, I am off for yon wildes of Oread Mounte where lies my quest—the Grail of Ale, and my Lady Hortense who has been kidnapped by a wild mountain band of Greeks. Tis for these myriad reasons, fond mother, that I ride forth unto yon forest, dense. Dense, screamed his mother, I ' d luff to! Whereupon Arthur struck his mother a stunning blow and rode off at full tilt. Homer disliked being ridden at tilt, and demanded another nickle. 4 e-Itinci-lite-dzeote.1 4cauta4 el Me Ptah Itleeh 14dt .4 PARTE, THE SECONDE For two days and two nights did Sir Arthur follow the highway which led to the city, Lawrence on the Kaw, home of sorcerers, wizards, and a place of strange doings. Coming in at eventide, he rode to a nearby Inn, a large place, owned by a Frenchman, and called, Jahnees . Ho, Innkeeper, exclaimed Arthur, a room for a traveller! Nay, sire, plied the Innkeeper, all my rooms are taken. Hast not thou heard? The town has been taken over by nomadic tribes of barbarian Greeks, bearing strange names like Sigma Nu, Phi Psi, and Beta. Tis not safe to walk the cobbled streets at night. Dullard! screamed Arthur, and striking the man a stunning blow, he goaded Homer out into the gathering fog. Homer bounded into the street on little cat feet, sat for a while on silent haunches and then they moved off together. Arthur had but ridden a few paces when from a dark doorway, eight masked figures loomed forth in front of him. Applying the emergency brake. Homer screeched to a halt. No sooner had Arthur stopped than a figure leaped out at him. One man quickly took his blood pressure, another felt his pulse, a third examined his family tree, while a fourth quickly gave him an I. Q. test. What is thy name , cried one of the men, drawing forth a scroll marked, THE D.U ' s DISCUSS WORLD EVENTS WITH RUSHEE. FALL NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 23 MEMBERSHIP IN FRATERNITIES IS BY INVITATION ' —Pre-Rush Week Manual Rush List. Arthur. Uther, rejoined Arthur. The group withdrew suddenly and went into a small huddle. Then one of their members called signals and they issued forth out of the huddle reciting in unison, Join our bande, it ' s ye beste in ye lande. Whereupon the leader approached Arthur and affixed upon his shield, a strange device. Another of the group approached Arthur, grasped his hand and quickly unhorsed him with a Judo hold. That ' s our grip, he apologized, Now you ' re a member of Alpha Rolda Dice. Congratulations! Arthur was sore confused. PARTE, THE THIRDE Lady Hortense stirred uneasily about in her cell. She tried desperately to unloosen the shackles which bound her feet, but finding herself unsuccessful, she slumped back into a corner. Searching for some- thing to occupy her time, she fumbled about in the pockets of her robe. She drew out a small pamphlet which had been handed to her at the time of her captivity. It was titled, Instructions to Coeds during Sorority rushing. She read it avidly. Remember above all else that your college career does not depend on being in a sorority— some of the most popular women on the K. U. Campus are not. In fact, some of the most popu- lar women on the K. U. Campus are not at K. U. She started to read further but was interrupted by a scuffling noise outside the door. The massive oak portal creaked slowly open, and two glistening Nubians stepped inside. Their muscles rippled in the yellow flames of the burning pine knots they carried. They stood motionlessly for a moment, their eyes gleaming like red coals in the semi-darkness. Soon a clanking noise sounded down the hallway, and a tall figure, robed in black, entered the room. His face was masked and his head was topped by a black pointed hood. In his hand he carried a spiked mace, and a vicious iron boot. Hortense gazed at him for a brief moment with ever-widening pupils. Then, hesitantly, she spoke, Okay . . . I ' ll pledge. PARTE, THE FOURTHE Arthur carefully tethered Homer in the corner of the room, and then unloaded his equipment. Thoughts of his quest for Hortense and the Grail were far away. Even the thoughts of jolly England, which used to cluster in his head, were far away, for now . . he was a Greek! And Homer . . . Homer was now a Greek horse. Homer grunted, and shifted his weight under the heavy load of red ii TIM AIPM9 CI-4S NAY -RING AROUND TIM RUSHEE and white banners which spelled out A.R.D. ( Alpha Rolda Dice) across his flanks. Arthur had just begun to unscrew his armor, when he heard a slight noise. He wheeled in time to note a diminutive figure creep stealthily through the transom. The figure was that of a small man dressed in foreign raiment. The man approached him and cried out in a hoarse whisper. So, Arthur Uther! Ye have pledged A.R.D. Ye have sinned. Hearken ye not to them for they are publicans and sinners, and do roll up their pantlegs. They teacheth that women art wicked. Yea, they have mocked thee and thou hast done wrong to listen. Arthur was sore afraid, and asked, I pray thee, sire, how mayest I atone for my sins? Whereupon the man drew from his pocket a button saying, By this token ye shall serve penance. Wear it and suffer no more the company of evil men. Therewith Arthur ceived the button, and the man withdrew, ing Arthur to appear at the Rho Rho house on the morrow. Thus it did happen that Arthur was once more alone in the room but ere he could pause to clear his brow, when a person ap- peared from beneath the bed, and Arthur was as- tonished with a great as- tonishment. Then did the stranger address himself to Arthur, saying, Thou art sur- prised but ye must put aside thy incredulity for I am the bearer of the true gospel which is that of Lambda Nu. Renounce those others for they are but tempt- ers. Be thou attentive therefore whilst I set thee straight. And Arthur listened while the stranger did proclaim the glories of Lambda Nu beside which the others measureth not, and as he spike he taketh from the lapel of Arthur ' s armor, the one button, and putteth back another. De- siring not to wait until the morrow, the stranger led Arthur and shorn of his A.R.D. garments, down the fire-escape and out into the night. PARTE, THE FIFTHE Having accepted the emblem of the barbaric band, Lady Hortense was relieved of her shackles and al- lowed to step forth into the dank halls of the castle. The walls of the dim hallway were lined with stone statues in female garb. As she was being led down the passage, Hortense gazed at these figures in amaze- ment. What be these strange figures? she inquired of her guide. The gaunt woman that was leading her turned slowly about and peering into her eyes, she gruffly replied, Alums. Hortense was led into a circular turret and seated in a large oak chair. The room was filled with large muscular women garbed in battle array. As she sat down, two Blackamoors lunged at her and strapped her to her seat. As soon as she was securely fastened, the leader of the Amazons stepped forward and ad- dressed her. Pledgeth thou to this sorority? FALL NUMBER, 1947 25 Yeseth, gurgled Hortense. No sooner had she spoken than two of the women stepped forward. One pressed a large railroad spike to Hortense ' s shoulder, while the other lifted a sledge hammer and drove the spike home. Does it hurt? the woman asked. No, just a flesh wound, retorted Hortense applying a tourniquet. The leader of the band stepped forward again. Hortense Hoffelmeyer, she claimed, thou hast been spiked. PARTE, THE SIXTHE Taking leave of his brother in Lambda Nu, Arthur proceeded to his lodging to receive the rest of his belongings. He rode Homer boldly up to the door of the Inn, but quickly changed his mind after receiving twelve parking tickets for being too far over the white parallel lines. A slight rain had begun to fall, and the little droplets began to spatter on the cobblestones. As Arthur approached the Inn, the Innkeeper rushed out the door, running at full speed. In his hand he clutched a box of Kleenex. As he reached the street he dropped to his knees and began wiping up the rain as fast as it fell. What cooketh, Innkeeper? asked Arthur, using a colloquialism of the day. Dost not thou know, Dullard? replied the Innkeeper, this is a drye state. Striking the Innkeeper a stunning blow, Arthur stormed into the Inn and up the rickety stairs to the attic. As he walked, he rudely pushed his way through a line of veterans waiting to sublet his closets. Reaching his room, he entered and closed the door. Hortense was waiting for him. They embraced, and wept loudly and longly over their long ration. Hortense, exclaimed Arthur, I have come for you at last. Too late . . . too late, she muttered, Arthur . . . I have become a Greek! Arthur gazed deeply into her chartruese eyes, and calmly replied, Hortense . . . I ' ll wait for you! Think of it, mused Hortense as she and Arthur strolled out of the Inn, I am now a member of a national organization. As they walked she spied the figure of a woman slouched in a corner. She sped over to the figure. Sister! cried Hortense in a hoarse voice, and embraced the woman vigorously. Pardon me! screeched the woman slapping a splint on her arm. But, cried Hortense, taken back, Art not a Greek? No, screamed the woman, Russo-Chero- kee! Whereupon she struck Hortense a stunning blow and stormed off into the darkness. Arthur labored hard over the inert form of his beloved, seeking to revive her. In quick succession he tried artificial respiration, smelling salts, carbon disulfide, and an oxygen tent, but all to no avail. As a last resort he slowly paced an uncovered bottle of Budweiser under her nostrils. Hortense ately leaped to her feet crying, T.G.I.F., T.G.I.F.! (Continued on Page 93) NORRIS SCHMIDT ETTINGER SMALL T. MONROE igsk n Prognosis ROUSE PATTEE JOHNSON BERTUZZI McDONALD c Clear the track! Make way for the K. U. All- Weather Football Express! Whether plowing through mud, climbing a mile- high field, or puffing under a scorching sun, the Jayhawker gridiron train, Head Coach George Sauer at the throttle, has been gaining speed in the face of de-railing attempts by three opponents. Co-champions of the Big Six last year, the Jay- hawkers have won two and tied one in their three open ing tilts. The tie, an opening game Wash Bowl battle with the T.C.U. Horned Frogs in Kansas City, ended with neither side scoring and both sides being swamped. Nothing was proved to 20,000 fans except that Kansas City can be wet in more ways than one. During the entire game, Kansas and T. C. U. ground out a combined total of only 80 yards, the Texans holding a slight edge due to one completed forward pass. Played in 12-minute quarters because of the weather, the battle was finished in semi-dark- ness as the light bulbs on the grandstand popped throughout the contest. Ray Evans, Jayhawker All-Big Six halfback and candidate for All-American honors, was forced to leave the game in the second quarter with a knee injury. A. week later against Denver, the Kansans matched the higher altitude with higher scoring and toppled the Pioneers, 9 to 0, in a night game at the Mile- High City. Holding their mountain country foes to a net gain of only 63 yards in the contest, the Jay- hawkers gave the crowd of 28,000, largest in Denver history, little to cheer about. Line stars of the Denver game were right guard, Joe Crawford, who blocked a Pioneer punt which gave Kansas a ' safety and two points; substitute left tackle, Ed Lee, who recovered a fumble on the Den- ver 16-yard line to set up the Jayhawker touchdown; and right end, Otto Schnellbacher, who took a 12- yard pass from quarterback Lynne McNutt for the only touchdown of the game. In the backfield, McNutt and newcomer. Torn Rif in ' RAY EVANS, last year ' s captain and two time All: Big Six choice, was conference ' s leading passer in 1946. FRENCH LEE HEAD COACH GEORGE SAUER 711 .4(1. Scott, turned in outstanding performances. Scott, sub- stituting for the injured Ray Evans at left half, made several fine runs in the game. The following Saturday Kansas took the measure of Iowa State, 27 to 7, in the opening conference clash. Played under a summer sun at Lawrence, the game drew 17,500 fans, the largest number in the history of the series between the two schools. Completing six out of nine passes and rolling up 227 yards on the ground, the Jayhawker grid- ders showed continued improvement in their offen- sive play. Left end, Marvin Small, recovered a Cyclone fumble on the Iowa State 11-yard line to set up the first Kansas touchdown. Then Forrest Griffith, substitute fullback, plunged over for the six points. Ray Evans, playing most of the last three quarters of the game, showed that he had recovered from his knee injury by scoring two touchdowns, one on a pass from McNutt and the other on a 6-yard end run. Bud French, substitute left halfback, furnished the greatest single thrill of the game by racing 57 yards to score in the fourth quarter. The six-man Kansas coaching staff is the most complete ever assembled at Lawrence. In addition to Head Coach, George Sauer, the former Nebraska All-American who piloted the Jayhawkers to the top his first year, five other grid bosses have had important parts in molding the winning Crimson and Blue machine. They are: Backfield Coach, Vic Bradford, former three-sport D. MONROE SCOTT BAKER HOGAN CRAWFORD IMMINNIMININN MOFFETT BROWN GRIFFITH FINK BRAY CO-CAPTAIN, FAMBROUGH IN RENKO McNUTT HAWKINS B. SPERRY FAMBROUGH EVANS O ' NEAL K. SPERRY TOMLINSON SCHNELLBACHER star from the University of Alabama; Line Coach Bob Ingalls, one time A11-American center from Michigan; Assistant Line Coach Mike Getto, All- American tackle at Pittsburg under Dr. Jock Suther- land; Tackle Coach and Trainer Dean Nesmith, standout Jayhawker lineman for three seasons under Ad Lindsey; and End Coach and Chief Scout Wayne Replogle, an eight-letterman at the College of poria. The Jayhawker coaches know that the team faces a difficult task this fall in living up to the advance notices. Only one man, center Howard Fischer, is not back from the 1946 starting lineup which tied the Oklahoma Sooners for the league title. In tion, a pre-season poll of sports writers and casters in this area, conducted by K.U. Sports city Director Don Pierce, revealed that the experts are already handing the championship to the team from Lawrence again this year. The balloting brought out opinion that Jayhawker material will once again be spread thin but will be of high quality. Spearhead of the team again this season is the never-say-die workhorse, Riflin ' Ray Evans. Ray led conference passers last year with 17 completions in 39 attempts for 379 yards. He was second only to Oklahoma ' s Joe Golding in individual rushing, pounding out a total of 459 yards. Chosen on every All-Big Six selection and given much All-American recognition in 1946, Evans should be a unanimous nomination for The Man Most Likely to Appear in the Nightmares of Other Coaches. (Continued on Page 91) Head Coach George Sauer maps out strategy to take the wind out of Cyclone sails. Guard Dick linson, stands by to enter the game. Tackle Hugh Johnson takes a drink of oxygen between smashes at the Iowa State line. The sun was hotter to handle than the Cyclones. Jayhawker fans join with Dorothy in prise at the fight of the Iowa State eleven. 2114),%. The visiting footballers watch their teammates Cyclones gather steam in give Kansas a scare during the opening quarter. taking the ball down field. A Jayhawker decides that the visitors have had enough Kansas hospitality and pulls down the Iowa State ball carrier without apology. An Iowa State aerial is on its way to a waiting receiver— but it fails to connect. The Kansas bench is vacated as the Cyclones give the home team a few anxious moments. 411 - - x vai.; -, .. .. ,, c__.................. 0,0,......,,...n 41,.......747 ,,...it•i -. ' . 64 et , 412 1:11121.t, %f - The tide turns as Schnellbacher pulls in a pass for the hawkers. Kansas rolls forward as Ray Evans pounds out a Forrest Griffith crashes head on into an ground gain. The fans begin to breath easier. Iowa State tackler as the Jayhawkers approach pay dirt. Y6 Es f9 The victim of Griffith ' s Don Fambrough ' s kick after touchdown sails headlong charge, a thor- toward the crossbars following the first Jayhawker ough ly deflated Cyclone, score. limps to the Iowa State bench. The traditional waving arms of sas students signal the initial seven points, as well as knocking the paper eyeshades askew. ttel iktd. The post-game victory rush for cokes finds the concesion swamped. Throats were dry from cheering the opening con ference triumph. Football suits are put ti away to rest till next week. The players don ' t get the same break—they ' ll be back at mage Monday. INTRAMURAL . . . . 74e MeK Conks Okay, so you don ' t weigh 200 pounds or have muscles like Ray Evans. So George Sauer hasn ' t stopped you on the street with a gleam in his eye and a jersey in his hand. So the cheerleaders don ' t know your name by heart. Don ' t give up! You can still be a poor man ' s All American in the University of Kansas intramural athletic gram. Your girl can yet cheer with pride as you race down the field for a touchdown ... or sink a basket in the last 10 seconds ... or clean the bases with a home run. Under the slogan, A program for every organi- zation; a sport for every individual, Don Powell, director of men ' s intramurals, launched the most ambitious schedule in the history of the university this fall. Powell expects even more men to pate this year than did during the peak 1946-47 season when over 2,00 athletes battled through the various sports. Facilities have been expanded since the spring semester by the completion of a new annex to Rob- inson gymnasium. Included are a handball court, two basketball courts, a game room, lounge, table tennis facilities, and an equipment room. Two new touch football fields have also been completed, mak- ing a total of eight available for service. An innovation this fall was the publication of a 52-page manual on Kansas intramurals. Under the co-editorship of Don Powell and Jack Greer. new secretary of men ' s intramurals, the booklet con- tains records for the 1946-47 season, pictures of va- rious teams and individuals, and explanatory articles on this year ' s program. Several changes have been made in various phases (Continued on Page 93) Top: The Men ' s Intramural Commit- tee meets with Don Powell and Coach Shenk to determine th year ' s program. Center: Jack Eskridge gets off a good serve on the handball courts. Bottom: Touch football is one of the main events in the Fall program for the men. PETLS ez)b he WomeK Time out! Free throw! Point for our team! Al- though these familiar cries were those echoed on the intramural courts back in 1917 when K. U. women first started playing basketball, the organi- zation of women ' s athletics has greatly expanded since the times of the blue bloomer and pleated middy. Today, women ' s sports competition involves twenty-nine individual teams, representing univer- sity dormitories, sorority houses, or other organized groups. Flashes of bare legs—instead of the modest three- quarter length stockings of 1917—are seen beneath trim white shorts and shirts as girls leap high to spike a volleyball or tip in a basket for those pre- cious points. The intramurals program satisfies all types of skills, whether it be a dusty slide to third base in the spring or a graceful swan dive in the mid-winter swimming meet. Individual sports, such as tennis, badminton, table tennis, and swimming are offered, as well as the team sports—volleyball, basketball, and softball. Competition is keen, especially in the final games, for each team aspires to win the glittering trophies awarded for excellence in each sport. The most coveted prize is the Women ' s Intramural Trophy, a cup presented each fall at the annual Sports Pow Wow to the group which has proven superiority and good sportsmanship in all sports. The trophy for the year 1946-47 was awarded to Alpha Delta Pi, after being held by Kappa Kappa Gamma for seven consecutive years. Since the women ' s intramurals program is so extensive, it must be highly organized. The various (Continued on Page 94) Top: Miss Hoover, Director of Wo- men ' s Intramurals, strikes a pose on the steps of Robinson Gym. Center and Bottom: volleyball and Badmitton are two of the more stren- uous sports in the Women ' s curricu- lum during the winter. i ,1111111101MMIMInw— Pi.10■11 .. ... ..... University of Kansas was organ- The School of Medicine of the ized in 1899 as a two year course at Lawrence. In 1906 it expanded to Kansas City when Dr. Simeon B. Bell gave the University seven and a half acres of land and forty- five thousand dollars. From this small beginning the University of Kansas Medical Center has spread into a multi-million dollar cluster of buildings which cover several acres. The present imposing edifice includes a three hundred and sixty bed hospital in addition to the many clinical and teaching facilities. Behind the great stone pillars and shiny brick walls, the solemn men in white gather from all over the state. Most of their waking hours and many of their later ones are spent attending lectures, clinics, and trudging up and down the long halls. Before the fledgling doctors have completed their stay at Bell Memorial, they come to speaking terms with most of the ailments which plague our society. No hour is too early, or none too late for the white- coated students to flock into the spacious, well-lighted classrooms for lectures. Students learn early that the life of a Doctor belongs to those he serves, and regular hours are a thing from the halcyon days of the past. At left, a group of Senior medics attend a lecture on bone diseases. Recreation periods are few and far between during the four years the student attends the Medical School. Relaxation becomes as much a problem as Chemistry or Anatomy. At the right, a group of Seniors find time to have a game of Bridge in spacious Newell Hall, the students recreational center. The long hours are not so much of a grind when there is a pretty girl for a patient. At left, a Senior listens to the heartbeat of a heart-breaking young maiden in the atrics Ward. The Center is one of the best equipped nostic centers in this area of the country. The pital services are divided into numerous ments which include such jaw-breaker n am e s as, neurology, orthopedic surgery, plastic surgery, Benito-urinary surgery, gynecology and obstetrics, pediatrics, radiology, derma- tology, opthalmology, and otorhinolaryngology. The well-outfitted chemistry lab at the right is used extensively in the department of medicine. Below left: Though the hours are long with few breaks, and the work is difficult and at times tedious, the students welcome their endless tasks for they know that their labors bear below right. Knowledge of the functions of large chines as well as small ones is a prerequisite for the graduating medic. At left, a Senior manipulates an X-ray machine used for deep therapy, which tips the .scales at almost a ton. 4 38 THE JAYHAWKER favit aeam 9adteeta Scaoft Le VieatJ ew Look Have you traded in your last year ' s silhouette for the New 1947 Form? If not, you ' re going to be left behind in the swirling rush to acquire the suave, sophisticated (and in the opinion of most men—senseless) New Look of Fashion. But don ' t worry, for according to the latest designers the change is made in three easy steps. You first fully discard your complete last year ' s wardrobe by contributing it to the Lower Slobovian Relief Fund; second, simply rebuild your figure by apply- - The Old Look — — Transition Stage — ing various ingenious gadgets and padding; and lastly, cheerfully spend a few hundred dollars on the right things with which to cover up your new form. There now, doesn ' t that sound easy? This year it seems the fashion designers weren ' t content to merely rearrange women ' s clothes. Instead, they conceived the rather cute idea of reshaping the feminine figure itself. And what ' s more, they have done it! To begin with they have given you hips again. (Nice of them, wasn ' t it? ) If you happen to be blessed with a toothpick-like silhoutte, your extra hips will be included as pads in your skirts and jackets. ( A pair of life-like, ruffled hips sells for $7.95 at the better stores.) The next change is considerably more uncomfort- able. Your waistline must be one to two inches smaller. ( Three inches is better, but it ' s a tight squeeze.) You can achieve this either by going on a simple diet of one crisp lettuce leaf, one teaspoon of cottage cheese and two Ry-Crisp crackers three times daily, or by playing Sacrlet O ' Hara with a boned and laced corset. ( Hip pads attached—$2.98 extra.) But here ' s the best news of all—shoulder pads are on the way out. You can stop trying to look like Lit ' Abner or Ray Evans, and simply try to resemble a woman again. You should strive to FALL NUMBER, 1947 39 There ' s a Big Change in Clothes . . look exactly like an hour glass with legs—rounded hips, rounded shoulders, and a disappearing line. ( Don ' t let it completely get away from you. ) The next problem is what to put on over this new, exciting form. Here is where men begin to shudder, longing for the antique styles of ' 45 and ' 46. But don ' t let their groans disturb you. The new low hemline is the most essential part of the thrilling New Look. ( It is rumored that the designer who invented the low hemline had a severe case of rickets when a baby and now has bow legs.) Your new skirts will be long, flowing, and completely unreveal- ing. They must come to the mid-calf line. ( This refers to a part of the leg, not a baby cow.) The height of the hemline is not an individual a ffair. The designers have laid down the law, and any woman would, of course, be foolish to disregard their careful, scientific research. The rule is as follows: The hemline must be 15 inches above the floor and 6 inches down from the knee, so be sure to measure both ways. (Obviously, if your knee does not happen to be 21 inches from the floor, it will present a problem.) Some women accept the new long hemlines with relief. One happy woman sighed, I have piano legs, and now, at last, only five inches of them show. It is generally agreed that men are rabid about long skirts because it deprives them of a clear view of feminine legs. Males must reluctantly confine them- selves to hazy glimpses of distant ankles which are often far from alluring. Even the promise of new hips for women has failed to quiet their displeasure at finding legs demurely hidden. This male unrest has caused a tremendous upheaval all over the nation. There has been a blossoming of P.T.L. Clubs ( Sam You Made The Pants Too Long ) everywhere. This is a frantic attempt to ridicule women ' s long hemlines b y shortening men ' s legs. All S.Y.M.T.P.T.L. Club members have pledged themselves to allow their ankles to peek from neath shortened trousers. Although some radicals breathlessly cite this action as the beginning of a revolution in men ' s apparel, so far the brief pantleg has only brought a gush of giggles and a complete loss of dignity for (Continued on Page 91) . .. and You ' ll Love It —Harpers AN EARLIER JAYHAWKER TRAVELER PAUSES IN A BELGIAN FOREST BEFORE CONTINUING HIS TRIP A JAYHAWKER ABROAD 4 ,,z No traveler in Europe today can fail to realize the seriousness of the prevailing political and nomic problems. With the cessation of hostilities, Americans shed the harness of restrictions and pro- ceeded to make improvements in their living ards which they considered six years overdue. Many European nations, however, started salvage tions and tightened their belts, grimly awaiting a bleak future. Perhaps you number among the students on this hill today who are inclined to discount lightly the statements made concerning the graveness of ditions in Europe. If you are prone to be placent, or believe that the most worthwhile work today is to prepare to go about your father ' s business, plan to be on the first ship to Europe next spring. During the recent summer vacation period, five Jayhawkers, along with two Eastern students and director Marc Law of Topeka, viewed the British Isles and the western European continent. Stories emanating from the British Isles bear little exaggeration. The English have their backs ing hard against the wall, economically, and the Labor government is trying all expedients to reach the best solution. The Jayhawkers endured the rigors arising from the economic plights of each country, but equipped with advance steamer, railway and hotel reserva- tions, plus the almighty American dollar, they were at no time underfed or forced to sleep in streets, wrapped in a copy of the London Times or Paris Herald. The British, as practically all western European nations, ration everything from socks to candy bars. There is a ceiling price on meals, the theory being that the available food may be had by all. The equi- valent of one dollar should call forth any dinner on a menu in London. In some establishments, ever, should the customer consent to pay for the use of a tablecloth, or a napkin or two, a dinner of greater quantity and variety could be had. For break- fast, one can count on a roll, the traditional cup of hot tea and a powdered egg omelette. For lunch or dinner there is always a choice between fish, chicken, and quite o ther cuts of meat. The Britishers, more than any of their European neighbors, have cleaned up the damage caused by bombings. Only by peering behind some of the facades can one note the extent of inflicted damage. Immediately noticeable to any American is the ish dress of today. Rations permit one new suit or dress per year for the average English man or woman. Consequently, a man well dressed by Ameri- can standards was the exception among populace garb ed in eight-year-old combinations of tweeds, plaids, and gabardines. Many visitors, apprised of the expected tions, carried ample supplies of soap, nylons, razor blades, and other useful articles which served as ex- cellent negotiable instruments in getting two-day laundry service. Dry cleaning is unheard of in most of Europe today, and the best, one can expect is a spotting and pressing job. In fact, it is said that the well-to-do Englishmen send their dry cleaning to New York by air. London continues to have the 10 p. m. curfew, which is, of course, a dampener on night life. ing the summer, with daylight saving time in effect, the clock usually strikes 1.1 before the sun sets. It was no feat to have dinner, attend a theater or movie, walk about a bit and return to your lodging before twilight. For those scholars who have visions of studying in one of the colleges at Oxford, it can be said that this year the buildings will again be without heat and many other study conveniences which Americans are accustomed to having. France, with its destruction and economic ills, has healed little since many of K.U. ' s veterans were there. A parodoxical country of fear and courage, and of corruption and reform, France remains a fertile field for the sowing of many isms. The black market is still prevalent, although post war tion has resulted in the removal of numerous items from the average marketer ' s list. Cigarettes fell to $12 per carton during the summer, and American money was worth about twice its U. S. Value. The whole of central Europe was hard hit by a drouth during the summer, and many days filled with cold and hunger are promised the Europeans this coming winter. In Southern France, the people were shabbily dressed and underfed. Citizens can still be seen sca- venging garbage pails for food. Refrigeration in meat markets is not to be had, and all food is posed to the dusty air and sunlight. The French bread contains 40-100% corn. Yellow in ance, it is sometimes harmful if eaten in great quan- tities. Published reports revealed that its quality was so poor that full rations were not being taken by the people. Holland presented another picture of a state strug- gling to restore pre-war living standards. The man rape of the country left the Dutch without trucks, buses, autos, and railroad equipment. In re- placing their autos, the Hollanders turned to the U. S., so today a good percent of the cars are Ameri- can models, predominantly ' 46 ' s and ' 47 ' s. However, though jaywalkers can easily dodge the cars and (Continued on Page 91) Left: Dr. Laudon, head of the geology ment pauses at his desk for the camera man fore delivering his Geology I lectuer in Lindley Hall. Why the serious expression? Dr. don is thinking about how to manage his mushrooming department which, despite the fact that it experienced a one hundred percent increase in enrollment this year, shows disconcerting signs of ing still larger! Below: Advanced geology dents peer at the minutae of fossil remains through powerful scopes in micropaleontology laboratory in Lindley Hall. The geology department is equipped for advanced work in all fields of ology and its related subjects; courses are available leading to the degree of elor of Science in general geology, pertoleum and mining neering and ogy. — photos by Bob Graham 48 THE JAYHAWKER 1g Wheels On Campus DALE JUDY Cairn, persuasive Dale Judy is taking his politics ly this year. As temporary chairman of the new political party, the Independents, Dale is devoting his energies ward creating an awareness of majority responsibility on the campus. Also Vice-President of International Relations Club, he draws from his wide reserve of information on the British Commonwealth to spark club discussions. Chances are you ' d lose a debate with him on the subject of comparative government, for he has an encyclopedic knowledge of this, his special interest. Often, however, Dale ' s love of the Canadian great-out-of -doors causes skiing, fishing, and hunting to rival politics in filling his spare time. A senior in political science, Dale considers graduation merely a step toward a new frontier. With such a ful beginning in politics—he may someday even be dent, who knows! —Betsey Sheidley EMALOU BRITTON Although flaming red hair should be the sign of a fiery temper, for Emalou Britton it indicates a shy and ing manner. A senior majoring in history, she is a familiar figure about the campus and especially at Henley House where she spends ninety percent of her time bustling about as President of the YWCA. Her election to Mortar Board ranks as another of her claims to fame. And if you stroll into the Western zation offices, you might see this sprightly redheaded proc- tor pounding the facts into her victims. No wonder Emalou sighs that she didn ' t know what the word busy meant until this year! Swimming and tennis top her list of favorite sports, but she is often tempted to neglect these for classical music—her first love. — Joan Bagby RODNEY ARMSTRONG The biggest Ku Ku on the Hill is tall, husky-voiced Rod Armstrong. This stalwart Topeka boy is a pant in many of the more active of the campus activities. Rod ' s biggest interest is in Pi Epsilon Pi, the men ' s pep organization known as the Ku Kus. Rod has been a ber of the Ku Kus for several years, and is serving his first term as president of that organization. Rod also devotes much of his time and energy to the support of the Progressive Party, which may explain why he is majoring in Political Science. When asked about his hobbies, Rod mentioned that he liked to hunt. Evidently he must be a pretty good shot, for he was a member of the championship K.U. Rifle Team of 1941. With his good sense of humor, congeniality, and liness, it is not hard to understand why this big D.U. is such a good mixer on the Hill. — Corinne Temple FALL NUMBER, 1947 49 50 THE JAYHAWKER BMW_ J C.... MARIAN MINOR This as a Rah, Rah Year, says brown-haired Marian Minor, effervescent president of the Jay Janes, a national pep organization. This bright-eyed miss who comes from Hutchinson, believes that this is K.U. ' s gayest year. Marian has brought honor to herself and K.U. by being national president of Phi Sigma Chi. When not stirring up enthusiasm in Jay Janes, this nineteen-year old senior keeps busy as president of Theta Sigma Chi, women ' s fessional journalism society, and assistant-managing editor of the Kansan. She is a familiar figure in the shack, editing copy and dashing off last minute headlines. Marian, who entered college when she was only sixteen, is a journalism major. Not content to receive only a B.S. degree, she intends to do graduate work in foreign tries. She believes that anyone can go places if he is willing to work; and with her boundless enthusiasm and sparkling, friendly smile, Marian certainly lives up to her formula for success. — Helen Kittle WILBUR NOBLE You would be fighting a losing battle if you tried to convince Wilbur Noble that campus activities and lent scholarship don ' t mix. He can cite some very vincing personal examples to the contrary; for instance he is President of YMCA, a member of the Owl Society, and a Summerfield scholar. This indefatigable Beta has twice been on the Dean ' s and Chancellor ' s honor role, was on the Student-Faculty Conference as a freshman and sophomore, and has been Chairman of the Directing Committee of Student Voters and chairman of the Forums Board. He sang in the men ' s Glee Club ' way back in his freshman year and was president of PSGL and secretary of the YMCA as a more. A Junior this year, Noble is currently shepherding underclassmen through the rigors of Calvin, Rousseau, Marx, et al, as a proctor in Western Civilization. He plans to take up teaching as a career and will begin on his Masters Degree after he graduates next year. Although leisure is a scarce commodity with Wilbur he likes to spend his free time reading or listening to good music—preferably classical. As president of the YMCA Wilbur intends to make the Y an all-out action group on the campus—and he is just the man to do it. — Charley Hoffhaus FALL NUMBER, 1947 BEN FOSTER If you like a bull session or a good argument, drop in at the Kappa Sig house and meet busy Ben Foster. With ardent enthusiasm for his hobby of politics, Ben has come a leading figure in political affairs on this campus. He is now president of the Progressive Party, a men ' s political organization. When Ben is not rushing from one meeting to another, he takes time off to study for his history major. He ' s trying to crack a few grade points to secure his future in law school. Although Ben, a Hutchinson boy, has attended two other universities, he says he likes K.U. the best. He has proven his loyalty by becoming one of our local wheels. Ben ' s wheel title results from his membership in Forensic League, International Relations Club, Inter-fraternity cil, Pi Kappa Delta, a national honorary debate fraternity, and Delta Sigma Rho, a national honorary debate nity. In spite of this long list of activities, Ben insists that his favorite past time is sleeping. Confidentially, we ' d like to know when he does it! — Margaret Meeks OTIS HILL Ever-smiling, friendly Otis Hill is one of the busiest wheels on the K.U. campus. Bud, as he is most generally known, has given up his many other activities to devote his full time and energy to the very important job of being president of the Student Union. Although only a more this year, Bud was the first freshman in the history of the university to be elected president of the Union. He has made many friends for himself and for the Union. His executive position has brought him into contact not only with university officials but also with such important executives as Governor Carlson. Bud, who comes from Wichita, is receiving excellent perience for his business major as director and chief ordinator of all the Union activities. He has put into effect a new and expanded program that includes all interested students. The results of his efforts have been evidenced in the greater student interest and spirit for the Union tivities. Bud ' s only worries are divided between keeping things running smoothly at the Union and finding time to study. — Margaret Meeks 51 52 THE JAYHAWKER PAT THIESEN No doubt you ' ve seen a blond-haired, blue-eyed boy flashing a big grin as he tears along Jayhawk Drive in his beloved white Ford. That ' s Pat Thiesen, who ' s a Junior now at K. U. and hails from Hutch. Pat has made a name for himself in every field, from music to sports, here on Mount Oread. He has proven his musical talents by being a member of the band for three years and by singing in the A Capella choir. Pat also serves on the Kansas Relay Committee of the Student Union. You might call him the steering wheel of the other campus wheels, for Pat has received the high honor of being elected the president of the Owl Society, men ' s honorary organization. Camping trips and fishing sprees top Pat ' s list of sports. He is an athletic enthusiast for all types of outdoor tivity, however, and claims to enjoy every aspect of the field. This likable Sigma Chi says that he likes just thing . There ' s no doubt that this lawyer-to-be will brighten many courtrooms in the future. Joan Bagby JIM WAUGH Versatility is the word for pleasant, blue-eyed, Jim Waugh, a senior on the hill and currently president of the All Student Council. Jim was an old hand at Oread activities even before the war. A K. U. cheerleader during his freshman year, this energetic Phi Delt later held offices in Pachacamac and Theta Tau and became a member of Scabbard and Blade, Owl Society, Ku Ku ' s, and Sachem. After two uneventful years in the army, he returned to K. U. last year and was elected President of the Engineering Council. Now doing a rushing business as president of the A.S.C., Jim manages to spend plenty of time with his wife, former Theta, Patty Armel, and with his one other love, golf. Not satisfied with just one vocational field, Jim plans to plement his engineering with a law degree later on in order to become a patent attorney par excellence. — Charley Hof haus Puff up those three flights of stairs to see us! Don ' t think you ' re in the wrong place if you hear a violin squeaking or a voice trying unsuccessfully to reach high C. Just continue on down the hall. Plate designs, travel posters, and cigarette tisements will catch your eye. Watch out for a student dashing from her locker in the hall to her class loaded down with rolls of paper, poster paints, pencils, rulers, ink, and scratch paper. These are the necessities of the sign class. Design is the course which stresses arrangements in line and color, either abstract or realistic. Assignments are real problems; it may be a wall {0...PARIPN paper design, a textile design, or a magazine cover. In the sculpture room, you will find Mr. Carey and Mr. Andrews, the two big pottery wheels. The color of the room attracts you immediately. The prevailing color is blue-green, but upon closer observation you will find caked clay everywhere, on the floor, on the tables, and even on the walls. Someone is at the wheel carefully turning a bowl, someone else is throwing the clay, and rows of objects are waiting to be fired. Sculpture is the art of molding various forms out of clay. If the work is good, it is fired in the school kiln; otherwise, back it goes into the clay bin. Don ' t forget to look into the handcrafts room. Silver work, silk screening and book binding are all subjects taught here, The room is cluttered with vices and buffers, and there are huge cupboards for tools at either end of the room. Here the patterns made in design or nature drawing are tooled on leather or engraved igt the form of silver jewelry. In this room many of the occupational therapy students work. In East Ad you will find the drawing and painting department which is composed of antique drawing, oil and watercolor painting. You will also find the various sketch classes. If you bump into someone doing physical exercises in the hall, never fear, it is only Mr. Mattern displaying one of his many talents. He is a friend to everyone whether the subject of counseling is art, posture, or the latest hair-do. One of the strange yet MSIttit? c so ating rooms is the antique room. It is not a room displaying furniture as you would ine, but it is crowded with plaster models, statues of Venus or David, individual heads and hands. Here the students are taught to observe precisely the shape, form, and light contrasts of the casts. Paintings in the hall both in oils and color lead you to another room. From the door you see nothing but a large No Admittance sign; however, if you get beyond this sign into the room, you would probably see a model ' s stand and students painting a figure in oils. Guiding the aspirants in oil is Mr. Eastwood who is well known for his sand dune paintings. Here in the east wing, in the midst of the pungent odors of oil, paints, canvas, and pentine, the fledgling Rembrandts putter around perfecting their talents. The long hallway is lined on both sides with the multi-colored dences of their industry. Pastoral scenes, lifes, animal pictures, and flesh-colored nudes all stare down from the walls in a colorful array. A casual step into one of the classrooms used for Antique drawing will bring a look of ishment to the face of the newcomer. The first impression gained is one of bewilderment. At first sight it seems as if you have stepped into a morgue or the macabre den of some derer. Hanging from the buff-colored walls in endless number are a wild assortment of arms. legs, hands, bones, and faces. Slumped about the room in contorted positions are human bodies. Upon closer examination it is found, that the bodies on the floor are those of students busily sketching the figures hanging from the • walls. A step further down the hall brings the itor to a large door. On the outer surface of the door, someone has painted in glowing red ters, No Visitors. Behind this door lies the life drawing classroom, the sanctum sanctorum where the diligent student, having graduated from plaster casts, gets to draw the real McCoy. Undoubtedly at sometime in your tour you will have been passed in the halls by a quiet tle dark-haired woman walking from one room to another with grim determination, This is Miss Whitney of the Design Department, counselor and buddy of, all the fledgling artists. The Art Department has grown from one hundred and six students, five years ago, to three hundred and twenty students today. Though the department should increase ten fold, however, there will always remain for the student the little vicissitudes which arise from being transformed from a bumbling Freshman into a potential Norman Rockwell. Among the many trials that beset the eager artist will always be the problem of cramming his gear into a cigar-box sized locker. At right, Bill Patterson and Sammy Lou Peete demonstrate the proper procedure. Trends in Art come and go, and there are many revolutions and counter-revolutions in art taste However, we are certain that throughout the years one thing will remain constant—above the clamor of pianos, squeaking of cellos, and rasping of baritones in the cata- combs of Frank Strong ' s attic, we will always hear the silent swish of horse hair brushes against canvas. —Janet Malott —Hank Brown qa4 quiltmen iv FRESHMEN MEN The Gree-1 year 4 ha, 9 hdatC14 LAWRENCE . . . exotic word striking many mixed emotions into the heart of each new student. LAWRENCE ... situated high above the shores of Potter Pond, yes, even called in time of school spirited passion—the Bagdad of the Kaw. LAWRENCE . . . home of Glen Cunningham, William Allan White, Charley Black and now . . . Jim Bowers, Jim shifts the weight of his sturdy carpet bag to his other hand and emits the heavy sigh that suddenly burdened his chest. Wrenching his eyes from the mesmerizing black letters on white background that spell HOME for the next four years, (Papa and the Dean of Men permitting) he bravely takes his first step toward the Knoll of Knowledge, the Pinnacle of chritude, (so he ' s been told) .. the well-known Hill, No sooner had he reached the windswept plateau atop Mount Oread than he was instructed to anchor his equally windswept coiffure with a Freshman cap. Jim answered, I don ' t want a Freshman cap .. . and more I won ' t buy one of the things. Picture Number Two was taken shortly after, when a little man in a white coat had untied him on the condition that try one on, Just for size. Jim was about to say, No, when the spirit of Ole ' Kayou appeared in the form of eight Ku Kus and assured him that the man-of-the-moment is never seen without one. He bought one! Picture Number Four shows Jim up to his knees in Enrollment (We ' ll call it that since our photographer winces everytime he hears the word, Overexposure. ) Though he appears to be studying a copy of the class schedule, Jim is really engrossed in this SUE:) CO BUY ?J week ' s issue of JUNGLE COMICS Which his advisor bequeathed to him at the close of the third day. Looking in on Jim hours later, we find him about to obtain final sent before entering the last lap of his trip. In the catacomb depths of Ad he sits back amazed at what he has just done. He has informed everyone from the Dai Llama of Tibet to the Chairman of Social Disorganization of All-Organized Activities Committee, that he is Jim Bowers, 1100 Indiana, (Home town, Kansas City, Mo.) ad infinitum, ditto. et al, and et cetera. Back at Robinson we catch up the thread of our drama in the life of an innocent Freshman, exposed to the wicked wiles of that threat to sanity, Ye Olde Keeper of the Closed Classes. Jim ' s back is turned toward the camera because his facial expression was so excruciating that it endangered the delicate life of the camera. In fact long after Jim had dazedly stumbled through the Pen he felt high vacillating notes of music gyrating through his brain cells, and extreme lack of control. The Doctor ' s request to open wide was followed by a lunge at our Medic ' s hand. However, having several, the Doc didn ' t notice it and the examination proceeded sullied by further outbreaks. Jim has calmed down now, he once more has a rational outlook . . . for HE is on the Knoll of Knowledge. And though he is worn gaunt by never-ending lines .. lines . . he never fails to appreciate more lines! He decides that the Old Hill isn ' t such a bad place after all. Alpha Chi Omega First Row: Mary Lou Power, Beloit; Betty Ann Eakin, burg; Patricia Perkins, Olathe; Winona Klotz, Coffeyville; Janice Monteith, Lawrence. Second Row: Jodi Bushey, Newton; Rosalie Bishop, Coffeyville; Joan Caldwell, El Paso, Texas; Barbara O ' Neal, Wichita; Laurie Birmingham, Kansas City, Mo. Third Row: Betty Land, Mision; Annalou Pope, Kansas City, Mo.; Lou Ann mann, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Helen Keller, Wichita; Jeanne Shafer, Great Bend. Not in picture: Patricia Rutledge, Tulsa, Okla.; Virginia Powell, Kansas City, Mo. Alpha Delta Pi First Row: Mary Helene Farrell, Lawrence; Ann Preble, Kansas City, Mo.; Marilyn Brown, Kansas City, Mo.; Arlene Hill, rence; Barbara Cleaves, Leavenworth; Virginia Brown, Emmet; Beverly Coulter, Blue Rapids; Sue Jones, Wichita. Second Row: Marie Schumacher, Topeka; Dolores Warren, Wichita; Marcia Hail, Lawrence; Barbara Lamoreaux, Waterville; Jeanne Trego, Merriam; Phyllis Ann Wilson, Raytown, Mo.; Mary Lou Lane, St. Marys; Jackye Simpson, Wichita. Third Row: Betty Preble, Kansas City, Mo.; Diane Howell, Kansas City, Mo.; Shirley Brown, Mission; Barbara Montaldo, Joplin, Mo.; Barbara Hoener, St. Louis, Mo.; Kathleen Graff, Ellinwood; Jean Gille, Joplin, Mo.; Marilyn Lundy, Atlanta, Ga.; Betty Schrier, Kansas City ,Mo.; Sarah Strickland, Hunnewell. Alpha Kappa Lambda First Row: Ted H. Beaver, Wichita; Dale A. Spiegel, Formoso; James R. Kanehl, Rittman, Ohio; Jac k E. Dausman, Malibu, Calif. Second Row: Robert L. Davis, Wichita; Ross C. Keeling, Topeka; Robert Teel, Columbus; Harry E. Robson, Herington; Joe ing, Topeka; Dale Theobald, Oak Park, Ill. Alpha Omicron Pi First Row: Dorothy Quirk, Kansas City; Lois Beth, Lawrence; Patricia Young, Kansas City, Mo.; Martha Willis, Kansas City, Mo.; Eleanor Brown, Kansas City, Mo.; Peggy Townsend, Humbolt; Donna Mercer, Goodland. Second Row: Ellen Hanes, Ottawa; Edith Williamson, Kansas City, Mo.; Betty Jo Bloomer, Claflin; Dorothy Bready, Cincinnatti, Ohio; Alice Jean Brandon, Kansas City, Mo.; Phyllis Gilpin, Kansas City; Joan Barr, Leavenworth. Third Row: Arlene Johnson, Kansas City, Mo.; Beverly Pepper, Topeka; Betty Juzek, Sunflower; Dorothy Kolb, Kansas City, Mo.; Winnifred Wilson, Lawrence; Virginia Johnston, Caldwell; Shirley Hobbs, Leavenworth; Beatrice Senor, St. Joseph, Mo. Alpha Tau Omega First Row: Jim Childers, Independence, Mo.; Ed Becker, ton; Don Helm, Kansas City; Sam Batsell, Junction City; Dave Nesser, Kansas City; Chuck Kendall, Concordia. Second Row: Dale Zimmerman, Independence, Mo.; Tom Milligan, Stanberry, Mo.; Clarence Hughes, Kansas City; Bob Brown, Kansas City; Myron Husband, Burbank, Calif.; Max Teare, St. Joseph, Mo.; Arthur Smith, Bartlesville Mo. Third Row: Bob Devine, Kansas City, Mo.; Bill Edwards, Leavenworth; Glen Tongier, Coffeyville; Jim Roberts, Hutchinson; Bryce Ehmke, Independnece, Mo.; Joe Levy, Coffeyville; Bill Rose, St. Joseph; Dick Milliken, Kansas City. Foutrh Row: Jim Wilson, Kansas City; Charles Keilhack, Kansas City; Jack Holland, Olathe; John Nieman Newton; Donald Reeves, Independence, Mo.; Allen Barrett, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Hucke, Kansas City, Mo.; Bill Wilhelm, Independence. Beta Theta Pi First Row: Richard C. Arnspiger, Wellington; John N. mer, Ottawa; John W. Weigel, Manhattan; James C. Lounsbury, Lincoln; Robert D. McEvers, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Lynwood H. Smith, Kansas City, Mo.; Albert R. Lowrie, Granby; Colo.; John G. Atherton, Emporia; Don P. Stickrod, Kansas City, Mo.; Bogue P. Harrison, Downs; William A. Champion, Wichita. Chi Omega First Row: Marynne Harwood, Wicihta; Virginia Osborne, chita; Beverly Brooks, Coffeyville; Dodie Miller, Kansas City, Mo.; Karen York, Overland Park. Second Row: Nancy Moore, rence; Kathleen Larson, Wamego; Mary Jane Horton, Kansas City, Mo.; Barbara Brown, Kansas City; Ann Cowger, Topeka; Dottie Hudson, El Dorado. Third Row: Helen Graves, Newton; Amy Guinotte, Kansas City, Mo.; Joan Bigham, Bethel; Flora Lee Pringle, Kansas City; Margretta White, Lawrence; Nancy Davis, Great Bend. Delta Chi First Row: Bill Straight, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Bransfield, Leavenworth; Bud Donley, Leavenworth; Gair Sloan, Leavenworth; Dwayne Tarver, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Carl Brown, Kansas City, Mo.; Jamison Vaughan, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim bard, Pueblo, Colo.; Gerald Lucas, Sublette; Fletcher Abbey, Kansas City, Mo.; J. Vitcor Nalley, Kansas City, Mo. Third Row: William Branit, Kansas City, Mo.; John Free, Jr., Wichita; John Wesley, Ulysses; John Davidson, Kansas City; Philip Savory, Atchison; Dan Reilly, Leavenworth; James Underwood, Anthony. Not in picture: John Neal, Lawrence; Charles Burckle, Kansas City, Mo.; Marshall Braly, Kingman. Delta Delta Delta First Row: Wilma Hershberger, Newton; Charlene Farrell, ling; Shirley Kyle, Kansas City; Donnis LaGree, Newton; Georgia Haun, Wichita. Second Row: Jacqueline Houdyshell, Larned; leen Collins, Wichita; Margaret Doll, Lamed; Barbara Wuerth, Kansas City; Marilyn Brown, Salina. Third Row: Joanne Dillon, Arlington, Va.; Deolres Collins, Wichita; Louise Warner, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Margaret Moore, McAllen, Texas; Patricia baker, Kansas City, Mo. Delta Gamma First Row: Margaret Harness, Kansas City, Mo.; Shirley stantos, Leavenworth; Barbara Esterle, Kansas City, Mo.; Margaret Wilson, Lawrence; Millie Marks, Valley Falls. Second Row: belle King, Hutchinson; Barbara Creel, Hutchinson; Nancee Bell, Kansas City; Jackie Christian, Coffeyville; Donnie Jones, Emporia; Frances Hall, Topeka. Third Row: Marcile Parker, Wichita; Lois Ann Fuller, Lawrence; Nanette Hyer, Olathe; Virginia Gard, dependence, Mo.; Rita Hartwell, Wichita; Donna Harrison, El Dorado; Carol Harris, Kansas City, Mo.; Ann Guyer, Wichita. Delta Tau Delta First Row: R. C. Harris, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack Clark, dence; Reed Bailey, Kansas City, Mo.; Carl Hoskins, Kansas City, Mo.; Bill Grosser, Salina; Warren Weaver, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Charles Duncan, El Droado; Dave Mordy, Fredonia; Wally McKee, Kansas City, Mo.; Fred Woods, Topeka; Bill our, Shawnee; Kenny Hillyer, Topeka; Frank McCoy, Wichita; Dean Frisbie, Kansas City, Mo. Third Row: Jerry Maloney, Wichita; Dale Hawly, Marquette; Bob Blinco, Fort Scott; Art Johnson, Kansas City; Clay Coburn, Kansas City; Fred Retter, Leavenworth; Don Diefendorf, Waterville; Carl Stallard, rence; Bob Leonard, Kansas City, Mo.; Jerry Osburn, Lawernce; Darrel McNeil, Peabody; Bill Layman, Kingman. Not in picutre: Dick Bradly, Wichita; Al Miller, Junction City. Delta Upsilon First Row: Jack T. Sturdivant, Independence; Lindy E. Bell, Highland; Donald R. Mather, Kansas City; Andrew A. Bauerlein, Burlington; John T. Rohde, Jr., Edwardsville; John H. Scrivner, St. Joseph, Mo.; Wade R. Stinson, Randall. Second Row: Max 0. Weber, Hoisington; James G. Mason, Lawrence; John S. Brown, Wichita; Dale H. Cooper, Wichita; Robert H. Schnetzler, sha; Norvell J. Osburn, Winfield; Harry E. Spuehler, Merriam. Third Row: John F. Bue, Lawrence; Richard J. Wood, Wichita; Robert W. Gowans, Hutchinson; Lawrence T. Nelson, Kansas City, Mo.; Alton C. Ray, Wichita; Kenneth H. Williams, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim M. Lammons, Wichita. Gamma Phi Beta First Row: Charlene Lashbrook, Kansas City; Catherine Jarboe, Parsons; Patricia McClure, Tulsa, Okla.; Charlotte Metcalf, Kansas City, Mo.; Kathleen Brode, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Margaret Dickinson, Kansas City, Mo.; Betty Martin, Lawrence; Mary Lou Peckenschneider, Halstead; Inez Hall, Wichita; Gloria Horn, Kansas City, Mo. Third Row: Mary Virginia Stout, Kansas City, Mo.; Marilyn Gibson, Lawrence; Margaret Dohlquist, filed; Betty Crawford, Paola; Marjorie Jenree, Kansas City; Georgianne Dutton; Dodge City; Carolyn Carmean, Carthage. Kappa Alpha Theta First Row: Barbara Nash, Lawrence; Agnes Husband, Burbank, Calif.; Mary Katherman, Sioux City, Iowa; Bobbie Connell, Kansas City, Mo.; Lorraine Ross, Whitewater; Nancy Haffner, Kansas City; Georgette Spears, Lawrence; Mary Ann Suderman, Newton; Ann Lawrence, Lake Lotawana, Mo. Second Row: Marilynn Smith, Wichita; Ann Warner, Kansas City, Mo.; Pa tsy Clardy, Wichita; Jeanne Peterson, Kansas City, Mo.; Ann Ackerman, Evanston, Ill.; Mary Warner, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Jean Oliver, Newton. Third Row: Sally Sue Woodward, Salina; Marjorie Crane, Topeka; Carolyn Weigand, Leavenworth; Virginia Walsh, Kansas City, Mo.; Sally Stepper, Kansas City, Mo. Kappa Kappa Gamma Fir.:t Row: Mary Beth McNalley, Minneapolis; Jeannie Hillyer, Topeka; Peggy Wolfe, Wichita; Mary Mid Chubb, Baxter Springs; Nancy Smart, Kansas City, Mo.; Jeannie Chambers, Iola. Second Row: Virginia Harris, Ottawa; Elaine Elvig, Lawrence; Zara ner, Tonganoxie; Carolyn Coleman, Wichita; Helen Kittle, Kansas City, Mo.; Mary Wilkins, Lawrence; Joan Bagby, Kansas City, Mo. Third Row: Shirley Rice, Salina; Nancy Ruthrauff, Kansas City; Betty Jane Sims, Miami, Okla.; Dianne Durham, Kansas City, Mo.; Barbara Hays, Lawrence; Virginia La Rue, Columbus. Kappa Sigma First Row: Gene Biddle, Hutchinson; Gene Puckett, Lawrence; Bob Zimmerman, Lawrence; Pat Thayer, Jr., Wichita; Dean Williams, Topeka; Brian O ' Brian, Fredonia; Bob Thayer, tan. Second Row: Stanton Margrave, Sabetha; Stanley Margrave, Sabetha; Jim Jackson, Lyons; Dick Daigh, Russell; Jack Foster, Hutchinson; Jack VanderLippe, Kansas City, Mo.; Gene Hall, Merriam; Duane Kraft, Lawrence; Monte Fuller, Topeka. Third Row: Bill Orr, Lawrence; Bob Rygh, Omaha, Nebr.; Howard Tetter, Hutchinson; Jud Greer, Topeka; Dick Eacock, Edwardsvile; Bob Dillenback, Wichita; Tom Steinle, Russell; John Sorem, Clay Center; Dick Peckenschneider, Halstead; Casper Braint, Belton, Mo. Fourth Row: Dick Randall, Climax; Paul Casterline, Dodge City; Dick Wakefield, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Sapp, Augusta; Dick Herold, Ellinwood; Walter Buchatz, Aruba Curacao; Lee merman, Lawrence; Phil Smith, Arkansas City. Lambda Chi Alpha First Row: Conrad M. Brack, Great Bend; William R. Durbin, Great Bend; Vernon I. Parsons, Hugoton; Walter H. Smith, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; Donald Blachly, West Chester, Pa.; James W. Lane, Parsons. Second Row: Philip L. Martinek, Bonner Springs; William G. Altimari, Atchison; George B. Harvey, Salina; David M. Garlock, St. Joseph, Mo.; John R. Jones, Great Bend; Edward Downard, Jr., Barnes; Hubert B. Grabau, Fairfield, Conn.; liam A. Crawford, Junction City; Rudolph S. Fanestil, Hutchinson. Third Row: Kent A. Shearer, Russell; John W. Roberts, Denton; Orville C. Walker, Sharon Springs; Don E. Kramer, Hugoton; Robert M. Houvener, Honolulu, Hawaii; John C. Fulkerson, Hugoton; Richard M. Groft, Wakeeney; Alvin A. Row, Lamed; Bernard L. Sherman, Dodge City; Thomas C. Fuller, Lamed. Phi Delta Theta First Row: Bud Eddy, Hayes; Stan Staats, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim Lawther, Emporia; Phil Mammel, Hutchinson; Bob Orr, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Fred Six, Lawrence; Terry Gardner, Hutchinson; Bob Shyne, Topeka; Dale Engel, Salina; Chuck Hall, Marysville; Bob Chaput, Concordia. Third Row: Emil Schutzel, Kansas City, Mo.; Dolph Simons, Lawrence; Hank Zoller, Wichita; Buddy Hedrick, Newton; Bill Gaudreau, Wichita; Ted Law, Tulsa, Okla. Phi Gamma Delta First Row: Bob Rein, Shawnee; Dave Lockhart, Wichita; Dan Slavens, Pittsburg; Sterling Waggener, Atchison; Dick Gove, St. Joseph, Mo.; Paul Coker, Lawrence; Gene Cox, Lawrence. Second Row: Neil Post, Independence; Ed Costello, Springfield; Lou Smith, Topeka; Rex Lucas, Independence; Martin Duncan, St. Joseph, Mo.; Gene Russell, Lawrence; Bill Rowlett, Great Bend. Third Row: Bill Thompson, Wichita; John Amberg, Kansas City; Dan Buie, Abilene; John Eulich, Kansas City; Jim Lord, Merriam; Bill Bishop, Overland Park; Jim Black, Lawrence. Fourth Row: Charles Hoffhaus, Salina; Ted McDonald, Enterprise; Bob ken, Lawrence; Jack Ransom, Wichita; Pat Lanahan, Salina; Jim Evans, Tulsa, Okla.; Bob Nash, Lawrence. Phi Kappa First Row: Jack Koelzer, Seneca; Donald Schaof, Redwing; John Marrow, Marysville; Eugene Jarus, Wilson; Jack Brooks, Wichita; Stephen Herra, Kansas City. Second Row: James mann, Kansas City; John Farrell, Marysville; Tom Oglevie, Kansas City; William Hart, Kansas City; Richard Bugler, Kansas City; Joseph Ziegler, Kansas City; Gerald Oglevie, Kansas City; Robert Jenson, Kansas City. Third Row: Thomas Wilkinson, Kansas City; Richard Rowe, Goodland; Cornelius Costello, Kansas City; Robert Miller, Claflin; Victor Hoffman, Claflin; Carl Teply, Marysville; William Nagle, Hoisington; Charles Scanlon, St. Louis, Mo.; nard Schulte, Marysville; Joseph Caldarera, Ponca City, Okla.; Jerome Taichmah, Tampa. Phi Kappa Psi First Row: Gene Rumsey, McPherson; Harold Edmondson, W ichita; Floyd Grimes, Paola; Robin McGeorge, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack Gillum, Wichita; Jay Ferguson, Philadelphia, Pa. Second Row: Bill Waters, Juntcion City; Glenn Starmer, Olathe; Kenneth Medearis, Kansas City; Jack Faerber, Kansas City; Jim Bower, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim Wood, Kansas Ci yt.Mo.; Robert Mapes, Kansas City. Third Row: Carl Bessier, McPherson; nard Morgan, Kansas City, Mo.; Bion Bierer, Hiawatha; Dick Pratt, Colby; Dee Roy, Kansas City. Pi Beta Phi First Row: Jeanne Dressler, Kansas City, Mo.; Anne Stodder, Wichita; Marlyn Sweet, Kansas City, Mo.; Maryanne Gear, inson; Connie Kende11, Great Bend. Second Row: Ivabelle Flora, Salina; Betty Armstrong, Hutchinson; Carolyn Cambell, Kansas City, Mo.; Barbara Pack, Kansas City; Joyce Newcommer, Kansas City, Mo. Third Row: Betty Dunn, Wichita; Joanne Hudson, Kansas City, Mo.; Kathrine Hoag, Wichita; Margaret Granger, Emporia; Pat Foncannon, Emporia. Pi Kappa Alpha First Row: Gary Straley, Hutchinson; James Marston, son; Joseph Janovjak, Chicago, Ill.; Richard Tatum, Liberal; Jere Dean Kimmel, Hiawatha; Harold Koch, Greensburg; Harry Webb, DeSoto. Second Row: Monte Nichol, Coffeyville; Harry gel, Kansas City; Laverne Eddy, Garfield; Ray Stewart, Caney; James Townsend, Coffeyville; Leland Dalgleish, Kansas City, Mo.; Quentin Long, Peabody; Edgar Eagle, Hutchinson. Third Row: Charles Hayes, Coffeyville; Gene Bradley, Greensburg; Channing Hiebert, Coffeyville; Jack Crawford, Lawrence; Eric Ericsson, Americus; Bill Burkhalter, Boise, Idaho; James Stinson, Kansas City, Mo.; Marvin Burnham, Wichita; Robert Miller, Kansas City, Mo.; Richard Harper, Twin Falls, Idaho; James Bennett, Kansas City, Mo. Sigma Alpha Epsilon First Row: Frederick G. Apt, Iola; Gerald H. Frieling, Kansas City, Mo.; Thomas P. Nelson, Kansas City, Mo.; Wililam R. Graves, El Dorado; Sam L. Jones, Garden City, New York; James Moddlemog, Moundridge; Guy Mabry, Rock Island, Ill. Second Row: Frank G. Ross, Wellington; Merlin Phillips, Wichita; Jack F. Hubeli, Tulsa, Okla.; William R. Atwood, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert O ' Brien, Kansas City, Mo.; William Feagans, Astoria, Ill.; Fred A. Ruck, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; Kent Cross, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Wallingford, Larchrnont, New York. Third Row: Robert D. Thompson, Junction City; Dale S. Helmets, Kansas City, Mo.; Norman McAdoo, Emporia; Shannon Bowers, Topeka; Dale W. Ferguson, McPherson; William C. Boosmann, Kansas City; ick B. Lewis, Eureka; Dave Ellis, Kansas City. Sigma Chi First Row: Cliff Johnston, Mission; Wayne Livingston, inson; Bob Cooper, Salina; Charles M. Ball III, Forest Lake; Edwardsville; Steve Mills, Russell; Richard Hunter, Iola; Lee oVgel, Leavenworth. Second Row: Bill Leonard, Independence; John Forney, Webster Grove, Mo.; Lee H. Reiff, Newton; Dick Barber, Anthony; John Braden, Hutchinson; Thomas White, Kansas City; Dean Beck, Topeka. Third Row: Robert A. Briden, Port Hope, Ontario; Ken Youngs, Kalamazoo, Mich.; William Stratton, Kansas City, Mo.; L. Wayne Davis, Medicine Lodge; Dixon Vance, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Beine, Topeka; John I. Small, Denver, Colo.; Bob Near, Lawrence; Bill Leake, Kansas City, Mo. T Sigma Kappa First Row: Patricia Watson, Kansas City, Mo.; Billie Nave, Lees Summit, Mo.; Billie Ann Carter, Kansas City, Mo.; Avanelle Allen, Sedan; Phyllis Jones, Lawrence; Joyce Stehley, Kansas City, Mo.; Nancy Dixon, Kansas City, Mo. Second Row: Margaret Miller, Langdon; Patricia Smith, Lawrence; Nita Brewster, Lawrence; Phyllis Mowery, Dighton; Joanne Alton, Kansas City; Mary Lou Brewer, Kansas City, Mo.; Carol Dunn, Garden City. Third Row: Dorothy Baldwin, Leavenworth; Areta Hemphill, Lawrence; Tolene Dudley, Hugoton; Ruth Routon, Merriam; Charlotte Reams, lene; Diane Danley, Wichita; Barbara Burkholder, McPherson; Jean Young, Hardtner. Sigma Nu First Row: Charles R. Edman, Great Bend; Henry H. Beels; Overland Park; Norman W. Crane, Long Beach, Calif.; Curtis T. Collins, Jr., Belleville; Joseph E. Ballour, Russell; Melvin H. an, Salina; John W. Wolfe, Wichita. Second Row: Marvin E. Arth, Great Bend; Kenneth Grubb, Independence; A. L. Buffer, Jr., Kansas City, Mo.; Kenneth T. Smith, Webb City, Mo.; Thomas K. Foster, Bartlesville, Okla.; William W. Warren, Wichita; Robert C. Scholes, Council Grove. Third Ray E. Martin, Kansas City, Mo.; Richard A. Raidt, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack R. Waln, Kansas City, Mo.; Clark Duncan, Jr., Lawrence; Henry L. Haltgrewe, Kansas City, Mo.; Billy K. Benz, Salina; Phil R. Hawkins, Olathe; Roy G. Lowe, Olathe; B. Jack Spalding, watha. Sigma Phi Epsilon First Row: Paul Skolaut, John Campbell, Lloyd Trace, Joseph Steininger, Clarence Frieze, Jr., John Crawford, Robert man, Winn Seroy, Thomas Harrison, Wayne Pierson, Douglas Paddock. Second Row: Harold Short, Rudy Valecek, Clifford Lude, Jack Wilson, Ted Coltharp, Cletus Kappelman, Charles Haverty, Todd Johnson, Jack Scott, Richard Caldwell, Joseph Schmitz, Whitfield Anderson. Third Row: Vernon Hawver, liam Evans, Robert Reese, Jerry Flynn, Charlie Medlock, George Williams, Don Glasco, Ervin Hodges, Robert Vignery, Jack Davis. Fourth Row: Harold May, Noble Malencamp, Richard Zink, James Berry, Don Wright, Richard O ' Neill, Gene Riling, William Taber. Triangle First Row: Ralph W. McClung, Hugoton; Louis F. Yonley, Kansas City; Charles D. Cain, Lees Summit, Mo.; Winton L. Studt, Kansas City; Gary W. Robbins, Leavenworth; John J. Hoffman, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Kunerr, Raytown, Mo. Second Row: Chester N. Holliman, St. Francis; James Deveney, Kansas City, Mo.; James E. Faris, Hutchinson; Mike Joyce, Kansas City; Elgin Thelen, Kansas City; Bob England, Leavenworth; Arthur B. cis, Leavenworth; Larry Hyde, Kansas City, Mo.. Third Row: Robert L. Burwell, Kansas City; Robert A. Frazer, Kansas City, Mo.; Paul M. Thome, Marceline, Mo.; Kenneth W. Philo, ville, Mo.; John McKernan, Kansas City, Mo.; Richard Hartzler, Kansas City, Mo.; Paul K. Klaas, St. Joseph, Mo.; Carroll F. Bower, Kansas City. Not in picture: Forest C. Stark, Kansas City, Mo. Tau Kappa Epsilon First Row: Jack Howard, Kansas City, Mo.; Larry Keenan, Seward; Jim Topping, Lawrence; Jack Praeger, Kansas City, Mo.; Ed Sheeley, Scarsdale, N. Y. Second Row: Robert Newman, ling; Charles Philbrick, Wichita; Bob Dring, Lyons; Howard Wilson, Sterling; Bob Blank, Altamont; Herbert Strecker, Galacia. Third Row: Bob Drewlow, Riverton; George Long, Kansas City, Mo.; Harlan Burns, Kansas City; Eva Lloyd, Kansas City, Mo.; Jim Drewlow, Riverton; Bud Bull, Columbus; Tad Field, bus; Kenneth McAllister, Kansas City, Mo. Not in picture: Jim Mooney, Pittsburg. 68 THE JAYHAWKER Corbin Hall First Row: Ruby Henningsen, Topeka; Katheryn Mita, Wahiawa, Oahu, T. H.; Virginia Dressler, Claflin; Joanne Beamer, Oberlin; Catherine Tribble, Garnett; Constance Walruff, Olathe; Marilyn Rif fer, Centralia; Phyllis Clegg, Columbus; Mary Moore, Bloom; Louise Hamilton, Medicine Lodge; Jeannine Welsh, Hoisington. Second Row: Yvonne Hammer, Claflin; Mary Alice Lobaugh, Washington; Elizabeth Ann Paterson, Topeka; Erma Rippey, Helena, Mo.; Jeannine Kahn, Kansas City, Mo.; Marjorie Courtright, McDonald; raine Forrester, Hazelton; Patricia McGovney, Freeport; Marjorie Bourland, Cottonwood Falls; Zenial McPeak, ElDorado Springs, Mo.; Margaret Wellman, McClouth; Elsie Randell, Kansas City. Third Row: Margie Lee Morris, Washington; Ethel Swart, Oakley; Wilma Shore, Big Bow; Helen Southerland, Kansas City; Margie Hoskins on, Excelsior Springs, Mo.; Phyllis Wilcox, Trousdale; Bettie Jean Swart, Oakley; Dorothy Englund, Salina; Frederika Ekblad, Hoising ton; Harolyn Clark, Newton; Martha Aldridge, Kansas City; Ruth Courtright, McDonald. Fourth Row: Peggy Circle, Kiowa; Betty Adams, Beloit; Ione Imthurn, Cottonwood Falls; Denise Owen, inson; Shirley Esplund, Bloom; Jane Anderson, Hiawatha; Yvonne Parkerson, Junction City; Mona Ratzlaff, Lakin; Marjorie Garten, Newton; Elizabeth Stenzel, Hoisington; Dorothy Hogan, Salina; Bar bzara Bowman, Kansas City; Alice Reiss, St. Joseph, Mo.; Virginia Larson, Robinson; Jo Ann Alkire, Belleville; Sue Rose Mounce, St. Joseph, Mo.; Helen Slaybaugh, St. Joseph, Mo.; Sharon McKim, Vliets; Geraldine Cuddy, Hoisington. Fifth Row: Mary Helen Shepard, Topeka; Barbara L. Smith, Hope; Virginia Fogelstrom; Junction City; Pauline Nixon, Ogallah, Charlene Breitenbach, Belpre; Virginia McCrea, Topeka; Rose Resovich, Kansas City; Jo Anne Boyer, Olathe; Jo Ann Edwards, Kansas City; Ester Christianson, Mission; Betty Jo Suiter, Macksville; Patricia Lander, Kansas City; Eva M. Morrow, LeRoy; Elaine Magner, Parsons. Not in picture: Alice Holtman, Ellsworth; Marilyn Magner, Parsons; Ana Lucia Moojen, Rio de Janeiro; Marian Swoyer, Oskaloosa; Joan Young, Westphalia; Dorothy Hoover, Smith Center. Battenfeld Hall First Row: Norman Lee Bell , Madison; Gene Linton, Beloit; Hugh McCoughey, Kansas City; Don Seiben, Leavenworth; John Anderson, Paola; Douglas Kent, Hubomldt. Second Row: Frederick Cross, Kansas Cit; George Walrafen, Topeka; Warren Arnspiger, Wellington; Russell Cooper, Lyons, Claude Moore, Arlington; Jerry Wackerle, Chetopa; Robert Dunwell, Kansas City; Bjarne Royrvik, Hyen, Norway; Kenneth Hoffman, Ottawa. Briar Manor First Row: Jane Hardison, Midland, Texas; Catherine Spalding, Kansas City, Mo.; Bert Schellhorn, Lawrence; Mabel Conderman, Moran; Phyllis Geissert, Bennington. Second Row: Dorothy Oyer, Hutchinson; Nancy Kastman, Mission; Esther Williams, worth; Jean Rankin, Kansas City, Mo.; Ruth Williams, worth; Laura Mason, San Jose, Calif.; Pat Felten, Hays. Third Row: Dorothy Ford, Hays; Lois Pester, Chevy Chase, Md.; Betty Keeler, Kansas City; Erma Handke, Atchison; Marge Myers, nett; Dona Jones, Kinsley; Eileen Szczygiel, Kansas City; Barbara Young, Leavenworth; Jackie Campbell, Flint, Mich.; Frances Doug- lass, Little Rock, Ark.; Phyllis Noah, Beloit. tor Carruth Hall First Row: Wilma Jean Anderson, Kinsely; Wilma Jean horn, Richmond; Nancy Lea Cole, Rahway, N. J.; Joan Wi lson, Lincoln. Second Row. ' Jane Tippin, Wichita; Darlene man, Centerville; Geraldine Catlett, Columbus; Maxine Wells, Paola. Foster Hall First Row: Betty Jane Orlowski, Leavenworth; Carol Cole, Iola; Terry Colton, Mission; Zelrna Beisinger, St. Joseph, Mo.; Herberta Darby, Washington. Second Row. ' Charlotte Wylie, Clay Center; Ellen Wilson, Allen; Claire Grothusen, Parsons; Mary Koch, Emporia; Margaret King, Stafford; Wanda Sisson, Kincaid. Third Row: D. Sisson, Kincaid; Beverly Thompson, Kansas City; Beverly Buehler, Bushton; Sally Smith, Akron, Ohio; Frances Fee, burg; Genevieve Gaines, Peabody. Harman Co-op First Row: Dolores De Fries, Muncie; Melva Jean Hatfield, Valley Falls; Maxine McVicker, Talmage; Marybeth Rea, Branson, Mo.; Alita York, Lawrence. Second Row: Ruth Richardson, Long Island; Betty Hargis, Pueblo, Colo.; Wilma Rose, Kansas City, Mo.; Diane Johnson, McPherson; Verva Johnson, Bush City; Vida Cummins, Holyrood; Shirley Anne Harclerode, Iola. Third Row: Norma Jean Kesterson, Kansas City, Mo.; Eleanor Anderson, Lindsborg; Phoebe Aurell, McPherson; Audrey Woodbury, Boone, Colo.; Marilyn Detter, Madison; Ruth Bertsch, Cartlon; Patricia Turpin, Kansas City, Mo. Hopkins Hall First Row: Rosemary Rosspaw, Dodge City; Emily Stewart, Biloxi, Miss.; Kathleen McKinney, Hartford. Second Row: Jo Anne Varnum. Yates Center; Shirley Talbot, Kansas City, Mo.; Freda Jones, Holcome; Phyllis Fangman, Seneca; Virginia Zabel, Atchison; Rosetta Snow, Bartlesville, Okla.; Lolita Carcia, Denver, Colo. Not in picture: Shirley Varnum, Yates Center; Carol Crow, Horton. Jollif fe Hall First Row: Edris McCarty, Medicine Lodge; Darlene Fiedler, Enterprise; Joan Bremer, Oberlin; Evelyn White, Kansas City; Verna Edwards, Kansas City. Second Row: Frances Robson, rington; Margaret Heatwole, Coleman, Texas; Marilyn Wisdom, Leavenworth; Johann Kendall, Topeka; Ellen Dufford, Marshall, Mo. Third Row: Helen Manka, Burns; Jean Oberhelman, Topeka; Dorothy Marvin, Oberlin; Glenna Anderson, Minneapolis; ine Ann Smith, Wellington; Elizabeth Laughlin, Hoisington. Locksley Hall First Row: Joan Holzapfel, Kansas City, Mo.; Alice Terrill, Osawatomie; Ruth Kinyon, Chanute; Dorothea Crawford, Kansas City, Mo.; Anne Ellis, Mountain Grove, Mo. Second Row. Valera K rehbiel, McPherson; Jeannine Wolfe, Atwood; Louise DeLay, Topeka; Marjorie Dilsaver, Kensington; Ruth Wolfe, Lyons; Marie Bardwell, Parsons; Helen Ann Krehbiel, Hutchinson. Not in picture: Catherine Cramer, Dighton; June Caldwell, Hutchinson. Miller Hall First Row: Joy Esch, Cherryvale; Laurel Leckron, Abilene; Marilyn Marks, Topeka; Maxine Heller, Hunter; Elizabeth Scott, Topeka; Mary Annie Carter, Kansas City. Second Row: Virginia Wilson, Chanute; Rita Swearingen, Leavenworth; Caroline ma, Hutchinson; Anna Marie Siemers, Blue Rapids; Yvonne row, Neodesha; Mary Van Houten, Lenox, Iowa; Laboyta Bloxom, Pratt. Third Row: Billie Jean Moore, Kansas City; Maxine singer, Prescott; Shirley Nelson, Salina; Nona Prettyman, Plevna; Faye Wilkinson, Cherryvale; Marjean Kent, Florence; Patricia Waterman, Washington. Fourth Row: Charlotte Pringle, Kansas City, Mo.; Marjorie Newell, Ozawkie; Donna Mae Hull, Clay Center; Naida Krause, Waverly; Donna May Bower, Stanley; Mary Helen Ryder, Kansas City, Mo. Sleepy Hollow First Row: Virginia Huscher, Concordia; Wilma Pendleton, Independence; Shirley McKnight, Greeley; Charlene Turner, via; Jan Rutherford, Wichita; Mary Ellen Wimmer, Baxter Springs. Second Row: Connie Koppers, Olathe; Evelyn Beach, Olathe; Patricia Hukle, Mulvane; Dorothy Swim, Marysville; Iva Ann Linnell, St. Joseph, Mo.; Geneva Fleshman, Platte City, Mo.; Joyce Gilbert, Goodland. Templin Hall First Row: Sue Stinson, St. Joseph, Mo.; Barbara Lusk, ville; Betty Hanson, Caldwell; Marie Jackson, Parker; Joan Gray, Topeka. Second Row: Harriet Yount, Fremont, Mich.; Carleen Jacobson, Horton; Eleanor Bradford, Humboldt; Betty walt, Kansas City, Mo.; Norma Turpin, Scott City, Lois Timken, Cimarron; Joan Deeds, Coffeyville. Third Row: Thelma Regier, Kansas City; Joan Smith, Montezuma; Jo Ann Holdeman, Auburn; Indiana; Ruthene Baker, Elkhart; Betty Bryant, Parsons; Grace Vaniman, Salina; Mary Flo Spillman, Fredonia. Not in picture: Marsha Baker ,Topeka; Virginia Scheuber, Peru, Ill.; Barbara Fletcher, Kansas City, Mo.; Ann Keefe, Kansas City, Mo.; Evelyn Clough, Kansas City, Mo. Watkins Hall First Row: Etta Jean Calvert, Waverly; June Allen, Horton; Kelly Baird, Hunter; Iris Van Wormer, Kansas City, Mo.; Joan Harris, Caldwell; Esther McKinney, Hartford; Carolyn Miller, Oberlin. Second Row: Sherla Pipkin, Cheney; Rosemary Levi, Kansas City; Molly Kelly, Montrose; Mary Jo Webster, Scott City; Joan Elder, ElDorado; Norma Hawkins, Quenemo; Connie Waterman, Washington; Marian Minor, Htuchinson. Third Row: Betty Edmonds, Blue Mound; Edna Mae Linenberger, Washington; Harriett Easter, Abilene; Florence Aickerson, Meade; Charlotte Thomas, Perry; Clara Childers, Kansas City; Eleanor McHarg, ElDorado. • 0 1 ° rviiv -mom armyilvi aw to dila vtauova ow • ino iHerki s(d]wNvHikvn • - - - Othelis is the Mete - - Same people Ia die Tepee DINE gEN tiAt. DINNERS SERVED SUNDAYS WEEKDAYS 2 NeON T!Lt. 8 P.M. f21100.1 -11 ' 30 • ooze atm ate qiteal at-ticiaau . .. athe4s lihe a ' i johndoot Bcualiot Bath i4 bot . . . . . blefleot Plattelid. i ' ' ' 76 THE JAYHAWKER ndeoe de is 4 Azidew • The Independent Student Association, which, in its present form, is the result of a merger of the ISA and the Independent Organization, has been a prom- inent organization at K. U. since 1937. The ISA boasts of being a charter member of the National Independent Student Association. One of the largest organizations of the campus, the I. S. A. was created to promote the welfare and interests of the dent student who has only to pay the yearly dues, to become a member. Since its membership is very large, it is necessary for the I. S. A. to have a small governing council to plan the functions and manage the business matters of the organization. Four officers and eight class representatives (a boy and a girl from each class) compose the council which is elected at the beginning of each spring semester. Every council member is chairman of a standing committee. To draw upon the entire membership of the I. S. A., an attempt is made to place each member on the committee of his preference. Social activities of the ISA members are planned by the dance committee and the social committee. Annual events on the social calendar include formal and informal dances, faculty open houses, a water- melon feed, a Hallowe ' en party, and several roller skating parties. This year the ISA is sponsoring Mid-week Mixers in the Memorial Union on nate Wednesdays, and is planning to include on their social calendar the annual ISA Christmas Dance to usher in the Yuletide season, and the Sweetheart Dance in the spring to highlight and climax the ISA social season. ISA dances are open to all University students, but ISA members are admitted by their membership cards, wheras non-members are required to pay admission. This fall, despite the cool weather, many ISA members were fed on watermelon at the Potter Lake pavilion. ISA tickets bought as much watermelon as capacity allower. This annual feed is an important part of ISA social plans. Several years ago the ISA began an Orientation Week project which has subsequently met with such success that plans are being made to continue this activity throughout the year. This project is the sponsoring of faculty open houses. Faculty members open their homes for an evening to a group of dents whom the faculty members themselves tain, and whom the ISA feeds. These parties provide an excellent opportunity for the profs to let their hair down, and for the students to discover that pro- fessors are really human after all. The activities committee contacts each member at the beginning of the year and places him on the committee of his preference. This committee also keeps the members informed of campus activities and methods of getting into them. In this way inde- pendents are steered toward the extra-curricular tivity of their choice, whether it be Union Activities, archery club, WAA, or the Men ' s Glee Club. Intramural teams among unorganized dents are fostered by the Intramurals committee. This year ISA boasts of one men ' s team and one women ' s team participating in the first intramural activity, and it plans to have at least two more ready for the next sport. The formation of these teams has accom- plished its purpose of increasing competition and interest in intramural sports among the independent students, but a much more extensive program is O Left: In the fastly spinning galaxy of large and small wheels on the K. U. campus none spins more lastly or shines brighter than Shirley born, the President of I.S.A. This demure Senior has somehow found time to hold some sort of an official position in almost every activity of any note at the University. Among her titles are the offices of; Secretary of the All Student Council, Treasurer of Jay Janes, Vice-President of Kappa Phi, mmeher of Inter-Dorm Council. addition to her extra-curricular tivities, Shirley has managed to up on the Dean ' s Honor Roll a good deal of regularity. Under her guiding hand, I.S.A. should make great advances this year. Below: Members of hte I.S.A. Council meet to discuss policy. Because of the vast ship of I.S.A., a Council elected every year to ganize the large From left to right Malcolm Pfautz, Lee Masterson, Betty van der Smissen, Ralph Moberly, and John Sello. • 78 THE JAYHAWKER under way, in order to make a place in intramural activities for all those independents wishing to par- ticipate. The Publicity committee manages the publication of ISA news in the Daily Kansan and the advertising of social events on the campus, in addition to tacting other ISA organizations for exchange of ideas. The Finance committee conducts membership drives and is responsible for fee collection. In tion to these duties it has the tremendous job of planning the ISA budget for the year, and of keeping the organization ' s expenditures within the limits of that budget. The Welfare committee is concerned with living conditions of the independent student. Last spring a survey was made of 10 private rooming houses in order to investigate the living quarters of the dents. This year the emphasis will be on raising the wage scale of the working student, with surveys being conducted to help accomplish that goal. The most important instrument in unifying the large and amorphous ISA membership is the official ISA newspaper, the Kan-Do, which is issued monthly and mailed to each member. This paper contains news of independent students, notices of ing ISA events, and this year for the first time will contain editorials on current campus issues of interest to the independent student. Each year a scholarship of $50 is awarded by the ISA to a student chosen on the basis of financial need, scholarship, personality, and participation in high school activities. The ISA council selects two candidates after a personal interview with all cants and the final choice is made by a joint student- faculty scholarship committee. As a member of the National Independent dent Association, the Kansas ISA has an opportunity each year to participate in the National ISA vention, at which time delegates from the member universities discuss common problems and exchange ideas. Delegates met at the University of Oklahoma last spring for the Sixth Annual Convention, and (Continued on Page 93) SHIRLEY WELLBORN, JANE KEITH, AND PAT GRAHAM EXAMINE KAN-DO Qel Thal Balt The I.S.A. Intramural program includes a strenuous sports schedule for both men and women. Among the highlights of the ISA calendar are the popular intramural con- tests, played for the relaxation they offer more than for the competition. Starting off the school year the women ' s teams are cur- rently contesting in Volleyball. A glance at the tensed and poised muscles of the players will show it takes more than an agile mind to play the game. The techniques employed are such that practice with the same teammates increases the pleasure gained from participation. Many friendships spring from these evenings which bring together students, who because of differing majors or home addresses may never have otherwise met. And by the way, ( revenue officers: at- tention) the lower shot is one of the few pic- tures of a spike that has ever been printed! WITH BUILT In yi ELL Doctor starts off the day by listening to the Series. Who says it ' s a dog ' s life, when Lavagetto can bust out a double in the ninth? Come on, Cookie! Doc saunters down to the book- store to see about late editions. The only trouble with the bookstore is.. Too many books! Ah, these dumb Freshmen! They certainly need sympathy. But wait till he gets to be a Junior, I ' ll be holding his head! Some guys study in the strangest positions. You have to check every so often to make sure they ' re not dead. In and out, in and out. There ought to be more than ten minutes between classes. Doc checks up on the Busi- ness Office. Tuitions are high- er even for local students. He finally gets his Activity Book. What a lousy picture! The end of a perfect day! c vertis Section STUDENTS: (7 te act6teidae9a 4aae made he I941 al4au,the,4 c4epe2b Aolat ,(E ti4 pp2Leciakcw4 dteze me 4c tai4 s. THE 1948 JAYHAWKER STAFF • • FALL NUMBER, 1947 83 STLOM, CORRONX0FAMMOWANW PRODUCTS VADUSTRY ( 6 ' r COPYRIGHT 1943 • HARRY DARBY iffP-fiq ' altO D A R.6•Y What do you know about bills ? This one shows you the biggest value you can buy. It stands for a dependable, low-cost servant who can preserve, prepare, and cook your food — light, heat, and cool your house — do the cleaning and the laundry keep time, entertain the family, and help do a dozen other jobs. For the average family, every dollar on it buys twice as much electricity as a dollar bought 20 years ago! What else repre- sents so much value for so little money as your Electric Bill? KANSAS tiTY (111111ii ) ' 1911.PANY 84 THE JAYHAWKER 1 Weaved More than a Department Store — A K.U. Serving K.U. and Lawrence since 1887 901 MASS. ST. LAWRENCE ' - ' .------,----,,-: sst, .ow,■!----..4.,:.1, ,. ;if - E--- -5-e ' ' ' ' : - ' 17 _,L4 ::: ::::: ................. .. I :::::::::::::: I • ha. .”. For Those Trips To Town Use the Bus 141 Trips per day between downtown and the campus THE ' RAPID TRANSIT ' COMPANY Your city bus service A FRIENDLY MESSAGE Our 29 Year 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 711 Mass. St. Lawrence BOOK SELLERS TO JAYHAWKERS SINCE 1898 Main Store Annex 1401 Ohio 1737 Oread Ph. 1401 Ph. 492 FALL NUMBER, 1947 85 Jayhawkers Remember that one thing you need at K. U. is a reliable cleaner. We have been clean- ing K. U. students clothes for 34 years. New York Cleaners IT COSTS SO LITTLE TO LOOK SO WELL Pasteurized MILK An All-Round Food C+.9 Grade A Milk Lawrence Sanitary Milk Ice Cream Company 202 W. 6th Telephone 696 Dad tries to keep the wolf from the door but I wear Johnson ' s clothes to keep one there. Johnson ' s Phone 771 GAS LUBRICATION OIL Lawrence ' s BEST Service Station PHONE 4 FRATZ CO. 8th and NEW HAMPSHIRE CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS TIRES AUTO SUPPLIES BATTERIES for your FORD ' S future MORGAN-MACK • FORD parts • FORD mechCinics dependable service 609 MASSACHUSETTS PHONE 277 86 THE JAYHAWKER ONE DOLLAR A SINGLE DOLLAR is not very important A in itself—but one hundred dollars is a sub- stantial and useful amount. OUR SAVINGS DEPARTMENT is tailor made to accumulate those extra dollars you can put away to build up a fund with which you can do those worthwhile things you have wished for so long. Start a savings account today in — The LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK Member FDIC THE CAFE for • that coke date • that dinner date 1340 OHIO PHONE 2007 LET ME MAKE YOUR WORk ID g2V SWELL REDDY! 1 I , REDDY KILOWATT Your Electric Servant GOOD LIGHT SPEEDS READING AND REDUCES EYESIGHT FATIGUE THE KANSAS ELECTRIC POWER COMPANY FALL NUMBER, 1947 87 Friends and Frogs (Continued from Page 11) There ' s always somebody good at something, and if you ask them, they are only too happy to inform you. So I would ask and my victim would impart. Or I would look at the picture in the book, but only as a last resort. Then I would squint industriously at nothing; and draw. And the teacher would mark it Vague and C—.Check! That job was done. Once—and only once—I saw some- thing. We were looking at the web- foot of a living frog. (No! No, thank you. No frogs ' legs. I ' m allergic to them. I ' ll have a clear soup, and a Kansas City steak, between rare and medium; and French fries; lettuce with thousand island dressing. Coffee later, with Roquefort—oh, excuse me. Where was I?) The web-foot of a living frog. I gazed and gazed, dazzled and enchanted ' His silver skin lac-d with his golden blood. Ah, that Elizabethan! He knew everything, with or without benefit of microscope. As the semester drew to a close, and the C-minuses were practically piling up to a crest that threatened to topple over into a trough of D ' s, a horrid rumor arose to disturb our peace. You must take so-and-so, grimly de- clared another. I could stand it no longer. I ' ll go to see the Dean, I said. (That will show you.) So I headed a delegation (I really was good at this) and we bearded the Templin in his den: the inner office on your left, as you entered the east door of Fraser. Th ey say—, I began. Who are ' they ' ? asked the Dean. I had got off to a bad start. I began again. We hear that we must take more science. How much have you had? We ' ve had this and that and the other and what-not, we enumerated. Then, said the Dean, deliberating —we scarcely breathed— you don ' t have to take any more. Silence is the perfectest herald of joy. (Shakespeare again.) We filed out. Once ou t of hearing of our aug- ust deliverer, however, we heralded our joy with the current equivalent of Yippee. With science safely behind me, I was free to frolic around with more French and German, and Old English and Beowulf and Chaucer, and the Epic, and Restoration Drama, and versification; and the history of edu- cation; and the Italian Renaissance; and Milton and his contemporaries— easy things like that. It was bliss to be alive, and forever unscientific. Even Chapel took on a livelier iris. Especially at such time when the Chan- cellor asembled on the platform all those who had taught twenty-five years or more. There they sat, a long row of venerables, the men looking very patriarchal, and the women looking, if p o s s i b 1 e, even more patriarchal. Somehow, it is very difficult for a lady prof. to look matriarchal. She may be wise and good and stern and intellec- tual; but she ' s just not matriarchal. Patriarchs or no-matriarchs, they made a very impressive appearance, a long row of the dear old souls seated in dignified order back of the Chan- cellor and beaming benevolently down on us as we greeted them with enthu- siasm. They were our friends, and we loved them. We liked to look at them. I imagine looking at a time capsule will be something like that. It will be serene, otherworldly, remote, yet, on the whole, kindly tolerant of the crudities of youth, in the year, say, 2839. Eheu, fugaces! and all that sort of thing. There, but for the grace of God and the discontinuance of the custom, I should be sitting now. But I should not be able to achieve the serenity, the wisdom, the sweetness and light of those who sat there before me. I should be other-worldly, in the sense that my world today is not their world. They had peace and serenity. They grew mellow under a benign autumnal lulled to security by the murmur of innumerable bees in immemorable elms. Philosophers all, they reached the stars easily; while we—if we ever reach the stars, it will be through difficulties undreamed of in their gentle philosophies, or even in our more bitter brand. Nor is our brand, however bitter, new. A satiric newspaper man and cartoonist of Athens paused a moment in his drama, The Frogs, to ask this question: Homer himself, our adorable Homer, What was his title to praise and renown? What, but the worth of the lessons he taught us, Discipline, arms, and equipment of war? Three thousand years later, we are still learning that le s s o n. Science draws our diagrams and sets us our problems. No need to tell us to be earnest of purpose. We know, better than our college song-writers, that we must fight, fight, fight for dear old Kansas, or our country, or Liberty, or Peace. Whatsoever may be the words we use, in spirit we fervently join in the Greek prayer to Apollo, Hail, thou far-darter, and grant us the vic- tory. Conclusion: courtesy of Aristo- phanes. G ' bye now. Aff ' ly yrs., H. R. H. 60 Million Years (Continued from Page 45) leum, and chemical engineering, and the Research Foundation. The area branch of the United States Geological Survey and the main research office of the Kansas State Geological Survey are both located in Lindley Hall. These two agencies keep accurate maps of the areas within their jurisdiction and locate new sources for municipal water supplies, as well as locating various materials for industrial use such as clay for ceramics and road building materials. Although not an actual part of the University, they cooperate with the Geology Department in certain fields and serve as a general clearing house for geological information in this area. Dr. Laudon has frequently done extension work for the Geologi- cal Survey in various parts of the country. The rapid expansion of the depart- ment will undoubtedly extend into the future at the same fast pace. Due to the discovery of many new mineral resources in Kansas such as new oil (Continued on Page 91) THE JAYHAWKER CARTER ' S STATIONERY UNIVERSITY SUPPLIES We invite comparison of price and quality 1025 MASS. PHONE 1051 the meeting place THE of the campus MEMORIAL UNION for fun and enjoyment 721 MASS. ST. The most interesting pose The most pleasing likeness — These are the qualities in our portraits that people talk about — Here no subject is too difficult for an interesting portrait ARRANGE FOR YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT PORTRAITS TODAY HIXON STUDIO PHONE Your retouched negatives are always in our files so cate photographs can be obtained on short notice 89 FALL NUMBER, 1 9 4 7 DRAKE ' S FOR BAKES 907 MASS. PHONE 61 • VISIT THE HILLSIDE No. 1 • For the Best In Refreshment Entertainment Delicious . . . • Cokes • Sundies • Malts • Shakes Prescriptions Filled • 616 W. 9th Ph. 1487 For Smart and Good We For You HYDE PARK CLOTHES New Fall and Now For your selection Our cash policy Saves you money Gibbs Clothing Company 811 MASS. MOM ' S famous chicken and steak dinners BEVERAGES AND DANCING DILL N ' S Velma — Bill — Perry One Mile North of Kaw River Bridge T H E STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE Where OUR PROFIT IS YOUR PROFIT BOOKS and SUPPLIES NEW and USED 90 THE JAYHAWKER The LOVE BOX COMPANY CORRUGATED AND WOOD SHIPPING CONTAINERS 612 S. COMMERCE ST. WICHITA, KANSAS SEND TODAY Free Catalogue This Christmas, make it jewelry . . . a lasting gift SANTA FE WATCH CO. 821 KANSAS AVE. TOPEKA With the aid of these advertisements we were able to bring the 1948 to you. Show your appreciation by patronizing the merchants listed on these — Doc Rounds, Advertising Manager The New Is the Place to Go DRIVE or COME IN Fountain Specials Tasty Steak Dinners ' CHATEAU DRIVE IN 1802 Massachusetts Bowl in Comfort at the PLADIUM BOWLING ALLEYS Air Conditioned Telefouls and Telescores Food and Fountain Service 9th and Open I p.m. to 12 daily Authentic Creations and styles shown simultaneously with New York. Visit our spec- ialty shops. Topeka, Kansas FALL NUMBER, 1947 91 (Continued from Page 87) fields, the demand for competent geo- logists is on the upswing. The K. U. department is keeping pace with that upswing, and though the Mount Oread geologists should encounter even more jungle fever, and hazardous adven- tures, K. U. Geology will continue to be second to none. A Jayhawker Abroad (Continued from Page 42) trucks, it is another matter to keep from being struck down by one of the many bicycles. Always a nation of bicyclers, the Dutch have been forced to rely on this means of conveyance more and more. Baggage, bundles, or even children are strapped on rear wheel stands. Even in this dairy land, milk, eggs and butter are rationed. There are five meatless days per week. However, several Dutch students pointed out that this is an improve- ment over a diet of tulip bulbs, which they endured for several months to- ward the close of the war. Belgium, the next-door neighbor of Holland, was the garden spot during the recent summer according to many travelers. The tiny country has been able to recover more speedily than the surrounding countries, and is riding along on a somewhat inflated econ- omy. In Brussels, American cigarettes sold for 35c a pack, and Hershey candy bars and Sunkist oranges were avail- able on the street. Night life pro- ceeded at a rapid rate and the atmos- pheric side walk cafes often bil led 15 piece orchestras. Switzerland remains the haven of Europe, however. This mountainous land, slightly touched by war, offers the traveler good food, white bread, and perhaps an egg or two. A great many Europeans, taking their first vacations in 8 years, turned to Swit- zerland. Unless special permission is granted, travelers are not allowed to see leveled Germany. First hand accounts are obtainable from army personel, and government officials. The emanating stories tell of poverty and hardship unsurpassed in Europe. It is generally agreed, that the threat of reoccuring fascisms is much more prevalent today than a year ago. It is no exaggeration to state that a gift of a few bars of Ivory soap to the average Hollander would bring forth as much appreciation as would a convertible presented to a college student. Those returning from Europe are amazed at the attitudes and general uninterest that Americans are taking toward prostrate Europe. Millions of Europeans are certain to suffer this winter from starvation or from lack of fuel. No country wants outright charity, nor do they desire financed capitalism. Our hungry war-time Allies look to the United States to utilize its resources to fight for peace as the country did to win the war, and to aid them initially in their ef- forts to reach again an economic level where self support is possible. Pigskin Prognosis ( Continued from Page 29) Another returning All-Big Six back from last year is quarterback Lynne McNutt. McNutt took over the signal calling slot last season when Red Ho- gan was shelved for the year with a broken leg in the Denver game. His play selection was superb for the rest of the season and his ball-handling and passing have constantly improved. In the line, three All-Big Six selec- tions are back for another campaign. At right end, Otto Schnellbacher, 6 feet, 3 inches and 173 pounds, has re- turned to take up where he left off as the top pass grabber of the con- ference in 1946. Schnelly pulled in 16 aerials for 342 yards and two touch- downs. Dave Schmidt, pushing the scale down for only 153 pounds, was all- conference choice at end on several teams last fall because of his phenom- enal defensive work. In the Oklahoma A. and M. game he hauled All-Ameri- can Bob Fenimore down 13 times to help Kansas come out on top, 14 to 13. Don Fambrough, 184 pounds of bone and muscle, received the Most Valuable Lineman award last year. From his guard spot Fambrough was outstanding on both offense and de- fense, completing the season by play- ing in the East-West All-Star game at San Francisco on New Year ' s day. As a placekicker he notched 19 points in 22 attempts, winning both the Okla- homa A. and M. and the Missouri game with his toe. Many potential stars loom on the Jayhawker horizon as candidates for All-Big Six honors this season. Besides the five men who gained the recog- nition last year, the following names might be included among the men to watch: Backs: Dick Bertuzzi, Bud French, Charley Moffett, Tom Scott, Red Ho- gan, Hoyt Baker, Frank Pattee, and Forrest Griffith. Linemen: Marvin Small, Don Et- tinger, Hugh Johnson, Joe Crawford, Dick Monroe, Terry Monroe, Ed Lee, Steve Renko, Ken Sperry, and Dick Tomlinson. At this writing no one can yet estimate the speed of this year ' s K.U. Football Express. It is gathering steam all the time, however, and if it doesn ' t make too many stops at stations along route, it may be fast enough to reach Victoryville ahead of all five other trains headed for the same place. In any event, the more students who help stoke the boiler, the faster we can travel. So grab a shovel, Jayhawkers, and climb aboard! The New Look (Continued from Page 39) the male sex. Evidently, men will continue to beat futilely against the rigid stone wall of fashion, while wo- men will sail gaily from the crest of one extreme style to another. (It has been safely stated by eminent author- ities that men will be wearing high collars, trousers, and coats—with a dash of color added by a necktie—in the year 2062. The dress of women at that time has been clased as un- predictable.) Clothing manufacturers ought to stroll along Easy Street for the next few years. Think of the boom for cloth retailers with the longer, wider skirts and clothes that cover every- thing. Dear old Grandma will be right in style again, for many ghosts (Continued on Page 93) 92 THE JAYHAWKER A Complete Cleaning Service INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 740 Vermont Lawrence, Kansas Phone 432 COMPLETE AIR TRAVEL SERVICE THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK LAWRENCE, KANSAS Fly Home Weekends and Vacations Direct Non-stop flights to all major cities Miss Rose Griegeman, Mgr. Telephone 30 -MOTOR IN- 827 VERMONT PHONE 607 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH SKELLY PRODUCTS MOTOR CARS HOOD TIRES WE SERVICE ALL MAKES OF CARS REEVES GROCERY MEATS FRUITS GROCERIE S VEGETABLES 900 MISS. FOR A Delicious Steak or Chicken Dinner TRY ROSE ' S RANCI-10 All Cooking just. Like MOTHER ' S Dancing Six Nights a Week CLOSED TUESDAYS Two Miles North of Lawrence on Highway 24 Featuring Fine Footware For Discriminating Students 837-39 MASS. FALL NUMBER, 1947 93 (Continued from Page 91) of by-gone days have returned. The Gibson Girl has come back to haunt 1947. Demure blouses with ties or ribbons at the neck have begun to push the revealing sweater from the college campus. (No wonder the men are frantic.) The duster coat has appeared from the days of the first horseless carriages. Satin, velvet, and taffeta, ball fringe, tiers, and lums ( men, if puzzled, see the tionary for definition of the ing words ) lend a touch of the rian Age. So we enter the fall of 1947 with the male sex slightly confused and evidentally extremely disappointed. They are worried for fear the long skirt and Victorian styles may turn social convention back to the modest days when it was considered a sin to hold hands in the well-lighted parplor. Frankly, we don ' t think they need to worry. Intramural (Continued from Page 32 ) of the intramural system this year. Among the most important are: 1. Point totals for the annual Sweepstakes trophy have been fied to place more emphasis upon the four major sports ( football, ball, volleyball, and softball) in parison with the minor sports (golf, tennis, handball, horseshoes, and rifle). 2. Volleyball was elevated to the level of a major sport for the first time this year. 3. Rifle competition will count for points for the first time this year. 4. A football field meet will be held midway through the touch ball season. The schedule will tain such events as kicking for tance, kicking for accuracy, passing for distance, and passing for accuracy. 5. The number of men on a touch football team was changed from 11 to 8. In addition, other regulations were tightened up to reduce the possibility of injuries. 6. Social fraternities have been signed to one league with ents and profesisonal fraternities in another. The champions of the two leagues wi ll meet for the university title at the end of the season for each sport. Football, the first team sport on the schedule, is already under way, with 52 teams and over 800 men pating. Though the regular schedule is barely one-third completed, several strong teams are making themselves known in the individual divisions of both leagues. In the social fraternity league, six teams are still undefeated: Phi Gamma Delta, Beta Theta Pi, Phi Kappa Psi, Tau Kapa Epsilon; and Phi Delta Theta. The independent-professoinal ternity league also has six groups with spotless records to date: Kappa Eta Kappa, Dine-A-Mite, Theta Tau, Dix Club, N.R.O.T.C., and Smith hall. The social fraternity B league completes the survey with a dozen undefeated teams at present: Delta Tau Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, ma Chi, Phi Gamma Delta, and Phi Delta Theta. Competition has also opened in four individual sports, golf, shoes, tennis, and handball. Over 359 men are participating in the tion tournaments. It ' s fun to sit in Memorial stadium on a Saturday and cheer the Jayhawker varsity to victory. But it ' s also fun to get in a game now and then yourself. The university intramural program offers that opportunity. Armchair quarterbacks can take the field. dream speedsters can carry the ball. It ' s a chance for spectators to get in the game! IDLES OF THE KING (Continued from Page 25) Together they walked over to mer, who by this time was almost completely obscured by a mountain of parking tickets. Homer was striving hard to drive off a uniformed man who was seeking to nail a large tag to his flank which read, KU.—Zone U. `Tell me dearest, asked Hortense in dulcet tones, What of the Grail of Ale for which thou wast in quest of, and didst searcheth far and wide for, even unto the vast wilderness of sas City? I have found it my sweet, Athur rejoined, and of all places .. . here at my Inn ... the abode of the Frenchman . . . known as Jahnees. Hurrah, exclaimed Hortense, and pinning the Kansas University ni Award upon his breast, she clasped his hand and they strode forth into the sunset . . . up Fourteenth Street Hill. By the way, remarked Hortense, which frat didst thou finally align thyself with? Verily, replied Arthur, It was a hard and difficult choice to make. For many hours I was sore fused, and my head didst spin in wilde circles. However, I finally determined to align myself with that bande which hadst the pinne of greatest beauty and intrinsic grandeur. Lunge hours, wast I beset with doubte, and then didst I make my decision. Quick, let me see your pin, roared Hortense. upon Arthur didst lift up his ski sweater and display a shining brass emblem. Upon it ' s face was engraved, Junior Birdmen of America-1947 Dullard, screamed Hortense, and striking him a stunning blow, she mounted Homer and rode off into ser Hall. Independents Unlimited (Continued from Page 78) at that time voted to set aside Oct. 10 to Oct. 17 as National Independents Week, during which time every ISA over the country publicizes its purpose and functions and plans special bration activities for its members. Because t he r e are two political parties on the campus which carry the name Independents , there has been confusion concerning the cal policies of the ISA. The ISA is a non-political organization designed for the express purpose of helping the independent student reap the fullest benefit from his college education. 94 THE JAYHAWKER Impetus (Contin ued from Page 33 ) teams are divided into five divisions. After a process of elimination in the primary games, the wnners of each division meet for the exciting final play-offs. The Women ' s Athletic sociation directs the intramurals gram through a system of team agers. Only when a player has mulated 125 points granted for active participation is she eligible for ini- tiation into W.A.A. The athletic awards are also based on a point sys- tem in which points are given to first, second, and third place winners. Gold medal awards honor individual skill in tennis and badminton singles and doubles. The intramural court is a lso the testing ground for girls ' var- sity teams which compete in inter- school contests. Players who star in skill and sportsmanship are selected for class, and eventually, varisty teams. Besides providing fun for the play- ers, the intramural noctests often stim- ulate tense excitement among the spectators. For there ' s usually a crowd of boys on the sidelines, cheering when their girl smacks a homerun or skillfully blocks a throw to the basket. From the Presses of ft ,,rner Pit] )lrilTrary j y 912 KANSAS AVENUE — — TOPEKA, KANSAS Fine Printing Since 1897 ENGRAVINGS BY Burger-Baii,Tra -0 ra v mg Ca GRAPHIC ARTS BUILDING KANSAS CITY, MO. makes us smile. So send in your jokes, gags and no bottle tops to Easy Money Dept., Pepsi-Cola Co., Long Island City, N. Y. The very next day you may receive a de-luxe radio-phonograph combination and a nine-room prefabricated house. It won ' t be from us. We ' ll just send you money if we feel like it. Easy Money, too. on so os am los nu NE so woo es as ion ow d Sing a sang of sixpence, pockets full of dough. Here ' s the way you ' ll get it from Pepsi-Cola Co. Make us laugh . . . if you can. We ' ll pay you 81, $2, $3 . . . as much as S15 for stuff we accept — and print. Think of it. You can retire. (As early as 9 P. M. if you like.) You don ' t have to mention Pepsi-Cola but that always US MI SRI IIMI Ela IIN NM MI NM MI -HE-SHE GAGS If you ' re a he or a she (as we pect) writing HE-SHE jokes should be a cinch for you. If you ' re not a he or a she don ' t bother. Anyway, if you ' re crazy enough to give us gags like these, we might be crazy enough to pay you a few bucks for them. He: Give me a kiss and I ' ll buy you a Pepsi-Cola . . . or something. She: Correction. Either you ' ll buy me a Pepsi . . . or nothing! He: When a man leans forward eagerly, lips parted, thirsting for loveliness, don ' t you know what to do? She: Sure, give him a Pepsi-Cola. He ghost: I ' m thirsty. Let ' s go haunt the Pepsi-Cola plant. She ghost: That ' s the spirit! • $3.00 (three bucks) we pay for stuff like this, if printed. We are not ashamed of ourselves, either! CUTE SAYINGS of KIDDIES (age 16 to 1.9 plus) Little Moron Corner Mohair Moron, the upholsterer ' s son, was found huddled up and shivering in his refrigerator one day. He ex- plained by saying, I was th-thirsty for a P-pepsi-C-cola and was t-told it should be d-drunk when cold. Now I can drink it. I ' m c-c-cold! You don ' t have to be a moron to write these . .. but it helps. $2 for each accepted we ' ll pay you, and not a penny more. ADDED ATTRACTION At the end of the year we ' re going to review all the stuff we buy, and the item we think was best of all is going to get an extra $100.00 GET FUNNY... WIN MONEY... WRITE A TITLE 1i This is easier than taking candy away from a baby. And less squawking. Maybe you don ' t want to be rich, but just force yourself. You ' ll like it. And, if we like the title you write for this cartoon we ' ll force ourself to give you $5. Or if you send us your own cartoon idea we ' ll up it to $10. For a cartoon that you draw yourself, we ' ll float a loan and send you $15 if we print it. Could you expect any more? Yes, you could expect. A famous sage has said that people are funnier than anybody. If that were true, all you ' d have to do would be listen to what the kiddies are saying, write it down, send it in, and we ' d buy it. If that were true. It might be, for all we know. We haven ' t the slightest idea what we ' ll ac- cept. Chances are it would be things like these unless we get some sense. My George, who will just be 17 on next Guy Fawkes Day, had his appendix moved last month. When the doctor asked him what kind of stitching he ' d like to have, George said, ' suture self, doctor ' . ' Elmer Treestlimp says his girl Sagebrush, only 22!,4, brings a bottle of Pepsi-Cola along on every date for protection. She tells everybody, ' that ' s my Pop! ' $1 each for acceptable stuff like this. :371ELtr S1711KLII, 3 a gift: ,GARETTE A carton of Camels will bring a happy tide Sha le to any cigarette list. :112.es cartons come all Re are in ever before!. an J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winstan-Salem, North Carolina fluiNct Ault RT SMOKING TOBACCO Prince Albert Smoking Tobacco — for pipes or roll-your - own cigarettes—is America ' s biggest- selling tobacco. Smokers know it as the National Joy Smoke be- cause it ' s so rich tasting, so mild and easy on the tongue. You ' ll enjoy giving Prince Albert—in the colorful Christmas-wrapped one-pound tin. CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 3 lo TAO, BE SURPRISEnll at the many new articles and pictorial features which wile appear in the third issue of THE JAYHAWKER A Permanent Memory of College Days THE OFFICIAL K.U. YEARBOOK (LIMITED SALES AT $1.00 PER ISSUE) CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 7 Staff EDITOR: KEITH WILSON BUSINESS MANAGER: LARRY SIMMONS SECRETARY: SHIRLEY HOYT ADVERTISING MANAGER: DWIGHT ROUNDS PHOTOGRAPHIC EDI TOR: HANK BROWN ART EDITOR: PAUL COKER • EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS: Bill Conboy Betsey Sheidley Charles Hoffhaus Mila Williams Margaret Meeks Lu Anne Powell Byron De Haan CONTRIBUTORS: Joan Bagby Melvin Clingan Bill Conboy Diane Crossland Robert Davis Byron DeHaan Roger Harlan Charles Hoffhaus Helen Kittle Margaret Meeks Betsy Sheidley George Spelvin Corinne Temple Mila Williams Joan Woodward Sara Scott Wally Rouse Diane Stryker ADVERTISING STAFF: Bob Bottoms Virginia Daniels Warren Helgesen Arlene Feldkamp Margaret Granger Torn Hanna Dean Miller Bob Oberhelman Ann Preble Balie Waggener PHOTOGRAPHERS: Bob Graham Jim Mason Duke D ' Ambra Hank Brown Estes Studios Al Chalupnik Ed Kirchhoff Now comes the wintry wind to Old Mount Oread, and in attenda nce, sneezes, colds, basketball, fluttering skirts, and the second edition of the JAYHAWKER. Starting off the long procession of fall events is Homecoming. This year ' s Home- coming proved to be the biggest, loudest, razzle-dazzle affair in the school ' s history, so we went all out in recording it. Joan Woodward, student director of ing publicity, did the honors at the writer to the excellent photographic ac- companiment of Hank Brown and Jim Mason. Three cheers and a rocket go to Hank for his excellent picture on page ten of four old grads looking just like . . . four old grads. We hate to keep talking in superlatives, but the past few months have certainly wit- nessed some superlative events here on the campus. For a recount of the greatest ball season in K.U. history, turn to page sixteen where Bill Conboy looks back across three months of pigskin thrills and chills. Scattered about Bill ' s story are some of the better action shots of the season. Especially in the two page picture story of the great Missouri game on page twenty-one. Paul Coker, our versatile cartoonist, makes his debut as Art Editor with a series of amusing sketches of the trials and tions of last minute shopping in, A hawker goes Christmas shopping on page thirty. We are doubly proud of the fine raphy in this issue. Many of our pictures are worthy of salon sections . . . . especially the study in perspective made by Bob Graham in Mechanical Lab which appears on page thirty-two. Lu Anne Powell is responsible for the unique picture story layout on the Union Carnival. Lu Anne, who is Vice-President of the Union, felt we were not doing the Carnival theme justice, so with pen in hand she retired with some of the candid shots. After two days, one night, and innumerable cups of coffee, she produced the striking array of clowns, bubbles, and balloons which appears on page forty-four. The gold star for this month, we think, should go to Byron DeHaan for his expose of the fairer sex. At a time when most of the country is involved in either the Meyers investigation, the Hughes investigation, or the Communist investigation, we felt that the JAYHAWKER should also do some investigating. However, we chose a more interesting subject. Before an angry mob of irate females descends upon us, we might hastily add that in the next issue we hope to give the barbed pen of womanhood an ample chance to rebut. Our artist, who at the moment is fatally involved with one of the creatures, took issue with Mr. DeHaan ' s point of view. Feeling that someone should defend the things he had been dating, he forthwith drew his pen and painted a subjective ture of the author. The late Al Smith once made a statement which I believe is among the outstanding truisms of our time. Al remarked one night that, You can ' t shoot Santa Claus! Mr. Smith ' s statement is not startling or amazing, however, as Christmas nears, I think it bears reconsideration. Of course you can ' t shoot Santa Claus. It just isn ' t done. Not shooting Santa Claus has become one of the main conventions of our convention-ridden ety. Americans consistently defame public officials, decry foreign cultures, and debunk traditions, but we don ' t shoot Santa Claus or in any way detract from the Christmas spirit. We take pride in our iconoclasm. We have proved that Jonah was a myth, George Washington was a liar, and Grant was a stewbum. We have replaced Minerva in our temples with Horatio Alger, and Aphrodite with John ' s Other Wife. We have trarily decided that a thing is obsolete because it is old, and therefore with wild huzzahs of, Out with the old, in with the new we have undertaken to rebuild civilization a la Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. In our pell mell journey we have broken many walls, stepped on many toes, and smashed many idols, but we have never . . . never . . . never .. . thought of shooting Santa Claus. This is a good thing . . . it is significant. It is good because it is one of the few genuine and spontaneous ideas in this land of chrome plate and pan cake make-up. It is significant because the reverence of Santa Claus . .. of the Christmas spirit, is not ours alone, but is a universal feeling. It is one of the great paradoxes of our age, that mankind should take time out once each year from the usual pastimes of killing, thieving, conniving, scalping, and general mayhem, to shake hands and reflect on the general thesis of, It ' s great to be alive. For eleven turbulent months, Western Civilization laboriously tries to exterminate itself with ingenious and methodical precision. Then for two short weeks we shower each other with gifts, good wishes, and egg nog, and with a deafening roar of bells and clinking of glasses we herald in a new open season on our fellow man. Then the suicidal effort starts all over again. The Christmas season means many things to many people. To some it is an occasion for religious tivity, to some it is a time for the exchanging of gifts, and to others it is an excuse for a big hinge. However, one thing is universally true, whether you are a small child waiting to open up gifts, or a large one waiting to do the same thing . . . from the little man kneeling in the hack of a large cathedral, to the rau- cous character toasting his friends at the country club . . . Christmas time is a wondrous occasion when we suddenly discover that the inconspicuous strangers that have been bustling by us for eleven months are pretty good Joes, and that, Good Fellowship . . . that strange phrase which we hear all too seldom .. . is a pretty good institution . . .it might even replace the great American sport of, Dog eat Dog. Way back in 1945, I remember seeing a political cartoon which appeared in a big Western daily. It depicted the pathetic figure of the sick world, with bandaged head, peering hopefully out from the covers at a large bottle labeled, U.N.O. The cartoon was captioned, The Right Prescription! I do not wish to detract from the glory of that obscure artist, but in a word, Buster, You are all wet! My remarks as to the damp mien of the aforementioned cartoonist have been borne out by the newspaper headlines of recent months. Such glaring notices as, Still Hope For Peace, and, War May Be Averted are prone to let in glimmers of doubt as to the effec- tiveness of our brave new organization of sovereign nations. You mean well gentlemen, but you are .. . as we say in railroad circles . . . on the wrong track. Well, you exclaim, Then where is the solution? Where lies the anodyne for the pains of mankind? The solution is simple . . . amazingly so. We don ' t need a new political system . . . or social system .. . or system of economics. They have all been tried before. All we have to do to reach the millenium is extend the Christmas holidays from December twen- tieth around to ... December nineteenth. Maybe if we started shaking more hands, and less sticks, the old world might settle down a bit. If we ever do reach such a happy state, there will be no more need for the Christmas season . . . for every day will be Christmas. Undercover 7 Editor ' s Angle 8 Home Is the Grad 11 We Did It Again 16 Oklahoma Game Pictures 17 Kansas State Game Pictures 19 The Missouri Game 21 Candidly a Jayhawker 24 A Jayhawker Goes Christmas Shopping 30 Men of Marvin 33 The JAYHAWKER Goes Duck Hunting 36 Joan of Lorraine 37 From Field to Court 38 Muscles and Tussles 40 The JAYHAWKER Goes to the Carnival 41 The Union Forever 44 Big Wheels on Campus 48 Professorially Proficient 50 Women 52 THE COVER If there is any truth in the old adage that we like familiar things the best, then this month ' s cover ought to rate the plaudits of the whole pus. The picture from which our cover was taken has probably been used and seen more around the campus than any other, with the possible exception of several action shots of Ray Evans. From the Graduate Magazine to the Daily Kansan, this stimulating snow scene has been admired and played. Therefore, we feel that it is fitting that this noble relic should have as it ' s final resting place ... the cover of the JAYHAWKER. NEXT ISSUE Provided that we last through the dangers of the Orange Bowl, New Year ' s Eve, and Final Examinations, the third issue of the JAYHAWKER will make it ' s appearance, along with crocuses and violets, in March. We will have a complete pictorial record o f the Orange Bowl, a few agonized shots of Finals, and many new tures. The next issue will also include the Basketball season, and the up of Winter Intramurals. Keith Wilson edito4-44-Glued Larry Simmons alma:id Mama9e4 El 0 S Tko Grac If a midnight earthquake had silently shaken Lawrence, there couldn ' t have been more commotion, confusion and unchecked chaos than hit the HILL November 22, 1947! But bedlam that it was, there were few casualties and everybody forgot world prob- lems, and term papers to swiftly drift into the whirl- pool of HOMECOMING!! Yes, it WAS a great day for Kansas. WE MAS- SACRED MISSOURI: Both score and statistics tell the story of a Jayhawk team with the winning will to beat Mizzou, 20-14. WE MET OLD GRADS: Re- percussions being equal, the grads met us and got their annual glance at K.U. WE FILLED THE STADIUM: We even overflowed to the tune of 40,043 paid admis- sions which is no two-bit melody. The part that isn ' t shown in factual summaries is the Homecoming we ' ll remember. Things started roll- ing Thursday, the 20th when some KU students darted for a day into Tiger territory. They made their quick call disguised as Tigers and Jayhawks in a statewide chase from Columbia, Mo. to Law- rence. Sponsored by the Student Union Activities and backed up by three cars of KU students and cheerleaders, they startled small town reporters and photographers by main street antics and profuse iclachua hornblasts. They arrived on the last lap Kansas City— in time to hold a rally at busy 11th and Main at the traffic-tie-up-time of 5:00 p.m. Later they caught the annual KU alumni banquet for an addi- tional prank or two. Crepe paper and sign bedecked cars made their final appearance Friday morning at the 10:50 Rally. There students beheld for the first time Homecoming Queen Carolyn Campbell, from Kansas City, Mo. and her two attendants, Carol Harris, and Martha Hutchenson, both also from Kansas City, Mo. Student enthusiasm pitched by cheerleaders and the band began its rising climb with the arrival of Doc Yak. After many years absence, Doc returned to boost spirit with a subtle pep talk and pills guaranteed to, among other things, twist the Tigers ' tail. Alumni (and alumnae) began registering at 3:00 that afternoon while stu- dents attempted to attend clases and take last min- ute quizes before celebrations officially started. The bursting point was reached at 7:00 Friday evening when down the bumpy brick streets of Mount Oread rumbled 30 festive floats flanked by an average of 35 persons per float. The parade stretched four block in length, and was led by the KU band ap- pearing for the first time in new blue grey and royal Tender sent ments appear as the two schools renew their rivalry blue uniforms. The clamor and excitement height- ened as the sideline spectators beheld convertible borne Queen Carolyn and attendents, Martha and Carol, followed by Jay Janes, and flare-illuminated floats interspersed with three additional marching bands. As the parade turned toward the WREN building, students thronged by thousands to the mammoth rally staged on a large float between WREN ' s twin birds. Though cold rain and sleet fell relentlessly upon Jayhawk brows, very few left before the whole rally program was completed. The crowd cheered, sang and listened to key pepster, Dr. Heil from Topeka. They learned that as a quarterback in the ' 20 ' s, he had the build of pint-sized ( and gallon packed ) Bill Fisher, and who should step up but Bill himself to show the similarity in size. The crowd responded to stimulating snatches from team co- captains Schnellbacher and Fambrough as well as players, Mary Small and Lynn McNutt. Eyes filled with admiration and watched Coach Sauer jump with a bound onto the platform and tell us the team would not forget student ' s spirit the next day. As the score shows, the coach is a man of his word. Braving sleet undaunted was Director of Athletics, E. C. Ernie Quigley, to boost the tide of enthusiasm al- ready present, even higher. And when the last strains of the Rock Chalk chant had faded, or perhaps more correctly, sunk on the moisture laden air, it was a warm hearted throng that sloshed hillward. For additional excitement on Friday night a good proportion watched the Varsity scramble about a basketball with the Frosh challengers to a crown of victory. Others seeking music and soft lights gathered at the Union for a nine-to-twelve dance in the ball- room. Retiring that night, found doubts clouding the heads of many about a good field for football the next day. But Kansas weather, mildly unpre- Above left: Doc Yak makes his first ap- pearance since before the war to a gigantic crowd. Even the campus hound takes a twist at the Tiger ' s tail. Chan- cellor Malott slips the grip to Carolyn Campbell. Jack Moorehead gives the crowd the good word at the night rally. dictable at best, booted out any remaining rain clouds and handed us an ideal day. Saturday activities started off well at the annual HULLABALLOO in Hoch auditorium. From 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. celebrants met former classmates at stations marked with the year of their graduation, they were served free coffee and doughnuts, and wit- nessed the premier showing of the Football Squad of 1947. Then the one reigning ( just for pun) element seen on Saturday came forth—and alumni beheld the Queen and her attendants. Five Hullaballoo skits especially designed for Homecoming were presented and the winning skits, Delta Chi, Miller Hall, and Pi Kappa Alpha took first, second and third place honors respectively. The cup capturing house decor- ations, long awaited by 52 competing houses, were announced. The winning houses in the Women ' s Greek division were: ( First) Gamma Phi Beta, (Second) Pi Beta Phi; in the Women ' s Dormitory Division: ( First) Sleepy Hollow, (Second) Foster Hall. In the Men ' s Greek: (First) Sigma Alpha lon, (Second) Lambda Chi Alpha and the Men ' s Dormitory: ( First) Spooner-Thayer, (Second) Bat- tenfeld. A contest to discover the most realistic sounding Jayhawk call won Warren Marshall, from Nassau, New $15 for his versatile and original contri- bution. Those claiming the first and second place awards for the finest Floats in Friday ' s parade were Sigma Kappa, Alpha Omicron Pi in the Women ' s Division and Sigma Nu and Delta Tau Delta in the Men ' s Division. Few Kansas Fans remember what they had to eat that noon for their minds were on the football of-fare to be served two hours hence in the Memorial Stadium by Chief Chef George Sauer. Late arrivers Above right: Norma Jean Guthrie goes wild on the Fiji Float. The Chi Omegas turn out for construction duty. Joan Gardner brushes with the Jayhawk in the Pi Phi basement. Some say that it rained the night of the big parade. Oread Hall knew what to do with that Tiger. at the game (anyone that came after 12:30) saw for the first time in KU athletic history a packed stadium with an equally packed bleacher section added at the open Hill side. Pom-poms, pennants, and pop corn were in the hands of prospective pig- skin proponents and the band added a gay note to the entire sporting symphony. Kansas Blocking in the first half of the game was so exciting that the crowd spent more time on its feet than the Missouri players. At half-time they were glad enough to settle back en masse, sink into 40,043 blankets and overcoats, and watch the mo- mentous mid-game performance. The show co- starred Governor Frank Carlson and Queen Camp- bell with Chancellor Malott. The attendants were a color guard of army and navy reserve officers, and flower bearing cheerleaders, Dorothy Scroggy and Bernadine Read. Directed by Professor Wiley and ably supported by the KU marching band and white clad Jay Janes, the pageant was a colorful and light intermission before Act II of the deeper drama Wring That Tiger Rag was finished. Fans were uneasy for the 14-13 score gave a one point tilt to the tigers, but the events of the following two quarters remain on the record to warm the hearts of Kansas men. Missouri fans have a different method. Red Barber, commentator for CBS made the game live for radio half-backs from East to West coast although KU enthusiasts could pick one of seven stations to hear the game. When at last the old grads and students alike filed down the stands and pushed towards the gates their chance remarks had a single trend: Greatest game I ' ve ever seen! Above left: Four pretty faces and four aces make up the Sigma Kappa float. The Delis Ferris Wheel brought back the cup. Shirley Constantos helps anchor down the D.G. float with a pair of nylons. The PIKAs mourned Missouri ' s loss. Foster Hall brought down the house with their modern dance skit. On Monday, by special order from the Chancellor, all classes were shortened to thirty minutes. Though most students bewailed the fact that they were not to be permitted to go to class for the usual fifty minutes, everyone took it on the chin and went ahead with the schedule. At 2:30 the student body congregated in Hoch Auditorium for the great Victory rally. Miller Hall and the PiKAs presented their prize-winning skits to the packed audience. E. C. Ernie Quigley gave a short talk to the mob of celebrants and then sped off to complete Orange Bowl arrangements. Quig was followed by George Sauer, who then introduced the rest of the coaching staff and the team. The students then filed out Hoch and trampled dov n the hill ro the Military Science building where the big Victory dance was in progress. From late afternoon until late evening the victory dancers took advantage of their holiday in a celebration that would make the Mardis Gras look like a Mid-Week. Thus ended the greatest week-end in K.U. history. Great news was to follow; the Orange Bowl, Ray Evans being selected by Grantland Rice and the A.P. to the first team All-American, and the great Trample Tech movement which is still in progress. However, nothing can overshadow the great thrill which went with that last minute touchdown in the biggest game, in the biggest Homecoming, in the biggest year in old K.U. ' s life. A Missouri fan put it more aptly than we ever could. He sat dejectedly on a curbstone outside of the stadium, one hand tightly clutching a large bot- tle marked For Medicinal Purposes Only, the other clutching his head. He looked up at the passing crowd and murmured, Whatta game, Whatta game, Whatta game! Above right: The Sigma Chis went on a Tiger hunt. The Alpha Chis placed with their recipe for Faurot-furters. Gamma Phi Beta won first place with a forlorn feline. The D.G. house sported a disc jockey, and the Kappa Sigs re- vised the map of the nation. Lynne McNutt looks on as Frank Pattee starts a touchdown drive through the Sooner line. 0. U. leads 13-7 in the third quarter, as the Jayhawkers strive to tie up the score. 18 THE JAYHAWKER and once in the third to bring victory to Kansas. Coach Sauer ' s machine ground out 317 yards rushing but was halted four times inside the Cowboy 10-yard line by a last ditch A. and M. defense. The climax of the Kansas pigskin season came one week later before 40,043 shouting spectators in Memorial stadium as the Jayhawkers smashed their way to a 20 to 14 win over a tough crew of Missouri Tigers. The record-breaking homecoming crowd saw the Crimson and Blue team grind out a 94-yard scoring drive in the last six minutes of the game to bring the s econd conference co-championship to Lawrence in the last two years. Ray Evans for the second straight year proved the Tiger nemesis as he scored one touchdown, passed to halfback Bud Now, as a result of their triumphs, the Jayhawkers will play a special Orange Bowl performance down in Miami on New Year ' s Day. For the first time in Kansas history, the Crimson and Blue football team will participate in one of the big post season classics. The opponent, Georgia Tech, with a record of 9 victories against one loss, will be plenty rough, but we ' re confident the show will go on. After all, the Kansas production—touchdown production, that is—has been better and better as the season rolled on. For instance: After the scoreless deadlock with Texas Christian and victories over Denver and Iowa State in their opening three tilts, the Jayhawkers couldn ' t locate the brakes against a hapless South Dakota State eleven. The final score was 86 to 6, an all-time Jayhawker scoring record being smashed in the process. Coach Sauer used 45 players in the game but couldn ' t stem the tide of 13 Kansas touchdowns. The following week, the Jay- hawkers traveled to Norman to engage the potent Oklahoma Sooners in one of the two tough- est games on the Kansas ule. Scoring first and last, the Crimson and Blue team came home with a 13-all tie thanks to the conversion which guard Don Fambrough notched after the second Kansas score. Otto Schnellbacher scored the first Kansas touchdown on a 16-yard pass from Ray Evans. Forrest Griffith bucked over from the Sooner 4-yard stripe to rack up the second vital score. With an extra week of rest behind them, Coach Sauer ' s Wildcat-hungry squad feasted next at Memo- rial stadium by thoroughly cooking the Kansas State goose, 55 to 0. A total of 235 yards in penalties was dished out by the referee as the team from Manhattan collected its 23rd consecutive loss. Otto bacher scored the first touchdown on a 32-yard aerial from quarterback Red Hogan. Then came the deluge. Next, the Kansas spoilers journeyed to Lincoln where they gave the boot to a jinx which had kept Kansas without victory on the Nebraska home field since 1916. Even this year that jinx held on tight for 59 minutes and 10 seconds of the crucial battle. Wtih 40 seconds remaining, Hogan hit Schnellbacher in the end-zone with the winning toss. Jayhawker fans made vocal history by mixing lusty cheers and sighs of relief in one big yell. Ray Evans had pitched to Schnellbacher for a score in the second quarter, but an aroused Cornhusker team came back to forge ahead, 7 to 6, in the third stanza on a sensational 40-yard in-and-out sprint by fullback Dale Adams. The winning Kansas drive carried from the Jay- hawker 38 yard line. In a non-conference clash with the Oklahoma A and M Cowboys at Stillwater, the Jay- hawkers again had to come from behind to clinch a victory. Re- covering a Kansas fumble in the first minute of play on the Jay- hawker 12-yard line, the boys scored two plays later to take a lead which stood up till the third quarter. Forrest fith, Jayhawker fullback plunged over once in the second stanza 0 0 19 CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 es opp Kansas K-StaLe 55-0 Above: Pattee takes off down the field as an unknown opponent pats him on the back. Right: Otto Schnell- bacher gets in a little pre- season basketball practice with a hapless Aggie. The fans went wild as Kansas went on a scoring spree. Ed Bray nails an Aggie back. 20 THE JAYHAWKER French for another and played sensationally on fense. The winning Kansas score came when back Forrest Griffith took the ball for the fourth consecutive time and scored from the 1-yard line, one minute remaining in the game. Traveling clear out to Tucson, Arizona, for their last game, the Big Six co-champs decided to match points for miles and made the Arizona scorekeeper reach for an adding machine before turning in a final 54 to 28 victory. Ray Evans scored two touch- downs in person and passed superbly to spark eral other payoff drives. With the regular schedule completed, Mount Oread can now claim its first undefeated season since 1923 and the best record since the season of 1908. In his second year as Kansas coach, George Sauer has brought the school its first undefeated Big Six title since the conference was formed in 1928. Before leaving for Tucson, the Jayhawker squad picked its Big Six all-opponent team. The three conference schools which gave Kansas its toughest battles were the only ones represented. Here are the choices: Ends—Tyree of Oklahoma and Pesek of Nebraska. Tackles—Walker of Oklahoma and Samuelson of Nebraska. Guards—Abrams of Missouri and Burris of Oklahoma. Center — Rapacz of Oklahoma. Quarterback—Entsminger of Missouri. Halfbacks— Brewer of Oklahoma and Carras of Missouri. Full- back—Adams of Nebraska. Walker, Samuelson, and Abrams were all unani- mous choices. The closest balloting came at quarter- back where Oklahoma ' s Mitchell was a close second. The naming of all-conference and all-America teams has not yet swung into full action, but from early appearances, a number of Kansas stars are due for a large share of recognition. End Otto bacher, guard Don Fambrough, halfback Ray Evans, and fullback Forrest Griffith have made three Big Six teams announced so far (Associated Press, United Press, and the Kansas City Star selections). In addition, Grantland Rice, dean of American sportswriters, included high praise for Evans in one of his nationally syndicated articles, naming the Rifler as the college player most sought by pro- (Continued on Page 97) Coaches, Vic Bradford, Bob Ingalls, and Mike Getto discuss the most successful season in K. U. history with the man-of-the-hour, George Sauer. Kansas-20 • • Jim May, Jim Berry and Bill Adams brave a frosty autumn Part of the record-breaking crowd of 40,043 fans, count night in order to be first in line for the rush for the 50- ' em—forty thousand and forty-three, who filled the stadium yard line seats. to overflowing during Homecoming. M. U. linesmen assume blanket party positions as the Jay- Pardon my elbow! Bud French accidently connects with hawkers draw first blood in their long drive to score the land Oake ' s solar plexis as Don Fambrough tries to make first touchdown, that fatal extra point after Kansas ' first score, The teams mix it up early in the game when the Tigers Forrest Griffith spots a hole and gets under way as try a kick from the wee yards of their own territory. sourians Giles and Blair maneuver int o position for a tackle. Fambrough and Crawford move in for the kill, Bus Entsminger skirts left end in one of those fast moving Bob West gets a foot entangled in Frank Pattee ' s grip as Tiger lunges that kept the Jayhawkers worried until the final minute, and Dick Bertuzzi moves around the Tiger interference for the tackle. Bud French brings down the pigskin as the Jayhawkers march back up the field into Tiger ground. Roger Englert flushes a covey of Jayhawkers as M. U. tries to score early in the fourth quarter. Frank Pattee eludes the grasp of Fred Kling as the Jayhawk- All-American Ray Evans closes in on a racing Tiger, ers stage their spectacular 96-yard race down the field in the playing the form which won him the title of best player in closing minutes of the game to make the winning score 20-14. the nation in several polls. lawker Candidly A Jay Hiya Gang!! Hiya Chanc!! Dean W oodruff flashes a loud night shirt as Nina Green, Virginia Joseph and Eileen Horner flash loud smiles at the nightshirt parade. Photos by Brown, Mason, Chalupnik, Estes, and Kirchhoff Corinne Carter gets a cup in a Lawrence Uncle Jimmy Green, known fondly as the shaft, Jim Cope takes a copious gulp of Tau Beauty contest while — gets a cloak before the K-State game. Joy Juice at an ATO party. The fall season brought out many John Nealy and John Davidson scorn the con- Hayracks were common everywhere, but new vehicles on campus, like this ventional gas buggy and pilot a coach to the this Watkins Hall open top wagon proved Jayhawk scooter. Pumpkin Prom. a little leaky. Music filled the air as Christ- Elaine Sawyer tosses in a few hot licks Lee Houser discovers a new way to mash pot atoes at mas approached. Here the on the flute at the K-State game. a Union Short Spin. Team of Warger and Nielson run through a few bars (Music, that is). There were plenty of parties to lure the hesitant mind away Jack Moorehead, like sex, rears his head over the crowd, as Dobber Hauver starts clubbing Dave Johnson ' s date at the Sig Ep Bowery party. from the dreaded thought of midsemesters, Almost all of the fall dances sported reception Time is definitely out at the Sig Ep Margaret Logan and Cleta Van Master lines. Marjorie Crane puckers up for the photo- Haunted House party, or maybe it ' s the mix cheesecake with the New Look and grapher at the Theta Open House, as Anne House of Blue Lights. come up with a very enticing omelette. Ackerman follows suit in the background. Carruth Hall dug up some witches for their Halloween Party. And the Kappa Sigs dug up a real live Art Riordan imitates drug store indian for the Red Dog Inn. Don Faurot just being dug up, after the K.U. game. Jack Kendree and Joan Woodward vainly search a wholescme Dick Tracy III frantically scans a crowd of students in search of Mumbles. Those midnight-sun glasses betray him as an ex- Air Corps man, or maybe a Hollywood scout. Holstein for a faucet before the K-State game. The Kappa Alpha Psis get in a little tuneful crooning bcfcre The cheerleaders all won on the parlays one week. their annual banquet. There was a big fire before the K-State game. Which would have really been handy at Nebraska. E. C. Quigley surveys the Russ Stephenson shows Dick Yaple game from under the how the New Look will appear on covers. men. Fiji Island ' s were never like this. The Johd s—Eulich and You gung try some Kickapoo Joy Juice? Nancy Smart Amberg give dates, Gwen Wilson and Margaret Granger waits for friends to pass the jug at ATO party. the low-down on Engine House No. 1 The gentle art of taking a powder as dem- onstrated by Shannon McKim and Off i- sher Dick Dalrymple of the Sigma Nu Regulars. The Phi Psi ' s give a mass demonstration of the Sec- ond Story Man. And he says to me, You oughta be in pitchers, baby! Judy Tihen, Wilma Geppelt, Betty Pretz, and Shirley Hoyt at the Home Ec House. Arlene Feldkamp gets the brush-off Adam McCluggage on Some days it doesn ' t pay to get up. Rip Collins from Jayhawk as a disgruntled Tiger the spot for the Delta veys the mortal remains of his car in Columbia. looks on at the Terrace Grill. Chis. The strange process of float building is demonstrated by Ring-thing-ching! The arrow girls After the fray under the men of Sigma Nu, captained by Goose Goshorn. the watchful eyes of Scott, Godbehere, Eyler, and company. Homecoming and the sweethearts) of Sigma Chi. Joan Ruese crowns Jack Beck. A New Look that meets with male ap- A disgruntled tiger does a once proval—the Theta float featuring Jan and over lightly as Paul Rastus Ginny, or Ginny and Jan? Klein turns the spit. The snow man is the only one dressed for the weather, but who cares. Bacon. Simpson. Warren, and Hoener flick the flag on the ADPi float. The Governor plays wolf on the fifty yard line as the army ap- plauds wildly. Joan Woodward gives out with a damp bird . . wet rock chalk, that is. DEC EM A X St A x AXK geXO 25 2b z7 pit St%11, MEDIU NW f6A0 Men of Marvin The story behind Jimmy Green ' s perennial painting by Charley Hoffhaus T. DEWITT CARR MARVIN HALL It would appear to the uninitiated visitor to Mt. Oread that the general area around Marvin Hall is either being readied for an enormous amount of new construction or is subject to frequent shifts in its surface which make it necessary to survey the area anew every day. However, to those who really know what ' s going on around K.U. ( are there such people? ) the assiduous transit toters who dot the campus from Potters lake to Lindley Hall are recog- nized as students of K.U. ' s Engine School —The School of Engineering and Architecture to you. K.U. ' s engineers, with their ever-present slide rules hanging saber-like from their belts have become evident in ever increasing numbers on the campus. Enrollment in enginering and architecture, which averaged around 500 before the war, has now jumped to the goodly sum of 2168, of whom 14 are women. Following the trend of several leading engineering schools in the country, the school of engineering and architecture was this year placed under the direction of a man who had achieved distinctive success in the field of engineering in our armed forces. That man is Dean T. DeWitt Carr, U.S.N. Born in Huntington, West Virginia in 1893, Dean Carr began his naval career at Annapolis, Mary- land, where he graduated from the Naval Academy in 1916. Since that time he has been continuously linked with engineering education and administra- tion. He served from 1935 until 1939 as chairman of marine engineering instruction at Annapolis. At that time he wrote a mechanical engineering text- book which is still being used at the Academy. During his tours of sea duty, Dean Carr received several trophys and commendations for efficiency in battleship and submarine engineering. He also ini- tiated a number of efficiency-increasing engineering devices which were adopted by the navy. For a time he served as naval aide to President Coolidge, as a congressional naval liaison officer, and also as budget officer in the Bureau of Naval Personnel. Dean Carr was no less active during the recent war. He was executive officer of the Great Lakes Naval Train- ing center during its period of rapid expansion in 1941-42 at which time he organized and directed 23 engineering trade schools. He then became chief of staff for the Southwest Pacific amphibious forces, and later deputy commander of the Seventh Fleet service forces. Dean Carr ' s new charge may not be quite as exciting as his previous ones, but it will undoubtedly keep him just as busy. For the school of engineering and architecture is no small organization—it is an Dave Ballard and Professor E. B. Phillips examine the Phillips ana- lyzer in electrical lab. institution complete within itself with its own facul- ty; buildings; and even its own student governing body, the Engineering Council; its own publication, The Kansas Engineer; and its own traditions. In the tradition department, the Hob Nail Hop holds first rank in the hearts of the Marvinmen. This is their annual dance, at which they elect their own queen. Another tradition which had gained great favor be- fore the war, and which is being resumed this year for the first time in six years is the Engineer ' s Banquet. Then of course there is the long standing feud with the lawyers which culminates every year in the brightening up of Jimmy Green ' s statue with a coat of paint. Year before last the lawyers retaliated by kidnapping the Queen of the Hob Nail Hop. The school of engineering and architecture is nominally located in Marvin Hall. It is composed of the departments of aeronautical, architectural, chemical, civil, electrical, mechanical, mining, and Students removing a specimen from a torsion machine in testing materials lab. metallurgical and petroleum engineering and engi- neering physics. Actually the school has expanded into several different buildings on the campus. The electrical, mechanical, and hydraulic labs are con- ducted in the buildings behind Marvin. Aeronautical engineering is now being taught in the quonset annex. Shop practice courses are taught in Fowler shops, and Lindley Hall houses the departments of chemical, petroleum, and mining engineering. Chem- istry and related subjects are taught in Bailey lab. The aeronautical engineering department ' s wind tunnel is located under the stadium and even the steam turbines in the University power plant are used for instruction in mechanical engineering. The college radio station KFKU is also an ex-officio branch of the school. The Research Foundation, although not actually a part of the engine school is closely integrated with it and pools its facilities and staff with that of the school. Its purpose is to provide facilities for Adjusting rheostats in an experiment of sirocco Walt Heinrich casts a frightened eye at the photographer from Bill Gaul checks the flame in a steam boiler. blower . . . So there! behind the switchboard. Wendell Robb and Bill Hoefer inspect a switch panel in electrical lab. Stanley Wade works on a model in aeronautical eng ' neering. and to carry on research for any industries, associa- tions, agencies, or individuals who may have need of these services in the search for new or better prose- cution of fundamental research, for the discovery of new materials, or for the improvement of products. The Research Foundation has recently installed a host of new scientific devices which greatly augment the scope of the projects which may be carried on at KU. At the present time research is being carried on in the fields of plastics, polio prevention, and psy- chological healing methods, to name a few. The Kansas Industrial Development Commission is also sponsoring research projects aimed at the discovery and better utilization of the mineral resources of Kansas. The school of engineering and architecture is ex- panding its facilities to keep pace with today ' s ever increasing need for thoroughly trained men in the engineering fields. Under the capable direction of its new dean, the school will undoubtedly add many All bewildered freshmen have long wondered why engineers carried those glistening sheaths. new names to the roster of successful KU engineers and architects the world over. Summing up his edu- cational philosophy in the Kansas Engineer, Dean Carr states: My life and strength continue to be devoted to the assistance and guidance of those whose curiosity is great, whose intellectual ambitions are powerful and honest, whose judgment is unpreju- diced, whose interests are sincere. These things in character I have come to know as the real values in life. I expect to find them here. .I will devote myself to the provision of the best facilities for those with these interests so that those who come here seeking opportunity for knowledge will find it fully, and in the warm atmosphere of understanding. The University can be justly proud of its progres- sive School of Engineering and Architecture. With ex-Captain T. DeWitt Carr at the helm, the sailing promises to be smooth indeed for the engineers of Mt. Oread. Now we know! Glen Sanky executes a magnificent thrust upon surprised fellow student. f f • • • • • • • • • 36 THE JAYHAWKER Duck Hunting The Jayhawker Looks At Two Fall Sports As the first wintry blasts decended on the old knoll in mid-November, the female population awoke to a startling fact one chill a.m.--no men! The whereabouts of vast amounts of the sterner sex remained a mystery for some days. Many dif- ferent theories were proffered as solutions to the enigma. Some thought the men had migrated South. Some thought Stupifyin Jones had been sashayin ' around, then the light dawned—Duck season had arrived. With it ' s advent, some two thousand eligible males had left for the marshes, leaving school and women far behind. For the uninitiated, the weird ritual of Duck Hunting is somewhat bewildering. The participant rises at three o ' clock in the morning, and with determined vigor heads for the nearest marsh, river, swamp, or other wet place. (Kansas City excluded.) Upon arriving at the river ' s edge, the noble hunter sits down in the nearest puddle and remains motionless for from three to five hours. The area in which the hunter operates is called a blind. Authorities are divided as to the origin of this term. Some say it is called that because the only way the (Continued on Page 97) Above left: Alton Ray shiveringly prepares to journey into the pre-dawn cold. Jack Comstock and Carson Rockhill expend a little ammo. Bottom left: A Keep Out sign beckons inticingly. Right: Home is the Hunter, or as the trigger is bent so grows the cluck dinner. -.. ,••• .......,,,„,4.0........1, ' - gotsoloth, . ---------;-:,, CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 37 Joan of Lorraine First Nighting laic goo The University theatre season opened on the night of October 20 with a rush and a bang which reverberated to the very lowest piers of old Green Hall. The University Players had chosen for their first presentation of the year, Maxwell Anderson ' s Joan of Lorraine. As practices progressed rumors of the impending hit began to circulate around the campus, and by opening night tickets were harder to get than seats at the Orange Bowl. The first nighters acclaimed the performance, and due to the demands of success, the opportunity of seeing Joan was extended an extra night. The unique manner of presentati on, a play within a play, gave the audience the in on play production along with the enjoyment of the ished product. High acclaim goes to Darlene Van Bibber for her sensitive and comprehensive characterization of Joan. Mis Van Bibber performed the ficult task of portraying two personalities, those of Mary Smith and Joan in a convincingly realistic manner. The comic relief was supplied by Tom Rea who (Continued on Page 97) Above right: Torn Rea, as the Dauphin, gets advice from his court treasurer before making mad love to his mistress, Bee Brady. Bottom right: Joan meets her inquisitors. Bottom left: Joan bans Bea from the Dauphins bedroom (Killjoy!). 38 THE JAYHAWKER 70 • o Co u t Sigma Chis win Football crown as Phi Gains lead in total points Homecoming w eekend on Mount Oread saw the climax of the football season for intramural teams as well as for the Jayhawker varsity. After watching Coach Sauer ' s gridders show how the T-formation should be played in Saturday after- noon ' s game with Missouri, the Sigma Chi ' s followed suit the next day to wallop the Dix Club, 26 to 7, and capture the 1947 University championship. Champions of the Fraternity League, the Sigma Chi ' s employed a hipper-dipper, hocus-pocus, now- you-see-it-now-you-don ' t style of T-attack which baf- fled the Independent League title-holders from the opening kickoff. Chuck Wagstaff raced over the goal line twice in the first quarter, on runs of 5 and 30 yards, to give the winners a lead they never relinquished. Following a scoreless period, Sigma Chi, Lee Vogel, unlimbered his pitching arm in the third quarter to shoot a 35-yard scoring aerial to Joe Con- nelly. The victors completed point-making in the final stanza when Wagstaff gathered in a 7-yard touchdown toss from Vogel. The lone Dix Club score had come in the third quarter when Don Ash- lock passed 10-yards to Waldron in the Sigma Chi end zone. The Sigma Chi ' s earlier in the week had wrapped up the Fraternity League crown by handing the Beta ' s their first defeat of the season, 16 to 14. Beta passer Bob Schwanzle battled it out on even terms with the Sigma Chi twin tossing threats, Vogel and Odd Williams, but a first period 20-yard field goal by Lynn Leigh furnished the winning margin. The Dix Club clinched the Independent League title by defeating the Bounders, 7 to 0, in a tight defensive game. Sheeley scored the only points of the game for the winners, taking a first quarter pay- off pass from Ashlock and then kicking the extra point. Eight teams participated in the Fraternity League playoffs, having won their way through divisional play. They were: Sigma Chi, Beta, Phi Gam, Teke, Sig Ep, Phi Kappa, Phi Psi and ATO. The Independent League Playoffs found the fol- lowing eight teams eligible for the elimination play: Dix Club, Bounders, Theta Tau, Smith Hall, Navy, Kappa Eta Kappa, Law School, and Dine-A- Mite. Fraternity B League competition reached the playoff stage with the Phi Psi ' s, Phi Gam ' s, and Phi Delt ' s as division winners and the Sig Ep ' s, Beta ' s, PiKA ' s, DU ' s and Sigma Chi ' s entered as second place teams. The Phi Psi B squad won the cham- pionship by winning a 6 to 0 victory over the Sig Ep ' s in the finals. For your 1947 Jayhawker intramural football all- stars, we went to Jack Greer, secretary of men ' s intra- murals. Upon nominations of the officials and re com- mendations by the team managers, Greer named the following lineups: Left, MARSH HULETT — 1947 HANDBALL CHAMPION ELWYN HENRY 1947 Horshoes Champion Fraternity League A Team All-Stars: First Team Ends—Connelly, Sigma Chi; Tongier, Alpha Tau Omega. Guards—Van Ert, Phi Gamma Delta; Leigh, Sig- ma Chi. Center—Jones, Beta Theta Pi. Backs—Carroll, Phi Kappa; Schwanzle, Beta Theta Pi; Mercer, Phi Kappa Psi. Independent League All-Stars: First Team Ends—Watson,Bounders; Nordling, Law School. Guards—Waldron, Dix Club; Rozich, ()read Hall. Center—Reber, Smith Hall. Backs—Shanahan, Bounders; Taggart, Dine-A- Mite; Ashlock, Dix Club. Glen Tongier, ATO, won the intramural tennis championship by defeating Dick Cray, Sig _Mph, in the final match, 6-2, 7-5. Courtland Smith, Sig Ep, handed Murray Regier, Phi Deft, a 1-up setback in SIGMA CHI — ALL-UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL CHAMPIONS 19 holes to take the golf title. Marshall Hulett, Phi Gam, outpointed Bob Hodgson, Phi Gam, 2-8, 21-14, in the handball finals. Elwyn Henry captured the horseshoe championship by beating Harold May in the title match. Semi-finalists in the individual sports were as fol- lows: Golf—Regier, Phi Delta Theta; Ashley, Sigma Nu; Smith, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Brinkman, Phi Kappa. Tennis—Cray, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Proctor, Beta Theta Pi; Sandborn, Air Screws; Tongier, Alpha Tau Omega. Horseshoes—May, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Fellers, Pi Kappa Alpha; Ross, Smith Hall; Strong, Phi Gamma Delta; Henry, Independent. Handball—Hulett, Phi Gamma Delta; Hodgson, Phi Gamma Delta; Carpenter, Phi Kappa Psi; Walker, Kappa Sigma. (Continued on Page 97) PHI KAPPA PSI — -13- LEAGUE FOOTBALL CHAMPIONS COURTLAND SMITH 1947 Golf Champion GLEN TONGIER 1947 Tennis Champion 10 THE JAYHAWKEIt Muscies and Tusseis Below: Joan Lippleman displays her championship Badmitton form. Kappa Kappa Gamma ' s champion- ship Volleyball team. -411111 111111 1•00011 KAPPA KAPPA is KAPPA KAPPA Locksley Hall leads total point race as Kappas take volleyball crown Basketballs took the place of volleyballs and tennis racquets were exchanged for ping pong paddles as the women ' s intramurals program moved from fall sports competition into the winter season. Players, breathless from the thrilling finals in volleyball, moved immediately into practice courts for ball, while table tennis experts prepared to put the finishing touches on their slice serves. As the fall program ended, four houses led, the race for the Women ' s Intramurals Trophy which will be presented at the end of the year to the group which has accumulated the highest number of points. Locksley Hall is now in first place with 289 points, Alpha Delta Pi in second place with 246 points, fol- lowde closely by Corbin Hall with 227 points, and Kappa Kappa Gamma with 226 points. With weak knees from suspense and voices hoarse from yelling, the spectators watched Kappa Kappa Gamma spike their way to a victory over Locksley Hall in the lively volleyball final game in ber. After eliminating the other division Pi Beta Alpha Chi Omega, and Alpha Delta Pi —in the semi-finals games, the Kappas faced ley in the championship game. The calm, consistent teamwork and vigorous spiking attack which Kappa team exhibited all fall resulted in their undefeated record. Op- ponents found it dif- ficult to return hard balls over the net by Kappa spikers—Maxine Gun- solly, Jody and Virginia The coveted gold vol- leyball t r op h y was presented to the team (Continued on Page 97) va CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 he Jayhawker Goes to the Carn 0. O • r O 1. Larry Nelson, Mary Jean Peet, and Will Friesen start for the Carnival. 2. Jack Kendree and Tish Laming look on as Queen Jo A nn Hudson surveys her sub- iects. 3. Locksley Hall maidens grew lip lettuce for their booth. 4. The Carnival crowd was one of the largest this year. 5. Tuck Cooke t akes interest in the boot black business. 6. Chuck Filbrick extolls the virtues of Les Roegnik at the Teke booth. 7. Ruth Routon glares at the happy mob of dancers. 8. Bob Seine deftly shoves the pastboards at a group of admirers. 44 THE JAYHAWKER THE UNION FOREVER Perhaps, at some time or another, you ' ve wondered (I never have) who sponsors most of the dances and parties in the Union, who organizes the parades and the publicity stunts you view from time to time about the campus, who publishes the K Union, and who brings you such attractions as the Norman Granz Jazz Concert. If you will indulge in a little research, you will discover the answer—Student Union Activities. In 1938, the Memorial Union Operating Board began looking for various ways to popularize the Union Building (They might try serving beer) and make it more a center of activity for students. With the help of Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union, and Henry Werner, former dean of men, the activities group was founded on two principles: first, to centralize activities on the campus; and second, to organize new activities for the students of the University. Since that time, Student Union Activities (SUA ) has grown from one committee of fifteen people to a tightly knit (cross stitch) organization of thirteen committees with a membership of 482 men and women. Headed by President Bud Hill, the committees are divided into three spheres: the Social, under Vice-President Lu Anne Powell, the tions, guided by Secretary Louise Lambert, and the Business steered by Homer Sherwood, Treasurer. The officers are chosen annually by the Memorial Union Operating Board, and the committee men by the four officers. These officers and mittee chairmen form the Student Union Executive Board (SUEB) . (Put it this way: SUEB chooses the Operating Board. The Operating Board chooses SUEB. They spend the rest of the year giving dinners for each other.) The various duties and accomplishments pleted each year by SUA include everything from sponsoring social events to running a library. From Roger Harlan takes an intimat e look at Union Activities ,with side comment by George Spelvin. the beginning of Orientation Week until after Com- mencement, the office on the west side of the Union Lounge is a honeycomb (Looney bin would have been a better word) of activity. The first event of Orientation Week was the Sunday reception at which all visitors quaffed punch, munched delicacies and listened to soft music. (So they could better digest the stale cookies). For three afternoons during the week, the Coffees and Forums Committee sponsored, Meet Your Faculty forums. The annual Jayhawk Nibble for new students, a free supper co-financed with the All-Student Council, was attended by nearly one thousand Freshmen. A parade of annual social events is sponsored by SUA. Heading the procession this year was the Union Carnival, featuring booths, dancing, and games. The Carnival Queen, selected by the merry- makers (Students, that is) themselves, was the first queen of the year. The Pumpkin Prom, assuming a Cinderella theme, (That ' s a pretty big assumption) was held this year after the K State game. One of the largest crowds of the season watched five beautiful K State girls (Bags) try on the silver slipper that was to make one of them Cinderella for the night. The Homecoming Dance, featuring a battle of bands, provided a perfect end to a perfect coming as all previous attendance records were smashed. The students and alums danced in both the Ballroom and the Main Lounge. (Both on top and under the tables). On December fourteenth, the annual Christmas reception doled (That pineapple company had to get UNION LIBRARY 10• H NOR Is - The Student Union Executive Board Seated: Homer Sherwood, Lu Anne Powell, Bud Hill, Louise Lambert, Frank Pomeroy, Standing: Paul Dillon, Grace Gwinner, Ann Learned, Bruce Bathurst, Donna Dee Munn, Bud Francis, Jim Hawes, Tuck Cooke, Margaret Meeks, Jack Kendree, Kathy Cully, Tom Hanna. Library Group Seated: Mary McNalley, Zara Zoliner, „ Charlotte Reames, Mary Caney. Standing: Dick Pratt, Charlotte Metcalf, Phyllis Debus, Margaret Dalquist, Doris Tihen, Donna De Munn (chairman), Phyllis Jones, Donna Grife. Announcements Committee Standing: Ervin Grant, Larry Nieman, Tom Milligan, Bob Bottoms, Tuck Cooke, Reed Bailey, Fred Six. Seated: Bob Tinklepaugh, Peggy Sue Cloyd, Bruce Bathurst (chairman). Student Union Activities Executive Board Dinner Frank Pomeroy, Lu Anne Powell, Otis Hill, Miss Hermina zipple, Homer Sherwood, Mr. Fred Montgomery, Bruce Bathurst, Paul Dillon, Mrs. Fred Montgomery, Bud Francis, Mrs. C. M. Baker, Margaret Meeks, Harry McClure, Rose Ann Madden, Thornton Cooke. Secretarial Committee Standing: Barbara Hamilton, Carol Ann Hastings, Margaret Granger, Aranelle Allen, Jean Young, Margaret Dickinson, Zelina Higgenbottom, Marilyn Gibson, Etta Mae Cooper. Social Committee Standing: Jack Kendree (chairman), Bob Shearer, Barbara Howard, Niles Peterson, Elaine Sawyer, Mary Kay Kottman, Bill Webb, John Sowers, Paul Barker, Bill W alker ,Ann Lundgren, Jerry Maloney, Bill Layman, Joe Madrell. Seated: First row: Nina Green, Sally Peguees, Patty Norcross. Entertainment Committee Standing—Grace Gwinner (chairman), Kitty Walter, Ber- nadine Reed, Jack Moorhead. Seated — Alix Neville, Norma Kennedy, Nola Jean Hosey, Mary Lou Pecken- schneider, Betty Crawford, Olive Jean Grimes. Decorations Committee Jeanie Kahn, Elaine Elvig, Janet Taylor, Jim Hawes man), Shirley Sudendorf, Joan Deagenhart, Merry Ann Waterman, Jeanne Rose, Craig Hampton, Patty Kelly, Jack Clark, Jo Compton, Babe Branit, Jack Tusher, Dick Bradly, Clubs and Organizations Seated—Chuck Kendall, Jim Joliffee, Mary Lou Redmond, Ed Morrill, Ann Learned, Virginia Daugherty, Don Meacham, Nancy Van Bibber. Standing — Lew Coats, Dick Stewart, Emerson Shields. Phil Carlson. Publicity Committee Standing—Shannon McKim, Frank Roteman (chairman), Bob Hughes. Lindbergh Bell, John Brown. Seated Shirley Kyle, Rip Collins, Arleen Feldkamp, Andy Bauer- Kathken Brode, Dick Wintermote, George Polk. Intramurals Committee First Row: Rosemary Robison, Betty Brewer, Don Wells, Kenneth Ramsey, Tom Hanna (chairman), Virginia Brown, Adrian Hiscox, Dolores Warren, Diane Stryker, Ed Weltner, Bob Lindsey. Second Row: Jim Porter, Bill Mitchel, Renz Edwards, Bob Fountain, Dale Engel, Terry Gardner. Coffees and Forums Marjory Darby, Shirley Rice, Carolyn Coleman, Margaret Meeks (chairman), Robreta Sanderson, Glen Vanderhorst, Barba, ' Hume, Peggy Wolfe, Joanne Rettig, Alice Hobbs, Faculty speaker. CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 47 a plug in somewhere) out hot-spice cider, and cookies (Also Sen-Sen and Benzidrene) for everyone around the Union Christmas tree. Come February fourteenth, the Sweetheart Swing will once again experience it ' s yearly blosoming. (I guess they never heard of weed killer). Guests will be the favorite sweethearts from surrounding middle- west universities. (Universities like Lawrence Busi- ness College and Tonganoxie Mortician ' s School). They wil be escorted by K.U. ' s Most Datable Males as elected by the younger faculty women. (Those that can still hobble around). This plan, inaugurated last year, has proved to be a gesture well appreciated by the participating schools. To this year ' s expanded schedule, SUA has added and revised worthwhile events until it now affects individually, and directly almost every mem- ber of the student body. The Union Open House on the night before school began was the greatest free party the Univer- sity has ever seen. Over three thousand students jammed the Union to watch Dick Bibler draw cari- catures, dance to the music of a campus band, watch a movie, look at the displays of twenty-six campus organizations, drink punch, view a floor show com- posed of local (Yokel would be a better word) talent, and read the yearly edition of Union Doins. Two hundred girls were presented with free corsages. (Dandelions) Governor and Mrs. Carlson joined the Chancellor and his wife in attending the SUEB din- ner and in greeting the thousands of students in attendance. Feeling that many students enjoyed the lighter side of music and entertainment, SUA sponsored the Norman Granz Jazz Concert on October thirtieth. This marked the first time within our memory that a student organization actually handled such a con- cert. The $1250 public address system, ($625 retail, $625 graft) purchased last year, plays music from the SUA office throughout the building. Under the call letters of SUPA, it provides an enjoyable, re- laxing variety of music, athletic events, news, (Static) and announcements at various times during the day. The student ' s storehouse for the literature they like, is the Student Union Library, another SUA project. Founded last year, it is located in the south- west corner of the Union Lounge. Books are pro- cured through gifts by friends (The Bobbsey Twins and the Beer Bottle, The Bobbsey Twins at School, The Bobbsey Twins take a Powder, The Bobbsey Twins at Reform School, The Bobbsey Twins take Another Powder, The Bobbsey Twins in Prison) and by a four hundred dollar appropriation from the University libraries. Booklists are adopted by a board of selectors made up of outstanding students and one faculty member. (Not necessarily outstand- ing) During daytime hours, students give their free time to keep it open. This is one of the most prom- ising of SUA projects. When a group of students have such a common field of interest that they want to form a club, they invariably consult the Clubs and Organizations Com- mittee. Already this year, the KU Mountaineers have become an active organization for the many in- terested in mountain climbing. Last year ' s Chess Club is about ready to resume meetings, not to men- tion organizations embracing casting, bridge, check- ers, and photography. (There is even a group of tree worshippers) The Modern Choir has been completely reorgan- ized by it ' s present director, Ross Robertson. Singing modern music, it is now available for large meetings, concerts, programs, and parties. (Also Funerals) This group is a branch of the Entertainment Com- imttee. Another important part of the Entertainment Committee ' s functions will be the first all-school musical in Hoch on March tenth. The success of SUA affairs lies in the organization. Instead of a small group of one or two arranging for a party, several hundred people are involved in (Continued on Page 98) E. rruLe ig Wheels On Campus ANNE SCOTT Vivacious and petite Anne Scott loves to go to school. She also likes to meet new people and be with them. This blond senior with the sparkling blue eyes is known as Scotty to her many friends. Scotty is very enthusiastic about her major in advertising, but also feels that one needs a good liberal education as a background. She would like to continue her education after graduating this spring and secretly dreams of going to Europe. One usually sees Scotty hurrying down the campus or barreling in her pink colored Ford from one meeting to another. Her second major might well be termed vities . She is a member of Mortar Board, Jay Janes, the Associated Women Students Senate, and is active in women ' s politics. For her journalistic interests she is a member of the Kansan board, treasurer of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary professional journalism fraternity, and Gamma Alpha Chi, honorary advertising fraternity. Scotty is also activities chairman of Kappa Alpha Theta. But, no matter how busy this senior from Pratt is, she always has time for a friendly ' hello. Scotty says she hasn ' t had time to develop any hobbies recently but that she likes to swim or play the piano in one of her occasional spare moments. But best of all, she likes making new friends. — Margaret Meeks BILL CONBOY Two words, By George, will identify this blond junior, Bill Conboy. His personality and campus spirit are hard to top. The things he ' s wanted longest to witness was this year ' s football team being on top of the Big Six and going to a Bowl. Being away three years in the Marine Corps did not stop Bill from ticipating in many activities and winning many awards. He is a Summerfield Scholar and last year won the University Oratorical Contest and the aneous Speaking Contest. Not only is he President of Delta Sigma Rho, but vice-president of the General Semantics Club, Keeper of the Scroll in Quill Club, Justice of Student Court, member of Owl Society, Forensic League, Newman Club, and Varsity Debate Squad. This Journalism major is interested in fiction writing and sports. For his life work he would like to do any type of writing. At the present time he is interested in helping promote a magazine, which will be sponsored by the Quill Club. Incidentally, he finds time to study—his grade average is 2.76! —Helen Kittle. BEVERLY FOX Victory of mind over matter is the case for Beverly Fox, a graduate student who is working for her Master ' s Degree in Industry Psychology. Claiming the title of Jayhawker Beauty Queen, membership in Phi Beta Kappa, Psi Chi (National Honorary Psychology fraternity), and the Dean ' s Honor Roll, Beverly proves that beauty and brains do mix. This versatile Jayhawker, who comes from Kansas City, is also interested in music and Spanish, which explains her membership in Music Appreciation Club and El Ateneo. Formerly attending Kansas City Junior College, Beverly proved her loyalty to K.U. by coming to work on her Master ' s Degree. In addition to her other activities, Beverly finds time to participate in Women ' s Intramurals and Union Activities. With her sparkling, friendly, and vivacious manner it is no wonder that Beverly is one of the most well liked wheels on the campus. —Corinne Temple JACK MOOREHEAD Pfftt Pfft goes the racing car. What ' s this? Nothing but Jack head ad-libbing during one of his frequent jobs as Master of Ceremonies up here on Mount Oread. This popular showman hails from Atchison, and has probably been M.C. at over half the Hill functions this year. Although the Great Whiteway is Jack ' s aim, he uses much of his time on the Hill to help on the War Memorial and also on Student Union Activities. Dodging bills and hitting the sack are the favorite leisure pastimes of this Barrymore, but this year he hardly has time for that because next spring, March 18, he will present the All Student Musical. He anticipates a hit, and we wish him the best of luck. Although only a sophomore, his talent is already proof of the big chance he may have to some day see his name in lights. —Joan Bagby so THE JAYHAWKER Professors any Proii DR. JACOB KLEINBERG Strictly a family man, Dr. Jacob Kleinberg, associate professor of chemistry, is the proud father of two little girls. His zeal in the field of chemistry coupled with an active terest in hill affairs make him one of the faculty ' s intelligent and popular leaders. Young, friendly Dr. Kleinberg was born and reared in Passoic, New sey. He received his B.S. at Randolph Macon College in Virginia, and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees at the sity of Illinois. Before coming to K. U., he taught chemistry at John likin University and at the Illinois College of Pharmacy. Believing that everyone should have equal opportunity on the campus, Dr. Kleinberg ' s suggestion is to broaden the affairs of the university socially, scholastically, and athletically. --Diane Stryker DR. RALPH CLARK From the University of Wisconsin with a B. S. degree in Pharmacy dated 1922 to a full professorship in K. U. ' s School of Pharmacy via many varied capacities and positions, comes Ralph W. Clark. Along the road leading to these pages of your Jayhawker, Dr. Clark earned his Master of Science and the precious Ph.D. He boasts an impressive joiner record as he counts Rho Chi, Alpha Chi Sigma, Sigma Xi, Phi Sigma, and the American Pharmaceutical ciation (as a Life Member) among those vieing for his spare time. A member of the Presbyterian church, the affable doctor ' s hobby is flowers. Having arrived on Oread ' s crest during October, 1946, Dr. Clark ' s im- posing outline of wheel calibre is crowned with his recent entry into the national officialdom of Kappa Psi pharmaceutical fraternity as Grand Ritualist. —Melvin Clingan DR. EDWARD ROBINSON A true New England Yankee with a twang of Harvard—that ' s Dr. ward Robinson, Professor of sophy. He was born, and lived most of his life in Vermont and chusetts. He consequently feels a little strange in a country as far south of Mr. Mason ' s line as Kansas. He received his degree at Harvard University, and extended his edge of philosophy by teaching at Kenyon in Ohio and Oklahoma A. and M. in Stillwater. He is an plished pianist and an avid bicyclist, however the pressure of his duties at K. U. have left little time for extra- curricular activities. His service in the army gave him several trips abroad. If he could name a third hobby, it would probably be travelling about Europe. Dr. Robinson is happiest when he is busiest, therefore he should be re- ceiving the maximum of pleasure from his job here at K. U. Grinding such subjects as Symbolic Logic into hawks is no easy task. —Joan Bagby 52 THE JAYHAWKER Woman Byron DeHaan takes a close look at a broad subject. Full many a flower is born to blush unseen and waste its sweetness on the desert air,—Thomas Gray Here, Mr. Gray is quite obviously talking about women. But I must conclude that he had nothing more than a seed catalog upon which to base his glaring fallacious statement. In the first place, a woman doesn ' t blush—she just gets overheated or perhaps is using a new Glow in the Dark tion over her bases, creams, tints, rouges, and cake make-up. The unseen is nothing but an out-and-out pre- varication. The first fact upon which a woman grounds her entire existence is the necessity of being seen. Just to be seen, she will walk miles, encase herself in the most ridiculous and meaningless garb imaginable, slobber grease over her features, dye her hair (sometimes two colors ), pad her hips and other- wise furbish her God-given form, resort to the most childish of devices, ornament her fingers and arms with cheap, showy trash, and issue forth an inane line of insignificant, chattering gibberish that would rust the ears of a brass baboon. A woman wouldn ' t waste sweetness on the desert air even if she had any. In fact, the only situation in which a woman could be conceived to cease ing up the witch ' s brew of verbal frippery and ostentation she labels sweetness would be by self, unseen, in a desert. Furthermore, the popular and numerous similes drawn between the female and the lovelier vegetables of our landscapes ( Sweet Violets, Roses kissed with dew, Lilies of the Valley , etc.) are mental monstrosities molded by a few dreamers in the depths of deranged dementia. Beyond likening a woman to a cactus, a thornbush, or perhaps a milkweed, the CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 53 average male explorer will hesitate to tread. With all her chicanery, guile, and affected artlessness, the woman will most surely be the last flower or creature to be civilized by man. Women are continually grasping for more, more, and more. Since the dawn of time, when they spawned from Adam ' s rib, they have been screeching, screaming, bellyaching, bewailing, beseeching, croak- ing, and clamoring for more rights, more power, more privileges, more equality. First they wanted clothes; next they wanted dominion over the home; then they wanted to vote; then they wanted to drink and smoke; then they wanted to run a business; now they want more clothes. It ' s a vicious circle. A woman doesn ' t want equality; she wants superiority. To top it all off, they have to drive automobiles. Since Eve demolished her spouse ' s canoe backing out of the bullrushes, they have been wrecking, smash- ing, rending, ravaging, demoralizing, destroying, and devastating on the highways and byways of time with their sleds, carts, carriages and automobiles; their kitty-cars, pogo-sticks, tricycles, canes, crutches, and wheelchairs. The grim reaper could indeed be best caricatured as a woman, soused to the gills, at the wheel of a convertible, her tangled hair stream- ing in the wind, her size nine clodhoppers stomping the accelerator to the floor, and her wild eyes pro- claiming death to the intruder on her very own high- way. The enigma of female purity is a whimsical one. There is no such thing as a good woman; it is only a question of comparative badness. The woman who appears good is merely artful. She has been well portrayed as a saint in the church, an angel in the street, and a devil in the home. She has more facets than the Kohinoor Diamond. She is as unpredictable as a tropical storm. Ovid tells us every woman thinks herself lovable. But show me a lovable wo- man and I will show you the Grand Canyon upside down. Women aren ' t a hobby, nor are they an estab- lishment. They are a gross calamity, a tragedy in an infinite number of acts. The day I trust a woman, I ' ll give away my basketball tickets and build the Memorial Campanile with a screwdriver. What occupies the inner region of a woman ' s skull that would evoke her amazing knowledge about nothing, her unreasoning reason, and her torrent of trivial chatter will be a problem till the doom tocsin peals. The clattering stream of words that pours from her otherwise empty kettlehead is the biggest waste of man-hours since the filming of, Forever Amber . Her words contradict her thoughts, and her actions contradict her words. Her vows are traced in water. Men walk a mile after supper; woman talk an hour— it ' s their exercise. She will use anything from a funeral to a bridge game as an excuse to trade oral emptiness and juicy slanders with her fellow vultures— The Girls. A woman with a hand of cards in her claw is about as intelligent as the stuffed walrus in Dyche Museum, and as useful as a steak in a nunnery on Friday. Her many cute caperings, sly questions, and coy inquiries across the table are classic examples of plain ordinary cheating and may not be called otherwise by a male in his right senses. He ' s got suitable grounds for divorce if he was fool enough to marry the gorgon in the first place. (Continued on Page 97) Alpha Chi Omega was founded October 15, 1885, at DePauw University, Greencastle, In- diana. Phi, now one of 70 active chapters was established at K. U. in 1914. President, Mila Williams; Vice-President, Patricia Link; Secre- tary, Margaret Logan; Treasurer, Barbara Parent. I j PLEDGES LAURIE BIRMINGHAM Kansas City ROSILE BISHOP Coffeyville JODY BUSHEY Newton JOAN CALDWELL El Paso, Tex. BETTY ANN EAKIN Greensburg MARY HELEN KELLER Wichita WINON A. KLOTZ Coffeyville BETTY LAND Shawnee Mission JANICE MONTEITH Lawrence BARBARA O ' NEAL Wichita PAT PERKINS Olathe LOU ANN PLAGMANN Kansas City ANNA LOU POPE Kansas City VIRGINIA POWELL Kansas City MARY POWER Beloit JEANNE SHAFER Great Bend PAT RUTLEDGE Tulsa, Okla. ACTIVES BARBARA ACKERMAN Kansas City ANN ANGLE Kansas City EDITH CAREY Wichita VIRGINIA DANIELS . Bethesda, Md. BETTY DE ARMOND Kansas City JOAN DUVALL Kansas City MARJORIE GARDNER Arkansas City MARTHA GRAGG Wichita GWENNYD GUPTON Greensburg JOAN HAPPY Ottawa MARY LYNN HEGARTY St. Joseph, Mo. ANN HOGUE Russell ELEANOR HOWELL Escondido, Calif. LILA HYTEN Wellington NORMA LEE JONES McPherson CAROLYN KEITH Topeka BEVERLY KING Kansas City RHETTA JO LANDIS Wichita BETTY LEIMERT Kansas City PATRICIA LINK Kansas City JACKIE LOGAN Kansas City MARGARET LOGAN Garden City NORMA LEE LOSKE Kansas City MAROLYN McNEISH Winfield LUCILLE MURRAY Kansas City MARY JO MYERS Great Bend BARBARA PARENT Ottawa BILLIE MAE POWELL Topeka ANNE SHAEFFER Kansas City MARIANNE ROGERS Independence, Mo. LYNN SPENCER Lawrence JOAN VERMILLION Junction City JOAN W ALES St. Joseph, Mo. HELEN WARD Coffeyville MARTHA WEED Kansas City JANIE WILLIAMS Wichita MILA WILLIAMS Topeka JERRE LYONS Lawrence FIRST ROW: Klotz, Sheaffer, Monteith, Shafer, Williams, J., Myers, M. ., Spencer, Caldwell, Eakin, Perkins. SECOND ROW: Logan, J., Power, Carey, Angle, Leimert, Jones, Williams, M., Mrs. W. C. Jackson, Link, Parent, Weed, Logan, M., Gupton. THIRD ROW Danels, Bishop, Bushey, O ' Neal, BIrmingleam, Leske, DeArmond, Powell, Howell, Kadner, Wales, Hyten, Keith, Landis, Rogers, M., Land. FOURTH ROW: Vermillion, Powell, V., McNeish, Hegarty, Hogue, Plagmann, Keller, Pope, Ackerman, Happy, Murray, Rutledge, King, Ward, H., Lyons. NOT IN PICTURE: Duval l ACTIVES JEANNE ALDRICH Kansas City JOAN ANDERSON Emporia ELIZABETH LEE APT Iola BETTY BACON Cleveland, Ohio PATRICIA BENTLEY Great Bend BETTY BRADFORD Kansas City, Mo. ELEANOR CAMPBELL Independence, Mo. JEANNE COOPER Lawrence RACHEL COOPER Lawrence VIRGINIA COPPEDGE Kansas City, Mo. MARY GENET COVEY Atlanta, Ga. ETHELMAE CRAIG Joplin, Mo. NANCY GERMAN Kansas Mo. BARBARA GIVIN Manhattan JANE KEND ALL Leavenworth CONNIE MARKLEY Cheyenne, Wyoming NORMA MENDENHALL Emporia MARY PEET Kansas City, Mo. JEANNE PRESTON Denver, Colorado JOYCE RANDOLPH El Dorado MARY LOIS RICE Butler, Mo. BEVERLY ROBERTSON Kansas City, Mo. BETTY ANN ROLES Junction City BETTY ANN SAWYER Leavenworth JOAN SCHINDLING Le-tvenworth PEGGY SCHNACKENBERG Madison, N. J. DONNA SNART Lawrence BETTY RAE THOMAS Leavenworth DARLENE VAN BIBER Kansas City, Mo. PLEDGES MARILYN BROWN Kansas City SHIRLEY BROWN Kansas City VIRGINIA BROWN Emmet BARBARA CLEAVES Ft. Leavenworth BEVERLY COULTER Blue Rapids MARY HELENE FARRELL Lawrence JEAN GILLE Joplin, Mo. KATHLEEN GRAFF Ellinwood MARCIA HAIL Lawrence ARLENE HILL Lawrence BARBARA HOENER St. Louis, Mo. DIANE HOWELL Kansas City, Mo. SUE JONES Wichita BARBARA LAMOREAUX Waterville MARY LOU LANE St. Marys MARILYN LUNDY Atlanta, Ga. BARBARA MONTALDO Joplin, Mo. ANN PREBLE Kansas City, Mo. BETTY PREBLE Kansas City, Mo. BETTY SCHRIER Kansas City MARIE SCHUMACHER Topeka JACKYE SIMPSON Wichita SARAH STRICKLAND Hunnewell JEANENE TREGO Merriam DOLORES WARREN Wichita PHYYLLIS ANN WILSON Raytown, Mo. 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, Joan Anderson; Vice-President, Joan Schindling; Secretary, Betty Bacon; Treasurer, Mary Lois Rice. L FIRST ROW: Brown, V., Jones, Robertson, Hill, Cooper, R., Cleaves, Strickland, Coppedge, Preble, B., Preble, A., Farrell. SECOND ROW: ' Snort, H Randolph, Markley, Anderson, Schindling, Bacon, Bradford, Kendall, Bentley. THIRD ROW: Preston, Hoener, Schnackenberg, Wilson, Schu- macher, Trego, J , Simpson, Givin, Rolfs, Craig, Lane, Warren, Apt, Hail, Graff, Brown, M. FOURTH ROW: Thomas, Aldrich, Covey, Lundy, Mendenhall, Brown, S., Gille, Campbell, Montaldo, Schrier, Peet, Lamoreaux, Howell, Sawyer, Coulter. NOT IN PICTURE: German, Van Bibber. 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, Helen Mather; Vice-President, Jo Ann Spalding; Secretary, Helen Lawrence; Treasurer, Ruth Williams. ACTIVES ALLA BEEBE Wichita JANET BELT Lawrence JOAN BENNETT Topeka ELWANDA BREWER Hoisington BILLIE BURTSCHER Hays MAR JORIE BURTSCHER Hays BETTE CATTELL Washington, D. C. M ARCY COUSINS Dunkin, Okla. WANDA DeNIO Lawrence NANCY DILLE Kansas City, Mo. COREL DUNKLEY Lawrence BEVERLY EMERSON Topeka MARY LUCILLE GARTON Chanute MARTHA GIBSON Great Bend NOLA JEAN HOSEY Kansas City, Mo. MARGARET HOOPES Anthony GLENDALE JONES Lawrence HELEN LAWRENCE Ottawa ELSIE LEMON Lawrence SYDNEY LETSON Kansas City CAROL LONG Kansas City MELB A MATHER Stafford HELEN MATHER Kansas City PATTY NORDEEN Kansas City, Mo. MARJANE SCOTT La Cygne ZOE SILER Chicago, Ill. JO SPALDING Concordia CHARLOTTE THAYER Atchison BETTY TICE Kansas City DOLORES TRAVALENT Kansas City, Mo. JOAN WEBSTER Leavenworth RUTH WILLIAMS Alexander ARDYCE WILSON Ottawa WINNIFRED WILSON Lawrence PLEDGES JOAN BARR Leavenworth LOIS BETH Lawrence BETTY JO BLOOMER Claflin DOROTHY BREADY Cincinatti, Ohio ALICE JEAN BRANDON Kansas City, Mo. ELEANOR BROWN Kansas City, Mo. PHYLLIS GILPIN Om ha, Neb. ELLEN HANES Ottawa SHIRLEY HOBBS Kansas City ARLENE JOHNSON Kansas City VIRGINIA JOHNSTON Caldwell BETTY JUZEK Sunflower DOROTHY KOLB Kansas City, Mo. DONNA MERCER Goodland BABARA PAEZ Lawrence BEVERLY PEPPER Topeka DOROTHY QUIRK Kansas City BEATRICE SENOR St. Joseph, Mo. PEGGY TOWNSEND Humboldt EDITH WILLIAMSON Kansas City MARTHA WILLIS Kansas City, Mo. PAT YOUNG Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Johnson, Beth, Travalent, Nordeen, Cattell, Mercer, Beebe Quirk, Letson, Young. SECOND ROW: Tice, Cousins, Scott, Burtscher, M., Spalding, Mrs. Klinkenberg, Lawrence, Williams, Garton, Slier, Dille. THIRD ROW: Thayer, Lemon, Williamson, Hanes, Emerson, Jones, Bloomer, Hoopes, DeNio, Gibson, Brandon, Gilpin, Bready, Barr, Wilson, A., Hobbs FOURTH ROW: ' Townsend, Bennett, Brewer, Nosey, Brown, Dunkley, Web- ster, Juzek, Kolb, Johnston, Belt, Long, Pepper, Mather, M., Senor, Willis, Burtscher, B. NOT IN PICTURE: Mather H., Wilson, W., Poez. ACTIVES MARY HELEN BAKER Bethel MARILYN BARNUM Wichita PAT BARRON Wichita MARY BOVAIRD Tulsa, Okla. BETTY BREWER Bartlesville, Okla. PAT COOK Sarasota, Fla. PAT COOLIDGE . . . . ..Kansas City, Mo. ... MARY CAROLYN DAUGHERTY Pittsburg ISOBEL FAUROT Independence JANE FERRELL Wichita PHYLLIS FRET WELL Pittsburg STELLA GABRIELSON Hutchinson HELEN HEATH Salina BONNIE HOLDEN Pittsburg MARY MARGARET HUSE Tulsa, Okla. SHIRLEY RUSTED Planiville JOAN JACOBS Independence MARTHA LEGLER Leavenworth ISABEL MARTIN Topeka MARY LOU MARTIN Topeka GLORIA MAXWELL Kansas City, Mo. NANCY MESSENGER Pittsburg MARILYN McCLURE El Dorado PATTI NORCROSS Denver, Colo. JEANNE PARROTT Hutchinson ETHEL PEARSON Kansas City, Mo. ROSEMARY ROBISON Mission VALARIE STAGG Tulsa, Okla. MARILYN STEINERT Mission MARIE STEWART Leavenworth PAT ANN STRANG Kansas City, Mo. JANET TAYLOR .. .. . . . Topeka DOROTHY THOMAS Pittsburg RUTH WALTERS Kinsley BETTY WEBB Kansas City, Mo. PLEDGES JOAN BIGHAM Bethel BEVERLY BROOKS Coffeyville BARBARA BROWN Kansas City ANN COWGER Topeka NANCY DAVIS Great Bend HELEN GRAVES Newton AIMEE GUINOTTE Kansas City, Mo. MARY ANN HARWOOD Wichita MARY JANE HORTON Kansas City, Mo. DOROTHY HUDSON El Dorado KATHLEEN LARSON Wamego DOROTHY MILLER Kansas City, Mo. NANCY MOORE Lawrence VIRGINIA OSBORNE Wichita MARY BELLE POLLOCK Kansas City, Mo. FLORA LEE PRINGLE Kansas City ALTHEA VOSS Downs MARGARETTA WHITE Lawrence KAREN YORK Mission Chi Omega was founded April 5, 1895, at the University of Arkansas. Lambda, now one of 100 active chapters, was founded at K. U. in 1902. President, Bonnie Holden; Vice-Presi- dent, Pat Ann Strang; Secretary, Dorothy Thomas; Treasurer, Marie Stewart. FIRST ROW: McClure, Brown, Horton, Stagg, Sudendorf, Pollock, Brewer, Miller, York. SECOND ROW: Fretwel I, Cook, Legler, Thomas, Ferrell, Hol- den, Strong, Stewart, Cool idge, Walters, Faurot, Norcross. THIRD ROW: Guinotte, Davis, Bovaird, M. Martin, Huse, Dougherty, Webb, Barnum, Heath, Baker, Jacobs, Messenger, Martin, Pringle, Hudson, Cowger. FOU RTH ROW: Barron, Voss, Pearson, White, Osborne, Gabrielson, Larson, Brooks, Graves, Hosted, Bighorn, Harwood. 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, Shirley Grigsby; Vice-President, Eunice Carlson; Secre- tary, Helen Dietzel; Treasurer, Mary Kindsvater. PLEDGES MARILYN BROWN Salina PATRICIA BRUBAKER Kansas City, Mo. CATHLEEN COLLINS Wichita DELORES COLLINS Wichita JOANNE DILLON Arlington, Va. MARGARET DOLL Larned CHARLENE FARRELL Sterling WILM A HERSHBERGER Newton JACQUELINE HOUDYSHELL Larned SHIRLEY KYLE Mission, Mo. DONNIS LaGREE Newton MARY MARGARET MOORE McAllen, Texas BARBARA WUERTH Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES JANE ARCHIBALD Ashland EUNICE CARLSON Topeka BONNIE CUNNINGHAM Downs REBECCA DAVIDSON Kansas City HELEN DIETZEL Kansas City, Mo. MARJORIE DINSMORE Lawrence PATRICIA DYE Independence VINA LOU GODDING El Dorado SHIRLEY GRIGSBY Kansas City, Mo. PATRICIA HARRIS Independence EVA HUMPHREY Concordia MARY KINDSVATER Bartlesville, Okla. MARY KLOOZ Lawrence NANCY LUDLOW Kansas City MARY ALICE MARTIN Salida, Colo. NANCY McGRAW Newton BARBARA MEYER Kansas City, Mo. EILEEN O ' BRIEN Kansas City, Mo. DOROTHY O ' CONNOR Hutchinson BERNADINE READ Baxter Springs JEANNE ROSE Bartlesville, Okla. MARY ANN SAWYER Caney MARJORIE SCIDMORE Salina LOUISE SPRINGER Kansas City, Mo. DOROTHY STEPHENSON Independence LA VERNE SWAIN Godfrey, Ill. LYNN TROUSDALE Newton KATHRYN WALTER Kansas City, Mo. DORENE WALLACE Norwich FIRST ROW: Read, LaGree, Farrell, Brubaker, O ' Connor, Ludlow, Hershberger. SECOND ROW: Dye, Wallace, Meyer, Cunningham, Grigsby, Carlson, Kindsvater, Sawyer, Dietzel, O ' Brien. THIRD ROW: Klooz, Swaim, Brown, Dinsmore, Houdyshell, Harris, Martin, Wuerth, Rose, Trousdale, Archibald, C. Collins, Humphrey, D. Collins. FOURTH ROW: McGraw, Stephenson, Dillon, Kyle, Moore, Doll, Springer, Davidson, Gadding, Walter, Scidmore. PLEDGES NANCEE BELL JACKIE CHRISTIAN SHIRLEY CONSTANTOS BARBARA CREEL BARBARA ESTERLE LOIS ANN FULLER VIRGINIA GARD ANN GUYER FRANCES HALL MARGARET HARNESS CAROL HARRIS DONNA HARRISON RITA HARTWELL LOUISE HAVEKORST NANETTE HYER DONNIE JONES LAURABELLE KING MILDRED MARKS MILDRED NAFF MARCILLE PARKER MARGARET WILSON ACTIVES JEANNE ATKINSON Burdick JANE BELT Coffeyville ABIGAIL BIXBY Valley Center BETTY BOLING Leavenworth PATRICIA BROWN Coffeyville CAROL BUHLER Lawrence PEGGY SUE CLOYD Kansas City, Mo. BETTY COMPTON Topeka SHIRLEY CORLETT Rochester, N. Y. MARTHA DUNCAN El Dorado OLIVIA GARVEY Wichita GUINEVERE GOERZ Moundridge ALICE GOLDSWORTHY Minneapolis, Minn. BETTY HAMMAN Wichita MARGARET JEAN HANNA Newton HARRIET HARLOW Kansas City, Mo. GLORIA HILL Freeport, Ill. BETTY HIRLEMAN Wichita BARBARA HOWARD Lawrence BETTE JO JONES Garden City KATHERINE KUBIK Wichita LOIS LINCK Leavenworth ELIZABETH McCLEARY Excelsior Springs, Mo. SHANNON McKIM Kansas City, Mo. JOAN MORRIS Oskaloosa DONNA MUELLER Kansas City, Mo. CAROLYN NIGG Whitewater KATHLEEN O ' CONNOR San Marino, Calif. MARY LOU STANLEY Bethel MARIE TOUHEY Lawrence SARA WEBB . . . . ... . Blue Springs, Mo. GEORGIA LEE WESTMORELAND . Kansas City, Mo. DOROTHY WOOD Kansas City, Mo. Delta Gamma was founded January 2, 1874, at Lewis School, Oxford, Mississippi. Beta Kappa, now one of 55 active chapters, was es- tablished at K. U. in 1940. President, Carolyn Nigg; Vice-President, Shirley Corlett; Secretary, Harriet Harlow; Treasurer, Kay O ' Connor. .1 Kansas City Coffeyville Leavenworth Hutchinson Kansas City, Lawrence Independence, Mo. Wichita Topeka Kansas City, Mo. Kansas City, Mo. El Dorado Wichita Long Beach, Calif. Olathe Emporia Hutchinson Valley Falls Lawrence Wichita Lawrence FIRST ROW: McCleary, Harnes, Hamman, Belt, Garvey, Havekorst, Buhler, Compton, Marks, Kubik, McKim. SECOND ROW: Boling, Webb, O ' Connor, Hirleman, Linck, Nigg, Corlett, Mueller, Westmoreland, Duncan, Hall. ROW: Harlow, Porker, Flyer, Brown, Creel, Goldsworthy, Cloyd, King, Wood, Jones, Goerz, Hill, Bell, Atkinson, Gard, Harrison, Hanna. FOURTH ROW: Morris, Guyer, Constontos, Touhey, Wilson, Esterle, Fuller, Harris, Howard, Bixby, Christan, Hartwell, Jones, B., Stanley. 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, Elizabeth Evans; Vice-President, Mary Ann McClure; Secretary, Patty Kelly; Treasurer, Glenda Leuhring. LNG PLEDGES KATHLEEN BRODE Kansas City, Mo. CAROLYN CARMEAN Carthage, Mo. BETTY CRAWFORD Paola MARGARET DAHLQUIST Garfield MARGARET DICKENSON Kansas City, Mo. GEORGIANNE DUTTON Dodge City MARILYN GIBSON Lawrence INEZ HALL Wichita GLORIA HORN Kansas City, Mo. CATHERINE JARBOE Parsons MARJORIE JENREE Kansas City CHARLENE LASHBROOK Kansas City BETTY MARTIN Lawrence PATTY McCLURE Tulsa, Okla. CHARLOTTE METCALFE Kansas City, Mo. MARY LOU PECKENSCHNEIDER Halstead MARI VIRGINIA STOUT Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES ANN ALLEN Tulsa, Okla. ISOBEL ATWOOD . ....... Olathe BERNICE BRADY Wichita LOLA BRANIT Lee ' s Summit, Mo. BETTY SARA BROTHERS Cherryvale BARBARA BYRD Kansas City, Mo. CAROLINE CARTER Lawrence CORRINE CARTER Lawrence ETTA MAE COOPER El Dorado KATHERINE CULLEY Medicine Lodge ELIZABETH EVANS Winfield ARLEEN FELDKAMP Kansas City DOROTHY FELDKAMP Kanssa City BARBARA ANN FELT Wellington BEVERLY FOX Kansas City, Mo. ROSEMARY GAINES Lawrence MARILYN GLOVER Topeka JEANNE GORBUTT Topeka PEGGY GRABER Hutchinson GRACE GWINNER Dodge City HELEN HARKRADER Pratt CAROL ANN HASTINGS Pratt SARA JANE HEIL Topeka SHIRLEY HOYT Iola NANCY JACKSON Long Beach, Calif. DOROTHY JAMES West Caldwell, N. J. BARBARA JOHNSON Wichita PATTY KELLY Los Angeles, Calif. GERRY KREIDER Chanute LOUISE LAWSON Dallas, Texas MARY LIND Chanute GLENDA LUEHRING Leavenworth JOAN MANUEL Wichita MARY ANN McCLURE Tulsa, Okla. ALIX NEVILLE Kansas City, Mo. SAMMY PEETE Kansas City, Mo. JANETTE POLLOM Lawrence LU ANNE POWELL Kansas City, Mo. MARIAN RIPPETEAU Kansas City, Mo. BERTIE SCHNITZLER Wichita DORIS TIHEN Wichita JUDITH TIHEN Wichita BONNIE VEATCH Washington, D. C. JOAN VICKERS Lawrence FIRST ROW: Brode, Lawson, Gulley, Rippeteou, Stout, Jackson, Hoyt, Lind, McClure, P., Allen„ Lashbrook, Metcalfe. SECOND ROW: James, Brothers, Felt, Luehring, McClure, M., Evans, Mother Baldwin, Heil, Johnson, Feldkamp, A., Veatch. THIRD ROW: Gruber, Gaines, Branit, Horn, Maneul, Kreider, Neville, Cooper, Hastings, Powell, Hall, Harkrader, Fox, Tihen, D., Dahlquist, Brady, Gorbutt. FOURTH ROW: Atwood, Corrine Carter, Peete, Jarboe, Gibson, Glover, Carmean, D. Feldkamp, Crawford, Peckenschneider, Schnitzler, Gwinner, Tihen, J., Pollom, Jenree, Dickinson, Carter, Dutton. NOT IN PICTURE: Vickers, Martin. ACTIVES FRANCES BERNERO St. Marys MARY ANN BROWN Burbank, Calif. VIRGINIA DAUGHERTY Tulsa ,Okla. PHYLLIS DOANE El Dorado MARGARET EBERHARDT Salina JEAN FRANCISCO Kansas City NORMA JEAN GUTHRIE St. Louis, Mo. VIRGINIA JENSEN Emporia CARA KING Topeka JOAN JOSEPH Whitewater VIRGINIA JOSEPH Whitewater CARA KING Topeka EDITH MALOTT Lawrence JANET MALOTT Lawrence KATHLEEN McBRIDE Wichita BETSY McCUNE Tulsa, Okla. MARY LOUISE McNERNEY Hutchinson MARY JANE MERRIMAN Mission MERCEDES MUIR Hutchinson SHIRLEY NEFF Kansas City, Mo. EILEEN O ' CONNOR Wichita MARY KAY PAIGE Topeka JOAN PUCKETT Wichita BETTY SAUDER Wichita JOAN SCHWINN Wellington ANNE SCOTT Pratt JOAN STEVENSON Salina VIRGINIA TOLLE El Dorado PATSY TOMLINSON Greenwich, Conn. JUDY TORREY Kansas City, Mo. SALLY TREMBLY Kansas City, Mo. NANCY VAN BEBBER Lawrence MARY SUE WEIMER Kansas City, Mo. NANCY WELKER Kansas City, Mo. JULIETTE WILLIAMS Kansas City, Mo. VIRGINIA WINTER Lawrence SALLY WINTERSCHEIDT Olathe MARTHA YINGLING Wichita PATRICIA ZACKMAN Kansas City PLEDGES ANN ACKERMAN Evanston, Ill. PATSY CLARDY Wichita BARBARA CONNELL Kansas City, Mo. MARJORIE CRANE Topeka NANCY HAFFNER Kansas City AGNES HUSBAND Burbank, Calif. MARY KATHERMAN Sioux City, Iowa ANN LAWRANCE Lee ' s Summit, Mo. BARBARA NASH Lawrence MARY JEAN OLIVER Newton JEAN PETERSON Kansas City, Mo. LORRAINE ROSS Whitewater MARILYN SMITH Wichita GEORGETTE SPEARS Lawrence SALLY STEPPER Kansas City, Mo. MARY ANN SUDERMAN Newton VIRGINIA WALSH Kansas City, Mo. ANN WARNER Kansas City, Mo. MARY WARNER Oklahoma City, Okla. CAROLYN WEIGAND Leavenworth SALLY SUE WOODWARD Salina Kappa Alpha Theta was founded January 27, 1870, at DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana. Kappa, now one of 67 active chapters was estab- lished at K.U. i44 1881. President, Virginia Win- ter; Vice-President, Margaret Eberhardt; Secretary, Mary Kay Paige; Treasurer, Mary Louise McNer- ney. • FIRST ROW: Schwinn, Yingling, Sauder, Guthrie, Woodward, Spears, Nash, Tolle, Crone, Husband. SECOND ROW: Puckett, Scott, J. Joseph, Paige, Winterscheidt, Winter, Eberhardt, V. Joseph, Merriman, McBride, McNerney. THIRD ROW: Tomlinson, Oliver, Stevenson, McCune, King, A. Warner, M. Hamer, Ackerman, Clardy, E. Malott, Zackman, Trembly, Weimer, Brown, Muir, Suderman. FOURTH ROW: Weigand, O ' Connor, Haffner, Lawrence Kathermon, Connell, Lorrey, J. Malott, Jen-on, Welker, Daugherty, Bernero, Van Bebber.. NOT IN PICTURE: Walsh, Ross, Smith, Peterson, Stepper, Williams, Neff, PLEDGES JOAN BAGBY Kansas City, Mo. JEANNE CHAMBERS Iola MARY MID CHUBB Baxter Springs CAROLYN COLEMAN Wichita DIANE DURHAM Kansas City, Mo. ELAINE ELVIG . ....... Lawrence BARBARA HAYS Lawrence VIRGINIA HARRIS Ottawa JEANNE HILLYER Topeka HELEN KITTLE Kansas City, Mo. VIRGINIA LA RUE Columbus MARY BETH McNALLEY Minneapolis SHIRLEY RICE Salina NANCY RUTHRAUFF Kansas City BETTY JANE SIMS Miami, Okla. NANCY SMART Kansas City, Mo. MARY WILKINS Lawrence PEGGY WOLFE Wichita ZARA ZOELLNER Tonganoxie ACTIVES ANNE ASHLEY Topeka ELLOUISE BARBEE Centerville, Iowa. ELIZABETH BERRY Kansas City, Mo. ELEANOR CHURCHILL Kansas City, Mo. JO ANN COMPTON Kansas City, Mo. POLLY CROSBY Topeka EDITH ELAM Lawrence PATRICIA GLOVER Newton NANCY GOERING Newton MARTHA GOODRICH Topeka NINA GREEN Kansas City, Mo. MAXINE GUNSOLLY Emporia EILEEN HORNER Kansas City NANCY HULINGS Tulsa, Okla. PAULA SUE JERNIGAN Wichita ALISON JONES Lawrence MARTHA LAFFER Wichita LETITIA LAMING Chanute KATHLEEN McKELVEY Atchison EILEEN MALONEY Tulsa, Okla. MARGARET MEEKS , Kansas City MARY MARGARET MORRIS Wichita BARBARA OLSON Wichita HELEN PILLER Great Bend GEORGIANA SEWELL Sabetha ELIZABETH SHEARS Hutchinson BETSY SHEIDLEY Kansas City, Mo. ELIZABETH SIFERS Iola MARY KAY SIMS Miami, Okla. NANCY SLATER Kanass City, Mo. MARJORIE STARK Manhattan DIANE STRYKER Fredonia JOSEPHINE STUCKY Hutchinson CORRINE TEMPLE Wichita SARA UNDERWOOD Lawrence MARY VALENTINE Kansas City, Mo. HARRIET WADDELL Salina Kappa Kappa Gamma was founded October 13, 1870, at Monmouth College, Monmouth, Illinois. Omega, now one of 80 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1883. President, Mary Margaret Morris; Vice-President, Nancy Slater; Secretary, Nina Green; Treasurer, Helen Piller. FIRST ROW: Sims, Ashley, Churchill, Shears, Sheidley, Compton, Waddell, Hillyer, La Rue, Barbee. SECOND ROW: Goodrich, Glover, Temple, Laffer, Goering, Piller, Morris, Slater, Skiers, Berry, Valentine, Olson. THIRD ROW: Sewell, Elvig, Zoellner, Elam, Underwood, Stryker, Kittle, Stuckey, Wil- kins, Jones, Coleman, Gunsoly, Durham, Meeks. FOURTH ROW: Smart, Flutings, Green, Betty Jane Sims, Rice, Bagby, Jernigan, Maloney, McNalley, Hays, Stark, Chubb, Laming. NOT IN PICTURE: Chambers, Horner, Harris, McKelvey, Crosby, Ruthrouff. f PLEDGES BETTY ARMSTRONG Hutchinson CAROLYN CAMPBELL Kansas City, Mo. BETTY DUNNE ............. Wichita JEAN DRESSLER Kansas City, Mo. IVA BELLE FLORA Salina PAT FONCANNON Emporia MARIANNE GEAR Hutchinson MARGARET GRANGER Emporia KATHERINE HOAG Wichita JO ANN HUDSON Kansas City, Mo. CONSTANCE KENDALL Great Bend JOYCE NEWCOMER Kansas City, Mo. BARBARA PACK Kansas City ANN STODDER Wichita MARILYN SWEET Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES PEGGY BAKER Salina CELESTE BEESLEY Bartlesville, Okla. CHARLOTTE BOYLE Kansas City, Mo. BARBARA BURNS Wichita MABLE ELLEN CABLE Kansas City CAROLYN ANN CAMPBELL Kansas City, Mo. FRANCES CHUBB Lawrence COURTNEY COWGILL San Francisco, Calif. SHIRLEY CUNDIFF Kansas City, Mo. MARJORIE DARBY Kansas City CONSTANCE DEAN Topeka GEORGANN EYLER Salina PEGGY FOSTER Kansas City, Mo. ELINOR FRYE Wichita JOAN GARDNER Winfield SHIRLEY GARST Wichita JOY GODBEHERE Kansas City, Mo. RUTH GRANGER Emporia JOANNE GRANT Wichita ADRIENNE HISCOX San Mateo, Calif. BARBARA HUME Kansas City NORMA KENNEDY Kansas City, Mo. MARTHA KEPLINGER Kansas City, Mo. LOUISE LAMBERT Leavenworth ANN LEARNED Bartlesville, Okla. NANCY LOVE Wichita MARILYN MARSH New York City, N. Y. SUE NEWCOMER Kansas City, Mo. SALLY PEGUES Hutchinson ELIZABETH PRIEST Wichita MARTHA RINGLER Lawrence SALLY ROWE Lawrence JOANN RUESE Lawrence SARA JAYNE SCOTT Kansas City, Mo. EDITH STODARD Burlingame ANN STANTON Leavenworth MARY VARNER Wichita MARY ALICE WHITE Kansas City, Mo. JOAN WOODWARD Milwaukee, Wis. Pi Beta Phi was founded April 28, 1869, at Monmouth College, at Monmouth, Illinois. Kansas Alpha, now one of 91 active chapters. was established at K.U. in 1873. President, Carolyn Campbell; Vice-President, Mary Var- ner; Secretary, Joy Godbehere; Treasurer, Ad- rienne Hiscox. FIRST ROW: Foncannon, Kendall, Pegues, Garst, Stodder, Stodard, Hume, Stanton, Dressler. SECOND ROW: Woodward, Kennedy, Baker, God- behere, Varner, C. Campbell, Priest, Hiscox, Chubb, Scott, Love. THIRD ROW: R. Granger, Dean, Cable, Hoag, C. Campbell, Beesley, Burns, Frye, Boyle, Cundiff, S. Newcomer, Cowgill J. Newcomer, Darby. FOURTH ROW: Sweet, Eyler, Learned, Lambert, Hudson, Foster, M. Granger, Armstrong, Pack, Flora, Ringler, White, Rowe. NOT I N PICTURE: Gardner, Marsh, Gear, Ruese. Sigma Kappa was founded in 1874 at Colby College in Waterville, Maine. Xi, now one of 52 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1913. President, Alice Hobbs; Vice-President, Jewel Mischler; Secretary, Zelina Higgenbot- tom; Treasurer, Sue Webster. PLEDGES AVANELLE ALLEN Sedan JOANNE ALTON Kansas City, Mo. DOROTHY BALDWIN Ft Leavenworth MARY LOU BREWER Kansas City, Mo. NITA BREWSTER Lawrence BARBARA BURKHOLDER McPherson BILLIE ANN CARTER Kansas City, Mo. DIANE DANLEY Wichita NANCY LEE DIXON Kansas City, Mo. TOLENE DUDLEY Hugoton CAROL DUNN Garden City ALYCE FAWKES Independence, Mo. ARETA HEMPHILL Lawrence PHYLLIS JONES Lawrence PEGGY MILLER Langdon PHYLLIS MOWERY Dighton BILLIE NAVE Lee ' s Summit, Mo. CHARLOTTE REAMS Abilene RUTH ROUTON Merriam PAT SMITH Lawrence JOYCE STEHLEY Kansas City, Mo. PAT WATSON Kansas City, Mo. JEAN YOUNG Hardtner ACTIVES Ir PATRICIA BEHLER Mission BETTY BLACK Ottawa JEAN BOWERSOX Arkansas City BARBARA BURNHAM Scotia, N. Y. ANN CLIFFORD Kansas City, Mo. OLIVE JEAN GRIMES Kansas City SHIRLEY GUENTHER . Kansas City, Mo. FRANCES HADLEY Topeka BARBARA HANLEY Kansas City, Mo. HELEN HENDRIX Independence, Mo. KATHRYN HESSLING Lawrence ZELINA HIGGINBOTTOM Lawrence ALICE HOBBS Topeka MARTHA BELLE HOGAN Rock Springs, Wyo. RITA HORNING Topeka MARTHA JEWETT Lawrence MARY JEWETT Lawrence DONNA KAPP Ottawa GERALDA KEESEE San Francisco, Calif. NORA MARIE MASON Chicago, Ill. JEWELL MISHLER Richmond DONNA De MUNN Garden City RUTH MURPHY Salina GERALDINE OTT Madison PEGGY RENN Wellington JOAN RETTIG Fredonia BETTY SARGENT Wichita MARTHA SIDENER Mullinville DIANA SMITH Colby JEANNE SMITH Topeka SHIRLEY SPARLING Kansas City, Mo. JACQUELINE WALKER Beverly Hills, Calif. SUE WEBSTER Garden City DOROTHY WHEAT Kansas City FIRST ROW: Ott, Stehley, Dixon, Clifford, Allen, Carter, Hendrix, Nave, Mowery, Guenther, Watson. SECOND ROW: Black, Webster, Higginbottom, Mishler, Hobbs, Mrs. Younkman, Wheat, Murphy, Grimes, Behler, Munn. THIRD ROW: Fawkes, Dudley, Walker, Reams, Burkholder, Routon, Dunn, Hanley, Smith, Mason, Alton, Spading, Keesee, Brewer, Hogan, Hemphill, Baldwin. FOURTH ROW: Sidener, Rettig, Bowersox, Horning, Kapp, Miller, Young, Donley, Sargent, Brewster, Renn, Hessling, Hadley, Jones, Burn ham. 4:0101 MARIE CREEGAN ROZANNE CROFF EVA DESIDERIO CONNIE HERRERA Kansas City, Mo. Fresno, Calif. Independence, Mo. Wichita PLEDGES PHYLLIS FANGMAN Seneca DENISE OWENS Hutchinson PATRICIA PATTEN Kansas City, Mo. CAROL PROCHASKA Ellsworth JEAN SULLIVAN Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES EVALYN HONOMICHL Lucas GERALDINE KOELZER Seneca BETTE KRENZER Kansas City, Mo. HELEN LADEEN STEINKERCHNER Newton Theta Phi Alpha, a Catholic social fraternity, was founded in 1912 at the University of Mich- igan in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Iota, now one of 14 active chapters established at K. U. in 1921, was reactivated this fall. President, Marie Creegan; Vice-President, Connie Herrera; Sec- retary, Rozanne Croff ; Treasurer, Jerry Koelze r. II FIRST ROW: Honomichl, Steinkerchner, Mrs. Patterson, Creegan, Croft, K renzer. SECOND ROW: Desiderio, Koelzer, Herrera, Fongman, Prochaska, Owens, Sullivan, Patten. lu Corbin Hall was established as a women ' s residence in the fall of 1925. President, Ruth Brown; Vice-President. Larson Bernelda; Sec- retary, Ruth Mitchell; Treasurer, Marie Horse- man. RESIDENTS BETTY AHNERT St. John MARTHA ALDRIDGE Kansas City JO ANN ALKRIE Belleville JANE ANDERSON Hiawatha. JERRY AYERS Neosho MARY ELLEN BARKER Kansas City BETTY BARKIS Kansas City MARION BATES Perry JOANNE BEAMER Kansas City, Mo. MARGARET BELTZ Kansas City PHYLLISS BETTS Oberlin RUBY BIEWENER Newton BETTY BOOTH Pleasant Hill, Mo. MARJORIE BOURLAND Cottonwood Falls BARBARA BOWMAN Kansas City JO ANN BOYER Olathe ELIZABETH BRADNEY Columbus CHARLENE BREITENBACH Belpre RUTH BROWN Sabetha JEAN BULLOCK Glasco PATRICIA BURNHAM Wichita BETTY BYAM Kansas City, Mo. ESTHER CHRISTIANSON Mission PEGGY CIRCLE Kiowa HAROLYN CLARK Newton PHYYLLIS CLEGG Columbus MARJORIE COURTRIGHT McDonald RUTH COURTRIGHT McDonald GERALDINE CUDDY Hoisington BETTE DAVIS Hiawatha PHYLLIS DEBUS Kansas City ALICE DEGNER Claflin PATRICIA DOSIEN Bentley MARY VIRGINIA DOUGLAS Edgewood, Pa. VIRGINIA DRESSLER Claflin JO ANN EDWARDS Kansas City DOROTHY ENGLUND Salina SHIRLEY ESPLUND Bloom FRANCES FALEN Elmo CHARITY FISCHER Mt Vernon, Iowa VIRGINIA FOGELSTROM Junction City MARY LOU FOLEY Kansas City LORRAINE FOR ESTER Hazelton MARJORIE GARTEN Newton BILLIE GEORGE Altamont WILMA GEPPELT Mound City BETTY GREEN Hutchinson JOAN GREGORY Kansas City MARGARET GRUENTHAL Glasco MILDRED GULNIK Kansas iCty LOUISE HAMILTON ' Medicine Lodge MARGORIE HAMPTON Ulysses YVONNE HAMMER Claflin LUCILLE HARLOW Bonner Springs MARY HELEN HARPER Lake Charles, La. LA VERLA HARRIS Concordia PAT HARRIS Concordia DOROTHY HARTER Caldwell MARILYN HARTER Caldwell BETTY HATCHER Plains JESSIE LEE HELENTHAI St Joseph, Mo. BETTY HENNING Belpre RUBY HENNINGSEN Topeka DOROTHY HOG AN Salina DOROTHY HOOVER Smith Center IONE IMTHURN Cottonwood Falls LOIS MARIE JAMISON Quinter MARGARET HOHN Hiawatha VERNILLE JONES Manhattan JEANNE KAHN Ka-isas City, Mo. JEANNINE KAHN Kansas City, Mo. MARGARET KELLY Kansas City FIRST ROW: Bullock, Forester, Henningsen, McGovney, Byarn, Hamilton, Burnham, Hammer, Dressler. SECOND ROW: Falen, Betts, Degner, Beltz, George, Novak, Bourland, Jeannine Kahn, Beamer, Davis. THIRD ROW: Gruenthal, Riffer, D. Harter, R. F. Mitchell, B. Larson, Brown, Mrs. Brown, R. L. Mitchell, Jamison, Ringwald, Brodney, Von Morer, Boyer, L. Harris, Jones, Bates, Edwards, Green, Booth, Hoover, Gregory, Circle, Grilnik. FOURTH ROW: Clark, Barkis, Richert, Harlow, Harper, Englund, Dosien, M. Harter, Fischer, P. Norris, John, Foley, Helenthol, Gep- pelt, Ayers, Anderson, Alkire, Kelly, Clegg. FIFTH ROW: M. Courtright, Noe, Christianson, Hatcher, Debus, Douglas, Hampton, Cuddy, Fogelstrom, R. Courtright, Esplund, Aldrdge, Hogan, lmthurn, Bowman, Garten, Barker, Breitenbach. A GENEVA LAMEN Frankfort ANN LAMENDOLA Columbus PATRICIA LANDER Kansas City BERNELDA LARSON Belleville REBECCA LARSON Robinson VIRGINIA LARSON Robinson LOIS LAUER Abilene DONNA LEWIS Belleville RUTH ELLEN LEWIS Kansas City, Mo. MARY LOBOUGH Washington .. MARGARET LOWE Olathe LYNN LUCAS Excelsior Springs, Mo. ELAINE MAGNER Parsons PATTI McCLATCHEY Eldorado, Ark. VIRGINIA McDREA Topeka PATRICIA McGOVNEY Freeport SHARON McKIM Vliets CECILIA MEDVED Kansas City DOROTHY MICHAEL Kansas City, Mo. MARION MILLA Gorham KATHERYN MITA Wahiawa, Oahu, T. H. RUTH F. MITCHELL Waldo RUTH L. MITCHELL Kansas City ANNA LUCIA MOO JEN Rio de Janeiro MARY ETHEL MOORE Bloom MARGIE LEE MORRIS Washington EVA MORROW Leroy SUE ROSE MOUNCE . . . .. . St. Joseph, Mo. MARJORIE MYERS Topeka VADA NICHOLAS Johnson PAULINE NIXON Ogolaah ANNE NOE Topeka CARAL NOVAK Wilson JERRY OSMER Wamego DENISE OWEN Hutchinson DOROTHY PARK Hilo, Hawaii ZOLA PARKE Kansas City YVONNE PARKERSON Junction City ANN PATERSON Topeka JEANNE PECK Horton MARTHA PENNOCK Longmont, Colo. BETTY PINKNEY Ford MARY PICKNEY Ford BEVERLY PYKE Strong City ELSIE RANDAL Kansas City JOAN RANEY Ellsworth MARILYN RANEY Syracuse MONA RATZLAFF Lakin ELIZABETH REGIER Moundridge ALICE REISS St. Joseph, Mo. ROSE RESOVICH Kansas City ROSALIE RHOADES Wakeeney FRANCES RICHERT Newton MARILYN RIFFER Centralia ARDELLA RINGWALD Oakley IRMA RIPPEY Helena, Mo. MARGARET ROBINSON Kansas City JOAN RODGERS Lyndon ESTELLE ROESLER Claflin VIRGINIA ROESLER Claflin JEAN SCHMIDT Whitewater MARVEL SENTI Junction City WILMA SHORE Big Bow KATHERYN SHOWALTER Wichita SHIRLEY SHRIVER Coats EVELYN SKONBERG Osage City HELEN SLAYBA UGH St. Joseph, Mo. BARBARA SMITH Hope NANCY SMITH Pittsburg HELEN SOUTHERLAND Kansas City ELLEN SPURNEY Belleville ELIZABETH STENZEL Hoisington SYLVIA STEPHENS Kansas City, Mo. BILLIE STILLMAN Bushton CONNIE St. LAWRENCE Maybelle MARY BETH STUART Rolla BETTY JO SUITER Macksville BETTY SWART Oakley ETHEL SWART Oakley MARION SWOYER Oskaloosa CATHERINE TRIBBLE Garnett CLETA VAN MARTER Grinell ANA MARIA VAZQUEZ Lima, Peru JOYCE WALKER Oxford CONSTANCE WALRUFF Olathe MARION WALTERS Ulysses BEULAH WARD Highland MARTHA WEBB Topeka MARGARET WELLMAN McLough JEANNE WELSH Hoisington ELAINE WHITE Edwardsville MELBA WHITING Downs PHYLLIS WILCOX Trousdale MARY YOST Topeka JOAN YOUNG Westphalia EVA ZUMBRUNNER Louisberg FIRST ROW: Vazquez, Welsh, Lobaugh, Walker, Kahn, Moore, Nicholas, Pennock, Resovich, Smith, B. Park, Tribble, Lewis, R., Lowe, W Magner, Senti, WeIlmcn, White, Paterson. THIRD ROW: Wilcox, St. Law Larson, V., Pinkrey, M., Mita. FOURTH ROW: Smity, N., Peck, Myers P , Roesler, V., Yost, Wolters, Regier, Spurney, Medved, Swart, E., Robin B , Young, Ratzlaff, Stephens, Morris, Lamendola, Mounce, Stenzel, Osm Parke, Milla Moojen, Raney, J. SECOND ROW: Rodgers, Nixon, Lander, ard, Lucas, McClatchey, Raney,M., Lewis, D., Morrow, Randal, Swoyer, rence, Stillman, Webb, Swart, B., Michael, Reiss, Whiting, Rippey, Lauer, arkerson, Bieweaer, Southerland, Shriver, Larson, R., Shore, Roesler, son. FIFTH ROW: Hhoodes, Suiter, Slaybough, McKim, Showalter, Pinkney, er, Pyke, McCrea, Owen, Sumbrunnen, Skonberg. Foster Hall became an organized women ' s residence in 1943. President, Hilda James; Vice-president, Roberta Sanderson; Secretary, Mary Lou Bienhoff; Treasurer, Frances Wolf- skill. RESIDENTS RUTH BARMAN Kansas City, Mo. BEVERLY BAUMER Hutchinson ZELMA BEISINGER St. Joseph, Mo. MARY LOU BIENHOFF Kansas City, Mo. ESTHER BLACK Peru ALETA BROWN Henderson, Nev. BEVERLY BUEHLER Bushton MARTHA CANNON Russel CAROL COLE Iola TERRY COLTON Mission VIRGINIA CUDDY Bethany, Mo. HERBERTA DARBY Washington BERNADINE DAWKINS South Haven FRANCES FEE Phillipsburg GENEVIEVE GAINES Peabody WANDA GOOD Garnett CLAIRE GROTHUSEN Parsons DOROTHY HAHN Healy LORENE HAHN Healy JUNE HAYS Stillwater BETTY HAYWOOD St. Joseph, Mo. HELEN HUMPHREY Kansas City, Mo. MARTHA HUTCHINSON Marysville, Mo. HILDA JAMES Belleville PATRICIA JAMES Lawrence MARGARET KING Stafford MARY KOCH Emporia PHYLLIS KRAFT Lake Forest, Edwardsville ANNE LONG Kansas City, Mo. LINDA NIEMEYER Oak Park, Ill. ELVERA OPPLIGER Lincoln BETTY JANE ORLOWSKI Leavenworth MARY PACE Parsons ELIZABETH POSORNOW Olathe ROBERTA SANDERSON Marysville DOLORIS SHADE Brookville BETTY LOU SHARP Dighton JEANNE SISSON, Kincaid WANDA SISSON Kincaid KATHLEEN SLOAN Wichita SALLY SMITH Akron, Ohio BEVERLY THOMPSON Kansas City, Mo. ELLEN WILSON Allen FRANCES WOLFSKILL Kansas City, Mo. CHARLOTTE WYLIE Clay Center FIRST ROW: Orlowski, Darby, Colton, Cannon, Shade, Sharp, Beisinger, Black, Humphrey. SECOND ROW: Baumer, Koch, Bienhoff, James, Mrs. J. R Scott, Sanderson, Wolfskill, Posornow, Hutchinson. THIRD ROW: Hahn, Wylie, Sisson, Sloan, Dawkins, Grothusen, Long, Oppliger, King, James, P., Barman, Thompson, Hahn, D. FOURTH ROW: Sisson J., Fee, Hays, Niemeyer, Wilson, Buehler, Cuddy, Brown, Gaines, Good, Hayward, Cole. NOT IN PICTURE: Kroft, Pace, Smith. 4ftsf)AvadoesrANO4 RESIDENTS GLENNA ANDERSON Minneapolis GERALDINE BABBITT Oberlin JOAN BREMER Oberlin MILDRED CRANDALL Cornign ELLEN DUFORD Marshall, Mo. VERNA EDWARDS Kansas City DARLENE FIELDER Enterprise MARGARET HEATWOLE Coleman, Texas SHERYL HOLLAND Kansas City, Mo. ANN HUNTER Harper RUTH KELLER Gardner JOHANN KENDALL Topeka ELIZABETH LAUGHLIN Hoisington SHIRLEY LIEM Overland Park MARILYN LINDBERG Topeka ROSE ANN MADDEN Baton Rouge HELEN MANKA Burns DOROTHY MARVIN Oberlin EDRIS McCARTY Medicine Lodge DARLENE McDOWELL Kansas City, Mo. HELEN MILLER Ottawa, Ill. CLARICE JEAN MOORHOUSE Cheney JEAN OBERHELMAN Topeka VIRGINIA PATCH Kansas City, Mo. FRANCES ROADY Hoisington MARGARET ROADY Hoisington FRANCES ROBSON , Herrington MILDRED ROWE Wellman, Iowa KATHERINE ANN SMITH Wellington KATHRYN ANN SMITH Yates Center BARBARA STAPLETON Topeka ROSE MARIE TRUESDEL Concordia EVELYN WHITE Kansas City MARILYN WISDOM Leavenworth Kansas City, Mo. Jolliffe Hall became an organized women ' s residence in February, 1943. President, Barbara Stapleton; Vice-President, Mary Jo Young; Sec- retary-Treasurer, Marilyn Lindberg. MARY JO YOUNG r FIRST ROW: Babbitt, Edwards, White, Bremer, Rowe. SECOND ROW: Hunter, Lindberg, Madden, Stapleton, Mrs. Lawson, R. Kite, Young, Liem, Fiedler, McCarty. THIRD ROW: Smith, Truesdell, Anderson, Kendall, W isdom, Crandall, F. Ready, Robson, Duford. FOURTH ROW: Moorhouse, Patch, Marvin, Oberhelmon, Miller, Keller, Laughlin, Heatwole. NOi IN PICTURE: Holland, Manka. 1 Miller Hall became an organized women ' s residence in 1937. President, Mary Lee Master- son; Vice-President, Janice Oehrle; Secretary, Berniece Stroup; Treasurer, Marie Scheiber. N.- RESIDENTS GEORGIANNA BEUNINGTON El Dorado LABOYTE BLOXOM Pratt DONNA MAE BOWER Stanley MARY CARTER Kansas City JOAN CLOUGH Lawrence VIRGINIA DAVID Cherryvale JOAN DEGANHARDT Kansas City MARTHA JO EASTER Abilene JOY ESCH Cherryvale DOROTHEA FULLER Coffeyville BERNIECE GRAVES Dighton HARRIET GRAVES Dighton CAROLINE HAMMA Hutchinson MAXINE HELLER Hunter MARY FRANCES HERCULES Carbondale ADREA HINKLE Concordia MAXINE HOLSINGER Prescott MARY VAN HOUTEN Lenox, Iowa BERNICE HUGHES Waldron DONNA MAE HULL Clay Center MARJEAN KENT Florence NAIDA KRAUSE Waverly ROSEMARY LAUDREY Kansas City LAUREL L. LECKRON Abilene JUANITA LEWIS Topeka MARYLYN MARKS Topeka MARYLEE MASTERSON Columbus DOLORES MITSCHKE Kansas City BILLIE JEAN MOORE Kansas City YVONNE MORROW Neodesha SHIRLEY NELSON Salina MARJORIE NEWELL Ozawkie JANICE OEHRLE Overbrook NONA PRETTYMAN Pleona CHARLOTTE PRINGLE Kansas City, Mo. JOYCE ROHRER Abilene BILLIE JEAN ROTERMUND Independence, Mo. MARY HELEN RYDER Kansas City, Mo. MARIE SCHREIBER Salina PEGGY SCOTT Topeka DOROTHY SCROGGY Wichita ANNA MARIE SIEMERS Blue Rapids BERNIECE STROUP Fontana RITA SWEARINGEN Leavenworth PATRICIA WATERMAN Washington FAYE WILKINSON Cherryvale PATRICIA WILLIAMS Clay Center VIRGINIA WILSON Chanute FIRST ROW: Carter, Williams, Hercules, Scott, Moore, Easter, Hinkle, Esch, Ryder, Leckron. SECOND ROW: Prettyman, Hull, Fuller, Scroggy, Schrei- ber, Masterson, Mother Roche, Oehrle, Stroup, Graves, Clough, Beunington, Graves. THIRD ROW: Nelson, Wilson, Degenhardt, Hamma, Swearingen, Morrow, Houten, Siemers, Lewis, Bloxom, Holsinger, Rotermund, Wilkinson. FOURTH ROW: Waterman, Krause, Bower, Kent, Hughes, Rohrer, Newell, Heller, Mitschke, Pringle, Laudrey, David, Marks. RESIDENTS Ottawa Topeka Elkhart Junction City Humboldt Parsons Kansas City, Mo. Herington Sabetha Coffeyville Iola BARBARA FLETCHER Kansas City, Mo. BETTY FORDEMWALT Mission JOAN GRAY Topeka BETTY HANSON Caldwell LORIT A HIGGINBOTTOM Winfield JO ANN HOLDEMAN Auburn, Ind. MARIE JACKSON Parker C ARLEEN JACOBSON Horton MARILYN JAMISON Bartlesville, Okla. ANN KEEFE Kansas City, Mo. CALRA JANE LUTZ Hoisington ALBERTA MOE Kinsley THELMA REGIER Kansas City VIVIAN ROGERS Hoisington VIRGINIA SCHEUBER Peru, Ill. MRS. ALBERT SCHRUMPF Lawrence VIRGINIA SHIMER Topeka BEVERLY SMITH Dodge City JOAN SMITH Montezuma MARY FLO SPILLMAN Fredonia ELIZABETH SPRATT Weston, Mo. SUE STINSON St. Joseph, Mo. LOIS TIMKEN Cimarron NORMA TURPIN Scott City GRACE VANIMAN Salina HAZEL WATHEN Platte City, Mo. HARRIET YOUNT Fremont, Mich. Templin Hall became an organized women ' s residence in the fall of 1946. President, Vir- ginia Shinner; Vice-president, Lorita Higgin- bottom; Secretary, Mary Flo Spillman; Treas- urer, Connie Cultra; House Manager, Beverly Smith. VHi ROSEMARY ALDERMAN MARSHA BAKER RUTHENE BAKER AILEEN BEAL ELEANOR BRADFORD BETTY BRYANT EVALYN CLAUGH CONNIE CULTRA MILDRED DEAVER JOAN DEEDS RUTH DUDLEY FIRST ROW: Deaver, Hanson, Regier, Jamison, Groy, Stinson. SECOND ROW: Jacobson, Clough, Sprott, Higginbottom, Schrumpf, Shimer, Cultra, Fordeme ' olt, Deeds. THIRD ROW: Lutz, Wothen, Beal, Smith, Rogers, Vanirnan, Spillman, Bcker. NOT IN PICTURE: Dudley, Haldeman, Yount, Smith. RESIDENTS JUNE ALLEN Horton EULALA BAIRD Hunter JEANNETTE BOLAS Kansas City, Mo. ETTA JEAN CALVERT Waverley ESTHER CALVIN Pittsburgh CLARA ETHEL CHILDERS Kansas City MARY LOU DAVIS Blue Mound FLORENCE DICKERSON Meade HARRIET EASTER Abilene BETTY EDMONDS Blue Mound JO ANN ELDER El Dorado SHIRLEY FRENCH Topeka BARBARA GLOVER Caldwell JOAN HARRIS ;. Caldwell NORMA HAWKINS Quenemo EVELYN HOFFMAN Ottawa DORRA LOIS HOSM Topeka JANE HYDE Topeka MARTHA HYDE Topeka MOLLY KELLY Montrose BILLIE JOAN KENT Humboldt MARGARET LAWRENCE Merriam ROSEMARY LEVI Kansas City CORINNE LOCKE Erie EDNA MAE LUCENBERGER Washington CHRISTINE MANN Junction City ELEANOR McHARG El Dorado ESTHER McKINNEY Hartford CAROLYN MILLER Oberlin MARION MINOR Hutchinson GLORIA NEELY Pomona ALVERTA NIEDERS Dighton MARTHA OATMAN independence, Mo. JANE PETERSON Osage City SHERL A PIPKIN Cheney ANNA PRETTYMAN Pleona NORMA REHBERG Bennington CAROLE RUHLER Clay Center JANET RUMMER Wichita JESSIMAI SHIDLER Winchester BARBARA SHIPP Paola ROSELYN SKONBERG Osage City BEVERLY STEMBER Ozawkie ANNETTE STOUT Rothville, Mo. JOAN STROWIG Concordia CHARLOTTE THOMAS Perry CONNIE WATERMAN Washington JOAN WEBSTER Scott City IRIS WORMER Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Pipkin, Skonberg, Member, Childers, Edmonds, Thomas, Lawrence, Neely, Luenberger. SECOND ROW: Baird, Wormer, Davis, Stout, Strowig, Willard, Mann, Rummer, Holm, Hyde, Bolas, Prettyman. THIRD ROW: Hawkins, Peterson, Kelly, Shidler, Hoffman, Calvert, Minor, Kent, Ruhlen, Allen, Shipp, Rehberg, Oatman, Elder. FOURTH ROW: Glover, Easter, Calvin, Dickerson, Waterman, Harris, Webster, Niedens, French, McKenney, Locke, McHarg, Hyae, Levi. • T Watkins Hall was established as a women ' s residence in 1926. President, Joan Strowig; Vice-president, Christine Mann; Secretary, Janet Rummer; Treasurer, Mary Lou Davis; House Manager, Annette Stout. Campus House became an or- ganized women ' s residence in 1939. President, Helen Kaiser,. Secretary-Treasurer, Betty Jeanne Sneary; Social Chairman, Martha Myers. FIRST ROW: Woodburn, Norquest, Pretz, Goode, Kaiser, Simpson, Jack. SECOND ROW: Colbert, Myers, Bales, Connor, Dunkleberg, Nevitt, Sceary Schreck, Marshall, Jacobus NOT IN PICTURE: Martin, Kaiser. `I tl RESIDENTS SHIRLEY BALES Emporia MARGE COLBERT Kansas City, Mo. HARRIET CONNER Atchison MAXINE DUNKLEBERG Osborne NANCY JACK Mission ROBERTA JACOBUS Wichita HELEN KAISER Kansas City IRENE MARSHALL Reading DAISY MARTIN Meridan MARTHA MYERS Norwich DELIA ANN NEVITT Moran NAOMI NORQUEST Fredonia BETTY PRETZ Olathe MARY SCHRECK Welda LAVONNE SIMPSON . ..... Norwich BETTY JEANNE SNEARY Welda IDA MAE WOODBURN Lawrence j T 11 RESIDENTS WILMA JEAN ANDERSON Kinsley MERIBAH BARRETT Arlington EMALOUISE BRITTON Columbus KATHERINE BURKEPILE Hoxie GERALDINE CATTLETT Columbus NANCY COLE Rahway, N. J. WILMA JEAN FEURBORN Richmond PATRICIA GRAHAM Winfield BARBARA HAMILTON Pratt HELEN HASTINGS Lexington, Ill. NANCY HESSEL Liberty, Mo. DORIS KLEINE Kansas City, Mo. NINA LULL Topeka JUNE MALLORY Buckland FRANCES NEAL Mission CHARLENE OLIVER Kansas City, Mo. PHYLLIS ' OLIVER Culver LETA JEAN RAMSDELL Burlington SARA SCHOPPENHORST Higginsville, Mo. DOROTHY STEPHENSON Winfield JANE TIPPIN Wichita MAXINE WELLS Paola JOAN WILSON Lincoln ELNORA LOU WYCOFF Solomon MELBA JEAN YOUNG Wichita DAR ENE ZIMMERMAN Centerville FIRST ROW: Barrett, Ramsdell, Wells, Stephenson, Klein. SECOND ROW: Tippin, Burkepile, Oliver, Milbo Neal, Oliver, Mallory. THIRD ROW: Hastings, Wilson, Cole, Zimmerman, Anderson, Feurborn, Cattlett, Wycoff, Hamilton, Lull. NOT IN PICTURE: Schoppenhorst, Britton, Graham, Young. Carruth Hall became an or- ganized women ' s residence in 1946. President, Phyllis Oliver,. Vice-President, Jane Tippin; Sec- retary, Sara Shoppenhorst: Treas- urer, Katherine Burkepile. Delta Sigma Theta was founded at Howard University, Washington, D. C., in 1913. Psi, now one of 160 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1924. President, Lorna Green; Vice- President, Shirley Elliot; Secre- tary, Louise Gross; Treasurer, Flora Parker. FIRST ROW: Givan, Johnson, Green, Clark, Govan, Brockin gton. SECOND ROW: Elliott, Kerford, Vickers, . Parker, Morrison, Riley, Hamms, Clemmons. NOT IN PICTURE:: Gross, Kerford, Dooley, Walker, Singer, Smith, Dooley. E MEMBERS I MARY BROCKINGTON Kansas City ROSANNE CLARK Kansas City BEATRICE CLEMMONS Kansas City EUNICE MAE DOOLEY Pittsburg MYRTLE DOOLEY Lawrence SHIRLEY ELLIOTT Newton FLORENCE GOVAN Kansas City IDA GOVAN Kansas City LORNA GREEN Kansas City LOUISE GROSS Kansas City SARAH HAMMS Kansas City THERESA JOHNSON Kansas City CAROLYN KERFORD Lawrence ELEANOR KERFORD Atchison BARBARA MORRISON Lawrence FLORA PARKER Kansas City EDNA RILEY Muskogee, Okla. GWENDOLYN SINGER Kansas City ELIZABETH JO SMITH Kansas City MARIE PEARL VICKERS Kansas City OCTAVIA WALKER Hugoton MN NAP RESIDENTS ELEANOR ANDERSON Lindsborg JOYCE MAMIGONIAN PHOEBE AURELL McPherson MAXINE McVICKER RUTH BERTSCH Carlton DORIS MEINECKE BARBARA CHAPIN Emporia BETTY RATZLAFF VIDA CUMMINS Holyrood MARYBETH REA DORIS DENNIS Trenton, Mo. RUTH RICHARDSON MARILYN DETTER Madison WILMA ROSE IRENE FLORY Lawrence NELDA STEFFEY SHIRLEY HARCLERODE Iola EVELYN STOLL BETTY HARGES Pueblo, Colo. PAT TURPIN JEAN HATFIELD Valley Falls PATRICIA WAITS DIANE JOHNSON McPherson BEVERLY WILBUR VERA JOHNSON Garnett AUDREY WOODBURY NORMA JEAN KESTERSON Kansas City ALITA YORK Wichita Talmage Wichita Wichita Branson, Mo. Long Island Kansas City, Mo. Valley Falls Yates Center Kansas City, Mo. Nickerson Augusta Boone, Colo. Lawrence FIRST ROW: Govan, Johnson, Green, Clark, Govan, Brockington. SECOND ROW: Elliott, Kerford, Vickers, Chapin, Johnson, Dennis, Latimer, Ratzlaff, Harges, Cummins, Rose. THIRD ROW: McVicker, Aurell, Woodbury, Wilbur, Meinecke, Mamigonian, Stoll, Richardson, Detter, Kesterson, Steffey, Rea. Harmon Co-op became an organized women ' s residence in the fall of 1942. President, Doris Dennis; Vice-President, Doris Jean Meinecke; Secretary. Patricia W aits;Treasurer, Betty Jean Ratz- laf. f • Henley House was organized in the fall of 1945 as a women ' s co-op. President, Margaret Con- nelly; Vice-President, N an c y Smith; Secretary, Marilyn Rust; Treasurer, Joyce Harkleroad. FIRST ROW: Moya, Connolly, Smith, Kerford, Green. SECOND ROW: Smith, Harlderwood, Rust, Covert, Hilde- brand, Elliot. NOT IN PICTURE: Pinkston. fh RESIDENTS MARGARET CONNELLY Topeka CAROLYN COVERT Abilene SHIRLEY ELLIOT Newton LORNA GREEN Kansas City JOYCE HARKLEROAD Whitewater WILMA HILDEBRAND Fowler Ti ii ELEANOR KERFORD Atchison ISABEL MOYA Cartago, Costa Rica DOROTHY PINKSTON Arkansas City MARILYN RUST Sao Paulo, Brazil NANCY SMITH Kansas City MR. AND MRS. RALPH SMITH Wichita T RESIDENTS BETTY JEAN ANDERSON Parsons MEREDITH BAXTER. Madison CATHERINE BENNETT Kansas City, Mo. ALICE A. FITZGERALD Atchison MARJORIE JEAN FORTUNE Kansas City, Mo. IMOGENE FRACK Ingalls LAVAUGHN HODGSON Garnett SUE JONES Billings, Okla. BETTY LOU KETCHUM Kansas City DELORES M. LANGEL Sterling MARILYNN LEE Augusta BETTY JOE LORBEER Neodesha MARGIE McCULLOUGH Kansas City EMILY SCHNABEL Kansas City JULIA SCHNABEL Kansas City SHIRLEY SLOAN Kansas City JOSEPHINE SKELTON London, Ontario, Canada TWYLA TALBERT Neodesha BETTY JOAN THARP Kansas City NORMA LEE THOMPSON Neodesha BILOINE WHITING Independence, Mo. COLLEEN YOHE Hutchinson FIRST ROW: J. Schnabel, Ketchum, Fortune, Tharp, Lorbeer. SECOND ROW: Tolbert, Hodgson, Thompson, Baxter, Mrs. Nusbaum, McCullough, Whiting, Shelton. THIRD ROW: Lange!, track, Fitzgerald, Lee, Yohe, Ander- son, Jones, Sloan, E. Schnabel, Bennett. Hillcrest House became an or- ganized women ' s residence in 1947, President, Meredith Bax- ter; Vice-President, Marjorie Mc- cullough; Secretary, B i l o a n e Whiting; Treasurer, Norma Lee Thompson. Hopkins Hall became an or- ganized women ' s residence in the fall of 1944. President, Aires- worth; Vice-President, Carol Crow; Secretary, Kathleen Mc- Kinney; Treasurer, Eloise Eitzen, FIRST ROW: Freeman, Petrowsky, Varnum, Garcia, Snow. SECOND ROW: Stewart, McKinney, Haase, Brodly, Ainsworth, Eitzen, THIRD ROW: Tonn, Glaser, Magers, Tangman, Rospaw, Zoble, Crow, Jones. ( Jl RESIDENTS IRIS AINSWORTH Bartlesville, Okla. IDABELLE BRADLY Blue Mound CAROL CROW Horton ELOISE M. EITZEN Hillsboro PHYLIS FANGMAN Seneca FRANKIE SUE FREEMAN St. Joseph, Mo. LOLITA GARCIA Denver, Colo. GERALDINE GLASER Mulvane LOUISE HAASE Plainville FREDA JONES Hocum MAXINE MAGERS Howard KATHLEEN McKINNEY MYRA PETROWSKY ROSEMARY ROSPAW ROSETTA SNOW EMILY STEWART SHIRLEY TALBOT ADELINE TOWN JOANNE VARNUM SHIRLEY VARNUM VIRGINIA ZABLE Hartford Preston Hutchinson Bartlesville, Okla. Hot Springs, Ark. Kansas City, Mo. Haven Yates Center Yates Center Atchison U J SIDENTS RUTH BALKA Topeka MARIE BARDWELL Parsons ANITA BEDELL Augusta HORTENSE BEDELL Augusta BETTY BROOKER Kansas City JUNE CALDWELL Hutchinson JOANNE COCKREHAM Kansas City, Mo. CATHERINE CRAMER Dighton DOROTHEA CRAWFORD Kansas City, Mo. MARJORIE DILSAVEa Kensington LOUISE DeL AY Topeka ANNE ELLIS Maintain Grove, Mo. MILDRED GARRISON Marion MARION GREENLEE Scott City COLLEEN HELMLINGER Fredonia RUTH HIBBS Carthage, Mo. JOAN HOLZHAFFLE Kansas City, Mo. BARBARA JOHNSON Topeka RUTH KINYON • Chanute FIRST ROW: Garrison, H. Krehbiel, A. Bedell, Cramer, Lowry, Brooker, H ' . Bedell. SECOND ROW: Mai, Cockreham, Hibbs, Ralston, Mrs. Vivian Christian, Helmlinger, Johnson. THIRD ROW: Wolfe, Holzhaffle, Kinyon, Crawford, Lippelmann, Greenlee, C. Terrill, Williams, Terrill, Dilsaver, Balka. FOURTH ROW: Rabb, Smith, ' Caldwell, Uhling, Ellis, D. Rumsey, L. Rumsey, Wolf, V. Krehbiel, Bardwell, DeLoy. NOT IN PICTURE: Wellborn, von der Smissen. A HELEN ANN KREHBIEL Hutchinson VALERA KREHBIEL McPherson JOAN LIPPELMAN Oberlin BERTHA LOWERY Wichita LORRAINE MAI Russell ARDYS RABB Turner LUCILLE RALSTON Sabetha DONNA RUMSEY Council Grove LORRAINE RUMSEY Council Grove LEAH SMITH Joplin, Mo. ALICE TERRILL Osawatomie CAROL TERRILL Osawatomie LEAH UHLING Afton, Wis. BETTY VAN DER SMISSEN Buhler SHIRLEY WELLBORN Lyndon CH ARLYNE WILLIAMS Kansas City RUTH WOLF Lyons JEANNINE WOLFE Atwood Locksley Hall bcame an or- ganized women ' s house in the fall of 1944. President, Lucille Ralston: Vice-President. Ruth Hibbs; Secretary, Jo Anne Cock- reham; Treasurer, Colleen Hel- meinger. Monchonsia Hall became an organized women ' s residence in the fall of 1947. President, Pa tricia Jordan; Vice-President, Pa- tricia Metcalf; Secretary, Doris Long; Treasurer, Jacquelyn Stoops. FIRST ROW: Gordon, Kilgore, Nissley, Swart, Charles, Kysor, S. Foster, WrAerstaadt, Dunkelberg, M. L. Foster, Schmalzried, Ulrich, Edgerton, Parman, Burns. SECOND ROW: Wagner, Pratt, Long, Metcalf, Englert, Jordon, Stoops, Webster, Stayton. THIRD ROW: Lux, Ausherman, Peterson, Boge, Ousley, Joyce, Sixbury, Collins, Kaurt. U RESIDENTS JEAN AUSHERMAN Cheney ANN BOGE Wichita JOYCE BUNNS Ashland ELLEN CHARLES Earned MERLE COLLINS Boise, Idaho HELEN DUNKELBERG Kansas City, Mo. MARION EDGERTON Overland Park MARION LEE FOSTER Junction City SHIRLEY FOSTER Altamont EVA JEAN GORDON Centerville PAT JORDAN Kansas City ELOISE JOYCE Kansas City HELENA KAURT Wichita NOLA FAY KILGORE Frazier, N. M. MARIAM KYSAR Quinten DORIS LANG St. John BARBARA LUX Kansas City, Mo. PAT METCALF Butler, Ohio BEVERLY NISSLEY Tuscon, Ariz. SHIRLEY OUSLEY Lee ' s Summit, Mo. MARY PARMAN Arkansas City GWENDOLYN PETERSON Cunningham EVANGALINE PRATT Hoxie BERNICE SCHMALZRIED Dighton BARBARA SIXBURY Oberlin SUZANNE STAYTON St. Joseph, Mo. JACQUELINE STOOPS Cherryvale GLADYS SWART Oakley ARLENE ULRICH Randolph TWILA WAGNER Bennington MARY JOAN WATERSTRAD ' f Detroit KAY WEBSTER Jetmore RESIDENTS EVELYN BEECH Olathe DOROTHY BLACK Reece BILLY BULL ARD Lansing MARY CHUBB Topeka MARIAN COX Prescott JOAN DEXTER Kansas City, Mo. BETTE FORBES Eureka JOYCE GILBERT Goodland MARTHA GRETZER Kansas City, Mo. PATRICIA HUKLE Mulvane JOSEPHINE HURTIG Hartford VIRGINIA HUSCHER Concordia DOROTHY JEAN JONES Penalosa GWENDO LYNNE JONES Olathe CONNIE KOPPERS Olathe JEANNE LAMBERT Emporia IVA ANNE LINNELI. St. Joseph, Mo. SHIRLEY McKNIGHT Greeley WILMA PENDLETON Independence MARY LOU REDMOND Ottawa JANIS RUTHERFORD Wichita JEANNE SCHAULIS Kansas City, Mo. PHYLLIS SEACAT Ashland MARY CATHERINE SHATZELL Hoxie PEGGY SHINN Niotaze DORANNE SNYDER Emporia JOAN STRINGFELLOW Raton, N. M. DOROTHY SWIM Marysville CHARLENE TURNER Sylvia MRS. LELA WHITEFORD Lawrence MARY ELLEN WIMMER Baxter Springs FIRST ROW: Gilbert, Cox, Seacat, Shinn, Black, Hukle, Beech, Koppers. SECOND ROW: Rutherford, Forbes, Shatzell, Jones, G., Jones, D., Whiteford, Hurtig, Dexter, Schaulis, Snyder, THIRD ROW: Swim, Chubb, McKnight, Wimmer, Bullard, Pendleton, Gretzer, Lambert, Stringfellow, Redmond, Huscher, Turner, Lirinell. Sleepy Hollow became an or- ganized women ' s residence in the fall of 1945. President, Dottie Jones; Vice-President, Lou Red- man: Secretary, Mary Chubb; Treasurer, Dora Ann Snyder. i • • 80 THE JAYHAWKER 1 The K.U. Women ' s Glee Club was established in 1913. Since 1935, it has been under the direction of Irene Peabody. President, Martha Laffer; Secretary, Ann Hogue; Business Manager, Joan Happy. MEMBERS FIRST SOPRANO JANET ARTMAN Topeka JOAN BENNETT Topeka DOROTHY BREADY Cincinnati, Ohio VIRGINIA LEE BROWN Emmett JOAN CALDWELL El Paso, Texas BARBARA CLEAVES Fort Leavenworth TERRY COLTON Mission ALICE DEGNER Claflin DORISS GILMAN Kansas City BETTY HENNING Belpre ZELINA HIGGINBOTTOM Lawrence SHIRLEY HOBBS Lawrence RITA HORNING Topeka LAURABELLE KING Hutchinson HELEN ANN KREHBIEL Hutchinson BARBARA LAMOREAUX Waterville MARY LOU LANE St. Marys LILIE MOSIMAN Kansas City MARY LOU POWER Beloit MARILYN RANEY Syracuse LOIS LEE RICHARDSON Topeka JOAN E. SMITH Montezuma BETTY JO SUITER Macksville CHARLOTTE THOMAS Perry EDITH WILLIAMSON Kansas City SECOND SOPRANO VIRGINIA ALBURTY Lawrence JACQUELINE BAUM Leavenworth BEVERLY COULTER . Blue Rapids MARTHA DUNCAN El Dorado BEVERLY EMERSON Topeka NANCY HAFFNER Kansas City, Mo. JOAN HAPPY Ottawa ANN HOGUE Russell JOAN HOLZAPFEL Kansas City, Mo. MARY HUMPHREY East Leavenworth, Mo. CAROL PROCHASKA Ellsworth CORINNE TEMPLE Wichita BETTY TICE Kansas City JEANNINE WOLFE Atwood SALLY WOODWARD Salina FIRST ALTO MERIBAH BARRETT Arlington GLYDE BLACKWOOD Lawrence ALETA BROWN Henderson, Nev. VIRGINIA HALLMAN Hudson THELMA HAMILTON Lawrence JEANNE HILLYER Topeka HELEN HUMPHREY La Porte, Minn. HELEN LAWRENCE Ottawa CLARICE MOORHOUSE Cheney DONNA SCOTT Ransom PEGGY SHINN Niotaze MARY KATHERINE SIMS Miami, Okla. HARRIET WADDELL Salina VIRGINIA WALSH Kansas City, Mo. HELEN WARD Coffeyville SECOND ALTO PATRICIA BRUBAKER Kansas City, Mo. CAROL BUHLER Lawrence ELEANOR CHURCHILL Kansas City, Mo. LOUISE DeLAY Topeka CAROL DUNN Garden City FRANCES HALL Topeka CAROL ANNE HARRIS Kansas City, Mo. RITA HARTWELL Wichita CATHERINE JARBOE Parsons GWENDOLYNNE JONES Olathe MARTHA LAFFER Wichita ANN LAWRANCE Lee ' s Summit, Mo. RUTH LEWIS Kansas City, Mo. VADA NICHOLAS Johnson CORAL NOVAK Wilson NONA PRETTYMAN Plevna MARILYN RIFFER Centralia BEATRICE SENOR St. Joseph, Mo. JESSICA SHIVE Turon BETTY JANE SIMS Miami, Okla. E. JEAN YOUNG Hardtner FIRST ROW: Artman, Power, Caldwell, Krehbiel, Richardson, Baum, Tice, Hum phrey Helen, Barrett, Buhler, Lewis, Ritter, Senor, Jarboe. SECOND ROW: Colton, Bennett, Henning, Degner, Thomas, Coulter, Happy, Temple, BlackwoodHillyer, Churchill, Sims, B. J., Novak. THIRD ROW: Hobbs, Cleaves, Higgin- bottom, Gilman, Brown, Virginia, Nord, Walsh, Waddell, Haffner, Woodward, , Young, Nicholas, Jones, Hartwell, FOURTH ROW: Smith, Roney, Suiter, Wolfe, J., Hogue, Brown, Aleta, Shinn, CeLay, Sims, M. K., Laffer, Hallman. F IFTH ROW: Mosiman, Lamoreaux, Horning Emerson, Lawrence, Holaz- phel, Moorhouse, Prochaska. SIXTH ROW: Bready, King, Lane, Alburty, Hu mphrey, M., Brown, Shirley, Harris, Brubaker, Lcwrorce, Hall. SEVENTH ROW: Hamilton, Scott, Dunn, Prettyman, Peabody. CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 81 ii JJ The K.U. Home Economics Club was established in 1913. Since 1936 it has been affiliated with the National American Home Economics Or- ganization. President, Bonnie Veatch; Vice-President, Marilyn Stockton; Secretary, Judith Tihen; Treasurer, Annetta Stout, MEMBERS BETTIE BATT Marion BETTY BURGETT Lawrence JOANN CLOUGH Richland KAY COLEMAN Richmond MARY LOU COLYER Lawrence BONNIE CUNNINGHAM Downs JANE FERRELL Wichita BETTY FORDEMWALT Kansas City, Mo. WILMA GEPPELT Mound City WANDA GOOD Garnett KATHALINE GROFF Ellinwood PATSY HARRIS Bronxville, N. Y. CAROL HASTINGS Pratt SHIRLEY HOYT Iola LORRAINE HOMMER Claflin MARY MARGARET HUSE Tulsa, Okla. PAT JONES Billings, Okla DONNA KAPP Ottawa MARILYN McCLURE Eureka KATHERINE NAXERA Kansas City, Mo. GERALDINE OTT Madison GWYNDALYN PETERSON Cunningham BETTY PRETZ Olathe BEVERLY PYKE Strong City PEGGY RENN Wellington SHIRLEY SCHEUFILE Kansas City, Mo. JEAN SMITH Neodesha MARILYN STOCKTON Lawrence ANN STOUT Rothville, Mo. BERNICE STROUP Fontana GLADYS SWART Oakley MARIAN SWAYER Oskaloosa JUDY TIHEN Wichita PAT TOMLINSON Bronxville, N. Y. BONNIE VEATCH Merriam JOYCE WALKER Oxford DOROTHY WHEAT Kansas City FIRST ROW: Ott, Tihen, Ferrell, Veatch, Uhling, advisor; Coleman, Stout, Geppelt, Hoyt. Hastings, Fordemwalt, Harris, Clarkson, Hammer, Cunningham, Swart, Clough. THIRD ROW: Hessling, Scheurele, Lowe, Barrgert, Pretz. NOT IN PICTURE: Wheat, Stockton, Walker, Graff. SECOND ROW: Smith, Naxera, Renn, Houdyshell, Huse, McClure, Peterson, Swoyer, Tomlinson, Pyke, Stroup, Doll, 82 THE JAYHAWKER T Tan Sigma was established at K.U. in 1921 to promote interest in, and appreciation of, higher types of dancing. President, Glenda Leuhring; Sec- retary, Mary Ann McClure; Treasurer, Rozanne Croft, MEMBERS ANN ALLEN Tulsa, Okla. KATHLEEN BRODE Kansas City CORRINE CARTER Lawrence CAROLYN COLEMAN Wichita ROZANNE CROFF Wichita CONNIE CULTRA Harrington DONNA DeMUNN Garden City DORTHEA FULLER Coffeyville PEGGY GRABER Hutchinson MILDRED GULNIK Kansas City BETTY HAMMOND Wichita CAROL HELMERS Kansas City JEANNE HILLYER Topeka LAVAUGHN HODGSON Garnett DOROTHY JAMES West Caldwell, New Jersey SUE JONES Wichita B. K. KRENZER Lawrence SHIRLEY KYLE Mission BETTY LARBEER Neodesha MARY LIND Chanute SHIRLEY LINDAUR Lawrence GLENDA LUEHRING Leavenworth ANNE LUNDGREN Topeka GLORIA MAXWELI Kansas City, Mo. MARY ANN McCLURE Tulsa, Okla. ZOLA PARKE Kansas City MARY LOU PECKENSCHNIEDER Halstead ROSEMARY ROBISON Kansas City, Mo. MARILYN STEINERT Mission SALLY STEPPER Kansas City, Mo. DORIS TIHEN Wichita JUDITH TIHEN Wichita DELORES TRAVELENT Kansas City, Mo. GEORGIA LEE WESTMORELAND Kansas City, Mo. ELEANOR WILK Kansas City CENTER: Hodgson. FIRST ROW: Maxwell, Lorbeer, Miss Selicovitz, Steinert, Wilk. SECOND ROW: Lundgren, Trovelent, Hammond, Allen, Hillyer, DeMunn, Fuller, Parke, Carter, Kyle, Stepper, Gulnik. THIRD ROW: McClure, Westmoreland, Robison, Tihen, Krenzer, Luehring Graber, Tihen, Croft, Pecken- enschneider. 83 CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 FW Jay Janes was established at K.U. in 1925 to promote good sportsman- ship and school spirit on the campus. President, Marion Minor; Vice- President, Dorothy James; Secretary, Barbara Meyer; Treasurer, Carolyn Campbell. MEMBERS MAXINE ALBURTY Lawrence ELIZABETH APT Iola MARY HELEN BAKER Bethel MARY ELLEN BARKER Kansas City MERIBAH BARRETT Arlington HORTENSE BEDELL Augusta JEAN BOWERSOX Arkansas City BEE BRADY Wichita KATHLEEN BROERS Eudora MARJORIE BURTSCHER Hays MARY JANE BYERS Junction City ESTHER CALVIN Pittsburg CAROLYN CAMPBELL Kansas City, Mo. KATHERINE COLEMAN Richmond JEANNE COOPER ,. Lawrence SHIRLEY CORLETT Rochester, N. Y. BONNIE CUNNINGHAM Downs MARY VIRGINIA DOUGLASS Edgewood, Pa. JANE FERRELL Wichita JULIA FOX Lawrence LORRAINE HAMMER Claflin HARRIET HARLOW Kansas City, Mo. WILDA HOSLER Ottawa DOROTHY JAMES Caldwell, N. J. HILDA JAMES Belleville DOROTHY JONES Penalosa HELEN KAISER Kansas City MARJORIE KAFF Overbrook LOUISE LAMBERT Leavenworth HELEN LAWRENCE Ottawa PEARL LEIGHT Lawrence SHIRLEY LIEM Overland Park MARILYN LIVINGOOD Eudora CLARA JANE LUTZ Hoisington MARYLEE MASTERSON Columbus HELEN MATHER Kansas City MARJORIE McCULLOUGH Kansas City KATHLEEN McKINNEY Hartford BARBARA MEYER Wichita MARIAN MINOR, President Hutchinson RUTH MITCHELL Kansas City ALBERTA MOE . . ....... . Pasco, Fla. MARY MARGARET MORRIS Wichita CAROLYN NIGG Whitewater SHIRLEY OUSLEY Lee ' s Summit, Mo. JEAN RANKIN Kansas City CHARLOTTE REAMS Kansas City MARY LOU REDMOND Ottawa BILLIE ROTERMUND Independence, Mo. ANNE SCOTT Pratt DOLORIS SHADE Brooksville NANCY SMITH Pittsburg ELLEN SPURNEY Belleville BARBARA STAPELTON Tecumseh MARJORIE STARK Manhattan JOAN STROWIG Concordia LEAH UHLING Afton, Wis. JOAN VERMILLION Junction City PATRICIA WAITS Nickerson MILA WILLIAMS Topeka SALLY WINTERSCHEIDT Kansas City, Mo. PERRY WRIGHT Lawrence FIRST ROW: Nigg, James, Livingood, Minor, Campbell, Meyer, Co ' eman, Hosler, Barrett, Jones. SECOND ROW: Rankin, Harlow, Broers Ferrell, McCullough, Mitchell, Lutz, Scott, Winterscheidt, Bedell, Alburty, Leight, Fox. THIRD ROW: Barker, Uehling, Koff, Shade, Morris, Ousley, Bowersox, Stork, Cunningham, Corlett, Stapelton. FOURTH ROW: Mother, Smith, Reams, Hammer, Cooper, Lambert, Redmond, Brady, James, Burtscher, Lawrence, Strowig. FIFTH ROW: Masterson, Baker, Byers, Liem, Moe, McKinney, Apt, Spurney, Kaiser, Calvin. NOT PICTURED: Rotenmund, Williams, Wright. S4 THE JAYHAWKER Pfl Kappa Beta is an organization for Christian Church girls. President, Mary Jarrett; Vice-President, Jo Ann Jarrett; Secretary, Frances Falen; Treasurer, Betty Green. PLEDGES VIRGINIA ALBURTY Lawrence ELEANOR BROWN Kansas City, Mo. MARJORIE COURTRIGHT McDonald RUTH COURTRIGHT McDonald JOAN DEGENHARDT . Kansas City MARIAM EDGERTON Overland Park JOY ESCH Cherryvale JOYCE GILBERT Goodland MAXINE HOLSINGER Prescott DOROTHY KOLB Kansas City, Mo. YVONNE MORROW Neodesha MARILYN RIFFER Centralia EMILY SCHNABEL Kansas City JULIA SCHNABEL Kansas City HELEN SLAYBAUGH St Joseph, Mo. SHIRLEY SLOAN Kansas City BARBARA SMITH Hope MARY ALICE WALKER Kansas City SHIRLEY WAMPLER Kansas City FAYE WILKINSON Cherryvale ACTIVES MAXINE ALBURTY Lawrence ALLA BEEBE Wichita JOAN BENNETT Topeka PHYLLIS BICE Plainville FRANCES BLAIR Hope GERALDINE BOBBITT Oberlin MAXINE BRUCE Lawrence FRANCES FALEN Elmo MARY LUCILLE GARTON Chanute BETTY ZELL GREEN Hutchinson JO ANN JARRETT Lawrence MARY JARRETT Lawrence FREDA JONES Holcomb GWENDOLYNNE JONES Olathe JUNE MALLORY Bucklin MARGARET McDOWELL Kansas City, Mo. DELMA NICHOLS Lecompton CHARLYNE OLIVER DOROTHY PARK LETA JEAN RAMSDELL MABEL ANN RICHARDSON BERNICE SCHMALZRIED MARJORIE SCOTT LUCY THOMAS CORAL WADE Kansas City, Mo. Hilo, Hawaii Burlington Lawrence Dighton LaCygne Lawrence Belleville FIRST ROW: Bobbitt, Riffer, Park, Green, Mrs. Harold G. Barr, M. Jarrett, J. Jarrett, Falen, Ramsdell, Sloan, M. Alburty. SECOND ROW: Schmalzried, Bennett, Smith, Brown, Slaybaugh, Walker, Mallory, Wade, Kolb. THIRD ROW: Gilbert, Wilkinson, V. Alburty, Holsinger, Degenhardt, Bice, Bair, Loughlin, M. Courtright, R. Courtright, Garton. NOT IN PICTURE: air, F.- Jones, Thomas, Bruce, Beebe, G. Jones, McDowell, Nichols, Scott, Edgerton, Wampler, Reise, Barman, Maurice, Webster, Esch, Morrow, Oliver, E. Schnabel, J. Schnabel. CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 O 85 Kappa Phi, National Methodist Gi4 ' s Club, was founded vn 1916 at the University of Kansas. Alpha is now one of 30 chapters. President, Virginia Shinier; Vice-President, LaVaughn Hodgson; Secretary, Bettie Swart; Treasurer, Frances Richert. MEMBERS HELEN AMYX Lawrence LaVAUGHN HODGSON . . Garnett VIRGINIA ROESLER . . . Claflin JOAN AUSHERMAN . . Cheney MILDRED HOCKADAY . . Lawrence CAROLE RUHLEN . . . Clay Center RUTHENE BAKER . . . Elkhart DORTHY HOGAN . . . . Salina ROBERTA SANDERSON . Marysville SHIRLEY BALES . . Emporia DONNA HULL . . . . Clay Center EVALYN SCAMELL . . . Lawrence DORIS BAYSINGER . . . Lawrence IONE IMTHURN . . Cottonwod Falls HELEN SCAMELL . . . Lawrence AILEEN BEAL. . Junction City MARIE JACKSON Parker MARILYN SCHNACKEL . Avoca, Ia. GEORGIANA INGTON HILDA JAMES Belleville PEGGY SCOTT Topeka . . . . ... El Dorado MARILYN JAMISON . Bartlesvile, Okla. VIRGINIA SHIMER . . . Topeka LABOYTA BLOXOM . . . . Pratt GRACIE JANKE Claflin PEGGY SHINN Niotaze MARJORIE BOURLAND FRANCES JOHNSON . Grinter Heights WILMA SHORE Big Bow Cottonwood Falls DOROTHY JONES. . . . Ottawa SHIRLEY SHRIVER . . . . Coats CHARLENE BREITENBACH . Belpre PAT JONES . . . . Billings, Okla. LAVONNE SIMPSON . . . Norwich JANICE BROADSWORD . . Newton MARY ELIZABETH KERR . Clever, Mo. ROSELYN SKONBERG . Osage City JEAN CALVERT . . . . Waverly NOLA KILLGORE . . Frazier, N. M. BEVERLY SMITH . . . Dodge City ESTHER CALVIN . . . . Pittsburg RUTH KIMMEL . . . . Lawrence DONNA SNART . . . Lawrence SERILDA CLAPP . . . . St. Francis DENNY KING Stafford BETTY SNEARY Weida PHYLLIS CLEGG. Columbus MARIAN KYSAR . . . . Quinter SHIRLEY SONDKER . . Manhattan JOANNE . . Johnson ANN LAMENDOLA . . . Columbus LIN SPENCER Lawrence MA RIAN COX Prescott MARGARET LAWRENCE . Merriam BEVERLY STEMBER . . Ozawkie VIRGINIA DANIELS . . Dallas, Tex. ELSIE LEMON . . . . Lawrence JOAN STRINGFELLOW . Karon, N. M. MARY LOU DAVIS . . Blue Mound MARY ALICE LOBAUGH . Washington BETTIE SWART Oakley LOUISE DeLAY Topeka CORINNE LOCKE Erie ETHEL SWART Oakley COREL DUNKLEY . . . Lawrence LOIS LOHRENTZ . . . McPherson NORA LEA TEMPLE . . . Baldwin MARTHA JO EASTER . . Abilene BERTHA LOWRY . . . . Wichita LOIS TIMKEN. Cimarron FREDRIKA EKBLAD . . Hoisington CLARA JANE LUTZ . . Hoisington BETTY VAN DER BARBARA FELT . . . . Wellington HELEN MANKA Burns . . Marion, S. D. LURA FRALICK Elgin CHRISTINE MANN . . Junction City IRIS VAN WORMER. . Kansas City, Mo. BILLIE GEORGE . . .Altamont SHARON McKIM . . . . Frankfort JOYCE WALKER. . . El Dorado WILMA GEPPELT . . City KATHLEEN McKINNEY . . Hartford MARIAN WALTERS . . . Ulysses BARBARA GLOVER . . . Caldweli ZENIAL McPEAK SHIRLEY WELLBORN . . . Ly ndon ELIZABETH GRAVES . . . Dighton . . . Colorado Springs, Mo. MARGARET WELLMAN . . McLouth WANDA GOOD . . . . . Garnett MARTHA MYERS . . . Norwich ELEANOR WELLS . • . . Lawrence LOUISE HAMILTON . Medicine Lodge ROWENA NEHRBASS . . Lawrence JEANNINE WELSH . Hoisington LORENE HAHN Healy KITTIE NITE Montezuma ESTHER WILLIAMS • . Leavenworth MARJORIE HAMPTON . . . Ulysses JANICE OEHRLE . . . . Overbrook RUTH WILLIAMS . • . Leavenworth GERALDINE HARRIS . . Eudora DOROTHY OYER . Kansas City, Mo. ALICE WISMER Pomona MARGARET HEATWOLF. NONA PRETTYMAN . . . Plevna RUTH WOLFE Lyons . . Coleman, Tex. JANETTE POLLOM . . . Lawrence FRANCES WOLFSKILL ANNA HEMPHILL . . . .Lawrence BARBARA RAND . . . . Lawrence Kansas City, Mo. LOUISE HEMPHILL . . . Lawrence MARILYN RANEY . . . . Syracuse IDA MAE WOODBURN . . Lawrence BETTY HENNING . . . Belpre BARBARA RICHARD . . Kansas City ELNORA WYCOFF . . . Solomon ANDREA HINKEL . . . Concordia FRANCES RICHERT . . . Newton MELBA YOUNG Wichita FIRST ROW: Jones, Cox, Lobaugh, Rand, Wellman, Welsh, Walker, Mrs. Price, Shimer, Schnockel, Wismer, Hinkel, Easter, Bennington. SECOND ROW: Hamilton, Lowry, Lawrence, Jackson, Spencer, Henning, Lamendolo, A. Hemphill, Cockreham, Killgore, L. Hemphill, Hull, Ausherman. THIRD ROW: McPeak, Sneary, Baysinger, George, Breitenbach, Geppelt, Janke, Raney, Hampton, Graves, Ruhlen, Harris. FOURTH ROW: Fralick, Stringfellow, Oyer, Hogan, Davis, Roesler, Kysar, Ekblad, McKinney. FIFTH ROW: King, Temple, Timken, Amyx, Richert, B. Swart, Simpson, E. Swart, Locke, Van Wormer. MI MI Quack Club was established at K.U. in 1922 to promote swim- ming, diving, and life saving ef- ficiency of members. Presi- dent, Jeanne Gorbutt; Secretary- Treasurer. Patricia Tomlinson. LEFT TO RIGHT: Chambers, O ' Connor, Crosby, Junch, Smart, Wolfe, Tomlinson, Miss Hoover, McKelvy, Foster, Harris, Campbell, Gillee, Simpson, Moore, Kittle, Stuckey, Grcthuson. II L MEMBERS BARBARA BURKHOLDER McPherson ELEANOR CAMPBELL Independence, Mo. JEANNE CHAMBERS Iola FRANCES CHUBB Lawrence HARRIET CONNOR Atchison POLLY CROSBY Topeka MARJORIE DINSMORE Lawrence MARGARET FOSTER Kansas City, Mo. JEANNE GILLEE Joplin, Mo. JEANNE GORBUTT Topeka CLAIRE GROTHUSEN Parsons VIRGINIA HARRIS Ottawa ILA JUNOD Chanute MARTHA KEPLINGER Kansas City, Mo. HELEN KITTLE Kansas City KATHLEEN McKELVY Atchison NANCY MOORE Lawrence SUE NEWCOMER Kansas City, Mo. DOROTHY O ' CONNOR Hutchinson ALBERTA SCHNITZLER Wichita JOAN SCHWINN Wellington JACQUELINE SIMPSON Wichita NANCY SMART Kansas City, Mo. JOSEPHINE STUCKEY Hutchinson PATRICIA TOMLINSON Greenwich, Conn. MARY VARNER Wichita MARY WILKINS Lawrence MARY WHITE Kansas City, Mo. PEGGY WOLFE Wichita MEMBERS PHYLLIS BETTS Oberlin MARJORIE BROOKS Kansas City MARY LOU DAVIS Blue Mound ELAINE FENTON Lawrence RUTH HIBBS Carthage, Mo. MARGARET McDOWELL Kansas City, Mo. ELIZABETH POSORNOW Olathe GERTRUDE SNYDER Lawrence BILLIE STILLMAN Bushton BARBARA STONE Smith Center BETTIE SWART Oakley EARLINE WEST . ....... Lawrence FIRST ROW: Davis, Swart, Fenton, Stone, Betts, Hibbs. SECOND ROW: Posornow, McDowell, West Snyder, Brooks, Stillman. Phi Chi Theta, professional women ' s business sorority, was founded in Chicago in 1924. President, Barbara Stone; Vice- President, Phyllis Betts; Secre- tary, Mrs. Elaine Fenton; Treas- urer, Gertrude Snyder. 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, Emalou Brit- ton,. Vice President, Patricia Graham; Secretary, Dorothy Hoover. FIRST ROW: Wismer, Brothers, James, Sondker, Uhling. SECOND ROW: Van der Lees, Hoover, Britton, Alford, Groham, Sheidley, Whiting. THIRD ROW: Cowgill, Douglas, Wilder, Godbehere, Smith, Hildebrand. NOT IN PICTURE: Francisco, Eberhardt, O ' Connor, Ferrel, Joseph, Greene, H. James MEMBERS EMALOU BRITTON Columbus BETTY BROTHERS Cherryvale JERRY CATLETT Lawrence COURTNEY COWGILL San Francisco, Calif. MARGARET EBERHARDT Salina JANE FARRELL Wichita JEAN FRANCISCO Kansas City JOY GODBEHERE Kansas City, Mo. PATRICIA GRAHAM Winfield LORNA GREENE Kansas City, Mo. DOROTHY HOOVER Smith Center WILMA HILDEBRAND Fowler DOROTHY JAMES Calderwood, N. J. JOAN JOSEPH Whitewater ANN LEARNED Bartlesville, Okla. MARY LEES Lawrence KAY O ' CONNOR San Marino, Calif. BETSY SHEIDLEY Kansas City, Mo. NANCY SMITH Pittsburg SHIRLEY SONDKER Manhattan LEAH UHLING Shawnee BETTY VAN DER SMISSEN Marion, S. D. SHEILA WILDER Haskell ALICE WISMER Pomona MELBA WHITING Downs HILDA JAMES Belleville MEMBERS JOAN ANDERSON Emporia PEGGY BAKER Salina PAT BARRON Wichita PATSY BEHLER Kansas City MARIE COLLGAN Kansas City, Mo. ROZANNE CROFF Fresno, Calif. BONNIE CUNNINGHAM Downs MARTHA DUNCAN El Dorado JANE FERRELL Wichita SHIRLEY GRIGSBY Kansas City, Mo. MAXINE GUNSOLLY Emporia ALICE HOBBS Topeka BARBARA JOHNSON Wichita HELEN MATHER Kansas City MARY MARGARET MORRIS Wichita KAY O ' CONNOR San Marino, Calif. ZOE SILER Chicago, Ill. ALBERTA SCHNITZLER Wichita NANCY WALKER Kansas City, Mo. MARTHA WEED Kansas City JANE WILLIAMS Wichita MILA WILLIAMS Topeka VIRGINIA WINTER Lawrence FIRST ROW: Hobbs, Barron. Schnitzler, Williams, Creegon, Siler. SECOND ROW: Mather, Behler, Ferrell, Gunsolly, O ' Connor, Croft, Anderson. THIRD ROW: Walker, Johnson, Cunningham, Baker, Grisby, Winter, Duncan, Weed, Morris. 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, Ma x ine Gunsolly; Secretary- Treasurer, Jane Ferrell, President, Wilda Hosier; Vice- President, Margaret Gaussle; Sec- retary, R o se Ann Madden; Treasurer, Dorothy Park. FIRST ROW: Davis, Rankin, Pennoch, Valentine, Compton, Campbell, Doctor, Bourland. SECOND ROW: Schaeffer, Higley, Hulings, Madd en, Hosier, Ganssle, Park, Olson, Coskey. THIRD ROW: Garvey, Peck, Schreck, Graves, Sewell, Larson, Johns, Myers, Douglas, Debus, White. 6 MEMBERS MARJORY BOURLAND Cottonwood Falls MARGARET JOHNS Hiawatha JACQUELINE CAMPBELL Flint, Michigan REBECCA LARSON Robinson BETTY COMPTON Topeka ROSE ANN MADDEN Baton Rouge, La. VIRGINIA COSKEY Kansas City, Mo. MARGERY MEYERS Garnett BETTY DAVIS Hiawatha BARBARA OLSON Wichita PHYLLIS DEBUS Kansas City DOROTHY PARK Hilo, Hawaii NORMA DOCTOR Lawrence MARALYN PECK Kansas City MARY VIRGINIA DOUGLAS Edgewood, Penn. MARTHA PENNOCH Longmount, Colo. POLLY GANSSLE Salina JEAN RANKIN Kansas City, Mo. OLIVIA GARVEY Wichita ELLEN SCHAEFFLER Hillshore ELIZABETH GRAVES Dighton MARY SCHRECH Independence MARIETTA HIGLEY Osawatomie GEORGIANNA SEWELI Sabetha WILDA HOSLER Ottawa MARY VALENTINE Kansas City, Mo. NANCY HULINGS Tulsa, Okla. CLAIRE B. WHITE Edwardsville H MEMBERS 1 L IRIS AINSWORTH Bartlesville, Okla. HORTENSE BEDELL Augusta RUTH BROWN Sabetha JOANN CLOUGH Richland DORIS DENNIS Trenton, Mo. DOROTHY HARTER Caldwell JUNE HAYS Stilwell RUTH HENRY Des Moines, Iowa DOROTHY JONES Penalosa NANCY KASTMANN Mission MARYLEE MASTERSON Columbus PHYLLIS OLIVER Culver VIRGINIA PATCH Kansas City, Mo. LUCILLE RALSTON Sabetha JEAN RANKIN Leavenworth MARY CATHERINE SHATZELL Kansas City VIRGINIA SHINIER Topeka ROSELYN SKONBERG Osage City JEAN SPAID Kansas City, Mo. GRACE VANEMAN Salina PATRICIA WAITS Nickerson • FIRST ROW: Waits, Skonberg, Rankin, Shimer, Jones. • SECOND ROW: Dennis, Brown, Patch, Ralston, Shatzell, Clough, Kastmann, Oliver. THIRD ROW: Stapleton, Masterson, Heary, Harter, Hays, Vaneman, Ainsworth, Spaid. NOT IN PICTURE: Wells, Spurney, James, Retrowsky, Strowig, Metcalf, Jordan. The Girl ' s Inter - Dormitory Council was established at K.U. to promote understanding and co-operation among the organ- ized independent women ' s dorm- itories. President, Mary Cathe- rine Shatzell; Vice-President, Lu- cille Ralston; Secretary-Treasurer, Joan Clough. dv Sector STUDENTS: ( 7 ie acitte2deJwa kaae made die la0aathe b dtea19.e b a2pt. app2beciakein pabL0214- el, tele me4c taII, THE 1948 JAYHAWKER STAFF L 90 THE JAYHAWKER ' Weaved For that gift that will put you in first place in her heart, visit our Cosmtic 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 Guerlain Elizabeth Arden Faberge Jean Patou Charles of the Ritz Lucien Lelong COSMETIC DEPARTMENT — MAIN Phone 636 901 Mass. St. Jayhawkers Remember that one thing you need at K. U. is a reliable cleaner. We have been clean- ing K. U. students clothes for 34 years. New York Cleaners IT COSTS SO LITTLE TO LOOK SO WELL For that CHRISTMAS GIFT Select K.U. NOVELTY Main Store Annex 1401 Ohio 1737 Orcad Ph. 1401 Ph. 492 Christmas Gifts Galore In every nook and cranny of our store! Wonderful, breath- taking gifts . . . . awaiting your selection. (520--dri orec? TOPEKA, KANSAS CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 91 FOR THAT COKE DATE FOR THAT FOR THAT MORNING COFFEE EVEKING SNACK T H E w r! % 1E7CRIAL ICINg FOtillTAJ MERRY CH USTP AAS iii jest wishes for rem NG YEAR STUDENT UNION BOOK STOR YOUR FORD PRESENT FUTURE take it back home to ORGA CK MOTOR COMPANY Complete One-stop Service PHONE 277 609 MASSACHUSETTS 92 THE JAYHAWKER For Smart TOPCOATS Come to G IBB ' S • Hyde Park • Curlee • Glenshire • Roxbury In 100 % Wool Fabrics $22.50 to $49.50 Shop at G IBB ' S CLOTHING COMPANY 811 MASS. A FRIENDLY MESSAGE Our 29 Year 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 LJXE CAFE 711 Mass. St. Lawrence I ' m not exactly a confirmed knitter, but when a pair of socks will get me a gift from JOHNSON ' S, it ' s time well spent. JOHNSON ' S 835 Mass. Phone 771 WHAT DO YOU THINK IS THE GREATEST INVENTION? Atomic energy, radio, the wheel, airplane, electricity, automobile, steam engine, tele- phone, printing press take your pick. What do you think is the greatest invention ever made? Certainly each is important, and each has contributed generously to our way of life. But the American public, in Dr. Gallup ' s recent coast-to-coast survey, voted electric- ity the most important invention of all time! Because electricity does so much for so little is, perhaps, the main reason why Americans have voted it the most impor- tant invention of all. KANSAS CITY POWER LIGHT COMPANY CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 93 IF YOU HAVE FORGOTTEN SOMEONE FOR CHRISTMAS OR NEW YEARS - order a photograph from the negative we have of you in our files — We can mail it special delivery and save the day — HIXON STUDIO PHONE 41 721 MASSACHUSETTS PHILCO — BRANDS KNOWN BEST — MAYTAG IN THE MIDDLE WEST RENTALS-FLOOR SCRUBBERS-WAXERS-SANDERS LAWRENCE HARDWARE Phone 178 HOME APPLIANCES 724-26 Mass. IN THE YEARS TO COME Your Memories of K.U. Will Include THE BEST SERVICE STATION IN LAWRENCE CITIES SEEIVICE FRITZ CO. 8th and New Hamp. Phone 4 OTTER ' S STU rNFRY UNIVERSITY SUPPLIES We invite ccmparison of price and quality 1025 MASS. PHONE 1051 9 THE JAYHAWKER The LOVE 13 COMPANY CORRUGATED AND SHIPPING CONTAINERS 612 S. COMMERCE ST. WICHITA, KANSAS REDDY KILOWATT Your Electric Servant CO GkAT kILAT[InNS AAYHAWKERS Best ' Luck Oiruge Bow ChLVii0LC 738 NEW HAMPSHIRE NOTO rj N WE SERVYCE ALL MAKES OF CARS - CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH MOTOR CARS - CHRISTM AS NUMBER, 1947 95 For that Completely New Wardrobe SP fES CL071-11114G CO. I I I West Douglas Wichita, Kansas FINANCIAL PROBLEMS are avoided by thrift. If you can live within your income and put something aside for the future, you are on the right road to success and financial security. OPEN AN ACCOUNT WITH US and build up a reserve fund with systematic deposits. You will enjoy the pleasure of seeing your balance increase steadily, and the satisfaction of knowing that you have ready cash available for any emergency. The 1c-; goad r LAwREINICE AATIMNAL BANK fo r you LAWRENCE, KANSAS and CORR@MON-RE2XSWAkilV P ROWIEITS INDUOTIEW fir I( ,zzz,,,‘Lcc ' fr COPYRIGHT 1943 HARRY DARBY HARRY DARBY 0 KANSAS CITY, THE TIARBYL, CORO KANSAS 0 A ION 6 THE JAYHAWKER These advertisers make the JAYHAWKER cheaper to you. Show your appreci- ation by patronizing them. Dwight Rounds, Advertising Manager 1144 INDIANA The best dressed girls on the K.U. campus, buy all their clothes at HARZFELD ' S PHONE 190 DRAKE ' S FOR BAKES 907 MASS. PHONE 61 A MERRY CHRISTMAS ANi) HAPPY EW YEAR THE RAPID TRANSIT COMPANY Your City Bus Service Featuring Fine Footwear ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP 837-39 MASS. Pasteurized MILK An All-Round Food Grade A C+4 Lawrence Sanitary Ice Cream Conway 202 W. 6th Telephone 696 CHRISTMAS NUMBER, 1947 97 Woman (Continued from Page 53) Women don ' t want their mates to have opinions. They like men who are meek and well thought of down at the office. They like men who put away their shoes and never leave their clothes around the bedroom. The wo- man wants a well-ordered existence— diner at six sharp and a game of hearts with Fred and Clara every Saturday night. Since her Neaderthal forbear made the old man get in by moonrise, she has been scheming to have things her own way. She lost Mark Anthony the world, caused the Ten Year ' s War, and laid Troy in ashes. She denies the reality of taverns and whiskey, but can slug the vile stuff down at cocktail parties with the capacity of Crater Lake. Her ethics and morals vary with her moods and she doesn ' t bother with them when she really wants something. The average woman is too crooked for anything except a game of solitaire. Fundamentally, she has just two basic faults: there ' s nothing good she does, and nothing good she says. She will be lying, slandering, cheating, mutating, coveting, revenging, disdaining, snob- bing, grasping, gossiping, and lusting till you know what freezes over. To close is to rationalize, but I shall do it gracefully by proclaiming that woman, withall, is one of nature ' : more gratifying blunders. And for each rule, according to the old saw there is the exception. You, fair wench, angrily perusing this article, to whom no vices lay claim, and to whom are given the traits of natural- ness, intelligence, and perspicacity— you, and you alone, are that exception. • Duck Hu nting (Continued from Page 36) hunter enjoys himself is by being blind drunk. After becoming thoroughly soaked for several hours in his hiding place (both inside and out) , the hunter rises to his feet, fires several volleys at a flock of passing sparrows, and starts wearily homeward. Another day of Duck hunting having been brought to a successful close. Females should not become too alarmed at this madness, however, for like New Year ' s Eve it only happens once a year. • Joan of Lorraine (Continued from Page 37) played the role of the spineless Dau- phin in a deft manner. The audience responded with spontaneous applause the humorous actions of the notorious Dauphin. Bee Brady added to the hu- morous touch by the finesse with which she portrayed the piquaint and abused mistress of the Dauphin. Jack Labowitz gave the inside slant of the problems of a director, neces- sitating compromise and brashness to produce his desired effects. The entire cast is to be commended for its excellent performance of Joan of Lorraine, a play with a moral; should a questionable means be toler- ated to achieve a good end. Attendance records were smashed to bits when after the final performance it was found that 2,550 people had attended the successful production, not counting the hundreds which were turned away. • Muscles and Tussles (Continued from Page 40) members at the end of the final game. The badminton bird received a bat- tering in the final match where Joan Lippleman won the singles title in a fast game with Joan Anderson. Locks- ley Hall produced a group of skilled players who took the badminton team championship with 84 points. The Alpha Delta Pi ' s followed in second place with 63 points. Tennis courts were crowded through the early fall months as women tennis teams played off the preliminary matches. Excitement rose to a higher tension as the tournament neared its end in the final games. Both singles finalists, Anne Murphy and Ruth Henry, displayed excellent form as they battled for the championship. After the close finals match Anne, with her racquet tucked under her arm, received congratulations for winning the tennis title. Corbin Hall ' s group of tennis stars secured the team championship by accumulating 81 points. And Locksley Hall, near the top in every fall sports, captured the second place in team tennis with 57 points. Good sportsmanship and friendly competition were always in evdence on the women ' s intramural courts. As the winter season progresses with basketball, table tennis, and swimming, the players--as well as the spectators —continue to gain enjoyment from the exciting matches—win or lose! • From Field to Court (Continued from Page 39) In the intramural total p oints race, the Phi Gam ' s now hold a substantial 39-point lead in competition fo the Sweepstakes Trophy, won last year by the Beta ' s. The Phi Gams have proved strong in every sport so far, advancing into both A and B league football playoffs, as well as placing men high in all four individual sports. In hand- ball, the Phi Gams scored 89 points as compared to 45 for each of two other organizations next in line. Here are the first eight contenders in the Sweep- stakes race: Phi Gam 418 Beta 379 Sigma Chi 378 Phi Deft 362 Phi Psi 353 Sig Ep 300 ATO 285 Sig Alph 276 More students participated in the University intramural program than in any other campus activity. Anyone can find some intramural event which suits his interest or ability. If you haven ' t found your niche yet, check with the intramural office. They may have just your size. • We Did It Again! (Continued from Page 20) fessional football scouts. The New York Sun named Evans to its first team all-America selection, calling him the nation ' s top grid performer. When Forrest Griffith scored the winning touchdown against Missouri, he took over the Big Six scoring lead 98 THE JAYHAWKER with a total of 48 points. The stocky Kansas fullback also ranks third in the conference in rushing, having ground out 463 yards on 78 carries. Only Mitchell of Oklahoma and Halbert of Iowa State have gained more and both have lugged the ball over 100 times. Ray Evans ranks second in ence passing yardage, having completed 23 pitches out of 49 for 468 yards. The Kansas quintuple-threat ace also ranks second in punt returns having carried the ball back 11 times for 190 yards. Schnellbacher for the second straight year leads the league in pass receiving with 13 catches for 270 yards. Guard Don Fambrough ranks tenth in Big Six scoring with 24 points, all made on conversions. The national poll conducted by the Associated Press ranks the Jayhawkers number 13 in the nation. Associated Press statistics also list Kansas as sixth in the country in total defense, the hawkers having yielded only 161 yards a game. Kansas is tenth nationally in pass defense with 58.3 yards against them a game through the air. In all games played, the Jayhawkers lead the league in both offensive and defensive scoring averages with a game average score of 29.0 points to 8.2 for their opponents. With most of the season over, here are your Jayhawker nominations for the various Mosts and Bests which traditionally furnish fuel for sation during the remaining nine months of the year: Most Exciting Game—The 20 to 14 win over the Misouri Tigers. Most Crucial Point After down—Fambrough ' s game tieing boot in the Oklahoma game. Most Frustrating Game—The one in Stillwater when the Kansas boys dominated the play but had trouble crossing that final payoff stripe. Quickest Setback of the Year When the Oklahoma Aggies recovered a fumble and scored before the game was two minutes old. Weirdest Touchdown by Opponent —When Oklahoma A. and M. scored on a fumble by Roof on the Kansas five yard line which London recovered in the end zone. Most Ill-Timed Penalty—The 5-yard assessment for too much time in the last quarter of the Oklahoma game when Ray Evans was going to attempt a field goal from the 29-yard line. Most Critical Defensive Play When Ray Evans intercepted the homa pass on his own 3-yard line in the last minute of the game after Sarratt had pitched the Sooners 50 yards down field on three straight completions. Best Run by an Opponent—When Kenny Adams, Nebraska fullback raced 40 yards through the entire Kansas team to score. Most Crucial Non-scoring Play by Opponent—When Nebraska gambled and lost when trying for one yard, and a first and ten on the Kansas 38 in the last quarter of the game at Lincoln. The Jayhawkers took over and marched 62 yards to score. Most Crucial Play for Kansas Take your pick between Hogan ' s touchdown pass to Schnellbacher in the Nebraska game and Griffith ' s yard plunge in the Missouri tilt. Longest Gain on a Blocked When Hugh Johnson blocked a punt on the South Dakota State 30-yard line which rolled back over the goal line and was recovered by bacher for a touchdown. Most Disheartening Play for ponent—After holding Kansas on the 1-foot line, South Dakota State punted out to the 40 where Ray Evans gathered in the kick and returned it all the way for a score. Longest Run from Scrimmage Bud French ' s 69-yard dash against South Dakota State. Dirtiest Game—Literally, the T.C.0 mud throwing contest. Figuratively. the Kansas State no-holds-barred clash. Least Entertaining Game — The Texas Christian contest where neither team could move through the swamp at Blues Stadium. Most Erratic Kansas Offensive Game—At Denver where Jayhawker drives ended twice on fumbles and three times on intercepted passes. Biggest Bubble Burst—The myth of Iowa State passing power. Kansas rushed Cyclone Ron Norman so hard, he failed to complete a single toss. and the Ames team only connected for one out of eleven the entire game. You ' ve done a wonderful job, hawkers, one of which we ' re all very proud. Congratulations to every mem ber of the team and to our splendid coaching staff. But in the future have mercy upon our poor tattered nerves. Honestly, men, we might never vive many more last quarter thrillers like the one you played against Neb raska and Missouri. No Hollywood script writer ever made our fingernails disappear so fast. Your dramatic last acts outdid Broadway. But next time could you give us just a glimpse at the ending before the play starts so we can relax just a little? But if you can ' t, Jayhawkers, there ' s still one thing certain—yo u ' ve made a smash hit in our book. The Union Forever (Continued from Page 47) decorating, arranging, publicizing, and entertaining. A better planned together is the result, as well as more universal interest. Other projects brewing in the ing pot of SUA (I thought this was against the law in Kansas) include Dancing Classes, Sunday Evening etry, Snacks, Campus Polls, and ty Rating Cards. The Union has come to assume a definite sphere in the life of the student. As a place where he eats, where he meets, and where he goes to enjoy himself in any number of ways, it is only natural that the Union is taking on more and more the aspect of a campus center; a kind of house square for the campus village. There is a real oportunity for the individual in Union Activities. As it expands, each student will find his pursuits and avocations more and more connected with the Union. The various committees offer ship with other students and a chance to serve the campus and gain ence in one of the specialized bodies of organization. The Student Union Activities points to the past with pride and turns to the future with great expectations. Get Funny Witil Money Tdvite a Title This is easy as falling off a log. A small log, that is. Just send us a caption for this cartoon. The best line gets $5. Or you can send in cartoon ideas of your own. For cartoon ideas we buy, we pay $10 apiece . . $15 if you draw them. If you ' re a He, and know a She— or vice versa—this should be your meat. Here ' s your chance to strike a blow for the home team in the battle between the sexes—and maybe win three bucks besides! He Ubangi: I hear that Mbongo has left his wife. She Ubangi: Really? Why? He Ubangi: He says that every time she drinks a Pepsi, she smacks her lips, and he can ' t stand the clatter. He: Why do you call my date Pepsi, when her ' name is Betty? She: Oh, we all call her Pepsi be- cause she goes with anything! He: I never knew what real happi- ness was until 1 married you. She: Darling! He: Yes, and by then it was too late. Three bucks apiece for each of these we print. Let your con- science be your guide. C)aff Definftions Here ' s a column that must have some deep underlying significance. Darned if we know what, though. All we know is that these rate a buck each—and the daffier, the better. Frustration—having a Pepsi-Cola and no bottle-opener. Stork—bird with a big bill. Professor—textbook wired for sound. Thirst—obsolete term; dates back to pre-Pepsi-Cola era. Cooperation—one bottle of Pepsi with two straws. Paying $1 apiece for these is like giving you a license to commit burglary. But—$1 apiece for those we buy. Are you dough-shy? Get us! We give the stuff away. Folding money, too. Yes sir, Pepsi-Cola Co. pays from $1 to $15 for gags you send in and we print. Why worry about an honest living? This is easier. J list send your stuff, along with your name, address, school and class, to Easy Money Department, Box A, Pepsi-Cola Co., Long Island City, N. Y. All contribu- tions become the property of Pepsi-Cola Co. We pay only for those we print. There ' s nothing to it—as you can see from the samples below. If, by coinci- dence, the words Pepsi-Cola turn up somewhere in your gag, don ' t worry about it. We don ' t mind. (Matter of fact, we kind of like it.) So start your stuff in now —for Easy Money. GOOD DEAL ANNEX Sharpen up those gags, gagsters! At the end of the year (if we haven ' t laughed ourselves to death) we ' re going to pick the one best item we ' ve bought and award it a fat extra $100.00 A ' IN ON CORNER, Our well-known moron-about- campus, Murgatroyd—now a stu- dent in the school of agriculture— has developed a new theory on sheep-feeding. He makes a daily ration of Pepsi-Cola an important part of their diet. Duuuuuuuuh, of course, said Murgatroyd re- cently, when questioned as to his reasoning, everybody knows that Pepsi-Cola is the drink for ewe! $2 apiece, believe it or not, for any of these we buy! CHESTERFIELDS OF COURSE THERE ' S LOTS MORE SMOKING PLEASURE TO THEM FEATURED IN WARNER BROS. TECHNICOLOR 4 PR ODUCTION MY WILD IRISH ROSE HESTERFIELD Copyright 1947, LIGGETT MYERS TOBACCO Co. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Comuany. Winston-Salem, N. C. RODEO BRONC-RIDING STAR 977 6,,Peody HOLDER OF NATIONAL WOMEN ' S FISHING RECORDS INTERNATIONAL 10-GOAL POLO STAR TABLE-TENNIS STAR Ceceec f•af AIL OUR AMERICA . . . THE CHOICE OF EXPER IENCE ' ' , I SMOKED MANY DIFFERENT BRANDS AND COMPARED— ITS CAMELS WITH ME! I ' VE TRIED OTHER BRANDS —NOTHING SUITS MY ' T-ZONE ' LIKE A CAMEL! CAMELS SUIT ME BETTER ALL WAYS. THEY TASTE SO GOOD _THEY SMOKE SO MILD AND COOL! T for Taste... T for Throat:.. T cats your proving ground for any cigaretto. See Camels don- suil- yourl -Zonell -to dr: • All over America, the story ' s the same! With smoker after smoker who has tried and compared differ- ent brands of cigarettes, Camels are the Choice of Experience ! Try Camels in your that ' s T for Taste and T for Throat -- and you ' ll see why! Compare Camels for rich, full flavor; for mild, cool smoking— and you ' ll agree with the millions of smokers who say Camels suit them to a T ! Let your own experience tell you why more people are smoking Camels than ever before! When 113,597 doctors from coast to coast were asked by three independent research organizations to name the cigarette they smoked, more doctors named Camel than any other brand! According to a Nationwide survey: MORE PIIIRS SU1KE CAMELS WHER CIGARETTE THE OFFICIAL K.U. YEAR BOOK ER -YAW ILE ,AY And What Sir, Will Be Your Fondest Memory of College Days? OF COURSE 4 THE JAYHAWKER nee Sivagetaate Keyed to the season and in tune with your budget — our hand somely fash- ioned suits strike just the right note in your wardrobe. They ' re beautifully pro- portioned, discreetly modified and done in the most wonderful fabrics and. colors. Choose yours now from our very carefully selected repertoire. Weaved 901 Mass. Lawrence MOTOR IN WE SERVICE ALL MAKES OF CARS CHRYSLER, PLYMOUTH MOTOR CARS — OUR. PROFIT IS YOUR P OFIT AT THE SPRING NUMBER, 1948 5 S r ' lULliiiLi -_4 VIM 11111111111111M Ann 111113011In ft ,11111141111111 itssalim sims. SERVICE HEADQUARTERS K.U. STUDENTS and faculty No job too large or too small WIN TER CHEVROLET 738 H. St. 24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE PHONE 77 SPRING NUMBER, 1948 7 1•11■■■•■ All hail the first sweet notes of Spring! Once more sweetness and light p r e v ail s, and old Oread Mount is wrested from Winter ' s cold clutch. Once more the sym- phony of Spring swells across the old campus—the robin ' s chirp, the cricket ' s solo, the beer bottle ' s pop. The ballerina skirt is shed for shorts. The sap rises in the trees and in the breasts of men as bach- elors begin to do the things they ' ve been dreaming of all Winter. Spirits zoom, and grade points take a dive, and in comes the third issue of the JAYHAWKER. This issue celebrates the begin- ning and the ending of two great eras at K.U. The Orange Bowl Scrap Book on page thirty-three notes the finale of two great years of George Sauer-coached football at Kansas. A brilliant finish to a brilliant episode—two conference championships and an Orange Bowl team in two years. On page eleven we pay tribute to the au- thor of what we are certain will be another great episode in K.U. football, Mr. Jules Verne Sikes. With Spring practice all ready under way, everyone is eagerly looking forward to the gridiron performance of the crimson and the blue next Fall. Every issue usually evolves into a race, around the last two or three weeks, however, this time instead of racing the clock, we found our- selves running against the stork. Our entire photography depart- ment was disrupted for a short time by the advent of Mr. Hank Brown Junior, who beat the dead- line by a scant two weeks. Hank Senior finished off the last batch of pictures with diapers in one hand and developer in the other. Junior should be quite proud. however, for the old man turned Editorial Assistants: BETSEY SHEIDLEY CLARENCE EYERLY BILL CONBOY CHARLES HOFFHAUS LELAND NORRIS WALLY ROUSE Advertising Staff : ANN PREBLE JACK ARMEL DICK HUNTER ANN COWGER BRUCE ETHERINGTON BARBARA O ' NEAL SHIRLEY RICE MARY McNALLEY CHARLES HAWKINS out some of the best basketball action photos we ' ve seen in a long time, starting on page eighteen. On p a g e forty-eight, Betsey Sheidley takes a pot shot at the obese male ego, and comes up with a little diatribe that might well be titled, Betsey ' s Baedeker for Flus- tered Females. We ' ll grant that Betsey ' s invective is well-aimed, but with Spring in the air it would take nothing less than Bacterial Warfare to deflate the swelled chests that expand under every corduroy sport coat and w o r n leather jacket. We have long been vexed by the little blue tickets that appear so prolifically from time to time be- neath our windshield wipers. Our anger boiled over recently when Contributors: MARIAN RIPPETEAU JOAN BAGBY BILL CONBOY ROBERT DAVIS CHARLES HOFFHAUS HELEN KITTLE MARGARET MEEKS BETSEY SHEIDL EY CORINNE TEMPLE WALLY ROUSE RICKY CAPPS Photographers: BOB GRAHAM JIM MASON DUKE D ' AMBRA HANK BROWN AL CHALUPNIK TOM DEALY JACK WILLIAMS ewe acquired one of these certifi- cates for remaining twenty one minutes in a twenty minute zone. So, muttering epithets in Esper- anto, we resolved to avenge our- selves. We unleashed Art Editor. Paul Coker, upon the campus gendarmes, and admonished him to spare no stroke, and leave no ink well unturned in his quest for vengeance. Therefore it is with great pleasure t h at we direct readers to page thirty and The Campus Cop by Paul Coker. Robert Herrick once began a poem with the line, Gather ye rosebuds while ye may. That may still he good advice to the ladies. Men are a drug on the market now, but if Harry Truman makes many (Continued on Page 98) Staff Editor: KEITH WILSON Business Manager: LARRY SIMMONS Secretary: SHIRLEY HOYT Advertising Manager: BOB BOTTOMS Photographic Editor: HANK BROWN Art Editor: PAUL COKER On a cool summer evening last year, a small be- spectacled man sat in a small corrugated steel shack deep in the hills surrounding Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. He was working intently on a large intricate mass of electrical equipment. With gnome-like mo- tions the little man fondly caressed the instruments, and watched the large glowing panel. Then at a pre- arranged time, late in the evening, he looked at his watch, then turned and with an air of finality, threw a large switch. Immediately an electric current coursed through the equipment, and outside the shack, from a tall metal tower, a tiny radar beam began to bite its way upward through the chill vapors of the substratosphere. Rentlessly, the impulse throbbed outward through the last vestages of atmos- phere surrounding our little cinder, and coursed through outer space. Back in his Lilliputian hut, the scientist labored over his glowing instruments. Seconds passed. He waited intensely, his whole being focused expectantly upon the panel. Then it happened! After seconds that seemed eternities, a dial glowed and the ma- chinery emitted a cryptic, Beep. Man had reached the Moon!! The following day, the press of a mighty nation with some condescension, took notice of the momen- tous event and was generous enough to sandwich the item into its morning editions ... just between the news of an axe murder in Dallas and a child bride in Chattanooga. The noise of that bashful beep in the Catskills was not deafening, but the story that lay behind it should certainly be worthy of our attention. It took twenty thousand years to make that noise. Twenty thousand years from the time man first looked up at the Moon in respectful awe, until he reached out and touched it! It was a long, hard, way from a hilltop in some Pleistocene wilderness to a knoll west of Fort Mon- mouth, and it took more than time to turn the ob- ject of a shepherd ' s wonder into the object of a tech- nician ' s triumph ... it took muscle, and sweat, and courage. The martyrs before the altar of knowledge are myriad. Twenty thousand years . . . two hun- dred Centuries of Progress. for what? Let ' s look at the result of our long hard efforts. Our alabaster cities gleam along the shores of all the oceans of the world, but inside those concrete caves of ours, we kill, cheat, whine, whimper, lust, cov et, rape, butcher, and starve in much the same way as our anthropoid forbears did only now we operate in comparative comfort. Thus we have learned to fly ... the better to drop troops behind the enemy ' s lines. We have developed the radio ... the better to guide our missiles. And we have unlocked the secret of the atom ... the better to blow the merry insides out of anyone that isn ' t in our particular club. It ' s a great game ... like giving a kid a can of nitroglycerin to play with. The fact remains, that though our two hundred Centuries of Progress were box office successes, they were artistic flops. Technically, mankind has travelled light years since his ignominious start as a bare-footed barbarian, but morally, he has barely gotten around the block. If you doubt me, just wander down to the prize fights some night with a couple of your brother apes, and watch them scream themselves hoarse as two underslung gladiators drub each other into babbling insensibility. They haven ' t had so much fun since the last Christian was burned. The concrete catacombs of New York City might just as well be caves, and the crosses burned by veiled vandals to, The greater glory of the flower of Southern womanhood, might just as well be incense, to the greater glory of Isis. That light in your best girl ' s eye, as Van Johnson puts the clench on Linda Darnell wasn ' t kindled yes- terday ... it was there when the wise boys were bet- ting that domesticating the horse would throw every- body out of work. And so we look back on the great era of geologic time ... from God knows when, B.C., to 1948 A.D. The time it took for man to reach the Moon. Unfortunately there was no great celebration in honor of this momentous occasion. However, I would like to imagine a great banquet in honor of the event ... the culmination of twenty thousand years of material progress and technical achievement. It would be held in the greatest hall in al I civiliza- tion. All the greatest men in the world would be there ... all the generals, diplomats, doctors, busi- nessmen, scientists, and politicians. Promptly at 8:30, a time agreed upon by the foremost experts of proto- col, a great dinner gong would ring, and as a million husky throats gave voice to, Hail, Hail; the Gang ' s All Here, the great entourage would march into the dining hall, four abreast. They would take their places around the great table ... but then, suddenly they would stop and stare in astonishment! Some- thing was wrong! The party was ruined! ... for someone had written all over the walls! JAYHAWKER Undercover 7 Editor ' s Angle 8 Question Mark Team 11 Candidly a Jayhawker 12 Maybe Next Year 19 How Soon? 23 On Field and Court 28 The Long and the Short of it 29 The Campus Cop 30 The Big Splash 32 Orange Bowl Scrap Book 33 K. U. vs. Georgia Tech 36 Big Wheels on Campus 38 Party, Party 40 Professorially Proficient 44 It Started with Adam 48 THE COVER And now comes Spring reviving old de- sires, the thoughtful soul to solitude retires, wrote Omar Khayyam several centuries ago. However, Professor Khayyam never visited Oread Mountain where all Springtime retir- ing is done in the grass in front of the library. When the balmy breezes of February wafted the temperature high in the sixties this year, we broke out our Brownie Reflex in fond hopes of indelibly recording a picture worthy of the Spring cover, however, true to form, the Kansas weather thumbed its nose at our valiant efforts, and it was almost four weeks of sub-zero weather later that our photogra- pher was able to catch the somnolent scene which now reposes on the cover of our third issue. NEXT ISSUE God and the printers willing, the final issue of the 1948 JAYHAWKER should be born in the waning weeks of May. The last issue will be the biggest yet, reaching Esquire pro- portions of 150 pages. W e shall feature the Kansas Relays, Spring Intramurals, Harvey, Sunbathing, and of course, Commencement. The Class of ' 48 will be dutifully shot and preserved for posterity on the glossy surface of our pages along with the record of their four year battle with higher edu cation. As a climax we will reveal the Queen of the year— the 1948 JAYHAWKER QUEEN. Keith Wilson eddivi-ios-C 1474 Larry Simmons Boaissedet Maim9eli 474 Question If Athletic Director E. C. Quigley has a theme song in his search for a new football coach, it prob- ably ran something like this: Georgia got its football name, Sinkwich, Trippi—bowl bid fame By winning almost every game . . . THAT ' S WHAT I LIKE ABOUT THE SOUTH When the search ended late in February, the new head man of the pigskin art on Mount Oread turned out to be Jules Verne Sikes, former end coach at the University of Georgia. In making the selection, Mr. Quigley followed the old sports axiom, If you can ' t beat ' em, join ' em. After losing to Georgia Tech in the New Year ' s Day Orange Bowl game, he probably felt the boys from the South must have something. Coach Sikes confirmed the opinion three weeks after his appointment by naming Nor- man T. Cooper, an Alabaman, and Clifford C. Kim- sey, a Georgian, as his assistants. Cooper will take charge of the line and Kimsey will instruct the backs. Victorious teams and bowl games are routine matters to the new Jayhawker mentor. He played under Dana X. Bible at Texas A. and M. in 1925, 1926, and 1927, making the All-Southwest Confer- ence team at end his senior year. He also lettered in basketball and baseball. Following graduation, Sikes coached in Texas for several years, moving to the University of Georgia in 1938. He served there as head baseball coach and football end coach from 1938 to 1942 and for 1946 and 1947. Mark Team 4 , e0-1401 Sikes helped guide the Georgia Bulldogs to vic- tories in the 1942 Orange Bowl, the 1943 Rose Bowl, the 1946 Oil Bowl, the 1947 Sugar Bowl, and to a tie with Maryland in this year ' s Gator Bowl clash. During the war, the big Texan served in the U. S. Navy pre-flight program and was head foot- ball coach at the St. Mary ' s, Calif., preflight school in 1944. While at Georgia, Sikes turned out such fine ends as Joe Tereshinski, now with the Washington Red- skins, Van Davis of the New York Yankees, Lafay- ette King of the Buffalo Bisons, George Young of the Cleveland Rams, and George Poschner, an All- American in 1942. The new boss man of the gridiron game at Kansas comes from a football family. Two of his three brothers are coaches, one at San Angelo, Texas, Junior college, and one at Ozona, Texas, high school. Chosen from a list of 65 applicants, Sikes came to K. U. with perhaps the finest recommendations ever given a prospective Jayhawker grid coach. School authorities and other coaches who were con- tacted were unanimous in praising him as a student of the game and as a gentleman. President H. W. Caldwell of the University of Georgia said: His moving to Kansas will be a great loss to the University of Georgia, but he will be a wonderful asset to Kansas. Mr. Quigley reported, at a welcome banquet given for the new coaches by the Lawrence Chamber of (Continued on Page 98 ) It ' s leap year fellows. ' Jo Anne Jacobs takes no chances John Touhey wildly exults as Bud Seaman hangs a pin about putting the clench on J. P. Bodkins. J. P. doesn ' t flinch, and an embrace on best girl, Marge Shryock. Pat Bills so obviously, Bodkins gets bussed. notices the operation from the rear. Jerry Peters and Janice Broadsword Ann Stodder, Mary Alice White, and George Osborne and date, indulge find out if the Life Saver will ev er friend, eagerly await Santa Claus at the Pi in some Home Ec lab work replace the toothbrush. Phi Christmas party. Jellying. Jane Keith, Kathy Broers, and Mariana Ward, Jack Holland welcomes the tradi- Dee Travalent and Betty Jo put teeth into Leap Year threats as they practice tional Kansas Spring weather in the Lorbeer discuss the week end firing with the Women ' s Rifle Team. traditional way. dating situation. The Spring weather brought out a happy throng of partygoers. Barbara Ackerman, ray Davis, Ed Todd, and Mary Keller beam into the Jayhawker camera. Jerry Brietag assumes a thought- Gene Martin holds down ful pose in preparation to rendering his Big Man in Band a difficult fugue on his saxophone. tion by sliping in some licks on the sliphorn. March came in like a lion, and went out with an ing back garnered from skating on the ice at Potter ' s ing all the nice Spring weather. Midsemesters invariably bring out the bookworms. Tish Laming, Diane Stryker, and Jo Compton burn the night oil before resuming the battle for higher learning. The Student Body turned out en masse at the basket- Taking care to show gentility and restraint, the crowd ball games. Though the team slipped in conference stand- quietly congratulates Claude Houchin for making the last ing, everyone agreed that it was one of the scrappiest minute winning basket in the KU-OU game. teams we ' ve had. Phi Beta Kappas deep in the dungeons of Watson. Sweating slave laborers serve up volumes of knowledge to frantic Carol Crow re- flects on the glories f higher education luring enrollment. Machine Gun Joe Compton puts the blast on hap- less Don Millikan at the annual meeting of the Inter- fraternity mob. Dean Lawson welcomes back a large throng of joyful students at the start of the second semester. Happy to be back in school, the neophyte scholars return the welcome. The Old Kegler con- tinues to roll ' em in the aisles at the Vice Versa party, with the able as- sistance of Bill Ogg. Happy hepcats wildly applaud the jumping jive of Duke Ellington and the lads in Hoch Auditorium. Mary Helen Baker, Marilyn Sweet, Marilyn Glover, and sister slave girls wearily view the future as members of the Sigma Chi Harem, Betty Preble, Micky Kelvey,and Omer Muchmore are forced to pose for the camera at the country club. Some people ate sandwiches at the Inter fraternity dance, but the more elite dined on confetti. Eager enrollees work away as Professors Osborne and Holland direct from the rear. Up and away! With a grunt and a groan, the intramural basketball season gets under way. Dot Woods gets carried away with own joke as friend rolls on floor at the Vice Versa dance. John Monroe gets cornered by Anne Scott, Sally Millie Marks happily waves her six hands while Donna Trembly, Mary Jane Merriman, and Mary Sue Wei- son, Frances Hall, Louise Havekorst, Nancee Bell, and the last of mer, and though fighting violently, he is held and the Mohicans looks on. kissed. Jim Johnson, Bill Daugherty, Pete Jensen, Chet Frazier, and Jim Sheppard catch hapless Louise son housebreaking at the Sig Alph house. To the victor belongs the spoils. Sally Trembly cheers wildly as Anne Scott, Jean Francisco, and Virginia Winter watch a Spring Theta pinning, Ralph Kiene and Jim roe light their way down town with candles. Patty Link reverses tradition and tries a stogie at an Alpha Chi ning. Kathleen Collins gets instructions from the volunteer workers in Robinson Gym. Lookout girls! L. B. Hammer and Charles Hall spo ' fi the latest in Spring ,corsages at the Jay Janes Vice Versa . dance. Tuck Cooke breaks the bank as the chips fall down at the Interfwernity ball. SPRING NUMBER, 19 4 8 19 Maybe Next Year zt 6014461 Hold it! Don ' t turn that page yet. The basketball season wasn ' t that bad. Suppose we did finish in a tie for the league cellar. And suppose we did lose 10 straight games at one time during the season. It was still one of the most exciting seasons in Jayhawker cage history. No, we ' re not trying to be funny. It doesn ' t do any good to sugarcoat a losing season. But there were some surprises, some thrills, and some upsets which will be remembered for a long time. The season started with a jolt when the Emporia State Teachers threw a 67 to 44 haymaker at Coach Allen ' s young squad down at Emporia. Kansas started off to a 7 to 0 lead, but the Hornets stormed back to run up the highest score ever made against a K. U. team. Oklahoma held the previous record with a 63 to 51 victory in 1942. In the Big Seven tournament at Kansas City, the Jayhawkers reversed the procedure by upsetting Colorado in the first game, 49 to 39. Eskridge scored 11 points for. Kansas. In the second round game against Kansas State, K.U. trailed by one point with five minutes left, but the Wildcats put on the steam to win 56 to 42. The Crimson and Blue cagers made it two out of three in the tournament by edging past Nebraska the next night, 64 to 60, in an overtime. Howard England tied the score with a free throw in the regulation time. In the added five minutes, 20 points were shoved through the nets, 12 by Kansas. Howard. England tossed in 11 points as the Jay- hawkers barely lost to Notre Dame, 49 to 51, in Lawrence. Kansas began a four-game tour out West with a 57 to 43 victory over San Francisco University. Guy Mabry scored 13 points. Playing Oregon at Eugene, Coach Phog Allen ' s boys dropped two games by score of 61 to 66 and 53 to 61. Charley Penny and Claude Houchin each netted 13 points in the opener, and Penny and Jerry Waugh tossed in 15 counters apiece in the second contest. The Jayhawkers gained an even split for the trip by whipping Nevada, 52 to 45, on the way back. In the most sensational game of the year at Hoch auditorium, the Kansas team won its opening Big Seven clash against Oklahoma, 39 to 38, in an over- time. With six seconds left in regulation play, Guy Mabry tied the score to 34 to 34 with a one-hander from behind the free throw circle. In the bitterly And Please God, for Colorado Whoah! Whoops! Now See Here!! ... fought extra session, Sooner forward Paul Courty hit a left handed shot with five seconds left, to give the Norman club a 38 to 37 lead. But Jayhawker guard Claude Houchin sank a phenomenal set shot from midcourt with one second remaining to give the home team victory. Throughout the entire game, the two teams were never separated by more than three points. The Crimson and Blue squad took its second con- ference victory by defeating Colorado 57 to 44 as Otto Schnellbacher, back from the Orange Bowl, found the basket for 16 points. With the winning fever beginning to take hold, the Jayhawkers roared over Drake, 72 to 42, tieing the Hoch auditorium record for scoring set by the 1946 Kansas team against Iowa State. Schnellbacher was again high with 22 counters. Kansas took over the conference lead by handing Missouri a 58 to 46 loss at Col- umbia. Bill Sapp engineered the team to its third straight league win by dunking 15 points. Then came the deluge. The Oklahoma Aggies started it off by winning 47 to 35 at Hoch auditor- ium. The Cowboys from Stillwater led only 38 to 34 midway in the second half but ran the score up when the Kansas players began taking risks to com- bat the famous Aggie freeze. Then followed suc- cessive home court losses to Nebraska and Missouri. The Cornhuskers won 61 to 57 despite Schnell- bacher ' s 19 points. In the Missouri game, won by the Tigers 42 to 39, the only bright spot was the sparkling defensive work of Jerry Waugh, slim Kansas cener. A starter on the Jayhawker quintet as a freshman, Waugh held Dan Pippin, Missouri hotshot, to three free throws for the contest. Pippin had dunked 24 points against Kansas State in the game preceding the Lawrence clash, leading his team to a 48 to 46 upset victory over the Wildcats. The Jayhawkers then lost all three games on a conference road trip. Iowa State won at Ames, 52 to 50. Kansas State poured it on, 48 to 29. Okla- homa gained revenge for their one-point loss at Lawrence by winning 50 to 46 at Norman. The Kansas State contest was one of the weirdest of the season. Playing a stalling game from the opening whistle, the Jayhawkers trailed only 9 to 14 at the half. In the second stanza, however, both teams opened up, with the Wildcats opening up everything a bit wider—including the score. Jerry Waugh was high for Kansas with 9 points. The heartbreaker of the season came when Kansas State eked out a 61 to 60 win on the Hoch audi- torium hardwoods. The Crimson and Blue sharp- shooters were red hot in the first half, running up a 32 to 16 lead at the intermission. The Wildcats roared back in the second half, however, to nose the home team out just before the final gun. Schnell- bacher was high for the game with 24 points. The victory gave Kansas State the league championship. Playing Oklahoma A. and M. at Stillwater, Kansas scored only nine points in the first half for the first half of the second time during the season and drop- ped the final decision, 25 to 37. Jerry Waugh tallied seven points for K.U. At Lincoln, the Cornhuskers set a new scoring record against the Jayhawkers, winning 70 to 64. Jack Eskridge set a sensational scoring pace in the second half, looping in 12 field goals and 6 free throws in the final 20 minutes for an evening ' s total of 30 points. Colorado was not to be outdone at Boulder and set the third new scoring record which was made during the year against the Jayhawkers. The final count was 77 to 64 in favor of the Buffaloes. In the final game of the season, against Iowa State in Lawrence, Kansas won 61 to 54 to gain a tie with Colorado for last place in the conference, the record being four won and eight lost. In the Cyclone game, Otto Schnellbacher scored 19 points to finish only 2 behind Oklahoma ' s Paul Courty in the league point race. Schnellbacher took second place with 154 points in 12 games. His 19 points in the final con- test also boosted Schnelly ' s four-year collegiate total to 1003 points. From the time he returned from. the Orange Bowl, Schnellbacher was the driving spearhead of the team. Besides his scoring, he was a leader on the court and a bundle of spirit and fire which never burned out. The Crimson and Blue forward was named to the (Continued on Page 89) How Soon? Cha)14 c727hapt coeds may visualize the currently popular recording on reading these words, but how soon is also a good thumbnail mary of the problem that the G I ' s—past, present, and potential—at K. U. are wondering about these days. With an anxious eye on the troubled world situation ( and their recently alerted state draft boards ), they are asking themselves just how soon the fireworks will be starting. How soon will they, lucky 1-A ' s, again be selected by a mittee of their friends and neighbors to go travel- ing for Uncle Sammy. The United States, however, has undertaken a program of preparedness in order to avert just such an occurrance, in the belief that a strong America is a peaceful America. We cannot afford to do other- wise—lest we find it necessary to use our recently won laurels for gun wadding in World War III. The R. 0. T. C. program is of the most vital im- portance in our policy of preparedness. The United States, as a peace-loving nation, has never retained a large standing army during peace time. But in the event of war, or threatened war we must be able to mobilize quickly our citizen army by maintaining a reserve of thoroughly trained officers ready to take over when they are needed. For these indespensible reserves we have always turned to the Reserve Offi- cers ' Training Corps. The R. 0. T. C. at K. U. has had a long period of Colonel John Alfrey ■••11.1111011.■ Fall in.! Captain J. V. Peterson development—from the days in 1917 when the de- tachment consisted of hastily constructed tents on the side of Mt. Oread, to the modern well-knit organi- zation housed in the Military Science Building. Two- hundred fifty-eight men are currently enlisted in the hill R. 0. T. C. The embryo Jayhawker officer has his choice of three different branches of the army— the Infantry; or for those who don ' t relish toting rifles, the Artillery; and for those with a taste for flight pay, the Air Corps. The cadets get thorough training in the theoretical phase of these three bran- ches during their academic terms, and this is supple- mented with a summer field camp between their junior and senior years. The R. 0. T. C. staff is com- posed of officers and enlisted men of the regular army who have charge of the courses of instruction. Wherever it is possible the cadet officers are given the maximum amount of responsibility in order to give them the know how in leadaing other which is not only essential in military life but a great asset in civilian pursuits as well. Come summe r time and the third year men will again go to various army bases in the country for what is, in effect, the lab course in military science. This year Mt. Oread ' s doggies and artillerymen are going to Ft. Riley and the fly boys are destined for Lowry Field, Colorado. Learn by doing is the motto at these summer sessions. The officers-to-be get firsthand experience with the flamethrowers, rockets, tanks, mortars, machine guns, mud, and field rations with which they would come in contact in case of an actual emergency. Clear Gun! The high point of the cadets ' year, from a military point of view, is the annual inspection conducted by the U. S. Army. The R. 0. T. C. detachment at K. U. has repeatedly passed this inspection with a rating of excellent. On the social side, the grand event of the year is the gala Army-Navy Military Ball—the full dress occasion which culminates in the crowning of some lucky cadet ' s or middy ' s date as Queen. Special recognition is given to cadets who excell in certain phases of their training. Men who are handy with their drill are given an opportunity to join the Pershing Rifles, a national organization of the R. 0. T. C. Those who, through their ability and leadership, display outstanding qualities as cadet officers are initiated into the national military honor society of Scabbard and. Blade. The K. U. detach- ment also sports a crack rifle team which challenges and accepts chalenges from other schools. Upon successful completion of their training, ca- dets are commisisoned as second lieutenants ( re- serve ) in the Army of the United States. The regular army offers direct commissions to men who have made outstanding records, and about three-fourths of the army ' s officer personnel is procured in this maner. As reserve officers the R. 0. T. C. graduates are free to enter whatever civilian pursuits they choose and only in the event of a national emergency are they required to go ino active service. They are America ' s modern minute men—our best insurance, this side of the millenium, for the peace of our country and of the world. Brace, Mister! MIMFM14‘ 4 unless there is an emer- gency. Graduates of the programs are commis- sioned as ensigns in the regular navy or the na- val reserve. The Jayhawker N. R. 0. T. C. unit is manned by officers and enlisted men of the regular navy. This year 150 K. U. men are learning the navy way via the N. R. 0. T. C. During their four years of train- What do we do in the Infantry? Instruction in Tactics gories. Regular N. R. 0. T. C. men, after completing their four year training course, are obligated to serve for two years after graduation in the regular navy. Conract N. R. 0. T. C. students follow the same course of instruction as the regulars but they receive no pay other than commuted rations during their last two years. Also they are not obligated to serve The salty branch of our armed forces is represented at K. U. by the Midshipmen of the Naval R. 0. T. C. Like our land forces, our navy re- quires a huge reservoir of trained officers who can be depended upon to command our forces afloat in time of a national emergency. This is the raison d ' etre of the N. R. 0. T. C. and of its high standards of training. The Midshipmen under the navy program are divided into two cate- Parade Rest! ing, the middys run the gamut of infantry drill, ship handling, navigation, ordinance, naval justice engineering, damage con- trol, fire-fighting and sea- manship. The navy unit at K. U. ( lack of water notwithstanding) is equip- ped to give these men a thorough course of instruc- tion in naval science. Oh Gunnery for practice submarine de- tection. All this, plus a huge five inch gun com- plete with rotating mount, Mark 37 director, com- puter, and switch-panel- and a very salty ship ' s company. ' a little imagination you can al= most feel the deck roll. The middys, however, get a real chance to get their sea legs on the eight- week s u m m e r cruises Navigation The Queen of the Fleet the first floor of the Mili- tary Science building there is an array of equipment which, given a bridge, bilge, and running lights, could almost pass for a destroyer. Everything is there—from 20 to 40m.m. guns, depth charges, tor- pedoes, and mines to a complete Sonar hookup Cadets Have Access to the Latest Scientific Equipment which the navy requires them to take. This summer the regulars are slated to sail from Treasure Island, California, to Pearl Harbor where they will receive submarine, gunnery, and amphibian training. The battleship Iowa and three light cruisers—the Pase- dena, the Astoria and the Springfield will make up the training fleet. The contract students will cruise the west coast area in the light cruiser Duluth, ping at Treasure Island; Victoria, British Columbia; Long Beach; and San Francisco. The navy keeps the middys on their toes during their shoreside training by a unique system of merits and demerits. A list of all the trainees, arranged ac- cording to their over-all ranking, is published period- ically. Aptitude for the service and excellence in aca- demic work are the essentials for the honor positions at the head of this list. Special credit is given to those men who participate in such extra-curricular ties as rifle or pistol teams, parades, crack drill squads, and navy-sponsored athletic teams. The navy and Army R. 0. T. C. men at K. U. are making a splendid contribution to their country by taking an active part in our program of preparedness. Over 30 percent of the middys and about 70 percent of the army cadets are veterans of World War II. Having seen what war is like they are doing their best to see that by remaining strong we never have another one. The R. 0. T. C. programs are vital to the security of the United States, for without them it would be imposisble to produce sufficient officer personnel to command our armed forces in time of an emergency. With the present grave world tion growing more grave as each teletype report comes in, the United States finds that it is becoming imperative that she have a large reserve of trained personnel on hand for any possible eventualities. The many long debates in congress over the advisability of Universal Military Training and the reinstitution of the Selective Service Act have brought this lem squarely to the fore. Yet R.O.T.C. training not only gives the nation a constant supply of trained offi- cers, but it also produces more able citizens. R.O.T.C. training in leadership, in command, and cooperation is invaluable to the men that have taken it. America is staking a large share of her hopes for a lasting peace on an alert and well-trained corps of civilian- officers—the men of the army and navy R.O.T.C. Kenneth Shearer Fires Away on the 20 M.M. Gun 28 THE JAYHAWKER On Field and Court 4 eapp The Sig Alphs, last year ' s chambionship k ' anz, battle it out with the hard fighting PiKAs. thousand forty-two men, the largest number ever to participate in a single extra-curricular activity at K. U., battled through over four hundred basketball games in this winter ' s intramural gram. The Independent teams won both the A and B basketball championships. The Aces High became A champions by ting Beta Theta Pi, 27-23, in a rugged game, March 11, in Robinson Annex. The Aces played a breaking, fancy-passing brand of ball and simply outsped the smoother-working Betas. Lightning-like Lou DeLuna cut loose twelve point for the Aces, three times breaking in so fast that no one was near him when he laid the ball in. Classy center, Ralph Moon, kept the Betas in the game, hooking in eleven points from his pivot position to be up high point man. In the B finals the Truesdale Tigers put on a sizzling last half drive to overcome a sixteen point deficit and eke out the Phi Delts, 31-29. The Tigers entered the finals by beating AVC, 37-33, while the Phi Delts had won the fraternity B title by ming the Betas, 41-27. From December 9, the day the season opened, till the finals, the 101 intramural teams kept Robinson Gym and Robinson Annex busy almost every ning. The teams in each of the Fraternity A and B and Independent A and B sections were divided into from six to fourteen leagues. At the end of the league play the two top teams from each league met in the championship playoffs. (Continued on Page 97) The Truesdale Tigers, championship B basketball team. The Aces High, All-University championship basket- ball team. SPRING NUMBER, 1948 29 long of the women ' s intramural winter basketball season was six foot two Shirley Hoff- man, high-scoring I.W.W. forward. The short of it is that I.W.W. easily won the 1947-48 women ' s basketball championship trophy. About the middle of December twenty-six teams entered the race for the trophy. With a combination of skill, enthusiastic rooting from the sidelines—and perhaps a little luck—five breathless teams emerged as division winners—Alpha Delta Pi, Delta Gamma, I.W.W., Kappa Alpha Theta, and Kappa Kappa Gamma. These five teams met in the semi-finals early in February. The exciting final game resulted in Alpha Delta Pi losing to the victorious I.W.W. team, sparked by their lanky forward. At the close of the season, several outstanding players were awarded positions on the women ' s varsity basketball team. They were Shirley Hoffman, Jerry McGee, Maxine Gunsolly, forwards, and Jody Stuckey, Joan Anderson, and Marjorie Kaff, guards. Kappa Kappa Gamma splashed its way to victory in the 1948 swimming season which will long be remembered for its keen competition and no less than three broken records. In the two preliminaries, Delta Gamma and Kappa Kappa Gamma each dominated the meets by more than doubling the total Short OF The game varsity team has nothing on the sprightly amazons that battle for the toss ups in the night games at Robinson. points of the respective second place winners, Pi Beta Phi and Kappa Alpha Theta. Each preliminary meet winner boasted a broken record. Nanette Hyer set a new record in breaststroke at 23 seconds, (Continued on Page 96) The Long and the 1 The girls develop theh ' lungs as the stiff Basketball com- petition gets underway. The hard-fighting I.W.W. team won the basketball com- petition over a large field of able opponents. The Big Game 4 Pia 4 Aipae George Sauer stood before his Jay- hawkers in the Santa Rita Hotel in Tuscon, Arizona and spoke the fateful words, Men, Mr. Quig phoned this morning and you have been given a bid to play in the Orange Bowl. The Mavericks from the great plains had done it, and masterfully. For the first time in the history of Kansas Universi ty, the Crimson and Blue would be carried gloriously onto the field of a post season bowl game. While visions of oranges danced through their heads, the highly favored Jayhawkers took the field in Tucson and handily trampled the Arizona Wildcats to the tune of 54-28. Then back to Lawrence and a welcome befitting the champs. With their return to the campus, a tired but triumphant crew settled down for an all too short eight day vacation before donning the moleskins for the pre-bowl practice. With cold hands and high spirits, the indomitable Jayhawk established a beach head on the Mt. Oread practice field. There the cold windswept December afternoons were spent in the perfection of the plays that had made Kansas the scourge of the Big Six for two seasons. Christmas vacation became a reality for most Oreadites, but as the last class was dismissed, those in it who were on the team turned their footsteps toward the Horseshoe on the hill where another cleated session was in the offing. On the Monday preceding Christmas, the last practice in Lawrence was held inside Memorial Stadium, and the squad was dismissed for a long three day Christmas vacation. The boys were told Upper Left: The Longest Convertible in the World rolls into Miami. The Orange Bowl Parade produced come elaborate floats. The travelling Jayhawks meet Queen Jeanne Beigger. The Band put on a show for everyong. Governor Carlson and Chancellor Malott were among the spectators at the memorable game. to meet in the Kansas City, Kansas, Chamber of Commerce Building at 10:00 sharp on the morn- ing of December 26, and with this announcement there remained only the flight Southward and the Miami pre-game practices before the Great Day arrived. Upon assembling in Kansas City, the Hawks were hustled to the Fairfax Airfield behind a screaming motorcycle escort. Here they were served a light breakfast in the lunchroom of the Administration Building amid resounding yells of, Rock Chalk and Yea Kansas! The boys climbed aboard their waiting plane. The Pan-American Airways Clipper, christened the Clipper jayhawk for this trip, was piloted by Captain Elwood Leep, Chief Pilot of Pan-American ' s Eastern Division. The Captain, a former Oreadite, had obtained special leave of absence from his duties in New York in order to fly the squad to their first venture in a post-season Bowl. The flight from Kansas City to Miami took approximately six hours, and as the silver sky giant glided in for its landing at Miami ' s International Airport, those aboard could see a large crowd waiting to welcome them to the land of oranges and millionaires. Waiting at the foot of the loading ramp, stood Miss Patricia Fordyce, Theme Girl of the Orange Bowl Festival, who presented each member of the squad with a large bag of Florida oranges. After a short period of interviews and pictures taking, the group was loaded into waiting buses and transported to the Venetian Hotel which was to be GHQ for Operation Orange Bowl. Follow- ing dinner and the announcement by Coach Sauer of the pending workouts, the Hawks were given free rein, and most of the boys hit a local movie before bedding down in preparation for the ses- sions beginning the next day. (Continued on Page 97) Upper right. The Mayor of Miami gets a copy of the Jayhawker from Jack Moorehead. The Orange Bowl Pageant swings down the streets of Miami, Queen Jeanne waves at the crowd. Even Cinderella was at the game. Red Ettinger greets Jim Messer after the big game. ;■11. ' n7 And who wins the toss? Pre-game ceremony featuring The whistle, the kick off, and the Orange Bowl classic is the co-captains of Tech and Kansas, Orange Bowl Queen on. The Jayhawkers, in white, do the honors with high Jeanne Biegger, and Theme Girl Patricia Fordyce. hopes of victory. Si Aoradurat.row. Schnellbacher, Crawford, Johnson, and Schmidt make a The Jayhawker ' s drive in for the kill as Frank Puttee Georgian pass it--but quick! downs a Tech back. !-:51- 471 Alki74,`,!;:v4T4- tP.VAvi, ° f, t4i. ? . ' .4.7- rr 110 Tech stopped the Hawks on occasion. No. 57 on the Evans displays his All-American ability, as he catches the ground facing camera is All American Bobby Davis, pass that ties the game up 7-7 at the half. Evans breathes a sigh of relief as he removes the tape from his aching feet for the last time as the press looks on approvingly. And the play that almost won the ball game—Schnelly barely steps out of bounds on his flying touchdown run that would have tied up the game and given Kansas the chance to win. Jim Messer, Bill Shears, and the whole Band whoop it up at the half. Kansas has been fighting the Yellow- jackets to a standstill. The Thinker. Coach Sauer masterminds from the sidelines while a Georgia Tech pennant waves in defiance behind him. The game is tied, but there is still a half to go. Co-Captains Schnellbacher and Fambrough lead their charges The enervating Florida sun took its toll of Jayhawker onto the playing field against the hot sun and the even hotter strength, and the Georgians quickly take advantage to Georgia passing. pile the score up to 20-7. French and Schnelly try to an elusive Yellowjacket. Rl g Whe On Campus BETTY VAN DER SMISSEN A fine leader, a good sport, and a capable student— each one of these characteristics fits the personality of Betty van der Smissen, who comes to K. U. from Buehler, Kansas. Along with her very active participation in All- Student Council and in YWCA, where she serves on the Cabinet and as district delegate, Betty devotes many of her busy hours to the new organization of Associated Women Students. She believes that AWS can work miracles in promoting women leadership and in knit- ting more closely the ties among women on the hill. With such energetic backers as Betty, the AWS has thrived this first year of its existence. Much of Betty ' s enthusiasm culminates in sports and the team work and leadership which they entail. Her adeptness at every sport from volleyball to basketball has led her to success in promoting team fellowship. Last summer Betty was awarded the Danforth Scholar- ship which enabled her to spend several educational weeks at the American Leadership Session at Camp Minnewonka in Wisconsin. An unusual career lies before Betty after graduation, for she plans to attend law school to train for the position of a juvenile court judge. Proving vigor and sureness in tackling each new job on the hill, Betty is certainly headed for success in the law field. —Joan Bagby ALDO ALIOTTI One of the most prominent members of Forensic League is Aldo Aliotti, who has come to the U. S. from Rome, Italy. Aldo has shown himself to be outstanding in debating and extemporaneous speaking. As a member of the Debate Squad, he has won debates in Iowa, Nebraska, and Kansas. Aldo ' s day is made up of many activities besides speaking. Last semester he taught classes in Italian and this semester is teach- ing French. When not teaching, or in Chemical Engineering classes, he is busy in many organizations. He is secretary of Inter- national Club, member of Alpha Chi Sigma, Y.M.C.A., American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Newman Club, Forensic League, Debate Team, and Pi Delta Phi, honorary French fraternity. To allow time for all his interests, Aldo schedules every hour of the clay. I like to be very precise, he explains. Aldo is an enthusiast for music, classical and popular—but not Duke Ellington. A multa-linquist, he speaks Italian, Greek, French, as well as English which he learned while living in Persia. He is an avid skier and chooses the Swiss and Austrian Alps as the ideal spot for this sport. Aldo has become a football fan, although during his first semester here he was entirely baffled by the tactics and scoring. His future plans include graduate school, a profes- sion in his major of Chemical Engineering, and most of all— American citizenship. —Marian Rippeteau JEAN MOORE Already a member of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, versatile Jean Moore has received countless other honors. Although he is probably the youngest student in Law School, he is reputed to be one of the greatest orators in the history of K. U. The Universit y has sent Jean over 15,000 miles for debating and oratorical contests. He is the only student to win both the oratorical and extemporaneous speaking championships in the Missouri. Valley. It is no wonder that he is the honor man of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary speech fraternity. Jea n ' s campus activities are many. He is the ex-president of Chess Club, member of Spanish Club, Quill Club, Forensic League, and Classics Club. Jean ' s experience as a delegate to the United Nations Assembly gave him the experience which he applies as national chairman of the Inter-collegiate United Nations Organi- zation. Also active in the Young Republican Party, Jean still finds time to peruse his interest in Roman history. Jean says the high point of his life came when at 18, he be- came an instructor of fencing—the youngest instructor in the history of the University. In whatever spare time he can find, he enjoys writing surrealistic poems, several of which have been published. With such an enviable past, we are sure this Wichita boy can look to a successful career as a lawyer. —Marian Rippcteau CLARKE THOMAS Everyone who has ever read the Daily Kansan should be well acquainted with Clarke Thomas, for he was editor for the fall semester. This semester many other activities have claimed his time. Besides being a member of the Kansan Board, Pi Kappa Alpha social fraternity, Treasurer of Quill Club and editor of their magazine, The Trend , and vice president of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, Clarke finds plenty of time to hit the books, for his overall grade average is 2.79. Clarke, a senior in the College, comes from Topeka and plans a journalistic career after graduation. His special interest is in music, which may explain his membership in the A Cappella Choir and the University Band. His hobby is collecting phono- graph records and he boasts of having five different recordings of that once popular number, Open the Door, Richard. Clarke ' s many hill activities plus his friendly personality make him one of K.U. ' s most outstanding wheels. —Corinne Temple I Below: Not a photo of clandestine river boat gamblers in New Orleans, but a shot of the revelers at the Interfratern- ity dance through the window of the Country Club. .Peg Baker gloats as she eyes her winnings. Photos by Hank Brown Circle: Donna De Munn places the hand of temptation heavily on the shoulder of Phyllis Mowery at the Sigma Kappa house. Phyllis is un- swayed, however, and shuns the demon Bourbon. Party Part ,y Roz,4e d 2,attiz Huzzah, Huzzah, for cometh Springe againe to Oread Mounte. How sweete are ye dulcet tones of ye convertibles honkinge, how redde ye Robbin ' s breste. Once more ye sap rises in ye trees, and stands up at formale dinners. Hark to the sounds of Springe! With ye beer, ustinge, and ye social set, setting. Gadzooks, what a season! But there is bitter withe ye sweete, for now ye younge men will once more suffer from ye dread disease ... Bleedinge at ye mouth. Gone are ye longe dim dayes of winter. Gone ye icy trips to Kansas Citye. Gone ye chill bare wind. Gone ye parkas. Welcome sweateres! Ah, sweete harbingers of Springe. Ye Saturdaye eve picnecks, ye rustlinge of ye underbrush round yon Pot- ter ' s Ponde, ye speaking of ye back seat springes, ye flunkinge of ye midsemesteres. And as ye warmer months spreade across ye Wakarusa valleye, once more a hardy people prepare for action. And once againe ringinge through the woodlandes of ye Fowlere Grove is heard ye war cry of ye Oreadites ... Party, Party! Upper Left: Ron Hills helps his date light up her opium pipe as Swami, Jim Fuller, glares into the future in the rear, at the Lambda Chi waterfront party. Upper Right: The Flora-dora girls, Dave Draper, and Rod Sumner pre- pare to go before the crowd at the Phi Beta house. Right: Margaret Granger gets the pig ' s tail for being the youngest girl as John Amberg looks on approvingly at the traditional Phi Gam Pig Dinner. Lower Left: Larry Bowman illustrates what evils can come from having Pink tooth-brush, to Jeanne Bowman at the Teke Mardi Gras party. Lower right: Bobbette Sellers and Jeanne Ashley grimace at the Cameraman as the panty goes on at the Sigma Nu house. Photo by Hank Brown Upper Left: Mary Hercules spikes her cow juice while date Don Ashlock, gets another slug from Martha Jo Easter at the Miller Hall Joe ' s Place Party. Upper Right: Eva Desideio, Beverly Morris, Joe Ziegler, Rozanne Croft, and Ralph Collins beam into the lens at the Theta Phi Alpha house. Left: Fred Apt leads fellow squawmen through the under- brush outside of the big Pow Wow of the Delta Gamma tribe. Lower Left: Bob Bryce reports on the bats he has been seeing in his room at the Foster Hall restorium. Lower Right: Lee Vogel, Karen York, John Forney, Laurie Bir- mingham, Mary Mid Chubb, and Dick Hunter lounge about on the cushions at the Sigma Chi Harem. Photos by Hank Brown Upper Left: Charley Thomas toasts Nancy McGraw in a Dixie Cup of Duggan ' s Dew at Hod-Carriers conclave at the Triangle house. Paul Tohme wears the green behind the bar. Sure an ' twas a foine party. Upper Right: Howard Davis executes a pincers movement on Carolyn Jones as several of the brothers jelly in front of the Kappa Sig house. Right: Spring brings out ground hogs, earthworms, and dance bands by the dozens. Reed Lindley massages the skins for Kass Kassinger and the lads. Lower Left: A. D. Moore, Kathy Brode, Bill Straight, Mary Lou Pringle, Jack Freed, and Marjorie McCullough trip the light fantastic and any unwary pedestrians at the Delta Chi house. Lower Right: Three Gun Jack Atherton puts the heat on Tillie Mack at the Chi Omega Ranch Ruckus. Photos by Hank Brown 44 THE JAYHAWKER Professorially Proficient R. M. DREYER Professor R. M. Dreyer might be hailed as the most eligible bachelor on the K. U. campus, but, hold it gals, he is, and I quote, not interested in that great step known as matrimony. Instead of settling down, Dr. Dreyer has many great plans in- cluding the enlargement of the geology staff and at the same time presenting a more well-rounded curriculum to the dents of K.U. Dreyer came to K.U. in 1939, left in ' 42 spent four years in the Navy and returned to this campus in 1946. In 1934 Professor Dreyer received his B.S. at Northwestern University which was followed by an M.S. and a Ph. D. received at the California stitute of Technology. He is now head of the Geology department and has been conducting research for the University of Kansas Research Foundation on the use of minerals in plants. Mr. Dreyer is definitely non-commital on controversial issues, is very good natured and individualistic. As for his hobbies, it seems that the professor likes to get away from it all by taking field trips or by taking off for a short hop in his airplane. —Carolyn Coleman HILDEN GIBSON I ' d rather teach than sleep. These are the words of Hilden Gibson, Associate Pro- fessor of Political Science and Sociology at K. U. This popular professor is eagerly sought on enrollment day, for his classes are equally interesting and informative. His survey class in Soviet Culture is helping to stimulate intelligent thought about Russia on the campus. Dr. Gibson, who obtained his AB degree at K. U. in 1933 and his Ph.D. at Stanford in 1940, is intensely interested in his work in human relations. A great part of his time is spent in the Western Civilization annex, for he heads this department. Professor Gibson considers himself one of the lucky people who finds his job more interesting than his pastimes. He does enjoy, however, his woodworking and photography hobbies in which he admits he is no expert. As a solution to his pet peeve—noisy jukeboxes—Professor Gibson jokingly gests offering his services to a jukebox company in order to turn out a machine containing a nickel slot for five minutes of silence. Looks like this might be an cellent way to capitalize on selling nothing. —Joan Bagby E. H. TAYLOR Though he was born in Marysvile, souri, Profesor E. H. Taylor is an old K. U. man. He teaches Comparative Anatomy, and has done so for twenty years. He ceived his A.B., M.S., and Ph.D. at the University of Kansas. Profesor Taylor is an authority on ical reptilian life and spends most of his time traveling to various sections of the world studying and exploring. In fact, he has lived fifteen years outside the United States, in South Asia, in the mountains of Mexico, Costa Rica, and other tropical countries. He spent many years in the Phillipines studying reptilian and ian life. He is known to have walked more miles through the Phillipines than any other white man on earth. Profesor Taylor ' s hobby, plain to sce, is collecting reptiles and amphibians and he has approximately 30,000 specimens, most of which are kept in a room in Snow Hall. He also has a room containing skeletons, which the Medical students use to further their education. —Helen Kittle 48 THE JAYHAWKER IT STARTED WITH ADAM T ALL started back a couple of eons B.C. when I Ned Neaderthal unconsciously slipped into a type of Freudian superiority-complex by discovering that it was much easier ( and much more pleasant) to simply drag his leopard-skin clad mate along by the hair than to coax her gently. Clinging tenaciousl y to the memory of that Golden Age when a man (plus a club and bulging muscles) was a man, men throughout history have been suffering from the happy delusion that they are definitely superior to the poor, misguided unfortunates of the other sex —women. It is but small comfort to us women to realize that this superiority is only an illusion in the male mind—for to men it is real, and they govern their actions accordingly. The self-portrait existing in the male egotistical imagination very probably pictures man strutting about on stilts towering above admiring women gazing upward in awe at his wisdom, intelligence, beauty, and perspicacity. But through all the turies, for some unexplicable reason, women have been unable to knock the props out from under him. Yet this ambulatory ego called man is not surprising, for his self love begins to be nourished from the time he wears his first diaper. Boy babies are always given the most interesting toys—cars that run, and cap pistols that shoot, and boats that float. No wonder he feels superior to little girls who always get stuck with stupid, insensible dolls that can ' t do anything but bleet Mama in a nasal goat-like voice. By the time he reaches grade school, he has become happily aware of the fact that he can yell louder, get his hands dirtier, blow bigger bubbles, and pitch a baseball better than any girl. The tism is growing. By the time man reaches college, his ego ates from grapefruit to watermelon size. It ' s not hard to understand the complacent smile of the college man, usually clad in an army jacket with casually turned-up collar, (he likes to have you exclaim about the faded air force insignia or the Chinese writing on the back), as he strolls among his admiring retinue of females. He is undoubtedly thinking the perpetual male thought— How lucky you women are to have me around! He is convinced that he is an absolute author- ity on any subject from Paleozoic pelecypods to the probability of Wallace for president, and he doesn ' t mind at all divulging some of his tible store of knowledge to any woman who will listen. Of course, the male flatly denies doing anything quite so trivial as studying, because, you see, he feels that wisdom is an innate male characteristic— especially knowledge of Athletics. It ' s extremely pleasurable to college men to earnestly exchange their pet theories on split T formations and double-wing backs while their dates sit helplessly twiddling straws and crunching the ice of the one nickel coke they have been magnanimously allowed. Men consider sports to be so BAFFLING to college women. The college man is a Fred Astaire when it comes to dancing. Suave in his tuxedo, he presses his cheek close, allowing his date to receive the full impact of the tic scent of his Sportsman ' s After Shave Lotion. in his eyes, he is gliding and dip- ping about gracefully, but his date with aching arches knows only too well the pains of doing an unchanging two-step — step, step, slide, step, —throughout the long evening, whether the music be fast or slow, rumba or samba. However, most males usually feel too superior to bother exerting the effort to entertain their girls by dancing. The college man is confident that it is much more ing for his date jammed against the un- yielding corner of a smoky booth, to sit in admiration as he whiles away the eve- ning engulfing voluminous quantities of be er and once in a while tossing her a bit of his sparkling wit in the form of a crude joke. When the college man is not actually participating in drinking beer, he loves to brag about how much beer he consumed that afternoon with the boys, or about how much beer he wishes he were consuming right now, or about how much beer he is going to consume in the future. Still reminiscing about cave man days, the college man expects women to yield to his every whim. He calls up at four o ' clock blithely suggesting they go to the horse-shoe pitching match at 4:15. His amaze- ment and anger knows no bounds if she dare to mention that she is already busy or hints gently that she might possibly rather go somewhere else than to stand among a sweaty mass of brutes ing iron pieces at two small defenseless posts. He invariably saunters in forty-five minutes late and bellows for her to Hurry up and cut the primping! As he waits, he slips out his pocket comb and deftly slicks down his crew cut, straightens his windsor knot, and squints at the smoothness of yesterday ' s shave in the mirror. Of course, no college girl is really fooled by the (Continued on Page 96) ACTIVES Warren R. Alexander, Richmond, Indiana Ted H. Beaver, Wichita Burton C. Canfield, Belleville Charles Milton Coughenour, Wellsville Robert L. Davis, Wichita Charles A. Dillon, Kansas City, Mo. Paul B. Farrar, Norwich Lloyd Grady, Altamont Ralph S. Grant, Clarkston, Washington J. Glenn Hahn, Norwich Dwight Hause, Kansas City Warren A. Shaw, Florence James Everett Simmons, Wellsville Dale A. Spiegel, Formoso Robert Raymond Teel, Columbus irgil H. Whitsill, Phillipsburg PLEDGES Jack A. Campbell, Lakin Jack Causman, Malibu, California Harold Joseph Keeling, Topeka Ross C. Keeling, Jr., Topeka Donald E. Spiegel, Formoso Dale D. Theobald, Chicago Alpha Kappa Lambda was founded April, 1914, at the University of Cali- fornia, Berkeley, California. Delta, now one of 8 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1922. Presi- dent, Charles A. Dillon; Vice-presi- dent, J. Glenn Hahn; Corresponding Secretary, Dale A. Spiegel; Treasurer, Everett Simmons. FIRST ROW: Simmons, Diilon, Davis, Whitsitt, Farrar, Beaver, Grady. SECOND ROW: Canfield, Campbell, Keeling, J. Spiegel, Teel, Seay, Hahn, R Keeling, Theobald. THIRD ROW: Grant, Robson, Don Spiegel, Dausman, Kanehl, Cougnelour, Shaw, House, Alexander. ACTIVES Wade H. Arthur, Lawrence John D. Brown, Independence James L. Brunson, Wichita Lowell C. Case, Independence Earl D. Clark, Jr., Kansas City G. Donald Clay, Buckner, Mo. Richard B. Collins, Wellington James R. Cope, Kansas City, Mo. Richard W. Cory, Eudora Robert G. Coshow, Hutchinson Chester L. Dillon, Downs Jack Eskridge, Independence, Mo. Paul R. Garey, Downs Joseph Gubar, Kansas City Richard T. Haggard, Mission Herman D. Hale, Kansas City, Mo. William M. Halsey, Independence William B. Harding, Kansas City John W. Hinde, Independence, Mo. Earl E. Laird, Kansas City Chester A. Laniewski, Ambridge, Pa. George 0. Latham, Lawrence Edwin A. Lee, Louisburg Jean LePage, Leavenworth Cla ude E. Mason, Wichita Joseph W. McCoskrie, Kansas City, Mo. Charles P. McKay, Kansas City, Mo. Donald D. Millikan, Kansas City Richard P. Oberhelman, Kansas City, Robert P. Oberhelman, Kansas City, Mo. Frank B. Palmer, Jr., Harper George L. Peterson, Overland Park Nile G. Peterson, Overland Park John W. Randell, Colby Albert E. Rice, Chanute Otto M. Rueschoff, Park Glenn J. Shanahan, Independence Robert R. Shaw, Bartlesville, Okla. Richard W. Sime, Kansas City, Mo. William D. Webb, Independence Herbert H. Weidensaul, Eudora William E. Weidensaul, Eudora Alpha Tau Omega, founded at Virginia Military Institute, on Sep- tember 11, 1865, now has 101 active chapters. Kansas Gamma Mu was founded at the University of Kansas on November 21, 1901. The current officers of this chapter are: Joseph IV. McCoskrie, President; Robert P. Oberhelman, Vice-President; Donald D. Millikan, Treasurer; D. Clark, Jr., Secretary. PLEDGES Allen A. Barrett, Kansas City, Mo. Samuel C. Batsell, Junction City Edward L. Becker, Newton Robert B. Brown, Kansas City James E. Childers, Independence, Mo. Robert S. Devine, Kansas City, Mo. William R. Edwards, Jr., Leavenworth Bryce A. Ehmke, Independence, Mo. Donald L. Helm, Kansas City Ivan D. Holland, Jr., Olathe Robert H. Hucke, Kansas City, Mo. Clarence 0. Hughes, Jr., Kansas City Myron W. Husband, Jr., Burbank, Ca.lif. Hubert P. Johnson, Harper Charles H. Keilhack, Kansas City Charles A. Kendall, Concordia Joe L. Levy, Coffeyville Thomas K. Milligan, Stansberry, Mo. Richard N. Millikan, Kansas City David A. Nesser, Kansas City John L. Nieman, Newton Donald L. Reeves, Independence, Mo. Kenneth G. Richradson, Lawrence James E. Roberts, Hutchinson William K. Rose, St. Joseph, Mo. Robert D. Schaefer, Kansas City, Mo. Arthur C. Smith, Bartlesville, Okla. Max E. Teare, St. Joseph, Mo. Glenn L. Tongier, Coffeyville William B. Wilhelm, Independence James R. Wilson, Kansas City 1 I Ij E FIRST ROW: Childers, Kendall, Laird, Harding, Lee, Robert Oberhelman, Milliken, Mrs. Horns, McLoskrie, Hinds, (Jerk, Lose, Hale, Rice LePage, Rueschoff. SECOND ROW: Coshcw, Lop e, Randell, B. Weidensaul, Nesser, Webb, Wilhelm, Richard Oberhelman, Keilhack, Hucke, Clay, Schaefer, Cory, Wilson, Palmer, Levy. THIRD ROW: Batsell, Nieman, Richardson, Reeves, Holland, Edwards, Arthur, Devine, Rose, Roberts, Mason, Milliken, Shaw, Sime, Gorey. FOURTH ROW: Gubar, Helm, Milligan, Brown, Collins, Hughes, Haggard, Husband, Eskridge, Dillon, Br unson, John Brown, Smith, Tears, Peterson, Johnson. NOT IN PICTURE: W. Halsey, Peterson, Tongier. ACTIVES Bob Anderson, Ottawa Thomas Ballinger, Santa Barbara, Cal. Bob Banker, Muskogee, Okla. Bill Beeson, Parsons Byron Bohl, Kansas City Pat Burke, Chicago, Ill. Richard Capps, Wichita Francis Carr, Wellington A. L. Chase, Parsons Dan Chase, Parsons Bill Conboy, Lawrence Paul Conrad, Hiawatha Neal Cramer, Walensburg, Colo. Bob Docking, Lawrence Steve Ellsworth, Lawrence Max Falkenstein, Lawrence Charles Finney, Wichita Bob Freeto, Pittsburg Clair Gillin, Pittsburg Hubert Hall, Lawrence Bill Harrison, Downs John Hoyt, Iola Hal Hunter, Attica Ed Huycke, Ellsworth Bob Idol, Robinson Stanley Jervis, Grosse Point, Mich. William Johnson, Granville, Ohio Bill Jones, Lawrence Hugh Kreamer, Downs Henry LaRue, Columbus Bob Malott, Lawrence John May, Atchison Jack McEvers, Kansas City, Mo. Charles McGill, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Miller, Topeka Ralph Moon, Kansas City, Mo. R. D. Moore, Bellflower, Calif. Richard Arnspiger, Wellington Jack Atherton, Emporia Bill Champion, Wichita Bogue Harrison, Downs James Lounsbury, Lincoln Al Lowrie, Granby, Colo. Bob McEvers, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Mosser, Wichita Albert Murphy, Oklahoma City, Okla. Hulbert Murray, El Dorado Stanley Nelson, Lawrence George Nettles, Pittsburg Wilbur Noble, Leavenworth Bob Piller, Great Bend Frank Prosser, Wichita Payne Ratner, Jr., Wichita Bob Ready, Wellington Jack Robinson, Kansas City, Mo. George Schaefer, Atchison John Schmaus, Iola Bob Schwanzle, Kansas City, Mo. Chet Scott, Hayes Haney Scott, Hayes Frederic Shelton, Great Bend Bob Shirley, Chanute Larry Simmons, Iola Ralph Simmons, Smith Center Charles Spencer, Pittsburg Bill Spencer, Pittsburg Jack Stewart, Wichita John Stites, Oklahoma City, Okla. Russell Stites, Oklahoma City, Okla. Andrew Struble, Glasco Henry Sullivan, Shawnee Ed Surface, Salina James Teichgraber, Emporia George Timmons, Pittsburg Bob Timmons, Pittsburg Dunham Walker, Kansas City, Mo. Gerald Waugh, Wellington Jack Winter, Columbus Ship Winter, Lawrence Keith Wolfenbarger, Talmadge Joe Mendenhall, Lawrence Lynwood Smith, Kansas City Don Stickrod, Kansas City, Mo. Ed Stollenwerck, Wichita John Wassmer, Ottawa John Weigel, Manhattan Beta Theta Pi was founded Au- gust 8, 1839, at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Alpha Nu, now one of 91 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1872. President, Bob Ready; Vice-President, Jack Robin- son; Secretary, Jack McEvers; Treas- urer, Ed Surface. PLEDGES FIRST ROW: McGill, Mosser, R. Banker, Docking, Malott, J McEvers, Ready, Surtace, Robinson, Hunter, Miller, Shirley, Murphy, Chase, Falkenstein. SECOND ROW: B. Timmons, Struble, Hoyt, Cramer, Johnson, Jervis, Moore, Spencer, Finney, Sullivan, Conrad, H ' . Scott, Bill Harrison, Piller, Anderson, G. Timmons. THIRD ROW: B. McEvers, Arnspiger, Stollenwerck, Nettels, Schwanzle, Lounsbury, Wassmer, May, Rainer, Noble, La Rue, Wolfenbarger, Huycke, Shelton, Waugh, Kreamer. FOURTH ROW: Murray, Idol, Conboy, L Simmons, Capps, Nelson, Weigel, Moon, Bohl, Schmaus, R. Simmons, Atherton, Schaefer, J. Stites, Prosser, Bogue, Harrison, Lowrie, Mendenhall, Freeto, Teichgraber. ACTIVES G. Warren Beck, Hutchinson Robert F. Bennett, Wichita Vern L. Birney, Bucklin W. Jim Brady, Clyde, Mo. Lawrence Channell, Kansas City Forest Lee Davis, Texhoma, Okla. Carl E. Faler, Independence Loren Lee Fincham, Clay Center Barney D. Graham, Pratt Herbert W. Gronemeyer, Kansas City, Mo. Kirke W. Grutzmacher, Onaga Lawrence H. Haden, St. Joseph, Mo. Marvin E. Hagemeier, Luverne, Minn. Donald E. Harper, Kansas City, Mo. John R. Harris, Wichita Richard C. Harris, Kingman Duane K. Harvey, Henryetta, Okla. Kenneth Henderson, Garden City E. Wayne Hilton, Salina C. Keith Hinshaw, Kansas City Harold D. Houx, Independence Melvin J. Huxtable, Kansas City, Mo. Donald R. Hyten, Wellington Leeman C. Joslin, Harper John J. Killinger, Topeka Frank D. Lane, Lawrence Edgar W. Love, Lawrence DeWitt K. McCluggage, Wichita Fletcher S. Abbey, Kansas City, Mo. J. Marshall Braly, Kingman William C. Branit, Lake Lotawona, Mo. Robert C. Bransfield, Leavenworth Carl I. Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Charles Burckle, Kansas City Harold C. Donely, Leavenworth Gerald L. Lucas, Satanta John Victor Nalley, Kansas City, Mo. Edward John Neal, Lawrence George L. MacCurdy, Kansas City, Mo. James E. Marshall, Reading Harvey J. Menehan, Wichita Lewis E. Mitchell, Scott City Arthur D. Moore, St. Joseph, Mo. Charles D. Moore, Wichita Lewis G. Musick, Redondo Beach, Calif. Millard M. Musselman, Lawrence John C. Neely III, Wichita Ronald E. Paris, Kansas City Billie M. Passmore, Concordia James F. Pearson, Topeka Roger W. Penner, Wichita Dillard Gene Robison, Topeka Otto 0 Schnellbacher, Sublette Gene Sherwood, Sublette George Fr anklin Sloan, Leavenworth Donald C Tinker, Great Bend Harold P. Thomas, Lawrence Richard D. Tomlinson, Dodge City Gordon L. Walters, Anthony Joseph B. Ward, Lawrence William J. Weigel, Dodge City H. Bruce Wilder, Lawrence William Winter, Lawrence John M. Wuest, Marysville, Mo. Arthur Jack Wiggins, Independence William Daniel Reilly, Jr., Leavenworth Philip P. Savory, Atchison Gair M. Sloan, Leavenworth Willard Edward Straight, Kansas City, Mo. Dwayne Tarver, Kansas City Jimmie Jack Underwood, Anthony Jamieson R. Vaughan, Kansas City, Mo. John C. Wesley, Ulysses Delta Chi was founded October 13, 1890, at Cornell U aiversi;:y, Ithaca, New York. Kansas, now one of 38 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1923. President, Gordon L. Walters; Vice-President, Roger W. Penner; Secretary, Donald R. Hyten; Treasurer, E. Wayne Hilton, J PLEDGES FIRST ROW: MacCurdy, Haden, Marshall, Lane, Huxtable, Eater, Hilton, Walters, Mrs Overhalser, Penner, Hyten, Sherwood, Brady, Musselman, Beck. SECOND ROW: Hinshaw, Graham, Nalley, Birney, Abbey, Brown, Davis, Schnellbccher, Henderson, Lucas, Gronemeyer, Wilder, Tomlinson, Neely. THIRD ROW: Wuest, Joslin, Wiggins, ' Hubbard, Tinker, Mit chell, Thomas, Passmore, Vaughn, A. Moore, Robison, Braly, Savory, McCluggage, Killinger, Underwood. FOUR ' H ROW: Fincham, Tarver, Reilly, Thompson, Bransfield, Straight, Wesley, Branit, Musick, R. Harris, Paris, Hagemier, Free, Bennett, Harvey, Burckle, Menehon, Donley, Sloan, Grutzmacher. NOT IN PICTURE: Davidson, J. Harris, Hilton, Houx, C. Moore, Neal, Sloan, Ward, Weigel, Winters. ACTIVES Delta Tau Delta was founded Feb- ruary, 1859, at Bethany College, West Virginia. Gamma Tam, now one of 76 active chapters, was estab- lished at K. U. in 1914. President, Don Harris; Vice-President, George McCarthay; Treasurer, Frank Wend- landt; Recording Secretary, Gene Pope. 1:1 Rex Arrowsmith, Belleville Hoyt Baker, Peabody Ross Baker, Peabody Edward D. Blincoe, Ft. Scott Carl Bomholt, Cheney James Bouska, Belleville David Bradley, Wichita John Brockett, Atchison Joseph Brooks, Humboldt Anderson Chandler, Wichita Donald Crain, Ft. Scott Richard Dodson, Wichita Pat Dunne, Manhattan Malcolm Dyden, Leavenworth Robert Elbel, Lawrence Jack Emerson, Chanute Paul Ericson, Topeka Roger Ewing, Lawrence Dale Farr, Independence James D. Frisbie, Kansas City Donald L. Frisbie, Kansas City Lamont Gaston, Lawrence Charles Hall, Junction City Harry Hanson, Kansas City Donald Harris, Blue Rapids, Mich. Conrad Hawley, Marquette Ralph Hedges, Kansas City, Mo. William Paul Hurrel, Holton Edward Hutton, Wichita Robert Jelinek, Leavenworth Robert Keplinger, Kansas City, Mo. John Kongs, Seneca Charles Krone, Lawrence Wayne Landis, Kansas City Dorwin Lamkin, Lawrence Harlin Lill, St. John Jeremiah McCarthy, Lawrence Donald McDaniel, Neodesha Gary McKee, Kansas City, Mo. Dale Marshall, Bonner Springs Donald Meacham, Lorraine Joseph E. Moddrell, Jr., Wichita Charles M. Moffett, Jr., Peabody Gorman Neel, Kansas City Jearl Nunnelee, Lawrence Duane lson, GOreenburg Charles Peek, Kansas City, Mo. Edward Pope, Blue Rapids Delmas Richards, Wellington Earl Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. Edward Rolfs, Lawrence Bill Shafer, Blue Rapids Thomas Scovel, Independence Arlyn Smith, Rozel Donald Spangler, Belleville Richard Spencer, Arkansas City Glenn Stallard, Lawrence Wayne Stallard, Lawrence Philip Stockton, Lawrence Jardon Strnad, Belleville Peter Stubbs, Forest Hills, Wichita Clifford Wade, Wichita Adrian Wallace, Kingman Royce Walz, St. Francis Ronald Weddle, Herington Robert Weeks, Ft. Scott Frank Wendlandt, Herington Robert Wiedeman, Lawrence James Wilson, Topeka Thomas Young, Kansas City, Mo. ii PLEDGES I Harold Bailey, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Blincoe, Ft. Sott Richard Bradley, Wichita Jack Clark, Independence Clay Coburn, Kansas City Donald Diefendorf, Waterville Charles Duncan, El Dorado Dean Frisbie, Kansas City John Glaser, Pittsburg Bill Grosser, Salina R. C. Harris, Kansas City, Mo. Dale Hawley, Marquette Kenneth Hillyer, Topeka Carl Hoskins, Kansas City, Mo. Arthur Johnson, Kansas City Bill Layman, Kingman Robert Leonard, Kansas City, Mo. Frank McCoy, Wichita Wallace McKee, Kansas City, Mo. Darrell McNeil, Peabody Gerald Maloney, Wichita Charles Albert Miller, Junction City David Moody, Fredonia Richard Nesch, Pittsburg Jim Retter, Leavenworth Bill Reinders, Marysville Carl Stallard, Lawrence William Summerour, Shawnee Mission Warren Weaver, Kansas City, Mo. Frederick Woods, Topeka FIRST ROW: Layman, Spencer, Neel, Hoskins, Miller, Dryden, Reinders, C. StaIlord, Duncan, Harris, Spangler, McDaniels, Gaston, McNeil. SECOND ROW: Elbel, Wallace, Hutton, Bombolt, Maddrell, Wendlandt, G. McCarthy, Harris, Farr, Pope, Hedges, Weddle, Shafer, R. McCarthy, Weeks, Ericson THIRD ROW: D. Hawley, Strnad, Bouska, Brockett, Arrowsmith, Rolfs, G. Stallard, Wiedman, Peek, Chanaler W Stallard, Lill, Wilson, Smith, Don Frisble, Walz. FOURTH ' ROW: Clark, Ewing, Marshall, Young, Johnson, Weaver, E. Blincoe, Crain, Moffett, Retter, C Hawley, Summerour, Grosser, Leonard, Coburn, Maloney, Scovel, G. McKee, Retter. FIFTH ROW: Hanson, Dunne, Emerson, Stubbs, Baker, McCoy, Dean Frisbie, Woods, W, McKee, Krone, Brooke, Hillyer, Mordy, J. Frisbie, Bradley, R. Blincce, Meacham, Dodson, Diefendorf, Robertson. ACTIVES Wade D. Abels, Topeka John E. Armel, Humboldt Rodney M. Armstrong, Topeka Jerald Bales, Portland, Ore. Robert D. Beu, Lawrence Jerald Breitag, Kansas City, Mo. Reginald F. Cook, Pratt William L. Cox, Pratt William R. DeLay, Kansas City, Mo. Robert W. Duckworth, Merriam Chester Fee, Cunningham Philip Fee, Cunningham Ernest C. Friesen, Hutchinson Hal M. Friesen, Hutchinson Wilbur Friesen, Hutchinson John H. Gerety, Wichita Amos D. Glad, Pratt James W. Hawes, Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth Higdon, Kansas City, Mo. Otis Hill, Wichita Harold M. Hubbard, Beloit John J. Irwin, Kansas City, Mo. James Jones, Beloit Robert E. Kroesch, Hoisington Bruce T. Bathurst, Chicago, Ill. John F. Beu, Lawrence David C. Burns, Winfield John Brown, Wichita Laird S. Campbell, Wichita Dale H. Co oper, Wichita Robert Gowans, Hutchinson Charles Howard, Lawrence James Lammons, Wichita James Mason, Lawrence Donald R. Mather, Kansas City Lawrence Nelson, Kansas City, Mo Carl Kron, Kansas City, Mo. George Lewrey, Newton John S. Light, Winfield Miles B. Light, Winfield Robert S. Light, Winfield John E. Meyer, Hoisington Robert Nichols, Mankato Donald W. Patton, Hutchinson James H. Raglin, Independence Carson Rockhill, Wichita Cooper Rollow, Chanute James W. Scott, Mankato William A. Starr, Peabody Samuel J. Stewart, Humboldt Alvin P. Steinhauer, Berwyn, Ill. James F. Swoyer, Oskaloosa James R. Thompson, Winfield Albert Tyler, Emporia Roderick E. Weltmer, Mankato Sewell T. Wilson, Merriam Richard D. Wintermote, Augusta John W. Wintermote, Augusta Robert B. Wood, Wichita John E. Woolcott, Halstead Norvell J. Osborn, Winfield Alton C. Ray, Wichita John T. Rohde, Edwardsville Robert H. Schnetzler, Neodesha John H. Scrivner, St. Joseph, Mo. Harry E. Spuehler, Merriam Wade R. Stinson, Randell Jack T. Sturdivant, Independence Max 0. Weber, Hoisington Kenneth H. Williams, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Wood, Wichita PLEDGES Delta Upsilon was founded No- vember 4, 1843, at Williams College, Williamstown, Massachusetts. Kansas Chapter, now one of 61 active chap- ters, was establish ed at K. U. in 1920. President, Bill Wintermote; Vice- President, John Irwin; Secretary, Brad Light; Treasurer, Gene Smith. E I] S I 11 11 FIRST ROW: Chaney, Armstrong, Lewey, Woolcott, W. Friesen, H. Friesen, Smith, B. Wintermote, P. Fee, B. Light, Irwin, Raglin, Hubbard, Campbell, Wilson, Kron, Comstock. SECOND ROW: Jones, Lammons, E. Friesen, Abels, D. Wood, Weltmer, Stewart, Duckworth, Spuehler, R. Wood, Sturdivont, Kroesch, Gowans, Cox, Hawes, Osborn, Rockhill, Patton, Tyler, Armel. THIRD ROW: Starr, Mason, Cooper, Nelson, Howard, Brown, Stinson, Gerety, Nichols, Scott, Schnetzler, R. Light, J. Light, Breitag, R. Beu, Weber, Stoops, Williams, Swayer. FOURTH ROW: C. Fee, Hill, DeLay, Bothhurst, Burns, Cook, Bauerlein, Glad, Boles, Mather, Ray, Rohde, Roliow, Scrivner, Thomson, Meyer. NOT IN PICTURE: J. Beu, Higdon, Parland, Steunhauer, D. Wintermote. ACTIVES Merle D. Baker, Fredonia Larry Brown, El Dorado William H. Burris, Dodge City Robert N. Carper, Topeka Max E. Coats, Arkansas City Herbert B. Coles, Muskogee, Okla. Fred M. Daneke, Topeka Richard H. Finney, Topeka Fred L. Firner, Lawrence James E. Fishback, Hutchinson James W. Forney, Eureka Wallace B. Foster, Hutchinson Herbert R. Foster, Topeka William H. Fountain, Arkansas City Allen Edward Green, Eureka Robert R. Gunn, Great Bend John T. Heisler, Jr., Wichita Paul S. Hill, Eureka Richard D. Hobson, Springfield, Ill. Walter Hoffman, Enterprise John P. Holliday, Topeka Lester L. Hunter, Jr., Great Bend Walter L. Hurt, Emporia Roger F. James, Lawrence John W. Kendrick, Inglweood, Calif. John D. Kennedy, Kansas City Cecil Langford, Killgore, Texas Charles D. McCarthy, Topeka Robert L. McKim, Independence Clemeth A. Abercrombie, Barnard Walter C. Buchholtz, Lago Colony, Aruba, Curacao Paul B. Casterline, Dodge City Vincent T. Coffman, Topeka, Kan. Richard A. Daigh, Russell Donald L. Dean, Wichita Robert L. Dillenbeck, El Dorado Ralph C. Eacock, Edwardsville John C. Foster, Jr., Hutchinson Monte L. Fuller, Topeka Judson L. Greer, Topeka Clifford E. Hall, Merriam Richard W. Herold, Ellinwood James A. Jackson, Lyons Winwood M. Kline, Emporia Margrave, Sabetha John S. Nichols, Beaumont, Texas Harlan L. Ochs, Russell Jack Parker, Robinson Arthur R. Partridge, Coffeyville William D. Pierson, Hutchinson Leslie H. Pihlblad, Kansas City, Mo. John A. Poison, Garfield Hugh T. Poison, Topeka William J. Porter, Hugoton Donald E. Price, Topeka William H. Pringle, Arkansas City Robert Rowley, Hamilton, Ohio Leland Sauder, Madison Robert Sauder, Madison John G. Schlagel, Kansas City, Mo. Daniel G. Senkarik, Sanford, Fla. Roy Shoaf, Jr., Topeka Robert E. Southern, Ellinwood James A. Spears, Hutchinson John P. Steinle, Russell Robert Junior Templer, Russell John R. Theile, Topeka Harry W. Tyrrell, Columbus Harold A. Vagtborg, Kansas City, MO. James W. Walker, Highland, Calif. Oren Wright, Jr., Coffeyville Robert J. Wuerth, Kansas City, Mo. Dean R. Young, Dodge City Philip M. Young, Dodge City Maurice C. Martin, Topeka Richard W. Peckenschneider, Halstead Edgar E. Puckett, Lawrence Richard D. Randall, Climax Robert M. Rygh, Omaha, Nebr. Robert G. Sapp, Augusta Thomas A. Scott, Shreveport, La. Philip K. Smith, Arkansas City John J. Sorem, Clay Center Thomas H. Steinle, Russell Howard B. Teeter, Hutchinson Robert K. Thayer, Manhattan John M. Vander Lippe, Kansas City, Mo. N. Wakefield, Kansas City, Mo. Kappa Sigma was founded Decem- ber 10, 1869, at the University of Virginia. Gamma Omicron, now one of 110 active chapters, was estab- lished at K. U. in 1912. President, Jim Walker; Vice-President, Cecil Langford; Secretary, Jack Parker; Treasurer, Paul Hill. PLEDGES FIRST ROW: Carper, Forney, Hoffman, B. Thayer, Spears, McCurdy, Barr, Young, Biddle, Puckett, Dean, P. Thayer, Gunn. SECOND ROW: Wuerth, Foster, Partridge, Daneke, Foster, Ochs, Young, Langford, Walker, Pihlblad, Steinle, Holliday, Coles, Thiele, Finney, Tyrell, James. THIRD ROW: Coats, Dillenback, Poison, Burris, Hunter, Parker, Sapp, Vander Lippe, Hall, Shoaf, Senkarik, Kendrick, Daigh, McCarthy, Poison, Fishback, Southern, Pierson, Nichols, Rowley. FOURTH ROW: McKim, Pringle, Sorem, Stanley, Margrave, Casterline, Steinle, Baker, Bucholtz, Colony, Fuller, Kennedy, Jackson, Stanton Margrave, Templer, Herold, L. Sauder, Wakefield, Eccock, B. Sauder, Foster. FIFTH ROW: Wright, Randall, Vcgtborg, Peckenschneider, Williams, Teeter, Smith, Green, Scott, Abercrombie, Greer, Brown, Sapp, Kline, Price, Rygh, Heisl er. ACTIVES Bob J. Barnes, Dodge City William H. Braum, Emporia Robert H. Brown, Peabody Richard R. Champ, Junction City Leroy E. Cox, Hutchinson M. Robert Cox, Hume, Mo. Charles W. Crowley, Rockford, Ill. Robert M. Davison, Chicago, Ill. Ernest W. Dewey, Hutchinson Jack W. Eiffert, Lamed James M. Fleming, Bonner Springs Robert F. Fleming, Lecompton James R. Fuller, Larned George B. Harvey, Salina W. Ronald Hill, Newton William D. Holford, Hutchinson Max E. Kliewer, Atchison Donald E. Kramer, Hugoton John H. Long, Lawrence Lloyd A. McBride, Wichita Thomas J. McGraw, Newton Raymond L. Park er, Seneca L. Robert Pennington, Frankfort Jack W. Robinson, Kansas City, Mo. Leon A. Sherwood, Independence Richard A. Wegner, Great Bend James R. Yoxall, Wakeeney Lambda Chi Alpha was founded November 2, 1909, at Boston Uni- versity. Zeta-Iota, now one of 122 active chapters, was founded at K. U. in 1946. President, James M. Flem- ing; Vice-President, Thomas J. Mc- Graw; Secretary, W. R. Hill; Treas- urer, John H. Long. PLEDGES William G. Altimari, Atchison Donald L. Blachley, West Chester, Pa. Robert E. Boyd, Kansas City C. M. Brack, Great Bend Edward Downard, Barnes R. Stanley Fanestil, Hutchinson John C. Fulkerson, Hugoton Thomas C. Fuller, Larned David M. Garlock, St. Joseph, Mo. H. Beck Grabau, Fairfield, Conn. Richard M. Groft, Wakeeney Richard C. Hite, Hiawatha Robert M. Houvener, Honolulu, T. H. John R. Jones, Great Bend William 0. Josephiak, Necoma James W. Lane, Parsons Philip L. Martinek, Bonner Springs • Vernon I. Parsons, Huguton Edward M. Pemberton, St. Joseph, Mo. Joe W. Reedy, Wichita Falls, Texas John W. Roberts, Denton A. A. Row, Lamed A. Kent Shearer, Russell Bernard L. Sherman, Dodge City Walter H. Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Orville C. Walker, Sharon Springs FIRST ROW: Downard, Yoxall, Brown, Long, McGraw, J. Fleming, Hill, Crowley, Davison, Holford, Braum. SECOND ROW: Martmek, L. Cox, Brack, Par- sons, T. Fuller, Raw, Parker, Smith, Blachley, Jones, Lane. THIRD ROW: R. Fleming, Josephiak, Shearer, R. Cox, Walker, Sherman, Dewey, Fulkerson, Champ, Pemberton, Groft, Roberts, Reedy. FOURTH ' ROW: Boyd, Grabcu, Altimari, Sherwood, Fanestil, Garlock, Houvener, Hite, Kliewer, Kramer. NOT IN PICTURE: Barnes, Eiffert, J. Fuller, Harvey, Pennington, Robinson, McBride, Wegner. ACTIVES Phi Delta Theta was founded De- cember 26, 1848, at Miami Univer- sity, Oxford, Ohio. Kansas Alpha, now one of 108 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1882. Presi- dent, Jim Sanders; Vice-President, Dick Hawkinson; Secretary, Bob Fountain; Treasurer, Dale Oliver. PNI - Gene Alford, Lawrence Mick Alt, Topeka Floyd Baker, Kansas City, Mo. Rusty Baltis, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Barber, Emporia Kenny Beck, Wichita Corb Bedell, Wichita Bill Belden, Eskridge Jim Black, Lawrence Jim Blocker, Lawrence Ed Boddington, Kansas City Clyde Burnside, Oklahoma City, Okla. George Byers, Kansas City, Mo. Clark Churchill, Kansas City, Mo, Carl Clark, Kansas City, Mo. Gene Conklin, Chanute Dick Cook, Iola Tuck Cooke, Kansas City, Mo. Dick Croker, Kansas City Don Cousins, Washington, D. C. Bob Danneberg, Kansas City, Mo. Ken Danneberg, Kansas City, Mo. Fred Darville, Sabetha Bill Davis, Hutchinson Bill Debus, Kansas City John Dewell, Newton Charles Dunn, Oak Park, Ill. Renz Edwards, Kansas City Ray Evans, Kansas City Bruce Fitts, Wichita Bob Fountain, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Franklin, Kansas City, Mo. Fred Gabelman, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Gaudreau, Wichita Lou Goehring, Wichita Jack ' Greer, Boulder, Colo. Forrest Griffith, Lee ' s Summit, Mo. Jordan Haines, Sabetha Tom Hanna, Newton Sam Harris, Kansas City, Mo. Ed Harris, Kansas City, Mo. Dick Hawkinson, Kansas City, Mo. John Hawley, Republican City, Nebr. Lacy Haynes, Kansas City Clay Hedrick, Newton Fred Helm, Grove City, Nebr. Bob Hess, Lawrence Jay Hines, Salina Mick Hines, Salina John Hirschler, Halstead Bill Hogan, Detroit, Mich. Bob Hollibaugh, Winfield Bob Hughes, Topeka Rey Irwin, Kansas City, Mo. John Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Jenson, Colby Dean Johnson, Kansas City Jack Kendree, Hutchinson Bob Chaput, Concordia Bud Eddy, Hays Dale Engel, Salina Harold England, Halstead Terry Gardner, Hutchinson Bill Gaudreau, Wichita Charles Hall, Marysville John Hedrick, Newton Jim Lowther, Emporia Charles Lear, Salina Joe Lindsay, Topeka Bob Lindsay, Topeka John Lynch, Salina Ralph Kiene, Kansas City Rusty Mammel, Hutchinson Bob Maricle, Dodge City Ed Marquis, Kansas City, Mo. Marvin Martin, Wichita Bill Martin, Topeka Harry McClure, Topeka Merle McCoy, McPherson Don McIlrath, Great Bend Jack McKee, Kansas City Leonard Menzie, Montzurna John Merriam, Topeka Bob Merrick, Salina Bill Mitchell, Hutchinson Ed Morrill, Hiawatha Bert Morris, Hutchinson Pat Munger, Kansas City Howard Nearing, Kansas Ctiy, Mo. Morton Newell, Kansas City, Mo. Dale Oliver, Salina Don Owen, Emporia J. R. Perkins, Dodge City Ed Perry, Kansas City Dick Piper, Hutchinson Frank Pomeroy, Holton Dick Porter, Concordia Jim Porter, Wichita Dick Potter, Lawrence Loren Powell, Salina Walter Quiring, Hutchinson Murray Regier, Newton Ken Ramsey, Kansas City, Mo . Oliver Samuel, Emporia Jim Sanders, San Francisco, Cal. Louis Shepard, Erie Homer Sherwood, Arkansas City Dave Smart, Kansas City, Mo. Earl Snowden, Lawrence Gordon Sondker, Holton Jack Staats, Kansas City, Mo. John Stauffer, Topeka Jack Steineger, Kansas City Jack Stevens, Hutchinson Ned Tanner, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Walker, Hutchinson Harold Warwick, Kansas City, Mo. George Waugh, Eskridge Don Wells, Rochester, N. Y. Ben White, Bonner Springs Charles Williams, Anthony Don Yelton, Bonner Springs Matt Zimmerman, Kansas City, Mo. Henry Zoller, Wichita Phil Mammel, Hutchinson Bob Orr, Kansas City, Mo. Emil Schutzel, Kansas City, Mo Bob Shyne, Topeka Dolph Simons, Lawrence Fred Six, Lawrence Stan Staats, Kansas City. Mo Hank Zoller, Wichita PLEDGES FIRST ROW: Darville, R. Gaudreau, Hirschler, Irwin, Powell, B. Danneberg, Orr, Schutzel, Eddy, Cook, Waugh, White, Hughes, Piper, Kiene, Zimmerman. OND ROW: H. Hines, Fountain, K. Danneberg, Morris, Warwick, Oliver, Hawkinson, Sanders, McClure, Munger, Baltis, Cousins, C. Hedrick, Haines, Beck, M. Martin, Hawley, Kendree, Pomeroy, Mallrath. THIRD ROW: Evans, Black, Stevens, Merriam, Wells, Williams, S. Stoats, Sondker, Law, Enns, W. Gaudreau, Fitts, P. Mammel, Belden, Morrill, Perry, Nearing, Edwards, Ramsey, Hogan, Hess. FOURTH ROW: Byers, R. Mammal, Merrick, Marquis, R. Lindsay, Stauffer, Bedell, Burnside, Goehring, Potter, Six, J. Hedrick, Lowther, Alford, Zoller, Johnson, Gabelman, Shyne, Chaput, Menzie, Samuel, R. Porter. FIFTH ROW: Mc-- Kee, Yelton, England, Hall, Engel, Cooke, Franklin, Sherwood, Quiring, Simons,Griffith, S. Harris, Owen, Gardner, E. Harris, J. Porter, Hollibaugh, Alt, Hanna, Regier, Clark, Croker. ACTIVES Theodore W. Amberg, Kansas City, Mo. F. Neil Ball, Newton Richard Beach, Lawrence ' William F. Binter, El Dorado Warren M. Bowman, Topeka Janus R. Boyd, Larned Robert C. Boyd, Larned Edward E. Brass, Lawrence Donald B. Brown, Wichita Robert M. Bunten, Topeka Philip J. Carlson, Blue Rapids Frank Davis, Lawrence James C. Dittmer, Tulsa, Okla. Donald Fricker, Great Bend Don Gardner, Winfield Jack E. Gove, St. Joseph, Mo. Wendell A. Gugler, Abilene Clifford D. Hargis, Atchison Thomas T. Hawkins, Thomasville, Ga. Warren C. Helgesen, Omaha, Nebr. Donald W. Hinchman, Salina Arthur Hoffman, Wichita Frank F. Hoge, Leavenworth Kenneth W. Johnson, Topeka William R. Johnson, Lawrence John F. Kapfer, Lawrence Robert B. Kline, St. Joseph, Mo. Henry F. Libby, Kansas City, Mo. William S. Macferran, Topeka Rod MacIvor, Wichita Dale E. Mallon, Topeka Charles W. Marsh, Salina Donald F. May, Lawrence Billy R. McDonald, Enterprise Walter L. Miller, Paola Randolph N. Moore, Potwin William L. Neff, Lawrence Robert S. Ogilvie, Evanston, Ill Carl E. Olander, Wichita James B. Olander, Wi chita Billie J. Porter, Lawrence Richard H. Raney, Osborne Warren E. Riegle, Chanute Evan D. Ritchie, Wichita Bobby Reed, El Dorado Dwight Rounds, Wichita Wallace T. Rouse, Wichita Eugene E. Sallee, Topeka James E. Sallee, Topeka Walter R. Simonson, Great Bend Earl C. Stanton, Leavenworth Richard R. Starr, Great Bend Earl W. Strong, Nashville Charles G. Stucker, Lawrence James Swenson, Wichita Edward Todd, Independence Roy Twist, Jr., Meade Jess Van Ert, Independence Balie P. Waggener III, Atchison George H. Waitt, Wichita John R. Wellington, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Williams, Paola Keith Wilson, Independence, Mo. Phi Gamma Delta was founded April 22, 1848, at Jefferson College, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania. Pi Deu- teron, now one of 74 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1881. President, William S. Macferran; Secretary, Wendel Gugler; Treasurer, Warren E. Riegle. PLEDGES John M. Amberg, Kansas City, Mo. William B. Bishop, Overland Park James W. Black, Lawrence Dan H. Buie, Abilene Paul A. Coker, Lawrence Edward R. Costello, Springfield, Mo. Monte G. Cox, Lawrence Emmet M. Duncan, St. Joseph, Mo. John F. Eulich, Kansas City, Mo. James C. Evans, Tulsa, Okla. Milton M. Fadler, Pittsburgh John B. Ferguson, Wichita Richard E. Gove, St. Joseph, Mo. Charles E. Hoffhaus, Salina Fred P. Lanahan, Salina David M. Lockhart, Wichita James W. Lord, Merriam Rex Lucas, Jr., Independence Hervey W. Macferran, Topeka John 0. McClelland, Independence Teddy E. McDonald, Enterprise Robert A. Nash, Lawrence Neal A. Post, Jr., Independence John S. Ranson, Wichita Robert E. Rein, Shawnee Charles W. Rowlett, Great Bend Ralph E. Russell, Lawrence Daniel L. Slavens, Pittsburgh Louis F. Smith, Topeka Milburn Stryker, Fredonia Willard B. Thompson, Wichita Sterling S. Waggener, Atchison fl FIRST ROW: Wilson, Rounds, Davis, Rien, Bross, Williams, Cox, Ferguson, D. Gove, Ritchie, Binter, Bunten, T. Amberg, Lockhart SECOND ROW: Stucker, G. Sallee, B. McDonald, Stanton, Reed, Riegle, Carlson, S. Macferran, Gugler, Marsh, Moore, Libby, Maclvor, Bowman, Kapfer. THIRD ROW: Hoge, Post, Twist, Brown, K. Johnson, C. °larder, Rowlett, Starr, Strong, Hargis, Ronson, B. Thom)son, Russell, B. Johnson, Fodler, Todd, Fricker, Hawkins, Waitt. FOURTH ROW: Coker, Miller, S. Waggener, Hoffman, Eulich, Evans, Buie, J. °lender, Hoffhaus, Simonson, Slovens, Raney, Nash, J. Sallee, Lanahan, Bishop, T. McDonald, Black, Lord, Costello, T. Thompson, Porter. ROW: Wellington, Kline, Gardner, Boyd, Mallon, Duncan, H. Macferran, Smith, Dittmer, B. Waggener, Hel- geson, Rouse, Stryker, J. Gove, Lucas, Hinchman, McClelland, Ogilvie. NOT IN PICTURE: Amberg, Van Ert, Bell, Swenson, May, Neff. ACTIVES Phi Kappa was founded Septem- ber 1, 1889, at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island. Epsilon, now one of 28 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1915. Presi- dent, William Case; Vice-President, Joseph Daly; Secretary, Felix Spies; Treasurer, Ralph Collins. Fred Brinkman, Tulsa, Okla. Jack Brooks, Wichita Kerrel Butler, Lawrence Joseph Calparera, Ponca City, Okla. William Case, Atchison Ralph Collins, St. Joseph, Mo. Thomas Conroy, Beloit William Conroy, Beloit Jerry Correa, Lawrence Donald Culhane, Mitchell, S. D. Joseph Daly, Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth Dieker, Tampa Ber nard Domann, Winchester Norbert Drouhard, Danville Harry Halligan, Long Beach, Calif. Steve Herrera, Kansas City Everett Hill, Lawrence Anthony Hoffman, Claflin Victor Hoffman, Claflin Paul Keenan, Singapore Straits Robert Kilker, Kansas City, Mo. Fred Mufic, Kansas City Alvin Riedel, Ellis Edwin Rossillon, Gridley Laurens Rossillon, Gridley Dean Ryan, Salina Donald Schauf, Redwing Nick Schmidt, Lawrence Felix Spies, Hays Charles Svoboda, Lawrence Floyd Svoboda, Lawrence Jerome Tajchman, Tampa Earnest Warnken, Kansas City, Mo. Joseph Ziegler, Kansas City, Mo. Norbert Zimmer, Stickney, S. D. PLEDGES INPPfl Richard Bugler, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Conroy, Beloit Neal Costello, Kansas City, Mo. John Farrell, Marysville James Gohlman, Kansas City, Mo. William Hart, Kansas City, Mo. Eugene Jarus, Wilson John Jensen, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Koelzer, Seneca Robert Miller, Claflin John Morrow, Marysville Richard Rowe, Goodland Robert Rupp, Hutchinson Charles Scanlan, St. Louis, Mo. Bernard Schulte, Marysville Jack Wilkus, Kansas City, Mo. Thomas Wilkinson, Kansas City, Mo. James Yoder, Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Keenan, Zimmer, Warnken, Smith, Mufic, Culhane, Daly, Case, Ryan, Collins, Spies, L. Rossillon, Kilker, F. Svoboda. SECOND ROW: Rowe, R. Conroy, Costello, Hart, Bugler, Gohlman, A. Hoffman, Ziegler, Farrell, Hill, Yoder, Rupp, Fensen. THIRD ROW: W. Conroy, Dieker, Tajchman, Jarus, C. Svoboda, Scanlan, V. Hoffman, Riedel, Schulte Miller, Brinkman, Wilkinson, Butler. FOURTH ROW: Koelzer, T. Conroy, Schauf, Brooks, Morrow, Cal- darera, Domann, E. Rossillon, Herrera, Crouhard, Correa. NOT PICTURED: Halligan. ACTIVES Fred Abell, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Arbuckle, Hutchinson Alfred Apitz, Topeka Ted Batchelder, Garden City Max Bell, Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth Bellamy, Colby David Bierer, Hiawatha Jack Bradley, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Bolin, Kansas City, Mo. J. D. Botkin, Fredonia William Brewster, Kansas City, Mo. Myron Brooks, Kansas City, Mo. William Burgess, Oklahoma City, Okla. Paul Carpenter, Morriss, Minn. George Carrington, Coffeyville William Cavanaugh, Bonner Springs Robert Chambers, Ottawa John Cole, St. Joseph, Mo. Earle Crawford, Chanute George Cox, Kansas City J oe Davis, Overland Park Joe Dunmire, Spring Hill Paul Dillon, Hutchinson Richard Ehrman, Chanute Robert Foerschler, Kansas City Leland Galbreath, Chanute James Guinotte, Kansas City, Mo. John Glover, Topeka John Gosnell, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Graham, Lawrence Moulton Green, Kansas City, Mo. David Grimes, Paola Paul Haggard, St. Louis, Mo. William Haggard, St. Louis, Mo. Phillip Hill, Arkansas City Dwight Horner, Kansas City Fred Johnson, Chanute Wayne Johnson, Chanute Dion Bierer, Hiawatha Jim Bower, Kansas City, Mo. Dick Dillon, Hutchinson, Kan. Hal Edmondson, Wichita Jack Faerber, Kansas City Lee Hamilton, Palo Alto, Calif. Duane Kays, Wichita, Kan. Floyd Grimes, Paola Jack Gillum, Wichita Robin McGeorge, Kansas City, Mo. Burris Jones, Kansas City Paul Kelly, Kansas City, Mo. Max Kissell, Portis Clayton Kyle, Hastings, Nebr. William Linscott, Lees Summit, Mo Jules M. MacKallor, Baxter Springs Duane McCarter, Topeka Tom McCully, Kansas City, Mo. Gene McLaughlin, Coffeyville Lynne McNutt, Colby Jack Mercer, Wichita Robert Mercer, Hutchinson Donald Medaaris, Kansas City James Miller, Wichita Clarence Mollett, Hutchinson Robert Mullen, Hutchinson Tony Mura, Kansas City, Mo. Gene Nelson, Marion Ernest Neuer, Kansas City, Mo. Dorman O ' Leary, Kansas City, Mo. Richard O ' Neill, Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth Ray, Kansas City William Richardson, Mission Walter Ritt, Kansas City, Mo. Don Roberts, Kansas City Ron Roberts, Kansas City Leroy Robison, Lawrence William Roy, Kansas City Wood Runyan, Topeka Harker Russell, Iola C. E. Russell, Iola Byron Shutz, Kansas City, Mo. Donald Sprinkle, Weaverville, N. C. Greg Stock, Lees Summit, Mo. Robert Teel, Philadelphia, Pa. James Tilson, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Tusher, Lawrence Haworth White, Hutchinson Ken Medearis, Kansas City Dick Pratt, Colby Dee Roy, Kansas City Gene Rumsey, McPherson Jack Sevier, Kansas City, Mo. Glen Starmmer, Olathe Bob Shmalberg, Lawrence Bill Waters, Junction City Clyde Wharton, Kansas City, Kan. Don Wilson, Kansas City Phi Kappa Psi was founded Feb- ruary 19, 1852, at Jefferson College, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania. Kansas Alpha, now one of 52 active chap- ters, was established at K. U. in 1876. President, Haworth White,. Vice- President, James Guinohe,. Secretary, Moulton Green, Jr.; Treasurer, P. Scott Kelly. PH PS PLEDGES FIRST ROW: W. Roy, O ' Neill, B. Bierer, Foerschler, Bessier, Wilson, Wood, D. Roy, Tusher, Dillon, Pratt, McCarter, Johnson. SECOND ROW: McGeorge, Bellamy, Cox, MccKallor, Graham, Guinotte, White, Robison, McLaughlin, Mura, Shutz, Galbreath, Runyan Glover, McNutt, Richardsn, Abell. THIRD ROW: Gillum, McCully, Edmondson, Dunmire, Kyle, F. Grimes, Teel, D. Grimes, P. Haggard, Horner, B. Haggard, Nelson, Cavanaugh, Bell, Batchelder, Starmer, Mul- lins, Ritt. FOURTH ROW: D. Medearis, Ferguson, Schmalberg, Nauman, Chambers, Tilson, K. Medearis, Hill, Faerber, Linscott, Botkin, Green, Bower, Ehrman, Kelly, Cole, Sprinkle, Bolin, Ramsey, Sevier. FIFTH ROW: Morgan, Waters, O ' Leary, Davis, D. Roberts, Mollett, R. Mercer, Arbuckle, R. Roberts, Brooks, Neuer, D. Bierer, Jones, Miller, Brunk, Ray, Gosnell. NOT IN PICTURE: J. Mercer, Burgess, Brewster, W. Johnson, Carrington, Bradley, H. Russell, Carpenter, C. Rus- sell, Kissell, Stock, Crawford, Wharton, Hamilton, Kays, D. Dillon. ACTIVES Phi Kappa Sigma was founded October 19, 1850, at the University of Pennsylvania. The University of Kansas colony, founded here Decem- ber 20, 1947, is one of 39 active chapters. President, Bruce Ethering- ton; Vice-President, Thomas J. Alex- ander; Secretary, Dean W. Cox; Treasurer, James A. Seelbinder- Thomas J. Alexander, Kansas City James R. Baker, Poplar Bluff, Mo. Harold W. Cogswell, Piper Robert W. Cook, Kansas City, Mo. Dean W. Cox, Englewood M. Dale Dunlap, Frankfort A. Bruce Etherington, Freeman, Ontario, Canada Ralph G. Henley, Sedalia, Mo. Francis W. Hoover, Topeka Samuel W. Hoover, Topeka Wallace N. Limbrick, Kansas City, Mo. Melvin J. Murphy, Meade Gene L. Nelson, Kingman Joseph N. Offenbecher, Kankakee,111. Russell G. Oleson, Council Grove Robert N. Paxton, Kansas City John R. Peard, Detroit, Mich. Harold D. Persing, Meade Richard G. Philips, Eureka Robert L. Pulliam, Kingman Kenneth W. Rhodes, Topeka Charles R. Roter, Lawrence James A. Seelbinder, Mission George P. Wallace, Kingman PLEDGES G. Marshall Bliss, Kansas City, Mo. Harlan D. Frazier, Girard, Mo. Gerald W. Gearhart, South Bend, Ind. John B. Gosman, Kansas City, Mo, William A. Hutchings, Kansas City, Mo. George J. Mastio, Lawrence Robert R. Maxwell, Kansas City, Mo. James Mitchell, Philadelphia, Pa. Jerrold G. Norris, Council Grove Stanley C. Searles, Willmette, Ill. Joseph R. Wells, Stambaugh, Mich. James R. Wilson, Meade FIRST ROW: Roter, Murphy, See!binder, Alexander, Etherington, Cook, Peard, Cox, Persing. SECOND ROW: Offenbecher, Henley, Maxwell, Gearhart, Wal- lace, Paxton, Phillips, Pulliam, Hoover. THIRD ROW: Dunlap, Nelson, Limbrick, Wilson, O ' eson, Baker, Rhodes, Helfert, Cogswell. NOT IN PICTURE: Bliss, Searles. ACTIVES John R. Addington, Kansas City, Mo. William W. Allen, Sedan Daniel W. Brite, Protection Robert J. Boese, Coffeyville William Y. Chalfant, Hutchinson Daniel D. Clinger, Rose Hill Carl H. Collins, Jr., Kansas City Robert W. Cowne, Pueblo, Colo. Joseph H. Crawford, Kansas City Walter E. Curtis, Parkville, Mo. John H. Denman, Sedan John D. Dorsey, Coffeyville Dilver W. Fellers, Mullinville Robert T. Gray, Topeka Dale R. Hanes, Coffeyville Harold D. Hanshaw, Winfield Gerald L. Hall, Clay Center William M. Harris, Rose Hill Emerson L. Hazlett Lawrence John C. Hofmann, Bern James Bennett, Kansas City James E. Bradley, Greensburg Bill Burkhalter, Boise, Idaho Marvin Burnham, Wichita Davis Crawford, Lawrence John Crawford, Lawrence Leland Dalgeish, Kansas City, Mo. Edgar Eagle, Hutchinson Levern Eddy, Garfield Eric Ericsson, Americus Dick Harper, Twin Falls, Idaho Charles Hayes, Coffeyville Charming Hiebert, Coffeyville William W. Howard, Anthony Joseph Janovjak, Chicago, Ill. Richard C. Houts, St. Louis, Mo. Donald E. Jesperson, Bartlesville, Okla. Ervin G. Johnston, Peru Charles D. Kennedy, Hutchinson Edward R. Lambert, Bergenfield, N. J. Charles S. Lindberg, Madison Richard M. Lowe, Blue Springs, Mo. Charles W. Lyne, Miltonvale Ralph H. Martin, Atchison John A. Newman, Hutchinson Arthur L. Oldham, Leoti Richard M. Pickler, Beloit Billy L. Robertson, Peru ArthurE. Rudd, Lawrence Wister 0. Shreve, Lawrence Robert H. Symons, Liberal Clarke M. Thomas, Topeka Martin S. Thompson, Lawrence Jere D. Kimmel, Hiawatha Harold Koch, Greensburg Harry Lohrengel, Kansas City Quentin Long, Peabody Robert Miller, Kansas City, Mo. Monte Nichol, Coffeyville James M. Small, Conway Springs Ray Stewart, Caney Norman D. Stout, Lees Summit, Mo. Gary Straley, Hutchinson James Stinson, Kansas City, Mo. Dick Tatum, Liberal James W. Townsend, Coffeyville Harry Webb, De Soto Pi Kappa Alpha was founded at the University of Virginia, March 1, 1868. Beta Gamma, now one of the 92 chapters, was established at K. U. in 1914. President, Loy Oldham; Vice-President, Richard Houts; Sec- retary, Charles Lindberg; Treasurer, Ralph Martin. PLEDGES IRST ROW: Curtis, Burkhalter, Eagle, Chalfant, Robertson, Lindberg, Martin, Oldham, Houts, Gray, Hanes, Collins,. Thomas, Eddy, Daigleisch, Nichol, Johns- ton. SECOND ROW: Janovjak, D. Crawford, Stinson, Boese, Allen, Hofmann, Miller, Clinger, Dorsey, Brite, Stewart, Harper, Tatum, Pickier, J. Crawford, Burn- ham. THIRD ROW: Lambert, Lowe, Symons, Thompson, Hanshaw, Koch, Stout, Kimmel, Small, Ericsson, Bennett, Townsend, Harris, Bradley, Webb, Cowne, Howard, Hall. NOT IN PICTURE: Addington, Denman, Fellers, Hazlett, Jesa?-sen, Kennedy, Lyne, Newman, Rudd, Shreve, Hayes, Hiebert, Lohrengel, Long, Straley, Joe Crawford. ACTIVES Charles Apt, Iola Marshall Bingham, Wichita Cal Briney, Bennington Charles Church, Kansas City, Mo. Mal Copeland, Topeka Dick Cray, Birmingham, Mich. Bill Daugherty, Pittsburg Murray Davis, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Feagans, Kansas City, Mo. Don Ferguson, McPherson Ray Fleming, Wichita Bud Frizell, Lamed Chet Frazier, Tulsa, Okla. Ted Glass, Tulsa, Okla. Bob Glover, Kansas City John Graves, El Dorado Frank Haas, Kehler, Wis. Jerry Harkins, Kansas City, Mo. Larry Hawkinson, Kansas City, Mo. Lon Hever, St.Louis,Mo. Jay Humphreys, Ashland Pete Jansen, Chicago, Ill. Jim Johnston, Kansas City 0. J. Kaufman, Moundridge Dick Lamb, Caney Ted Llewellyn, Kansas City Fred Apt, Iola Bill Atwood, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Boosmann, Kansas City Shan Bowers, Topeka Kent Cross, Kansas City, Mo. Dave Ellis, Kansas City Dale Ferguson, McPherson Jerry Frieling, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Graves, El Dorado Dale Helmer, Kansas City Jack Hubeli, Tulsa, Okla. Guy Mabry, Rock Island, Ill. Bill Mayer, Kansas City Jim McBride, Kansas City, Mo. Amos McCune, Tulsa, Okla. Bill Meier, Kansas City, Mo. Dave Mitchell, Tulsa, Okla. Jim Mueller, Kansas City, Mo. Keith Neville, Topeka Tom Nicklin, Chanute Miller Nordeen, Fort Scott Stan Oyer, Kansas City Jim Padon, Houston, Texas Sam Peacock, Stafford Dean Perkins, Liberty, Mo. Dick Randolf, Kansas City, Mo. DuMont Reed, Lamed John Rees, Emporia George Robb, McPherson Bob Rosenfield, Junction City Jim Shepard, Kansas City, Mo. Jerry Shideler, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Tuthill, Kansas City, Mo. Doug Wall, Iola Edward Weltner, Kansas City, Mo. Dexter Welton, Sterling, Ill. Bob Whitcomb, St. Joseph, Mo. Sam Jones, Garden City, N. Y. Fred Lewis, Eureka Norman McAdoo, Emporia Jim Moddelmog, Moundridge Tom Nelson, Kansas City, Mo. Moose Phillips, Wichita Frank Ross, Wellington Fred Ruck, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Thompson, Junction City Bob Wallingford, I,archmont, N. Y. Sigma Alpha Epsilon was founded March 9, 1856, at the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Kan- sas Alpha, now one of 117 active chapters, was established at the Uni- versity of Kansas in 1903. President, Larry Hawkinson; Vice-President, Dumont Reed; Secretary, Sam Pea- cock; Treasurer, Bill Mier. PLEDGES FIRST ROW: Briney, Kaufman, Welton, Neville, Hawkinson, Whitcomb, Reees, Humphrey, Don Ferguson, Daugherty, Reed, Heuer, Bingham, McCune, Nordeen, Haas. SECOND ROW: Helmers, McAdoo, Peacock, Johnston, Lamb, Llewellyn, Perkins, Glass, McBride, Tuthill, Frazier, Meier, Davis, Fleming, Copeland, Clover, Nicklin, Thompson. THIRD ROW: Shideler, Oyer, Dale Ferguson, Atwood, Bcosmann, Phillips, Ross, Wall, Weltner, Hubeli, Lewis, Bowers, Church, Harkin s, Mitchell, Ellis. FOURTH ROW: Robb, Frizell, Cross, C. Apt, Jones, Randolf, Nelson, Padon, Ruck, Apt, Feagans, Mabry, Moddelmog, Frieling, Graves. ACTIVES Robert Adams, Salina Mead Almond, Topeka Robert Anderson, Hutchinson Dan Bachman, Newton James Barr, Leavenworth Joe Barrington, New Washington, Ohio John Beck, Dwight Marvin Bills, Kansas City, Mo. William Black, Kansas City, Mo. Ford Bohl, Georgetown, Ohio Laird Bowman, Dodge City Joseph Bukaty, Kansas City Duke Burt, Kansas City Jack Button, Anthony Art Coate, Leavenworth Wendell Clark, Victoria, Ill. Harley Colburn, Pitta burg Joe Connelly, Petersburg, Ill. James Connell, Kansas City, Mo. John Couch, Anthony ' Thurston Cowgill, Sunflower David Cowley, Overland Park Robert Dafforn, Overland Park Bill Degan, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Duboc, Kansas C ty, Mo. Louis Duff, Kansas City, Mo. Art Dekker, Roswell, N. M. Eldon Dewater, Lawrence Joe Etzler, Hutchinson Evans Francis, Topeka Bud French, Lawrence Eugene Gamble, Chicago, Ill. Robert Hagg, Evanston, Ill. Ray Hirshman, Lawrence George Holden, Kansas Ctiy, Mo. Samuel Hunter, Marion, Indiana Roland Kamprath, Chattanooga, Tenn. John Kanas, Kansas City Kenneth Keene, Lawrence Richard Keene, Lawrence Tembrook King, Pittsburg Everette Land, Mission Lynn Leigh, Burley, Idaho Floyd Lunsford, Wichita John MacGregor, Medicine Lodge Cliff McDonald, Lawrence Douglas McLeod, Smith Center Floyd Mallonee, Wichita Robert Maupin, ' Topeka Dean Miller, Topeka Grant Miller, Iola Al Miville, Topeka Jack Moehlenkamp, Tulsa, Okla. John Naff, Lawrence George Newton, Overland Park Frank Puttee, Lawrence Owen Peck, Kansas City Charles Peterson, Kansas City, Mo Pete Purdy, Kansas City, Mo. Myron Rake, Horton RueII Reddoch, Kansas City, Mo. Ralph Reed, Osborne Ted Reid, Evergreen, Colo. Don Relihan, Smith Center Terry Relihan, Smith Center William Richardson, Kansas City, Mo. Ed Rickel, Kansas City, Mo. William Saffell, Independence William Sands, Independence Gordon Saunders, Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Eugene Sawyer, Hutchinson Robert Sellers, Bartlesville, Okla. Todd Seymour, Leavenworth Richard Shea, Sedalia, Mo. Eugene Silers, Lawrence Jerry Slater, Bartlesville, Okla. Dale Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Kansas City Larry Smith, Salina William Sproul, Birmingham, Mich. Jim Stevens, Lawrence Pat Thiessen, Hutchinson George Tiffany, Mission Carl Tilford, Topeka Charles Wagstaff, Lawrence Richard Wagstaff, Lawrence J. Rex Watkins, Salina Matthew Wiegand, Leavenworth Dan Westerman, Kansas City Kenneth White, Kansas City, Mo. Odd Williams, Lawrence Aaron Wilson, Kansas City, Mo. Charles Winslow, Pratt Pat Winsor, Wichita Don Wyman, Hutchinson Sigma Chi was founded June 28, 1855, at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Alpha Xi, now one of 109 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1884. Consul, Joe Con- nelly,. Pro-Consul, Laird Bowman,. Secretary, Duke Burt,. Quaestor, Dave Cowley. S PLEDGES Charles Ball, Edwardsville Richard Barber, Anthony Dean Beck, Topeka Robert Beine, Topeka Wally Benton, Am, Ariz. John Braden, Hutchinson Robert Briden, Port Hope, Ontario, Can. Robert Cooper, Salina Wayne Davis, Medicine Lodge Robert Felts, Independence John Forney, Webster Groves, Mo. Roger Hall.day, Pittsburg Richard Hunter, Iola Cliff Johnston, Mission Wayne Livingston, Hutchinson Wiliam Leake, Kansas City, Mo. William Leonard, Independence Cal Markwell, Hays Steve Mills, Russell Robert Near, Lawrence John Small, Denver, Colo. Lee Reiff, Newton William Stratton, Kansas City, Mo. Dixon Vance, Kansas City, Mo. Lee Vogel, Leavenworth Tom White, Kansas City Ken Youngs, Kalamazoo, Mich. FIRST ROW: G. Miller, Rake, Small, Couch, Hagg, Seymour, Miville, R. Land, Watkins, Cooper, Mills, Barber. SECOND ROW: Lunsford, MacGregor, Sands, C Wagstaff, Shockey, Duff, Reed, Connelly, Cowley, Bowmen, D. Wagstaff, Reddock, Sawyer, Adams, White, Bukaty, Keene. THIRD ROW: Smith, McLeod, Relihan, Markwellinslow, Stevens, Briden, Holden, Maupin, King, Tucker, Barr, Smith, Wilson, Kamprath, Degan, J. Beck, Beine, Winsor. FOURTH W ROW: Reid, Livingston, Westerman, Johnston, Hunter, Shea, Colburn, Leake, Davis, Weber, Sproul, Saunders, Stratton, Coate, Bohl, Bills, Ball, French, Weigand. FIFTH ROW: D. Miller, Near, Leigh, Purdy, Connell, Leona-d, Vance, Braden, D. Beck, Slater, Forney, Reiff, Newton, Hunter, White, Gamble, Barrington, Clark, Anderson, Logan. NOT IN PICTURE: Burt, Tilford, Mollonee, Moehlenkamp, Rickle, McDonald, Cafforn, Williams, Duboc, Button, Bachman, Cowgill, Decker. ACTIVES GNfl NII Richard L. Ashley, Chanute Dean C. Banker, Russell Maurice Y. Beardmore, Mankato Jack P. Beeman, Russell Eldon R. Bell, Hutchinson Syd A. Bennett, Huron, S. D. Wayne A. Bentley, Great Bend Andrew W. Berry, Russell Robert L. Berry, Kansas City, Mo. Patrick Bills, Elcelsior Springs, Mo. Ray R. Binnicker, Kansas City, Mo. William N. Bragg, Lawrence John H. Burnett, Lawrence Donald H. Burton, Russell Robert E. Combs, Grandview, Mo. Jack R. Cousins, Kansas City, Mo. Richard D. Dalrymple, Paola Harold R. DeLongy, Parsons Warren R. Daugherty, Plainville John J. Duffy, Kansas City, Mo. Robert W. Elliott, Kansas City, Mo. Stanley M. Englund, Salina Paul W. Fairchild, Kansas City, Mo. Edward P. Fischer, Kansas City, Mo. Robert M. Foster, Bartlesville, Okla. M. Bruce Goshorn, Los Angeles, Cal. J. C. W. Halliburton, Arkansas City Herbert A. Harms, Great Bend Charles W. Hawkins, Olathe Buddy J. Hinkle, Independence, Mo. Edwin D. Hirleman, Wichita Richard S. Hodges, Kansas City, Mo. Marvin E. Arth, Great Bend Joseph E. Balloun, Russell Herman H. Beels, Overland Park Billy K. Benz, Salina A. L. Buffer, Jr., St. Louis, Mo. Melvin H. Clingan, Salina Curtis T. Collins, Jr., Belleville Robert E. Conkling, Wichita Norman W. Crane, Long Beach, Cal. Herbert R. Dietrich, Maryville, Mo. Clark Duncan, Jr., Lawrence Charles R. Edman, Great Bend Thomas K. Foster, Bartlesville, Okla. Walter Hulen, Springfield, Mo Harold E. Jones, Wichita Paul G. Klein, Kansas City, Mo. George R. Learned, Lawrence George A. Lowe, Olathe William G. Malone, Wichita Thomas C. Messplay, Kansas City, Mo. Omer S. Muchmore, Jr., Parsons Robert A. Parrish, Great Bend William L. Pattison, Council Grove George M. Polk, Independence, Mo. Robert A. Ramseyer, Kansas City, Mo. Charles B. Replogle, Cottonwood Falls Gerald V. Ricketts, Topeka Robert B. Riss, Kansas City, Mo. William E. Robison, Kansas City, Mo. William H. Roehl, Chicago, Ill. Dale S. Romig, Hutchinson Loyd L. Russing, Kansas City, Mo. Robert D. Seaman, Logan Joseph A. Shephard, Kansas City, Mo. Billy Stanton, Lawrence Harry L. Talley, Kansas City, Mo. John B. Touhey, Hattisburg, Miss. Charles A. Underwood, Wichita Paul F. Van Dyke, Plainville Robert R. Watts, Kansas City, Mo. Dick G. Williams, Lawrence Robert O. Williamson, Topeka R. Kenneth Grubb, Independence Phil R. Hawkins, Olathe Jack J. Haynes, Russell Henry L. Holtgrewe, Kansas City, Mo. Roy G. Lowe, Olathe Ray E. Martin, Kansas City, Mo. Richard A. Raidt, Kansas City, Mo. Robert C. Scholes, Council Grove Kenneth T. Smith, Webb City, Mo. Jack R. Waln, Kansas City, Mo. William W. Warren, Wichita John W. Wolfe, Wichita Sigma Nu was founded January 1, 1869, at the Virginia Military Insti- tute, Lexington, Virginia. Nu, now one of 99 active chapters, was estab- lished at K. U. in 1884. Commander, Omer Muchmore; Lt. Commander, Robert Combes; Recorder, Eugene Jones: Treasurer, Dean Banker. PLEDGES FIRST ROW: Edman, Wolfe, Haynes, Conklin, Clingan, Beeman, B. Foster, Parrish, Underwood, Beals, Martin, Crone, Pattison. SECOND ROW: Bennett, Klein, Ramseyer, Hodges, Dougherty, Hinkle, Combs, Muchmore, Jones, Banker, Van Dyke, Wilson, Malone, DeLongy, Talley, Halliburton. THIRD ROW: Lowe, Collins, Duncan, Williamson, P. Hawkins, Harms, Scholes, Lowe, Beardmore, Seaman, Cousins, Watts, Fischer, Shephard, Arth, Balloun, Warren, Romig. FOURTH ' ROW: Bene, Dieterich, Binnicker, Russing, Polk, Grubb, Replogle, Buffer, Berry, Ricketts; Roehl, Bragg, Burton, Smith, Raidt, T. Foster. FIFTH ROW: Messplay, Hulen, C. Hawkins, Bentley, Elliott, Burnett, Learned, Goshorn, Berry, Bell, Hi rleman, Holtgrew, Englund, Stanton, Touhey. NOT IN PICTURE: Williams, Duffy, Dalrymple, Riss, Ashley, Bills. ACTIVES Bill Akright, Kansas City Gene Allen, Hutchinson John Ashby, Hutchinson Harry Barker, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Barker, Lawrence Bob Barnes, Wichita Bob Bell, Wichita George Benscheidt, Hutchinson Dick Blasdel, Hutchinson Chan Boucher, Kansas City Dave Boyd, Kansas City, Mo. Gene Bullinger, Wichita Bill Burt, Topeka Charles Carson, Kansas City, Mo. Art Cattlett, Lawrence Cliff Clark, Iola Merle Cline, Hutchinson Bill Doane, Lawrence Alan Dougherty, Topeka Jack Fink, Topeka John Foust, Iola Charles Freshwater, Leavenworth Wally Fritz, Silver Lake Lee Garich, Lawrence Dean Gibson, Lawrence De s Gibson, Lawrence Jud Goodrich, Topeka Dick Haley, Bennington Junior Haverty, Lawrence Torn Hensley, Wichita Bill Hinrichs, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Holloway, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Hutton, Kansas City, Mo. Charles Johnson, Topeka Don Johnson, Topeka Emmett Johnson, Wichita Glenn Kappelman, Lawrence Karl Kappelman, Lawrence Leroy Krug, Russell Jim May, Independence, Mo. John May, Oskaloosa Dale McCollum, Lawrence Don McConnell, Lawrence Bob McNeive, Topeka Bob Mitchell, Humboldt Jack Moorhead, Atchison Bob Murray, Sedalia, Mo. Frank Obenland, Clay Center Bil Ogg, Topeka Bob Pearson, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Perry, Joplin, Mo. Art Riordan, St. Marys Art Ruppenthal, Russell Gene Ryan, Wichita Dave Shoffner, Salina Wes Smith, Salina Courtland Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Selig, Lawrence Howard Soice, Stafford Paul Stavros, Lawrence Bob Swenson, Topeka Bob Tinklepaugh, Kansas City, Mo. Ralph Ufford, Kansas City, Mo. Gene Vignery, Concordia Al Ward, Chanute Lyle Woodring, Wichita Tom Wreglesworth, Chicago, Ill. Sigma Phi Epsilon was founded November 1, 1901, at the University of Richmond, Richmond, Virginia. Gamma, now one of 80 active chap- ters, was established at K. U. in 1923. President, Don Johnson; Vice- President, Charles Carson; Secretary, Cliff Clark; Treasurer, Bill Burt; His- torian, Gene Ryan. George Ablah, Wichita Whitfield Anderson, Lawrence Bob Ausherman, Kansas City Jim Berry, Hutchinson Richard Caldwell, Goodland John Campbell, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Cauble, Chanute Teddie Coltharp, Union Star, Mo. Ben Craig, Baxter John Crawford, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Davis, Hutchinson Cliff De Lude, Leavenworth Bill Evans, Lawrence Jerry Flynn, Wichita Clarence Frieze, Merriam Don Glasco, Wichita Tom Harrison, Wichita Charles Haverty, Lawrence Vernon Hawver, Lawrence Ervin Hodges, Lawrence Todd Johnson, Kansas City, Mo. Cletus Kappelman, Augusta Harold May, Kansas City Jim McCaig, Wichita PLEDGES Charles Medlock, Atchison Noble Melencamp, Dodge City Dick Milton, Dodge City Richard O ' Neil, Lawrence Doug Paddock, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Reece, Wichita Gene Riling, Lawrence Winn Seroy, Independence, Mo. Joe Schmitz, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Scott, Merriam Harold Short, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Skolaut, Wichita Joe Steininger, Kansas City, Mo. Russ Stephenson, Kansas City Bill Taber, Kansas City, Mo. Lloyd Trace, Topeka Rudy Valasek, Natrona, Pa. Bob Vignery, Concordia George Williams, Lawrence Jack Wilson, Augusta Darrell Wright, Lawrence Don Wright, Lawrence Richard Zink, Lawrence 1 fPS FIRST ROW: Ashby, W. Smith, Obenland, Zink, Ablah, Freshwater, Biasdel, Melencomp, Haley, Medlock, O ' Neil, Riling. SECOND ROW: Hodges. Ausherman, Holloway, G. Kappelman, G. Vignery, Goodrich, Clark, Ryan, D. Johnson, Carson, Bullinger, Foust, Hensley, C. Johnson, Flynn, Milton, Neale. THIRD ROW: Schmitz, Woodring, Harrison, Stovros, Swenson, Ogg, R. Vignery, Bell, Taber, Fink, Ruppenthal, H. Barker, Berry, Trace, Hawver, H. May, Boucher, Seroy, Cattlett, K. Kappelman, McConnell. FOURTH ROW: Wilson, Moorhead, Benscheidt, Scott, McCollum, J. Haverty, Steininger, De Lude, Campbell, Hinrichs, Coltharp, McCaig, Mitchell, E. Johnson, Selig, Frieze, Jim May, Shoffner, John May, Wreglesworth, Ward, C. Smith, Garich. FIFTH ROW: Short, Caldwell, C. Kappelman, Cauble, Crawford, Reece, Hutton, C. Haverty, Williams, Dougherty, Perry, Ufford, Riordan, Davis, McNeive, Don Wright, Glasco, T. Johnson, Craig, Skolaut ' , Tinklepaugh. NOT IN PICTURE: Anderson, Akright, P. Barker, Barnes, Boyd, Burt, Cline, Evans, Fritz, Dean Gibson, Des Gibson, Krug, Murray, Paddock, Soice, Stephenson, Valasek, Darrell Wright. ACTIVES Tau Kappa Epsilon was founded January 10, 1899, at Illinois Wes- leyan, Bloomington, Illinois. Alpha Phi, now one of 56 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1942. President, Robert Brock; Vice-Presi- dent, Robert Stroud; Secretary, Larry Mercer; Treasurer, Perry Wilcox. Don Allen, Wichita Harold Benitz, Leavenworth Charles Boulware, Columbus Larry Bowman, Stafford Ralph Brock, Sterling Robert Brock, Sterling Lloyd E. Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Earnest Buckles, Garnett Charles Comstock, Kansas City, Mo. Elton Closser, Kansas City, Mo. Edwin K. Crowley, Leavenworth James Dudley, Kansas City, Mo. Homer Evans, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Evans, Glasgow Zeno Gould, Syracuse Thomas Gregg, Lawrence Robert Grissom, Syracuse James Hastings, Prat t Morton Hauserman, Grandview, Mo. Robert Hill, Kansas City, Mo. Clarence Jenkins, Bucklin Robert Krueger, Emporia , Frank Limbocker, Iola Edwin Lindquist, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Line, Kansas City, Mo. Walter E. Linthicum, Leavenworth John Lo Pinto, Brooklyn, N. Y. Larry Mercer, Garden City Dean Mitchelson, Baxter Springs Norman Nolop, Leavenworth Charles O ' Conner, Lawrence Dudley Potter, Kansas City Reg Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. Leslie Roenigk, Mission Warren Rugan, Ellinwood Emerson Shields, Lincolnville James Silvius, Kansas City, Mo. Earl Spidel, Burlingame Richard Stewart, Oswego James Stiller, Shreveport, La. James Street, Independence, Mo. Robert Stroud, Peabody Richard Truehart, Sterling Robert Ulrich, Wichita Jerry Ward, Great Bend James B. Webster, Trenton, Mo. Perry Wilcox, Garden City Walter Yoakum, Leavenworth Paul Zeh, Kansas City PLEDGES L Robert Blank, Altamont Clinton Bull, Columbus Harlan Burns, Kansas City Robert Drewelow, Riverton Robert Dring, Lyons Charles Dutton, Kingman George Field, Columbus John Howard, Kansas City Larry Keenan, Seward Don Kimbrough, Baxter Springs Evan Lloyd, Kansas City, Mo. George Long, Kansas City, Mo. James Mooney, Pittsburgh Kenneth McAllister, Hickman Mills, Mo. Robert Newman, Sterling Charles Philbrick, Wichita John Praeger, Kansas City, Mo. Thomas Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Herbert Strecker, Galatia William Swope, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Stewart, Tulsa, Okla. Howard Wilson, Sterling FIRST ROW: Dutton, Ulrich, LoPinto, Robertson, Wilcox, Mercer, Stroud, Ralph Brock, Zeh, Evans, Hastings, Dring, Stewart, Wilson. SECOND ROW: Closser, Linthicum, Blank, Shields, Field, But, Stewart, Silvius, hokum, Nolop, Philbrick, Swope, J Drewelow, Gould, Grissom, Newman, Stiller. THIRD ROW: Spidel, Buckles, Burns, Webster, Hill, Strecker, Rugon, Boulware, McAllister, Allen, Line, Smith, Jenkins, Kimbrough. FOURTH ROW: R. Drewelow, Keenan, Leib, Praeger, Krueger, Evans, Byarn, Lloyd, Howard, Long, Street, Roenig k, Limbocker, Potter. NOT IN PICTURE: Benitz, Bowman, Brock, Brown, Comstock, Crowley, Dudley, Hauserman, Linguist, Mitchelson, O ' Conner, Mooney, Truehart, Ward. 1 ACTIVES Tom Ackerman, Kansas City Robert Aker, Kansas City, Mo. Floyd Boosmann, Kansas City, Mo. Carroll Bower, Kansas City Gene Brown, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Burwell, Kansas City Lewis Carroll, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Crawford, Hutchinson Jim Faris, Hutchinson Robert Frazer, Kansas City, Mo. Alan Furnish, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Godfrey, Overland Park Paul Gratny, Kansas City Van Harrison, Kansas City, Mo. Donald Helm, Kansas City, Mo. Joseph Hensley, Lawrence John Hoffman, Kansas City, Mo. Harry Holzle, Topeka Robert Kunert, Kansas City, Mo. Sam McCamant, Hutchinson Douglas Parks, Umatilla, Fla. Jack Rowland, Kansas City, Mo. Norman Royer, Kansas City, Mo. Glenn Sa nkey, Kansas City, Mo. John Sanks, Kansas City, Mo. Roy Smoots, Kansas City, Mo. Forrest Stark, Kansas City, Mo. Gordon Stein, Overland Park Verne Stevenson, Overland Park Winton Studt, Kansas City Charles Thomas, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Thome, Marceline, 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. Presi- dent, Sam McCamant; Vice-Presi- dent, Charles Thomas; Correspond- ing Secretary, Van Harrison; Busi- ness Manager, Tons Ackerman. PLEDGES Dan Cain, Lees Summit, Mo. Jim Deveney, Kansas City, Mo. Robert England, Leavenworth Art Francis, Leavenworth Richard Hartzler, Kansas City, Mo. Neil Holiman, St. Francis Larry Hyde, Kansas City, Mo. Mike Joyce, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Klaas, St. Joseph, Mo. Jack McKernan, Kansas City, Mo. Gerald Pauls, St. Louis, Mo. Ken Philo, Humansville, Mo. Gary Robbins, Leavenworth Tom Sagmoen, Kansas City, Mo. Elgin Thelen, Kansas City Harry Woltkamp, Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Aker, Holzle, Furnish, Thomas, McCamant, Crawford, Ackerman, Harrison, Gratny, Parks, Sankey. SECOND ROW: Stein, Burwell, Boosman, Sanks, Bower, Rowland, Carroll, Klaas, Studt, Robbins, Cain, KulneW THIRD ROW: Haliman, Frazer, Smoots, McKernan, Joyce, Paulo, Sagmoen, Hyde, Brown, Woltkamp, Thorne, Royer. FOURTH ROW: Hoffman, Hartzler, Francis, Stevenson, Philo, England, Thelen, Faris, Deveney. NOT IN PICTURE: Ycnley, Stark. 72 THE JAYHAWKER PHI II Et 11 PI Phi Beta Pi, professional medical fraternity, was founded March 10, 1891, at Western Pennsylvania College, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Alpha Iota, now one of 32 Collegiate chapters, was established at K.U. in 1910. President, Findley Law; Vice-president, Robert Brenner; Secretary, Bobby Andrews; Treasurer, Tom P. Watkins. George T. Campbell, Lawrence Ryland E. Coe, Tarkio, Mo. Charles W. Conroy, Lawrence Robert W. Dafforn, Mission Bobby B. Andrews, Bethel Benjamin Barker, Winfield Theodore Batchelder, Garden City Harry L. Biggs, Kansas City, Mo. John Marvin Bills, Kansas City Robert L. Brenner, Kansas City Jerry W. Brown, Wichita John E. Buess, Pittsburg Dale E. Clark, Cedar Vale Thomas F. Clinton, Wichita Robert W. Cook, Kansas City, Mo. Frank Cvetkovich, Pittsburg William W. Dodson, Great Bend David H. Draper, Lawrence Charles W. Dreher, Kansas City, Mo. Don Dyche, Kansas City, Mo. Donald L. Eakin, Greensburg Byron T. Eberle, Kansas City Derly D. Fuller, Arlington James T. Hamilton, Sunflower Edgar D. Hinshaw, Winfield PLEDGES Robert E. Feighny, Topeka Frederick E. Grant III, Lee ' s Summit, Mo. Richard L. Harrison, Tulsa, Okla. Jack L. Perkins, Kansas City Henry B. Sullivan, Shawnee ACTIVES Marvin H. Hird, Lawrence Wayne E. Hird, Lawrence Thomas W. Hogan, Chanute Waldo S. Holt, Kansas City Glen C. Hutchinson, Wakeeney Clifford E. Jones, Liberal Eugene C. Kane, Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth L. Knuth, Nashville William A. Kells, Osborne Findley Law, Hill City Edward E. Long, Norwich Donald L. Marchbanks, Pittsburg George J. Mastio, Lawrence Kenneth L. May, Sunflower Glen M. McCray, Lawrence Lester E. McGonigle, Potwin Ernest W. Mitts, Kansas City, Mo. Max D. Moody, Onaga George E. Omer, Wamego R. Dale Ostlund, Simpson John L. Ott, Sabetha Jack T. Peterson, Hutchinson Carl Tompkins, Sunflower Dunham Walker, Kansas City Galen W. Wampler, Minneapolis Robert G. Wood, Lawrence Robert E. H. Puntenny, Newton Howard R. Pyle, Wichita Victor E. Reinking, Ucall Albert M. Ricllon, Pittsburg George W. Ryder, Kansas City, Mo. Robert K. Russell, Olathe Donald E. Saunders, Lamed John W. Schmaus, Iola David 0. Schmidt, Milwaukee, Wis. Ross D. Skinner, Delphos 0. D. Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Dean A. Smith, Seldon George C. Steinberger, Independence Niles M. Stout, Lawrence Marion M. Sumner, Independence Robert A. Tennant, Pittsburg Fred E. Totten, Sunflower Richard N. Todd, El Dorado Richard E. Trueheart, Sterling Tom K. Watkins, Farmington, Mo. Joseph R. Wells, Stambaugh, Mich. FIRST ROW: Draper, Tennant, Puntenny, Pyle, Kane, Andrews, Law, Brenner, Watkins, Cook, Mastio, Dreher, Spencer, Reinking. SECOND ROW: Wampler, Smith, Wells, Ridlon, Wood, Eberle, Kells, Batchelder, Trueheart, McGonigle, Ma rchbanks, W. Hird, Sumner, Holt. THIRD ROW: Brown, Biggs, Dodson, Stein- berger, Conroy, Skinner, Long, Stout, McGray, Smith, Clark. FOURTH ROW: Ryder, Perkins, Cvetkovich, Ostlund, Campbell, Clinton, Jones, Barker, Dyche, Ott, Knuth, Moody, Grant. NOT IN PICTURE: Bills, Buess, Eakin, Fuller, Hinshaw, M. Hird, Hogan, Hutchinson, May, Mitts, Peterson, Russell, Saunders, Schmaus, Schmidt, Totten, Hamilton, Coe, Daftorn, Sullivan, Tompkins, Feighny, Harrison, Walker. ' SPRING NUMBER, 1943 73 1 1 Nu Sigma Nu, professional medical fraternity, was founded March 2, 1882, at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Beta Theta, now one of 42 collegiate chapters, was established at K.U. in 1909. President, Melvin Kettner; Vice-President, Paul Carpenter; Secii?tary, Herman Hiesterman; Treasurer, Mac Geyer. PLEDGES John Corbett, Emporia Sam Crow, Topeka Gerald Dobel, Kansas City Joe Etzler, Lawrence Ward Benkelman, McDonald Frank Bowser, Lawrence Hugh Buff, Topeka Paul Carpenter, Kansas City Mack Carter, Wichita Dan Coats, Topeka Frank Coulter, Kansas City Richard Dreher, Salina Robert Fairchild, Kansas City Barton Fischer, Lawrence Jim Gerlach, Manhattan Mac Geyer, Topeka Carl Gunter, Oakley Herman Hiesterman, Palmer Norman Hull, Clay Center Sam Hunter, Wadsworth Bill Leo, Lawrence Jack Lungstrom, Topeka ACTIVES Willard Howland, Lawrence Robert Hull, Leavenworth Howard Joseph, Whitewater J. D. Kabler, Wichita John Kanas, Kansas City Melvin Kettner, Hutchinson Charles Krause, Belleville Warren Kump, Oberlin George McDonald, Kansas City Stanley McEwen, Wichita Warren McKay, Wichita Alexander Mitchell, Topeka Dewey Nemec, Agenda Frank O ' Connell, Kansas City William Padgett, Geuda Springs George Newton, Overland Park Warren Swartz, St. John Gerald Ward, Ellinwood Don Williams, Garden City Owen Peck, Kansas City James Pike, Hurlock, Md. Richard Pokorny, LaCrosse Charles Powell, Columbus Bartlett Ramsey, Kansas City, Mo. Grove Roberts, Lawrence Chester Scott, Hays Lee Schlosser, Fredonia Eugene Schwartz, Hoisington Ned Smull, Bird City Melvin Stevens, Hutchinson Elwood Tippin, Wichita Jack Welch, Halstead Charles Wheeler, Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: McKay, Gunter, Buff, Hiesterman, Gayer, Carpenter, Kettner, Kanas, Smull, O ' Connell, Welch, Schwartz. SECOND ROW: Gerlach, Roberts, Lungstrom, Nemec, Newton, Fischer, Kabler, Padgett, Hunter, Coulter, Powell. THIRD ROW: Bowser, Dreher, Pokorny, Crow, Ramsey, Benkelmon, Mitchell, Scott, Tippin, Dobel, Krouse. FOURTH ROW: Hull, Fairchild, McDonald, Wheeler, Stevens, McEwen, Howland, Peck, Schlosser, Joseph, Williams. NOT IN PICTURE: Corbett, Carter, Coats, Pike, Leo, Ward, Etzler, N. Hull, Schwartz. THE JAYHAWKER 74 Battenfeld Hall was established at K.U. as a men ' s resi- dence in September, 1940. President, William E. Ruth; Vice-President, Dale Judy; Secretary, Hugh McCaughey; Treasurer, Theodore Richey. Wallace Abbey, Evanston, Ill. Koli Amini, Teheran, Iran John Anderson, Paola Warren Arnspiger, Wellington Norman Bell, Madison Richard Bertuzzi, Arma Darrel Brown, Oxford John Burnau, Kansas City Robert Casad, Wichita Eugene Casement, Sedan Russell Cooper, Lyons Frederick Cross, Kansas City John Dickerson, Meade Robert Dunwell, Kansas City Samuel Duran, Concepcion, Chile Harold Ehrlich, Marion Ray Frisby, El Dorado Howard Hallman, Pittsburg U1 ' It [1 1 [El RESIDENTS Austin Harmon, Milltown, Maine Delmar Harris, Concordia Kenneth Hoffman, Ottawa George Johnson, Chanute Dale Judy, Leavenworth Douglas Kent, Humboldt Robert Kite, Lawrence William Knapp, Parsons William LaCombe, Shawnee Gene Linton, Beloit Edward Marks, Topeka Hugh McCaughey, Kansas City Claude Moore, Arlington James Nelson, Hutchinson Arthur Oatman, Independence, Mo. Harley Oberhelman, Clay Center Jack Pio, Chase Deane Postlewaite, Delphos George Pyle, Morrill Victor Reinking, Udall Theodore Richey, Topeka Bjarne Royrvik, Hyen, Norway William Ruth, Solomon Harold Sandy, Kansas City, Mo. Vincent Savukinas, Newburyport, Mass. George Sheldon, Great Bend Don Sieben, Leavenworth Phillip Smith, Wellington Frank Stalzer, Kansas City Bruce Talmadge, Kansas City Paul Uhlig, Kansas City Carl Unruh, Wichita Glenn Varenhorst, Conway Springs Jerry Wackerle, Chetopa George Walrafen, Topeka Lyle Wheatcroft, Utica John Wilcox, Newton FIRST ROW: Postlewaite, Nelson, Reinking, Richey, Ruth, Outman, Judy, McCaughey, Cooper, Royrvik, Marks. SECOND ROW: Hoffman, Johnson, Pyle, Savukinas, LaCombe, Knapp, Wackerle, Hallman, Stelzer, Sandy, Cross, Cased. THIRD ROW: Smith, Sheldon, Casement, Harris, Dunwell, Arnspiger, Kite, Ober- helman, Wheatcroft, Moore, Pio, Walrafen, Duran. FOURTH ROW: Wilcox, Kent, Brown, Linton, Varenhorst, Sieben, Unruh, Talmadge, Burnau, Anderson, Uhlig, Bell. NOT IN PICTURE: Abbey, Amini, Burtuzzi, Dickerson, Ehrlich, Frisby, H armon. SPRING NUMBER, 1948 75 H PVII Phi Delta Phi, professional legal fraternity, was founded in 1869 at Michigan University. Green Inn, now one of 67 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1895. Magister, Donald E. Johnson; Clerk, William C. Cavert; Exchequer, Edward A, Metcalf; Historian, Ernest McRae. PLEDGES J. 0. Biggs, Pittsburg Robert D. Buehler, Seneca Robert J. Foster, Kansas City Robert H. Gale, Syracuse Jack Green, Wichita Robert P. Keenen, Seward Harlan C. Altman, Wellington Willard F. Barber, Emporia Harold. T. Beck, Iola James H. Bernard, Kansas City, Mo. Edward M. Boddington, Kansas City William D. Bright, Paola Robert L. Briley, Chanute Granville M. Bush, Kansas City, Mo. Robert B. Castor, Kansas City William C. Cavert, Independence William R. Cole, Hutchinson Harry M. Crowe, Tulsa, Okla. A. Port Early, Lawrence Howard G. Engleman, Lawrence Robert C. Foulston, Wichita Carney B. Gass, Lawrence T. Gra Gaston, Sterling Joe F. Gregory, Dodge City William A. Guilfoyle, Abilene Lacy Haynes, Kansas City Jack F. McKay, Marion Hillary D. Mahin, Bartlesville, Okla. S. Dean Mitchelson, Baxter Springs Terry E. Relihan, Smith Center James M. Rhine, Manhattan George A. Robb, McPherson PLEDGES Robert C. Helsel, Wichita Dalton T. Holland, Harper John E. Honsinger, Lawrence F. Marshall Hulett, Platte City, Mo. James S. Jensen, Oakley Donald E. Johnson, Salina Harold E. Jones, Wichita David W. Kester, Ottawa Charles D. Knapp, Coffeyville Robert M. Lee, Lawrence Stanley L. Lind, Kansas City Weymouth G. Lowe, El Dorado John Lynch, Salina J. D. Lysaught, Kansas City William B. McElhenny, Topeka James B. McKay, Lawrence Ernest McRae, Blue Rapids G. Richard Mankin, Kansas City Robert L. Marietta, Salina Marion P. Matthews, Lawrence Richard P. Royer, Abilene Thomas M. Schofield, Kansas City, Mo. Jack F. Steineger, Kansas City Milo M. Unruh, Goessel Haworth White, Hutchinson Jason K. Yordy, Salina John S. May, Atchison William P. Meek, Kansas City Edward A. Metcalf, Neodasha Frederick Mitchelson, Baxter Springs C. R. Mong, Neodasha Robert L. Morrison, Lawrence Edward R. Moses, Great Bend Kenneth Nohe, Kansas City Howard A. Rankin, Topeka Kenneth Ray, Kansas City John Q. Royce, Salina William Schell, Wichita Thomas F. Seed, Wichita Glenn Shanahan, Independence Robert F. Stadler, Iola W. Donnan Stephenson, Iola Roger G. Tilbury, Kansas City, Mo. Lewin Timmerman, Plentywood, Montana J. William Wood, Meade FIRST ROW: Jenson, Rankin, Bright, Boddington, Ray, Metcalf, Johnson, Covert, Seed, Marietta, McElhenny, Mackin, Bush. SECOND ROW: Mitchelson, D., M Mitchelson, F., Biggs, Foster, Gass, Unruh, Gale, May, Buehler, Mahin Nohe, Gregory, Haynes. THIRD ROW: Schell, Hulett, Beck, Tilbury, Morrison, White, Rhine, Early, Altman, McKay, Wood, Shanahan, Lynch. FOURTH ' ROW: Yordy, Foulston, Holland, Stieneger, McRae, Meek, Castor, Schofield, Hon- singer, Robb. 76 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, Reg Robertson; Secretary, Gene Innis; Treas- urer, Bob Bell. PLEDGES Bob Arbuckle, Hutchinson Eugene Ayers, Kansas City Ted Amberg, Jr., Kansas City Dick Barton, Burlington Don Becker, Blackwell, Okla. David Burns, Winfield Harlan Burns, Kansas City William Chalfant, Lawrence Dick Champ, Junction City LeRoy Cox, Hutchinson Bud Clark, Kansas City Jack Davis, Hutchinson Kenny Dicker, Tampa Chet Frazier, Tulsa, Okla. Clark Griswold, Lawrence Tom Ackerman, Kansas City Bob Andrews, Bethel Rod Armstrong, Topeka Clarence Atkins, Independence, Mo. Bob Bell, Wichita Floyd Beery, Kansas City, Mo. Ray Binnic ker, Kansas City, Mo. Eddy Brunk, Kansas City Tuck Cooke, Kansas City, Missouri Dick Cory ,Eudora James Crawford, Hutchinson Walter Curtis, Parkville, Mo. Bernard Domann, Winchester Kenny Grubb, Independence Kenny Hillyer, Topeka Bob Hughs, Topeka Bob Hutton, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Jongema, Ulysses Harold Koch, Greensburg Bud Krueger, Emporia Bill LaComb, Kansas City Leo Lauber, Bethel Scott Lynn, Allen George Mastio, Lawrence Jim McBride, Wichita Hugh McCoughey, Kansas City Bob Nagel, Wright City John Neely, Wichita ACTIVES Nate Ericson, Topeka Bob Foerschler, Kansas City Bob Franklin, Kansas City, Mo. Wilber Friesen, Hutchinson Bob Glover, Kansas City, Mo. Luke Henderson, Garden City Kenny Higdon, Kansas City, Mo. Walter Hoffman, Enterprise Eugene Innis, Meade Finn Law, Hill City Bob Light, Winfield Clyde Lunger, Summerfield Veron Mahon, Lawrence Bob Morey, Amboy, N. J. Gordon Offenbacker, Buffalo William Pierson, Hutchinson John Powell, Iola Charles Schafer, Blue Rapids Dick Sime, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Silvius, Kansas City, Mo. George Skinner, Leavenworth Jack Steinle, Russell John Stoops, Tulsa, Okla. Chic Spies, Hays Marion Sumner, Independence Dick Wagstaff, Lawrence John Weigel, Manhattan Lewis Yonley, Kansas City Lewis Mitchell, Scott City Victor Pirnie, Kansas City George Polk, Independence, Mo. Victor Reinking, Udall Bill Richardson, Kansas City, Mo. Reg Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Schafer, Blue Rapids Jack Schmaus, Iola Larry Simmons, Iola Earl Strong, Nashville Bob Stroud, Peabody Rex J. Watkins, Salina Bill Worwag, Sabetha FIRST ROW: Lynn, Richardson, Morey, Curtis, Crawford, Bell, Robertson, Schafer, Innis, Powell, McCaughey, Chalfant, Nagel. SECOND ROW: Offen- backer, Schafer, Hoffman, La Combe, Barton, Ericson, Arbuckle, Friesen, Krueger, Foerschler Spies, Watkins, Cox, Warwag, Skinner. THIRD ROW: Jongema, Mastic), Hughes, Sime, Polk, Stoops, Mahon, Silvius, Sumner, Wagstaff, Steinle, Beery, Cory, Clark, Lunger, Stroud. FOURTH ROW: Higdon, Pinrie, Hill- yer, Grubb, Mitchell, Hutton, Frazier, McBride, Cooke, Franklin, Pierson, Neely, Griswold, Ackerman, Burns, Binnicker, Light. SPRING NUMBER, 1948 77 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, Harriet Harlow; Vice-President, Ardella Ringwalt; Corresponding Sec- retary, Shirley Ousley; Treasurer, Martha Myers. MEMBERS Jeanne Aldridge, Kansas City Betty Backis, Nickerson Georgiana Bennington, El Dorado Dorothy Brenner, Olathe Eleanor Brown, Bethel Pearl C. Campbell, Lawrence Maxine Dunkleberg, Osborne Ruth Dudley, Iola Mildred Garrison, Marion Billie George, Altamont Barbara Glover, Caldwell Harriet Harlow, Kansas City, Mo. Pat Harris, Columbus Donna Holm, Topeka Katherine Mulky, Lawrence Martha Myers, Norwich Shirley Ousley, Lee ' s Summit, Mo. Dorothy Pennington, Wichita Ardella Ringwalt, Oakley Joyce Rohrer, Abilene Emily Schnabel, Kansas City Phyllis Seacat, Ashland Shirley Sloan, Kansas City, Mo. Betty Tharp, Kansas City Betty Rae Thomas, Leavenworth Sally Trembly, Kansas City, Mo. Twila Wagner, Bennington Sara Webb, Blue Springs, Mo. FIRST ROW: Harris, Myers, Backis, Harlow, Brenner, Ousley, Brown. SECOND ROW: Bennington, Tharp, Holm, Thomas, Aldridge, Garrison, Wagner, Glover. THIRD ROW. Seacat, Schnabel, Rohrer, Dunkleberg, Webb, Sloan, George. NOT IN PICTURE: Dudley, Campbell, Mulky, Pennington, Trembly, Ringwalt. 78 THE JAYHAWKER Theta Tau, national professional 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. Chapter Advisor, Professor G. W. Bradshaw; Regent, Edward Hansen; Vice-Regent, Robert Meredith; Secretary, Jack White; Treasurer, Francis Van Benthem. FACULTY Charles Baer, Engineering Drawing Frank Bowdish, Metallurgical Engineering George Bradwshaw, Civil Engineering W. C. McNown, Civil Engineering Charles Foster, Chemical Engineering Loring Hanson, Applied Mechanics J. 0. Jones, Applied Mechanics J. 0. Maloney, Chemical Engineering F. A. Russell, Engineering Drawing Jesse Gamber, Mechanical Engineering PLEDGES Richard Harris, Council Grove Joe Beeler, Jewell Gene Beery, Colby Bill Bergman, Bark River, Mich. Kenneth Borene, Sabetha Morris Borene, Sabetha Harry Box, Lawrence Alvin Brubaker, Lawrence Jack Bruyr, West Mineral Sam Campbell, Kenilworth, Ill. Bill Duncan, Topeka Bob Elliott, Kansas City, Mo. George McNeish, Winfield Joe Reid, Sabetha ACTIVES Fred Gartung, Wichita Bob Greenwell, Kansas City, Mo. Ed Hansen, Little Rock, Ark. Dudley Hanstine, Wichita David Hay, Lawrence James Jacobs, Mankato Bert Ladd, Lawrence Dick Marcum, Long Beach, Calif. Bob Meredith, Lincoln Kenneth Murphey, Independence John Montfort, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Wahlstedt, Kansas City, Mo. Curtis Ottinger, St. Joseph, Mo. Bruce Pennington, Kansas City, Mo. Leonard Rickards, Canton, N. C. Clair Sommers, Wichita Bob Talty, Kansas City, Mo. Francis Van Benthem, Atchison James Waugh, Eskridge John Waugh, Eskridge Jack White, Tonganoxie Clayton Williams, Rosalia Ralph Wood, Trousdale FIRST ROW: M. Borene, White, Meredith, Bradshaw, Hansen, Maloney, Van Benthem, Box, K. Borene, Montfort. SECOND ROW: Sommers, Tolty, Richards, Williams Brubaker, Marcum, Duncan, Pennington, McNeish, Beery. THIRD ROW: Bruyr, Gartung, Hay, Elliott, Greenwell, Murphey, Ladd, Bergman, Hanstine, Harris. NOT IN PICTURE: Wahlstedt, Wood, Campbell, James Waugh, John Waugh, Ottinger, Beeler, Reid, Jacobs. SPRING NUMBER, 1948 79 Ij 1 NflPUC 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, Donald R. Baumunk; Vice-President, Curvin Greene; Secretary, Charles Dillon; Treasurer, Morse, Murray. FACULTY Prof. John G. Blocker Ivan M. Farmer Wiley S. Mitchell Harold P. Nielsen Joe R. Small Howard Stettler Prof. Alvin Tuohino Arnold Warger COLLEGIATE C. A. Abercrombie, Bernard Frank C. Anderson, Kanopolis Robert Bailey, Lawrence Harry Barker, Kansas City, Mo. Donald R. Baumunk, La Harpe Jack Beeman, Russell Robert Berry, Sunflower Marshall Bingham, Wichita B. K. Brackman, Wichita John R. Brady, Osawatomie William Burt, Topeka Carl T. Campbell, Lawrence Merle A. Cline, Hutchinson Verne P. Collier, Colorado Springs, Colo. Robert Combs, Grandview, Mo. Byron DeHaan, LaGrange, Ill. Leon DeYoung, Prairie View Charles A. Dillon, Kansas City, Mo. William Dunn, Kansas City, Mo. Arnold Englund, Jr., Salina Paul Ensch, St. Paul Homer Evans, Kansas City, Mo. Franklin Fearing, Lawrence Robert Franklin, Kansas City Albert Goodpasture, Caldwell Beck Grabau, Fairfield, Conn. Curvin H. Greene, Kansas City, Mo. Ralph Grier, Haven Norman Hanson, Assaria George Harvey, Salina Robert Hilton, Sunflower Bud Hinkle, Independence, Mo. Harold D. Jones, Osage City Orval J. Kaufman, Moundridge Ajas Kiaer, Fredrickstad, Norway Edwin Kirchhoff, Lawrence John D. Mason, Lawrence Dwight McClintick, Sunflower Charles McGill, Kansas City, Mo. Maurice Mosher, Lawrence Omer Muchmore, Parsons Morse Murray, Fort Scott Ralph I. Norquest, Fredonia Park C. Pennington, Coldwater William D. Pierson, Hutchinson Frank Pomeroy, Holton Harry D. Rice, Johnson County Francis Ronnau, St. Marys Glenn Scott, Ft. Scott David J. Sheehy, Lawrence Charles Sherrer, Elwood Thomas H. Smith, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. Glenn Sowders, Wichita C. R. Stephenson, Kansas City Kenneth Swedlund, Salina John Taylor, Jr., Lawrence Robert Teel, Columbus Jack D. VanMeter, Lansing Willard K. Wright, Sunflower Richard Yaple, Lawrence Paul B. Zellers, Holton Marvin Zimmerman, Sunflower FIRST ROW: Bailey, Rice, Dillon, Bingham, Baumunk, Greene, Murray, Anderson, Muchmore, Sherrer, Combs. SECOND ROW: VanMeter, Kiaer, Swedlund, Campbell, Taylor, Ensch, Hilton, Stephenson, Pennington, Zellers. THIRD ROW: Yaple, Pomeroy, Ronnau, Abercrombie, Dunn, Smith, Fearing, ' Collier, Norquest, Hanson. FOURTH ROW: Teel, Mason, Goodpasture, Jones, DeYoung, Berry, Brockman, DeHaan, Brady, Wright, Kirchhoff. NOT IN PICTURE: Barker, Beeman, Burt, Cline, Englund, Evans, Franklin, Grabau, Grier, Harvey, Hinkle, Kaufman, McClintick, McGill, Masher, Pierson, Scott, Sheehy, Sowders, Simmerman. • Student Union Activities, a member of the national Asso- ciation of College Unions, con- cerns itself mainly with student recreation and entertainment. It has 13 committees and a total membership of 400 students. President, La Anne Powell; Sec- retary, Louise Lambert; Treasurer, Homer Sherwood. FIRST ROW: Lambert, Kendree, alley. SECOND ROW: Meeks, Hill, Gwinner, Powell, Sherwood, Learned. THIRD ROW: Rotman, Francis, Cook, Bathurst, Wells, Hampton, Pomeroy. NOT IN PICTURE: Madden, Dillon. UNIIiN ilN I EXECUTIVE BOARD Bruce Bathurst, Chicago, Ill. Tuck Cook, Kansas City, Mo. Kathy Culley, Medicine Lodge Paul Dillon, Hutchinson Bud Francis, Topeka Grace Gwinner, Dodge City Wayne Adams, Independence Boyd Bainter, Jennings Paul Beisel, Lawrence Jerome Breitag, Kansas City Charles Byers, Lawrence George Campbell, Lawrence Gerald Carney, Lawrence Merle Clayton, Topeka Louis Cunningham, Lawrence Sidney Dawson, Kansas City Paul DeCora, Lawrence Sam Eitel, Lawrence Arnold Englund, Salina Eric Ericsson, Americus Dale Foote, Pittsburg Richard Francis, Lee ' s Summit, Mo. Craig Hampton, El Reno, Okla. Bud Hill, Wichita Jack Kendree, Hutchinson Louise Lambert, Leavenworth Ann Learned, Bartlesville, Okla. Rose Ann Madden, Baton Rouge, La. PHI NII ACTIVES Kenneth Geoffrey, Solomon Nicholas Genen, Kansas City Leroy Goering, Moundridge Dean Grant, Lawrence Richard Hamilton, Kansas City Jerry Hall, Clay Center Robert Hallman, Pittsburg Clarence Hooper, Lawrence Leo Horacek, Lawrence Neill Humfeld, Salina William Jackson, Kansas City Charles Kas singer, Lawrence Ralph Larson, Lindsburg Vincent May, Sunflower Thomas McMillin, Kansas City Frank Pomeroy, Holton Richard Porter, Concordia Margaret Meeks, Kansas City Frank Pomeroy, Holton Lu Anne Powell, Kansas City, Mo. Frank Rotman, Kansas City, Mo. Homer Sherwood, Arkansas City Don Wells, Rochester, N. Y. Bobbie Robertson, Overland Park Jess Rose, Sunflower James Sellarcls, Osage City Benjamin Shanklin, Lawrence Charles Smith, Little Rock, Ark. William Spence, Lawrence Harry Spencer, Topeka Frank Stalzer, Kansas City Donald Swarthout, Lawrence Robert Tawney, Kansas City Marshall Turkin, Kansas City Robert Unkefer, Lawrence B. L. Webber, Lawrence Frank White, St. Louis, Mo. Charles Wiley, Lawrence Melvin Zack, Sunflower FIRST ROW: May, Horacek, Geoffrey, Goering, Carney, Swarthout, Zack, DeCora, Kassinger, Unkefer, Dawson, Webber, Adams. SECOND ROW: Beisel, Campbell, Spence, Ericsson, Clayton, Byers, Jackson, Genen, Wiley, Eng- lund, Porter, Breitag, Sahnklin, Bainter THIRD ROW: Cunningham, Foote, Turkin, Rose, Larson, Hamilton, Hum- feld, Hallman, Eitel, Stalzer, Sellords, Pomeroy. FOURTH ROW: Francis, Hooper, Spencer, Smith, McMillin, Grant, Tawney, White, Robertson, Hall. Phi Mu Alpha, national men ' s music fraternity, was founded in 1898 at the New England Con- servatory of Music at Boston, Massachusetts. Xi, now one of 77 active chapters, was estab- lished at K.U. in 1914. Presi- dent, Melvin Zack; Vice-Presi- dent, Leroy Goering; Secretary- Treasurer, Kenneth Geoffrey. The Owl Society is an honorary organization for junior men, whose selection is based on out- standing leadership and character. The society ' s purpose is to origi- nate and promote movements for the best interests of the junior class of the University and to create school spirit and fellow- ship. President, Pat Thiessen; Vice-President, Keith Wilson; Secretary, Ralph Kiene; Treas- urer, Austin Turney. FIRST ROW: Zirnmerman,Wilson, Thiessen, Kiene, Turney, England. SECOND ROW: Tach, Bathurst, Malott, Noble, Irwin. MI [IV MEMBERS Bruce Bathurst, Chicago, Ill. Ralph Kiene, Kansas City Arthur Toch, Lawrence Dick Bertuzzi, Girard Robert Malott, Lawrence Austin Turney, Lawrence Harold England, Halstead Wilbur Noble, Leavenworth Keith Wilson, Independence, Mo. Bud French, Lawrence John Stauffer, Topeka Mathew Zimmerman, Kansas City, Mo. John Irwin, Merriam Patrick Thiessen, Hutchinson [11 I FACULTY Dr. Herman Allen Dr. William Argersinger Dr. Ray Brewster Dr. Joseph Burckhalter Dr. R. W. Clark Dr. Paul Gilles Dr. Ernest Griswold Dr. E. D. Kinney Dr. S. A. Miller Dr. C. A. Reynolds Dr. Robert Taft Dr. Calvin VanderWerf Mr. Henry Werner COLLEGIATE Aldo Aliotti, Rome, Italy Earl Barney, Lawrence Lewis Bayles, Lawrence Thomas Bean, Winchester, Ill. Floyd Beery, Kansas City, Mo. Charles Benton, Kansas City, Mo. Jerry Carter, Lawrence David Chamberlain, Lawrence Donald DeFord, Lawrence Hugh Donahoe, Kansas City, Mo. Oliver Edwards, Kansas City Richard Elliott, Independence Richard Ferm, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Ferm, Kansas City, Mo. John Ferris, Kansas City, Mo. John Gerety, Wichita Richard Goertz, Moundridge Judson Goodrich, Topeka Ward Graham, Kansas City, Mo. Ralph Grant, Clarkston, Wash. William Harding, Kansas City Arthur Helin, Watertown, N. Y. Harold Hubbard, Beloit Roland Hughes, Kansas City, Mo. Earnest Hyde, Kansas City, Mo. Eugene Innis, Meade John Irwin, Merriam Sam Johnson, Lawrence Carl Johnston, Kansas City, Mo. Vance Kirkland, Liberty, Mo. Carl Kron, Kansas City, Mo. Warren Lowers, Lawrence Robert Malott, Lawrence Mack McCormick, El Dorado David McGuire, Kansas City Russell Mesler, Kansas City, Mo. John Minor, Marshall, Mo. James Noonan, Kansas City, Mo. Kenneth Oldham, Leoti John Poje, Kansas City James Ralls, Kansas City, Mo. Albert Reed, Lawrence Paul Renich, Lawrence Reg. Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. Russell Runnels, Lawrence Robert Russell, Lawrence John Startz, Liberty Joseph Steininger, Kansas City, Mo. Stephen Stephanou, Lawrence Raymond Stoenner, Levasy, Mo. August Sveinbjornsson, Iceland Thomas Whaley, Atchison Quintin Wheatley, Gypsum Archer Wilcox, Kansas City George Worrall , Kansas City Armand Wullschleger, Marysville FIRST ROW: Mesler, McGuire, Renich, Startz, Clark, Donohoe, Reynolds, Beery, Kron, Hubbard, Goertz. SECOND ROW: Stephanou, Lowen, Steininger, Gerety, Goodrich, Hughes, Rolls, Kirkland, Irwin, McCormick, Innis. THIRD ROW: Bean, Poje, Edwards, Robertson, Noonan, Grant, Whaley, Stoenner, Helin, Worrall, Minor . Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemical fraternity, was founded in 1902 at the University of Wisconsin. The organization is composed of two branches, the collegiate and the professional. Kappa, now one of 46 collegiate chapters, was established at K.U. in 1909. Master Alchemist, Hugh Donahoe; Vice-Master Alchemist, James Rails; Recorder, John Stolz; Treasurer, Paul Renich. Delta Sigma Rho, national honorary fraternity, whose mem- bership is awarded for outstand- ing work in debate and forensic activities, was formed in 1904 by consolidation of four fraternities, founded at Michigan, Minne- sota, Northwestern and Wiscon- sin Universities. Kansas chapter is now one of 84 active chapters. President, Bill Cowboy; Vice- President, Kenneth Beasley; Sec- retary-Treasurer, Jean Moore. FIRST ROW: Moore, Bell, Buehler, Schiefelbusch, Coles. SECOND ROW: Royer, Conboy, Frieson, Beasley, Wilson, Foster. 1 1 11 II I FACULTY E. C. Buehler COLLEGIATE Kenneth Beasley, Lawrence Beth Bell, Lawrence Herbert Coles, Wichita Bill Conboy, Lawrence Ben Foster, Hutchinson Hal Frieson, Hutchinson Jean Moore, Wichita Richard Royer, Abilene Dick Schiefelbusch, Lawrence Keith Wilson, Independence, Mo. Hii ACTIVES Laurence Allred, Lawrence Ted Bernard, Hamilton Walter Cheng, New York, N. Y. Francis Duddy, Abilene Anthony Granosky, Kansas City Charles Grimmett, Topeka Vernard Guyer, Topeka Bill Hamilton, Augusta FACULTY Prof. F. E. Kester Prof. G. W. Smith Prof. J. D. Stranathan Preston Clement Clarence Coats Melvin Cottom William Reardon Forrest Haynes, Chillicothe, Mo. Walter Heinrich, Independence, Mo. Leonard Hieber, Sunflower Jack Hollingsworth, South Haven Donald Knott, Perry, Okla. Bruno Loewen, Newton Chesley Looney, Leavenworth Hal Mahuron, Liberal William Malone, Wichita John Margrave, Kansas City Clyde McKale, Garnett Bert Miller, Erie, Pa. Carl Paden, Topeka John Patterson, Lawrence Boyd Pond, Lawrence Calvin Remmers, Elmhurst, Dale Rummer, Wichita Warren Shaw, Florence John Shepp, Sunflower Harry Shinkle, Lawrence Walter Stockebrand, Garnett David Thomson, Irving Ted Tyler, Parsons Milton Waller, Osawatomie Del Woolworth, Nortonville PLEDGES Jack Cejka, Peru, Nebr. Raymond Cooper, Sylvia Glenn Forclham, Lawrence Don Gordon, Whiting Kenneth King, Clyde, Mo. Bob Lindsay, Kansas City, Mo. Don McMurray, Burlington Bill Miller, Erie, Pa. Elton Noble, Leavenworth John Roberts, Lyons Elmer Weigel, Gorham ROW: Malone, Shinkle, Stockebrand, Hamilton, Cottom, Shaw, Allred, Thomson, Guyer, Hollingsworth, McKale. SECOND ROW: Bernard, Rummer, Margrave, Tyler, Miller, Buldy, Cheng, Heinrich, Roberts. THIRD ROW: Patterson, Heiber, Loewen, Grimmett, Remmers, King, Paden, Shepp, Looney. FOURTH ROW: Mahuron, Haynes, Pond, McMurray, Gordon, Cejka, Cooper, Wailer. Kappa Eta Kappa, professional electrical engineering fraternity, was founded in 1923 at Wis- consin University, Madison, Wis- consin. Gamma, now one of 7 ,collegiate chapters, was estab- lished at K. U. in 1924. Presi- de nt, Warren Shaw; Vice-Presi- dent, Bill Hamilton; Secretary, Laurence Allred; Treasurer, Walt Stockebrand. The Student Forums Board sponsors cultural programs of in- terest to students, such as lec- tures, foreign moving pictures, and coffee discussion groups with convocation speakers. Members are chosen by a student council— faculty committee. Chairman, Nancy Hulings. FIRST ROW Kittle, Riss, Hulings, O ' Connel. fOBUN MEMBERS Nancy Hulings, Tulsa, Okla. Helen Kittle, Kansas City Wilson O ' Connel, Hutchinson Robert Riss, Kansas City, Mo. ACTIVES Jack Beal, Harper Jack Bower, Norton Kenneth L. Conwell, Wichita S. Wayne Curry, Lawrence Howard Dold, Parsons Bernard Domann, Winchester Jack Frost, Emporia Stanley Gaulding, Independence, Mo. Desmond Gibson, Lawrence G. Dale Glasco, Clifton Charles W. Ham, Burbank, Calif. E. Melvin Inloes, Quinter Jack Isaacs, Lawrence Jay Johnson. Lawrence Bernard Lambert, Smith Center Robert Lemons, Lawrence T. Charles Marriott, Lawrence John McKirnens, Sudan William McNary, Potwin Richard Megredy, El k City Cy Merriweather, Selden K. Elwood Paxton, Wichita 011411 PSI Philip Preble, Concordia Alan Probst, Argonia Leon Ramsey, Chapman Laurens Rossillon, Gridley Rudolph Sandberg, El Dorado James Schwensen, Wellington Keith Stanley, Wicihta Andrew Struble, Glasco Raymond Thompson, Jr., Belleville PLEDGES Anson Anderson, Sunflower McRae Barker, Kansas City Edward Barlow, Mobile, Ala. Billy Bryant, Haviland Roy Burger, Wichita Richard Cook, Iola Robert Drumm, Centralia Donald Greenhaw, Canton Jimmie Gr mes, Hiawatha Clarence Hamm, Kinsley Kenneth Harper, Phillipsburg Lester Hauber, Hiawatha 0. Lewis Hiebert, Buhler D. Dwight Hunter, Wichita James Kiene, Kansas City John Killinger, Topeka Lyle Lathrop, Sunflower Jack Lewis, Atchison Paul Linn, Parsons Max Mabie, Green Robert Mahanna, Hoxie James Martin, Sunflower Corwin McIntyre, Sunflower Lawrence Morgan, Atlanta Donald Morrow. Concordia Albert Pipkin, Sunflower John Pistorius, Lawrence C. Warren Plummer, Westmoreland Hugh Poison, Moline Ralph Pool, Lawrence William Rives, Elkhart Dale Schesser, Lawrence Frank Shrimplin, Lawrence Ralph Siemen, Topeka Wallace Taylor, Lawrence H. Pat Turner, Lawrence Harold Winters, Lawrence FIRST ROW: McIntyre, Schesser, Morgan, Thompson, Probst, Gibson, Bass, Dr. Clark, Beal, Dean Reece, Lathrop, McKimns, Conwell, Drumm, Lemons. Schwensen. SECOND ROW: Megredy, Kiene, Preble, Winters, Mahanna, Morrow, Marriott. Burger, Poison, Bower, Bunter, Barlow, Lewis, Pipkin, Martin, Ramsey, Greenhaw, Hauber, Merriweather. THIRD ROW: Hamm, Stanley, Paxton, Dold, Anderson, Frost, Johnson, Barker, Pistorius, Domann, Plummer, Linn, Isaacs, Mabie, Curry. FOURTH ' ROW: Glasco, Turner, Harper, Struble, Sandberg, Taylor, Pool, Shrimplin, Rives, Siemen, Ham, Hiebert, Rossillon, Lambert, McNary. NOT IN PICTURE: Bryant, Cook, Goulding, Grimes Killinger. Kappa Psi was founded at the Medical College of Virginia in 1879. The local chapter, one of 53 in accredited colleges of pharmacy, was established at K. U. April 23, 1922. Regent, Jack Beal; Vice-Regent, Desmond Gib- son; Secretary, Kenneth Conwell; Treasurer, Alan Probst. The All Student Council, stu- dent 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 admin- istrative bodies, promote the Uni- versity ' s highest interests, and cul- tivate loyalty to the University among its students. President, James Waugh; Vice-President, George Robb; Secretary, Sue Webster; Treasurer, Arnold Eng- lund. FIRST ROW: Kelley, Leigh, Reiff, Webster, Waugh, Robb, Englund, Wilson, Ruppenthal. SECOND ROW: Weiker, Thayer, Harlow, Brown, McCarthy, Postlethwaite Gunn, Heath, Warner, Caldwell, Sheibley. R NJ MEMBERS Ruth Brown, Sabetha Arnold Englund, Salina George Caldwell, Pittsburg Dick Gunn, Kansas City Harriet Harlow, Kansas City, Mo. Helen Heath, Salina Ed Kelley, Garden City Lynn Leigh, Burley, Idaho George McCarthy, Wichita Duane Postlethwaite, Delkhos Lee Reiff, Newton George Robb, McPherson Art Ruppenthal, Russell Betsy Sheidley, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Thayer, Manhattan Louise Warner, Jackson, Mo. Jim Waugh, Eskridge Sue Webster, Garden City Nancy Welker, Kansas City, Mo. Keith Wilson, Independence, Mo. Ruth Balka, Topeka Dick Bibler, Elkhart Esther Black, Peru Jeanne Bowman, Stafford Carolyn Campbell, Kansas City, Mo. Betty Compton, Topeka Eva Desiderio, Lawrence Helen Dietzel, Kansas City, Mo. Marjorie Ganssle, Salina Gwen Goerz, Moundridge Austin Harmon, Lawrence Lorita Higgenbottom, Winfield • UfliN Mil Hill MEMBERS Wilda Hosier, Ottawa Don Humphreys, Pratt Bill Imel, Topeka Mr. Jacobson, Lawrence Miss Johnson, Lawrence Don Kane, Lawrence Bill Lakey, Neodesha Frank McCoy, Wichita Janet Merrill, St. Joseph, Mo. Barbara Meyer, Wichita Eileen O ' Conner, Wichita FIRST ROW: Oliver, Stark, Compton, Mr. Jacobson, Harmon, Miss Johnson, O ' Conner, Kane, Higgenbottom. SECOND ROW: Sewell, BaIke, Lakey, Meyer, McCoy, Campbell, Bibler, Imel, Goerz. THIRD ROW: Desiderio, Black, Ganssle, Shannon, Dietzel, Humphreys, Merrill, Bowman, Stevenson, Saunders, Olson. NOT IN PICTURE: Rivard, Schaeffler, Varner, Hosier, Yost. Dale Oliver, Kansas City, Mo. Barbara Olson, Wichita Barbara Rivard, Kansas City, Mo. Mary Saunders, Lamed Ellen Schaeffler, Hillsboro Georgianna Sewell, Sabetha Joyce Shannon, Kansas City Marjorie Stark, Manhattan Joan Stevenson, Salina Mary Varner, Wichita Mary Yost, Topeka Delta Phi Delta, national hon- orary art fraternity, was formed September 28, 1912, from the Pallette Club, organized at K. U. in 1909. Griffith ' s chapter is now one of 31 collegiate chap- ters. President, Austin Harmon; Vice-President, Eileen O ' Connor; Recording Secretary, Mary Var- ner; Treasurer, Don Kane. Delta Sigma Pi is an inter- national professional fraternity in the field of commerce and management, founded at New York University in 1907. The Iota Chapter, organized at the University of Kansas in 1921, was reactivated this winter after having been inactive during the war. Headmaster, Duane A. James; Senior Warden and Master of Ceremonies, Walter C. Emery; Scribe, Raymond L. Moore; Treas- urer, Robert Docking. FIRST ROW: Lumbers, Wahl, Emery, James, B. Johnson, Fulton, Moore. SECOND ROW: Land, E. Johnson, Nichols, Wardin, Walters, Docking. NOT IN PICTURE: Swalwell. Robert Docking, Lawrence Walter Emery, Kansas City Donald Fulton, Kansas City, Mo. Duane James, Independence Bill Johnson, Nickerson MEMBERS Edgar Johnson, Independence, Mo. Stewart Lambers, St. Joseph, Mo. Everett Land, Mission Raymond Moore, Lexington, Mo. Robert Nichols, Hoxie James Swalwell, Topeka Richard Wahl, Saxman Gordon Walters, Anthony Charles Wardin, Lawrence tiCflBHB MEMBERS Russell Baltis, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Bradley, Overland Park Kenneth Brown, Newton Jack Bryan, Junction City Bruce Coffin, Lawrence John Cole, St. Joseph, Mo. Art Dekker, Roswell, N. M. Paul Ericson, Topeka Herbert Foster, Topeka Charles Freeburg, Lawrence Bill Gaw, Lyons Warren Gibbs, Kansas City R. L. Graves, Baltimore, Md. Ed Hartronff, Lyons Lon Hever, St. Louis, Mo. Dwight Horner, Kan sas City Glen Horn, Pomona Wayne Johnston, Chanute Bill Kiene, Topeka Ralph Kiene, Kansas City Duane Lintecum, Olathe John LoPinto, Brooklyn, N. Y. Sam McCamant, Hutchinson Joe McCoskrie, Kansas City, Mo. John Monroe, Kansas City, Mo. Bob Riegle, Lawrence Bob Rosenfield, Junction City Louis Shepard, Erie Jack Singleton, Chanute John Staats, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Stewart, Tulsa, Okla. Harley Tracey, Sunflower Dexter Welton, Sterling, Ill. Arthur Woodman, Kansas City Bill Yost, St. Joseph, Mo. FIRST ROW: Brown, Welton Foster, Graves, Gibbs, Hever, Lo Pinto, Johnson, Ericson. SECOND ROW: McCoskrie, Cole, Horner, Yost, Hartronff, Lintecum, Monroe, Dekker. THIRD ROW: Freeburg, Woodman, Gaw, McCamant, Stewart, B. Kiene, Baltis, Tracy, Bradley. NOT IN PICTURE: Bryan Rosenfield, Singleton, Shepard, Riegle, R. Kiene, Coffin, Stoats. Scarab, professional architec- tural fraternity, was founded in 1902 at Illinois University. Aby- dos Temple, now one of 12 active chapter was installed at K.U. in 1922. President, Warren Gibbs; Vice-President, Herbert Foster,. Secretary, Jack Bryan; Treasurer, Robert Rosenfield. FIRST ROW: Stollenwerck, Moore, Bell, Buehler, Schiefelbusch, Reiff, Davis. SECOND ROW: Wilson, Conboy, Beasley, Eacock, Bennett, Schrerer, Aliotti, THIRD ROW: Cross, Royer, E. Friesen, H. Friesen, Mills, Coles, Foster. Aldo Aliotti, Rome, Italy Kenneth Beasley, Lawrence Beth Bell, Lawrence Robert Bennett, Wichita E. C. Buehler, Lawrence Herbert Coles, Wichita Bill Conboy, Lawrence MEMBERS Fred Cross, Kansas City Robert Davis, St. Joseph, Mo. Ralph Eacock, Lake Forest, Edwardsville Ben Foster, Hutchinson Ernest Friesen, Hutchinson Hal Friesen, Hutchinson Steve Mills, Gosham Jean Moore, Wichita Lee Reiff, Newton Richard Royer, Abilene Alan Scherer, Newton Dick Schiefelbusch, Lawrence Ed Stollenwerck, Wichita Keith Wilson, Independence, Mo, 11 Bruce Bathurst, Chicago, Ill. William A. Bell, Leavenworth William Blanchard, Kenoma, Mo. Brinkerhoff, Mulvane Lynn Chase, Parsons Robert H. Chesky, Herington Loren Corliss, Rogers, Ark. Robert L. Davis, Wichita John Eberhardt, Glasco Dale W. Fields, McPherson Robert Franklin, Kansas City. Mo. MEMBERS Hugh Gibson, Wichita Albert L. Grimes, Marion Austin E. Harmon, Lawrence Elmer E. Harvey, Wichita Harrison Madden, Wichita Richard A. Moore. Pratt Morton Newell, Kansas City, Mo. Elton B. Noble, Leavenworth Wilbur B. Noble, Leavenworth Donald E. Owen, Emporia Richard L. Pfister, Hiawatha Henry Pinault, Salem, Mass. Jose Portuguez, Cartago, Costa Rica William E. Ruth, Solomon Robert D. Reiswig, Wichita Hardy Scheuerman, Beloit Dale A. Spiegel, Formoso Robert M. Stewart, Manhattan Robert K. Thayer, Manhattan Austin H. Turney, Lawrence Glenn Varenhorst, Conway Springs Keith Wolfenbarger, Talmadge a FIRST ROW: Moore, Scheuerman, Vorenhorst, Spiegel, W. Horde, Linegar, Pfister, Brinkerhoff, Bathurst, SECOND ROW: Blanchard, Fields, Eberhardt, Pinault, Newell, Wolfenbarger, Owen, Chesky, E. Noble, Bell, Corliss, Reiswig, Thayer. NOT IN PICTURE: Davis, Turney, Stewart, Harmon, Franklin, Chose, Gibson, Wahl, Portuguez, Ruth, Harvey, Grimes. The student branch of Y,M. C,A., world-wide fellowship of Christian men, was founded in 1858 at the Universities of Mich- igan and Virginia. K.U. ' s branch, now one of 300, was established in 1882. President, Wilbur B. Noble: Vice-President, Dale A. Spiegel; Secretary, Robert L. Da- vis; Treasurer, Richard L. Pfister. Pi Tau Sigma, national honor- ary mechanical engineering fra- ternity, was founded at the Uni- versity of Illinois on March 16, 1915. Psi, now one of 33 active chapters, was established at K.U. in 1941. President, John Thiele; Vice-President, Robert Wehe; Secretary, William McCoy; Treas- urer, James Kanehl. FIRST ROW: Suptic, Sells, Bower, Borene, Casten, Sonnenberg, McCarter. SECOND ROW: Hadley, Kanehl, Green, Daasch, Thiele, Tait, Stockton, Wehe, THIRD ROW: Mlincheff, Maiden, Rubaloff, Roberts, Sherrer, Kinney, Hansen, Burgert, Jervis, Harris, Nation, H. Moore, Shea, Singer, McCune, Ferraro. NOT IN PICTURE: Ballinger, Burgess, R. Moore, Pihlblad, Randle, Spector, Walker, Beady, Curtis, R. A. Moore, Sabin, Sellers, Van Venthum Marion Burgert, Hillsboro William Burgess, Oklahoma City, Okla, William Casteen, Lawrence Little Paul Curtis, Sunflower Harry Daasch, Lawrence William Davis, Cameron, Mo. Victor Ferraro, Sunflower Charles Green, Sunflower COLLEGIATE Stephen Hadley, Kansas City, Mo. Edward Hansen, Westpoint, Ill. Thomas W. Ballinger, Santa Barbara, Cal, Richard Harris, Council Grove Marion Bearly, Parker Stanley Jervis, Grosse Point, Mich. Morris Borene, Sabetha James Kanehl, Rittman, Ohio Carroll Bower, Kansas City Duane McCarter, Kansas City, Mo. William McCoy. Benkelman, Nebr. Gordon McCune, Tulsa, Okla. James McKinney, Hartford Eimo Maiden, Lawrence Edison Mincheff, Sunflower Richard A. Moore, Sunflower Robert D. Moore, Bellflower, Cal. Harold W. Moore, Lawrence William Nation, Kansas City Leslie Pihlblad, Garf eld Grady Randle, Lawrence Bob Roberts, Kansas City. Mo. Stuart Rubaloff, Louisberg Eugene Sabin, Sunflower Robert Sellers, Bartlesville, Okla. John C. Sellis, Effingham Richard Shea. Sedalia Robert Sherrer, Topeka John Singer, Parker William Sonnenberg, Leavenworth Leo Spector, Kansas City, Mo. Robert Stockton, Lawrence John Suptic, Kansas City R. S. Tate, Lawrence John Thiele, Topeka Francis Van Venthem, Atchison William Walker, Hutchinson Robert Wehe, Topeka FACULTY Leonard Brown M. E. Jackel Professor K S. Gray Stan Stockton Professor R. S. Tait 111H CRICIL MEMBERS Robert J. Anderson, Hutchinson Vern Birney, Bucklin Floyd T. Boosmann, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Brady, Clyde, Mo. Bill Braum, Emporia Fred H. Brinkman, Tulsa, Okla. Robert Brock, Sterling Bill Burris, Dodge City Daniel D. Clinger, Rose Hill Joe Connelly, Petersburg, Ill. Murray H. Davis, Kansas City, Mo. Robert L. Davis, Wichita Charles Dillon, Kansas City, Mo. Bernard E. Domann, Winchester Bob Dougherty, Plainville Malcolm Dryden, Leavenworth David Ellis, Kansas City Jack Emerson, Chanute James Fleming, Bonner Springs Ben Foster, Hutchinson Ernest Friesen, Hutchinson Wendell D. Gugler, Abilene Larry Haden, St. Joseph, Mo. Dale Hanes, Coffeyville Van Harrison, Kansas City, Mo. Richard S. Hawkinson, Kansas City, M Phillip C. Hill, Arkansas City James K. Hitt, Lawrence Jay Humphreys, Ashland Samuel E. Hunter, Wadsworth Ralph Kiene, Kansas City Robert Krueger, Emporia William S. Macferran, Topeka Russel N. Mammel, Hutchinson Charles Marsh, Salina Sam McCamant, Hutchinson Joseph McCoskrie, Kansas City, Mo. Jess McNish, Lincoln, Nebr. Gene R. McLaughlin, Coffeyville o. Omer Muchmore, Parsons Bob Mullen, Hutchinson Stanley Nelson, Lawrence George L. Peterson, Kansas City Bob Oberhelman, Kansas City, Mo. Jack H. Robinson, Kansas City, Mo. Jack W. Robinson, Kansas City, Mo, Jim Selig, Lawrence Warren A. Shaw, Florence Glenn Stallard, Lawrence John Stites, Oklahoma City. Okla. Robert E. Stroud, Peabody John Touhey, Hattsiburg, Miss. Jim Walker, Highland, Calif. Skipper Williams, Lawrence Bill Wintermote, Augusta L. C. Woodruff, Lawrence FIRST ROW: Dillon, Fleming, J. H. Robinson, Hill, Hunter, Hawkinson, Stroud, Hitt, Williams, McNish, M. H. Davis, Brock, Wintermote, Gugler, Foster, McLaughlin. SECOND ROW: Connelly, Dougherty, Marsh, Mammel, Anderson, Humphreys, Nelson, Birney, Stallard, Braum, Peterson, Shaw, Mullen, Kiene, linger, R. L. Davis, Hanes, Macferran, Stites. THIRD ROW: Brady, Haden, Dryden, Harrison, Friesen, J. Robinson, Brinkman, Oberhelman, Emerson, Burris, Boosmann, Selig, Walker, Domann, Touhey, McCamant, Krueger, Ellis, Muchmore. NOT IN PICTURE Woodruff, The Inter-Fraternity Council is the governing body for social fraternities at K.U. President, Skipper Williams; Vice-President, Joseph McCoskrie; Secretary, Murray H. Davis, Treasurer, Robert E. Stroud. 1 THE JAYHAWKER dvertising Sect:on STUDENTS: cio-e)ikwa 4a6te made I%e ialkaatheib 04eape voia. Aulat vow 4 appeciako-n 4 pabb6,4_ dtee meibc tai4 1, HE 1948 JAYHAWKER STAFF SPRING NUMBER, 1948 89 Maybe Next Year (Continued from Page 21) conference all-star first team (both Associated Press and United Press) for the fourth time in his college career. In addition, he was picked as a ber of the West all-star team to play in the annual East-West game in New York. The East won, 58 to 47, but Schnelly took scoring honors for the West with 11 points on 4 baskets and 3 free throws. The nomination for the most ising star of the future goes to Jerry Waugh, the former Wellington flash. While operating in the quarterback slot of Coach Phog Allen ' s system, Waugh averaged 7.9 points a game in league play and ran the team with coolness and finesse. He was named the Sheriff of Sumner County for the way he put the handcuffs on opposing high scorers—including American Kevin O ' Shea of Notre Dame, A. L. Bennett of the Oklahoma Aggies, and Dan Pippin of Missouri. The greatest frustration of the son was that experienced by Jayhawker coach Phog Allen when he had the facts proving Kansas State center Clar- ence Brannum to be ineligible but could not gain the support of the ference fathers. The top irony was when, in a telephone poll, even the K.U. faculty representative voted in favor of Brannum. It was a losing son all the way around for the nial producer of cage champions at K.U. One hopeful sign for the future is that eight different players led the team in scoring at least once during the year. They include: Schnellbacher, Waugh, Eskridge, Houchin, Sapp, England, Penny, and Mabry. Only Schnellbacher has used up his lity. The Jayhawkers lost a few feathers in this year ' s basketball campaign, but being young birds they should grow to be pretty tough customers in seasons to follow. A little Wildcat and Tiger meat would make a good diet for next year. We ' ve a hunch Coach Allen is preparing the menu right now. The LOVE BOX COMPANY CORRUGATED AND WOOD SHIPPING CONTAINERS 612 S. COMERCE ST. WICHITA, KANSAS From the Presses of Capper Printing Company, Inc. 9 I 2 KANSAS AVENUE — TOPEKA, K ANSAS Fine Printing Since 1897 AT YOUR SERVICE GAS — OIL — LUBRICATION — CAR WASHING TIRE and BATTERY SERVICE FRITZ CO. PHONE 4 CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS 8th and New Hamp. 1:11=11■ 90 THE JAYHAWKER SAVE FOR THE FUTURE FINANCIAL PROBLEMS are avoided by thrift. If you can live within your income and put something aside for the future, you are on the right road to success and financial security. OPEN AN ACCOUNT WITH US and build up a reserve fund with systematic deposits. will enjoy the pleasure of seeing your balance increase steadily, and the satisfaction of knowing that you have ready cash available for any gency. THE LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK LAWRENCE, KANSAS FOR THAT S PEC I A L DATE GEMMELS CAFE FOR THAT S P ECI A L FOOD WE ARE ALWAYS READY TO SERVE 717 Massachusetts Street IT ' S a PORTRAIT for HIM so of course nothing but a HIXON portrait will do HIXON STUDIO 721 MASS. St. LE4 :11 THE LATEST FASHIONS IN WEARING APPAREL IT ' S TOPEKA, KANSAS SPRING NUMBER, 1948 91 DRAKE ' S FOR BAKES 907 MASS. PHONE 61 How to Save Money on Electric Bin 1. Sell your electric refrigerator to the junkman and get back some of the money you wasted on it. Besides taking up too much room, it costs you about 5 cents a day to run. Of course, without refrigeration, food will spoil—but that can easily he avoided by eating out of cans. Or by not eating at all. 2. Donate your electric sewing machine to an orphanage and start stitching by hand. Of course, it takes a lot of time. And maybe it ' s a little hard on the eyes. But you ' ll save one whole penny for every eight hours your sewing mach- ine doesn ' t run! 3. Turn off your radio during the Elec- tric Hour — Hour of Charm — every Sunday afternoon at 3:30 over CBS, CST. In this way you ' ll miss a great show but think; in two years this self- sacrifice on your part will have saved you the price of a pack of cigarettes! KANSAS CITY POWER LIGHT COMPANY ' Compliments of CO LEGE SHOP the store for fine footwear • K.U. NOVELTIES • 1401 Ohio Ph. 1401 Two Book Stores 1237 Oread Ph. 492 92 THE JAYHAWKER U 0 [ i 1 for your every need Books, Food, Relaxation T H E WHEN ITS COFFEE TIME! JAYHAWK CAFE 1340 OHIO PHONE 2007 A PERSONAL MESSAGE! The business ' that have advertised in the JAYHAWKER are responsible for its cation. Please show your appreciation by patronizing them. —Robert L. Bottoms, Advertising Manager MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY for that complete one stop service FORD SPECIALISTS PHONE 277 609 MASS. SPRING NUMBER, 1948 93 STEEL, ALUMINUM and CORROSION-RESISTANT PRODUCTS for INDUSTRY ifP ' • r,:cz‘a rzr-eZtr-6cr-cr COPYRIGHT 1943 HARRY DA BY ! 7 ' 3 - 0 0 0 TN, AR BY KANSAS CITY, PRODUCTS = OF = STEEL PLATE q CO FM KANSAS 0 ATI 0 N HARRY DARBY For of Quality Workmanship Ph on ,46 7,0,111CleartePS Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE 926 Massachusetts St. Lawrence, Kansas Delivery Service and Cash and Carry A FRIENDLY MESSAGE Thirty years of supreme service Same Location— Same Management • Best of and service • Coffee famous the state over DELUXE CAFE 711 Mass.—Ph. 561 Lawrence For Easter For Spring For Year ' Round Wear HYDE PARK SUITS are the answers $49.50 . . . $55.00 GIBBS CLOTHING COMPANY 811 MASS. 7,142TER ' S STATONER7 UN VERSITY SUPPLIES WE INVITE COMPARISON OF PRICE AND QUALITY 1025 MASS. PHONE 1051 RANSDELL MOTOR SERVICE 621-25 Massachusetts St. Phone 361 LAWRENCE, KANSAS I 11 COOKING ' S A SNAP‹ ..4 ee ' d 69.41 44 4 0e0 COOK ELECTRICALLY A N D ENJOY THE DIFFERENCE THE KANSAS ELECTRIC POWER COMPANY Lawrence, Kansas 95 SPRING NUMBER, 1948 1 In clothing, APPEARANCE counts — In cleaning, EXPERIENCE counts — INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING LAWRENCE, KANSAS 740 VERMONT PHONE 432 She ' s blond, about so tall, and wears a CAR LYE dress. JOHNSON ' S 835 Mass. Phone 771 For YOUR Transportation Needs Use The Bus The RAPIP TRANSIT CO. Your City Bus Service The Favorite Dessert Lawrence Sanitary Ice Cream Company 202 W. 6th — Tel. 696 all the K.U. students buy their groceries AT REEVES GROCERY 900 MISS. PHONE 413 et) It Started With Adam (Continued from Page 49) male show of manners. He swoops eagerly to open the car door, shoves his struggling date into her coat, or grabs her with brute-like grip to waft her over the waiting mud puddle—not because he wants to help her, but because it gives him such a gallant, superior, masculine feeling to play Sir Walter Raleigh. Perhaps the most unfortunate thing of all is that the college man takes such great pride and pleasure in being male. He has, through years of practice, become an artist in the techniques of maneuvering into a position of advantage, whether it be on the back doorstep at closing hours, in the back seat of his Chevy convertible, or behind the bushes by ters. He pictures himself as a type of superior h ybrid of Charles Boyer and Clark Gable when it comes to love-making. Only momentarily baffled by signs of feminine resistance to his irrestible charms, his un- quenchable egotism bursts forth in the typically male remark, What ' s the matter, haven ' t you got any more lipstick? And sadly enough, the college man is going to re- tain these happy masculine characteristics in his later life. He leaves college — misty-eyed and full of glorious ambition, reaching for the stars and the first vice-presidency of General Motors. Oh, too soon, he finds himself plop in the middle of middle age, self-complacent and proud to be assistant secretary of the Osawatomie Chamber of Commerce. He comes a paunchy self-satisfied, solid citizen, his Elks key dangling gracefully over his bay-window. With a lump in his throat, he rises nostalgically to boom forth the heart-swelling notes of Rotarians Forever. He passes out fifteen-cent cigars and brotherly, bone- crunching handshakes to his brothers. He leaves his patient wife at home with the kids while he bustles off to gorge himself on frenchfried oysters at the Chamber of Commerce Booster ' s Banquet and guffaw racously at his own lewd jokes. Undaunted by his sagging jowls and thinning hair he mutters enticing remarks like Twenty-three Skiddoo and Oh, you kid, to the blond waitress, invariably at- tributing his failure to her insensibilities rather than to his own inadequacies. And when he finally reaches senility he is still feebly chuckling about what a terror he was way back when . . . So men dream on—each believing himself to be the one faultless creation in the verse. My only advice to women is—Let ' em dream ...We know who ' s superior. The Long and Short of It (Continued from Page 29 ) while Jody Stuckey knocked her last year ' s sidestroke rec- ord of 23.8 down to 23.6. On March 23rd, the night of the final meet, the base- ment of Robinson gymnasium was packed with damp, hot spectators who cheered widly as Nanette Hyer smashed her week-old breaststroke record to set a new speed of 22.5 seconds. The excitement rose to a high tension as Delta Gamma and Kappa swimmers matched point for point in the close competition. Finally, the Kappas pulled forward to win the swimmers ' trophy with 50 points. Delta Gamma was second with 37 points, while Pi Beta Phi and I.W.W. tied for third. Especially outstanding were three high point winners—Nanette Flyer, Jody Stuckey, and Virginia Harris. SPRING NUMBER, 1948 97 On Field and Court (Continued from Page 28) The top ten teams at the end of basketball: Beta 657 Phi Delt Phi Gam 589 Sigma Chi 558 Phi Psi 549 Sig Alph 494 Sig Ep 493 ATO 452 Kappa Sig 448 Pi K A 400 Even before the basketball finals were completed, the Intramurals fice got out the volleyballs; at present 60 teams are trying to slap balls down each other ' s throats. And April 15, when volleyball is over and the sun is out, the spring ball, tennis, golf, handball, and shoes—will take over the scene. The intramural directors also plan to hold a track meet, tentatively set for April 7-8-9, and a swimming meet, either April 14-15-16, or later in April. Far more men participate in mural sports than in any other Hill activity program. Director Don Powell estimates that at least 3,000 men will take part in at least one sport this year. The program has grown mendously the last few years, mostly because more unaffiliated men have been organized into teams. Powell is coming very close to his goal, which is to find a place for every male dent who wants to participate in sports. —Rickey Capps The Big Game (Continued from Page 35) The Orange Bowl Committee did their utmost to make the stay of the Jayhawkers a pleasant and memorable event. In the way of pre-game tainment the squad was given every opportunity to see all the wonders that have made Miami one of the top tion spots in the United States. Their evenings were spent in visiting the famous Jai Alai Fronton, the local dog tracks ( where, incidentally, several of the boys, including Athletic Director E. C. Quigley, were seen to reap the benefits from a few innocent bets across the pari-mutuel counter), and the Orange Bowl Water Festival which was held at the very beautiful Coral Gables Venetian Pool. Mr. John D. Montgomery, editor of the Miami Beach Sun-Star, and a KU graduate, was a member of the committee, and saw to it that the Knights of the Hill were royally treated. The University of Miami ' s practice field was chosen as the locale for the Kansan ' s pigskin work, and it was to this location that the boys were transported twice a day to participate in what was fondly known as matization to the Southern Heat. Coach Sauer was not too well satisfied with the showing of the squad in the first workouts, and consequently two rough scrimmages were held. It was in connection with these very ous workouts in the Miami sun that the Press was so impressed with the superb condition of the Big Six Champs. Only one workout was held on the day preceding the game, and this was held in the huge Orange Bowl dium. There, with workmen putting finishing touches on the upper deck which brought the seating capacity up to 60,000, the Jayhawks quickly ran through a warm-up session. A squad picture was taken, then showers, and back to the Venetian to await the next day. January 1, 1948. That date will long be remembered by all ers. Our great team, students, and loyal alumni, alike will recall how the vaunted Yellowjackets of Georgia Tech, who took the field in Orange Bowl Stadium a 13-point favorite, were very, very lucky to eke out a 20-14 victory. Fate was certainly smiling Georgia way when the great drama unfolded before the 60,000 nesses in the blazing Florida sun. The game had been nip and tuck all the way, with the Yellowjackets pulling ahead momentarily, only to have the determined Jayhawks creep up on them. Time was running out, however, and the final minutes of the game came up—the time when the Kansans had used Black Magic to pull victory out of the fire. The question on the lips of every spectator was, Can they do it again? Less than six minutes to play, and the Yellowjackets lead, 20-14. The fighting Kansans have just driven from midfield to score on Bill Hogan ' s pass to All-American Ray Evans. Georgia elects to receive the kickoff and it is returned to midfield. A Tech man is penalized 15 yards for unnecessary roughness. In the next play a Georgian fumbles the ball and it is recovered by one of our boys. Now, can they do it? Will those last minute Jayhawkers come through again? Sparked by Ray Evans, the Kansans return to the game with a vengeance. The Kansas aerial offensive is leashed, and two passes to gered Co-Captain Otto Schnellbacher take the Hawks down to the twelve yard line. Schnelly almost made it across for the tieing score, but was called back on an out-of-bounds alty. Ray Evans then takes the ball and piledrives over to the two. The Kansas magic has worked again! It looks like a sure thing as the Hawks come out of the huddle with only two yards between them and a tie and possible victory. Lynn McNutt takes the ball from center. There ' s a pile up. The referee is slow getting over to the ball, and Georgia recovers with time running out. The score remains 20-14, yet as a Miami paper later ported, there was hardly a fan that left that field that didn ' t know that the best team had lost that day. As Tech Coach, Bobby Dodds, said later in a post-game interview, Kansas deserved to win that game. It ' s tough to lose one that way. One thing is sure, we don ' t want to have to play Kansas again. The dejected Jayhawkers showered and boarded their busses for the ride from the Stadium back to the hotel. Once at the hotel, the team members began preparations for the big party which was to be held at Murray ner ' s famous Copacabana night club on Miami Beach. Here, while sipping Champagne and eating a six course dinner, the two teams viewed the floor show featuring the famous Copa Girls. The gold Orange Bowl footballs were also presented to the respective coaches at the party. 98 THE JAYHAWKER The Jayhawkers had won a real place in the hearts of Miamians. The spectacle of students coming down in a truck, of a whole state chipping in to send the band, of hundreds of stu- dents and alumni making the trip from all over the U. S., and finally the spectacle of a great team that never said die ... made a lasting impression upon the Floridians. The chairman of the Orange Bowl Committee said that it was the finest exhibition that any school had ever made in the Orange Bowl, and he assured the Jayhawks that another successful season would insure their inclusion on the Orange Bowl list for next year. The three-day vacation passed rap- idly, but not so rapidly that the Jay- hawkers weren ' t happy to climb back into the Clipper Jayhawk for the flight back home. Captain Leep had obtained special permission from the C.A.A. to Buzz Lawrence, so about six hours after taking off, the squad got a bird ' s eye view of the Hill before landing in Kansas City. Here, as when they left, the defeated but still smiling Jayhawk- ers were met by a throng of alumni and friends, proud of the wonderful showing their team had made. The 1948 Orange Bowl was a thing of the past, but the Kansans had al- most tasted a post-season victory, and next time ... would they be denied? Question Mark Team (Continued from Page 11) Commerce, that Henry Frnka, Tulane Coach, had called him to recommend a man of his own, but had ended up praising Sikes for the last three-quar- ters of the conversation. Following Mr. Quigley ' s remarks, Sikes arose with a twinkle in his eyes. Aftuh hearin ' all these nice things, he drawled, ' I wish I had asked for a longuh contract and mouh money. When we walked into Coach Sikes ' office to inteview him for the Jay- hawker, our first feeling was one of regret that he wouldn ' t be playing as well as coaching. Topping six feet one inch in height and weighing 190 pounds, the 43-year old former end looks as if he could don the pads and go a full 60 minutes tomorrow. And when we shook hands with him, we knew how hopeless a football must have felt when Sikes latched on to it in his playing days. We will use a standard T-forma- tion, the coach said in answer to our question. Very similar to that used here last sea son. I ' m anxious to get spring practice under way to see the boys under fire. I ' ve been looking at last season ' s pictures, but seeing the players on the screen doesn ' t match seeing them on the field. After learning that he was most concerned with turning up some new tackles, ends, quarterbacks, and left halfbacks, we asked the coach what one phase of Kansas play he would be watching most keenly this spring. Well, he said slowly, Mainly I ' ll be looking for some good passing, good catching, good running, and good kicking. The rest we can work on later. It ' s obvious the new grid boss is offense minded. This bears out the stories we ' ve heard that Georgia quarterbacks had to know as many as 200 plays and that the Bulldogs tossed an average of almost 30 passes each game. The friendly, soft-spoken Texan named natural athletic ability as his number one requisite for a football player. He cited that right combina- tion of physical qualities which make some men winners in any sport. We knew what the coach meant. We had seen Ray Evans. We can give a boy a lot of coach- ing, Sikes said, but it ' s really what the Lord gave him that counts. Next to physical ability, the Kansas coach named aggressiveness as a prime requisite. Fight and determination ratings don ' t appear on the programs, but they often pay off more than pounds on the field. Sikes chose the 1943 Georgia Rose Bowl team as the greatest eleven he ever coached. With both Frankie Sink- wich and Charlie Trippi on the same squad, he said the Bulldog offense was sharp as a Texas gale. He named the game against Texas when he was only a sophomore as his greatest playing thrill. He ran 92 yards with an intercepted pass to score against the Longhorns in the cham- pionship game which Texas A. and M. won 28 to 0. Even playing on an undefeated team his senior year and participating in the New Year ' s Day East-West game did not match that thrill. Before we left, Sikes made one thing clear about his plans for Jayhawker pigskin success. If you hear of any Evan ' s, Sink- wich ' s, or Trippi ' s, he said, let me know. Because we want them up here at K.U. Sikes received his first two names, Jules Verne, because his father had been reading Twenty Thousand Lea- gues Under the Sea before his son was born. He liked the book so well that he named his baby boy after the French novelist. That should be a good sign for Kansas. With twenty thousand leagues already taken care of, one more should be easy. Yes, we mean the Big Seven. Jayhawker Undercover (Continued from Page 7) more stirring speeches, the War De- partment may activate that fish bowl, and the campus coeds may go back scavenging again. Charley Hoffhaus takes note of this sad situation in his article, How Soon? on page twenty- three. As an alternative or supplement to the draft, Charley reports on the Reserve Officer Training Corps units at K.U. Our ROTC units, made up of over fifty per cent veterans, are growing every day. There have been several new addi- tions to our staff since the last issue. Leading the new talent is Clarence Eyerly who has been doing invaluable work around the office the past few months. Clarence ' s versatility has led him into many positions of prestige on the staff, from doing editorial work to the indispensible duty of cleaning up. We doubt if this issue would have reached the presses without his help. The third issue is traditionally the Men ' s issue, however, your staff, being male, succumbed to a very human frailty, and we find that there are fifty-six (count ' em) fifty-six pictures of the fair sex in this very masculine issue. All complaints will be thor- oughly investigated. ■ LITTLE MORON CORNER We ' re not just sure who ' s daffy—but we sent one frog apiece to Don Mc- Cauley, Baylor Univ.; Edward Whit- taker, Boston Univ.; Joy Duvall, Univ. of Chicago; Charles R. Meissner, Jr., Lehigh Univ.; and James 0. Snider, Baylor Univ., for these gems: Lipstick—something which adds color and flavor to the old pastime. property of Pepsi-Cola Co. We pay only for those we print. Will getting Pepsi-Cola into your gag hurt its chances? Don ' t be naive, chums. We like it. So, if you should wind up with a rejection slip clutched in your hot lit tle fist, that won ' t be the reason. Well, don ' t. just sit there! Pick up that pencil—get your stuff started now. There ' s Easy Money waiting! V 11 LI LI 11 11 N I DAFFY DEFINITIONS H Controversy—one Pepsi—two people. Worm—a caterpillar with a shave. Rival—the guy who gives your girl a Pepsi. Steam—water gone crazy over the heat. So we ' re subsidizing lunacy. Okay --but it ' s still a buck apiece for any of these we buy. Here ' s the gag that won a M. M. (Mas- ter Moron) degree—and a fast two bucks —for Ben Ornoff, of Univ. of North Carolina, in the November contest: Our minor-league moron, Mortimer, caused considerable furore in local cir- cles by entering one of our better bis- tros and calling for a Pepsi-Cola. When served, he proceeded to glug it down with not one, but six, straws. Ques- tioned as to his motives, Mortimer care- fully removed all six straws from his mouth and replied with considerable hauteur: So I can drink six times as much Pepsi, natch! Earle S. Schlegel of Lehigh Univ. also came up with two bucks for his moron gag. Why don ' t you get on the gravy train? Two bucks each for every moron joke -we buy. GET FUNNY... WIN MONEY... WRITE A TITLE G6. Ever play pin the tail on the donkey? Well, this is pretty much the same idea—and never mind the obvious cracks. $5 each for the best captions. Or send in your own idea for a cartoon. $10 for just the idea . . . $15 if you draw it . . . if we buy it. Here ' s how we split the take for cartoon drawings, ideas and captions in the November contest: $15 each to Jay Gluck of Berkeley, Calif. and Herbert John Brammeier, Jr. of St. Louis Univ.; $10 to H. Dick Clarke of Univ. of Oklahoma; and $5 each to Virgil Daniel of George Washington Univ., Frances Charlton of William and Mary College, and Sidney B. Flynn of St. Louis Univ. Forget the principle of the thing—this is money! That ' s right—legal tender . . . in folding quantities . . . as high as fifteen bucks—that ' s what Pepsi-Cola Company pays for gags and such-like you send in and we print. Procedure? Simple—send your stuff, marked with your name, ad- dress, school and class, to Easy Money Dept., Pepsi-Cola Co., Box A, Long Island City, N. Y. All contributions become the GAGS Put one and one together—and you get a He-She gag. Three bucks each to Duane 0. McDowell of So. Dakota State College; Albert M. Dredge of Duquesne Univ.; Emmett Carmody of Manhattan College; and Alfred Shapiro of New York Univ., re- spectively, for these specimens: She: And what position do you play on the football team? He: Oh, sort of crouched and bent over. She: Why don ' t you park the car by this sign? He: You ' re not allowed to park here. She: Don ' t be silly. The sign says Fine for Parking ! He: Your eyes sparkle like Pepsi-Cola. She: Tell me more. I drink it up. She Scot: Sandy, ' tis a sad loss you ' ve had in the death of your wife. He Scot: Aye, ' tis that. ' Twas just a week ago the doctor told her to dilute her medicine in Pepsi-Cola, and she hadna ' time to take but half the bottle. Current quotation on these is $3 each for any we buy. Sure, but everything ' s over-priced these days. EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION At the end of the year, we ' re going to review all the stuff we ' ve bought, and the item we think was best of all is going to get an extra $100.00 ALL THESE STARS APPEAR IN DAVID 0. SELZNICK ' S PRODUCTION THE PARADINE CASE DIRECTED BY ALFRED HITCHCOCK CHARLES COBURN LIGGETT 6 MYERS TOBACCO CO WITH THE STARS 1EESTERF11211: 8ECAUSE „ ALWAYS MILDER n BETTER TASTING COOLER SMOKING THE RIGHT BEST TOBACCOS 1) iS, LIGOETT OCb.LYetu Lu1,CLO EXPERIENCE IS THE BEST TEACHER In twisting slaloms ... in tricky jumps ...this petite young Cypress Gardens aquamaid is in a class by herself ... a champion many times over. IT TAKES EXPERIENCE TO SKIM THE SURF AT teo e ‘0 : . and Champion NANCE STILLEY agrees that in water — and in cigarettes too • • • You watch her and you know Nance Stilley has plenty of experience. Her cigarette? That ' s a choice of experi- ence too...Camel! I LEARNED BY EXPERIENCE... BY COMPARING... THAT CAMELS SUIT MY ' T-ZONE ' BEST ! I NOTICE MORE AND MORE PEOPLE SMOKING CAMELS. THEY ' RE GREAT! THE T for Taste... T for Throat... your final proving ground for any cigarette .f. lieynol Tobacco Company, 1Vinston-Salem, N. C. Mr) $ ' Zone tell you why More people are smoking Camels than ever before! • Now that people can get all the cigarettes they want ... any brand ... now that they once again can choose their cigarette on a basis of personal preference ... more people are smoking Camels than ever before. Why? The answer is in your T-Zone (T for Taste and T for Throat 1. Let your taste ... your throat ... tell you why, with smokers who have tried and pared, Camels are the choice of experience ! Cl 0 CE OF E.XPER 5 1 C5. According to a Nationwide survey: MORE DOCTORS SMOKE CAMELS THAN ANY OTHER CIGARETTE When 113.597 doctors front coast to coast were asked by three independent research organiza• Lions to name the cigarette they smoked, more doctors named Camel than any other brand! COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 3 mom ilinfarl 413111 1 011111111111111E1 I 111111311111!_a_ X81! an I um 011•1+111; 111111 iii I Mai SERVICE 11 lEADQLARTERS K.U. STUDENTS and faculty No job—any make or mcdel Too Large or Too Small WINTER VIEVROLFT 738 H. St. 24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE PHOk E 77 4 THE JAYHAWKER To The Graduating Class of ' 48 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 true. We have appreciated the patronage and friendship of K. U. students, and hope to continue that privilege. rar aver DRAKE ' S FOR BAKES 907 MASS. PHONE 61 MY SON IS GOING TO COLLEGE .. . Many a father, perhaps even your own, has said those words and seen them come true. Often this ambition of a fond parent for his son or daughter has been made possible only by systematic thrift and saving. A savings account in this bank can help you realize your ambitions when you graduate. Start yours today. THE LAWRENCE NATIVAL BA1V Lawrence, Serving K. U. Always Member F.D.I.C. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 7 oxi L hawker ([ t-ercover Along with finals, picnecks, and summer weather comes the last issue of the JAYHAWKER, and an- other year at K.U. is interred in black and white. Though the general policy of the JAYHAWKER has been to hold writing to a minimum and print as many pictorial features as pos- sible, we are as proud as punch of the literary tone of this issue. The 1948 JAYHAWKER must have started out under a lucky star, for we had the good fortune to have one of the most popular writers in the country write an article for the final issue — Philip Wylie ' s Sic Transit Veritas which ap- pears on page eleven. All students, especially g r a du a t in g seniors should read this timely message and ponder its implications. Our undying thanks goes to Mr. Wylie for taking time out to write this article for the JAYHAWKER. The long-awaited pictures of the Beauty Queen appear starting on page 23. Charley Hoffhaus covers the first post-war Engineering Exposi- tion on page 40. Charley became so intrigued by facinations of the exhibit that he almost changed his major. Bill Conboy, Editor of the 1949 JAYHAWKER, reviews the Twenty- Third annual ' Kansas Relays on page thirty-three. This year ' s t rack festival proved to be the biggest and best that Oreadites have ever witnessed. To round out our largest issue to date, on page sixty-five, the parade of seniors passes through the pages. Thanks to the efforts of many hard-working office workers, this issue which is the largest one to date goes to press crammed with a variety of features which will, we hope, appeal to all students. Staff Editor; KEITH WILSON Business Manager: LARRY SIMMONS Secretary.. SHIRLEY Advertisng Manager.. BOB Photographic Editor: HANK Art Editor.. PAUL COKER Editorial Assistants; BETTY HANSON BETSEY SHEIDLEY VIRGINIA HARRIS CLARENCE EYERLY RITA HARTWELL BILL CONBOY MARIANNE HARWOOD CHARLES HOFFHAUS LOUISE HAVEKORST JEANNE MUELLER BARBARA HAYS Advertising Staff : KATIE HOAG ANN PREBLE GLORIA HORN JACK ARMEL MARY JANE HORTON DICK HUNTER DOTTY HUDSON ANN COWGER RICHARD HUNTER BRUCE ETHERINGTON AGNES HUSBAND BARBARA O ' NEAL MARY MARGARET HUSE SHIRLEY RICE JO ANNE JACOBS CHARLES HAWKINS MARJORIE JENREE Contributors.. CONNIE KENDALL MARIAN RIPPETEAU HELEN KITTLE BILL CONBOY KATHLEEN LARSON ROBERT DAVIS CHARLENE LASHBROOK CHARLES HOFFHAUS JIM LOUNSBURY MARGARET MEEKS MARY LOU MARTIN BETSEY SHEIDLEY PATTY McCLURE WALLY ROUSE MARY BETH McNALLY BOB BOTTOMS CHARLOTTE METCALFE Photographers: DODIE MILLER JIM MASON NANCY MOORE DUKE D ' AMBRA JEANNE MUELLER HANK BROWN BILLIE NAVE TOM DEALY BOB NEWMAN JACK WILLIAMS JOHN O ' LEARY GRAHAM STUDIOS BARBARA O ' NEAL Office Staff: VIRGINIA OSBORNE ANN ACKERMAN MARCILE PARKER MARY HELEN BAKER MARY LOU JO ANN BIGHAM PECKENSCHNEIDER LAURIE BIRMINGHAM PATTY PERKINS KATHLEEN BRODE LOU ANN PLAGMANN BETTY BREWER ANNALOU POPE BARBARA BROWN VIRGINIA POWELL PHYLLIS BUEHLER MARY POWER CAROLYN CARMEAN BETTY PREBLE JEANNE CHAMBERS LEE PRINGLE PATTY COOK SHIRLEY RICE BETTY CRAWFORD MARIANNE ROGERS CAROLYN COLEMAN LORR AINE ROSS DELORES COLLINS ELAINE SAWYER MARGIE CRANE JEANNE SHAFER MARGARET DAHLQUIST BETTY JANE SIMS NANCY DAVIS MARJORIE STARK LOUIS DeLAY SALLY STEPPER MARGARET DICKINSON MARI VIRGINIA STOUT CLARENCE EYERLY MARILYN SWENSON MARILYN GLOVER DOTTY THOMAS MARGARET GRANGER GRACE VANIMAN JO GRAY RUTH WALTERS KEN GRUBB GLORIA WASSON AIMEE GUINOTTE BETTY WEBB INEZ HALL PEGGY WOLFE MARDY HANNA KAREN YORK THE JAYHAWKER Commencement time always brings back a wave of nostalgia to me. I remember so well my own com- mencement, which was not different in many ways from thousands which will take place this month. We were all ushered into the auditorium where a horde of neatly dressed parents eagerly awaited us. The stage was banked with gladiolias, lillies, and flags. It presented quite an impressive array as we solemnly marched down the center aisle to the brassy strains of Pomp and Circumstance. We all sat down on the front row and waited tensely for the program to begin. The hall was silent except for the steady hum of several large fans. The speaker of the day stepped to the rostrum. He was the local minister, and his sonorous ecclesiastical tones echoed through the room as he began his address. I only remember snatches of his speech, but the pattern is all too famil- iar. Dear friends, we are gathered here on a great occasion . .. You are standing at the threshold of a new era, you who will build the new world. Build it on the foundations that we have laid for you . . . With trembling hands we pass to you the torch .. . It is for you to hold it high. ... Et cetera ad nauseam. I remember that commencement well . . . but more vividly I remember the events that followed it. The new era we were entering into seemed a little shop- worn around the edges, and the foundations which were handed over to us were beginning to crumble. We went out into a world that had been made for us ... into a war that had been started for us ... fought people we had never seen before . .. won a victory for a cause we were not sure of . . . to bring about a peace, so the whole dismal process could start all over again. Those that came back, and took time ' to reflect upon that commencement address, were a pretty disillusioned lot. It seems that the foundations that each older gener- ation has so generously provided each younger one have been pretty consistent about falling in, but we wouldn ' t change our building methods for all the new cars in Detroit. Yes siree, the way that Grand- pap died is good enough for me . . . and you . . . and you . . . and all the rest. However, this thesis isn ' t new. It is pretty generally admitted in some circles that conditions are in a sorry state. The world is going to Hell in a hack .. only jet-propelled this time. Who ' s to blame? Who killed Cock Robin- Who threw the dirt into the starry eyes of youth? The Communists say that it ' s Capital, and the Capitalists say it ' s the Communists, and Labor says it ' s the Busi- nessmen, arid the Businessmen say it ' s the Militarists, and on and on and on. But they ' re all passing the buck rather uselessly. For the real culprit is not hard to find. The guy that done in Cock Robin is quite easily discernible. The murderer is you! Yes, you ... and me ... and all the rest of us. We did it! The trouble with society is not the system . .. or the politics . . . or the economics. It ' s the people. Our great snorting machine is breaking down be- cause its cogs are faulty. The great chain of our civili- zation is snapping because it is made up of too many weak links. In the breasts of the people, you will find the roots of the disaster which stalks the race. For in the breasts of the Common men are the seeds of all the lust, greed, bitterness, and intolerance that has so lately erupted in an explosion of hate that has threatened to engulf our puny race. Everyman is to blame, let him look for a solution. Our eyes have been so crowded with beams that our vision has been impaired . . . so impaired that we have not been able to see the simple remedy to our predicament. And the remedy is simple ... so simple that we have passed it by time and again. If we could stop the frantic buck passing of our guilt for a moment we could easily perceive our plight . . . If we want a better world, we ' ll have to be better people . the words are simple yet putting them into practice has so far proved to be too much of a Herculean task. Let us remember this simple axiom as we go about the routine tasks of preparing our own suicide. The stage is banked with flowers . . . gladiolias, lillies, and flags. The air is crisp and tense as martial music floats about the room. The great audience grows silent, and a hushed tone envelopes the room unbroken save for the hum of the fans as they stir the fragrant odor of the blankets of flowers. A pretty scene! Let us hope that it is for Commencement and not for a funeral! COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 9 CO FE 1 ' S JAYHAWKER Undercover 7 Editor ' s Angle 8 Sic Transit Veritas 11 Campus Beautiful 12 Candidly a Jayhawker 14 The Contest Judges 22 Hail the Queen 23 The Kansas Relays 33 Carnival Time 38 The Engineer ' s Exposed 40 Spring Elections 44 Intramural Wind Up 46 Muscles and Bustles 49 College Daze 51 Swan Song 52 Senior Laws 57 Senior Nurses 63 Senior Class of 1948 65 The cover of this issue is something entirely new in the way of JAYHAWKER covers. Feeling the need for a change from the old stereotyped views of campus buildings and people, we started searching for a cover that would be new and different. When we had all but given up the chase, we were rescued by Dick Bibler. Dick had an idea, and was eager to put it into effect. After about three nights of hard work, lie produced the striking cover which is on the front of this issue. For those hardened scholars who have not been diligent in observing their fellow man on Oread Mount, the roster of faces on the cover reads as follows: Reading Clockwise; Dean Swarthout, Ray Evans, Coach Sikes, John Ise, Chancellor Malott, Karl Mattern, Phog Allen, E. C. Quikley, Jack Moorhead, and Otto Schnell- bacher. The place of honor, in the l ower right hand corner was reserved especially for the man of the hour, Little Man On Campus. -, 740f7?) --, heith Wilson Edi104-4:-Chiei Larry Simms Basi.H.e44 Wastage.% 74 II C t Ver°Las 4 Pki Wie The hallmark of the educated man is his ability to change his mind. In our society mind-changing is regarded as an inferior capacity and usually buted to women. But what is meant here is not decisiveness or fickleness. What is meant is a long readiness to learn new facts and truth as it is discovered, to compare the new with the old, and to make a continuing readjustment of the whole personality in keeping with man ' s increasing knowl- edge of Nature. The benchmark of the educated man is not how much he knows to-day. It is the degree to which he has mastered a psychological process. For the truth —even in so fundamental and objective a field as physics—changes from year to year, so that, in the last analysis, even objective knowledge is specula- tive and uncertain. All that may be said to be dependable in a man is his awareness of that circum- stance and his consequent willingness to alter what he knows and what he believes throughout his life. This quality is truthfulness—and it is subjective. To be educated is to be truthful in that fashion. But education, even higher education , is little concerned with the training of man as his own truthful subject. It does not teach him insight into himself and his relations with other human beings. It has none to offer, as a rule. And where a little insight exists in the university it must be proffered sub rosa. For the chief tendency of every society is to maintain an existing attitude—and whatever would change that is tabu. The laws of the land, the dogmas of religion, and the formulations of professors, trustees and politicians — engraved on rigid brains without respect to whether they are obsolete—form a matrix into which the student is poured. He is permitted only an objective ation. He can learn what makes all the wheels go round—excepting his own. His very Intelligence Quotient is measured and his Aptitudes are tested so he may know his capacity for objective learning and in what direction he may most efficiently direct it. But no stock is taken of his aptitude to become himself as a person, or his capacity to understand the needs, emotions, thoughts, behavior and nature of other people. So he is only half-educated. When he graduates, he hopes he knows enough to earn a living. He hardly imagines that he must also earn a which is the more arduous project. He is a chemist, or an agronomist, a salesman, a journalist, a banker in embryo or a business man. His whole notion of future security impinges upon the concept of nomic security — whether he graduates from the University of Kansas or from a university in Soviet Russia. He does not know how insecure his emotions are. He does not realize that these will control whatever (Continued on Page 113) One of America ' s most vigorous thinkers i s s u e s a timely warning to Educators, Profes- sors, Students and SENIORS. Far above the Golden Walley Glorious to View Stands Our ikodo Aim Mater, Towering toward the Blue Lift the Chorus Ever onward, Crimson nnol the Blue Hail to Thee Our Alma Mater Hail to CH D A A 1-1 A W K E R Cutlines by Betsey Sheidley Photos by Brown, Mason, and Dealy A ping ping champ dis- plays winning form and nonchalant facial expres- sion in the Union Lounge. Strictly rear vision . .. K. U. slugs it out with M. U. on the dusty diamond while excited spectators jump up and cheer wildly. Looks like even staid old Jimmy Green and f r le n d sometimes get plastered. Dottie Thomas suffers excruciating pain as Jane Ferrell Barbara Parent, Sam McCammant, Jackie Logan, and gleefully stabs her with a corsage pin at a Chi Omega pinning. Alan Furnish go explorng at the South Pole at a Triangle dance. Sam ' s stargazing ... hence the far away look. Dave Ritchie ' s molars go bouncing down Massachusetts street Through the diligent work of Bill Easton and a as he, John Stauffer, and Bob Hughes escort Ann Cowger in the working Relays committee, the 1948 Kansas Relays proved Relays Parade. to be the biggest of ' em all, as pictures of the crowd testify. Nate Ericson plays Nazi spy, Finding themselves short on silverware the Phi Kappas de- but he can ' t quite comprehend tided to borrow some. Here is a modest stac k of their purloined the mechanical complexities of prizes. a flash bulb camera. Joe Hale samples Chi Omega lipstick shades at his pinning to Althea Voss. Looks like some of the girls missed their tar- get. Comfortably clad in the latest style toga, Dave Lockhart Gene McLaughlin plays Charles Boyer with his bedroom languidly reclines on the radiator of his limousine, while Karen eyes and cigar smoke at a Phi Psi — Chi Omega pinning York and Maryanne Harwood are forced to take a back seat in Looks like Nancy Moore had one too many five-cent cigars. the Relays Parade. Ham fat McClure drums up some bongo rhythm while the A toothsome foursome — Joe Davis, Mila Williams, Phi Delts make like uneducated savages singing Cviliza- Charles Hawkins, and Jane Williams, Joe and Charlie ' s tion on their spring serenade. carnations hint of spring weddings. KIRKPATRICK SPORT SHOP A Sig,. ea Nu charms Gloria Hill with his This drum majorette swings a Glenn Cunningham reminisces on rippling muscles. But we know his secret— wicked hip . . . limbering up for the cinder sidelines . . . it takes two a six weeks correspondence course with Charles the low hurdles. mighty policemen to keep him from Atlas! geting back into the race. Chancellor Malott loses his shirt to Frank Winston. It is a special model designed es- pecially for K. U. chancellors. Arlene Johnson charms passers-by with this attractive view of her well- developed tonsils. Charlie Moffett shoves a gentle fist into No. 75 ' s solar plexus when he gets crowded at the K. U. spring night game at Haskell. Nina Green an d Alice Fawkes model resort fashions at the Union fashion show. All they need is an ocean. Phyllis Mowery hastily throws her self together, as she rushes to get ready for the Sigma Kappa formal. She doesn ' t want to keep her date waiting. Jim Fleming, Lynn Lundy, Mary Spellman, and John Long try to hide he gladiala bouquet at the Lambda Chi Alpha spring party. Bill Schafer just couldn ' t make up his mind which shade of pancake makeup to wear to the Delta Tau costume party. We think the green shade is more becoming, Bill. Fascinated spectators made faces at themselves in the tele- vision screen (at the Engineer ' s Exposition). Here, a KMBC technician aims the lens. It was that English accent that got him . . . Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Bradly stride down the steps of Ad. 4111111b. Jeanne Chambers, Carolyn Coleman, and Mary Valentine Marilyn Gl over and Corinne Carter put their heads cheesecake for the photographer, as they vie for the coveted gether. The result of their intense concentration—a Delta title of Miss Lawrence Beach on the white sands by the Chi Pin. sparkling Kaw. Yo, heave ho! Delta Gammas try their Margaret Logan shows Lir Abner These Gamma Phi ' s aren ' t playing sea legs at their Pinafore party, while Geor- how to blow a bigger bubble. Did pattycake—it ' s just another pinning. gia Lee Westmor eland tries to convince her- you notice? . . . his tie is polka dot. self she isn ' t seasick. Sigma Chi ' s cheer the girl of their dreams, as Martha Tri Delta enjoy their lesson in the art of kissing. Say, Goodrich is elected to take her place with the Sigma Chi how do you get to be this kind of teacher! Sweethearts at their sprng party. Two devotees practice daily Yoga on the Tau Sigma Sparkling with enthusiasm and radiant smiles, the Chi dance floor. That thing in the background wandered in from Omegas gaily serenade as bleary-eyed fraternity men stagger the next set where they were shooting Frankenstein Walks from their beds to cheer their gratitude. Again. Barbara Nash, Bill Johnson, Mary Katherman, Neal Post, The perfectly coordinated chorus of Campus Daze Ann Warner, and John McClelland match molars at the Theta smoothly runs through their finale. Isn ' t it amazing how spring formal. they all stay together! He ' s out a mile! screams the Sigma Chi portion of specta- The fervor of the primitive rhythm rises to such a tors, while the Beta half roars for runner Bill Schell to Slide, height that some of the girls get carried away at the Tau man, slide! at a spring baseball game. Sigma dance recital. stretches of their second story sunporch. Chi Omegas try to get that casual windblown look on the Jack Kendree gives himself the fingernail test, while Jimmy Hawes haw-haves the crowd in a hilarious skit in Campus Daze. Sigma Phi Epsilon Golden Heart girl, Ruth That ' s right, madame, Routon, displays her golden trophy in a flower take a card. Dunninger mys- heart. tifies the crowd with master mind in Hoch. Harriet Harlow poops crowd from the poop deck of H. M. S. Pinafore at a Delta Gamma party. John Nall ' s son develops Louise Lambert and Craig Hampton D.U. ' s and their dates guffaw gaily at some- lung power for future bubble trade daffodils at a Union Open House. thing funny pulled at their Dutch garden party. gum blowing. Typical artistc scene of Sociology would put anybody to sleep. Billie Moore alertly sand dunes on the Law- stands night watch as lock-up girl at Miler. rence beach. Bill Rose and Chuck Kendall showing off ther Ethiopian an- cestry at the A.T.O. spring party. Rip Collnis strikes a Man of Dstinction pose, while A.T.O. ' s Vivacious election wheels briskly count votes in the and dates rest aching arches during intermission at their spring friendly atmosphere of Ad after a carefree day of working dance. at the polls. It ' s usually sensible to get out of the way when a woman goes Four smoes leer at the camera at the Delta Gamma spring on the rampage with a baseball bat. Looks like the referee party. Wonder if they ' ll ever get out of the hole! better duck. Glenn Cunningham Brock Pemberton Ben libbs COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 23 1A TGi QUEE There are enough Queen contests every year at the University of Kansas so that mathematically, at the end of four years, every girl in the Freshman Class has the opportunity to become a Queen. How- ever, in the spring of every year comes the Grandaddy of them all — the JAYHAWKER Beauty Queen Contest. This year the contest was run differently than in preceding years. To make sure of the efficiency of our selection machinery, there were three selections made by seven men all together. Two months ago, aspiring hill beauties were asked to submit their pictures to the JAYHAWKER office. Three hundred complied--an all time high. From this deluge of Kansas pulchritude a committee of four men narrowed the field down to fifty finalists. This committee consisted of Jim Surface, former Editor of the JAYHAWKER, Cliff Kinsey and Norman Cooper, Assistant Football Coaches; and Otto Schnellbacher, President of the K-Club. This same committee of four presided at a tea where the sixteen finalists were chosen. The bevy of nervous females assembled in the Kansan Room where after being plied with tea and cigarettes they were looked over by the steely eyes of the committee of married men. No identifying jewelry was worn by the contestants, to make the choices as fair as possible. The sixteen finalists were then photographed by the Graham Studios, and a separate set of the pictures was mailed to each of the three final judges. The results of the judge ' s decisions were then tabulated, and Miss Corrine Carter of Lawrence was crowned Queen of the 1948 JAYHAWKER. Her fifteen attendants were listed in the following order: Nina Green, Kansas City, Mo.; Diane Stryker, Fredonia; Carolyn Campbell, Kansas City, Mo.; Jeanne Parrot, Hutchinson; Patsy Clardy, Wichita; Mary Mid Chubb, Baxter Springs; Karen York, Overland Park; Kathleen Graff, Ellinwood; Sally Trembly, Kansas City, Mo.; Beverly Fox, Kansas City, Mo.; Joan Puckett, Wichita; Elizabeth Sifers, Iola; Isobel Faurot, Independence and Dorothy Scroggy, Wichita. Opposite Page: The Final Judg- ing Committee. Brock Pember- ton, New York play producer. Glenn Cunningham, f o r m e r Olympic runner. Ben Hibbs, Editor of the Saturday Evening Post. All of the members of the committee are K.U. graduates. Right: Former JAYHAWKER Editor, Jim Surface aided in se- lecting the contest finalists. , I Charlie Dunn, the Student Relays Manager places the crown on the head of Miss Nancy Lindemuth from Washburn College. Charlie Fonville lets go wtih a mighty heave that later netted him the worlds record for the shot- put. Corinne Carter and Shirley Con- stantos prove that there ' s more to this relays business than just run- ning around a cinder track. Kansas high in the finals of the high jump. Tom Scofield flips over the stick to place the colors of The Daily Kansan displays a few of its prettiest shack rats to the mob at the relays parade. Queen Nancy and her attendants pose for the Jayhawker Flyin ' Charlie Parker breezes ahead of the pack to take camera at the victor ' s stand in the center of mmorial stadium. the one hundred yard dash for Texas. RE 011111TairlIMMEL 33 COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 SAS REL._ A YS . 6cid,01 Many things were broken in Memorial stadium this year—the hearts of Missouri football fans, at- tendance marks, and finally track records at the 23rd annual Kansas Relays. Two world track and field standards were shattered by Negro athletes entered in the national competi- tion April 17. Charles Fonville, powerful shotput artist from the University of Michigan, tossed the iron ball 58 feet, inch to eclipse the previous international mark of 57 feet, I inch set by Jack Torrance, former Louisiana State athlete, at Oslo, Norway, in 1934. Harrison Dillard, the speed-demon hurdler from Baldwin-Wallace college, won his 52nd consecutive race to open the afternoon program as he skimmed the high hurdles in 13.6 seconds. This time cut a Left. The Delts race down Massachsuetts as the Texas quarter milers round the curve at right. full tenth of a second off the world mark. The previous record of 13.7 seconds was established by Forrest Spec Towns in 1936 and equalled by Fred Wolcott of Rice Institute in 1941. Few spectators saw both record smashing per- formances. Fonville, a lithe 195-pound tower of strength and coordination, made his sensational heave in the morning shotput preliminaries with only a handful of persons on the sidelines. A pre-dental student at Michigan, the modest soft-spoken Negro bettered the former Kansas Relays mark of 52 feet, 11 2 inch, in each of his four morning tosses. Elmer Hackney of Kansas State had set the previous record in 1939. Fonville did not throw again in the afternoon finals. To the big weight man from up north his record smashing performance came as a distinct surprise. Due to a recent injury he was worried that he would fall below his normal form. I hurt my back throwing the discus last week, Fonville said after the meet, and although it didn ' t pain me today, I thought about it every time I let go the shot. When he heard of Fonville ' s explosive exhibition in the morning, Dillard remarked that he would need a world ' s record himself to make the Sunday papers. Two hours later he had done just that, and there were few among the 10,000 fans in the sun- baked stands who were surprised when the record time was announced. Dillard started fast and pulled steadily away from his competitors, finishing some Top: The D.U. ' s prize winning float. The Tekes and Mt. Olympus. Carolyn Coleman rides the waves for the Sig Eps. The Jay Janes, plane and float. Bottom right: Sigma Kappas gl:tter in the sunlight. 10 yards in front of runner-up Clyde Smackover Scott from the University of Arkansas. In the ing preliminary rounds, Dillard won without being pushed in 14 seconds flat, two-tenths of a second faster than the relays record. Four other meet records were also set as each event found topflight quality among the contestants. The University of Wisconsin 2-mile relay team turned in a 7:44.7 time to break the old mark of 7:45.7 set by Kansas State in 1935. Don Gehrmann anchored the winning Badger team with a 1:52.g half mile. Dave Bolen, University of Colorado graduate student, competed unattached in the 400 meter hurdles and toured the course in 53 seconds flat to clip 2.4 seconds off the previous record set by man Nelson of Oklahoma 12 years ago. East Texas State shattered the college sprint ley record with a time of 3:31. The former record of 3:47.2 was held by Abilene Christian and was set last year in the rain and cold. The last of the day ' s new marks was set by a swift Texas A. and M. University one-mile relay team. The Cowboy runners ran the distance in 3:15.6 to best the record set by Texas of 3:16.1 in 1935. Kansas track coach, M. E. Bill Easton, put on a magnificant spectacle for the assembled fans, but his Jayhawker thinclads did not fare too well at the hands of visiting spikemen. One tie for second, a Top: Gloria Hill reigns on the Sigma Nu float. Joy here and spear on the ATO float. Beulah Horner surveys the crowd and Phi Psi athletes. The Sigma Chis bring the flame of sportmanship. Bottom Left: Mercedes Muir and Mary Louise McNerney yearn for the Theta urn. Harrison Dillard greets the small fry Dillard gets attention from Queen Nancy as Glenn Cunningham presents the after breaking the world ' s record in the record holder fellow Fonville stands by. trophy for the 1500 meter race to high hurdles. Cy Perkins. third, and four fourth places were all the Kansans could muster. Tom Scofield, ace crimson and blue high jumper, finished in a three-way tie for second in his event behind Dwight Eddleman of Illinois. Eddleman leaped 6 feet, 5 inches. Scofield cleared 6 feet, inches. Bob Crowley leaped 23 feet, 113A inches to finish third in the broad jump. Fourth spots were gathered by the one-mile, two-mile, and sprint medley Jayhawker relay teams and by Bob Drumm who tossed the javelin 183 feet, inches. Due to the coming Olympic games which will be held in London this summer, several special events were included on the program. Chief interest among these was centered in the decathlon competition. With a likely berth on the United Sates Olympic team in the balance, 14 men participated in the gruelling two-day grind. The final winner was Charles Baker, a tall, barrel-chested unknown who competed unattached from Fayetteville, Arkansas. Baker was in sixth place at the end of five events Friday night, but he was superlative in the final half of the schedule Saturday as he surprised the experts by edging out Irvin Mondschein of New York University, three-time national A.A.U. decath- lon champion. The Arkansas athlete won the. pole valut at 12 feet, 43 4 inches; the javelin at 178 feet, 3 inches; Left: Referee Frank Potts congratulates decathlon winner Baker from Arkansas. Bottom: Charlie Parker breaks the tape for the Texas quarter milers. Left: The Texas sprinters do it again. Above: Dillard pulls away in the hurdles to crack the world record. the discuss at 136 feet, 5 inches; and placed second in the 110-meter dash. Baker had a total of 6,730 points for the ten events. Mondschein finished with 6,667. James Roberson of Indiana University took third with 6,455. Other special events were the 1500-meter run (replacing the Glenn Cunningham Mile this year) ; the hop, step, and jump; and the A.A.U. 3,000- meter steeple chase. Cy Perkins of the Illinois A.C. led the field in the 1500-meter run winning in 3:57.2. Bill Mack, former Drake athlete, competing unattached from Michigan State, took second. John Gaugh of Oklahoma won the hop, step, and jump with a toal distance of 46 feet, inch. Hobo Gilstrap, also from the Sooner school, was the runner-up. In the A.A.U. 3000-meter steeple chase, Forest Efaw, unattached from Oklahoma A. and M., was the victor in 9:53.2. James Urguhart, unattached, finished second. Paul Efaw, a brother of the winner and also from the Stillwater institution, came in third. This event was the single most gruelling exhibition of the day, requiring both running and hurdling ability as well as stamina and coordination in hitting a difficult water hazard time after time. Bill Easton declares that this year was only a starter, that his plans call for bigger and better things to come. Baseball has its Little World Series. Foot- ball has its Little Rose Bowl. The Kansas Relays may become the Little Olympics in years ahead. Bobby Miller of Notre Dame pole vaults for Notre Decathlon entrants crouch at the starting line, as white capped Dame. officials look on. CARN VAL TIME Welcome to my Spin-O-W heel, Joan screams at Gene who leaps from his seat with an attack of nervous apo- plexy. --by Bob Davis Each Spring the white finger of a searchlight probes the night air, and the dulcet tones of a side show barker drift up toward the hill. Adventuresome students clasp their money belts closer to their breasts, and tread the rocky paths to the meadows south of the hill, for the Carnival is in town. Then for four noisy nights, Jayhawkers shun the books and flock to the more educational display under the canvas. In a burst of yells and dollar bills ex-Air Corps men ride the Loop-O-Plane, Mathe- matics Majors figure the odds on Bingo, and Botanists visit the biological exhibits . . . Peaches and Temptation. To catch some of the color of the Carnival, The JAYHAWKER sent out two spies to ferret out information about this phenom- enon. Disguised as a College Photographer, a f f able Hank Brown followed Joan Woodward and Gene Courtney about for an si evening under the bright lights. Above: Lured on by silver-throated barkers and multi- colored can vas posters Joan and Gene venture in to view the freaks. The show was quite disappoint- ing, however, as both had been con- ditioned by years of association with K.0 professors. Center: Well, pardon my cucara- cha, Gene cries as he maneuvers guitar under Joan ' s mantilla. Hank took this picture by using brute force over the in- sistent protests of the Carnival pho- tographer . . . pro- fessional jealosuy. Left: Weary of rebounding in rattling rides, our valiant explorers repair to the cotton candy counter for a well-earned repast. Joan is not intrigued by the candy, but by the fact that there is a dead mouse lodged in the starboard end of the concatenation. Above: Fortified with weiners, cokes, frankfurters, lemonade, hot dogs, and cot- ton candy, Joan and Gene settle their dinners by going for a twirl in the Loop-0- Plane. Their happy laughter comes from the fact that the operator of the ride just in- formed them that the contrap- tion broke down the week be- fore and eight people were killed. Center: Pushing children into the dust with practiced dexterity, Courtney and Wood- ward secure choice seats on the Merry-Go-Round. Below: Lust-m addened Courtney takes advantage of a stalled Ferris Wheel to force his affections on Joan in mid air. Trembling with shyness, she shoots a fright- ened glance at Gene as Hank shoots both of them. Above: Though putting up a cour- ageous last ditch de- fense, the two kids are finally ousted from the train by Gene and Joan who take over the good car, Wichita . All concerned were dis- appointed to find that the good car, Wichita was not a club car. Below: To the vic- tor belongs the spoils. Joan ' s dead eye with the dart drives the conces- sionnaire into bank- ruptcy an d drives Gene into the role of a pack mule. The dashing grey Homburg which graces Gene ' s dome was won by pitching baseballs at coke bottles or coke bottles at balls or something like that. Bur- dened by plaster statues, all plastered that is, Gene and Joan decide to call it an eve- ning, and as their taxi sinks into a mud hole, they bid fare- well to the Carnival. Amifilintlf Levi Barnes revs up the acroplane and roars into a nosedive, with flaps up and throttle wide open. This in- genious little machine, built by the Aeronautical Engineers is capable of simulating all the maneuvers of an actual plane. he Engineers, Exposed e 4 44 .17102 hapa During the week end of the Kansas Relays no less than twelve-thousand people journeyed atop Mt. Oread to witness another of K. U. ' s grand events, the 1948 Engineering Exposition. This year ' s Exposition was the first since 1941, and it was well received by all who attended it. Hundreds of people stopped to mug for the tele- vision cameras set up by the Electrical Engineers in front of Hoch, or to ogle at the amazing reproduc- tions on the receiver screens inside the building. The Aeronautical Engineers drew some of the biggest crowds with their exhibit of German aircraft in front of Lindley Hall. Curious spectators got a chance to see just how a jet plane looked in opera- tion as the A. E. ' s put their German Heinkle jet through its paces. A complete Messerschmidt 109 and a novel radio-controlled target plane were also (Continued on Page 111) The area in front of Lindley Hall takes on a striking likeness to a Nazi airfield in this night scene of the Heinkle jet plane. Also in- cluded in this display were a Ales- serschmidt 109, a radio controlled target plane, and the novel acro- plane shown on the opposite page. Sadie Heil and Maryanne Mc- Clure try their luck in the Archi- tects wishing well. The attractive wall design and pictures in the background helped the Architects win the Sigma Tau award for the most outstanding display of the Ex- position. Three Engineers pour molten bronze into casts in Fowler Shops while interested spectators look on. Members of the American Society of Tool Engineers gave souvineer castings to all Exposition visitors. One million dollars worth of indus- trial equipment was on display in Fowler Shops during the Exposi- tion. PLAS7 OF KOWIDGE AL;C:MMED COLLEGE IS ASSET N [LATER 13 FE. i(lexemet7),24e, e77.r e 772 ere Coller 1- Z I – « •- ■ , ORGANIC Ck DAISY RI ANIMAS OF THE pAsi 1,1 ADVANCE-I) NAVIC.:AttOrl NAVAL SCIENCE 131 PDVANCED MILI I AR! 5CI ENCE v ELEMENTARY MODERN DANCE PHYS. ED. ■ 05 1-10T5Y TOT5T CA A ATOMIC PFIVSICS 153 NIMitsztr■G—E AND FAMILY RE-LAI-101•01-1i1VS IWA” ( ' ri rn r n ,:` ADVANCED DEBATING 1 Above: Old Master Machinist Ben Foster, President of Pachaca- mac, smiles shrewdly from behind an array of coke botles as he begins to figure out the PR for next year. Ben led the P ach- acamacers to a narrow one seat victory. Above: Duane Postlethwaite lets out a roar as the early talleys give a decided lead to Independent can- didate Arnold Englund. Lower left: Arnold Englund rattles his slip horn together with assorted members of the univer- sity band who blast away before a five foot picture of candidate Englund. P i l o t e d by Postle- thwaite, the Willys band wagon toured the campus, scouring for Independent votes. Left: Students line up to vote in the new Union P oll Booths. Martin Duncan ex- amines activity books as student council member Betsey Sheid- ley issues ballots to student voters, Lower right: Professors Page and Stene work on the problem of calculating vote quotas. With- out the able assistance of Mr. Page and Mr. Stene, the K.U. electoral machinery would have barely c r eaked through the night. Ben Foster glows, and Ed Sheehey looks astonished, as Mr. Stene chalks up the results of the close council race in District Spring Election 4 mavae Mee4J, This spring, as every spring on Mt. Oread, there comes up with the grass that old qeustion— How are we going to win the election? Asked of course by those vener- able political parties, Independents and Pachacamac-NOW. This spring we had what is known as a quiet election, but, if one had put his ear down to he ground, he could have heard the rumblings of the party strategists, which resulted in Pach tearing down Independent posters, and In- dependent tearing down Pach posters. After many hours of working, discussing, debating, and planning for slates, platforms, and campaigns the day of election finally dawned. The polls were set up in the dungeons of the school buildings, and one could see the feverish activity of the students as they came to assert that great privi lege the University bestows upon us—the right to vote! There were the poll judges waching the poll workers, the watchers watching the judges, the poll workers watching the voters, and then of course, there were the voters watching everybody. A typical student walked eagerly up to a poll, fumbled nervously for his activity book, and, pro- ceeded to wait in line for a short hour and a half, while eager-beaver poll workers laughed gayly, lost their three-times-punched activity books, and made dates with the cute girl checkers. The student finally arrived at the poll. The first worker asked for his activity book and re- marked coyly, God, what a horrible picture, punched it, and passed it on while telling the others to get a load of this one. Mr. Voter then passed to the next worker and told him his classification and school. Sorry my boy, the worker gleefully remarked, but we have you listed as a sophomore in the school of Epitomized Physics. You will have to go over to Ad and see the registrar. As the vanquished miscreant slowly walked out of the door, he breathed a sigh and fumbled with his faded Wallace button. The polls closed at 6:00 p.m. and by 7:00 he political wheels were up a Frank Strong ready to help count the ballots. By 7:30 the (Continued on Page 113) NTRA URAL WIND UP Pcfii t14 A9OLOCrIE5 -to AHD TO EVIL. EYE A u Gaining momentum through a hard fought winter season, the Spring Intramurals produced a worthy climax to a well run intramural program. The final point tabulation again found the Big Three of intramurals firmly ensconced at the top of the heap. The defending Sweepstakes Champions, Beta Theta Pi, repeated again this year with a total of 1456 points, Phi Delta Theta was second with 1417, and Phi Gamma Delta third with a total of 1340. The splash and paddle boys led the Easter Parade and when the pool had calmed the Phi Gam swim- mers were a four point margin over the second place Beta ' s. George Nettels was the dual star of the meet, anchoring the four-man relay and -150-yard medley relay to victory for the Beta ' s. The Phi Gam ' s were sparked in their victory by Stucker and Thompson. Point totals: Phi Gam 33, Beta 29, SAE 17, Phi Delt and Phi Psi (Tie) 15. Following a delay necessitated by the Kansas Relays the Intramural Track Meet was run on April 22nd and 23rd. The Beta ' s won a decisive victory by doubling the points on their nearest rivals the Phi Delts. Jerry Waugh proved to be the Beta ' s Man of Distinction by winning both the 220 and 440 yard dashes. Paced by the stellar play of Hill Handball Cham- pion, Marsh Hulett, the Phi Gams ' Hulett, Van Ert, Hodgson, Ritchie, and Wellington, defending cham- pions, defeated all contenders to retain the team trophy for another year. The Beta ' s advanced to the finals while other division winners were the Phi Psi ' s and SAE ' s. Spring horseshoes reached a finale with the Delta Chi ' s and ATO ' s facing each other across the pits. The Delta Chi team—Passmore, Lucas, Lane, Hage- meire, Davis and Schnellbacher outlasted their op- ponents to annex the horseshoe trophy. Semi-finalists eliminated were Phi Gam and Oread Hall. Softball proved to be the most hotly contested of the spring sports. The tenth inning was the payoff in the Phi Gam-ATO semi-final encounter which featured two day play and two protests upheld by the Inramural Office. Weidensahl ' s single in the bottom of the tenth with two on drove in the winning ATO run. Score ATO 10, Phi Gam 9. In the Phi Delt-Beta semi-final a pitching duel between Clay Hedrick, Phi Deli and Bill Conboy, Beta, was climaxed by a win for the Phi Delts. Score: Phi Delt 3, Beta 2. The championship game saw the Phi Delts spike a determined ATO crew to retain their softball crown for another year. Clay Hedrick and fourteen ATO errors were sufficient to put the game on ice, 9 to 5. In the championship tennis match the ATO rac- quet squad was shaded by the Phi Gam tennis crew —Gardner, Van Ert, Smith, Ransom, and Thompson. The SAE ' s and Beta ' s were division winners but were both dropped in semi-final play. Golf competition ended in a tie for first place between the Phi Delts and Beta ' s. This tie was sub- sequently played off with the Beta team—Prosser, Finney, Hoyt, and Stickrod emerging vicorious. In third and fourth places respectively, the Phi Gam ' s and Delt ' s were seperated by only one point. Medal (Continued on Page 113) Bob Wood takes a turn at the horseshoe pits during the Spring competition. Howard Joseph squats into position, catching for the Betas Jess Van Ert clouts out a homer during the Sig Ep-Phi against the Sigma Chis. Gam quarter final game. Muscles and Bustles et11 C ' mon, SLIDE! Now, slug it—hit a home run! Aw, ref, you ' re blind, she ' s out a mile! C ' mon, pitch ' , sling ' er a curve; Such vocal participation of bois- terous sideline spectators seems to be inevitable at spring baseball games—even in girls ' intramural softball. And although boys smile in disgust at feminine wild swings, frantic scrambles, and arch- ing, slow-motion throws, the girls have a wonderful time playing softball. But several of the women ' s teams advanced be- yond the typically haphazard women ' s baseball to exhibit real skill. Such a team was the Corbin nine who defeated Locksley in the final game to capture the softball championship. Throughout the season, Corbins ' opponents swung frantically at Mary Helen. Shepard ' s hard, fast, fireballs. Supported by a fine team and an especially skilled catcher, Joan Kirkam, the Corbin pitcher had little trouble in scoring an undefeated season. Other outstanding women ' s teams in softball were the division winners: Locksley, Delta Gamma, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Kappa Kappa Gamma. On Saturday, May 15, K. U. sportswomen cli- maxed the softball season with an overwhelming victory at the Ottawa baseball playday. K.U. ' s win- ning streak, begun in the morning game, continued throughout the day despite the dust and hot sunshine. The three K. U. pitchers, Mary Helen Shepard, Max- ine Gunsolly, and Betty Van der Smissen, success- fully downed teams from Ottawa University, Baker, and Washburn. The K. U. team was made up of skilled players chosen from the various intramural (Continued on Page 117) FIRST ROW: Patricia Lander Patricia McGovney; Mary Helen Shepard; Geneva Taman; Joan Kirkham Elsie RondeII. SECOND ROW: Helen Slaybaugh; Geraldine Clement; Reiss; Virginiia Larson Bernelda Larsen Patricia Dasien; Ruth Courtwright; Dods Greenbank; Virginia McCrea. NOT PICTURE: Joan Young. 50 THE JAYHAWKER COLLEGE DAZE 4 itzioa With a hearty You are welcomed to College Daze, a chorus of 41 voices opened the first student musical to be produced on our campus. Before finishing the Rock Chalk Welcome, the chorus introduced to the audience Joe and sephine College, who got the evening ' s ment well underway. The show featured two ballads written by Jess Stewart. They were When You ' re Near and Come Along Baby. The first, When You ' re Near, was sung by Norma Jean Guthrie and Dargan gomery, who were supported by the chorus. Delores Travalent, as the ballerina, gave a rhythmic pretation of the dancing hearts of the young lovers in the song. The catchy melody of the second song, Come Along Baby, was sung by Ann Hogue and Dean Frazier, while Sue Jones and Phil Young gave out with a jitterbug routine full of flips and tion steps. The skits, written by Jack Moorhead, represented students in scenes typical of the activities of college years. Sparked by Jud Greer, Jack Kendree, Jim Hawes, and Will Noble, the cast success fully trayed the humorous incidents which occur on the campus, in the classroom, and at home during vaca- tions. In a song, also written by Jack Moorhead and Bill Ogg, two Legionnaires described the new look in women ' s fashions. All of the songs, both music and lyrics, as well as the dance routines, script, and striking stage settings were created by students in the University. Jim Caig arranged the music which was performed by a 23-piece orchestra, led by Charles Kassinger. Arrangements are being made with Student Union Activities, who presented this production, to continue all-school musical as an annual event. If the efforts are successful, students who are potential artists, will be given opportunity to demonstrate their talents and participate in the show. Charlie Freshwater tries to describe Neither Dutch Guthrie or Dargan Mont- Virginia Brown tells that the fine nursing course he got in place gomery seem to mind rehearsing the words to thinks the veterans are awfully of Engineering. When You ' re Near. nice as she illustrates the typical Josephine College. Jack Moorhead and Bill Ogg have Sue Jones looks at jitterbugging from a new that old look from seeing the new angle with the helping arm of Phil Young. look in the Legion of Lost Men. Craig Hampton and Betty Jo Lorbeer brought down the house in the first act with their scintillating version of native South American dancing. With a musical assist from Bolivar Marquez on the drums, the pair barefooted it about the stage in an act that would put many professionals to shame. By far the most uproarous skit was the one Jimmy Hawes, Jack Kendree, Jud Greer, Dorothy Scroggy, and Louise Lambert acted in called, Vacation Time. Greer acted the part of a typical K.U. student. His entire speech consisting of muttering over and over, Where ' s the Booze? Though the sets were not too elaborate, they were well constructed and adequate for the show. The audience received quite a shock early in the first act when the curtain raised on an imitation of Uncle Jimmy Green ' s statue. However, instead of talking to a starry eyed young lawyer, Uncle Jimmy was talking to the grinning face of Little Man on Campus. Perhaps the best remembered feature of the entire production will be the catchy original tunes which were written by Jess Stewart. His new version of the Alma Mater for the chorus was especially beautiful. Though there was considerable room for improve- ment, College Daze received a tremendous ovation from the student body, and everyone is looking for- ward to a repeat performance next year. Upper right — Jack Kendree and Jud ( Pro- fessor) Greer greet the Dean as he makes his morning run of the campus. Right center— Chal- mer Newlook illus- trates to his confused father what the average student learns in college today. Lower right — Dean Frazier tries to empha- size to Ann Hogue that she should follow the words to Come along Baby. Keith Wilson — wrote the editorials. Larry Simmons — wrote the checks. SWAN SO Spring is usually looked upon as the beginning of things . . . love affairs, vaca- tion, exams, poison ivy, and various fevers. However, this Spring is the end of some- thing . . . a long line of- JAYHAWKERS. Sixty, to be exact. The past sixty years have seen a tremendous change come about in the JAYHAWKER, as well as in the small world in which the JAYHAWKER revolved. Shirley Hoyt—The smiling secretary that endured hundreds of correspond- ence memos, and thousands of corny jokes. Back in the days when Dad was a charmer in his bowler and blazer which he wore to the ice cream socials on the banks of the Kaw, the old magazine wasn ' t a magazine . . . but a small eighty page annual, bound in leather. As the years passed the old HAWK grew gradually into a full-fledged college annual, sporting some four hundred pages and a flashy cover. During the thirties, a tremendous change took place in the book. To get through the financial doldrums of the times, the JAYHAWKER was changed to a Magazine-Annual, the first of its kind in the entire country. This change increased the work four times, but it gave the students a new type of yearbook which has been increasingly successful with each year. So it is with an air of nostalgia that we close the cover of number sixty. Though at times the office has looked more like a social club than a workshop, a lot of honest perspiration and midnight oil went into number sixty. A large groove worn in the floor by the Editor and Business Manager, pacing back and forth waiting the dawn of a new issue, stands as a silent reminder to our heirs that office life is not just a bowl of type lice. Bill Conboy — Heir to a worn Dean Miller—New keeper of the keys, books, swivel chair, numerous bathing adding machine, secretarys, and check stubs of beauty pictures, two old typewriters, th 1949 JAYHAWKER. and the Editorship of the 1949 JAY- HAWKER. Paul Coker — Versatile Fine Artist, who rose from Janitor to Art Editor in a few short months of laborious ink blotting and brush pushing, Many promising young workers have made their debut on the JAYHAWKER staff this year, and will probably be of great assistance to Editor Bill Conboy, and Business Manager Dean Miller next year. For the first time since the war perio d, a woman has worked her way high into the JAYHAWKER heirarchy. We collectively tip our editorial hats to Marion Rip- peteau who has been of great assistance in holding up the editorial end of this year ' s book. Another new worker who has persistently batted around one thou- sand, is Charley Hoffhaus. Charley ' s good handling of many of the duller assignments, and skill as a proof reader, re-write man, and general mechanic has been invaluable this year. Leading the list of bright young men in the busi- ness department is Clarence Eyerly. Clarence ' s dili- gence and dependability has in many cases, been the margin of success for an issue. And of couse, the issue could not go to press without a word about Paul Coker. Feeling deeply the loss of the venerable Yogi Williams, we looked rather sadly at the art prospects this year. However, our gloom changed to smiles as Paul began to turn out superlative art work. Now Paul has firmly entrenched himself in the office, and has become a solid part of the JAYHAWKER. The 60th JAYHAWKER has been a lot of work, but we ' ve come to know a lot of people, and received a lot of pleasure out of working. If you dear reader, have enjoyed it . . . then and only then can we hon- estly say, Mission Accomplished. FIRST ROW: Shirley Hoyt-1948 Secretary, Barbara O ' Neal, Mary Virginia Stout. SECOND ROW: Jim Lounsbury, Clarence Eyerly, Paul Coker, Larry Simmons--1948 Business Manager, Keith Wilson-1948 Editor, Jeanne Mueller, Bob Bottoms-1948 Advertising Manager, Gloria Horn. THIRD ROW: Bill Conboy-1949 Editor, Nancy Davis, Dottie Thomas, Barbara Brown, Mary Helen Keller, Charlotte Metcalf. FOURTH ROW: Virginia Harris, Flora Lee Pringle, Joan Bingham, Mary Jane Horton, Marian Rippeteau, Mary Power, Patty Perkins, Margaret Dickinson. L THE JAYHAWKER 54 fan Beta Pi,national honorary engineering fraternity, was founded in 1885 at Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Kansas Alpha, now one of 73 active chapters, was established at K. U. in 1914. President, Harry W. Johnson; Vice-President, William J. Hall; Secretary, William R. Nation, Jr.; Treasurer, Richard R. Potter. MEMBERS John R. Autenrieth, Ottawa Robert F. Banker, Muskogee, Okla. Paul I. Banks, Honolulu, T.H. Charles E. Becker, Kansas City, Mo. Joe R. Beeler, Jewell Andrew R. Bertuzzi, Girard Morris E. Borene, Sabetha James R. Bowden, Wichita Carroll F. Bower, Kansas City Jack R. Bradley, Jr., Overland Park Jack N. Butts, Hutchinson Lowell C. Case, Independence Dale B. Chesney, Fort Scott Jack F. Daily, Pittsburg Philip C. Davis, Kansas City, Mo. Dalton Eash, Wichita Oliver D. Edwards, Kansas City John P. Ellis, Springfield, Mo. Douglas E. Ferguson, Kansas City, Mo. David J. Foley, Norton Herbert R. Foster, Topeka John R. Fowler, Lawrence Walter R. Garrison, Jr., Topeka Frederick G. Gartung, Wichita Paul S. Gratny, Kansas City Charles H. Green, Sunflower William J. Hall, Lawrence Billy H. Hamilton, Wellington Edward P. Hansen, West Point, Ill. Robert H. Harris, Lawrence James C. Harrison, Lawrence Edward G. Hartronft, Lyons Howard H. Hobrock, Princeton Jack W. Hollingsworth, South Haven Joseph A. Hull, Arkansas City Elbert E. Innis, Meade Paul H. Jackson, Jr., Lawrence Stanley W. Jervis, Grosse Pointe, Mich. Harry W. Johnson, Manhattan David S. Jones, Lawrence James R. Ka.nehl, Rittman, Ohio Carl G. Klaus, Easton Donald L. Luffell, Fort Scott Hal H. Mahuron, Liberal Elmo E. Maiden, Lawrence John L. Margrave, Kansas City Duane K. McCarter, Kansas City, Mo. William V. McCoy, Benkleman, Neb. Russell B. Mesler, Kansas City, Mo . Norman G. Miller, Kansas City John Montfort, Kansas City, Mo. Robert D. Moore, Bellflower, Calif. Bernard M. Nagle, Hoisington William R. Nation, Jr., Kansas City Dorman S. O ' Leary, Kansas City, Mo. Donald E. Owen, Emporia Robert W. Partridge, Kansas City, Mo. Leslie H. Pihlblad, Garfield Richard R. Potter, Lawrence James M. Rails, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. Grady L. Randle, Lawrence Harry D. Reed, Larned John H. Robinson, Kansas City, Mo. Walter H. Robinson, Kansas City, Mo. Dale I. Rummer, Wichita Eugene R. Sabin, Sunflower Charles J. Schuler, Sunflower Joseph C. Sciandrone, Kansas City, Mo. Robert V. Sellers, Bartlesville, Okla. John C. Sells, Effingham Warren A. Shaw, Florence Richard J. Shea, Sedalia, Mo. Clyde A. Shockley, Kansas City, Mo. Harold C. Smith, Kansas City Earl W. Snowden, Chillicoteh, Mo. Leo F. Spector, Kansas City, Mo. Paul W. Stark, Kansas City Ambrose J. Startz, Liberty Winton L. Studt, Kansas City John M. Suptic, Kansas City Charles R. Svoboda, Lawrence Robert D. Talty, Kansas City, Mo. Grover M. Taylor, Lawrence Arthur Toch, Vienna, Austria Carl E. von Waaden, Washington Raymond R. Wagner, Troy Paul Whitford, Salina Robert E. Wiedemann, Lawrence James L. Williams, Great Bend Gerald G. Wilson, Wichita George I. Worrall, Kansas City FIRST ROW: Suptic, Daily, Hall, Prof. Jones, Johnson, Stockton, Toch, Nation, Jackson, Innis, Sells, Borene, McCarter. SECOND ROW: Hobrock, Shock- ley, McCoy, Fowler, Margrave, Chesney, Luffel, Smith, O ' Leary, Talty, Banker, Robinson, Edwards, Bower, Harrison, Snowden Sciandrone, Studt, Rummer, Spector, Harris. THIRD ROW: Whitford, Reed, Autenrieth, Hollingsworth, Green, Gartung, Stark, Svoboda, Bertuzzi, Wagner, Davis, von Waaden, Beeler, Garrison, Shea, Case, Rolls, Jones, Maiden, Becker. FOURTH ROW: Show, Ow en, Hull, Hansen, Sellers, Gratny, Klaus, Mesler, Wilson, Hamilton, Startz, Butts, Montfort, Bowden, Konehl, Foley, Nagle, Banks, Easn, Ellis. L COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1 9 1 8 55 • Phi Alpha Delta, professional legal fraternity, was 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, Bernard E. Nordling; Vice-justice, Kenneth H. Hibsch; Clerk, F. Parke Snyder; Treasurer, Oral W. Bilyeu; Mar- shall, Ronald D. Albright, PLEDGES Chester E. Bowman, Lawrence Earle E. Brehmer, Great Bent George B. Caples, Great Falls, Montana C. A. Gilmore, Neodesha Russell L. Handy, Sunflower Kenneth Harmon, Ellsworth Warren G. Hodson, Galena Robert F. Hudson, Wichita Roy D. Adcock, Modesto, Calif. Ronald D. Albright, Valley Center Charles W. Allphin, Lawrence John H. Atchison, Overbrook Daniel C. Bachman, Newton Robert F. Bailey, Fredonia Dean C. Batt, Marion Fred A. Beaty, Lawrence Oral W. Bilyeu, Protection James Boutz, Concordia Jack B. Bowker, McPherson Aubrey J. Bradley, Blue Mound James H. Bradley, Merriam Robert N. Burtscher, Hays Leo J. Callahan, Lawrence David 0. Cochran, Luray Richard W. Hurd, Sunflower George A. Lowe, Olathe Karl W. Masoner, Kansas City Howard B. McClellan, Lawrence Paul Nye, Newton Arthur N. Nystrom, Savonbury Earl E. O ' Connor, Paola ACTIVES Grant H. Cole, Arkansas City Austin L. Covey, Lawrence Clyde P. Daniel, Hutchinson Charles F. Forsyth, Valley Falls George W. Haessler, Leshara, Neb. J. C. Halliburton, Arkansas City Algie H. Harding, Lawrence Ray F. Harris, Lawrence Joseph E. Hensley, Lawrence Franklin Hiebert, McPherson Kenneth H. Hiebsch, Zenda James H. Hunsucker, Winchester William A. Kelly, Lawrence Eldon L. Lackey, Hutchinson Kenneth S. Larkins, Kansas City, Mo. Robert L. Lesh, Arkansas City James E. Parmiter, Perry Lawrence R. Pennington, Frankfort Charles W. Sherrer, Elwood Henry H. Sinning, Holton Jacob H. Torbert, Miami, Okla. Donald E. Underwood, Lafayette Willis W. Wheeler, Sunflower Thomas S. Mackie, Lawrence Jean 0. Moore, Wichita Stanley A. Morantz, Kansas City, Mo. Bernard E. Nordling, McPherson Vernon L. Nuss, Hoisington Arnold C. Nye, Newton Donald E. Richter, Oskaloosa Duane F. Roberts, Salina Savier J. Shartran, Kansas City Harvey J. Snapp, Belleville Franklin P. Snyder, Emporia Gerald L. Wait, Kansas City, Mo. Keith L. Wallis, Wichita Paul B. Watson, Pratt Willard G. Widder, Kansas City FIRST ROW: Parmiter, Richter, Sherrer, Pitt, Snyder, Hiebsch, Nordling, Watson, Bilyeu, Albright, Hunsucker, McClellan, Widder. SECOND ROW: Lackey, Adcock, Handy, Atchison, Hurd, Masoner, Sinning, Burtscher, Batt, Cole, Covey, A. Bradley, Nystrom. THIRD ROW: Cochran, Bachman, Pennington, Allphin, Kelly, Bowman, Halliburton, Lowe, Gilmore, Daniel, Harmon, Hensley, Brehmer, Hodson. FOURTH ROW: O ' Connor, Haessler, Morantz, Bowker, Wheeler, Snapp, Torbert, Larkins. Boutz, Underwood, Callahan, Forsyth. 56 HE JAYHAWKER T Sigma Tau, national honorary engineering fraternity, was founded in 1904 at Nebraska University, Lnicoln, Nebraska, Lambda, now one of 25 collegiate chapters, was established at K. U. in 1916. President, Dalton Eash; Vice-President, Morris E. Borene; Secretary, Elbert E. Innis; Treas- urer, John C. Sells. FACULTY Stan Stockton Clayton Crosier J. D. Stranathan F. A. Russell Lt. Col. K. Rosebusl G. W. Brandshaw S. A. Miller Preston Clement Rex Woods Kenneth Rose Paul Ott F. L. Brown A. Palmerlee W. M. Simpson James F. Aiken, Sunflower Robert F. Banker, Muskogee, Okla. Charles E. Becker, Kansas City, Mo. Joe R. Beeler, Jewell Andrew F. Bertuzzi, Girard Morris E. Borene, Sabetha James R. Bowden, Wichita Carrol F. Bower, Kansas City Edward J. Bray, Parsons James R. Bruce, Lawrence Jack R. Bruyr, Columbus Dale B. Chesney, Fort Scott Anthony L. Cooper, Leavenworth Jack F. Daily, Pittsburg Phillip C. Davis, Kansas City, Mo. Earl G. Defenbaugh, Coffeyville Dalton Eash, Wichita Oliver D. Edwards, Kansas City John Pierce Ellis, Springfield, Mo. Victor Ferraro, Sunflower David Foley, Norton Felix D. Fortin, Kansas City, Mo. Herbert R. Foster, Topeka John R. Fowler, Lawrence Norman G. Fritz, Independence Walter R. Garrison, Topeka Fred G. Gartung, Wichita Truman L. Gore, Independence, Mo. Ward A. Graham, Kansas City, Mo. Paul S. Gratny, Kansas City Glenn C. Gray, Eureka Charles H. Green, Sunflower William J. Hall, Lawrence Edward P. Hansen, Westpoint, Ill. COLLEGIATE Robert H. Harris, Lawrence James C. Harrison, Lawrence Edward B. Harry, Washington, D. C. William L. Heald, Salina James C. Henderson, Wichita Joseph A. Hull, Arkansas City John M. Hunt, Kansas City, Mo. Elbert E. Innis, Meade John J. Irwin, Merriam Paul H. Jackson, Lawrence Harry W. Johnson, Manhattan David S. Jones, Lawrence James R. Kanehl, Pittman, Ohio Joseph W. Keil, Garnett Ralph E. Kiene, Topeka Donald L. Luffel, Fort Scott Scott Lynn, Iola Elmo E. Maiden, Lawrence John L. Margrave, Kansas City Duane K. McCarter, Kansas City, Mo. William V. McCoy, Benkelman, Neb. Robert A. Meredith, Lincoln Russel B. Mesler, Kansas City, Mo. Wilbert H. Meyers, Sunflower John G. Montfort, Lawrence Bernard M. Nagle, Hoisington J. William Nagle, Hoisington William R. Nation, Kansas City Dorman O ' Leary, Kansas City, Mo. Donald E. Owen, Emporia Richard R. Potter, Lawrence James M. Ralls, Kansas City, Mo. Harry D. Reed, Lamed William J. Ries, St. Louis, Mo. Jack H. Robinson, Kansas City, Mo. Harry E. Robson, Herrington Frank J. Rozich, Kansas City Eugene R. Sabine, Sunflower John R. Sacks, Kansas City Eugene E. Sallee, Topeka Charles E. Schuler, Sunflower Joe Sciandrone, Kansas City, Mo. Robert V. Sellers, Bartlesville, Okla. John C. Sells, Effingham Warren A. Shaw, Florence Richard J. Shea, Sedalia, Mo. Clyde A. Shockley, Kansas City, Mo. Harold C. Smith, Kansas City Earl W. Snowden, Chillicothe, Mo. Leo F. Spector, Kansas City, Mo. Charles W. Spieth, Lawrence John A. Startz, Liberty Jack P. Stovall, Lawrence William L. Stringer, Topeka Winton L. Studt, Kansas City John M. Suptic, Kansas City Robert D. Talty, Kansas City, Mo. Joe S. Turner, Sunflower Francis Van Benthem, Atchison Carl E. von Waaden, Washington Raymond T. Wagner, Troy William C. Walker, Hutchinson Ralph W. Ward, Lawrence D. M. Welton, Sterling Boyd H. Wilkes, Cherryvale James L. Williams, Great Bend Gerald G. Wilson, Wichita Francis M. Winterburg, Lawrence FIRST ROW: Sacks, Spieth, McCoy, Shockley, Suptic, Banker, Innis, Eash, Stockton, Sciandrone, Borene, Sells, Nagle, Jackson, Doily, Spector, Sabin, McCarter, Sellers, Stringer. SECOND ROW: Ward, Luffel, Chesney, Ferraco, Talty, O ' Leary, Edwards, Snowder, Fritz, Graham, Ries, Harrison, Margrave, Beeler, Jones, Smith, Bower, Fowler, Studt, Aiken, Bruce, Defenbaugh, Meredith, Winterburg, Stovall, Benthem. THIRD ROW: Robson, Ellis, Maiden, Nation, Reed, Irwin, Gartung, Comer, Harris, Garrison, Davis, Von Wooden, Gore, Hansen, Bertuzzi, Shea, Hull, Henderson, Rolls, Green, Johnson, Wagner, Lynn, Fortin. FOURTH ROW: Hall, Becker, Harry, Wilkes, Owen, Gratny, Rozich, Mesler, Nagle, Sallee, Foley, Kanehl, Montfort, Bowden, Meyers, Kiel, Wilson, Startz, Gray, Walker, Shaw, Kiene, First Row ADCOCK, ROY DALE, Modesto, California. Phi Alpha Delta. BERNARD, JAMES HARVEY, Kansas City, Missouri. Sigma Nu; Phi Delta Phi. BINGHAM, ROBERT H., Wichita. BODDINGTON, EDWARD MOZLEY, JR., Kansas City. Phi Delta Theta; Phi Delta Phi; President, Senior Law Class. Booz, ROBERT B., McPherson. Phi Alpha Delta; Alpha Tau Omega. BOYD, JAMES ROBERT, Lamed. Second Row BRIGHT, WILLIAM DANIEL, Paola. Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Delta Phi. COLE, WILLIAM R., Hutchinson; Phi Delta Phi. FOUST, JOHN OSCAR, Iola. Sigma Phi Epsilon. GUNN, RICHARD LEON. Kansas City, Keeper of Records, Steward, Kappa Alpha Psi; Student Court; YMCA. HELSEL, ROBERT C., Wichita. Phi Delta Phi. KESTER, DAVID WILLIAM, Eureka. Phi Delta Phi. Third Row LIND, STANLEY L., Kansas City. Phi Delta Phi. LOWE, GEORGE ALEXANDER,Olathe. Sigma Nu; Phi Alpha Delta. MANKIN, GEORGE RICHARD, Kansas City. Phi Delta Phi. MARIETTA, ROBERT L., Salina. Owl Society; Sachem; Pi. Sigma Alpha; Men ' s Student Council; Phi Delta Phi; Scabbard and Blade. MAY, JOHN S., Atchison. Beta Theta Pi; Phi Delta Phi. MCELHENNY, WILLIAM B., Topeka. Treasurer, Phi Gamma Delta; Delta Sigma Pi; Phi Delta Phi; Golf; Modern Choir; Men ' s Inter-Fraternity Council; Student Court. Fourth Row MCVEY, WALTER LEWIS, JR., Independence. President, Phi Alpha Delta. PARMITER, JAMES EDWARD, Eskridge. Phi Alpha Delta. PENNINGTON, ROBERT, Frankfort. Lambda Chi Alpha; Treasurer, Pachacamac. ROBINSON, MARTHA ANN, Kansas City. Basileus, Alpha Kappa Alpha; Chairman, K.U. Panhellenic; YWCA; Negro Students Association. ROYER, RICHARD P., Abilene. President, Beta Theta Pi; Sachem; Delta Sigma Rho; Phi Delta Phi; Owl Society. RUSSELL, CHARLES ERNEST, Wellington. Phi Alpha Delta. SEED, THOMAS FINIS, Wichita. Phi Delta Phi. 58 THE JAYHAWKER pp n 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 receive. In the spring of 1947, the local organization affiliated itself as Sachem Circle with Omicron Delta 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 conrtibutions to the University. Officers, who are elected by lot, are as follows: Chief Sachem, Dale Rummer; Chief Warrior, Bob Campbell ;Secretary, Willis Tompkins; Treasurer, jack Hollingsworth. George Caldwell, Pittsburg Bob Campbell, Wichita Gene Casement, Sedan Irvin Elliott, Newton Arnold Englund, Salina Jerry Hamilton, Wichita Richard Hawkinson, Kansas City, Mo. Jack Hollingsworth, South Haven Richard Hollingsworth, Seward Harry Johnson, Manhattan Dale Judy, Leavenworth Lynn Leigh, Burley, Idaho John Margrave, Kansas City Bolivor Marquez, Chitre, Panama Thad Marsh, Eudora Arthur Partridge, Coffeyville Dick Pfister, Hiawatha Bob Ready, Wellington George Robb, McPherson Richard Royer, Abilene Dale Rummer, Wichita Otto Schnellbacher, Lawrence Frank Stalzer, Kansas City Bob Stewart, Manhattan Willis Tompkins, Sunnyside Arthur Toch, Lawrence James Waugh, Eskridge George Worrall, Kansas City FIRST ROW: Arnold Englund; Thad Marsh; Bob Campbell; Dale Rummer; Willis Tompkins; Jack Hollingsworth; Bob Stewart. SECOND ROW: Gene Casement; Arthur Toch; Harry Johnson; Lynn Leigh; Dick Pfister; Jerry Hamilton; FrankStalzer; John Margrave NOT IN PICTURE: George Caldwell; Ervin Elliott Richard Hawkinson; Richard Hollingsworth; Dale Judy; Arthur Partridge; Bob Ready; George Robb; Richard Royer; Otto Schnellbacher; James Waugh; George Worrall; Bolivar Marquez. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 59 Fi 1 Mortar Board is a national honorary society for outstanding senior women. The organization peared first on the K. U. campus in 1912 as the Torch Society for senior women. In 1924, it came affiliated with the national organization of Mortar Board, and is now one of 80 Mortar Board chapters throughout the United States. Service to the University, the advancement of scholarship, cooperation with the faculty and loyal support to every worthy activity constitute the funda- mental purposes of this organization. Members are chosen during the spring of their junior year by the senior women in the active chap- ter. Membership is based on leadership, scholarship and service to the University. Newly elected bers are secretly tapped by active members some night during the week previous to the Honors Con- vocation in the spring of their junior year. Their names are revealed at Honors Convocation when the new members are capped before the entire dent body. Officers of the 1947-1948 chapter of Mortar Board are: President, Shirley Wellborn; Project Chairman, Carolyn Campbell; Corresponding Secre- tary, Emmalou Britton; Treasurer, Patricia Graham Fuller; Elections Chairman, Mary Wisner Lees. MEMBERS First Row Emalou Britton Carolyn Campbell Margaret Eberhardt Elizabeth Evans Second Row Patricia Graham Fuller Lorraine Carpenter Hammer Mary Wisner Lees Marylee Masterson Third Row Carolyn Nigg Anne Scott Shirley Wellborn FIRST ROW: Ashley Markwell, Thompson, Meeker, Winey, Regier, DeLongy, Brinkman, Smith. Dick Ashley, Chanute Fred Brinkman, Tulsa, Okla. Hal DeLongy, Parsons Cal Markwell, Hays Bob Meeker, Erie Murray Regier, Newton Courtland Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Thompson, Winfield Bill Winey, Jr., Lawrence ( coach ) MEMBERS Glenn Auschutz, Wilson Delbert Ackebaner, Sylvan Grove Richard Baden, Coffeyville Norman Baumann, Sylvan Grove Harold Beuitz, Wathena Vida Cummins, Holyroad Melum Dadeforde, Paola Dwane, Darling, Hutchinson Graham Frenert, Newton Reith Frederick, Oberlin Ruth Gradert, Newton Lowell Hagen, Hepler Guonne Hammer, Claflin Robert Henning, Holyroad Herman Husteman, Palmer Lorita Higgenbottom, Winfield Clarence Jenkins, Bucklin Okmer Kanser, Lincolnville Donald Keller, Herington Melvin Kettner, Hutchinson Raymond Koeneke, Herkimer George Kraft, Claflin Rosemary Landrey, Kansas City Ludwig Lenz, Muscative, Iowa Ernest Meyer, Hiawatha Walter Mueller, Wichita Norman Nolop, Leavenworth Vernon Nuss, Great Bend Isabella Nuss, Great Bend Elvira Oppliger, Lincoln Paul Pfortmiller, Natoma Bob Quade, Hunter Don Quade, Lincoln Lawrence Schuimmel, Lawrence Emerson Shields, Lincolnville Adelime Lonn, Hanen Arthur Upton, Kansas City Elden Wambsgans, Chase Richard Wegner, Great Bend Margaret Wilhelm, Great Bend Virginia Zabel, Atchison A FIRST ROW: Jenkins, Cummins, Dageforde, Gradert, Shields, Reverend Meyer, Landrey, Higginbottom, Hursig, Lenz. SECOND ROW: Quade, Nuss, Zeh, Wambsgans, Nolop, Plattner, Oppliger, Baumann, Kaiser, Schultz, Baden, Fervert, Quade Pfortmiller, Kraft, Nuss. THIRD ROW: Tonn, Hammer, Gradert, Meineke, Keller, Meyer, Arkebaner, Benitz, Zabel, Rippey, Petrowsky Wiley. Gamma Delta, International Asociation of Lutheran Students, was founded on October 27, 1934 in Chicago, Illinois. Iota is now one of the 64 active chapters. President, Emerson Shields; Vice- President, Walter Mueller; Sec- retary, Rosemary Landrey; Treas- urer, Victor Gradert. Sigma Alpha Iota, national music sorority, was founded June 12, 1903, at the University School of Music, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Beta Beta, now one of 86 collegiate chapters, was established at K. U. on Novem- ber 14, 1947. President, Maxine Alburty; Vice-President, Jane Byers; Secretary, Loraine Mai and Nancy Messenger. FIRST ROW: Ginther, Fiedler, Messenger, M. Alburty, Jersild, Rodgers, Hastings, Richardson. SECOND ROW: Tack, Baur, Bardwell, Anderson, Bennett, Walter, Read, Fretwell. THIRD ROW: Wells, Cowger, Byers, Lucas, Daugherty, V. Alburty, Petrowsky, Weed. MEMBERS NOT IN PICTURE: Mai, Caddis, Ward, Lyle Hyten, O ' Connor, Barron, Jorgensen. PLEDGES Virginia Alburty, Lawrence Wilma Jean Anderson, Kinsley Joan Baur, Eudora Maxine Alburty, Lawrence Pat Barron, Wichita Joan Bennett, Topeka Mary Jane Byers, Junction City Darlene Fiedler, Enterprise Phyllis Fretwell, Pittsburg Isabelle Gaddis, Winfield Helen Hastings, Lexington, Ill. Marian Jersild, Lawrence Lawrence Abbott, Kansas City, Mo. Louis A. Baron, Kansas City, Mo. Newton Caldera, Managua, Nicaragua Omer Dum, Fertek Nigde, Turkey Claude Engelke, Tecumseh William B. Gaul, Kansas City, Mo. Vartan A. Gulaian, Kansas City, Mo. John Hoppesh, Elmhurst, Ill. Marie Bardwell, Parsons Ann Cowger, Topeka ACTIVES Elfin Jorgensen, Lawrence Marilynn Lee, Augusta Lynn Lucas, El Dorado Springs, Mo. Loraine Mai, Russell Nancy Messenger, Pittsburg Dottie O ' Connor, Hutchinson Myra Petrowsky, Preston Bernadine Read, Baxter Springs 0 l MEMBERS Frank N. Lee, Milford, Conn. William Leighton, Nortonville John L. Margrave, Kansas City William Moline, Topeka David A. Moore, Leavenworth Mehmet 0. Zulu, Kazariri, Turkey James Pemberton, Kansas City, Mo. Victor Pineiro, Barbosa, Puerto Rico Mary Carolyn Daugherty, Pittsburg Lyla Hyten, Wellington Lois Lee Richardson, Topeka Joan Rodgers, Lyndon Melva Tack, Gaylord Carol Terrill, Lawrence Kitty Walter, Kansas City, Mo. Helen Ward, Coffeyville Martha Weed, Kansas City Betty Wells, Topeka Arieh Rivlin, Tiyva, Palestine Ernest F. Ross, Kendall Ralph M. Ross, Atchison Charles W. Shara, Parks Robert S. Turkington, McCune Charles F. Weaver, Wakarusa George I. Worrall, Kansas City FIIRST ROW: Gaull, Pemberton, Weaver, Margrove, Engelke, Worroll, Gulaian, Sham, Duru. SECOND ROW: Turking- ton, Baron, O ' Zulu, Lee, Rivlin, Abbott, Leighton, Moore, Moline, Hoppesch, Ross. NOT IN PICTURE: Caldera, Pineiro, Ross. Smith Hall was established at K. U. as a men ' s residence in 1946. President, Claude Engelke; Vice-President, Anthony Baron; Treasurer, Dave Moore; Secretary, Robert Turk- ington. Alpha Delta Sigma, national professional advertising fraternity, was founded at the University of Missouri, November 14, 1913. The K. U. chapter was established in 1925 and was later named the L. N. Flint Chapter in honor of Mr. Flint, Prof. Emer. Journ. President, Paul Warner; Vice- President, Wister Shreve; Secre- tary, Robert Alderson; Treasurer, William Dill. FIRST ROW: Welch, Tennant, Melton, Wasser, Cole, Warner, Flint, Lane, McLaughlin, Dill, Lukens. SECOND ROW: Addington, Amend, Waldron, Knuth, Brown, Wilson, James, Mura, Binter, Tamblyn, Cole. THIRD ROW: Nelligan Beck, Havener, Snyder, Bellamy, Alderson, Shreve. NOT IN PICTURE: Bergstrom, Stock, Morris, Clymer, O ' Connor, Malone, Gray. F LI Harold Addington, Lawrence Lee S. Cole, Lawrence FACULTY Ted Gray, Lawrence John Malone, Lawrence COLLEGIATE Burton G. Wasser, Overland Park Bill Alderson, Kansas City, Mo. Glenn Amend, Cummings Bill Beck, Kansas City, Mo. Ken Bellamy, Colby John Bergstrom, Topeka Bill Binter, El Dorado Bill Brown, Lawrence Dave Clymer, Lawrence Don Cole, Lawrence Bill Dill, Lawrence Darrell Havener, Kansas City Roger James, Lawrence Dean Knuth, Nashville Frank Lane, St. Joseph, Mo. Harold Lukens, Lawrence Jack McKee, Kansas City Gene McLaughlin, Coffeyville Carlos Melton, Independence Bert Morris, Hutchinson Tony Mura, II, Kansas City, Mo. Bill Nelligan, Halstead Charles O ' Connor, Larehmond, N. Y Wister Shreve, Bloomfield, N. J. Bob Snyder, Lawrence Gregg Stock, Lee ' s Summit, Mo. George Tamblyn, Kansas City, Mo. Don Tennant, Topeka Don Waldron, Newton Paul Warner, Chanute • Don Welch, Kansas City, Mo. Jim Wilson, Topeka Gene Barr, Lawrence Dick Bertuzzi, Girard Bill Binter, El Dorado Charles Carson, Kansas City, Mo. Lawrence Channel, Kansas City N. P. Collins, Eudora Charles Conroy, Lawrence Robert Crowley, Rockford, Ill. Ken Danneberg, Kansas City, Mo. Louis DeLuna, Kansas City, Mo. John Dickerson, Meade Don Doehring, Lawrence Bill Easton, Lawrence Dr. E. R. Ebel, Lawrence Harold England, Halstead Jack Eskridge, Independence, Mo. Jack Fink, Topeka Howard Fischer, Mt. Vermont, Iowa Herbert Foster, Topeka Bud French, Lawrence Don Frisby, El Dorado Dick Gilman, Merriam George Gorman, Kansas City Forest Griffith, Lee ' s Summit, Mo. John Hawley, Republican City, Neb. Lou Hammer, Kansas City, Mo. Bruce Henoch, Enterprise Roland Herd, Coldwater Bob Hill, Ottawa Hal Hinchee, Berghdz, Ohio Carl Hird, Lawrence Bill Hogan, Detroit, Mich. Don Johnson, Topeka Hugh Johnson, Bay City, Texas L Bob Karnes, Overbrook Bob Kline, St. Joseph, Mo. D. R. Lamkin, Lawrence Ed Lee, Louisburg Lynn Leigh, Burley, Idaho Guy Mabry, Rock Island, Ill. Bob Malott, Lawrence Duane McCarter, Kansas City, Mo. Charles Moffett, Peabody Dick Monroe, Tishmingo, Okla. Hal Moore, Lawrence R. D. Moore, Bellflower, Calif. Bob Morris, Washington, D. C. Lewis Musick, Redondo, Calif. Delvin Norris, Kansas City, Mo. Steve Renko, Kansas City, Mo. Warren Riegle, Chanute Leroy Robison, Lawrence Wally Rouse, Wichita Bill Sapp, Augusta Dave Schmidt, Milwaukee, Wis. Otto Schnellbacher, Lawrence Tom Scofield, Kansas City, Mo. Tom Scott, Shreveport, La. Neale Shaw, Galesburg Dick Shea, Sedalia, Mo. Gene Sherwood, Sublette Homer Sherwood, Arkansas City Marvin Small, Lawrence Bryan Sperry, Lawrence Ken Sperry, Lawrence Frank Stannard, Lawrence John Stites, Wichita Dexter Welton, Sterling, Ill. N. A. Zimmer, Stickney, S. Dak. FIRST ROW: Show, Zimmer, Musick, Sperry, Hinchee, Crowley, H. Sherwood, Hawley, Binter, G. Sherwood, Channel!, Gorman, Henoch. SECOND ROW: Wade, Sapp, Carson, England, Welton, Shea, Leigh, Elbel, Schnellbacher, Easton, Riegle, H. Moore, Rouse, Malott, H. Johnson, Eskridge, McCarter, THIRD ROW: Frisby, 0. Johnson, Monroe, Fischer, Doehring, Scofield, Kline, Renko, Stannard, Gilman, Mabry, Small, Lee, Barr, Danneberg, French, DeLuna, Schmidt, Conroy, Fink. FOURTH ROW: Hill, Herd, Griffith, Morris, H ' ird, Stites, Hammer, Collirs, Foster, Dickerson, Moffett, Bertuzzi, R. Moore, Sperry, Lamkin, Scott, Robison, Karnes, Hogan. K-Club, composed of men who have won letters in varsity ath- letics, was founded in 1889 at the University of Kansas. It was later reorganized in January, 1948. President, Otto Schnell- bacher; Vice-President, Lynn Leigh; Secretary, Hal Moore; Treasurer, Warren Riegle. HOLMAN, JEANNE NATHALIE, Leavenworth. Nursing; Alpha Delta Pi; Sigma Theta Tau; YWCA; Pre-Nursing Club. HYDE, BEVERLY JUNE, Courtland. Nursing; Pre-Nursing Club; Kappa Beta; Forum; Dean ' s Honor Roll. HYDE, SHIRLEY JEAN, Courtland. Nursing; Pre-Nursing Club; Kappa Beta; Forum. SCOTHORN, SARAH ANN, Watertown, South Dakota. Nursing; Sigma Kappa; Wesley Foundation; Sigma Theta Tau; Kappa Phi. SEVERSON, FAITH MARIE, Augusta. Nursing; Delta Gamma; W.A.A. SPICER, EVELYN LUCILLE, Hesston. Nursing; Alpha Chi Omega; Pre-Nursing Club; YWCA; Union Activities. J. FACULTY Prof. George W. Bradshaw Prof. William C. McNown James F. Aiken, Jr., Sunflower Robert F. Banker, Muskogee, Okla. Paul I. Banks, Honolulu, T. H. Elmer F. Bien, Sunflower John B. Black, Kansas City, Mo. James R. Bruce, Lawrence Noms Jack Burns, Lawrence Lowell C. Case, Independence Hubert M. Church, St. Joseph, Mo. Clare J. Colman, Lawrence Jack F. Daily, Pittsburg Martin J. Ellis, Wichita Lee E. Ettig, Cedar Vale William Paul Freeberg, Parsons Eldon C. Frye, Wichita Prof. Donald D. Haines Prof. J. 0. Jones COLLEGIATE Delton A. Gaede, Bazine Fred G. Gartung, Wichita William R. Gibbs, Lawrence Donlad L. Gray, Chanute William J. Hall, Lawrence Russell C. Hardy, Jr., Kansas City Howard H. Hobrock, Princeton Wiliam W. Holloway, Kansas City, Mo. ' Robert G. Hull, Kansas Ct, Mo. Jack M. Kendree, Hutchinson Phillip D. Lanyon, Sunflower Rodger D. Lee, Overland Park John L. Meyer, Shenandoah, Ia. John G. Montfort, Lawrence Mr. Clayton M. Crosier Mr. Robert W. Lamberton Sibio Naccarato, Columbus Charles A. Redman, Olathe Frank L. Rees, Topeka Frank J. Rozich, Kansas City Joseph C. Sciandrone, Kansas City, Mo. Lee A. Seybert, Dodge City Clyde A. Shockley, Kansas City, Mo. Forest J. Snyder, Belleville Paul W. Stark, Kansas City Oliver P. Sullens, Sunflower Arthur Toch, Lawrence Richard G. VanGundy, Moline Harry G. Wampler, Lawrence Forest H. Wells, Kansas City, Mo. FIRST ROW: Feltig, Hardy, McNown, Montfort, Brendshaw, Haines, Jones, Daily. SECOND ROW: Lanyon, Ellis, Banker, Meyer, Gartung, Gaede, Shockley, Hobrock, Sciandrone, Kendree THIRD ROW: Rees, Wells, Holloway, Bruce, Burris Toch Block Stark, Bien. FOURTH ROW: Naccarato VanGundy Frye, Rozich, Lee, Hall, Case, Gray, Hull. FIFTH ' ROW: Seybert, Redman, Church, Wampler, Freeburg, Snyder,Colmon, Banks, Gibbs, Sullens, Aiken. The Student Chapter of American Civil Engineers, a member of the national American Society of Civil Engineers, was established at K. U. in 1921. The national society was founded in 1848. President, John Montfort; Vice-President, Bill Gibbs, Treasurer, Jack Kendree; Correspond- ing Secretary, Frank Rozich; Record- ing Secretary, Jim Aiken. 66 THE JAYHAWKER First Row ADDINGTON, CLEO H., Elkhart. Political Science. ADELL LELAND J., Neodesha. Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi; ALDERMAN, ROSEMARY, Ottawa. Bacteriology; Secretary, Newman Club; Vice-President, Treasurer, Intramural Chairman, Templin Hall; Publicity Chairman, Bacteriology Club; Public Relations Chairman, Union Activities; Independent Student Association; Dean ' s Honor Roll. ALDERSON, ROBERT WILLIAM, Kansas City, Mo. Advertising; Sceretary, Alpha Delta Sigma; Advertising Manager, University Daily Kansan; Treasurer, Christian Science Organization. ALDERSON, VIRGIL RAY, Kansas City. Psychology. ALDRIDGE, ROBERT G., Kansas City, Mo. Business; S.A.M.; ness School Association; Am. Vets. Second Row ALEXANDER, THOMAS J., Kansas City. Political Science; Treasurer, Scabbard and Blade; Vice-President, Phi Kappa Sigma. ALLEN, RONALD, Hardner. Marketing; S.A.M.; Business School Association. ALIOTTI, ALDO G., Rome, Italy. Chemical Engineering; Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Beta Pi; Secretary, International Club; Forensic League; Debate Squad; A.I.Ch.E. AMEND, GLENN LEON, Cummings. Journalism; Alpha Delta Sigma. ANDERSON, HOMER B., Kansas City. Business; Inter-Varsity tian Fellowship. ANDERSON, JOAN, Emporia. Physical Education; Treasurer, Senior Class; Treasurer, W.A.A.; Union Activities; Student Council; Vice-President, A.W.S.; YWCA; Panhellenic League; President, Alpha Delta Pi. Third Row ANDERSON, RICHARD A., Kansas City, Mo. Fine Arts; Art Club; Track Team. ANDREWS, BOBBY BARCUS, Bethel. Medicine; Ku-Ku Club; Phi Beta Pi. ANGLE, ANN, Kansas City. History; Phi Alpha Theta; Alpha Chi Omega; Bitter Bird; YWCA; Chemistry Club; Sociology Club. APT, ELIZABETH LEE, Iola. Chemistry; Jay Janes; Chemistry Club; Assistant Social Chairman, Alpha Delta Pi. ARMSTRONG, WILLIAM FRANKLIN, JR., Kansas City, Mo. neering; President, Institute of Aeronautical Sciences. ARROWSMITH, MURRAY R., Belleville. Mining Engineering; dent, Delta Tau Delta; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; All-Student Council; Inter-Fraternity Council; President, A.I.M.E. Carolyn Carter and date make like Buck Rogers as Corrine Carter, A. D. Moore, Phyllis Buehler, and Bill Debus look on at the Gamma Phi spring party. 67 COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 First Row ARTMAN, JANET BARKER, Topeka. Spanish; Kappa Phi; Girls Glee Club. BACON, BETTY JUNE, Lakewood, Ohio. Advertising; Theta Sigma Phi; Rush Captain, Alpha Delta Pi; Kansan Board; W.A.A.; Advertising and Business Manager of Kansan; Pan-Hellenic. BAILEY, ROBERT L., Lawrence. Economics; Alpha Kappa Psi; ness School Association; Summerfield Scholar; Boynton nomics Scholarship. BANKS, PAUL IRVING, Honolulu, TH. Civil Engineering; ASCE; Tau Beta Pi; Varsity Swimming. BARNES, BOB FRANK, Wichita. Business; K-Club; Executive cil of Pachacamac; Rush Captain Sigma Phi Epsilon; dent, Junior Class. BARR, EUGENE EDGAR, El Dorado. Geology; K-Club; ing Council. Second Row BARROW, FRANCES WAYNE, Bendena. Education. BAUMER, BEVERLY BELLE, Hutchinson. Journalism; Press Club; Warden fo the purse, Quill Club; Society Editor, Women ' s mural, Daily Kansan. BAUMUNK, DONALD R., LaHarpe. Business Administration; Band; President and Vice-President, Alpha Kappa Psi; Committee Chairman, YMCA; Committee Chairman, State-wide Activities; Business School Association Council; Intramural sports; I.S.A.; Sports Editor, Kan-do. BAYLES, LEWIS ALLEN, Lawrence. Chemistry; Alpha Chi Sigma; Recording Secretary, Phi Kappa Psi; Men ' s Glee Club. BEACH, DOROTHY M., Claflin. Personnel Administration; Alpha Chi Omega; YWCA; French Club. BEAL, JACK LEWIS, Harper. Pharmacy; American Pharmaceutical Association; President, Kappa Psi; Secretary, Freshman YMCA. Third Row BEAL, ROBERT S., Great Bend. Marketing; Kappa Sigma; Business School Association. BEAMER, JOANNE, Kansas City, Missouri. English. BEARDMORE, MAURICE YOUNG, Mankato. Economics; Sigma Nu; Executive Committee, 1943; Intramural Athletics; •en ' s Fraternity Council, 1943. BEARLY, MARION FRANK, Parker. Mechanical Engineering; Pi Tau Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Intramural basketball and volley ball; A.S.M.E. BEASLEY, KENNETH E., Topeka. Political Science; Forensic League; Vice-President, Delta Sigma Rho; Varsity Debate, Forum Board. BECK, GEORGE WARREN, Hutchinson. Accounting; Vice- President and Scholastic Chairman, Delta Chi; Intramurals; History Committee of Senior Class. Giving out with the 1pana smiles at the Kappa Alpha Theta spring part are Jo Stevenson, John O ' Leary, Warren Bowman, and Joan Puckett. rib THE JAYHAWKER First Row BECK, KENNETH F., Wichita. Political Science; Senior Member Executive Council, Phi Delta Theta; Quill Club; Forensic League; UNESCO; NIUNA; President, International Relations Club. BEEN, STUART AUBREY, Shallow Water. Physics; I.S.A.; Amateur Radio Club. BEERY, DOROTHY JEANNE, Kansas City. History; Pi Lambda Theta; Historian, Phi Alpha Theta; Epistoleus, Alpha Kappa Alpha; YWCA; Secretary-Treasurer, Negro Students Association. BEERY, FLOYD T., Kansas City, Missouri. Chemical Ku Ku Club; A.I.Ch.E.; Vice-President of Alpha Chi Sigma. BEHLER, PATRICIA ALICE, Harrisonville, Missourii. Art; YWCA; University Art Club; N.O.W.; Pan-Hellenic Council, Union Activities; President, Rush Captain, Sigma Kappa; BELL, GEORGE R., Wichita, Political Science; Phi Gamma Delta; International Relations Club; YMCA; Young Republicans. Second Row BELLAMY, KENNETH L., Colby. Journalism; Alpha Delta Sigma; Secretary, Phi Kappa Psi. BELLAMY, PEGGY HOWARD, Colby. Geology; Gamma Phi Beta. BELT, JANET, Lawrence. English; Social Service Chairman and Study Plan Officer, Alpha Omicron Pi; President, Women ' s Rifle Club; Reporter, Spur Club; W.A.A.; Women ' s Glee Club; YWCA. BENNETT, SYD A., Huron, South Dakota. History; Band; Sigma Nu; Football, 1945; Track, 1945. BENSON, CHARLES A., Lawrence. Mechanical Engineering. BENSON, PAUL L., Lawrence. Commercial Art; Band; Orchestra; Art Club; YMCA. Third Row BENTON, CHARLES HERBERT, Kansas City, Missouri. Chemistry; Master of Ceremonies, Alpha Chi Sigma. BERGSTROM, JOHN FRANK, Lawrence. Advertising; Alpha Delta Sigma; Kansan Board; Business Manager Daily Kansan, Fall 1947. BERUBE, LEON WILLIAM, Wichita. Engineering Physcis. BETTS, PHYLLIS ELEANOR, Oberlin. Business; Vice-President, Phi Chi Theta; YWCA. BEYER, WILLIS ALVIN, Gridley. Mechanical Engineering; Pi Kappa Alpha. BIGGS, J. 0., Pittsburg. History; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Delta Phi. The families Sapp and Ettinger smile cozily from the back seat as Eddie Green and friends from Washburn in front seat make ready for an evening of socializin ' . COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 69 Third Row BOWMAN, WILLIAM G LENN, Kansas City. Medicine; Phi Chi. BRADNEY, JOSEPHINE ELIZABETH, Columbus. Political Science; YWCA. BRADY, JIM, Clyde, Missouri. Business; Inter-Fraternity Council; Newman Club; Business School Association; Intramural Basket- ball, Football, Baseball; Treasurer and President, Delta Chi. BRANUM, JACK S., Arkansas City. Public Administration. BRENNER, DOROTHY LOUISE, Olathe. Trumpet; Secretary and Historian, Mu Phi Epsilon; Band; Symphony Orchestra; I.S.A.; Methodist Church Choir. BREWER, ELWANDA LEONE, Hoisington. Music Education; A Cap- pella Choir; Girl ' s Glee Club; Mu Phi Epsilon. Sarah Underwood, Betsey Sheidley, and Elaine Elvig show off the Kappa key and their Phi Dolt dates at the Kappa Spring formal. First Row BINGHAM, RALPH M., Wichita. Business; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Alpha Kappa Psi. BLACK, ESTER F., Peru. Fine Arts; Delta Phi. Delta. BCCK, ROBERT LEROY, Macksville. Geography; Forensic League; Band; President, Independent Party; President, Young Demo- crats Club; Treasurer, International Relations Club; Treasurer, Owl Society; Corresponding Secretary, Delta Tau Delta; Na- tional Convention Delegate, A.V.C.; Sports Editor, Daily Kansan; Jayhawker; Intramurals. BOMHOLT, CARL M., Cheney. Business; Ku Ku Club; Secretary and Treasurer, Delta Tau Delta. BOOSI, JOHN V., Arkansas City. Chemical Engineering; A.I.Ch.E. BORENE, MORRIS EUGENE, Sabetha. Mechanical Engineering; Theta Tau; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; Vice-President, Engi- neering Council; Vice-President, Sigma Tau; A.S.M.E.; Associate Ed.tor, Kansas Engineer; Essistant Instructor-Mechanical Engi- neering. Second Row BOWER, JACK C., Norton. Pharmacy; Student Branch American Pharmaceutical Association; Regent 1942, Kappa Psi. BOWKER, JACK, McPherson. Law in College; Pi Alpha Delta. BOWMAN, JAMES LARRY, Stafford. Metallurgy for Engineering; Tau Kappa Epsilon; American Society of Mining and Metallurgi- cal Engineering; Navy ROTC. BOWMAN, JEANNE GORBUTT, Topeka. Commercial Art; Gamma Alpha Pi; Historian, Gamma Phi Beta; Secretary, Delta Phi Delta; President, Quack Club; Attendant to Queen of Kansas Relays, 1947; Hager Pottery Award; Jayhawker Staff; Student Union Activities; YWCA. BOWMAN, JOAN BRADLEY, Greensburg. Psychology; Psi Chi; YWCA; Registered Nurses Club; I.S.A. BOWMAN, WARREN M., Topeka. Speech; Historian and Social Chairman, Phi Gamma Delta; Men ' s Glee Club; Track; Radio Workshop; Joan of Lorraine. 70 THE JAYHAWKER BROWN, DORA ANN, Kansas City, Drawing and Painting. BROWN, DORIS, Kansas City. Bacteriology. Second Row BROWN, PATRICIA R., Coffeyville. Spanish; Delta Gamma; man Club; El Ateneo; Union Activities. BROWN, RUTH AILEEN, Sabetha. French; President, Corbin Hall; Secretary, French Club; ASC; AWS; Inter-Dorm Council; War Memorial Executive Committee. BRUBAKER, ALVIN G., Lawrence. Aeronautical Engineering; mural Manager, Theta Tau; Senior Representative, Engineering Council. BRUCE, JAMES ROLLIN, Pekin, Illinois. Civil Engineering tary Option); American Society of Civil Engineering. BUEHLER, ROBERT DIETZ, Seneca. College Law; Ku Ku Club; Phi Delta Phi; Student War Memorial Committee; Treasurer, Beta Theta Pi; Senior Manager, Kansas Relay Committee. BURCHAM, WILLIAM CHAILLE, Lawrence. General Business; Kappa Alpha; Society for the Advancement of Management. Third Row BURGERT, ALFRED L., Sterling. Finance; Business School ation; I.S.A.; Society for the Advancement of Management; ROTC. BURGERT, BETTY K., Jetmore. Home Economics; Home Economics Club; I.S.A.; YWCA. BURKEY, JORDAN W., Arkansas City. Medicine; Phi Chi. BURNAU, JOHN M., Kansas City. Music Education; Band; chestra. BURNETT, DONALD F., Lawrence. Mechanical Engineering; A.S. T.E.; A.S.M.E.; Sophomore Class Dance Manager. BURNETT, RALPH LEROY, Lawrence, Political Science. Their Majesties Sue Rose Mounce and Joy Godbehere, with their escorts Dean Jordon and Bob Brown start the grand march at the Army Navy Ball. First Row BRIDWELL, RUSSELL EUGENE, Topeka. Medicine; P.S.G.L. Chemistry Club; Librarian, Secretary and Chairman Phi Chi. BRILEY, BEVERLY BETZ, Asherville. Journalism; I.S.A.; President, Gamma Alpha Chi; Vice-President, Templin Hall; Circulation Manager, Daily Kansan; Statewide Activities. BRITTON, EMALOU, Columbus. Political Science; Mortar Board; Jay Janes; YWCA Cabinet; President, YWCA; President, ruth Hall; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Student Religious Council; Dorm Council. BROWN, DONALD L., Ottawa. Political Science; Phi Delta Theta. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1 948 71 First Row BURRIS, N. J., Lawrence. Civil Engineering; A.S.C.E. BURTSCHER, ROBERT NEAL, Hays. Business. BURT, WILLIAM W., Topeka. Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi; Business School Association; S.A.M.; Inter-Fraternity Council; Pachacamac; President, Comptroller, and Intramurals of Sigma Phi Epsilon. BUTTERFIELD, PEARCE ROBERT, Ogallala, Nebraska. Civil neering; A.S.C.E. BYERS, CHARLES A., Topeka. Music Education; Phi Mu Alpha; Secretary and Assistant Director of A Cappella Choir; Drum Major, Band; Chairman, Operetta Guild. BYERS, MARY JANE ZOLLINGER, Topeka. Voice; Jay Janes; dent Council; Operetta Guild; Vice-President, Sigma Alpha Iota; Treasurer of A Cappella Choir; Vice-President, Freshman Class. Second Row CABLE, MABLE ELLEN, Kansas City. Sociology; Pi Beta Phi; YWCA; Union Activities; University Players. CALDWELL, GEORGE HOWARD, Pittsburg. Political Science; All Student Council; Progressive Students Government League; Phi Beta Kappa; O.D.K.; The Dove; Summerfield Scholar; Pi Sigma Alpha; Western Civilization Proctor; Vice-President, All dent Council; President, Jayhawk Co-op; President, PSGL; man, Forums Board. CALVIN, ESTER MARIA, Pittsburg. Bacteriology; Kappa Phi; Jay Janes. CAMPBELL, CAROLYN ANN, Kansas City, Missouri. Art Education; Delta Phi Delta; President and Recording Secretary, Pi Beta Phi; President, Pi Lambda Theta; Treasurer, Jay Janes; Vice-President, Mortar Board; Student Union Executive Board; Education Honor Roll; YWCA; Jayhawker; Pan-Hellenic. CAMPBELL, GAYLORD L., Kansas City, Missouri. Geology; Kappa Sigma; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Geology Club. CAMPBELL, JOHN J., Kansas City, Missouri. Mechanical ing. Third Row CAMPBELL, ROBERT W., Wichita. Economics; Sachem; YMCA; I.S.A.; Student Council; President, P.S.G.L.; Summerfield ar; President, Jayhawk Co-op. CANFIELD, GERALD LEE, Belleville. Electrical Engineering. CANFIELD, RAYMOND MERRITT, Columbus. Business-Personnel. CANNON, WAYNE E., Chanute. Civil Engineering; A.S.C.E. CARLSON, EUNICE MARIE, Concordia. Psychology; Vice-President, Delta Delta Delta; Marshal; Sociology Club; Spur Club; tary Young Republicans. CARR, FRANCIS E., Wellington. Economics; Beta Theta Pi; YMCA; Jayhawker. The Phi Delts turn out en masse to listen to the Alpha Chi nade in the wee hours of the morning. (Bibler had the right idea.) 72 THE JAYH AWKER First Row CARRINGTON, GEORGE WILLARD, Coffeyville. Economics; Phi Kappa Psi. CASE, LOWELL CLYDE, Independence. Civil Engineering; Alpha Tau Omega; Tau Beta Pi; American Society of Civil Engineers; Engineering Council. CASEMENT, WILBUR EUGENE, Sedan. Accounting; Omicron Delta Kappa (Sachem); P.S.G.L.; Men ' s Glee Club; Treasurer of Independent Organization; Men ' s Activities Chairman, Inde- pendent Organization; President and Vice-President, Battenfeld Hall. CATLETT, GERALDINE L., Columbus. English; University Players; KFKU Radio Players; YWCA Cabinet. CHANDLER, ANDERSON W. Wichita. Finance; Delta Tau Delta; Alpha Phi Omega; Beta Gamma Sigma; Summerfield Scholar, Scabbard and Blade; Jayhawk Flying Club. CHANEY, BAILEY R., Iola. History; Council Member of Delta Upsilon; Delegate to Mock United Nations Conference. Second Row CHANNELL, WESLEY R., Kansas City. Education; Delta Chi Vice- President and Sergeant at arms; Phi Kappa Epsilon; Sasnak; Freshman Football; 3-Years Varsity Football; Freshman Basket- ball. CHAPPUIE, WILLIAM G., Independence. Medicine; Phi Chi; Presi- dent, Freshman Medical Class. CHESKY, DOLORES CUSTER, Wichita. Personnel Administration; House Manager and Activities Chairman, Alpha Delta Pi; Vice- President, Secretary and Treasurer, N.O.W.; ASC; Pan-Hellenic; Union Activities; Forensic League; YWCA. CHITTY, CHARLES EDWARD, Coronado, California. Civil Engineer- ing; A.S.C.E. CHOTEAU, CHARLES CYPRIAN, Nowata, Oklahoma. Mathematics. CHUBB, JULIA FRANCIS, Lawrence. Bacteriology; Pi Beta Phi; Vice- President, WAA; Dean ' s Honor Roll, 2 Years; I.M.; Chemistry Club; Bacteriology Club; Union Activities; Jayhawker; Rifle Club; Quack Club. Third Row CHURCH, HUBERT M., St. Joseph, Missouri. Civil Engineering; Vice-President, A.S.C.E.; Religious Council. CHURCHILL, DEWEY ROSS, JR., McPherson. Electrical Engineering. CHURCHILL, ELEANOR, Kansas City, Missouri. Social Work; Glee Club; Spur Club; Antomology; Pan-Hellenic; W.A.A.; A.W.S.; Rush Chairman- Social Chairman, Kappa Kappa Gamma. CLARK, CARL WILLIAM, Kansas City. Chemistry; Secretary and Historian, Phi. Delta Theta; Union Activities; Yucca-Yucca. CLARK, CLIFFORD D., Iola. Economics; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Busi- ness School Association; UNESCO. CLAYPOOL, BILL, Arkansas City. Language. Get in line fella ' s, it ' s another pinning. Iva Belle Flora looks starry- eyed as Pi Phi ' s Maryanne Gear, Lui Lambert, Margaret Granger, Joanne Hudson, Georgianne Eyler and Barbara Pack gather round for congratulations. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 73 First Row CLOSSER, ELTON JAMES, Kansas City, Missouri. Business Market- ing; Tau Kappa Epsilon; Pachacamac-Inner Circle. CLOTHIER, GRANT M., Sylvia. Education; A.V.C.; Phi Delta Kappa. COE, RYLAND E., Tarkio, Missorui. Zoology. COAN, CLARK, Barnes. Social Studies; I.S.A.; Phi Lambda Upsi- lon; Young Republican Club; Intra-murals; International Rela- tions Club; Pi Gamma Mu; YMCA. COLE, DON B., Lawrence. Journalism; Alpha Delta Sigma. COLEMAN, KATHERINE D., Richmond. Home Economics; Home Economics Club; Jay Janes; Band. COMSTOCK, JACK B., Hutchinson. General Business; Delta Up- silon; YMCA; Business Scohol Association; Intramurals; Union Activities. CONARD, VIRGINIA POWELL, Olathe. Personnel Management; Forensic League; Band; Union Activities; Alumni Secretary, House Manager of Miller. CONKLE, NORMA L., Osawatomie. Physical Therapy. COOK, PATRICIA, Sarasota, Florida. Social Work; Chi Omega; YWCA; Sociology Club; Intramurals; Psychology Club; Jay- hawker Staff. CORBER, BILLY G., Topeka. Aeronautical Engineering; Institute of Aeronautical Sciences. Second Row COLEMAN, RAYMOND J., Richmond. Marketing; Business School Association; S.A.M. COLES, HERBERT BROOKS, Muskogee, Oklahoma. Personn el Man- agement; Kappa Sigma; Delta Sigma Rho; Society for the Ad- vancement of Management; American Society of Tool Engineers; Forensic League; Business School Association; Debate Squad. COLLINS, CARL HAROLD, Kansas City, Missouri. Industrial Man- agement; Pi Kappa Alpha; S.A.M.; Pachacamac. COLLINS, WILLIAM D., Portland, Tennessee. Engineering Physics. COLMAN, CLARE J., Lawrence. Civil Engineering; Treasurer, ASCE. COMBS, ROBERT, Grandview, Misouri. Business; Vice-President, Sigma Nu; Alpha Kappa Psi; Business School Council; Business Manager of K Book; Vice-President of Business School Associ- ation. Third Row COMPTON, BETTY LOU, Topeka. Occupational Therapy; Treasurer, Delta Gamma; Palette editor of Delta Phi Delta. Jeanne Torchy Chambers holds fellow Kappas and their dates entranced with her singing at the Kappa spring party. 74 THE JAYHAWKER r First Row COUGIIENOUR, CHARLES MILTON, Wellsville. Sociology; Treas- urer, Sociology Club; Wesley Foundation Cabinet; Alpha Kappa Lambda; Men ' s Glee Club; AICE; Navy V-12. COUSINS, DON, Washington, D. C. Business; Social Chairman, Phi Delta Theta; President, Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Treasurer, Pi Tau Sigma; Sachem; Ku Ku Club; Student Council; Inter- national Relations Club; Baseball ' 44; Kansas Relays; ASME; Secretary Theta Tau; Symphony Orchestra; Intramurals; Student- Faculty Conference. COWELL, FORREST EDWIN, Topeka. Aeronautical Engineering; In- stitute of Aeronautical Sciences. COWLEY, DAVID Roos, Oberlin Park. Business; Treasurer, Pledge Trainer, Sigma Chi; Intramural Tennis. COWGILL, COURTNEY, San Francisco, California. Psychology; Pi Beta Phi; Spur Club; YWCA; Editor Y-KNOT; Zoology Club; Union Activities; Psychology Club. Cox, N. JEANNE, Hume, Mo. Home Economics. Second Row Cox, WALTER L., Parsons. Marketing; Business School Asociation; Society for Advancement of Management; Jayhawk Veterans. CRAIG, ETHELMAE, Joplin, Missouri. Spanish; Alpha Delta Pi; Phi Alpha; Spanish Club. CRAMER, NEAL P., Walsenburg, Colorado. Geology; Secretary, I.M. Manager, Beta Theta Pi. CRAWFORD, EARLE, T., Chanute. Accounting; Social Chairman, Phi Kappa Psi; Inter-Fraternity Council; President, Pachacamac; Associate Editor, Jayhawker. CREEL, BARBARA J., Hutchinson. Delta Gamma; YWCA. CREWS, JOHN R., Chemistry. Third Row CRIMMINS, HAROLD JOHN, Hanover. History. CROFF, ROZANNE M., Fresno, California. Sociology; Treasurer, Tau Sigma; Newman Club; Secretary, Theta Phi Alpha; Soci- ology Club; French Club; Pan-Hellenic Council. CROMLEY, ALLAN W., Minneapolis. Journalism; Vice-President, Sigma Delta Chi; Sachem; Owl Society; All-Student Conucil; Kansas Board; Treasurer, I.S.A.; President, P.S.G.L.; Editor-in- Chief, University Daily Kansan; Assistant Editor, Summer Session Kansan; Editorial Assistant, Jayhawker. CROWLEY, CHARLES W., Rockford, Illinois. Industrial Manage- ment; Ritualist, Lambda Chi Alpha; President, Alpha Phi Omega. CROWLEY, ELAINE CARLSON, Clay Center. Bacteriology; Bacteri- Virginia Gard, Rosemary Robison and friends enjoy an evening of ology Club. conversation—and refreshment—at the Skyline. CULBERTSON, RAY L., Topeka. Business. 75 COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1918 First Row CULHANE, DONALD E., Mitchell, South Dakota. Industrial agement; Phi Kappa; Alpha Phi Omega. CUMMINS, LEE R., Kansas City, Missouri. Art. CUNNINGHAM, JEAN DRYDEN, Belton, Missouri. Design; Art Club. CUNNINGHAM, LOUIS, Ness City. Music (Voice); Phi Mu Alpha; A Cappella Choir; Young Republicans. CURRAN, ROBERT JAMES, Pratt. Electrical Engineering; Rush Chairman, Vice-President, Delta Upsilon. CURRY, SAMUEL W., Golden City, Missouri. Pharmacy; Kap pa Psi. Second Row DAVIS, MARY Lou, Blue Mound. Personnel; Program Chairman, Phi Chi Theta; Devotional Chairman, Kappa Phi; Treasurer, Reporter, Historian, Watkins Hall; Business School Association; I.S.A.; U.N. Deelgate; YWCA; Band. DAVISON, ROBERT MACKEY, Chicago, Illinois. ing; Secretary, Pledge Trainer, Lambda Chi Alpha; N.R.O.T.C.; Student Union Business Committee; Business School Associaiton. DAWSON, SIDNEY LEE, JR., Kansas City, Missouri. Music tion; President, Kappa Alpha Psi; Choirister, Phi Mu Alpha; A Cappella Choir. DEARMOND, BETTY, Kansas City, Missouri, Psychology; Alpha Chi Omega. DEAY, MARY LOu, Lawrence. English; President, Delta Secretary, Drama Work Shop; A Cappella; Girl ' s Glee Club. DAILY, JACK F., Pittsburg. Civil Engineering; Corresponding retary, ASCE; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Professional Member of American Meteorological Society; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Senior Honors; Chairman of the Exposition Committee for Civil neering Department. DANEKE, FRED M., Topeka. Mechanical Engineering, Industrial Management; Kappa Sigma; S.A.M.; Business School Association. DANNEBERG, KENNETH IRWIN, Kansas City, Missouri. Business Industrial Management; Secretary, Rush Chairman of Phi Delta Theta; S.A.M.; Football and Track Letters; Student Council; Student Union. DAUGHERTY, WILLIAM N., Pittsburg. Zoology; Rush Captain, Executive Committee, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Nu Chi; Senior Intramural Manager of 1948. DAVID, VIRGINIA, Cherryville. Sociology; Sociology Club; man Club; ESA.; Scholarship Chairman, Miller Hall. DAVIS, HARRY WILLIAM, JR., Hutchinson. Finance; Phi Delta Theta; Business School Association; Society for the ment of Management. Third Row DAVIS, LETHA MARCILE, Clay Center. Psychology; Psi Chi. Betty Preble casts a coy look at the photographer during the Delta Tau Costume Party. 76 THE JAYHAWKER First Row DEHAAN, BYRON, La Grange, Illinois. Business; Sachem; Business School Association; Alpha Kappa Psi; Society for the Advance- ment of Management; Bitter Bird; K-Union; Jayhawker; Men ' s Glee Club; Intramurals. DELLINGER, ROBERT E., Arkansas City. Journalism; Sigma Delta Chi; Sports Editor, Kansan; Intramural Basketball; Press Club. DELONGY, HAROLD R., Parsons. Business; K-Club; Intramural Manager, Sigma Nu. DEVAULT EVERETT NEWTON, Spring Hill. Industrial Manage- ment; Delta Sigma Tau; Society for Advancement of Manage- ment. DEXTER, JOAN J., Kansas City, Missouri. Bacteriology; President, Sleepy Hollow; Bacteriology Club. DICK, GERALD T., Perry. Business; SAM; Ku Ku. Second Row DIETZEL, HELEN MARIE, Kansas City, Missouri. Fine Arts; Rush Captain, Social Chairman, Secretary, Delta Delta Delta; Secretary, Delta Phi Delta. DILLE, NANCY JOHANNA, Kansas City, Missouri. Spanish; His- torian, Alpha Omicron Pi; Spanish Club; French Club; Student Counselor; Dean ' s Honor Roll. DILLON, CHARLES ANTHONY, Kansas City, Missouri. Personnel Administration; President, Alpha Kappa Lambda; Secretary, Alpha Kappa Psi; President, Student Religious Council; Inter- Fraternity Council; President, Roger Williams Foundation; Busi- ness School Association. DITZLER, JACK E., Kansas City, Missouri. Business. DIXON, JOHN T., Kansas Missouri. Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi. DOCKING, ROBERT B., Lawrence. Finance; Beta Theta Pi; Delta Sigma Pi. Third Row DODSON, WILLIAM W., Great Bend. Medicine in College; Phi Beta Pi. DOLCH, HOWARD HENRY, JR., Fowler, Indiana. Business Admini- stration; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Naval ROTC; Business School Association. DORGE, DONALD H., Chicago, Illinois. Economics; Society for the Advancement of Management; Intramurals. DOUGHTY, CLYDE C., Hutchinson. Physiology; Phi Beta Pi. DOUGHERTY, WARREN ROBERT, Plainville. Business; Sigma Nu; Inter-Fraternity Council; Modern Choir. DOVE, DEVERNE, Holton. Business. Odd Williams does pull ups on the bulging biceps of Bill Nature Boy Sharp at the Gamma Phi costume party. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 77 First Row DREIZLER, ROBERT B., Frandfurt, New York. Industrial ment; Society for the Advancement of Management; A.I.E.E. DREWBAUGH, DONALD W., Des Moines, Iowa. Physics. DUDLEY, RUTH JOAN, Iola. Voice; Mu Phi Epsilon; Symphony; I.S.A.; A Cappella Choir. DUELL, ARTHUR L., Ruleton. Zoology; Entomology Club. DYCHE, DON L., Kansas City, Missouri. Psychology; Phi. Beta Pi. EASH, DALTON, Wichita. Chemical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; President, Sigma Tau; Ku Ku; A.I.Ch.E.; I.S.A. Second Row ENBERG, ELINOR MARIE SORENZA, McPherson. Business Secre- tarial Training; Business School Association; Inter-Varsity Chris- tian Fellowship. ENGLUND, ARNOLD, JR., Salina. Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi; Phi Mu Alpha; President KU Band; President, Battenfeld; Busi- ness Manager, Dove; Business Manager, The Mikado ; Treas- urer, ASC; A Cappella Choir; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Battenfeld Scholarship Award; Symphony Orchestra; Business Association Council; Independent Men ' s Party; Owl Society; Sachem; War Memorial Student Committee; ISA. ENSCH, PAUL CHARLES, St. Paul. Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi. ENSIGN, POLLYANNA 0., Lawrence. Pharmacy; Kappa Epsilon; American Pharmaceutical Association, Student Branch. EASTER, MARY Jo, Abilene. Sociology; Independent Women ' s Senate; A.W.S.; Secretary, Sociology Club; Kappa Phi; Chair- man, Alumni Secretary, Miller Hall. EBERHARDT, MARGARET KATHERINE, Salina. Personnel Admini- stration; Associated Women Students; YWCA; Executive Bo ard, State Wide Activities; Mortar Board; Vice-President, Kappa Alpha Theta; Senate and House, A.W.S. EDMISTON, DORIS, Lawrence. English; Quill Club; Rifle Club. EDWARDS, EARL ARTHUR, Salina. Bacteriology. EITZEN, ELOISE M., Hillsboro. Bacteriology; Bacteriology Club; A Cappella Choir. ELBEL, ROBERT EDWIN, Lawrence. Entomology; Secretary, Delta Tau Delta; Phi Sigma; Entomology Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Secretary, American Society of Civil Engineers. Third Row ELLIOTT, RICHARD E., Independence. Chemistry; Alpha Chi Sigma. ELLIS, JOHN PIERCE, Springfield, Missouri. Electrical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; Secretary, A.S.T.E.; A.I.E.E. Looks like everyone ' s having a bang up time in this shot of the Templin Hall Spring Formal. THE JAYHAWKER 78 First Row ESMOND, BARBARA, Springfield, Illinois. Occupational Therapy; O.T. Club. ESTRADA, FRANK, Eudora. Romance Lacnguages. EVANS, ELIZABETH, Winfield. Psychology; Mortar Board ; Psi Chi; A Cappella Choir; Dramatic Workshop; President of the Junior Class; Vice-President, A.W.S.; Presiding Officer of the House of Representatives of A.W.S.; President, United Women ' s Council; President, Gamma Phi. Beta; YWCA Cabinet; Executive Board, N.O.W.; Executive Board, State-Wide Activities. EVANS, WILLIAM R., Great Bend. Bacteriology. EWING, BARBARA JEANNE, Lawrence. Physical Therapy; Ameri- can Physio-Therapy; Physical Therapy Club; American Registry of Therapists; Staff Member, University Daily Kansan. FANESTIL, DONALD E., Emporia, Business; Alpha Kappa Psi. Second Row FAUROT, ISOBEL CORDELIA, Arkansas City. Psychology; Chi O- mega; Jayhawker; YWCA. FELDKAMP, DOROTHY LOUISE, Kansas City. Drawing and Paint- ing; Secretary, Gamma Phi Beta; Delta Phi Delta; YWCA; New- man Club; Union Activities; Rifle Club; Intramurals. FELLERS, DILVER W., Mullinville. Economics; Pi Kappa Alpha. FENTON, W. ELAINE, Fairview. Personnel in School of Business; Secretary, Phi Chi Theta. FERGUSON, DON E., McPherson. Business; Treasurer, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Christian Science Group; Business School Association. FERGUSON, DOUGLAS EUGENE, Kansas City, Missouri. Electrical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; A.I.E.E. Third Row FISCHER, BARTON LEE, Lawrence. Medicine; Delta Tau Delta; Nu Sigma Nu. FISCHER, JEANNE L., Hoquiam, Washington. Physical Therapy; A.W.S.; Physical Therapy Club. FISHER, RICHARD WAYNE, Parsons. Accounting; Beta Gamma Sigma. FITZGERALD, ALICE A., Atchison. Geology; Secretary-Treasurer, Geology Club; I.S.A.; YWCA. FLEENOR, PHILLIP EUGENE, Coldwater. Mathematics. FLORY, MARTIN, Lone Star, Mechanical Engineering; A.E.M.E. T t The Delta Chi ' s get set for the last serve in the game with the Phi Delts which won for them the vollyball championship. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 79 First Row FORD, GEORGE HENRY, Kansas City. Psychology. FORD, JOHN J., Lawrence. Marketing. FORDENWALT, BETTY J., Kansas City, ' Missouri. Home Economics; Home Economics Club. FOSTER, HERBERT RUST, Topeka. Architectural Engineering; Kappa Sigma; Treasurer, Sigma Tau; Tau Beta Pi; Vice-President, Scarab; K-Club; N.R.O.T.C.; Engineering Council. FOSTER, WALLACE B., Hutchinson. History; Rush Captain, Social Chairman, Kappa Sigma; Delta Sigma Rho; Pi Kappa Delta; Owl Society; President, Forensic League; President, Pachacamac; International Relations Club; Debate Team. FOWLER, JOHN RUSSELL, Ottawa, Aeronautical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Institute of Aeronautical Sciences. Second Row Fox, JULIA E., Lawrence. Physical Education; Jay Janes; AWS. FRACK, IMOGENE J., Ingalls. English Education; Theta Phi Alpha; Newman Club; University Players; W.A.A.; Quill Club. FRANCISCO, JEAN, Kansas City. Political Science; Kappa Alpha Theta; Cabinet, YWCA; Treasurer, Young Republican ' s Club; French Club; Inter-National Club. FRANZKE, ALICE W., Topeka. Psychology. Kappa Alpha Theta; Psi Chi. FREEMAN, FRANKIE SUE, St. Joseph, Missouri. Pharmacy; Kappa Epsilon. FRETWELL, PHYLLIS JOAN, Pittsburg, Voice; Chi Omega; Sigma Alpha Iota; A Cappella Choir; Tau Sigma; Modern Choir; Dramatic Club; YWCA. Third Row FRY, JEAN LOUISE, Kansas City. History; YWCA; ISA. FULLER, PATRICIA GRAHAM, Winfield. Political Science; Treas- urer, Mortar Board; President, Vice-President, Inter-Dorm Coun- cil; President, Foster Hall; President, Carruth Hall; Vice-Presi- dent, Freshman Class; Vice-President, ISA; Vice-President, Treas- urer, YWCA; All-Student Council; Chairman, Americans Unit- ed; Homecoming Committee; W.A.A.; Dramatic Workshop; Executive Board, Statewide Activities; Dean ' s Honor Roll. FUNGAROLI, GLORIA B., Northampton, Massachusetts. Physical Therapy; Physical Therapy Club. FURNISH, MARGARET, Dodge City. Psychology; Secretary, General Sematics; University Players; Midsummer Nights Dream . GAEDE, DELTON A., Bazine. Civil Engineering; A.S.C.E.; N.R.O. T.C.; Intramurals. GANSSLE, MARGARET ANN, Salina. Occupational Therapy; Vice- President, Occupational Therapy Club; Linnean Club; Delta Phi Delta; The Swordsmen. Pat Zachman, Cathy McBride and their dates take a breather dur- ing the Theta spring party. T 30 THE JAYHAWKER First Row GARDNER, JOAN, Winfield. Painting and Drawing; YWCA; Universtiy Art Club; Historian, Pi Beta Phi; Union Activities. GARDNER, MAR JORIE MAYBIN, Arkansas City. English; YWCA; Corresponding Secretary, Alpha Chi Omega. GARRISON, WALTER RAYMOND, St. Louis, Missouri. Aeronautical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Institute of Aeronautical Sciences. GARTON, MARY L., Chanute. Bacteriology; Study Plan Chairman, Alpha Omicron Pi; Kappa Beta; Secretary-Treasurer Spur Club; Rifle Club; Bacteriology Club. GASS, BROOKS CARNEY, Lawrence. Law in College; Phi Delta Phi. GEPPELT, WILMA JEAN, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Home Economics; Home Economics Club; Program Chairman, Kappa Phi. Second Row GERHARTER, EARL NV., St. Joseph, Missouri. Architectural Engi- neering. GETZ, GEORGE R., Kansas City, Missouri. Business; Tri Chi; Vice-President, Jayhawk Archery Club; YMCA. GEYER, C. MAC, Topeka, Medicine; Phi Delta Theta; Treasurer, Nu Sigma Nu. GIBSON, BARBARA JEANNE, Topeka. Psycho logy; Psi Chi. GIBSON, LOIS MARIE, Quinter. Music Education; Band: Orchestra; A Cappella Choir; I.S.A.; President, Sophomore Class. GIBSON, MARTHA ANN, Great Bend. Psychology; Alpha Omicron Pi. Third Row GIBSON, ROBERT D., Lawrence. Pharmacy; Sigma Epsilon; Vice- Regent, Kappa Psi; American Phamaceutical Association. GIBSON, HUGH W., Wichita. Sociology; Cabinet, YMCA; Cabinet, Sociology Club; Cabinet, Wesley Foundation; Student Cahir- man, Christian Mission Fellowship; Proctor, Spooner Thayer Dormitory. GLOVER, PATRICIA ANN, Newton. Geology; Key Correspondent, Registrar, Kappa Kappa Gamma; YWCA; Union Activities; Jayhawker Staff; Spanish Club; Geology Club; Quill Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll. GOBLE, CECIL RAYMOND, Lawrence. Zoology. GODBEHERE, JOY, Kansas City, Missouri. Speech and Drama; Jay- hawker; Cabinet, YWCA; Forensic League; Christian Science Organization; House Manager, Pi Beta Phi; Dramatic Work- shop; Homecoming Queen; Trojan Women ; Navy Queen; Radio Players; Senior Class Committee. GOERING, NANCY JANE, Newton. Personnel Administration; Presi- dent, Librarian, House President, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Statewide Activities Correspondent; Statewide Ac- tivities Executive Board; Jayhawker Staff; Union Activities; YWCA; Advertising Manager, Student Directory; Dramatics Work Shop; Univeristy Players; International Relations Club. Patty Cook, Ethel Pearson, Charlie Moffett, Mary Jane Horton, Marilyn Steinert, and some unidentified aborigines at the Delta Tau costume party. 81 COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 First Row GOERTZ, RICHARD J., Moundridge. Chemistry; Recorder, Alpha Chi Sigma. GOERTZEN, DARLOW ISAAC, Hutchinson English; YMCA. GOLDSWORTHY, ALICE M., Minneapolis, Minnesota. Personnel Administration; Delta Gamma; Secretary, President, N.O.W.; Union Activities; YWCA; Jayhawker Staff; Senior Class Gift Committee. GOODRICH, MARTHA L., Topeka. Psychology; W.A.A.; Bit and Spur; YWCA; Glee Club; Pledge Captain, Kappa Kappa Gamma. GRADY, LLOYD, Altamont. Social Science; Secretary, Alpha Kappa Lambda; Baptist Youth Fellowship. GRANGER, RUTH, Emporia. Sociology; Censor, House Manager, Pledge Trainer, Pi Beta Phi; W.A.A.; Rifle Club; YWCA; Jayhawker; Sociology Club; Intramurals. Second Row GRANT, ERVIN EUGENE, El Dorado. English, Pre-Law; University Players; Announcements Committee, Student Union Activities. GRAVES, MARY ELIZABETH, Dighton. Occupational Therapy; Kap- pa Phi; Treasurer, Occupational Therapy Club. GREEN, BETTY ZELL, Hutchinson. Secretarial Training; Phi Chi Theta; ISA; YWCA; Business School Association; Treasurer, Kappa Beta. GREEN, CHARLES H., Pittsburg. Mechanical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; Instructor, Mechanical Engineering. GREEN, HAROLD L., Kansas City. Zoology. GREEN, NINA LOUISE, Kansas City, Miissouri. Psychology; YWCA; Tau Sigma; Chairman, Union Activities Carnival 1947; Jay- hawker Office Staff; Homecoming Queen 1946; Miss Student Union 1948; Secretary, Kappa Kappa Gamma. Third Row GREENE, CURVIN H., Kansas City, Missouri. Business; President, Business School Association; Vice-President, Alpha Kappa Psi; I.S.A.; YMCA; Freshman Basketball; Business School Council; UNESCO Representative; A.V.C.; Society for Advancement of Management. GREGG, TOM, Los Angeles, California. Political Science; Chaplain, House Manager, Tau Kappa Epsilon; YMCA; Union Activities; Intramurals. GRIGSBY, SHIRLEY ANN, Kansas City, Missouri. Psychology; Presi- dent, Rush Captain, House Manager, Delta Delta Delta; Psi Chi; Sociology Club; Pan-Hellenic. GRIMES, OLIVE JEAN, Kansas City. Sociology; Song Leader, Sigma Kappa; YWCA; A Cappella Choir; Sociology Club; Union Activities. GRINDLE, ELLEN MARIE, Wellington. Dietetics; Home Economics Club. GRIST, NAOMI JUNE POND, El Dorado. Sociology; Sociology Club. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stryker pause for a chat at the Gamma Phi spring party. 82 THE JAYHAWKER First Row GROVES, WESLEY M., Edwardsville. Chemistry. Dean of Pledges, Alpha Kappa Psi; Chemistry Club. GRUENTHAL, MARGARET ALBERTA, Glasco. Zoology; Secretary, Treasurer, Snow Zoology Club; Secretary-Treasurer, Religious Council; Dean ' s Honor Roll. GUENTHER, SHIRLEY L., Kansas City, Missouri Journalism; Sigma Kappa; Editor of Union Doin ' s GUINO TTE, JAMES E., Kansas City, Missouri. Geology; dent, Phi Kappa Psi; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Geology Club; Intramurals; Newman Club. GULAIAN, VARTAN ASTAUR, Kansas City, Missouri. Mechanical Engineering; American Society of Mechanical Engineers; No Bridge Club. GUNSOLLY, MAXINE ALLEN, Emporia. Phyiscal Educaiton; Kappa Kappa Gamma; President, W.A.A.; Secretary-Treasurer, dent, Women ' s Pan Hellenic Council; Intramural Board; hawker Staff; Kansan Staff; YWCA; A.W.S. House of sentatives; President ' s Council; Spur Club; Rifle Club. Second Row HAAS, ALEX, Independence. Marketing; Alpha Tau Omega; ness School Association; Pachacamac; S.A.M.; Young cans Club, Intramurals. HAAS, JOSEPHINE S., Independence. Psychology; K.U. Dames; Home Economics Club. HADLEY, FRANCIS, Topeka. Business; Librarian, Historian, Sigma Kappa; Phi Chi Theta; YWCA; Secretary-Treasurer, Student Religious Council; Glee Club; Union Activities; Fireside Forum. HADLEY, STEPHEN DANIELS, Kansas City, Missouri. Mechanical Engineering; Men ' s Glee Club; Vice-Chairman, American Society of Mechancial Engineers; Alpha Phi Omega; Track Squad 1948. HAHN, J. GLENN, Norwich. A ccounting; Beta Gamma Sigma; Vice-President, Alpha Kappa Lambda; Pershing Rifles; Business School Association; El Ateneo. HALE, ARLEF,N LORRAINE, English. Third Row HALL, WILLIAM JOEL, Lawrence. Civil Engineering; dent, A.S.C.E.; Vice-President, Tau Beta Pi. HAM, CHARLES W., Burbank, California. Pharmacy; Kappa Psi Alpha. HAMILTON, ROBERT JERALD, Wichita. Organ; Phi Mu. Alpha; Omicron Delta Kappa; Phi Kappa Lambda; Summerfield ar. HAMILTON, THELMA GARNER, Kansas City, Missouri. Music cation; Treasurer, Alpha Kappa Alpha; YWCA; University Women ' s Glee Club. HAMMER, LORRAINE ESTELLA, Claflin. Home Economics; Omi- cron Nu; M ortar Board; Publicity Chairman, President. I.S.A.; Inter-Dorm Council; Student Council; Jay Janes; Pre-Nursing Club; President, Home Economics Club. HANSEN, EDWARD PHILLIP, Little Rock, Arkansas. Mechanical Engineering; President, Theta Tau; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Pi Tau Sigma; Secretary, A.S.M.E.; Mechanical Representative on Engineering Council. Charlie Gunn chin swith Dick Hawkinson as Elizabeth Sifers and Eloise Barbee look on at the Kappa Spring Formal. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1 9 4 8 83 First Row HANSON, NORMAN, Lawrence. Busi ness; Alpha Kappa Psi; Alpha Phi Omega. HARBAUGH, JOHN W., Hudson, Ohio. Geology; Sigma Xi; Gamma Epsilon; Don Henry Co-op, Social Chairman. HARKNESS, CHARLES A., III, Greenleaf. Social Science; Phi Delta Kappa; Battenfeld Scholar. HARKRADER, HELEN LOUISE, Pratt. Sociology; Gamma Phi Beta; Sociology Club; Intramurals; Student State-Wide Activities; A Cappella Choir. HARLOW, LUCILLE IRENE, Bonner Springs. Psychology; Univer- sity Players; Intramurals. HARMAN, AUSTIN EDWARD, Lawrence. Commercial Art; Presi- dent, Vice-President, Treasurer, Delta Phi Delta; University Art Club; I.S.A.; P.S.G.L.; Cabinet, YMCA; Bitter Bird Staff; Kansas Engineer Staff; Social Chairman, Battenfeld; Y-Knot Editor. Second Row HARMAN, DAVID M., Kansas City. Psychology. HARMON, THELMA, Kansas City. Zoology. HARRIS, ANETTE DETAR, Joplin, Missouri. Bacteriology. HARRIS, LAVERLA DELL, Concordia. Spanish; Vice-President, El Ateneo; Secretary, Pi Sigma Alpha; President, Sleepy Hollow. HARRIS, ROBERT HALL, Glen Ellyn, Illinois. Mechanical Engi- neering; Pershing Rifles; A.S.M.E.; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma. HARRISON, VAN DEE, Kansas City, Missouri. Chemical Engineer- ing; Corresponding Secretary, Triangle; Inter-Fraternity Council; American Institute of Chemical Engineers. Third Row HARTER, DOROTHY LEE, Caldwell. Education; Inter-Dorm Council; HARVEY, HAROLD A., Ft. Collins, Colorado. Dramatics; Univer- sity Players; Dramatics Workshop; Owl Society; Harvey . HASTINGS, HELEN, Lexington, Illinois. Voice; Treasurer, Sigma Alpha Iota; A Cappella Choir; Secretary, I.S.A. HAUSE, DWIGHT HUNTER, Kansas City, Missouri. Psychology; Alpha Kappa Lambda; YMCA. HAWKINSON, LAWRENCE B., Kansas City, Missouri. Accounting; President, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Business School Association. HAWKINSON, RICHARD SCOTT, Kansas City, Missouri. Political Science; Vice-President, Phi Delta Theta; Omicron Delta Kappa; President Inter-Fraternity Council; President, Owl Society; Presi- dent International Relations Club; Chairman, Student United Nations Conference; Chairman Student Faculty Conference; Chairman, Homecoming House Decorations; Chairman, 1947 Inter-Fraternity Ball; Chairman Coffees and Forums, Union Activities; Jayhawker Feature Writer; Executive Committee, Pachacamac; New Student Councilor; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Chair- man Alumni Relations, 1948 Senior Class. Jo Stevenson and John O ' Leary, Bob Bunten and Mary Jane Merri- man seem carried away by the music but Yogi Williams takes time out to watch the birdy during the Theta spring party. .1 84 THE JAYHAWKER First Row HAWLEY, JOHN W., Republican City, Nebraska. Aeronautical Engineering; Intramural Manager, Freshman Trainer, President, Phi Delta Theta; K-Club; International Relations Club; I.A.S.; A.SM.E.; Varsity Track. HAWMAN, RUTH ANN, St. Joseph, Missouri. English. HAWVER, VERNON E., Kansas City. Physical Education; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Sasnaks; Phi Epsilon Kappa; Intramurals. HAYNES, MARION C., Lawrence. Business; Pachacamac; All Student Council; Phi Delta Theta; Business School Association. HAYNES, FORREST M., Chillicothe, Missouri. Electrical ing; Kappa Eta Kappa; A.I.E.E. HEARIN, JOSEPH N., Eudora. Business; Kappa Sigma. Second Row HEDRICK, CLAY A., JR., Newton. History; Rush Chairman, mural Manager, Phi Delta Theta; Senior Committee; murals. HEIL, SARAH JANE, Topeka. Speech and Dramatics; Rush man, Treasurer, House Manager, Gamma Phi Beta; Jayhawker Office; Union Activities; University Players; Intramurals; YWCA. HEINRICH, CLARENCE, Buhler. Accounting; Men ' s Glee Club; Business School Association. HELENTHAL, JESSIE LEE, St. Joseph, Missouri. Sociology; ology Club. HENSLEY, THOMAS RICHARD, JR., Wichita. Civil Engineering; Sigma Phi Epsilon; American Society of Civil Engineering. HESSENFLOW, WILLIAM L., Olathe. Mathematics in Education; Phi Delta Kappa; Math Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll. A Third Row HESSLING, KATHRYN LEE, Kansas City, Missouri. Home nomics; Home Economics Club; Home Economics Council; Sigma Kappa. HEUER, LON S., St. Louis, Missouri. Architectural Engineering; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Scarab; Winner of Homecoming ations Contest. HIBBS, RUTH HELEN, Carthage, Missouri. Secretarial Training; Phi Chi Theta; Women ' s Glee Club; Vice-President, Scholarship Chairman, Locksley Hall. HICKOK, THEO:ORE VIRGIL, Wichita. Civil Engineernig; A.S.C.E. HIESTERMAN, HERMAN WILLIAM, Palmer. Medicine; Secretary Nu Sigma Nu,. HIGGINEOTTOM, LORITA MAE, Winfield. Art Education; Delta Phi Delta; Pi Lambda Theta; Secretary, Delta Gamma; sity Art Club; YWCA; Vice-President, Scholarship Chairman, Templin. Is there a doctor in the house? The scene of this gay tragedy is the Sigma Kappa costume party. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 85 First Row HILL, HOWARD M., Kansas City. English. HILTS, BETTY ANN, Kansas City, Miissouri. Drama; Delta Delta Delta; National Collegiate Players; University Players; Radio Workshop; Newman Club. HIPPLE, KEMPER E., Hutchinson. Industrial Management; Society for the Advancement of Management. HIRD, CARL, JR., Lawrence. Industrial Management; K-Club; Business School Association; Varsity Football. HISCOX, ADRIENNE MEANS, San Mateo, California. Chemistry; Treasurer, Pi Beta Phi; Iota Sigma Pi; President, Chemistry Club; Chairman, Senior Class Ring Committee; Chemistry Club; Spanish Club; Union Activities; W.A.A.; Dean ' s Honor Roll. HIXON, DEAN FRANKLIN, Fredonia. Marketing and Business ministration; Society for the Advancement of Management. Second Row HOBBS, ALICE MARILYN, Topeka. Economics; President, Rush Captain, Sigma Kappa; Modern Choir; Pan-Hellenic Council; Psychology Club; Coffee and Forums, Union Activities; YWCA. HOGAN, MARTHA BELLE, Rock Springs, Wyoming. Art; Sigma Kappa; Glee Club; Modern Choir; YWCA; Spanish Club. HOKE, ROBERT WARREN, JR., East Orange, N. J. Mechanical Engineering; Society for the Advancement of Management; Intra- murals. HOLDEN, BONNIE JEAN, Pittsburg. Bacteriology; President, Chi Omega; Secretary, Jayhawker; President, N.O.W.; Bacteriology Club; Intramurals; YWCA; Jay Janes; State-wide Activities; Editor of KU Calendar. HOLLAND, SHERYL LAYNE, Kansas City, Missouri. Biochemistry; Chemistry Club; YWCA; I.S.A.; Associated Women ' s Students, House of Representatives; Independent Women ' s Political Party; President ' s Council; President, Independent Women ' s Political Senate; Secretary, I.W.S.; Blueprinting Tomorrow , Confer- ence Committee ' . HOLLINGSWORTH, JACK, South Haven. Engineering Physics; Treasurer, Sachem; Tau Beta Pi; Owl Society; President, Wesley Foundation; Vice-President, Treasurer, Kappa Eta Kappa; Secre- tary, A.I.E.E. Third Row HOLLIS, WILLIAM J., Fredonia. Business; Kappa Sigma; Beta Gamma Sigma. HOLZLE, HARRY R., Topeka. Civil Engineering; Triangle; A.S.G.E. HOOVER, DOROTHY LEE, Smith Center. Sociology; Secretary, YWCA; I.S.A.; Union Activities; Sociology Club. HOSLER, WILDA J., Ottawa. Occuptaional Therapy; Delta Phi Delta; President, Occupational Therapy Club; Jay Janes. HOSMAN, JAMES H., Kansas City, Missouri. Aeronautical Engi- neering; I.A.S. HOWARD, Ross H., Coffeyville. Business; Business School Associ- ation; Dean ' s Honor Roll. Well shut my mouth if it isn ' t the Duke himself! Marion Rippeteau and Carolyn Coleman in the foreground listen to music in the Elling- ton style at the Triad Formal. 86 THE JAYHAWKER First Row HOWLAND, WILLARD J., Lawrence. Medicine; Nu Sigma Nu. HUBBARD, HAROLD M., Beloit. Chemistry; Vice-President, Chap- ter Editor, Scholarship Chairman, Delta Upsilon; Alpha Chi Sigma; Band; Student Union Activities; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Chemistry Club. HULINGS, NANCY MILDRED, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Occupational Therapy; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Chairman, Forums Board; Delta Phi Delta; Occupational Therapy Club; YWCA. HUMPHREY, DONALD G., Pratt. Drawing and Painting; Delta Phi Delta. HUNTER, HARRY H., Attica. Business; Beta Theta Pi; Varsity Dance Manager; Jayhawker Staff. HUTCHINSON, MARTHA FAY, Maryville, Missouri. Psychology; A.W.S. House of Representatives; Glee Club. Second Row HUXTABLE, MELVIN JAMES, JR., Kansas City, Missouri. Mechan- ical Engineering; Delta Chi. ISKE, GLADYS FAY, King City. Secretarial Training. JACK, NANCY C., Mission. Journalism; Intramurals; W.A.A.; University Daily Kansan Staff; Unitarian Club. JACKSON, WILLIAM EDWARD, Kansas City, Missouri. Music Edu- cation; Kappa Alpha Psi; Phi Mu Alpha; Orchestra. JACOBUS, ROBERTA JOY, Wichita. Mathematics; Student Religious Council; Mathematics Club; President, Thet a Epsilon; YWCA. JAMES, CARL, Elk City. Business; Society for the Advancement of Management. Third Row JAMES, DUANE ALLEN, Independence. Industrial Management; Head Master, Delta Sigma Pi; Society for the Advancement of Management; YMCA; Sematics Club. JAMES, ROGER F., Lawrence. Journalism; Grand Master of Cere- monies, Kappa Sigma; Alpha Delta Sigma; Vice-President, Press Club; Promotion Manager, Daily Kansan; YMCA. JARRETT, DONALD LEE, Columbus. Civil Engineering; Corres- ponding Secretary, Student A.S.C.E. JENSEN, VIRGINIA MARIE, Emporia. Political Science; Kappa Alpha Theta; Secretariat, UNESCO; YWCA. JENSON, WILLIAM KEEN, Colby. Zoology; President, Phi Delta Theta; President, Alpha Phi Omega; Phi Sigma; Omicron Delta Kappa; President, Inter-Fraternity Council; Chairman, An- nouncements Committee Senior Class; Chairman, Homecoming Decorations for University; Student ' s Faculty Conference; Chair- man, War Memorial Drive; Chairman, Inter-Fraternity Ball; Inner Circle, Pachacamac; New Student Councelor; Chairman, President ' s Ball. JERVIS, STANLEY W., Grosse Point, Michigan. Mechanical Engi- neering; Vice-President, Beta Theta Pi; Tau Beta Pi; President, Pi Tau Sigma; A.S.M.E.; Varsity Swimming. These beauties gazing from behind the roses (or are they tulips?) at the Gamma Phi spring party are Lu Anne Powell, Gloria Horn, and Shirley Hoyt. 87 COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 194 8 First Row JESSUP, HERBERT W., Eau Gallie, Florida. Business; N.R.O.T.C. JEWETT, MARTHA NI., Lawrence. Journalism; Secretary, Scholarship Chairman, Sig ma Kappa; Vice-President, Theta Sigma Phi; Managing Editor, Assistant Managing Editor, Telegraph Editor, Society Editor, Daily Kansan; Editor, Summer Session Kansan; Publicity Chairman, Band; Orchestra; President, Fireside Forum; Kansan Board; Press Club. JOHNSON, CHARLES DANIEL, JR., Topeka. Economics; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Dance Manager, Business School Association; Pershing Rifles; R.O.T.C., Rifle Team; Freshman Swimming Team. JOHNSON, DONALD MAURICE, Topeka. Psychology; Inter-Frater- nity Council; Varsity Football; Track; K-Club; Psychology Club; President, Sigma Phi Epsilon. JOHNSON, HARRY WELLINGTON, Manhattan. Aeronautical Engi- neering; President, Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Owl Society; Omi- cron Delta Kappa; Pershing Rifles; Institute of Aeronautical Sciences; Summerfield Scholarship; Enginering Council; All- Student Council; Circulation Manager, Kansas Engineer; Intra- murals; Varsity Track; A Cappella Choir; Instructor, Mathe- matics and Applied Mechanics. JOHNSON, WAYNE R., Kansas City. Mechanical Engineering; A.S.M.E. Second Row JOHNSTON, CARL C., Kansas City, Missouri. Chemical Engineer- ing; Alpha Chi Sigma; A.I.Ch.E. JOHNSTON, NORMA DYMOND, Sterling. Music Education; A Cappella Choir; Glee Club. JONES, ALISON, Lawrence. Commercial Art; Kappa Kappa Gam- ma; Gamma Alpha Chi; YWCA; W.A.A.; Intramurals. JONES, ELDRED C., Lawrence. Social Studies; Phi Delta Kappa. JONES, GERALDINE V., Kansas City, Missouri. Mathematics; Math Club. JONES, GWENDOLYN, Olathe. Music Third Row JONES, NORMA LEA, McPherson. Sociology; Social Chairman, House Manager, Alpha Chi Omega; Sociology Club; Young Democrats Club. JONES, VIRNELLE Y., Manhattan. English Education. JORDAN, IRA DEAN, Chanute. History; R.O.T.C.; Pershing Rifles; Wesley Foundation; YMCA; ISA; Men ' s Glee Club. KAFF, MAR JORIE, Overbrook. History; Jay Janes; Basketball Manager, W.A.A. KANAS JOHN, Kansas City. Medicine; Sigma Chi; Nu Sigma Nu. KANE, DONALD I., Des Moines, Iowa. Commercial Art; Art Club; Treasurer, Delta Phi Delta. No, Mac, it ain ' t the Follies. Those are Tau Sigma members doing a specialty number during their recital. 88 THE JAYHAWKER KELLOGG, MAURICE D., El Dorado. English; Quill Club. KEMMERER, BAERBARA MAY, Kansas City, Missouri. Home nomics. KENDREE, JACK MCLEAN, Hutchinson. Civil Engineering; ship Chairman, Phi Delta Theta; Treasurer, A.S.C.E. Cheerleader; Chairman of Social Committee, Student Union Activities. Second Row KENSETT, LENORE B., Lawrence. Business; Phi Chi Theta. KENT, BILLIE JOAN, Humboldt. French; Vice-President, French Club; ISA; YWCA; A Cappella; Dean ' s Honor Roll. KESTER, DAVID WILLIAM, Eureka. Law; Phi Delta Phi. KETTERMAN, ROMNEY 5., Summerfield. Accounting; Business School Association. KETTNER, MELVIN GEORGE, Hutchinson. Medicine; Treasurer, Beta Theta Pi; President, Nu Sigma Nu; A Cappella Choir; versity Players; Gamma Delta. ROBERT L., Kansas City, Missouri. Industrial ment; House Manager, Phi Kappa; Executive Committee, Society for Advancement of Management; Newman Club. Third Row KILMER, HARLAN NELSON, Kansas City, Missouri. History; Alpha Phi Omega; Vice Moderator, Westminster Foundation; A pella Choir; Zoology Club; Spur Club. KING, RAYMOND EARL, Hesston. Business; A Cappella Choir; Busi- Manager, Student Directory. KIRKHAM, JOAN, Topeka. Mathematics. KIRKPATRICK, RICHARD L., Ottawa, Accounting; Business School Association; I.S.A.; Statewide Activities; Instructor in Reading Laboratory. KLEIN, HAROLD W., Ottawa. Business; Society for the ment of Management; Business School Association; A.I.A. KOERNER, OTTO J., Newton. Economics; Independent murals Manager. Everybody takes time out for a musical interlude at Miller Ha ll while Annie Siemers plays the piano. First Row KAPPLEMAN, GLENN L., Lawrence. Political Science; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Phi Alpha Theta; Secretary, Pachacamac; Campaign Chairman, Progressive Party; Chairman, Senior Class Gift mittee; Vice-President, Woodring for Governor Club; Young Democrats; Member War Memorial Committee; Intramurals; Track; International Relations Club; New Student Councilor. KAUFMAN, ORVAL J., Moundridge. Acc ounting; Vice-President, Intramural Manager, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Rush Captain, Pledge Trainer, Alpha Kappa Psi. KEENE, KENNETH W., Lawrence. Geology; Sigma Chi; Geology Club; A.I.M.E.; Representative, Engineering Council. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1 948 89 First Row KooRR, LEONARD M., JR., Lawrence. Zoology. KRAFT, JOE C., Nevada, Missouri. Business; Business School ciation. KREIDER, JERRY M., Chnaute. Psychology; Gamma Phi Beta. KRON, CARL M., Kansas City, Missouri. Chemical Engineering; Scholarship Chairman, Delta Upsilon; Reporter, Alpha Chi Sigma; A.I.Ch.E.; Dean ' s Honor Roll. KROSSE, CHARLES E., Peoria, Illinois. Engineering. KRUG, LEROY A., Lawrence. Business; Sigma Phi Epsilon; ness School Association. Second Row LABOWITZ, JACK ALLEN, Kansas City, Missouri. History; sity Players; KFKU Players. LAIR, MARY JANE, Newton. Personnel Administration; Phi Chi Theta. LAIRD, EARL EDWARD, Kansas City. Architectural Engineering; Vice-President, Alpha Tau Omega. LAMBERT, BERNARD, Smith Center. Pharmacy; Kappa Psi; A.Ph.A. LANDON, CLEO REIN, Lawrence. General Business; Scholarship Chairman, Vice-President, President, Alpha Chi Omega; Spanish Club; YWCA; Music Club. LANDON, WILMER D., Lawrence. General Business; Pachacamac; All-Student Council; Sigma Nu. Third Row LANE, FRANK D., St. Joseph, Missouri. Advertising; Delta Chi; Alpha Delta Sigma. LANYON, PHILLIP D., Kansas City, Missouri. Civil Engineering; A.S.C.E. LARRABEE, FRED H., JR., Lawrence. English. LAW, FINDLEY, Hill City. Medicine; President, Phi Beta Pi; Executive Council, KuKu Club; Pachacamac. LAWLER, FRANK H., Independence. Political Science. LAWRENCE, HELEN ANNE, Ottawa. English; Secretary, Alpha Omicron Pi; Jay Janes; YWCA; Women ' s Skate Club. Harriet Harlow, Shirley Corlett, and the Delta Gammas take over during intermission at the Saint and Sinner Swing. 90, THE JAYHAWKER First Row LEAR, CHARLES W., Salina. Accounting; Phi Delta Theta; urer, Business School Association. LEE, EDNA L., Chanute. English; Quill Club; YWCA; Phi Rho Pi; Union Activities. LEE, ROGER D., Overland Park. Civil Engineering; A.S.C.E. LEES, MARY WISNER, Howard. Sociology; I.S,A.; Math Club; Sociology Club; Secretary, Chairman of Committees, Regional Chairman, YWCA; Mortar Board; Western Civilization Proctor; Dean ' s Honor Roll. LEIGH, LYNN LAVERNE, Burley, Idaho. Aeronautical Engineering; Industrial Management; Sigma Chi; Sachem; K Club; ASME; AIAS; All-Student Council Committee; Chairman, Elections. Bud Hill gets in the middle of things at the Delta Upsilon formal. LENAHAN, RICHARD MICHAEL, Tonganoxie. Accounting. Second Row LEONARD, LAWRENCE ALBERT, Junction City. Business; Business School Association; Young Democrats. LESSENDEN, BETTY KIEFFER, Lawrence. Bacteriology; Warden, Alpha Chi Omega; YWCA; Pledge Trainer, Kappa Phi; urer, Bacteriology Club. LEWIS, KENNETH RAYMOND, Kansas City. Mechanical ing; A.S.M.E. LILL, JOE, St. John. Law in College. LINTECUM, SAMUEL DUANE, Olathe. Architecture; Scarab. LITTLE, CHARLES EDWARD, Edwardsville. Sociology; President, Sociology Club; YMCA. Third Row LIVINGOOD, MARILYN ROSENAU, Eudora. Psychology; murals Chairman, Scholarship Chairman, Alpha Chi Omega; Notificat:ons Chairman, Jay Janes; YWCA; W.A.A. LOGAN, JACQUELYNE PEARL, Kansas City, Missouri. Fashion Illustration; Rush Captain, Program Chairman, Alpha Chi Omega; President, Organizer, University Art Club; Archery Club; Union Activities; Newman Club; YWCA; Pan-Hellenic Council. LOGAN, MARGARET LOUISE, Garden City. Business School; ing Secretary, Treasurer, Alpha Chi Omega; Kappa Beta; tary-Treasurer, Archery Club; YWCA. LOHMANN, JACK IRVING, Kansas City, Missouri. General Business. LONG, CAROL. ELIZABETH, Kansas City. Geology; Corresponding Secretary, Alpha Omicron Pi; Kappa Phi; Geology Club; tary-Treasurer, Vice-President, Spur Club. LONNQUIST, JAMES 0., Dresden. Economics. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1918 91 First Row LOPINTO, JOHN Brooklyn, N. Y. Architecture; Tau Kappa Epsi- lon; Scarab; Architectural Society. LOSKE, NORMA LEE, Kansas City. Psychology; House Manager, Alpha Chi Omega; Psi Chi; Union Activities; El Ateneo; YWCA. LOVE, EDGAR WRAY, Goodwell, Oklahoma. Personnel Manage- ment; Delta Chi. LOVE, NANCY, Wichita. History; Pi Beta Phi; Phi Alpha Theta; Union Activities; Bitter Bird; YWCA. LOWENSTEIN, WILLIAM BRUCE, Kansas City, Missouri. Account- ing; Jewish Student Union. LUEHRING, GLENDA MAE, Leavenworth. Psychology; Scholarship Chairman, Treasurer, Gamma Phi Beta; Band; YWCA; Treas- urer, President, Tau Sigma; W.A.A.; Union Activities; Jay- hawker; Intramurals. , Second Row LUNGSTRUM, JACK E., Topeka. Zoology; Nu Sigma Nu. MACCURDY, GEORGE L., Kansas City, Missouri. Chemical Engi- neering; Delta Chi; A.I.Ch.E.; Alpha Phi Omega. MACFERRAN, WILLIAM SF.WALL, Topeka. Accounting; President, Treasurer, Phi Gamma Delta; Representative, Student Council. MACGREGOR, JOHN W., Medicine Lodge. Law in College; Rush Captain, Pledge Trainer, Sigma Chi; Phi Delta Phi; Eexecutive Committee of Young Republicans; Executive Committee State- wide Activities. MACKALLOR, JULES ALBERT, Baxter Springs. Geology; Phi Kappa Psi; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Geology Club. MADDEN, ROSE ANN, Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Occupational Therapy; Social Chairman, Jolliffe Hall; Vice-President, Social Chairman, Ricker; Secretary, Occupational Therapy Club; Stu- dent Union Executive Board; Chairman of Poster Committee; Newman Club; A.W.S. Senate; Intramurals; Student-Faculty Conference. Third Row MAHONEY, JOHN WILLIAM, Kansas City. English. MAIDEN, ELMO EMERY, Lawrence. Mechanical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Pi Tau Sigma; President, Freshman Class; Intramurals. MALONE, WILLIAM G., Wichita. Electrical Engineering; Kappa Eta Kappa; Sigma Nu; A.I.E.E. MALOTT, ROBERT H., Lawrence. Chemistry; Beta Theta Pi; Alpha Chi Sigma; Varsity Basketball; Owl Society; Student Member of World War II Memorial Association; Secretariat, UNESCO; Intramurals. MARGRAVE, JOHN L., Kansas City. Engineering Physics; Kappa Eta Kappa; Tau Beta Pi; Omicron Delta Kappa; Sigma Xi; President, Engineering Council; Summerfield Scholar; Owl Soci- ety, Engineering Society. MARKLEY, CONSTANCE AILEEN, Topeka. Bacteriology; Alpha Delta Pi; W.A.A.; Bacteriology Club; YWCA; Union Activities; Glee Club. Jud Where do you keep the booze Greer and Jack Kendree run through some of their slapstick before the performance of Campus Daze. 0 I 92 THE JAYHAWKER 211 First Row MARQUEZ, BOLIVAR, JR., Chitre, Panama. Architectural Engineer- ing; Secretary-Treasurer, Sachem; President, Spanish Club; Inter- national Club; Vice-President, Newman Club; Secretary-Treas- urer, French Club; Intramural Manager, Latin American Basket- ball Club; Speech Contest; Dancing for University Programs. MARSH, MENDOLE D., La Harpe. Electrical Engineering. MARSH, THAD NORTON, Sedgwick. English; Sachem; Summerfield Scholar; Student Council; President, P.S.G.L.; Editor-in-Chief, Daily Kansan. MARSHALL, IRENE E., Reading. Design; YWCA. MARSHALL, JAMES E., Reading. Psychology; Secretary, Delta Chi; YMCA. MASTERSON, MARYLEE, Columbus. Political Science; Mortar Board; Jay Janes; W.A.A.; I.S.A. Council; Secretary, Indepen- dent Organization; Social Chairman, House Manager, President, Miller Hall; Independent Women ' s Political Senate; A Cappella Choir; Newman Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll. Second Row MATHER, HELEN MARIE, Kansas City. Home Economics; Rush Captain, President, Alpha Omicron Pi; Kappa Phi; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Jay Janes; Pan-Hellenic Council. MATLOCK, PATRICIA SUZANNE, Pomona. Bacteriology; Bacteri- ology Club; Chemistry Club. MCCARTHY, J. RUSE, Wichita. General Business; Delta Tau Delta; Newman Club. MCCARTHY, GEORGE D., Wichita. Business; Student Council; Delta Tau Delta. MCCLURE, MARY ANN, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Psychology; Rush Cap- tain, Vice-President, Gamma Phi Beta; Secretary, Tau Sigma; Psychology Club; YWCA; Union Activities; Jayhawker. MCCORMICK, MACK HAROLD, El Dorado. Chemistry; Alpha Chi Sigma; Vice-President, Chemistry Club. Third Row JAMES CULBERTSON, Lawrence. Sociology; Phi Delta Theta; Sociology Club. WILLIAM VERN, Benkelman, Nebraska. Mechanical Engi- neering; Tau Beta Pi; Secertary, Pi Tau Sigma; Treasurer, A.S.M.E. McCuE, CARROLL E., Mound Valley. Accounting; Jayhawk Co-op; Treasurer, Student Council; Treasurer, YMCA; Business School Association; College Honor Roll; Dean ' s Honor Roll. MCCUNE GORDON Amos, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Mechanical Engineer- ing; President, Rush Captain, Social Chairman, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Pi Tau Sigma; A.S.M.E.; Intramurals. MCDowELL, MARGARET ELEANOR, Kansas City, Missouri. Busi- ness; Phi Chi Theta; Kappa Beta; Inter-Dorm Council; Scholar- ship Chairman, President, Jolliffe Hall. MCEwEN, RICHARD W., Kansas City, Missouri. Mechanical Engi- neering; A.S.T.E.; A.S.M.E. Jim Robison slips in a few jitterbug steps at the Lambda Chi spring formal. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1918 93 First Row MCGINNNIS, JOHN LEO, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Social Work; Newman Club; Sociology Club. MCGUIRE, DAVID RUSSELL, Kansas City, Chemistry; Alpha Chi Sigma; President, Chemistry Club; Varsity Track. MCKIMENS, JOHN J., Sedan. Pharmacy; Historian, Kappa Psi. MCKINNEY, JAMES T., Hartford. Mechanical Engineering; Pi Tau Sigma; Treasurer, A.S.M.E. MCMORRIS, DONALD L., Kansas City, Missouri. Business. MCNARY, WILLIAM H., Potwin. Pharmacy; Kappa Psi. Second Row MCPHERSON, ROBERT D., Topeka. Sociology; Kappa Sigma. MEEK, JOHN WILLIAM, Newton. Geology; Geology Club. MELTON, CARLOS R., Independence. Journalism; Alpha Delta Sigma. MERRICK, ROBERT W., Salina. Accounting; Phi Delta Theta; YMCA; Union Activities. MERRIWEATHER, NYRLE KAY, Clayton. Pharmacy; Kappa Psi. MEYER, BARBARA JANE, Wichita. Commercial Art; Historian, Secretary, Chaplain, Delta Delta Delta; Secretary, Vice-President, President, Delta Phi Delta; Art Club; Secretary, Activities Chair- man, Jay Janes. Third Row MEYER, FERDINAND GEORGE, St. Louis, Missouri. Electrical Engi- neering. MEYER, OTTO WILLIAM, El Dorado. Journalism; Circulation Manager, Daily Kansan; Press Club. MICHAEL, DOROTHY ANN, Kansas City, Missouri. Bacteriology; Bacteriology Club. MILLER, GRANT E., Iola. Law; Sigma Chi. MILLER, NORMAN GEORGE, Kansas City. Chemical Engineering; Cataloger, Tau Beta Pi; Owl Society; Engineering School Coun- cil; A.I.Ch.E. MILLER, WILLIAM JESSE, JR., Topeka. Business; Beta Theta Pi; Business School Association; Society for the Advancement of Management. At the TKE party Judy Tihen gets a front row seat for the enter- tainment during intermission. T 94 THE J AYHAWKER Fi rst Row MINOR, MARIAN, Hutchinson. Journalism; President, Jay Janes; Secretary, Kansan Board; President, Theta Sigma Phi; President, Phi Sigma Chi; Secretary, Tau Sigma; President, Press Club; Treasurer, Independents; Assistant City Editor, Telegraph Editor, Assistant Managing Editor, Kansan. MITCHELL RUTH F., Waldo. Spanish; Jay Janes; Spanish Club. MITCHELL, WILLIAM LUTHER, Hutchinson. Political Science; Phi Delta Theta; Phi Alpha Theta; International Relations Club; National Intercollegiate U.N.O.; Union Activities; Young licans. MIVILLE, ALFRED J., Topeka. Business; Sigma Chi; International Relations Club; Modern Choir. MOE, ALBERTA L., Kinsley. Personnel Administration; President, KU Fencing Club; Vice-President, ISA; President, Independents; W.A.A.; Zoology Club; Jay Janes; Student Counselor; sity Ring Committee. MOEHLENKAMP, JACK GILBERT, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Piano; Phi Kappa Lambda. Second Row MONTFORT, JOHN G., Los Angeles, California. Civil Tau Beta Sigma; Sigma Tau; Theta Tau; President, A.S.C.E. MOORE, ROBERT D., Bellflower, California. Mechanical ing; Beta Theta Pi; Tau Beta Pi; Vice-President, Pi Tau Sigma; Varsity letterman, Football. MORRIS, J. BERTRAND, Hutchinson. Advertising; Alpha Delta Sigma; Ku Ku Club; Kansan Board; Promotion Manager of Daily Kansan; Historian, Recording Secretary and Social man of Phi Delta Theta. MORRIS, MARY MARGARET, Wichita. Social Work; President of Kappa Kappa Gamma; Phi Sigma Chi; Pan-Hellenic; YWCA; Sociology Club. MORSE, WAYNE ALLEN, JR., Kansas City, Missouri. General ness. a MORROW, WALTER R., Newark, Ohio. N.R.O.T.C.; V-12. Third Row MUCHMORE, OMER STEPHEN, JR., Parsons. Business; Treasurer and Commander, Sigma Nu; Inter-Fraternity Council; Alpha Kappa Psi. MUNDELL, JAMES R., Parker. Accounting; YMCA; School of Business Association. MURA, ANTHONY VINCENT, II, Kansas City, Missouri. Advertising; Newman Club; YMCA; Secretary and Social Chairman of Phi Kappa Psi; President, Secretary, Alpha Delta Sigma; Publicity and Entertainment Committee of Union Activities; Advertising Staff of Bitter Bird; Kansan Staff. MURPHY, RUTH ELIZABETH, Salina. Bacteriology; A.W.S.; CA, Cabinet; Glee Club; Bacteriology Club; Swedish Club; Vice-President, Sigma Kappa. MUSSELMANN, MILLIARD M., Lawrence. Electrical Engineering; Delta Chi. MYERS, BETTY, Bethel. Occupational Therapy; Occupational apy Club. Wow! Would you look at those gams! Billie Moore and Caroline Hamma look unconcerned while the bartender gets an e yeful! at the Joe ' s Place Party. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 95 First Row NATION, WILLIAM R., Kansas City, Mechanical Engineering; Member of Sigma Tau; Pi Tau Sigma; Treasurer, Tau Beta Pi; Secretary, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Activities; A.S.M.E. NEAL, FRANCES, Mission. Sociology; YWCA; Vice-President, ruth Hall. NELSON, BILL MARTIN, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Zoology; Lambda Chi Alpha. NELSON, JAMES E., Hutchinson. Speech and Drama; Member of Forensic League; University Players; KFKU Radio Players; Feature Editor on YMCA Paper; Social Chairman of Battenfeld Hall; Activiities : Traditions Convocation, 2 years; Plays : gar on Horseback , Juno and the Paycock , Midsummer ' s Night ' s Dream , Thy Kingdom Come , Joan of Lorraine , Harvey. NELSON, MARY LOUISE, Tulsa, Oklahoma. English. NEVITT, DELIA ANN, Moran. English. Second Row NEWCOME, JEAN E., Russell Springs. Physical Therapy; dent Women ' s Association. NIEDENS, ALVERTA D., Dighton. Journalism; Theta Sigma Phi; Press Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Scribe of the Quill Club; Society Editor, Assistant Managing and Assistant Telegraph Editor of Daily Kansan,. NIGG, CAROLYN, W hitewater. Bacteriology; Mortar Board; President, President of Delta Gamma; Executive Board of Statewide Activities Commission; Vice-President of House of Representatives of A.W.S.; Activities : Dean ' s Honor Roll; Jay Janes; A.W.S.; A.S.C.; Union Activities; Jayhawker. NOBLE, HAROLD T., JR., Norfolk, Virginia. Electrical Engineering; A.I.E.E. NORDEAN, MILLER, Fort Scott. Mechanical Engineering; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; A.S.M.E. NORQUEST, NAOMI, Fredonia. Secretarial Training; Phi Chi Theta; Business School Association. Third Row NORQUEST, RALPH I., Fredonia. Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi; Business School Association. OATMAN, ARTHUR C., Independence, Missouri. Electrical Engi- neering; A.I.E.E.; Band; Battenfeld Scholarship Res.; OBER, THOMAS NOLAN, Carlbad, California. Finance; Business School; Phi Gamma Delta. O ' BRIEN, MARY EILEEN, Kansas City, Missouri. Bacteriology; Delta Delta Delta-President, House President; Bacteriology Club; man Club. OCHS, LAWRENCE DAVID, Russell. Business Administration; Kappa Sigma; Business School Association. O ' CONNELL FRANK A., Kansas City. Medicine; Nu Sigma Nu. Jim White does a quick take on his opponents bridge hand during a Saturday afternoon session of the Four No Club. 96 THE JAYHAWKER First Row O ' CONNOR, EILEEN, Wichita. Commercial Art; Social Chairman, Kappa Alpha Theta; Corresponding Secretary, Vice-President of Delta Phi Delta; Gamma Alpha Chi; YWCA. O ' CONNOR, EVERETT MANUAL, Lawrence. Accounting. O ' LEARY, JOHN ALVIN, JR., Luray. General Business; Business School Association; Jayhawker Staff. OLIVER, PHYLYIS A., Culvert. Physical Therapy; President, ruth Hall; Secretary, Physical Therapy Club. OLMSTEAD, KATHLEEN VIRGINIA, Nickerson. Bacteriology. OLSON, BARBARA JEAN, Wichita. Occupational Therapy; tary, Treasurer, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Delta Phi Delta; pational Therapy Club; YWCA. Barbara Hume gives her companion the low down during a formal at the Country Club. Second Row O ' NEIL, RALPH T., Topeka. Mechanical Engineering; Freshman Trainer, Beta Theta Pi; A.S.M.E. OTT, GERALDINE, Madison. Psychology; Vice-President, Sigma Kappa. PALMER, WILLIAM J., JR., Kansas City, Missouri. Marketing; Business School Association; Alpha Phi Omega; Society for the Advancement of Management; I.S.A. PALMQUIST, DAN A., Hutchinson. Speech and Drama. PARNELL, DONALD KEITH, Topeka. Philosophy; Student Religious Council; Assistant Secretary-Treasurer, Inner-Varsity Fellowship; Men ' s Glee Club; Student Volunteer Movement. PARRY, VIRGINIA GRAY, Augusta. Design. Third Row PATCH, VIRGINIA, Kansas City, Missouri. Mathematics. PECK, OWEN CALVIN, Kansas City. Medicine; President, Freshman Class; Vice-President, Junior Class; A.S.C.; A.S.C. Representative on Big Six Athletic Board; Sachem Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa; Sigma Chi; Nu Sigma Nu; K-Club; Varsity Basketball and Track. PEEK, CHARLES B., Kansas City, Missouri. Industrial Management; Chemical Engineering; President, Treasurer, Delta Tau Delta; President, Inter-Fraternity Council; American Institute of ical Engineers; Society for the Advancement of Management. PELOT, BETTY Lou, Misison. Entomology; K. U. Entomology Club. PEMBERTON, ROBERT M., Muncie. Accounting; Beta Gamma Sigma; Business School Association. PENNEY, PATRICIA LEE, Lawrence. Journalism; Mortar Board; Secretary, Pi Beta Phi; Managing Editor, Assistant Managing Editor, News Editor, Sports Editor, University Daily Kansan; Rally Chairman, Publicity Chairman, Homecoming Committee; N.O.W. Inner Circle; Newman Club; Cheerleader; Editorial Associate, Jayhawker Magazine; President, Theta Sigma Phi; Secretary, W.I.G.S.; Tau Sigma; W.A.A.; Kansan Board; Press Club. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 97 First Row PENNY, REBECCA ANNE, Lawrence. Business; Phi Chi Theta; Business School Association. PERKINS, COURTNEY W., Kansas City, Missouri. History; I.S.A. PERSKY, ABRAHAM P., Independence. English; University Band; University Orchestra; President, General Semantics Club. PETRIE, FRANK, Paola. Accounting; YMCA. PFAUTZ, MELCOLM C., Neodesha. Marketing. PFISTER, RICHARD LEE, Hiawatha. Economics; Sachem; Dove; Vice-President, and Treasurer of Jayhawk Co-op; Cabinet ber and Treasurer of YMCA; Freshman Counselor. Second Row PLANTZ, DON V., Cherryvale. Business; Beta Gamma Sigma; Dean ' s Honor Roll. PORTE, SANFORD, Fort Scott. Industrial Management; Glee Club; S.A.M.; Intra-mural Tennis. POSORNOW, BURNETTA ELIZABETH, Olathe. Business; Phi Chi Theta. POSTELTHWAITE, DUANE, Delphos. Political Science; Young Republicans; Sigma Tau Delta; Independents; I.S.A.; P.S.G.L.; Dove Staff; A.S.C.; Union Operating Board; Chairman of minster Fellowship; Vice-President, Federal Union; Business Manager, K.U. Calendar; President, Inter-Dorm Council. PICKENS, JOHN JACOB, Neosho, Missouri. Industrial Management; Society for the Advancement of Management; Office Secretary, I.S.A. PIERPONT, FRANCIS R., Chanute. Marketing; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Ku Ku Club; Business School Association. PILLEY, JAMES F., Kansas City. Industrial Management; Phi Kappa Psi; Business School Association; Membership Chairman of S.A.M. PINES, New York. Accounting; Business School Association. PINKSTON, DOROTHY M., Arkansas City. Chemistry. PIO, JACK D., Long Beach, California. Business Education; Men ' s Residence Hall Scholar. Third Row PIPER, ROBERT D., Emmetburg, Iowa. Personnel Management; S.A.M.; Business School Association. PITTENGER, DALLAS, Sabetha. Physical Education; Phi Delta Kappa; Manager Football Team; Sasnak; Physical Education Club. Moe Martin hides his king sized frame behind Eleanor Howell as Alpha Chis and date pose for the camera. j 98 THE JAYHAWKER First Row POTTER, RICHARD RALPH, Lawrence. Electrical Engineering; Phi Delta Theta; Treasurer, Tau Beta Pi; Treasurer, A.I.E.E.; Sigma Tau; Square Dance Club; Radio Club; Summerfield Scholar. PRATT, EVANGELINE H., Hoxie. Commercial Art; University Art Club; Newman Club; Gamma Alpha Chi. PRETZ, BETTY, Olathe. Home Economics; Home Economics Club; General Semantics; YWCA. PREWITT, ROBERT H., Pomona. Geology; Geology Club; can Association of Petroleum Geologists. PROCTOR, CARL MONROE, Parsons. Personnel Management; Phi Beta Kappa. PUCKETT, H. JOAN, Wichita. Psychology; Kappa Alpha Theta; French Club; Young Republicans Club; Coffee and Forums Board. Second Row PUMPHREY, JACK E., Independence. Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi; Business School Association. RAGLIN, JAMES H., Independence. Journalism; Delta Upsilon; Sports Editor, Daily Kansan; Sigma Delta Chi. RALSTON, LUCILE IRENE, Sabetha. Psychology; Inter-Dorm; Psi Chi; Viec-President, Inter-Dorms; Treasurer and President, Locksley; Intramurals. RAMBO, CLARENCE EDMUND, Winfield. Mechanical Engineering. RANDOLPH, JOYCE LEE, El Dorado. Combined-Letters and cine (A.B.-M.D.); Scholarship Chairman, Alpha Delta Pi; Iota Sigma Pi; Zoology Club— ' 45, ' 46. RAU, DAVID HERMAN, Junction City. Medicine; KuKu Club; YMCA; Treasurer, Delta Tau Delta; Phi Chi; Executive Council, KuKu Club; Editor of Y-News; YMCA House Steward, ing Junior Dietor and Publicity, Senior Council of Phi Chi Medical Fraternity. Third Row RAWLINGS, ROBERT R., Tonganoxie. Psychology; Social Chairman and Senior Council, Phi Chi. REED ROBERT N., El Dorado. Accounting; Phi Gamma Delta; Modern Choir. REED, HARRY DUMONT, Lamed. Electrical Engineering; President, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau: A Cappella Choir; Men ' s Glee Club; Navy R.O.T.C. REES, JOHN E., Emporia. Political Science; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Owl Society. REMMERS, CALVIN M., Elmhurst, Illinois. Electrical Engineering; Kappa Eta Kappa; Phi Sigma Epsilon; Chairman and Treasurer, A.I.E.E.; Concert Band; Men ' s Glee Club; N.R.O.T.C.; Navy V-12; Assistant Instructor, E.E. RESLER, PAUL E., Pittsburg. History; Presiding Junior and Social Chairman, Phi Chi; Newman Club. What fun! Helen Hastings, Irvin Johnston, Hank Ramsdell, and Scoot Thompson make good use of the few minutes before closing hours. 99 COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1918 First Row RETTIG, MARIETTA JOAN, Fredonia. Speech; N.I.U.N.A., tional Secretary; Forensic League, Secretary; El Ateneo; YWCA; Modern Choir; A Cappella Choir; Union Activities; University Players; Phi Alpha Theta, Vice-President; Sigma Kappa; Kappa Phi. REYNAUD, RAYMOND L., Oketo. Zoology. RICE MARY LOIS, Butler, Missouri, Bacterio logy; Treasurer, Alpha Delta Phi; Bacteriology Club; YWCA; Entomology Club; Senior Dues Committee. RICHARDSON, MABLE ANN, Lawrence. Business Education; dent and Treasurer, Kappa Beta; I.S.A. RICHARDSON, PAUL J., Topeka, Chemistry. RIEGLE, WARREN E., Chanute. Industrial Management; Phi Gamma Delta; K-Club. Second Row RILEY, RICHARD R., Council Hill, Oklahoma. Education. RINGWALT, ARDELLA DORIS, Oakley. Music Education; Mu Phi Epsilon (Warden, Vice-President); Kappa Phi; Song Leader, Social Chairman, President, Corbin Hall; Band; Orchestra; A Cappella Choir. RIPPEY, ERMA MAE, Helena, Missouri. Bacteriology; Gamma Delta; Bacteriology Club. ROBB, GEORGE A., McPherson. Law in College; Phi Delta President of Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Vice-President of ASC. ROBER, ROBERT R., Carthage, South Dakota. Civil Engineering; Men ' s Glee Club; Men ' s Chorus; A.S.C.E. ROBERTSON, R. REGINALD, Kansas City, Missouri. Chemical neering; President and Vice-President of Ku Ku Club; President of Tau Kappa Epsilon; Alpha Chi Sigma; A.I.Ch.E. Third Row ROBERTSON, BILLY L., Peru. Business. ROBINSON, CORLIS W., St. Joseph, Missouri. Industrial ment; S.A.M.; American Institute of Chemical Engineers. ROBINSON, MARGARET E., Kansas City. Psychology; Sociology Club; Spanish Club. ROBINSON, WALTER H., Kansas City, Missouri. Electrical neering; Tau Beta Pi. ROBINSON, LEROY, Lawrence. Engineering and Business; President, K-Club; I.A.E.S.; Secretary-Treasurer, Senior Class ' 46; President, Phi Kappa Psi; Varsity Football and Track. ROBISON, WILLIAM ELLET, II, Kansas City, Missouri, Business; Sigma Nu. Everyone is happy during intermission at the Carruth Hall Spring Formal. 100 THE JAYHAWKER First Row RODGERS, JOAN ELAINE, Lyndon. Voice; Sigma Alpha Iota; national Club; German Club; A Cappella Choir. RODMAN, THOMAS WALKER, Kansas City, Misosuri. Mechanical Engineering; A.S.M.E.; A.S.T.E. ROGERS, VIVIAN N., Hoisington. Speech and Dramatics. ROLES, BETTY ANN, Junction City. Sociology; Alpha Delta Pi; Union Activities Committee; Women ' s Glee Club; Senior Ring Committee; Sociology Club. ROLES, EDWARD J., Junction City. Economics; Delta Tau Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Phi Omega. ROTERMUND, BILLIE JEAN, Independence, Missouri. Commercial Art; Jay Janes; Treasurer of Delta Phi Delta; Treasurer of Gamma Alpha Chi; President of Miller Hall. Second Row ROTMAN, FRANK H., Kansas City, Missouri. Journalism; Publicity Chairman, SUAC; Student Union Executive Board; University Radio Players; I.S.A.; Independent Men ' s Party; Jewish Student Union; Publicity Manager, College Daze. ROWE, Mu DRED MILISSA Wellington, Iowa. Occupational Therapy; Occupational Therapy Club; YWCA; Women ' s Rifle Club; President of Jolliffe Hall. RUDKIN, ROBERT A., Fort Scott. Personnel—School of Business. RUMMER, DALE IVAN, Wichita. Electrical Engineering; A.I.E.E.; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Mu Epsilon; Owl Society; Sachem Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa; Kappa Eta Kappa, Treasurer; YMCA Cabinet; President of Omicron Delta Kappa. RUMSEY, LORRAINE, Council Grove. Electrical Enginering; dent of Locksley Hall; Vice-President of Inter-Dorm Council; A.I.E.E.; Statewide Activities. RUSK, JAMES H., Kansas City, Missouri. Electrical Engineering; A.I.E.E. A Third Row RUSSELL, CHARLES W., JR., Kansas City, Missouri. Business; ness School Association. SALLEE, GENE E., Topeka. Chemical Engineering; Phi Gamma Delta; Sigma Tau; Secretary, A.I.Ch.E.; Intramurals,. SAMUEL, OLIVER J., Emporia. Mechanical Engineering; President of Phi Delta Theta; Alpha Phi Omega; Vice-President of Junior Class; Secretary of Inter-Fraternity Council; A.S.M.E.; Pachacamac. SANDERS, JAMES CLEMENT ' S, San Francisco, California. Civil Engineering; President and Treasurer of Phi Delta Theta; A.S. GE.; Student Union; International Relations Club; nity Council; Student War Memorial Committee. SANDS, WILLIAM H., Independence. Business; Secretary, Sigma Chi; Jayhawker Staff; Bitter Bird Staff; Intramural Sports. SAVUKINAS, VINCENT EDMUND, Newbury port, Massachusetts. ology; I.S.A.; N ewman Club. Well shut Georgian Eyler ' s mouth. Charlie Marsh, Phi Gam, and Iva Belle Flora, Pi Phi, were pinned. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1 9 4 8 101 First Row SCAMELL, HELEN JOSEPHINE, Lawrence. Philosophy; Kappa Phi; I.S.A.; Wesley Foundation; Inter-Dorm Council. SCHAFER, WILLIAM G., Blue Rapids. Fine Arts (Commercial Art); Social Chairman of Delta Tau Delta; Treasurer, Ku Ku; Pi. Epsilon Pi. SCHERER, WILLIAM GORDON, Newton. Industrial Management; Treasurer, Society for the Advancement of Management; Busi- ness School Association. SCHINDLING, JOAN, Leavenworth. Journalism; Vice-President, Alpha Delta Pi; Keeper of the Archives, Theta Sigma Phi; Secre- tary, Kansan Board; W.A.A. SCHLOESSER, LEE L., Fredonia. Medicine in College; Beta Theta Pi; Nu Sigma Nu. SCHNELLBACHER, OTTO 0., Sublette. Physical Education; Delta Chi; Sachem; K-Club; Senior Class, President. Second Row SCHOPPENHORST, SARA MARGARET, Higginsville, Missouri. Phys- ical Therapy; President, Physical Therapy Club. SCHREIBER, EDITH MARIE, Salina. Pharmacy; American Pharmacy Association Student Board; President, Kappa Epsilon; Treasurer, Miller Ha111. SCHREIBER, I. CARL, Kansas City, Missouri. Aeronautical Engi- neering; Institute of Aeronautical Sciences. SCHUCH, EDWARD J., Tyndall, South Dakota. Zoology; Phi Kappa. SCHUTTE, FLORENCE ANNE, Kansas City, Missouri. English. SCIPIONI, MARION DELORES, Topeka. Psychology; Psi Chi; Soci- ology Club. Third Row SCOTT, ANNE LOUISE, Pratt. Journalism; Activities Chairman, Kappa Alpha Theta; Treasurer, Theta Sigma Phi; President, Gamma Alpha Chi; Mortar Board; Jay Janes; General Chair- man, Executive Board, Statewide Activties; Press Club; Kansan Board; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Associate Editor, K.U. Cues; Execu- tive Council, N.O.W.; Jayhawker Staff; Publicity Chairman, A.W.S. Senate; Career ' s Conference Committee; Blueprinting Tomorrow Committee; War Memorial Committee; A.S.C.; Ad- vertising Manager, University Daily Kansan; W.E.C. SCOTT, CHESTER E., Hayes. Medicine; Beta Theta Pi; Nu Sigma Nu. SCOTT, MAR JORIE JANE, LaCygne. French; Scholarship Chairman, Alpha Omicron Pi; Kappa Beta; Vice-President, French Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Honors, 1947. SCOTT, SARA JAYNE, Kansas City, Missouri. Education; Social Chairman, Files Chairman, Pi Beta Phi; Pi Alpha Theta; Uni- versity Players; Jayhawker Staff; Union Activities; Stagecraft; C.V.C.; YWCA; Jayhawker Cover; Intramurals. SEAMAN, ROBERT D., Logan. Business; Social Chairman, Sigma Nu; Minor Choir. SELLS, JOHN C., Effingham. Mechanical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; Treasurer, Sigma Tau; Pi Tau Sigma; President, A.S.M.E.; Business Manager, I.S.A. George McCarthy, Margaret Logan, Gwen Gupton, and John Had- dock make a very becoming foursome at the Alpha Chi spring party. 102 THE JAYH AWKER First Row SENKARIK, DANIEL G., Sanford, Florida. Civil Engineering; Kappa Sigma; A.S.C.E.; Intramurals. SEYBERT, LEE A., Dodge City. Civil Engineering; Vice-President, A.S.C.E. SHANAHAN, PATRICIA LOUISE, Independence. Design; Activities and Publicity Chairman, Corresponding Secretary, Delta Delta Delta; YWCA; University Art Club. SHATZELL, MARY CATHERINE, Hoxie. Fine Arts; President, Dorm Council; Social Chairman, Sleepy Hollow. SHEA, RICHARD J., Sedalia, Missouri. Mechanical Engineering; Sigma Chi; Secretary, Tau Beta Pi; Pi Tau Sigma; Sigma Tau; Track; K-Club. SHEIDLEY, BETSEY, Kansas City, Missouri. English; Scholarship Chairman, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Secretary, Statewide Activities Executive Council; Chairman, Publications Committee, Parking Committee, A.S.C.; Contributor, Editorial Assistant, Jayhawker; Cabinet, Executive Board, YWCA; Community Service mission; Editorial Assistant, Y-Knot; Chairman, Senior tory Committee; Advisory Board, Bitter Bird; N.O.W.; A.W.S.; United Nations Delegate; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Phi Beta Kappa. Second Row SHEARER, CHARLES W., Elwood. Business; Alpha Kappa Psi; Business School Association; Vice-President, Jayhawkers for lace Club; Editorial Staff of the Dove; R.O.T.C.; Statewide Activities Committee. SHERWOOD, HOMER L., Arkansas City. Industrial Management; Chaplain, Phi Delta Theta; K-Club; Treasurer of Student Union Activities; S.A.M. SHIMER, VIRGINIA LEE, Topeka. Personnel Administration; dent, Kappa Phi; Pre sident, Templin Hall; Inter-Dorm Council; House of Representatives of A.W.S.; Wesley Foundation. SHINKLE, HAROLD A., Lawrence. Engineering; Secretary, Kappa Eta Kappa. SHIVE, JESSICA JANE, Music Education; Girl ' s Glee Club. SHOCKLEY, CLYDE A., JR., Kansas City, Missouri. Civil ing; Tau Beta Pi; A.S.C.E. Third Row SHREVE, WISTER DONALD, Bloomfield, New Jersey. Journalism; Pi Kappa Alpha; Ku Ku; Vice-President, Alpha Delta Sigma. SILKS, LOUIS A., JR., Kansas City, Missouri. Law in College; Pi Kappa Alpha. SIMMONS, JAMES EVERETT, Wellsville. Accounting; YMCA; ness School Association; Treasurer, Alpha Kappa Lambda. SIMS, MARY KATFIERINE, Miami, Oklahoma. Design; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Spur Club; Glee Club; Senior Publications; Freshman Counselor; YWCA. SINGER, JOHN P., Parker. Mechanical Engineering; Pi Tau Sigma; A.S.M.E.; Softball, Battenfeld. SINGLETON, JACK, JR., Topeka. Architecture; Phi Kappa Psi; President, Scarab; Modern Choir; Men ' s Glee Club; Fencing Club; Assistant Instructor in Architecture. Mr. and Mrs. John Conard, Sue Webster, and Newell Jenkens have a coke during the Sigma Kappa party. 103 COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1 9 4 8 First Row SKINNER, Ross D., Delphos. Medicine; Phi Beta Pi. SLATER, NANCY ANN, Kansas City, Missouri. Social Work; President, Kappa Kappa Gamma; 0. T. Club; YWCA; Glee Club; Jayhawker. SMART, DAVID L., JR., Kansas City, Missouri. Mechanical neering; Phi Delta Theta. SMITH, JEANNE CLARA, Neodesha. Home Economics Education; YWCA; Women ' s Glee Club; Home Economics Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll. SMITH, JEANNE MARIE, Topeka. Education; Scholarship man of Sigma Kappa; Publicity Chairman of Band; Student Union Committee. SMITH, WILLIAM THOMAS, JR., Dighton. Journalism; President, Sigma Delta Chi; Press Club; City Editor, Assistant Managing Editor, Managing Editor, University Daily Kansan. Second Row SMULL, NED W., Bird City. Medicine in College; Secretary, urer, Phi Gamma Delta; Nu Sigma Nu; Secretary, YMCA; Union Activities. SNART, DONNA E., Lawrence. Mathematics; Historian, Alpha Delta Pi; Kappa Phi Cabinet; Hanna Oliver Latin Award. SNOWDEN, EARL WARREN, Chillicothe, Missouri. Aeronautical Engineering; Phi Delta Theta; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; Mural Manager; Institute of Aeronautical Sciences. SNYDER, GERTRUDE L., Lawrence. Business—Finance; Treasurer, Phi Chi Theta. SNYDER, LEROY MEAD, Lawrence. Accounting; Business School Association; Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. SNYDER, ROBERT C., Lawrence. Advertising; Alpha Delta Sigma. Third Row SOMMERVILLE, WILLIAM DAVID, Lawrence. Spanish; Spanish Club; International Club; University of Kansas Christian ship. SPALSBURY, DUANE G., St. Joseph, Missouri. Accounting; Sigma Chi. SPARLING, ROBERT G., Oneida. Physical Education; Phi Delta Kappa. SPENCER, LINA MARGRET, Lawrence. History; Alpha Chi Omega; Kappa Phi; Assistant Business Manager, Student Directory 47-48; YWCA. SPRATTT, ELIZABETH ANN, Weston, Missouri. Psychology. STALLARD, GLENN E., Lawrence. Accounting; Delta Tau Delta; Inter-Fraternity Council; YMCA. Two middies and their dates pause between dances at the Army Navy Ball. 104 THE JAYHAWKER First Row STALZER, FRANK, Kansas City. Music Education; Phi Mu Alpha; Sachem; Phi Delta Kappa; Orchestra; Glee Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Student Conductor of Band; Councilor of Band Camp; Chairman of Battenfeld. STANFIELD, JOHN H., Lawrence. Chemistry Medicine; President, Alpha Phi Alpha. STANG, OLE A., Oslo, Norway. Business; S.A.M.; Business School Association. STANLEY, MARY LOUISE, Bethel. Social Work; Delta Gamma; House Chairman for World War Memorial Drive; dent, Sociology Club; Rifle Club; Schoeppel for Senator Club. STANLEY, REX C., Chanute. Bacteriology. STANNARD, FRANK K., Lawrence. Political Science; Chairman of C.O.R.E.; Dove Staff; Chairman of Jayhawkers for Wallace; K-Club; Varsity Track; A.V.C.; Negro Student Association; International Relations Club. Second Row STARR, WILLIAM, Peabody. Political Science; Delta Upsilon. STARTZ, AMBROSE JOHN, Liberty. Chemical Engineering; Alpha Chi Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; A.I.Ch.E.; Newman Club. STEELE, VERLENE E., Florence. Mathematics; Pi Lambda Theta; Mathematics Club. STEINKIRCHNER, HELEN LADEEN, Newton. Advertising; ing Secretary, Historian, Corresponding Secretary, Theta Phi Alpha; Charter Member, Recording Secretary, Gamma Alpha Chi; Student Religious Council; Chairman and Executive mittee, Newman Club. STEPHENSON, DOROTHY LouISE, Independence. Interior Design; Corresponding Secretary, Marshall, Delta Delta Delta. STEWART, ALAN J., Lawrence. Journalism; A Cappella Choir; Sigma Delta Chi; Chairman of Kansan Board; City Editor and Managing Editor of Kansan. Third Row STEWART, ROBERT MITCHELL, Manhattan. Accounting; Beta Gamma Sigma; Sachem; Cabinet Member of Wesley Foundation; Cabinet Member of YMCA; Vice-President, Student Religious Council; Co-Chairman 1948 W.S.S.F. Drive. STEWART, WILLIAM ALLEN, Manhattan. Political Science; Pi Kappa Alpha; Jayhawk Co-op. STILLMAN, BILLIE JOAN, Bushton. Finance; Phi Chi Theta; ness School Association; I.S.A. ST. LAWRENCE, MAYBELLE, Fowler. English; I.S.A.; Newman Club; Press Club; Linnaean Club. STOCKTON, PHILLIP JEROME, Lawrence. Psychology; Delta Tau Delta. STOCKWELL, DAVID LLOYD, Kansas City, Missouri. Zoology; Snow Zoology Club; Psychology Club; German Club; Alpha Phi Omega. Cadet Captain Bob Franklin beams as he surveys the troops and his date at the R.O.T.C. ball. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 194 8 108 First Row STONE, BARBARA J., Smith Center. Business; President, Phi Chi Theta; Secretary, Business School Association. STONE, GEORGE M., Topeka. Commercial Art. STOUT, ANNETTA, RotheIle, Missouri. Home Economics; dent, Omicron Nu; Pi Lambda Theta; Home Eoncomics Club. STREIB, WILLIAM R., Lecompton. English. STRYKER, MARY LYNN, Fredonia. Music. STUCK, WILLIAM L., Kansas City, Missouri. German; President, German Club. Second Row STUECKEMANN, WALTER F., Ellinwood. Mathematics. STUCKY, RICHARD R., Lawrence. Geology; Alpha Phi Omega; YMCA; I.S.A.; Sociology Club. SUMNER, MARION M., Independence. Chemistry; Summerfield Scholar; Ku Ku Club; Zoology Club; Phi Beta Pi. SURFACE, EDWARD B., Wellington. Economics; Beta Theta Pi. SVOBODA, FLOYD JOSEPH, Lawrence. Petroleum Engineering; Phi Kappa; American Institute of Mining and Metalurgical neering; Newman Club; I.S.A.; Engineering Council; Football; R.O.T.C.; P.S.G.L. Senate; Intra-murals; Engineering Exposition. SWAIM, OLLIE LAVERNE, Godfrey, Illinois. Psychology; Psi Chi; Intra-Mural Manager, Delta Delta Delta; Y WCA. Third Row SWANN, MARVELYN MARCIA, Merriam. Sociology; Alpha Kappa Alpha. SWANSON, DALE A., Hays. Accounting; Business School ation. SWART, BETTY JEAN, Oakley. Business; Secretary, Kappa Phi; Iris Reporter, Phi Chi Theta; Business School Association. TAFT, DOROTHY L., Lawrence. Botany; Theta Epsilon; Linnean Club; Secretary, Phi Sigma. TALLEY, HARRY LESLIE, Kansas City, Missouri. Marketing; ma Nu; A Cappella Choir. TANNER, EDWARD W., Kansas City, Missouri. Business; Phi Delta Theta. Evening at the Skyline finds Virginia Gargis and her date partak- ing of the better things of life. 106 THE JAYHAWKER First Row TAWNEY, ROBERT R., Kansas City. Industrial Management; Phi Mu Alpha; S.A.M.; Band. TAYLOR, DON HASTINGS, Huthcinson. Political Science; Alpha Tau Omega,. TAYLOR, JANET P., Topeka. Commercial Art; Chi Omega; Gamma Alpha Chi; YWCA; Union Activities. TAYLOR, JOHN, JR., Solomon. Accounting; Alpha Kappa Psi; S.A.M.; Business School Association. TAYLOR, RUTH LARSON, Galba. Social Work; Sociology Club; Pre-Nursing Club; YWCA; Girl ' s Glee Club; Dean ' s Honor Roll; Lutheran Student Organization. TENNYSON, LOUIS W., Kansas City. Pharmacy; Polemarch of Kappa Alpha Psi; Intra-murals, N.S.A.; A.P.A. Second Row TERRILL, GROVER RAYMOND, Sunflower. Economics. THEYER, CHARLOTTE PATRICIA, AtchisOk Political Scien ce; Alpha Omicron Pi; International Relations; YWCA; The Eagle; Com- mittee Chairman for U. N. Conference; Union Activities. THIELE, JOHN ROBERT, Topeka. Mechanical Engineering; Kappa Sigma; A.S.M.E.; President, Pi Tau Sigma; Associate Editor, Kansan Engineers. THOMAS, CLARKE MUNSELL, Topeka. Journalism; Pi Kappa Alpha; Sigma Delta Chi; A Cappella Choir; International Re- lations Club; Editor-in-Chief, Assistant Managing Editor, Uni- versity Daily Kansan; Editor, Trend magazine; Vice-President, Alpha Phi Om ega; Treasurer, Quill Club. THOMAS, DOT ' rIE, Pittsburg. Psychology; Union Activities; Jay- hawker Staff; YWCA; Associated Women Students Representa- tive; Modern Choir; Secretary and Pledge Trainer, Chi Omega. THOMAS, JOHN J., Boise, Idaho. Physical Therapy. Second Row THOMPSON, RAYMOND, Belleville. Pharmacy; A.Ph.A.; Chaplain, Kappa Psi. TILLER, HARRY BERNARD, Wichita. Psychology. TOCH, ARTHUR, Vienna, Austria. Civil Engineering; Omicron Delta Kappa; Corresponding Secretary, Tau Beta Pi; American Society of Civil Engineers; Owl Society; German Club. TOMLINSON, RICHARD P., El Dorado. Business. TYRRELL, HAROLD WILLIAM, Columbus. Business; President, Vice-President, Social Chairman, Kappa Sigma; S.A.M.; A.S.M.E. UEHLING, LEAH CELESTE, Afton, Wisconsin. Psychology; Jay Janes; YWCA Cabinet and Freshman Counselor; Psi Chi; Westminster Fellowship; Social Chairman, Locksley Hall; Treas- urer, Independent Womens Senate; Dean ' s Honor Roll. Bill Degan strikes a distinctive pose with Beverly King as Lyle Hytten and friend grimace at the camera. 107 COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1 9 ,1 8 First Row UMBACH, JOHN CHARLES, Dodge City. Industrial Management; Ameriacn Accounting Association; Business School Association; Phi Kappa Psi Publicity; Organization Committee, Field Trip Committee, Membership Committee, S.A.M. ; Atheletics. UNRUH, M. M., Goessel. Philosophy; Phi Delta Phi. VAN HORN, JACK TRAVIS, Coffeyville. Business; Men ' s Glee Club; YMCA. VEATCH, BONNIE D., Washington, D. C. Home Economics; Home Economics Club; President, Scholarship Chairman, Gamma Phi Beta; YWCA. VERNON, LYLE J., Topeka. General Business. VICKERS, JOAN, Lawrence. Voice; Gamma Phi Beta; W.A.A.; A Cappella Choir; YWCA. Second Row VIGNERY, GENE, Concordia. Journalism; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Sigma Delta Chi; City Editor, Assistant Managing Editor, Daily .Kansan. WADE, STANLEY H., Leavenworth. Aeronautical Engineering; Vice-President, Engineering Council; Institute of the nautical Sciences. WAGNER, RAYMOND T., Troy. Aeronautical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; Institute of Aeronautical Sciences; Newman Club. WAHL, ROSWELL E., Lawrence. Engineering Physics; YMCA. WALKER, JAMES W., Highland, California. Mathematics; dent of Kappa Sigma. WALKER, WILLIAM CALHOUN, Hutchinson. Mechanical neering; Sigma Tau; Pi Tau Sigma; Phi Delta Theta; ing Manager, Kansas Engineer; Secretary, A.S.M.E. Third Row WALLACE, DOREEN JEAN, Norwich. Psychology; Forensic League; Psychology Club; Social Chairman, Delta Delta Delta. WALTER, HOWARD F„ Kansas City, Missouri. Business. WALTERS, RUTH LEATRICE, Kinsley. Speech and Drama; Chi Omega; Jayhawker, ' YWCA; Play, Harvey. WAMPLER, GALEN, Minneapolis. Psychology; Phi Beta Pi. WARD, GRACIA J., Dodge City. English; Phi Alpha Theta. WARREN, WILLIAM DREW, Emporia. Business; Publicity mitteeman, Business School Association. Buckskinned Tri Delts gather under the crepe paper after picneck- ing all afternoon. 108 THE JAYHAWKER First Row WATHEN, HAZEL JEAN, Platte, Missouri. English,. WATSON, PAUL B., Pratt. Law in College; Phi Alpha Delta; Bar Journal. WEBB, MARTHA ELIZABETH, Topeka. French; I.S.A. WEEKS, GEORGE ROBERT, Eldon, Missouri. Psychology; Secretary, Delta Tau Delta. WEHE, ROBERT LOUIS, Topeka. Mechanical Engineering; O.D.K., Tau Beta Pi; Student Council; Engineering Council; A.S.M.E.; President, Alpha Phi Omega; Vice-President, Pi Tau Sigma. WELKER, NANCY ANN, Kansas City, Missouri. Spanish; Rush Chairman, Kappa Alpha Theta; YWCA; Spanish Club; Hellenic; Student Council; A.W.A. Senate. Second Row WELLBORN, SHIRLEY ANNE, Lyndon. Psychology; Band; Glee Club; Psychology Club; Psi Chi; Phi Beta Kappa; President, Vice-President, Locksley Hall; Interdorm Council Representative; Secretary, A.S.C.; Freshman Representative, Business Manager, President, I.S.A.; Honor Initiate, Treasurer, Jay Janes; President, Kappa Phi; President, W.E.C.; President, A.W.S.; Associate Editor, K. U. Cues; President, Mortar Board. WELLS, ANNA MAXINE, Paola. English; Quill Club; Symphony Orchestra; Inter-Dorm Council; Scholarship Chairman, Carruth Hall. WELTON, DEXTER M., Sterling, Illinois, Architectural ing; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Sigma Tau; Scarab; Track; K-Club; A Cappella; N.R.O.T.C. WENDLANDT, FRANK R., Herington. Accounting; President, President, Secretary, Treasurer, Delta Tau Delta; Business School Association; Statewide Activities Committee. WEST, CHARLES OMER, JR., Lawrence, Zoology; Zoology Club. WEST, EARLINE HOVEY, Lawrence. Business; Phi Chi Theta. Third Row WESTMACOTT, ROBERT IRVIN, Nowata, Oklahoma. Geology; Phi Delta Theta; Glee Club. WESTMORELAND, GEORGIE LEE, Kansas City, Missouri, Physical Education; Delta Gamma; Tau Sigma; W.A.A.; Union Activities. WHEATLEY, QUENTEN L., Gypsum. Chemistry; Rush Chairman, Kappa Sigma; Social Committee, Alpha Chi Sigma; Chemistry Club; Band. WHITCOMB, ROBERT T., St. Joseph, Missouri. Industrial ment; Secretary, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Tennis; Volleyball; YMCA. WHITE, HAWORTH, Hutchinson. Political Science; President, Treas- urer, Phi Kappa Psi; Modern Choir; Glee Club; Dean ' s Choir; Young Republicans. WHITING, BILOINE, Independence, Missouri. Journalism; Theta Sigma Phi; Secretary, Quill Club. Sammy Lou Peete models a little off-the-shoulder thing surrounded by revelers at the Delt costume party. 109 COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1 9 4 8 First Row WHITING, MELBA JEANNE, Downs. Spanish; Spanish Club; dent Religious Council; House of Representatives of A.W.S.; YWCA Cabinet; Women ' s Glee Club; Home Economics Club. WHITSITT, VIRGIL HOWARD, Phillipsburg. Political Science; dent of Alpha Kappa Lambda; YMCA; Wesley Foundation; International Relations Club; News Reporter; Glee Club; W.S.S.F. Team Captain. WIEDIMANN, ROBERT EUGENE, Lawrence. Civil Engineering; Delta Tau Delta; Treasurer of Tau Beta Pi; Treasurer of Engineering Council; A.S.C.E.; Hob Nail Committee. WIENS, ARTHUR N., Inman. Psychology. WILKERSON, CLYDE, JR., Topeka. Aeronautical Engineering. WILLIAMS, C. D., JR., Anthony. Business Administration; Phi Delta Theta. Second Row WILLIAMS, CHARLYNE JANET, Kansas City. History; President of Phi Alpha Theta. WILLIAMS, JAMES L., Great Bend. Chemical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Tau; A.I.Ch.E. WILLIAMS, RUTH W., Alexander. Bacteriology; Treasurer, Alpha Omicron Pi; N.O.W.; Bacteriology Club; Zoology Club; national Relations Club; WILLIFORD, HARRY E., Wichita. Business; Kappa Sigma; S.A.M.; N.R.O.T.C. WILSON, MARY Jo, Atchison. History; Historian and Rush man, Alpha Chi Omega; French Club; Gamma Delta; wide Activities; United Nations Conference; Dean ' s Honor Roll. WILSON, ROBERT LEE, Lawrence,. Marketing; Sigma Nu; Business School Association; Newman Club; Jayhawker Staff. Third Row WILSON, WILLIAM R., Wichita. Psychology; YMCA; Republicans Club; Glee Club; Venerable Dean of WINDBLAD, JAMES N., Lindsborg. Chemistry; Sergeant-at-Arms Treasurer, Senior Council, and Scholarship Chairman, Phi Chi; YMCA; Phi Beta Kappa. WISMER, ALICE MAY, Pomona. Psychology; President, I.S.A.; Membership Chairman, Office Manager Chairman, YWCA; Kappa Phi; Wesley Foundation; Semantics Club; A.S.C. WOLFE, ROBERT, Kansas City. Marketing; S.A.M.; Business School Association; Vice-President, Jayhawker. WOLFSKILL, FRANCES AVONNE, Kansas City. Bacteriology; teriology Club; I.S.A.; Treasurer, Foster Hall; Coordinator, Kappa Phi; Coordinator, Wesley Foundation. WOLKOW. BERNARD EDWARD, Wichita. Accounting; Alpha Phi Omega; Jewish Student Union; Men ' s Residence Hall ship; Pershing Rifles; Sons of Judah; Freshman Advisor, Jolliffe Hall. Mary Bovaird, Valrie Stagg, Helen Heath, and Ethel Pearson stand in li..e to osculate with Joe Hale. 110 THE JAYHAWKER First Row WOOD, JACK ALBERT, Kansas City, Missouri. Mechanical neering; A.S.M.E.; A.S.T.E. WOODBURN, IDA MAE, Lawrence. Bacteriology; Cabinet of Kappa Phi; Methodist Choir; Wesley Foundation. WOODMAN, ARTHUR T., Overland Park. Architectural ing; S.A.M.; Treasurer and Secretary, Pledge Class, Scarab; Pledge Master, Phi Delta Theta; Football; Basketball; Softball. WOODWARD, JOAN ALICE, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Speech and Drama; Pi Beta Phi; Phi Alpha Theta; Sergeant-at-Arms, Tau Sigma; Secretary, Senior Class; Secretary-Treasurer, Junior Class; President, Vice-President, Student Union; Cheerleader; Secretary, N.O.W.; Membership Chairman, Newman Club; Plays: fever, Blithe Spirit, The Trojan Women, Harvey ; ADPis think candy is dandy as one of the sisters adds a pin to her ensemble. morial Union Committee; National Collegiate U. N. Conference; Student-Faculty Conference; KFKU Players; Delegate to Student Union Convention; Associate Editor and Contribution, Jay- hawker; W.A.A.; Publicity Chairman, 1947 Homecoming; World War II Executive Committee; C.V.C.; University Players; Forensic League; Editorial Board, Eagle. WOOLWORTH, DEL L, Nortonville. Electrical Engineering; Kappa Eta Kappa; A..EI.E.; Glee Club; Jayhawk Quartet. WORRALL, GEORGE I., Kansas City. Chemical Engineering; Tau Beta Pi; Sachem; Vice-President, Alpha Chi Sigma; President, A.I.Ch.E.; A.S.C.; Owl Society. Second Row WUERTH, ROBERT JOSEPH, Kansas City, Missouri. Marketing; Grand Master of Ceremonies, Kappa Sigma. WULLSCHLEGER, ARMAND DUANE, Frankfort. General Business; S.A.M.; Business School Association; Alpha Chi Sigma; YMCA. WYCOFF, NORMAN GLENN, Solomon. Economics; Men ' s Glee Club; Intramurals. YOST, MARY ELIZABETH, Topeka. Design; Delta Phi Delta. YOUNG, MELBA JEAN, Wichita. English; Band; Kappa Phi; YWCA; I.S.A.; Housemanager, Carruth Hall. YOXALL, JAMES RICHARD, WaKeeney. Political Science; Lambda Chi Alpha; Pachacamac. Third Row ZEH, PAUL LOUIS, Kansas City. Journalism; Sigma Delta Chi; Historian, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Kansan Staff,. ZIEGLER, JOSEPH RAYMOND, Kansas City, Missouri. Chemistry; Phi. Kappa; Union Activities. ZIMMER, NORBERT A., Stickney, South Dakota. Mathematics; Phi Kappa; K-Club; Varsity Track. ZIMMERMAN, MARY Lou, McPherson. Psychology; Pi Beta Phi; Psi Chi. ZIZLER, JOSEPH K., Wichita. Business. 111 COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1948 The Engineer ' s Exposed ( Continued from Page 40) featured in the exhibit. The Architects won the Sigma Tau award for the most outstanding exhibit with their eye-catching display of building and home designs. A model placer mine which actually worked was shown by the Mining and Metallurgy department, and for those who had never seen an oil field the Petroleum Engineering department displayed models of wells and drilling rigs as well as several full sized pieces of actual equipment. Members of the American Society of Tool Engineers were on hand in Fowler Shop with a million dollars worth of industrial machinery on display, and with souvineers for all visitors to boot. The Civil Engineers, in addition to furnishing a very interesting display of model dams and bridges, kept the younger spectators intrigued with their magic fountain and gum-making machine. The Engineers, lacking any recent experience with such things as tions, started from scratch and came through with a highly successful piece of work. John Margrave, president of the Engineering Council and general chairman of the Exposition; the cil members; and all of the ments and members of the school of Engineering and Architecture who planned and worked for the 1948 Engineering Exposition rate a hard earned pat on the back for a job well done. 0 0 g Sectio STUDENTS: acitteidaa sue made Me la. kau,tbe 1 cheapen emu. Auzat app- pake21- 4, dteSe iii,w1c4awL 948 JAYHAWKER STAFF M-0 T-0 R I-N One Stop Master Serviice WE SERVICE ALL MAKES OF Phone 607 Chrysler—Plymouth Sales 827 Vt. St. STATIGERY UNIVERSITY SUPPLIES EXTENDS SINCERE CONGRATULATIONS TO K. SENIORS 1025 MASS. PHONE 1051 COOK ELECTRICALS V AND ENJOY THE DIFFERENCE THE KANSAS ELECTRIC POWER COMPANY Lawrence, Kansas I i A SivAp.,z ...q ' 4 Etectree COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1 9 4 8 113 Intramural Wind Up (Continued from Page 47) play was the basis for the golf scoring with the lowest aggregate team score deciding the winner. Total score (36 holes) : Beta ' s and Phi Delt ' s 589, Phi Gam 608, and Delt ' s 609. With the Intramural Ball on day night, May 22, and the tion of the hard-earned trophies to the deserving winners, the University of Kansas Intramural Program of 1947-48 has become history. All who participated, however, realize what a fine job the Intramural Office has done and await the opening of next year ' s program. Spring Elections (Continued from Page 45) room was filled with the campus ticains, eager candidates, people who had been roped-in to count ballots, and smoke. Lynn Leigh, head of A.S.- C. ' s election committee stepped to the front of the room and respectfully yelled over the din of political orators, Come on you stoops, let ' s count these things. This resulted in Independents ing Greeks record and Greeks ing Independents read the ballot. After the initial tabulation they were ready for the final count. Workers were seated at long tables ready to tabluate and callers were exercising their vocal cords when all of a sudden someone called, Free cokes outside the door for the first twenty-four. This resulted in a uniting of Pachacamacs and pendents. There was a brief period of relaxation in which Ben Foster, dent of Pachacamac, and Bob Bock, president of the Men ' s Independent party compared the total number of bets received on the A.S.C. president. Soon everyone lit up another rette and settled down to work. Mr. Stene, god-father of the P. R. system at K.U., stepped to the black board and began tabulating. What ' s the P.R.? It ' s very simple. P.R. means tional representation. All you do is figure the total number of votes, vide that by the total number of dates, add one, multiply this ask Mr. Stene. The feversh activity continued on into morning, the weight of expctancy grew heavier and heavier, and the eyelids drooped lower and lower. When the dawn came, Pat Thiessen was the new A.S.C. president, and Pachacamac held a one seat margin of victory on the new council. Sic Transit Veritas (Continued from Page 11) he does with objects. He has no peace within—and hence he has no prospect of external peace. He does not realize that the material wealth which comes into his possession will actually possess him. ( In this connection, it is curious that communists never study the nutty notions, the nervous ties, and the enslavements to chattels of millionaires—who are, after all, far more secure economically than the proletariat could ever be under an even sharing of the earth ' s products.) The graduate knows everything but self—everything, that is, but humanity. He is that triumph of idiocy who leads civilization to-day — the cated man—who can make an atomic bomb but not an enduring peace. There is no peace inside him. How can he bring about a peaceful condition in the external world? He may even be the President of Harvard and one of the gentlemen who actually put the bomb together and a well-disposed Joe, besides. What, then, does he do? He writes articles and books imploring the social scientists —whatever they may be—to find out quickly how humanity ticks before his ticking infernal machine shall blow him off the earth from his own ance of himself. It never seems to occur to such gentlemen that the knowledge is on hand. The laboraory work has been done. The hypotheses—formed and pirically tested—have been set out neat- ly. Certain other gentlemen, as highly specialized as nuclear physicists and chemists, have achieved the essential formulations. They call themselves psychologists. But their findings imply the need of a complete rearrangement inside man ' s head—a selection of new and different goals—an attitude in the home which would currently be most repulsive to American parents — writing of the laws of modern and even, a fundamental tion of religion. What the professors and the trustees and the politicians want is an easy little plan—preferably economic — which will swiftly allay their fears. They are hardly willing to accept the thesis of the psychologists —that they are adult infants, for all their erudition—and to launch selves upon a mighty series of changes, or personality changes, and brand new objective acts which will need, to show useful profit, several centuries at least. A long time? Then let the student honestly ask himself if he is being prepared, chologically, for the world he is soon to enter. Has the knowledge of chology itself been made available to him? Or will he merely come by it later through the good fortune of a nervous break-down which will lead him to a capable psychologist, atrist, or psychoanalyst? Or will he never learn about it at all—and live and die a possible neurotic in a chotic society? Does his university, beginning in the Freshman year, attempt to unravel the infantile complexes which were foisted upon him when he was a year old, and two, and five? Is he made aware of the part played in all his hours and days by instinct? Is he clearly shown how our prejudices and superstitions and tabus and egoistic ambitions inhibit and corrupt stinct from birth onward? Is he made to realize that for all the laws and religious doctrines and customs and outward expressions — he is tively a mammal and will inevitably behave as such—a circumstance fully revealed by psychology in the past generation and lately documented by the taxonomy of Alfred Kinsey and his associates? And does he appreciate that his own ego—his sense of identity —is largely an illusion? Is his tion modern? Or, could it be that his education has somehow overlooked such simple facts—and the many more which tend them—leaving him with a ma in his hands that says on one side (Continued on Page 115) 114 THE JAYHAWKER For Latest Fashions Viklearring Apparel (1,-J-trigure.9 TOPEKA, KANSAS TO GO UP HILL ,Loxifo TO GO DOWNHILL USE THE BUS THE RAPID TRANSIT C. Your City Bus Service If its a 111YDE PARK SUL ' its right for spring and summer wear We ' re ready now with a large assortment of styles and patterns. GIBBS runHimn COMPANY 81 I MASS. ¶TEEL, ALMMITTM anct CORROMON-RESIST OT PRODUCTS for IlaDU4TRY o (if frffr ' COPYRIGHT 1943 HARRY DARBY r j7 AW ei 4 , COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1 9 4 8 115 he is knowledgeable, but is blank on the other? Shouldn ' t he also be given a degree in subjective knowledge — if he is expected to take any responsibil- ity for himself (let alone for others!) after his graduation? And if he has no such degree—no such insight—should he not anticipate chaos the length of his days? Chaos has been the principal achievement of mankind all the days of my generation—chaos, geometrical- ly increasing. And since every prece- dent in history and all the major cir- cumstances of mankind to-day sug- gest that the graduate is entering into a new and more august chaos—sho uld he not be at least prepared for this? Let him ask concerning it, too. Is he (or she) steadily facing what is surely an even chance of war in new generations? and if so, is he (or she) fully ready for the odds-on chance of war with atomic weapons? That is to say, is the student being prepared against the statistical likelihood of pre- mature death? Are courses being of- fered in wilderness survival? Or will Boy Scouts alone inherit such habitable nooks of earth as may one day be left free of radio-activity? Any lesser prep- aration — at least of the mind — is extremely unrealistic, is it not? Again, is the graduate ready for divorce? He probably thinks about marrying and becoming a parent. If he marries, it is statistically more likely that he will divorce than that he will have four children. Hence he (or she! ) should be intellectually and emotionally educated to face this sullen commonplace catastrophe. Is the graduate trained to fail? He is, of course, trained to succeed. But it is something on the order of ten times as probable that his life will be a failure ( from the university stand- point of success ) as that it will not. Did his curriculum, then, stress the proper means of reconcilliation with failure ten times as hard as it recom- mended success ? And did it show, in the event of success , how to remain happy? In five generations, as Fairfield Osborn has pointed out, the American people have squandered five inches of topsoil which required five thousand years for deposition. America is be- coming a have-not nation in many categories. Thus it may be asked if education has taught conservation and how to do with less. Has it? These are a few realities with which life after graduation is likely to con- front the educated man. Obviously, the best means toward their solution is to face them squarely and with fore- sight before they become irreversable realities. War and atomic war, survival thereafter, divorce, personal failure, the exhaustion of resources, neurosis and psychosis are samples of future events which have a statistical predic- tability. Not all of them may occur to any one graduate; one or more will almost certainly befall each. Has the University of Kansas done the job? Are the students ready? Have they gained a vast store of subjective knowl- edge—and objective—in these and a hundred other such categories? Can they go on learning about them, com- paring what they learn with what they knew, and thinking about the compari- sons? And, if they can, will they? Have they been shown the frantic incentive? Have they been taught the logics, and given experience in the values, and shown the examples which such edu- cation requires? Or are they only dangerously knowledgeable because they have no realistic idea of what to do with such knowledge as they own? One wonders. The modern record is not reassuring. Behavior in the Sunflower State warrants no optimism. Tabu holds firm—and blindness. Kansas regards itself as the cradle of Prohibition. It laughingly admits it is a State which drinks wet and votes dry. The psychologist thinks that over without much amusement. Such people are pernicious brother-keepers who, in keeping their brothers, corrupt them by example. The precedent set by respectable people who violated a Constitutional Amendment for more than a decade probably did worse damage to American character than all the other crimes ever committed in the land. Respect for law was sabotaged. One looks for lofty examples among Kansans. The names of Haldeman- Julius and Alf Landon leap into the mind. They are both Pennsylvanians, it happens, which is itself a curious datum. For, to the psychologist, the early climate of the child is the princi- pal conditioning-factor of the adult. Is it necessary to be weaned and trained and reared outside Kansas to be a great man in Kansas? And how great are these? A consideration of what Mr. Landon said in 1936, when compared with what happened after that, is not con- tributory to his stature. And it is con- venient—but not sane—to blame Roosevelt because things did not turn out as Landon predicted . It is not sane owing to the fact that many persons, among them this author, were calmly predicting the holocaust long before the time of Roosevelt—be- cause, in short, the causes of Munich, Dachau and Pearl Harbor were visible even generations ago,. when other men set them down. To blame any person or group of leaders for what took place in 1939 and the years afterward is to wrap the mind in a little private night of vice—the vice of self-imposed stupidity. Whole peoples sinned. Mr. Haldeman-Julius, then? A great iconoclast and de-bunker. A valuable soul in his field. For how can im- provement be made until criticism is undertaken? It cannot. To improve anything, the faults in it must first be discovered, manifestly. (Yet, Boost, don ' t knock! is the desk-slogan of a hundred thousand business men, and of every Chamber of Commerce — a frank indication that a booster is a psychological jackass.) Mr. Haldeman- Julius did his share of knocking. But he replaced the smashed icons with no adequate symbol. Little Blue Books may educate man—the—object; but man—the—subject, is generally still left by them an arrogant ignoramus concerning himself—a Little Boy Blue, blowing his horn ever louder. The note has gotten to sound very much like Gabriel ' s trump of doom, lately. Kansas would do best to reflect long and hard upon such matters as that erosion and crop-mining may soon reduce the golden lands to desert— or that swirling isotopes and fungi (Continued on Page 117) 116 THE JAYHAWKER Congratulations to you 1948 Graduates from THE ME00111 1 UNION Fountain Service • Cafeteria Recreation IT ' S a PORTRAIT for HIM so of course nothing but a HIXON portrait will do HIXON STUDIO 721 MASS. St. for that friendly FORD service firOGARNACK genuine FORD parts PHONE 277 609 MASS. 1. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 117 borne on military weather may day render the place uninhabitable. So reflecting, Kansans might begin to study man, as Pope suggested long ago —and more recently, the desperate Dr. Conant. The deep, unconscious sleep of the prairies—that takes the material profit and leaves the subjective needs to raging instinct—is no no more found than sleep on the American seaboard or sleep in the tormented Kremlin. We modern men have not yet awakened our minds. We mistake the dreams and nightmares rising from primordal force s for reasonable acts and great achievements. And, if we do not now waken ourselves to dignity and responsibility. Nature—our own uncomprehended nature — may put most of us to sleep in death, shortly, with, perhaps, a remnant still left to attempt the shattering of our hypnosis and a recovery from the cold hysteria of our ways. The Seventy-Sixth Anniversary of th e University of Kansas, is also, a small anniversary for the author of these placid, self-evident comments. In June, a quarter of a century ago, after two and a half years of hard trying, I abando ned the campus of another University — Princeton. In those days it was a rich man ' s club and a poor boy ' s penitentiary. I was an inmate rather than a member. If it has changed, I do not know, for I have never gone back to see—a fact which may distress that sense of affec- tion and loyalty in which the Senior Class of Kansas is now doubtless bathed. I felt then, and I still feel, that what Princeton considered an tion was a specialized training in importance attained at a general cost to human dignity, or worth. I felt then that erudition was a source of humility if it was real, rather than of academic pomp, which was the ubiquitous, silly aspect of it. I felt that what I had been learning concerned life and people only in such frames of reference as were advantageous to the vanity of ton dons and deans—and that the marks and benchmarks of these men were remarkably cockeyed. In the ensuing quarter-century, what was accomplished through these frames of reference—and other, similar academic frames—made me certain that cated men do not have even the beginnings of education and that often, they come by attitudes in college which later cause them to debase the little they do know by the way they apply it. Thus, in saluting the Seventy-Sixth Anniversary of the University of sas, I find myself wondering if it will have a Ninetieth and a Hundredth. I hope so. But I can see that any such glad future will take much luck and doing on the part of graduates trained to concentrate their attention not upon all humanity in all time but upon their own prospects for the ensuing fiscal year. And I am bering how college and campuses and cloistered halls enjoy boasting at their tribal ceremonies—to point out that the last bunting of Everyman is crepe —and that every society, as Toynbee has shown, has finally displayed that somber fabric over its sand-covered ruins. It is not necessary for man eternally to build and then to inter himself. But an enduring society will depend upon the fealty of its citizens to eternal principle—whereof the only one we know for sure is that truth changes and man must change himself and his ways along with it or succumb. Our basic function is not to get by in our time — as the Chamberlains imagine—but to set the stage tively and then objectively so that our species will have prospects that stretch out of sight in the ranges of time. To think less or to undertake less is to live asleep and to achieve nothing. When men discern they must learn to know mankind first, to be knowing above all, and bankers or chemists or poets only secondarily, they will have made a proper ning at their own education. and nothing else—is the challenge of the future. The glory of the world passes because man will not change himself as he changes what he knows of truth. Along with the open mind, the open personality is essential; but it is rarer in a Ph. D. to-day than mountain flowers in Lawrence. The torch each older generation passes on comes wrong-end-to, and burns youth ' s fingers; the one proffered to-day is loaded with hot isotopes; it is a thought that should be uttered—at least in a still and trivial amidst the general din of ulation, some of which may even be historically regarded as justifiable. More and more we hear that the coming era is to be not as much the Atomic Age as the Age of Psychology. What man has done and is doing and aparently will do without ing his own psychology is quite dent from the headlines, the ruins, and the national budgets. So this that psychology, or subjective edge, be taught in universities ought not to surprise anybody or disturb anybody. I daresay it will bother only those who are such imbeciles as to imagine they already know what they are doing. They call themselves, as a rule, right-thinking, hard-headed tical, men . And they think rightly insofar as they think their heads are hard. Ave, then, and not, I trust, vale. • Muscles and Bustles (Continued from Page 49) teams to make the Ottawa trip. They were: Marjorie Kaff, Maxine solly, Shirley Hoffman, Joan am, Mary Helen Shepard, Kathleen McKelvy, Betsy McCune, Marilyn Smith, Mildred Marks, Lorraine Ross, and Betty Van der Smissen. With the last dusty slide to the home plate, the women ' s intramural season closed. Throughout the through tennis, ping pong, volleyball, basketball, swimitnng, and team participants found friendly, but keen competition. Although vidual trophies were presented for each sport, all looked longingly to the awarding of the big women ' s pionship trophy to be presented to the group whose accumulation of points proves their ability, good spirit, and fine sportsmanship in all sports. This cup for 1947-48, along with dividual awards, will be presented in the fall. 118 THE JAYHAWKER For your For Enjoyment Good Health Use Lawrence Sanitary Dairy Products Grade A Pasteurized Milk Regular and Homogenized Varsity Velvet Ice Cream Table Talk Butter Dutch Maid Cottage Cheese 202 W. 6th Phs. 696-697 YOUR FURS STORED COLD STORAGE Moth Proofing Wool Clothing Guaranteed Service NEW YORK CLEANERS Just a shade darker and I ' ll match that adorable new tan suit at Johnsons! JOHNSON ' S 835 MASS. Ph. 771 2fatf4z lotue.sionent — is four years of your life plus your expenses while in school. 2 6 44 Ite44441 — is an average of $130,000 more in earnings than you would have without your education. is to protect those who share your investment with you. KANSAS CITY LIFE INSURANCE CeMPArt KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI COMMENCEMENT NUMBER, 1 9 4 8 119 THANK YOU The advertisements and the student patronage of the advertisers has made the 1947- 48 JAYHAWKER available to the student body. We sincerely hope that such student- merchant cooperation may continue for many years to come, as it is the backbone of any official campus magazine, therefore I would like to thank both the students and the advertisers for their mutual cooperation. — BOB BOTTOMS, Advertising Manager FIREPROOF Outstanding Among Kansas ' Best AIR COOLED RofejjetnItenrit KANSAS The LOVE BOX COMPANY CORRUGATED AND WOOD SHIPPING CONTAINERS 612 S. COMERCE ST. WICHITA, KANSAS OUR PROF!T IS YOUR PROFIT AT THE 120 THE JAYHAWKER BEST W SHES TO HE GRADUATES 1401 Ohio Ph. 1401 Two Book Stores K.U. NOVELTIES e 1237 Oread Ph. 492 There ' s Joy in Giving Gifts — if it ' s from TOPEKA ' S DEPENDABLE JEWELERS SANTA FE WATCH COMPA Home of Insured Perfect Diamonds The BEST Service in Lawrence GAS—OIL—LUBRICATION—CAR WASHING TIRE AND BATTERY SERVICE Phone 4 FRITZ CO. 8th and New Hamp. •I=M2■=!... 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 serv- ice, the less work is in her housework. 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 Morn balances her budget, she ' s bound to note that electricity is one of its smalles 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. IL C. POWER LIGHT COIVIPArr CAREER WOMAN! 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Business enterprise, too, must be un- hampered if opportunity for employment is to maintain American standards of liv- ing. Shortsighted legislation can destroy jobs and make depressions. More jobs and better jobs at higher wages are possible only by expanding the production output per worker through use of better tools and equipment. This costs money—thousands of dollars per worker. That means new capital, the saved money that the public—you, your friends, your in- stitutions and businesses — invest freely under the normal conditions of free enter- prise. Only by making capital a tool, through accumulation and investment, can steady work and good wages prevail for all of us. Without capital there are no machines, no tools, no no no stores, NO JOBS. Don ' t be fooled by plausible arguments suggesting a substitute for capitalism. Call upon your good common sense and de- pend upon it for your decision. In these critical times, every freedom- loving American should keep informed and express his wishes on all public issues af- fecting rights of today ' s young people to OPPORTUNITY UNLIMITED, CAPPER PRINTING COMPANY, Inc.—Topeka I4 If your letters home read like this: Dear Folk8, GueS$ what I need most? then perhaps we can ease the parental burden. Pepsi-Cola Co. will cheerfully send you a dollar ...or even fifteen for gags you send in and we print. Merely mark your attempts with your name, address, school and class and mail to Easy Money Dept., Pepsi-Cola Co., Box A, Long Island City, N. Y. DEPARTMENT All contributions become the property of Pepsi-Cola Co. We pay only for those we print. As you might imagine, we ' ll be quite mad if you mention Pepsi-Cola in your gags. (Simply mad about it.) Remember, though, you don ' t have to enclose a feather to tickle our risibilities. Just make us laugh—if you can. We ' ll send you a rejection slip .. . if you can ' t. GET FUNNY... WIN MONEY... WRITE A TITLE ... well, as long as I ' m down here I ' ll fill out my entry blank for the Pepsi-Cola ' Treasure Top ' Contests. Got a good line for this gag? Send it in! $5 each for any we buy (Don ' t worry about the caption that ' s already there—that ' s just our subtle way of reminding you about Pepsi ' s terrific $203,725 Treasure Top Contests. Latch onto entry blanks at your Pepsi-Cola dealer ' s today!) Or, send in your own cartoon idea. $10 for just the idea—$15 if you draw it ... if we buy it. January winners: $15.00 to Philip Gips of the Bronx, N. Y., and to Rosemary Miller of Mary Washington College. $5 each to Jerry H. O ' Neil of Washington University, Jack Marks of Columbus, Ohio, and C. A. Schneyer of New York City. HE-SHE GAGS You, too, can write jokes about people. These guys did and we sent them three bucks each for their wit. To wit: Joe Murray of Univ. of Iowa, Bob Prado of the Univ. of Texas, King MacLellan of Rutgers and Roy Lauer of Cicero, Illinois. She: Thanks for the kiss. He: The pressure was all mine. He: Yoo-hoo! She: Shut up, you wolf! He: Pepsi-Cola? She: Yoo-hoo!! She: What ' s the best type of investment? He: Air mail stamps. She: Why air mail stamps? Ile: They ' re bound to go up. $1 apiece is shamefully sent to C. R. Meissner, Jr. of Lehigh Univ., Bernard H. Hymel of Stanford Univ., T. M. Guy of Davidson College, and Irving B. Spielman of C. C. N. Y. In fact we ' re almost sorry we did it. Atlas—a geography book with muscle. Spot—what Pepsi-Cola hits the. Paradox—two ducks. Laugh—a smile that burst. Hurry and coin a phrase . . . you might face some coin. If that isn ' t easy money, we don ' t know what is. Yuk, yuk, yuk! we said when we read this. And promptly peeled off two crisp leaves of cabbage ($2) for June Arm- strong, of the University of Illinois: How do you like my new dress? asked the little moron ' s girl friend on the night of the junior prom. See, it has that new look—with six flounces on the skirt. Duuuuh, replied our little hero, that ain ' t so great. Pepsi-Cola ' s got twelve flounces! Do you know any little morons? If so, follow them, send us their funny utter- ances and we ' ll send you $2, too. Nothing personal, of course. DAFFY ``, DEFINITIONS She: If you kiss me, I ' ll call a member of my family. He: (Kisses her). She: (sighing) Brother! Can you do better? We hope so. And we ' re ready to pay for it. S3 is wait- ing. Try and get it! EXTRA ADDED TTRACTION At t end of the year, we ' re ing to review all the stuff we ve bought, and the item we think was best of all is going to get all extra 000.00 I,


Suggestions in the University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) collection:

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

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University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

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University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

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University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

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University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

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